Note: this Foundation Document was written in March 2016; some aspects of the Park have changed in the years since its creation. Part 1: Core ComponentsThe core components of a foundation document include a brief description of the park, park purpose, significance statements, fundamental resources and values, other important resources and values, and interpretive themes. These components are core because they typically do not change over time. Core components are expected to be used in future planning and management efforts. San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park is in San Francisco, California, just inside of the Golden Gate. Congress established San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park in 1988 to preserve and interpret the history and achievements of seafaring Americans and the nation’s maritime heritage, especially on the Pacific coast. The 50-acre park is small in area but large in nationally significant cultural resources. The park uses a fleet of national historic landmark (NHL) vessels, a collection of more than 100 historic small craft, a museum collection with more than 6 million archival and museum items, a visitor center, and a research center to chronicle the lives and dreams of the men and women who tamed America’s maritime frontier.
The San Francisco Bay has long played an important role in maritime history. Native peoples plied San Francisco Bay in reed canoes long before explorers first charted America’s western coastline and the Spanish established an outpost at the site of present-day San Francisco in 1776. After gold was discovered in 1848, the sea brought waves of dreamers to the American West. They entered the Golden Gate aboard anything that could float and then raced to find their fortunes. Ships brought goods to the west and took rich western resources to the world. The first stop for many visitors is Hyde Street Pier, which features a number of historic vessels, maritime structures, and exhibits. Past the Donkey Boiler and Wapama steam engine, the busy Shipwright Shop, and boats undergoing restoration in the Boat Shop is the 1890 ferryboat Eureka, a 299-foot double-ender with a massive single-cylinder walking beam engine. Berthed across the pier is the three-masted schooner C. A. Thayer, built in 1895 for the West Coast timber trade. After a career transporting 575,000 board feet of lumber, Thayer was modified to work in the cod fishing industry. The 1886 square-rigger Balclutha is currently host to an overnight education program. This 301-foot, steel-hulled, Age of Sail veteran rounded Cape Horn 17 times. Below deck, exhibits trace Balclutha’s three careers: carrying California grain to Europe, transporting lumber, and serving in the Alaskan salmon industry. Also on Hyde Street Pier, the tugboat Hercules has a 151-foot oil-burner with a three-cylinder, triple expansion steam engine. Built tough for ocean towing, the 1907 riveted-steel Hercules kept busy guiding ships and barges on San Francisco Bay, as well as transporting materials south to build the Panama Canal and west for work on Pearl Harbor dry docks. At the far end of the pier are a collection of historic small craft and Alma, an 1891 San Francisco-built scow schooner. Alma’s deck was once stacked with hay and other bulk cargoes; today, she offers history sails to park visitors. The park’s visitor center, across from Hyde Street Pier, provides a multimedia orientation to West Coast and San Francisco maritime history. Rangers and volunteers staff an information desk near exhibits, models, and artifacts. West of the visitor center, the pathways of the Aquatic Park National Historic Landmark District lead through Victorian Park to the Maritime Museum, a striking, Streamline Moderne building named for Sala Burton. This ship-like structure is filled with 1930s Works Progress Administration (WPA) artwork, including colorful, abstract murals, mosaics, sculptures, and bas reliefs. Outside the bathhouse, the Aquatic Park cove and beach are protected by the curved Municipal Recreational (Municipal) Pier. The park’s extensive collection of artifacts, books, oral histories, photographs, vessel plans, documents, and other archival materials are located at the Maritime Research Center. Here staff assists visitors conducting research by providing access to published and archival materials and a wide range of maritime artifacts. Each year, in partnership with the San Francisco Maritime National Park Association, the park hosts more than 10,000 local schoolchildren in hands-on, experiential education programs. The park also nurtures relationships with community groups and neighbors. Partnerships have included: staging maritime-related plays, hosting readings of Chinese American oral histories, teaching high school classes to build and launch small boats, and working with the San Francisco Senior Center to recruit and train a cadre of docents whose rich life experiences enhance learning opportunities for visitors of all ages. The purpose statement identifies the specific reason(s) for establishment of a particular park. The purpose statement for San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park was drafted through a careful analysis of its enabling legislation and the legislative history that influenced its development. The park was established when the enabling legislation adopted by Congress was signed into law on June 27, 1988 (see appendix A for enabling legislation). The purpose statement lays the foundation for understanding what is most important about the park.
Significance statements express why a park’s resources and values are important enough to merit designation as a unit of the national park system. These statements are linked to the purpose of San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park, and are supported by data, research, and consensus. Statements of significance describe the distinctive nature of the park and why an area is important within a global, national, regional, and systemwide context. They focus on the most important resources and values that will assist in park planning and management.
The following significance statements have been identified for San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park. (Please note that the sequence of the statements does not reflect the level of significance.)
Fundamental resources and values (FRVs) are those features, systems, processes, experiences, stories, scenes, sounds, smells, or other attributes determined to warrant primary consideration during planning and management processes because they are essential to achieving the purpose of the park and maintaining its significance. Fundamental resources and values are closely related to a park’s legislative purpose and are more specific than significance statements.
Fundamental resources and values help focus planning and management efforts on what is truly significant about the park. One of the most important responsibilities of NPS managers is to ensure the conservation and public enjoyment of those qualities that are essential (fundamental) to achieving the purpose of the park and maintaining its significance. If fundamental resources and values are allowed to deteriorate, the park purpose and/or significance could be jeopardized. The following fundamental resources and values have been identified for San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park:
San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park contains other resources and values that are not fundamental to the purpose of the park and may be unrelated to its significance, but are important to consider in planning processes. These are referred to as “other important resources and values” (OIRV). These resources and values have been selected because they are important in the operation and management of the park and warrant special consideration in park planning.
The following other important resources and values have been identified for San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park:
Interpretive themes are often described as the key stories or concepts that visitors should understand after visiting a park—they define the most important ideas or concepts communicated to visitors about a park unit. Themes are derived from, and should reflect, park purpose, significance, resources, and values. The set of interpretive themes is complete when it provides the structure necessary for park staff to develop opportunities for visitors to explore and relate to all park significance statements and fundamental and other important resources and values.
Interpretive themes are an organizational tool that reveal and clarify meaning, concepts, contexts, and values represented by park resources. Sound themes are accurate and reflect current scholarship and science. They encourage exploration of the context in which events or natural processes occurred and the effects of those events and processes. Interpretive themes go beyond a mere description of the event or process to foster multiple opportunities to experience and consider the park and its resources. These themes help explain why a park story is relevant to people who may otherwise be unaware of connections they have to an event, time, or place associated with the park. The following interpretive themes have been identified for San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park:
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Last updated: January 11, 2025