RECENT RESEARCH — A newly unearthed photograph showing the north side of the 600 block of Commercial Street, San Francisco, in the aftermath of the earthquake and fires of 1906 reveals, for the first time, visual evidence of the fate of the building that housed the Eureka Lodgings, where Emperor Norton lived from 1864–65 until his death in 1880. Our analysis of the photo sharpens the focus on the identities and locations of the buildings along this stretch — and exactly what each building suffered in 1906. Includes our highly researched new infographic that can be used as a tool for understanding the history of this location.

The Emperor Norton Trust

TO HONOR THE LIFE + ADVANCE THE LEGACY OF JOSHUA ABRAHAM NORTON

RESEARCH • EDUCATION • ADVOCACY

The Importance of Being Emperor Norton

Travel writer and urban explorer Stuart Schuffman, a.k.a. Broke-Ass Stuart, has been a friend of The Emperor’s Bridge Campaign* since before the beginning. Indeed, I was delighted to learn in late July — as I was putting the finishing touches on the Change.org petition that would launch in the next day or so — that Stuart, a couple of weeks earlier, had posted his own call to "reignite the movement" to name the Bay Bridge for Emperor Norton.

Yesterday, in another nice serendipity, Stuart was up with the latest in his weekly series, for 7x7 magazine, on San Francisco bars. This week's entry: Emperor Norton's Boozeland — the scene of the Campaign's launch party in late September.

In the course of his review — which includes a shout-out to the movement to name the Bay Bridge for the person most closely identified with the call to construct a bay-spanning bridge linking Oakland and San Francisco — Stuart explains why the Emperor matters now more than ever:

Each time they do something to appease the queasy stomachs of San Francisco’s nouveau riche, like ban public nudity or close our public parks at night or disperse the chess players on Market Street, the Emperor Norton myth grows. That’s because the importance of Emperor Norton is that he symbolizes San Francisco at its best: strange, unpredictable, curious, mysterious, freewheeling, and more than anything not willing put up with trifling bullshit.


As you'll learn from the review, "my" headline above actually was Stuart's original title for the piece. Read the whole thing.

* In December 2019, The Emperor's Bridge Campaign adopted a new name: The Emperor Norton Trust.

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