Coastside Guide Spring 2012

Page 57

Pacifica

Our neighbor to the north will soon get a little closer when the Devil's Slide tunnel is completed at the end of this year. It is where a lot of Coastside residents head to to shop for certain items, dine in a variety of restaurants or be entertained at venues not found on the Coastside. It is also a very popular destination to for surfers and anglers. Pacifica is a string of communities hugging the coast, each with it's own flavor. Here are a few items that make it unique — and a few of the most popular places to visit.

What’s in a name?

While Pacifica is Spanish for “peace,” the city’s name actually has less romantic roots. It is the result of a contest in 1957 to name the newly incorporated sliver hard by the Pacific Ocean. The inspiration was an 80-foot sculpture by Ralph Stackpole, commissioned for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition. Two models of the sculpture remain, one at City Hall and the other in the City Council chambers.

Before Adobe was an software company

The Sanchez Adobe was built in the 1840s from timbers salvaged from a Spanish wreck at Point San Pedro. Today it is the secondoldest structure in San Mateo County and has been a brothel, a hunting lodge, an agricultural shed and farm labor quarters. These days it’s a tourist destination, open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. (650) 359-1462, 1000 Linda Mar Blvd., Pacifica

The first church

The Little Brown Church was Pacifica’s first place of worship, built in 1910 and right along the old Ocean Shore Railroad line. The city of Paficia purchased it some time ago and it served as a police station for a time. Now, a fundraising campaign mounted by the Pacifica Historical Association aims to make it a museum. Learn more at pacificahistory.org

Is that a castle?

Yes it is. San Francisco rail magnate Henry Harrison McCloskey built the bohemouth at 900 Mirador Terrace after his home in the city was damaged in the 1906 earthquake. It’s modeled after wife Emily’s Scottish childhood home. Like the Sanchez Adobe, it has a somewhat sordid history, including service as a bordello and speakeasy before serving as a U.S. Coast Guard barracks. The castle is now in trust and sometimes open for tours. (650) 3550272.

Pier at the ocean

The 1,140-foot L-shaped pier has a name – the Rev. Herschell Harkins Memorial Pacifica Pier (Harkins was the pastor at Little Brown Church) but you don’t need to know the name to ask a local how to get to the pier. The span attracts fishermen from all over the world and the anglers catch Jack smelt, white croaker and striped bass from the pier. You might also see a whale, if you’re there the right time of year. Open daily, 4 a.m. to 10 p.m., weather allowing. (650) 738-3760. SPRING/SUMMER 2012 Coastside Guide 55

Coastside Guide_2012.indd 55

3/19/12 11:33 AM


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.