The Castro Part 2: Pride, Protest, and Harvey Milk
In the late 1960s, Eureka Valley became the Castro — a new home for San Francisco’s LGBTQ+ community. From the open windows of Twin Peaks Tavern to Harvey Milk’s fight for equality, this was the moment the neighborhood transformed into a global symbol of pride and resilience.
Mission District Part 3: Food, Film, and Curiosities
The Mission District is San Francisco at its most alive — where dinner comes with a movie at Foreign Cinema, ceviche sizzles at Limon, and Dolores Park turns everyday sunshine into a festival. From quirky shops to wild traditions, this neighborhood blends creativity, culture, and community like nowhere else.
Cole Valley Part 2: A Quiet Counterculture
In the 1960s, while Haight-Ashbury burned bright with counterculture, Cole Valley caught a gentler wave of creativity. Artists, students, and musicians settled among its tree-lined streets, shaping a quieter bohemian spirit that still hums through its cafés, murals, and easygoing charm today.
