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This website, on its initial public release, is the latest incarnation of Shaping San Francisco, originally a Windows-based multimedia excavation of the lost history of the city. This is the fifth iteration of the project, and has been produced in collaboration with the forthcoming City Museum at the Old Mint.
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>What is FoundSF.org?</font></font>


We invite you to become registered users and begin using the site as a Living Archive of the city. We hope you'll add new writings, diaries from your grandparents, old family photos, historic images of the city, video clips of historic events you attended, scans of tickets, programs, buttons, etc. We also welcome comments on existing content, and repairs to errors where we might have made mistakes (one thing about doing a sprawling history project: there are always mistakes!).
FoundSF is a wiki that invites history buffs, community leaders, and San Francisco citizens of all kinds to share their unique stories, images, and videos from past and present.  There are over 1,250 articles here presenting primary sources, essays, and images from history... and we hope you'll add to it to help it grow!


If you find material on this site that you "own" and think we are using without permission, you can ask us to remove it by sending us an email with specific information on what the problem is and what rights you are claiming. We see this as a public service in the public domain, and we don't claim ownership over the content ourselves. It is all under a Creative Commons license (link at bottom of all screens) that precludes using this material for commercial purposes.
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>How can I access the articles here?</font></font>


more to come...
There are four ways to explore the articles in FoundSF.  You can use the search bar at the right to look for terms of interest, click on the "Random Page" link at right to jump to a surprise article, check out the [[Special:Categories | Categories]] to search by topic, or explore the themed collections featuring grouped articles of interest. 
 
The [[Special:Categories | Categories]] allow you to browse articles by:
* [[Time|Decade]]
* [[Theme|Theme]]
* [[Population/People|Population/People]]
* [[Neighborhood/Geography|Neighborhood/Geography]]
 
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>Is the information on FoundSF neutral and balanced?</font></font>
 
No.  Unlike Wikipedia, FoundSF does not have a mission to present a "neutral point of view."  Instead, we are focused on presenting real artifacts of history, and some of the best of these are highly biased and provocative.  For example, Mark Twain's [[A_Defense_of_General_Funston | searing satire of General Funston]] is a unique, provocative, and highly opinionated piece of history. 
 
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>So how can I tell what to believe about the information on this site?</font></font>
 
Each article on FoundSF is labeled at the top as an historical essay, primary source, "I was there" account, or unfinished history.  The primary sources and "I was there" accounts are authentic pieces of history.  The historical essays usually have citations and always are signed by the original author.  "Unfinished history" pieces are collaborative projects of the community and are still taking shape, a process you are invited to contribute to!
 
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>Can I contribute my own stories and edit the articles here?</font></font>
 
Absolutely!  You can edit any article labeled unfinished history, or create your own following these [[Help:Contents | steps]]. 
 
If you would like to contribute a primary source or "I was there" account, your article will represent your experience alone and you will be responsible for verifying its authenticity.  Please [mailto:[email protected] email us] to discuss if your work is appropriate to be included as a primary source.
 
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>Who owns the content on FoundSF?</font></font>
 
FoundSF uses a Creative Commons license (attribution, non-commercial, share alike).  For more information on what this means, check out the [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ full license here].
 
<font color = navy> <font size = 2>Who manages FoundSF?</font></font>
 
FoundSF is part of [http://www.shapingsf.org Shaping San Francisco], a project of [http://artsandmedia.net Independent Arts & Media]. You can reach us with your comments on this project, questions about San Francisco history, or suggestions for improvements by [mailto:[email protected] emailing us.]  We'd love to hear from you.
 
'''Found San Francisco''', on its initial public release, is the latest incarnation of [[Backing Into a History Commons: A History of Shaping San Francisco|''Shaping San Francisco'']], begun in 1997 originally as a Windows-based multimedia excavation of the lost history of the city. This is the fifth iteration of the project, and has been produced in collaboration with the forthcoming San Francisco Museum and Historical Society's Museum at the Old Mint.
 
'''Found San Francisco''' is a living archive of the city providing people with access to its lost history. Hundreds of people have contributed stories, photos, video oral histories, and more. Through our unique approach to community history, we developed strong content on labor, ecology, transit, and dissent and how they have changed the landscape of San Francisco since the 1850s. Our project shows that history is much more than Richter scales and gold rushes.
 
We seek to demonstrate and reinforce the simple observation that ''History is a Creative Act in the Present!'' By this we mean that the meaning and understanding of the past is always an intellectual and social process carried out in our own time. Given the many so-called "history wars" that have beset U.S. culture in the past decades, and the frequency with which our understanding of our shared history is revised, we think it vital to invite as many people as possible into the process of literally ''making history.'' Our long-term goal is to facilitate the discovery, presentation, preservation of, and access to local history, incorporating the past into a rapidly changing future.
 
We look forward to your contributions to this evolving collection. You can go to our help screen and see our guidelines and learn how to use the system. If you've ever edited on Wikipedia, you'll find this quite familiar. If not, you will find it relatively easy to learn. If you would like to schedule a workshop for your community group, your classroom, or even just yourself and a few friends, please [mailto:shaping@foundsf.org contact us].

Revision as of 17:45, 11 January 2017

What is FoundSF.org?

FoundSF is a wiki that invites history buffs, community leaders, and San Francisco citizens of all kinds to share their unique stories, images, and videos from past and present. There are over 1,250 articles here presenting primary sources, essays, and images from history... and we hope you'll add to it to help it grow!

How can I access the articles here?

There are four ways to explore the articles in FoundSF. You can use the search bar at the right to look for terms of interest, click on the "Random Page" link at right to jump to a surprise article, check out the Categories to search by topic, or explore the themed collections featuring grouped articles of interest.

The Categories allow you to browse articles by:

Is the information on FoundSF neutral and balanced?

No. Unlike Wikipedia, FoundSF does not have a mission to present a "neutral point of view." Instead, we are focused on presenting real artifacts of history, and some of the best of these are highly biased and provocative. For example, Mark Twain's searing satire of General Funston is a unique, provocative, and highly opinionated piece of history.

So how can I tell what to believe about the information on this site?

Each article on FoundSF is labeled at the top as an historical essay, primary source, "I was there" account, or unfinished history. The primary sources and "I was there" accounts are authentic pieces of history. The historical essays usually have citations and always are signed by the original author. "Unfinished history" pieces are collaborative projects of the community and are still taking shape, a process you are invited to contribute to!

Can I contribute my own stories and edit the articles here?

Absolutely! You can edit any article labeled unfinished history, or create your own following these steps.

If you would like to contribute a primary source or "I was there" account, your article will represent your experience alone and you will be responsible for verifying its authenticity. Please email us to discuss if your work is appropriate to be included as a primary source.

Who owns the content on FoundSF?

FoundSF uses a Creative Commons license (attribution, non-commercial, share alike). For more information on what this means, check out the full license here.

Who manages FoundSF?

FoundSF is part of Shaping San Francisco, a project of Independent Arts & Media. You can reach us with your comments on this project, questions about San Francisco history, or suggestions for improvements by emailing us. We'd love to hear from you.

Found San Francisco, on its initial public release, is the latest incarnation of Shaping San Francisco, begun in 1997 originally as a Windows-based multimedia excavation of the lost history of the city. This is the fifth iteration of the project, and has been produced in collaboration with the forthcoming San Francisco Museum and Historical Society's Museum at the Old Mint.

Found San Francisco is a living archive of the city providing people with access to its lost history. Hundreds of people have contributed stories, photos, video oral histories, and more. Through our unique approach to community history, we developed strong content on labor, ecology, transit, and dissent and how they have changed the landscape of San Francisco since the 1850s. Our project shows that history is much more than Richter scales and gold rushes.

We seek to demonstrate and reinforce the simple observation that History is a Creative Act in the Present! By this we mean that the meaning and understanding of the past is always an intellectual and social process carried out in our own time. Given the many so-called "history wars" that have beset U.S. culture in the past decades, and the frequency with which our understanding of our shared history is revised, we think it vital to invite as many people as possible into the process of literally making history. Our long-term goal is to facilitate the discovery, presentation, preservation of, and access to local history, incorporating the past into a rapidly changing future.

We look forward to your contributions to this evolving collection. You can go to our help screen and see our guidelines and learn how to use the system. If you've ever edited on Wikipedia, you'll find this quite familiar. If not, you will find it relatively easy to learn. If you would like to schedule a workshop for your community group, your classroom, or even just yourself and a few friends, please contact us.