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Indybay Feature
The Logic of Freedom: a Juneteenth-inspired walking tour
Date:
Friday, June 19, 2026
Time:
2:00 PM
-
4:00 PM
Event Type:
Teach-In
Organizer/Author:
David Giesen
Email:
Phone:
415-948-4265
Location Details:
meet in the lobby of the American Youth Hostel
312 Mason Street
San Francisco
312 Mason Street
San Francisco
Juneteenth spells freedom from mean-hearted procrastinators. Join a FREE walking tour inspired by Juneteenth, exploring how San Francisco has inspired folk seeking to recover from obdurate custom the social integrity and individual freedom of land security.
This trek along San Francisco's 19th Century hills and reimagined tidal zone reclaims the Declaration of Independence's momentous promise of individual liberty and bountiful society by recounting the stories of six upstart thinker-activists with formative links to the city.
Henry George leads the way with his marvelously wholistic proposal to treat the footprint of America as a commonwealth.
Next comes Jose Rizal who pioneered the Philippine resistance to colonialism; followed by William Leidesdorff who fled the USA to teeny, tiny San Francisco in 1841 to secure his freedom from legalized racism; Kate Kennedy won equal pay for women, ran for political office, and championed labor liberated from landlordism; Sun Yat-sen fashioned the 1911 revolution in China, emphasizing the land policy of previously mentioned Henry George; and rounding out our study in stellar Fog City revolution-minded personalities comes the noble, pathetic tale of Joshua Norton who, like so many of us, believed a better world was possible, but drifted delusionally insane trying to create it.
This trek along San Francisco's 19th Century hills and reimagined tidal zone reclaims the Declaration of Independence's momentous promise of individual liberty and bountiful society by recounting the stories of six upstart thinker-activists with formative links to the city.
Henry George leads the way with his marvelously wholistic proposal to treat the footprint of America as a commonwealth.
Next comes Jose Rizal who pioneered the Philippine resistance to colonialism; followed by William Leidesdorff who fled the USA to teeny, tiny San Francisco in 1841 to secure his freedom from legalized racism; Kate Kennedy won equal pay for women, ran for political office, and championed labor liberated from landlordism; Sun Yat-sen fashioned the 1911 revolution in China, emphasizing the land policy of previously mentioned Henry George; and rounding out our study in stellar Fog City revolution-minded personalities comes the noble, pathetic tale of Joshua Norton who, like so many of us, believed a better world was possible, but drifted delusionally insane trying to create it.
For more information:
http://www.TheCommonsSF.org
Added to the calendar on Tue, Jun 16, 2026 4:28PM
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