Native Americans of the Chutchui village of the
Yelamu tribe inhabited the area prior to the arrival of Spanish missionaries, who founded nearby
Mission Dolores in 1776. The park site consists of two plots, Mission Blocks #86 and #87, formerly owned by
Congregation Sherith Israel and
Congregation Emanu-El and was used as a Jewish cemetery, which became inactive in 1894. The cemetery was moved to
San Mateo County when San Francisco land became too valuable for the dead and burial within the city limits was prohibited. The graves were moved to
Colma (via
Southern Pacific railroad), where they still rest today at Hills of Eternity and Home of Peace Cemeteries.In 1903, over 1,000 property owners from the southern side of San Francisco formed the Mission Park Association, which introduced a ballot measure to buy the former Jewish cemetery area and turn it into a park. It passed by 73.9% later in the same year, initiating the creation of what was back then named "Mission Park". In 1906–07, the park served as a refugee camp for more than 1600 families made homeless by the
1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. Camp life after the earthquake ended in the summer of 1908. Some people kept their temporary shacks as houses and a few still survive today scattered across western San Francisco. In 1917, the
J-Church streetcar line, which runs along one side of the park, began service. Until after World War II, the Mission District was largely inhabited by European Americans, which from the 1950s to the 1970s were replaced by an influx of Latino immigrants. Partly as a symbol of this transformation, on September 16, 1966, a replica of the “Mexican Liberty Bell”, presented by Mexican president
Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, was installed in the park near a statue of
Miguel Hidalgo, the father of Mexican independence, which had been erected four years earlier. In 2009, the San Francisco Chronicle observed that "as the wide variety of park visitors indicates - from Latino families to young hipsters to Castro gays - it sits at the intersection of a number of San Francisco demographic groups. And it always has." Dolores Park has hosted political rallies, festivals,
Aztec ceremonial dances,
Cinco de Mayo celebrations,
San Francisco Mime Troupe performances, and an annual "Hunky Jesus" competition on
Easter by the
Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.In March 2014, the San Francisco Recreation & Park Department began a two-stage $20.5 million renovation project made possible by the 2008 Clean & Safe Park Neighborhood Bond to upgrade the park. Community-driven meetings lead to the
conceptual design of the improvement project. Input from local community members, neighbors, merchants, the
San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department, the
San Francisco Department of Public Works, and other major
stakeholders shaped the final design. The park was fully reopened in January 2016 with a light-up event. To address trash issues in the park, a
Leave No Trace campaign was also launched encouraging park users to "pack it in, pack it out." In the years up to 2016, according to a SF Rec & Parks spokesperson, "Dolores Park [had] seen an exponential increase in the number of visitors: On a sunny Saturday, it can host between 7,000 and 10,000 people." There have been some injuries and at least one death associated with the event. The city has made repeated attempts to prevent the event from happening, e.g. by installing
Botts dots in 2020, using
kettling and mass arrests in 2023 and by blocking off streets and part of the park in 2024. However, skaters returned regardless. ==Facilities==