The first Hall of Justice (1900–06) was opposite
Portsmouth Square, at the southeast corner of
Kearny and
Washington, occupying a building originally built in 1851 as the
Jenny Lind Theatre and purchased by the city in 1852 for use as the
City Hall. While a new City Hall was being constructed between 1872 and 1899 at
Civic Center, the old Jenny Lind building was rebuilt as the Hall of Justice; the cornerstone was laid on December 19, 1896. By 1898, the editors of the
San Francisco Call derided the slow pace of work as "The Haul of Justice", concluding the contractor had underbid the job and was intent on delaying the completion by ordering numerous changes; a grand jury would later ask Mayor
James D. Phelan and the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors to "grant no further extension" of the contractors after October 1 of that year. Also that year, when
bubonic plague broke out in neighboring
Chinatown, residents there blamed the tall tower of the Hall of Justice, which they claimed "had aroused the evils of the air". Work was completed in 1900 and the first official business was conducted there on September 19, although the upper floor jail remained unfinished; despite this, the
Call wrote "the building is the best San Francisco ever had in its history". It was heavily damaged following the April
1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. The second Hall of Justice (1912–61) was rebuilt at the same site to a design by city architect
Newton J. Tharp. Tharp's drawings were approved by the Board of Police commissioners on March 5, 1909, and construction on the second Hall was completed in 1912. The half-circle, fan-shaped windows on the fourth floor appear in numerous police dramas such as
The Lineup in the 1950s and
Ironside, the American television program starring
Raymond Burr, in the 1960s. The San Francisco Hall of Justice is also frequently mentioned in the works of
Dashiell Hammett and
James Patterson. It was demolished in 1968. After the third Hall of Justice was completed in 1960, operations moved there and the old Hall of Justice was demolished in 1968; a hotel, the
Hilton San Francisco Financial District, was completed in 1971 and currently stands on this site. The current Hall of Justice at 850–880 Bryant Street served as the
San Francisco Police Department's operational headquarters until 2015. It is internally referred to as "850 Bryant" and "the hall". The complex serves as the main San Francisco County Jail, as well as base of operations and headquarters for the
San Francisco Sheriff's Department, and garage for the majority of vehicles for the SFPD. The San Francisco Police motorcycle traffic division is completely based there as well. In 1994 the Hall was renamed for
Thomas J. Cahill, the
Chief of the SFPD from 1958 to 1970. The San Francisco Hall of Justice housed Jail #3 and Jail #4 for the San Francisco County Superior Court criminal division. County Jail #4, on the 7th floor, closed September 5, 2020. The Hall of Justice formerly served as the location of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and city morgue; those offices moved to a new facility in the city's
Bayview district in November 2017. ==References==