The land used to be part of
San Miguel Rancho; and it was one of the last parts of San Francisco to be incorporated. In 1910, Joseph A. Leonard's Urban Realty Improvement Company bought the track and set about turning the land into a residence park. By 1912, Ingleside Terraces had opened, with Urbano Drive paved on the loop of the old racetrack. Like other suburban developments built in the United States at the time, Ingleside Terraces was explicitly designed to be a segregated whites-only neighborhood, and written into the property deed was a section reading: "That no person of African, Japanese, Chinese, or of any Mongolian descent shall be allowed to purchase, own, lease, or occupy said real property or any part thereof." In 1922, the
Ingleside Presbyterian Church building was completed by Joseph A. Leonard; since November 22, 2016 it is listed as one of the
San Francisco Designated Landmarks. It started as a church population primarily made of white people of European-descent, and after
World War II, the demographic shifted to a primarily African American population. In 1931, the
El Rey Theatre in Ingleside Terraces opened; it was designed by
Timothy L. Pflueger. The 1948 Supreme Court case
Shelley v. Kraemer declared racial restrictions were illegal and unenforceable in courts, though the restrictions continued to be enforced socially. In 1957, assistant district attorney
Cecil F. Poole moved into the neighborhood with his family as the first non-white residents. The following year, on June 5, 1958, other neighborhood residents burned a cross on the front lawn of the Pooles' house. The
Cecil F. Poole House is a San Francisco Designated Landmark since 2000. ==Ingleside Racetrack==