San Francisco Chronicle

Thousands pay tribute to mayor at City Hall

Lines around block as mournful crowd files past Lee’s casket to offer tears, prayers

- By Sophie Haigney, J.K. Dineen and John Wildermuth

Thousands of people, from street cleaners to famous politician­s, streamed into San Francisco City Hall on Friday and filed past the casket bearing the body of Mayor Ed Lee, many whispering prayers for the man whose unexpected death cast a pall over the city he led for six years.

As a cellist from the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra played somber tunes, mourners began entering the City Hall rotunda around 8 a.m. to pay respects to San Francisco’s first Chinese American mayor, pausing briefly at the closed casket draped in an American flag. They kept coming, hundreds every hour, until 7 p.m. when the Sheriff ’s Department closed the line down. And even then a hushed crowd of

The casket containing the body of Mayor Ed Lee lies in state in the rotunda of San Francisco City Hall. Mourners from all walks of life honored Lee, whose office door is seen on the floor directly above the casket.

“For now, it’s important for us to remember what a blessing he was to the city.” Rep. Nancy Pelosi, House minority leader

more than 100 gathered across the street from the City Hall steps, waiting for the casket to be wheeled through the glass doors, which happened just after 8 p.m.

At times during the day line stretched down City Hall’s Polk Street steps, down the block and sometimes around the corner at McAllister Street. Even for a building steeped in the art of the whisper, the atmosphere inside City Hall was especially hushed Friday as the young and old stopped before Lee’s casket to kneel, pray, salute, bow their heads or simply stop and look. Many wiped away tears.

Mourners came from all walks of life — Public Works employees in yellow and orange vests, City Hall employees in suits, San Francisco police officers in full dress uniform, members of the violence prevention organizati­on United Playaz in sweatshirt­s that read: “It takes the Hood to save the Hood.” Some were old friends of the mayor; some had never met him.

“I want to pay tribute and pray over his body,” said Carl Giaraffa, 74, of San Francisco, one of the mourners who waited in line to enter City Hall. “I respected the man. I thought he was very fair to people, and he didn’t come off like a politician.”

Giaraffa, who has lived in San Francisco since 1966, added, “I think he was one of our greatest mayors ever.”

For others, the connection was more direct.

“He got me housing,” said Brian Gonzales, who lives downtown and walked over to pay his respects. “It was a year ago, and he shook my hand.”

Lee died early Tuesday morning after suffering a heart attack. He was 65.

Among the politician­s who came to bid farewell to Lee were Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the House minority leader, and former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown.

Pelosi, joined by husband Paul and daughter Christine, entered the Rotunda about 11:45 a.m. Head bowed, she stood for a moment in front of the casket, touched the flag covering it with her right hand, and left quietly.

Her voice shook with emotion as she spoke with reporters on her way out.

“It’s heartbreak­ing, it’s really heartbreak­ing,” she said. “For now, it’s important for us to remember what a blessing he was to the city.”

Even those who at times had political difference­s with Lee remembered him as an upbeat man who loved San Francisco.

“He gave his life for the city, in more ways than one,” said former Supervisor John Avalos. “He deserved to live a long life with his family.”

The city’s Chinese community was out in force to honor the mayor. Women, men and families — young and old — stopped in front of the casket and made three ceremonial bows before moving along.

In the large hall just off the rotunda, visitors signed the heavy buff-colored pages of the memory book. Many of those signatures and comments were in Chinese.

“He was one of us,” said Mary Woo, who lives in the Sunset District. “We’re proud of him, and I had to come down and pay my respects.”

The dozens of floral arrangemen­ts that arrived throughout the day also reflected the pride of the Asian community. Along with those from employee groups like the Sheriff ’s Department and business backers like Facebook and the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce were displays from groups including Air China, the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office, the Asian Pacific Democratic Club and Sing Tao Daily, a Chinese-language newspaper.

“He’ll be remembered for his civility and decorum, as someone who worked to build consensus and get us all to pull together,” said Assemblyma­n David Chiu, a former San Francisco supervisor whose district included Chinatown. “And, of course, he was San Francisco’s first Chinese American mayor.”

Before dawn Friday, a black hearse carrying Lee’s body and escorted by police on motorcycle­s slowly made its way to City Hall from a Daly City funeral home. Outside, firefighte­rs unfurled a huge American flag from two ladder trucks, as city officials, police, dignitarie­s and pallbearer­s waited for Lee’s casket to arrive. On the marquee of the Civic Auditorium was a simple message: “Rest in Peace Mayor Ed Lee.”

Many of those in line were city employees, ID badges around their necks. They knew Lee as one of their own, someone who had worked for the city for years, shoulder to shoulder with them.

City employee Jody Monahan said Lee had been personally important to her, dating to when the mayor served as the city’s director of public works.

“He did some kind things for me and my work. It meant a lot to me,” Monahan said. “He’s a kind person. This was sad and shocking.”

Tracy Griffin, who has been a city and county employee for nearly 28 years, choked up with emotion as she spoke of Lee. She carried a single white flower in honor of the mayor.

“I was going to the store to buy a bouquet of flowers, but I decided on this small carnation because for him, it didn’t matter how small you were,” Griffin said. “I’m here because I lost someone really special to me and someone who was really humble and I considered him a friend.”

The last two mourners let in the door were William Bonhorst and Ghazal Sharif, self-described Millennial­s who appreciate­d Lee’s support of the tech industry.

“We had to beg to be let in,” said Sharif, an attorney. “I think Mayor Ed Lee was the epitome of what San Francisco is, the heart and the soul of it. He stood up for the poor. He stood up for immigrants. He stood up for Millennial­s. And did it all without an ego.”

Bonhorst, who works with tech startups, said Lee “embraced us” even though the industry’s rapid growth was controvers­ial. “He allowed San Francisco to thrive,” he said.

Fire Chief Joanne HayesWhite couldn’t stay away from City Hall on Friday, making three stops at the casket during the day. While fire chiefs don’t have to wait in lines, she said she found queuing with strangers “therapeuti­c.”

“The variety of people coming out to pay their respects speaks volumes about the kind of man he was and the kind of mayor he was,” HayesWhite said. “It was an honor for me to work for him, and I think all of the city’s 30,000 employees would say the same thing.”

But even amid the mourning, the city remained the quirky San Francisco that Seattle-born Lee grew to love.

On the steps of City Hall, among the flowers, pictures and other remembranc­es of the mayor that people had left was a tie-dyed neckerchie­f with a message scrawled in black ink: “Ed Lee R.I.P. (“What a long strange trip it’s been”) P.S.: Say hi to Jerry,” referring to Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia, who died in 1995.

 ?? Michael Macor / The Chronicle ??
Michael Macor / The Chronicle
 ?? Photos by Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle ?? The casket of San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee is carried into City Hall, where hundreds of mourners gathered to pay tribute after his death following a heart attack.
Photos by Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle The casket of San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee is carried into City Hall, where hundreds of mourners gathered to pay tribute after his death following a heart attack.
 ??  ?? Mourners bow three times in the City Hall rotunda to honor San Francisco’s first Chinese American mayor. The atmosphere inside City Hall was especially hushed.
Mourners bow three times in the City Hall rotunda to honor San Francisco’s first Chinese American mayor. The atmosphere inside City Hall was especially hushed.
 ??  ?? San Francisco Assessor-Recorder Carmen Chu (left, facing camera) and Supervisor Katy Tang are comforted as they mourn Lee. The public began lining up outside City Hall before sunrise to pay respects to the mayor.
San Francisco Assessor-Recorder Carmen Chu (left, facing camera) and Supervisor Katy Tang are comforted as they mourn Lee. The public began lining up outside City Hall before sunrise to pay respects to the mayor.

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