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San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park celebrates 150th birthday online

FILE - In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, file photo, Eduardo Vernier wears a mask while sitting under the Francis Scott Key monument at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, amid the coronavirus outbreak. At rear is the SkyStar Observation Wheel. Golden Gate Park turned 150 on Saturday, April 4. To mark this historic occasion, a virtual concert series is being launched that will bring some of the past outdoor concerts and performances held in the park to people everywhere to enjoy for free. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)
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FILE - In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, file photo, Eduardo Vernier wears a mask while sitting under the Francis Scott Key monument at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, amid the coronavirus outbreak. At rear is the SkyStar Observation Wheel. Golden Gate Park turned 150 on Saturday, April 4. To mark this historic occasion, a virtual concert series is being launched that will bring some of the past outdoor concerts and performances held in the park to people everywhere to enjoy for free. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

SAN FRANCISCO >> Golden Gate Park turned 150 years old on Saturday, and a huge party to celebrate San Francisco’s beloved treasure was held online.

Originally, city officials planned a yearlong celebration that included free museum admission, concerts and the participation of more than 150 cultural institutions and community groups. A giant Ferris wheel that lifts passengers 150 feet into the sky was brought in for the occasion.

But the spread of the coronavirus forced them to postpone the event.

Instead, they launched an online concert series featuring musical sets performed in the park over the years. They include an appearance by Boz Scaggs at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival in 2016 and Metallica’s headlining performance at the Outside Lands festival in 2017.

“Golden Gate Park has served as a place of inspiration, hope and refuge for San Franciscans for 150 years,” Mayor London Breed said in a statement.

“We hope these virtual experiences will bring some joy and entertainment during this challenging times.”

April 4 marks the day the park was chartered by order of California State Legislature 150 years ago. Skeptics doubted the city’s sand dunes could be converted into park land, but field engineer William Hammond Hall and master gardener John McLaren figured out a way to blanket more than 1,000 acres on the city’s west side with trees.

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