Senator Diane Feinstein lies in state in San Francisco City Hall

London Breed, mayor of San Francisco, pays respects at the casket of late senator Dianne Feinstein at San Francisco City Hall. (Carlos Avila Gonzalez/Bloomberg News)

It was in San Francisco City Hall, the imposing granite-and-marble seat of government at the center of downtown, that Dianne Feinstein first vaulted into the national spotlight decades ago.

And it was there that body of the longtime U.S. senator and local politician, who died Sept. 28 at age 90, lay in state on Tuesday as mourners from around the country paid their final respects.

A hearse escorted by police motorcycles and squad cars wound through the city after dawn, arriving at the entrance on Polk Street just after 8 a.m. Pallbearers carried Feinstein’s casket, draped in an American flag, up the steps and into the shadowy rotunda as family members looked on, flanked by Mayor London Breed and dozens of police and firefighters.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Feinstein’s friend and colleague, was among the first allowed in. She was joined by her husband, members of Feinstein’s family, and Pelosi’s own daughter, Nancy Corinne Prowda, who helped care for Feinstein in the senator’s final days.

With Feinstein’s daughter, Katherine, at her side, Pelosi made the sign of the cross, then leaned down and placed her arm over the casket.

Soon after, the doors opened to the public. A long line of people filed through the rotunda, some pausing to lay cards and bouquets of flowers.

Feinstein was the oldest sitting senator when she died and was one of the oldest ever to serve in Congress. She broke gender barriers as a female politician, becoming the first woman elected to the Senate from California and the first woman to lead the powerful Intelligence and Judiciary Committees. She made a name as a centrist stalwart, rankling conservatives for her support for same-sex marriage rights and gun control, while drawing criticism from the left for her hawkish stances on national security and law enforcement.

Many senators who have died in office after long and storied careers have lay in state at the U.S. Capitol — that was most recently the case for the late senator John McCain, of Arizona, who died in 2018.

Feinstein instead was returned to the place where her political ascent began.

She was president of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors in 1978, her aspirations for higher office fading, when a former supervisor fatally shot Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, one of the country’s first openly gay public officials. Feinstein rushed toward the gunfire. Milk died at her side.

She announced the deaths that night from outside city hall, calling on San Franciscans to “rebuild from the spiritual damage” caused by the killings in a speech that drew national attention. Soon after, she was appointed to succeed Moscone, becoming the first female mayor in the city’s history.

She remained in office for nine years. After losing a bid for governor in 1990, she was elected to the Senate in 1992, in what would become known as Year of the Woman for the dozens of new female lawmakers voters sent to Congress.

A military jet carried Feinstein’s body to San Francisco International Airport on Saturday, where a color guard accompanied by rows of police officers and squadrons of firetrucks were assembled.

Pelosi stood on the tarmac, watching as Feinstein’s casket was loaded into a hearse. A ray of light broke through the gray clouds, and Pelosi wiped away tears.

Memorials to Feinstein sprung up across the city. At her home in the upscale Pacific Heights neighborhood, residents laid flowers at her doorstep and paused to take photographs there. Her family’s brick mansion sits across from a poignant public art instillation: a golden heart that faces the San Francisco Bay, a nod to Tony Bennett’s famous ode to the city.

“She offered our city,” Pelosi said in a statement after Feinstein’s death, “a beacon of strength and hope.”

Reis Thebault contributed to this report.

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