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![[photo] [photo]](buildings/seacoast1_Btry%20Davis%201.jpg)
The biggest guns in the Harbor Defenses of San Francisco could fire
shells weighing more than a ton 26 miles out to sea.
Photo courtesy of San
Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library |
A historian once described San Francisco during World War II as "a giant
cannon aimed at the Pacific," likening the millions of tons of cargo and
munitions coming out of the port to projectiles sent against the Japanese
military forces. To protect the all-important entrance to the harbor,
the Golden Gate and its famous bridge, the U.S. Army and Navy arrayed
a vast network of coastal fortifications, underwater minefields, antiaircraft
guns, radars, searchlights, observation posts and patrol aircraft. Today,
the still-impressive remains of that network can be seen at many locations
in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.
Beginning during the California Gold Rush in the 1850s, the U.S. Army
had been continually constructing, expanding and modernizing harbor
defenses surrounding the Golden Gate and intended to keep an enemy from
capturing the port with its strategic military and industrial sites.
In the early years, French and British fleets were most feared by American
planners, and large masonry forts armed with scores of smoothbore cannon
were constructed at Fort Point in the Presidio
of San Francisco and on Alcatraz Island in
the middle of the bay. During the Civil War and the years immediately
following, additional masonry and earthwork fortifications were constructed
along both shores of the Golden Gate straits. Well-preserved examples
of these semipermanent fortifications can still be seen at Battery East
in the Presidio and at Battery Cavallo at Fort Baker.
North of the Golden Gate, hidden
in the hills of the Marin Headlands, and south, in the dunes of
Fort Funston, guns originally designed for battle cruisers protected
the most important military harbor on the West Coast
Photo courtesy of National
Archives and Records Administration
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In the 1890s the army began a major modernization of the Nation's coastal
fortifications and, because of its strategic importance, San Francisco
Bay was given number two priority behind New York Harbor. (Actually, defense
appropriations for San Francisco defense projects frequently exceeded
those of New York.) This rearmament project resulted in the wholesale
scrapping of smoothbore artillery and the introduction of modern breech
loading artillery protected in concrete gun emplacements. Construction
of these fixed defenses had a dual role: first, the improved fortifications
made the Nation's ports much more secure and ready to deal with the threat
from modern armored warships; secondly, the strong shore defenses freed
up the U.S. naval forces from their reluctant role as "floating coastal
forts." This strategic change allowed our navy to sail the globe
freely and extend our military presence--and U.S. influence--to foreign
countries. By 1910, nearly 120 coast artillery guns were mounted in the
Harbor Defenses of San Francisco. Ranging in size from three-inch rapid-fire
weapons to 12-inch long-range guns, these fortifications were designed
to meet the threat of any size vessel from a small patrol boat to a heavily
armored battleship. These new weapons and fortifications would form the
backbone of San Francisco's coastal defenses until after the end of World
War II.
As Europe headed deeper towards war in the 1930s, isolationist America
reluctantly began to upgrade its coastal fortifications once again.
In San Francisco, this program lead to the construction of two batteries
mounting the largest guns then in American arsenals: 16-inch caliber
rifled guns mounted on high elevation carriages, capable of firing 2,100-pound
projectiles nearly 26 miles. To protect the weapons against the growing
threat of aerial bombardment, each battery of two guns was constructed
as a subterranean fortification with the guns aiming out from the sides
of heavily camouflaged, manmade hills. Up to 20 feet of overhead concrete
and earth cover provided protection for the guns themselves along with
a labyrinth of connecting corridors, ammunition magazines, power plants,
crew spaces, and assorted storage rooms. To protect the new batteries,
antiaircraft guns were concentarted nearby to ward off attacking enemy
aircraft.
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![[photo] [photo]](buildings/seacoast3_Btry%20Davis%205.jpg)
In the wake of the war, the huge guns were scrapped, each one providing
as much as 300,000 pounds of high quality steel to help fuel the
postwar economic boom. The ascendancy of air power made traditional
coast defense artillery obsolete.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area, Interpretive Negative Collection
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Completed in 1940, Battery Davis at Fort Funston and Battery Townsley
at Fort Cronkhite were the prototypes for all subsequent
fortification designs adopted by the U.S. Army. On the eve of World War
II, these two batteries formed the state-of-the-art defenses not only
of San Francisco but also of the entire United States.
On December 7, 1941, the Harbor Defenses of San Francisco Bay comprised
a mixture of modern batteries as typified by Batteries Davis and Townsley;
aging--but still potent--coast artillery emplacements constructed at
the turn-of-the-century; mobile tractor drawn field artillery and antiaircraft
guns; and the underwater minefields that still protected the shipping
channels. Manning these defenses were an assemblage of "old army" regulars
from the Sixth Coast Artillery Regiment, newly-formed units such as
the 18th, 54th and 56th Coast Artillery Regiments, and National Guard
Regiments from as far away as Minnesota and Texas. When news reached
San Francisco of the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor, all off-duty personnel were recalled to their units and
the harbor defenses put on full alert. Soldiers moved out of their barracks
and into the batteries, and began filling sandbags, stringing barbed
wire and constructing beach defenses at a fevered pace. Up and down
the coast, observers in tiny concrete observation posts scanned the
horizon for the approach of a Japanese fleet that would never come.
Under camouflage netting, to hide
the emplacement from aerial observation, gunners drill on one
of the six-inch guns of Battery Chamberlin
at Baker Beach in San Francisco--only yards away from the swank
homes of the Sea Cliff district.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area. PAM Prints Collection.
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As the days and weeks progressed, the initial fear of imminent invasion
settled into a long-term commitment to defend the harbor by every means
possible. Mobile antiaircraft guns, searchlights and radars were positioned
on virtually every hill and knoll overlooking the Golden Gate. The U.S.
Navy stretched an antisubmarine net across the inner harbor extending
from the Marina in San Francisco to Sausalito in Marin, and stationed
a navy tugboat to open and close the net to allow friendly shipping to
pass. Soldiers assigned to the fortifications and observation stations
constructed extensive earthwork trenches on the hillsides near their batteries,
and in some cases tunneled into hillsides to construct unauthorized but
comfortable underground quarters. Everywhere, camouflage paint was daubed
on concrete batteries and wood barracks, and acres of camouflage nets
were stretched over fortifications to obscure their presence from high
flying enemy planes. Overhead, navy blimps armed with depth charges patrolled
offshore waters searching for Japanese submarines but only attacked the
occasional unfortunate whale.
The command center for all these activities was an underground facility
covertly constructed at Fort Winfield Scott in the Presidio
of San Francisco and dubbed the Harbor Defense Command Post/Harbor
Entrance Command Post (HDCP/HECP). The HDCP/HECP was little discussed
but its role was crucial, for here inside the bomb proof command center
army and navy senior staff coordinated their resources both to defend
the bay against enemy sea or air attack (the army's role) and also to
track and coordinate all shipping traffic in and out of the Golden Gate
(the navy's responsibility).
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Artillerymen of the 54th Coast Artillery Regiment (Colored), as
it was officially designated at the time, fire a 155GPF mobile gun
from a beach in the Marin Headlands. This African American outfit
was quartered at the barracks overlooking Rodeo Beach at Fort
Cronkhite before being shipped to, of all places, Peru to protect
against a perceived Japanese threat there.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area. PAM Prints Collection. |
No enemy has ever attacked San Francisco, and by 1944 it was obvious to
the army-navy commanders that invasion was a far distant likelihood. The
soldiers of the harbor defenses were needed on battlefronts elsewhere,
and starting that year the HDSF began to phase out its operations. With
the signing of the peace treaty with Japan in 1945 the army reevaluated
its need for fixed defenses, especially in light of a new age of long-range
bombers and nuclear weapons. The phase out was speeded up, and by 1948
the last of the army's San Francisco coastal artillery fortifications
had been scrapped.
Today, the remains of "Fortress San Francisco" can still be found throughout
the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. In the Presidio of San Francisco,
Battery Lowell A. Chamberlin at Baker Beach displays
a rare six-inch rifle on a 1903 disappearing carriage, and an adjacent
display gallery tells the story of the bay's harbor defenses. Fort
Point, a veteran of the Civil War, was pressed into use during World
War II for a battery of three-inch guns, and its museum also tells the
story of the harbor defenses of San Francisco. At Forts Funston and
Cronkhite, the empty casemates of Batteries Davis
and Townsley can still be explored although their unlit interiors are
closed for safety reasons. Below Battery Townsley at Rodeo Beach in
Fort Cronkhite, visitors can see the preserved 1940s "mobilization barracks"
complex where the coast artillery soldiers lived.
Numerous concrete and steel "pillboxes"
still crown many sites with the best views along the coastline
of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Officially known
as base-end stations, the soldiers were there to spot the positions
of ships offshore and communicate with plotting rooms that supplied
firing data to the big guns.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area. PAM Prints Collection.
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Across from Fort Cronkhite is Fort Barry, site of
several 1900-era gun batteries that were armed during World War II. Many
of these batteries still display remnants of their green-and-ochre camouflage
schemes applied shortly after Pearl Harbor. Also at Fort Barry is Battery
Elmer J. Wallace, a 12-inch battery that was extensively rebuilt with
overhead cover during World War II and now appears much like a scaled-down
version of Batteries Davis and Townsley.
Throughout Golden Gate National Recreation Area are dozens of observation
posts used by coast artillery troops. Officially known as "base end
stations," these tiny structures housed a crew of observers whose job
was to search the horizon for the approach of enemy ships and, in the
event of attack, direct the gunfire of the big guns through telephone
communication. These stations stretch along the San Francisco coastline
from Point Reyes in the north to Half Moon Bay in the south. Some of
the best examples can be found at Fort Cronkhite above Battery Townsley;
at Fort Barry near Battery Mendell; and at Fort Funston near Battery
Davis.
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![[photo] [photo]](buildings/seacoast7_plotting.jpg)
The plotting room in each gun battery was where data from the spotters
at base-end stations was received by telephone. Rapid trigonometric
calculations resulted in range and bearing date being transmitted
to the big guns--and in accurate fire, if all went well.
Photo courtesy of San
Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library |
Perhaps the most visible remnant of the army's defensive system is the
land itself, for in their efforts to construct ever more far-flung fortifications
the U.S. Army purchased large tracts of land overlooking the Golden Gate
and its approaches. Kept out of private hands, these lands eventually
formed an unintentional but invaluable "green belt" around the entrance
to San Francisco Bay. In 1972, Congress created the Golden
Gate National Recreation Area and included these lands within its
boundaries. Today, the former World War II harbor defense posts of Forts
Funston, Miley, Winfield Scott, Baker,
Barry and Cronkhite provide some of the most spectacular and unspoiled
open space surrounding any American city. Combined with the even earlier
military posts of Alcatraz Island, Angel
Island, Fort Mason and the Presidio
of San Francisco, the U.S. Army handed down to today's generation
a gift of urban parkland truly unrivaled anywhere.
Essay by John A. Martini.
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