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![[photo] [photo]](buildings/mobilization1_GOGA_1766_a.jpg)
Across the street from the Fort Mason headquarters
of the U.S. Army's San Francisco Port of Embarkation troops were
billeted in city parks and ball fields awaiting overseas shipment.
1942 Official U.S. Signal Corps photo.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area, Park Archives and Records Center,
Presidio Army Museum Collection |
World War II touched all of California very heavily, but nowhere more
than San Francisco Bay. The war turned the Bay into a citadel, and in
turn the cities made the fortress work.
Cities played several roles in World War II. They were targets of
destruction and strategic advantage; they were distribution points for
men and material; and they were centers of production. San Francisco
Bay was prepared for the first role, but in the war, only played the
second and third. Still, the preparations were massive, swiftly arming
San Francisco. Forts Baker, Barry and Cronkhite
ringed the tip of Marin County; Fort Funston stood at the ocean base
of San Francisco, with gun emplacements in between. Fort
Point mounted guard on the Golden Gate Straits. Inside the bay,
bases abounded. Fort Mason, the principal Pacific
Port of Embarkation, rested aside Aquatic Park; Moffett
Field stood at Sunnyvale; Alameda Naval Air Station and the Army
supply depot in Oakland faced San Francisco across the Bay; Hamilton
Field stood to the north in Marin County. In the middle, Treasure
Island housed the Naval Training Station. Camp
Stoneman accommodated servicemen waiting to be sent abroad. The Bay
had nearly every kind of base, up to and including one of the chief
Pacific code-breaking stations, United States Intercept Station Number
Two, at Petaluma.
Newspapers, scrap metal, rubber,
even cooking oil and fat were collected for the war effort. They
didn't call it recycling, but that's what it was. Official U.S.
Signal Corps photo.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area, Park Archives and Records Center,
Presidio Army Museum Collection
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Some 240,000 people built and repaired ships at Sausalito, Vallejo, Richmond,
Oakland, San Francisco and South San Francisco. The converted Richmond
Ford Motor Company Assembly Plant prepared tanks
for shipment overseas to the Pacific War, and the Benicia
Arsenal manufactured the munitions for these and other weapons. Servicemen
and defense workers thronged the streets at shift change. Damaged navy
ships plied the bay toward the naval shipyard at Vallejo. Thousands came
to paint the towns, and thousands more jammed the hospitals for succor.
The war was inescapable. It came over the radio, on billboards, in newspapers,
from the military presence and in unique events like the exodus through
the Gate on April 1, 1942, of the Doolittle Raiders, in Captain Marc Mitscher's
timeless words, "bound for Tokyo."
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One week after the attack on Pearl
Harbor, men of the California State Guard stand watch at the Golden
Gate Bridge.
Photo courtesy of
San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library
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The war imposed its own rhythms on the cities and its own ethos on their
inhabitants. People worked the swing shift and then partied through the
graveyard shift until dawn. Everyone faced the novel every day: other
cultures, other workers, other work routines, other comrades at arms or
work, other lovers. Then just as surely, these were replaced again as
the workers left, the soldiers sailed and the lovers departed.
Loss was omnipresent and so was death. It came in the newspapers,
letters, radio broadcasts and Western Union telegrams. The uncertainty
meant that people lived for the moment, dancing at the Stage Door Canteen
in San Francisco or unwinding to the black man's blues at the joints
of Oakland and the white man's blues at the barn dances in Richmond.
People walked into each other's lives, bonded over work, drink, or love
and walked out again.
Yet if individual lives were fragmented, irregular and fleeting, the
war effort was not. It rolled on unrelentingly. Somehow the mass of
locals and strangers, blacks and whites, men and women, young and old,
whole and handicapped came together in an extraordinary united war effort.
The military and the managers of corporations created an impressive
production achievement that kept men and products flowing out of the
great San Francisco Bay. So did the cities. Cities had numerous superbly
important latent resources for war, not immediately obvious to the untrained
eye. World War II uprooted 15 million Americans to work in defense,
and the Federal Lanham Act failed utterly to house them. So cities had
to. San Francisco and Oakland became vast dormitories, as housewives
rented spare rooms, basements, back porches, garages and garrets. People
doubled up in apartments and single rooms; hotels took in some; converted
warehouses, others; and aunts and uncles shoehorned relatives into their
homes.
![[photo] [photo]](buildings/alc2_az%20clothing%20factory.jpg)
James Widmer may have been serving time in America's most notorious
prison, but that did not stop him from being proud of the contribution
that Alcatraz inmates made to the war effort. Click
here
for a larger version of this image.
Photo courtesy of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area. Park Archives and Records Center,
Mary M. Bowman Collection
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Somehow cities sheltered these employees. The resident women, retirees,
high school dropouts, the blind and other handicapped, and African Americans
who joined the labor force already had housing, places at school, transportation
(many walked to work) and daycare. Even criminals received early parole
for defense work, and the inmates of San Quentin and Alcatraz
pitched in while still incarcerated. In special labor emergencies women,
girls and retirees delivered the mail at Christmas or picked crops at
harvest.
Cities could also mobilize these neophytes. Many drove their cars,
but millions more than usual rode mass transit. War workers could get
to work by bus, streetcar, cable car, ferry and interurban, in addition
to cars. The infrastructure was not the least of the cities' contributions.
The new Golden Gate Bridge, Bay Bridge and older bridges held the dispersed
metropolis together and allowed it to function as a physically unified
military unit from Camp Stoneman to Moffett Field. The military greatly
benefited from huge, well developed urban harbors. The State of California
had invested $86 million in the San Francisco
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![[photo] [photo]](buildings/mobiliation3_GOGA_1766_b.jpg)
An overseas shipment of troops crowds San Francisco's Embarcadero,
1942
Photo courtesy of
Presidio Army Museum Collection. Golden Gate National Recreation
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port alone, and the Embarcadero there contained
1,912 acres of facilities. Bay Area harbors were partly laid out on artificial
land created as early as the Gold Rush. Airfields supplemented these and
often served military functions as did Oakland Airport, where planes were
stored and prepared for dispatch overseas. City police helped train military
ones, staffed the civil defense organizations and convoyed army trucks
through the streets. Throughout America, urban and town water departments
supplied military bases, and the San Francisco and East Bay Municipal
Utilities District did the same in the Bay Area.
![[photo] [photo]](buildings/mobiliation5_AAA-8489%5B1%5D.jpg)
Soldiers of the 78th Coast Artillery pitching camp in Golden Gate
Park only two months before the United States enters World War
II.
Photo courtesy of San
Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library
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Camp Stoneman in the North Bay was literally an instant city of 10,000,
which badly needed water. So did many industrial processes. These urban
services had taken years to develop and the military would have been badly
hampered if they had been forced to develop them in 1941. Because of the
fall of the water from higher elevations, the urban water projects often
came with a hydroelectric power component. City boosters prized this asset
to keep power and therefore production costs low, and the military and
defense plants inherited this cheap power too.
Open space in the parks and playgrounds served as a tenting space
for the housing-strapped military before barracks could be built. Schools
and colleges trained people in everything from welding to exotic languages.
Even San Quentin became an educational institution, training parolees
as welders or as chefs for the merchant marine. Cities are world-class
junk piles and this scrap, like high-grade steel from abandoned trolley
tracks, came in handy too.
Today, Californians take city advantages for granted, so it is instructive
to think of the opposite case. During World War II the government had
to site many installations in the rural South and West, where it had
to build many of the services that urban areas already contained. The
military tried to locate these institutions close to some kind of town,
even a small one. In short, Bay Area cities supplied many of the most
pressing military needs. In martial terms, they were a force multiplier.
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Students at San Francisco's Everett
Junior High School make aircraft models to be used for pilot training.
Photo courtesy of
San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library |
But San Francisco Bay was more than just an arsenal and a production cornucopia.
It was also the most important Pacific Theater symbol of freedom, home
and America. For 1,650,000 men, it was the last part of the States that
they glimpsed before they saw combat, and it was the first thing that
they saw when they returned. It was also the voice of freedom until they
returned, as was the British Broadcasting Company in Europe. Even American
prisoners of war, at considerable risk to themselves, cobbled together
clandestine radios in their lethal prison camps to tune in to a twice-weekly
newscast from Treasure Island. The risk of a severe
physical beating was less important than hearing the voice of San Francisco
and home.
Essay by Roger Lotchin, Professor of History, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
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