Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Fort Point served as a bastion of defense against enemies who never came

- BY JOHN METCALFE

Westerners brought many things when they came to the Bay Area, technology, new religion and massive greed. Among these was paranoia — a fear of others slipping in and disrupting the nice life they were making.

The focus of this paranoia was a mile-wide strip of water below what’s now the Golden Gate Bridge. If you look at a map of the San Francisco Bay, it’s like a vast front door left open to anybody who wants to cruise in and poke around. Early on, the concern was a British invasion. Then it was the Confederat­e States Navy — it existed and not just in the South — and then Japanese and German forces during World War II.

Several measures were proposed to guard this entrance. A never-realized idea from the 1860s was to string a cable all the way across the water to clotheslin­e ships, profession­al-wrestler style. There actually was a physical barrier during the 1940s — a retractabl­e metal-mesh net — to snag intruding U-boats. None was ever found in the Bay, so supposedly it worked, no doubt to the annoyance of larger marine mammals.

The most practical solution was a fort. The Spanish, realizing the narrows were key to controllin­g the region, built one called Castillo de San Joaquin in 1794. It was a funny-shaped adobe structure that could rain down fire from a perch roughly 100 feet above the water. When the Americans captured California in the mid-1800s, they wanted a fort closer to water level to bounce cannonball­s over the waves like deadly skipping stones. Hundreds of workers — many of them miners who got skunked in the Gold Rush — physically lowered the ground, excavating the building site to just above Bay level.

Thus was born Fort Point, now a U.S. National

Historic Site, an enormous expanse that invites exploratio­n outdoors — on the grounds, atop the rooftop where cannons were once mounted and in the open air parade grounds at the fort’s center — as well as inside.

The four-story building, despite being made from millions of bricks, looks rather humble in the bridge’s massive shadow. But in its time, it was a mighty presence, one that might make a Confederat­e soldier wet his trousers.

“This was the only fort of its kind built west of the Mississipp­i,” says John Martini, a retired National Park Service ranger. “There were about 40 forts built with this general design scheme, but they were along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. That the government spent money to build a cutting-edge coastal fort way out here in the wilds shows the importance of California during the Gold Rush.”

Martini knows the fort well, having worked there in the 1970s and written two historical books about it. “The idea was to build multiple-story forts, so that cannons could be stacked one upon the other to maximize firepower,” he explains.

The fort employed four types of uniquely devastatin­g cannonball­s. The first was a plain ol’ hunk of iron that flew at a thousand feet per second to smash through the oak walls of warships. Another was a metal eggshell filled with powder that could explode into shrapnel, and a third was a sack of grapeshot that tore up rigging like a giant shotgun blast. The last was also solid iron, but heated until red-hot in a furnace so it would light ships on fire.

Cannonball­s from enemies would simply ricochet off the fort’s five-foot-thick carapace. It was both a formidable defense and, to this day, an enduring example of the mason’s art.

“They didn’t have diesel-powered machinery swinging around the blocks of granite. It was all

done with portable cranes and either strong backs or wheel power. The fact they were able to build the thing as fast as they did — they started in 1853, and it was almost finished in 1861, when the Civil War began — is remarkable,” says Martini.

“I’m such a nerd,” he adds,

“that I walk around looking at the arched ceilings and notice how the bricks were hand-cut at very specific angles to form intricate arches. It was done without electrical or hydraulic machinery and was just laborious. I don’t think it’s a craftsmans­hip we see much of nowadays.”

During the Civil War, the fort was occupied by dozens of soldiers, cooks, surgeons, laundresse­s and prisoners with 12-pound balls attached to their legs. By most accounts, it was not a nice place to stay. A contempora­ry sanitary inspector wrote:

“This Fort, as is well known, consists of a mass of granite and brick, situated at the entrance of the Golden Gate, presenting a bold front to the Ocean. And while its massive walls afford safe protection to its big guns, its interior arrangemen­ts offer but a cold and cheerless habitation to the soldier.”

Dense fog enveloped the grounds for 260-plus days a year. It kept the walls damp and the floors puddled with water. Soldiers tried to stay warm by

 ?? KARL MONDON/STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Fort Point was built at the edge of the Golden Gate more than 70 years before constructi­on began on the landmark bridge that soars above it today.
KARL MONDON/STAFF ARCHIVES Fort Point was built at the edge of the Golden Gate more than 70 years before constructi­on began on the landmark bridge that soars above it today.
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