Fort Baker (1): Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Coastal Forts]]
[[Category:Coastal Forts]]
[[Category:Endicott Period Forts]]
[[Category:Endicott Period Forts]]
[[Category:California Marin County]]
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[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Preserved]]
[[Category:Preserved]]
[[Category:National Park]]
[[Category:National Park]]

Revision as of 17:08, 24 March 2011

Fort Baker (1) (1867-1998) - Originally established as Lime Point Military Reservation in 1867. Renamed in G.O. 25, 29 Apr 1897 for Col. Edward D. Baker an ex Senator from California who was killed 21 Oct 1861 at the battle of Ball's Bluff, Virginia, during the U.S. Civil War. Also known as Lime Point Fort.

Fort Baker circa 1925
Commanding Officer's Quarters


Fort Baker (1) History

Part of the Harbor Defense of San Francisco.

Post U.S. Civil War

Established in 1897 to guard the entrance to San Francisco Bay. Original Gun Batteries were Point Bonita, Point Diablo, Gravelly Beach, Lime Point Ridge, Cavallo, and Point Cavallo.

Endicott Period

In 1890 plans were developed by a Board of Engineers for a series of eight Modern Endicott Period batteries on the north shore of the Golden Gate Strait, guarding the entrance to San Francisco Harbor. The Lime Point Military Reservation was renamed Fort Baker in 1897 and construction on the new batteries and the Fort infrastructure begun. Construction of permanent buildings began in 1901 with essential structures and by 1942 there were 159 buildings. Construction of the original planned eight gun batteries was complete by 1905. In 1904 the post was split into two forts, Fort Baker and Fort Barry. The dividing line between them was a North-South line originating at Point Diablo. The batteries that remained on Fort Baker are listed below.

Fort Baker (1) Endicott Period Battery (edit list)
Battery
Click on Battery links below
No. Caliber Type Mount Service Years Battery Cost Notes
Battery Ridge 4 15" Rodman 1890-1909 $ ? Smoothbore
Battery Spencer 3 12" Barbette 1893-1897-1897-1943 $ 110,353 1 Gun removed 1919
Battery Kirby 2 12" Disappearing Carriage 1899-1900-1900-1941 $ 70,334 1 Gun removed 1933
Battery Cavallo 3 8" Rodman 1872-1876-1900-1910 $ 170,504 Converted Rodman cannons
Battery Duncan 2 8" Barbette 1898-1899-1900-1917 $ 57,535
Battery Wagner (2) 2 5" Balanced Pedestal 1899-1901-1901-1917 $ 25,000
Battery Yates 6 3" Pedestal 1903-1903-1905-1943 $ 41,407
Source: CDSG
Fort Baker Plan 1916


World War I

At the beginning of American involvement in World War I the guns of Battery Duncan and Battery Wagner were removed for potential service overseas. After the war, one gun was removed from Battery Spencer and the post became inactive.

World War II

In the buildup to World War II, Fort Baker was reactivated as a mine depot. Over three hundred underwater mines guarded the Golden Gate during World War II, tended by the Army’s “navy” of mine vessels berthed at Fort Baker. Two gun batteries were build at Gravelly Beach to provide an anti-aircraft and anti-motor torpedo boat (AMTB) capability for the post and the remaining operational batteries.

After the war, Fort Baker became a sub-post of Fort Winfield Scott and later of the Presidio in 1950. During the cold war era it was used to train Army Reserve troops and as a Headquarters for Nike missile units in the bay area.

Fort Baker (1) World War II Battery (edit list)
Battery
Click on Battery links below
No. Caliber Type Mount Service Years Battery Cost Notes
Battery Kirby Beach 2 3" Pedestal 1942-1942-1943-1943 $ 956 Guns from Battery Yates
Battery AMTB - Gravelly Beach 2 90mm Pedestal 1943-1943-1943-1946 $ 4,908 Partially buried
Source: CDSG

Current Status

Fort Baker is within the boundary of Golden Gate National Recreation Area and is a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places. The National Park Service has signed a 60-year lease for conversion of Fort Baker into a bayside lodge and retreat.


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Location: North side of the Golden Gate Bridge on Lime Point, California.

Maps & Images

Lat: 37.836513 Long: -122.479019

Sources:

Links:

Visited: 19 Aug 2009

Fort Baker (1) Picture Gallery

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