Fort Winfield Scott (2): Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1853-2000) - Originally a [[Third System]] brick Fort named [[Fort Point(3)|Fort Point]], established under the supervision of 1st Lt. [[William H.C. Whiting]], [[U.S. Corps of Engineers]], and under construction 1853 to 1861. Renamed [[Fort Winfield Scott]] after Maj. Gen. [[Winfield Scott]] 25 Nov 1882. Old Fort Point is a part of the larger Fort Winfield Scott. The old fort was declared obsolete in 1905 and abandoned for military purposes in 1914 but the larger Fort Winfield Scott maintained an active military role until 2000. Also known as [[Fort Scott (1)]], [[Fort Blanco]], [[Castillo de San Joaquin]] and [[Old Fort Scott]].
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1853-2000) - Originally a [[Third System]] brick Fort named [[Fort Point(3)|Fort Point]], established under the supervision of 1st Lt. [[William H.C. Whiting]], [[U.S. Corps of Engineers]], and under construction 1853 to 1861. Renamed [[Fort Winfield Scott]] after Maj. Gen. [[Winfield Scott]], 25 Nov 1882. Old Fort Point is a part of the larger Fort Winfield Scott. The old fort was declared obsolete in 1905 and abandoned for military purposes in 1914 but the larger Fort Winfield Scott maintained an active military role until 2000. Also known as [[Fort Scott (1)]], [[Fort Blanco]], [[Castillo de San Joaquin]] and [[Old Fort Scott]].
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[[Image:FortPoint_CivilWar.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Fort Point as it appeared around the end of the U.S. Civil War]]
[[Image:FortPoint_CivilWar.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Fort Point as it appeared around the end of the U.S. Civil War]]

Revision as of 16:57, 24 March 2011

Fort Winfield Scott (2) (1853-2000) - Originally a Third System brick Fort named Fort Point, established under the supervision of 1st Lt. William H.C. Whiting, U.S. Corps of Engineers, and under construction 1853 to 1861. Renamed Fort Winfield Scott after Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott, 25 Nov 1882. Old Fort Point is a part of the larger Fort Winfield Scott. The old fort was declared obsolete in 1905 and abandoned for military purposes in 1914 but the larger Fort Winfield Scott maintained an active military role until 2000. Also known as Fort Scott (1), Fort Blanco, Castillo de San Joaquin and Old Fort Scott.

Fort Point as it appeared around the end of the U.S. Civil War
Fort Winfield Scott During Golden Gate Bridge Construction


Fort Winfield Scott (2) History

Part of the Harbor Defense of San Francisco.

Fort Point was originally built to prevent entrance of a hostile fleet into San Francisco Bay.

U.S. Civil War

Fort Point was designed to mount 126 massive cannon. Rushed to completion at the beginning of the U.S. Civil War, Fort Point was first garrisoned in February of 1861 by Company I, 3rd U.S. Artillery. The fort was occupied throughout the U.S. Civil War, but the advent of faster, more powerful rifled cannon made brick forts such as Fort Point obsolete. In 1886 the troops were withdrawn.

In 1882 the fort was renamed Fort Winfield Scott and over a series of reconfigurations Fort Winfield Scott came to encompass most of the military reservation at the northern tip of San Francisco.

Endicott Period

The recommendations of the Endicott Board resulted in a massive construction program on Fort Winfield Scott that built some eighteen concrete coastal gun batteries over a period of thirty years. The boundaries of the fort expanded to encompass all of the new gun batteries but additional batteries to the south resulted in the creation of two new forts, Fort Miley and Fort Funston. The northern side of the Golden Gate has a similar expansion during this period at Fort Baker and with the creation of Fort Barry and Fort Cronkhite.

Fort Winfield Scott Endicott Period Battery (edit list)
Battery
Click on Battery links below
No. Caliber Type Mount Service Years Battery Cost Notes
Battery Dynamite (3) 3 15" Barbette 1894-1900-1900-1904 $ 127,137
Battery Lancaster 2
1
12" Disappearing 1898-1900-1900-1918
1896-1898-1899-1918
$ 107,409 Part buried for bridge
Battery Godfrey 3 12" Barbette 1892-1896-1896-1942 $ 299,862
Battery Saffold 2 12" Barbette 1897-1897-1898-1942 $ 107,409
Battery Howe (1) 16 12" Mortar 1893-1895-1900-1920 $ 144,247 1 mortar pit remains
Pits C & D redesignated
Battery Wagner (1) 1906
Battery Wagner (1) 8 12" Mortar 1893-1895-1900-1920 Included
in above
Formed from pits C & D
of Battery Howe (1) 1906
Battery Stotsenburg 16 12" Mortar 1897-1898-1900-1942 $ 130,188 Pits C & D redesignated
Battery McKinnon 1906
Battery McKinnon 8 12" Mortar 1897-1898-1900-1942 Included
in above
Formed from pits C & D
of Battery Stotsenburg 1906
4 mortars to
Battery Howe (2) 1918
Battery Cranston 2 10" Disappearing 1897-1898-1898-1942 $ 55,432 Buildings built into it
Battery Miller 3 10" Disappearing 1891-1898-1898-1918 Included in
Battery Godfrey
Established from
Battery Cranston 1907
Battery East 2 8" Barbette 1897-1915 $ ? Converted Rodman
Battery Slaughter 3 8" Disappearing 1899-1900-1900-1917 $ 71,063 Part buried
Battery Crosby 2 6" Disappearing 1899-1900-1900-1943 $ 59,039
Battery Chamberlin 4
2
6"
6"
Disappearing
Pedestal
1903-1904-1904-1917
1920-1949
$ 100,803 1 restored
Battery Boutelle 3 5" Balanced Pillar 1898-1901-1901-1917 $ 27,030
Battery Sherwood 2 5" Pedestal 1900-1900-1900-1918 $ 20,355 Guns & carriages to
Battery Bruff 1918
Battery Blaney 4 3" Masking Parapet 1901-1903-1907-1920 $ 20,355 Part buried
Battery Baldwin 2 3" Masking Parapet 1901-1903-1903-1920 $ 11,120
Source: CDSG
Fort Winfield Scott Plan


World War I

Post World War I

Between 1933 and 1937 the fort was used as a base of operations for the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge.

World War II

During World War II, Old Fort Point was occupied by about 100 soldiers who manned searchlights and rapid-fire 3" guns mounted atop the fort as part of the protection of a submarine net strung across the entrance to the Bay.

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

Fort Point is the only third system brick fort on the west coast of the United States.

Current Status

Part of the Golden Gate Recreation Area (GGNRA) administered by the National Park Service. A National Historic Site since 16 Oct 1970.


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Location: Under the south end of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California.

Maps & Images

Lat: 37.8108 Long: -122.4769

Sources:

Links:

Visited: No

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