19th CENTURY FORT
BENEATH ALCATRAZ
G'day folks,
Before Capone took up
residence, the island was home to military installation that guarded San
Francisco Bay.
lcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay has a long history as a military and federal prison. But before the Rock became the Rock, the site was home to Fort Alcatraz, a military installation commissioned to protect the then-burgeoning city of San Francisco. That fort, and most signs of it, are long gone. But as Katie Dowd at SFGate.com reports, archaeologists recently located hidden structures below the concrete prison that show a glimpse of what was.
Because of its historical
importance—Alcatraz Island is part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area
and administered by the National Park Service—archaeologists couldn’t just dig
up the mostly cement prison yard to see what was under it. Instead, researchers
used non-invasive ground-penetrating radar and laser scans to locate to see if
they could find anything still lying beneath. Afterward, they compared their
results to old maps, historical documents and photographs to help them
interpret their data. All together, they believe they’ve located an ammunition
magazine, a “bombproof” earthwork traverse as well as brick and masonry
tunnels. The finds are revealed in the journal Near
Surface Geophysics.
“This really changes the
picture of things,” lead author Timothy de Smet, an archaeologist at Binghamton
University, tells Katherine J. Wu at Nova. “These remains are so well preserved,
and so close to the surface. They weren’t erased from the island—they’re right
beneath your feet.”
There’s a reason the fort
at Alcatraz didn’t last. Adam Brinklow at Curbed San Francisco reports that
construction of a brick and masonry fort on the island began in 1853, but even before it was
completed, powerful new artillery made that style of construction obsolete. In
1870, the military began a project to upgrade the island to sturdier earthwork
fortifications, but that plan was not completed. Instead, during the Civil War
and late 1800s, the military began using Alcatraz as a prison and quarantine
zone for soldiers with tropical diseases. Its reputation as a prison fort grew
from there, and in 1907, the U.S. officially designated it a military prison.
The military went about constructing the massive concrete cellblock it’s become
known for—the world’s largest reinforced concrete building at the time of its
completion in 1912—burying the remains of the old fort and earthworks beneath.
Maintaining the island prison was a costly endeavor, not to mention Alcatraz’s harsh conditions were bad PR. In 1933, the military transferred the prison to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons where for the next 30 years it served as a segregation unit for the most difficult prisoners housed in federal custody. That’s the era that made the Rock legendary in popular culture. Due to the expenses of running it, it closed its doors for good in 1963.
The new archaeological
research shines a light on the long-lost history of the island before Al
Capone, Machine Gun Kelly and the “Birdman” Robert Stroud made it infamous.
“This really reinforces what several historians and archaeologists had long
suspected,” co-author and Alcatraz historian John Martini tells Wu. “Up until
this point, we had nothing to go on except for a few visible trace remains and
maps—and a lot of suspicion.”
In the article, the
researchers suggest this type of non-invasive research can help archaeologists
investigate other sensitive places, too, so as they put it they can
“figuratively rather than literally dig up an otherwise inaccessible but
fascinating past.”
Clancy's comment: Mm ... there ya go.
I'm ...
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