Old machine-gun nests found, ready for WWII assault that never came
By CARL NOLTE
San Francisco Chronicle
19-MAY-06
SAN FRANCISCO -- The Japanese air raid on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, produced devastation in Hawaii _ and panic on the West Coast.
Anything seemed possible. The attack had come out of the Sunday-morning sky without warning. What if Pearl Harbor was only the first target? What if the Japanese navy was off California ready to strike?
What if the Japanese battleships got past the big guns that were the key coastal defenses around San Francisco and the Golden Gate? What then?
The U.S. Army had an answer. On the night of Dec. 7, the Army assigned every available soldier at the Presidio of San Francisco to get to work digging slit trenches and field fortifications to stop a Japanese invasion.
Trenches were dug on the bluffs above the Golden Gate. Machine guns were sited to cover Baker Beach on the western edge of the city. If the Japanese came, we were ready.
Nearly 65 years went by, and the world changed. The Army is gone from the Golden Gate. The Presidio is part of a national park now. The other day, National Park Service crews clearing weeds and making surveys for a hiking trail above Baker Beach found some of the old wartime trenches and machine-gun nests, still there, still ready for the invasion that never came.
More at
http://www.shns.com/shns/g_index2.cfm?action=detail&pk=OLDTRENCHES-05-19-06
By CARL NOLTE
San Francisco Chronicle
19-MAY-06
SAN FRANCISCO -- The Japanese air raid on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, produced devastation in Hawaii _ and panic on the West Coast.
Anything seemed possible. The attack had come out of the Sunday-morning sky without warning. What if Pearl Harbor was only the first target? What if the Japanese navy was off California ready to strike?
What if the Japanese battleships got past the big guns that were the key coastal defenses around San Francisco and the Golden Gate? What then?
The U.S. Army had an answer. On the night of Dec. 7, the Army assigned every available soldier at the Presidio of San Francisco to get to work digging slit trenches and field fortifications to stop a Japanese invasion.
Trenches were dug on the bluffs above the Golden Gate. Machine guns were sited to cover Baker Beach on the western edge of the city. If the Japanese came, we were ready.
Nearly 65 years went by, and the world changed. The Army is gone from the Golden Gate. The Presidio is part of a national park now. The other day, National Park Service crews clearing weeds and making surveys for a hiking trail above Baker Beach found some of the old wartime trenches and machine-gun nests, still there, still ready for the invasion that never came.
More at
http://www.shns.com/shns/g_index2.cfm?action=detail&pk=OLDTRENCHES-05-19-06