National Register #73000255
Fort Cronkhite
Marin County Headlands
Year 1938
Fort Baker, Fort Barry and Fort Cronkhite
are collectively listed as National Register #73000255. All three forts are included in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area and are accessible to the public.
Fort Cronkhite, named on 17 December 1938 and commissioned to support Battery Townsley, is the newest of the three.
To obtain the land for Battery Townsley, the federal government condemned eight hundred acres of dairy farm north of Rodeo Lagoon. The battery was built on the rim of Wolf Ridge
to house two sixteen-inch guns with a range or twenty-six miles. Fort Funston, south of the Golden Gate, supported two identical guns. At the time, sixteen-inch guns were
the largest in the Unites States arsenal.
On 1 July 1940, Battery Townsley fired its inaugural round, the first time a shell that large had been fired from the Pacific Coast of the United States.
The Fort Cronkhite cantonment beside Rodeo Lagoon is composed of typical World War II woodframe army structures, built quickly and intended to be
temporary. The buildings were completed in the early summer of 1941 when Battery E of the 6th Coast Artillery was garrisoned here. Before the end of the year, the
Japanese Imperial Air Force had bombed Pearl Harbor. Battery Townsley was on twenty-four hour alert. San Franciscans could easily imagine a Yamato-class battleship
with 18-inch guns materializing in the Pacific fog.
|