|
In order to defend the Spanish
colony against hostile vessels, Spain began construction of a fortification
to protect the Bay of San Francisco, at its narrow entrance in 1793.
Located on La Punta de Cantil Blanco, or the point where
white bluffs overlook
the two-mile wide Golden Gate Strait, a brick-covered adobe
with 15 embrasures
was completed in December of 1794 and named the Castillo de San
Joaquin. Later that year, reacting to the fear of a British
incursion into Spanish territory, the Spanish royal frigate Aranzazu
delivered six bronze guns to the Castillo. Far from being
a bastion of Spanish control over the region, the Castillo
was only intermittently manned, usually by soldiers from the nearby
Presidio. A lack
of adequate upkeep at the Presidio soon became a problem. In spite
of reconstruction attempts, the Castillo's adobe structures
quickly deteriorated from rain, shifting sand substrate, and lack
of adequate upkeep.1
When the U.S. military began building Fort
Point, the cliffs on which the Castillo de San Joaquin
stood were leveled. As a result, nothing remains of the Spanish
outpost today; however, a few relics survived the destruction of
the Castillo, including a collection
of several cannons used to defend it. These cannon were cast
in Peru more than a century earlier. They are among the oldest cannon
in the United States and are currently on display at the Presidio
of San Francisco.
1. Langelier, John and Rosen, Daniel. Presidio
of San Francisco: Golden Gate. California: United States Dept.
of the Interior, 1992.
|