Showing posts with label Coronado Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coronado Island. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Aloha to San Diego: Cabrillo National Monument (part 2) - Old Point Loma Lighthouse, Coastal Defense, and Coronado Island


We continued up to the Old Point Loma Lighthouse. From the National Park Service (link),

The Old Point Loma Lighthouse stood watch over the entrance to San Diego Bay for 36 years. At dusk on November 15, 1855, the light keeper climbed the winding stairs and lit the light for the first time. What seemed to be a good location 422 feet above sea level, however, had a serious flaw. Fog and low clouds often obscured the light. On March 23, 1891, the light was extinguished and the keeper moved to a new lighthouse location closer to the water at the tip of the Point.



Today, the Old Point Loma Lighthouse still stands watch over San Diego, sentinel to a vanished past. The National Park Service has refurbished the interior to its historic 1880s appearance - a reminder of a bygone era. Ranger-led talks, displays, and brochures are available to explain the lighthouse’s interesting past.


The Point Loma peninsula forms a natural protective barrier at the entrance to San Diego Bay, rising 422 feet to provide strategic views of the harbor and ocean. In 1852, the government of the United States recognized the importance of this sandstone rampart and designated the area as a military reserve. In 1899, the War Department dedicated Fort Rosecrans and built a series of gun batteries over the years. 


During World War I and II, military facilities on the Point provided vital coastal and harbor defense systems. Between 1918 and 1943, the Army constructed searchlight bunkers, fire control stations, and gun batteries. The largest guns were at Battery Ashburn, adjacent to the park entrance station, where two 16-inch guns could fire 2,300 pound shells nearly 30 miles out to sea.


Point Loma offers views of the migrating whales.


We walked down to the Cabrillo Monument, passing the panorama of San Diego Bay leading to the Pacific Ocean. Mexico is in the distance. 


Coronado Island came into view ... 


...  with a passing container ship heading out to sea.  I can't imagine sailing by the container ship in a sailboat! 


Cabrillo National Monument, established in 1913, commemorates Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo's voyage of discovery. A heroic statue of Cabrillo looks out over the bay that he first sailed into on September 28, 1542. At the Visitor Center, the film "In Search of Cabrillo" and an exhibit hall present Cabrillo's life and times. Ranger-led programs about Cabrillo are usually available on weekends and on many weekdays during summer months.


We also spotted Naval Base Point Loma, home to the Submarine Base, Naval Mine and Anti-Submarine Warfare Command, Fleet Combat Training Center Pacific, Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR), and the Fleet Intelligence Command Pacific.


On our drive back back to Downtown San Diego, I spotted these signs - my brother was named Byron.

I am giving away a book choice from my convention stash to one randomly selected commenter from this week's posts. To enter the giveaway,

1. Leave a comment about lighthouses - do you have a favorite?  Of course I love the lighthouses of Hawaii!

2. Comments are open through Saturday, August 6, 10 pm in Baltimore.

3. I'll post the winner on Sunday, August 7, on SOS Aloha.

Mahalo,

Kim in Baltimore
Aloha Spirit in Charm City

Old Glory flying on the mast outside the visitors' center.


Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Aloha to San Diego - America's Finest City

F/A-18 Hornet flying over San Diego
Public Domain (link)

I recently booked my flight to San Diego for the RWA Annual Conference (link).   I arrive four days before the conference to soak up the local sights:

Gaslamp District, from its website (link),

In an effort to establish a town on San Diego’s waterfront, San Franciscan William Heath Davis begins developing land near what is now the foot of Market Street. For his own family, Davis builds a pre-framed lumber “salt box” house, one of the first residences in town. The oldest surviving structure in San Diego’s New Town was actually built on the East Coast and shipped around Cape Horn. After an economic depression causes Davis’ venture to fail, his town becomes known as Rabbitville, for its principal inhabitants.


gaslamp.org

Coronado Island, from the Visitor's Center (link), 

Modern-day Coronado began in 1885 with the purchase of a one-time Spanish rancho that spanned Coronado, North Island and the Silver Strand. A small partnership led by Elisha Babcock and Hampton Story purchased all this for a mere $110,000. Their vision was to establish “the grandest hotel on the Pacific coast” set within a master-planned community featuring wide avenues, parklands, handsome public buildings, and attractive beachside residences.

Coronado Bay Bridge
Public Domain (link)

USS Midway, from Wikipedia (link)

USS Midway (CVB/CVA/CV-41) was an aircraft carrier of the United States Navy, the lead ship of its class. Commissioned a week after the end of World War II, Midway was the largest ship in the world until 1955, as well as the first U.S. aircraft carrier too big to transit the Panama Canal. It operated for an unprecedented 47 years, during which time it saw action in the Vietnam War and served as the Persian Gulf flagship in 1991's Operation Desert Storm. Decommissioned in 1992, it is now amuseum ship at the USS Midway Museum, in San Diego.

Learn more about the USS Midway at midway.org.

Midway in 1963 after SCB-110
Public Domain (link)

Authors - if you want to join me for preconference sightseeing, please contact me at sos.aloha@yahoo.com.

Readers - can you recommend places to see or eat in San Diego?  Or do you want to visit San Diego, too?  One randomly selected commenter from this week's blog posts wins a book choice from my convention stash.  Comments are open through Saturday, February 27, 10 pm in Baltimore.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, February 28.

Mahalo,

Kim in Baltimore
Aloha Spirit in Charm City

A surfer at Black's Beach
Public Domain (link)