I never had visited the island in the three decades of living in the area, and perhaps the mentality of "that's only where the tourists go" played into why I never did. My spouse and I do a good job of trying to limit these types of attractions on our visits, but we've been to the area together enough to start putting these places into our rotation. On this trip back to California, we figured it was time to make our first visit to the island.
Like our trip to Mackinac Island in the middle of 2014, pictures really are the best way to tell the tale of our visit on a slightly windy otherwise sunny late-December day:
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One of the old cannon batteries on the island. The island was first designated by the U.S. Government for military use shortly after California statehood and the Gold Rush in 1850. Alcatraz, along with Fort Point and Fort Baker, formed the defense for a possible San Francisco Bay invasion. Alcatraz's guns were never fired in battle, and the facility turned into a military prison prior to takeover by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. |
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Informational displays were found throughout the facility; we found they helped supplement the already detailed audio narration to great effect. |
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Inside the prison's control/dispatch room: the space reminded me a bit of the broadcast booth of the radio station I spun records at during college, sans any turntables or record albums. |
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Looking at the cell blocks A through C from the corner of "Seedy" Street (a nickname for the main walkway between C and D cell blocks) |
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Multi-media art installations by famed Chinese activist Ai Weiwei were found throughout the island. Titled "@Large", Weiwei's artworks "explore urgent questions about human rights and freedom of expression and responds to the potent and layered history of Alcatraz as a place place of detainment and protest," as described on the National Parks Service's webpage detailing these exhibits. Activities exhibit visitors could partake in included sending postcards of support to imprisoned activists and listen to various musical works inside a prison cell. |
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This message on the island's water tower hints at Alcatraz Island's past as a center of protest for American Indian rights, climaxing with the nearly 19-month occupation of the island by rights protesters from 1969 to 1971. This spurred other actions that helped bring Indian rights more to the forefront in the public conscience and the U.S. Government, and led to the annual "Unthanksgiving Day", a morning gathering on Thanksgiving Day on the island to honor the indigenous people of America. |
Alcatraz Island National Historic Landmark
(part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area)
Open for regular visits all year except on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day
National Park Service Website Page
Ferry service/park admission available through:
Alcatraz Cruises
Pier 33, Alcatraz Landing
San Francisco, California 94111
(415) 981-ROCK (7625)
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