Richmond Shipyards District!

Richmond Shipyards District
Landmark #1032 Contra Costa County Visited: Sept. 14, 2013 Plaque?  YES! 🙂
What is it? A plaque on a concrete pillar at the entrance to Point Potrero!
What makes it historical? THE GUIDE SAYS: The Richmond Shipyards District was once a mammoth facility covering 880 acres in this North Bay community. The yards were constructed for and by the Henry J. Kaiser Company during 1941 and 1942. The San Francisco Bay area became a tremendously important shipbuilding center of the nation during World War II. In 1944 the yards at Richmond were the largest in the world. New methods of ship construction used there, including prefabrication and intense labor specialization, allowed the production of new vessels at a record pace.

The techniques used at Richmond became a model for ship yards throughout the nation. During the period 1941-1945 the yards built a total of 747 ships, including 519 Liberty Ships (almost a quarter of the total U.S. production). The social and cultural landscapes of the Bay Area were reshaped by the influx of new workers drawn by good wages for unskilled labor. Between 1941 and 1943 the yards hired 90,000 new workers, many of them women, African-Americans from the rural South, and members of other minority groups.

OTHER TIDBITS: This landmark is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places!

How can I Help the Helpers? HERE’S HOW:

Where is this place? LISTED DIRECTIONS:
1040 Canal Boulevard
Richmond, CA 94804

ANNOTATIONS:
Go further down Canal Boulevard to the Point Potrero sign, where you’ll see the plaque installed on the right concrete pillar!

From Los Angeles: ~383mi (617km) — 6.4hrs
From Sacramento: ~77mi (124km) — 1.3hrs
From San Diego: ~503mi (810km) — 8.4hrs
From San Francisco: ~19mi (31km) — 0.4hrs

When should I go? Whenever the mood strikes you!

Richmond Shipyards District

Richmond Shipyards District

Richmond Shipyards District

Richmond Shipyards District

Richmond Shipyards District

Click here to see more California historical landmarks!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.