Angel Island!

Angel Island
Landmark #529 Marin County Visited: November 17, 2013 Plaque?  YES! 🙂
What is it? A beautiful island where the first Spanish explorers entered San Francisco Bay, where troops deployed to fight multiple wars, and where newcomers to the United States were quarantined!
What makes it historical? THE GUIDE SAYS: In 1775, the packet San Carlos, first known Spanish ship to enter San Francisco Bay, anchored in this cove. While here, the commander, Lieut. Juan Manuel de Ayala, directed the first survey of the bay. This island, which Ayala named Isla de los Angeles, has been a Mexican rancho, a U.S. military post, a bay defense site, and a quarantine and immigration station.

OTHER TIDBITS: Ayala named the island La Isla de Los Angeles in the Spanish custom, because he landed on it three days after the Feast of Nuestra Señora de los Angeles! The island very quickly became a military outpost, first for the Spanish, then the Mexicans, then the Americans in 1863 to keep California from the Confederacy! Until the 1950s, Angel Island was predominantly a place for processing. Military troops would stop here first before launching into campaigns against the Native Americans, or later the Axis Powers, then return here once their campaigns ended. In many ways, Angel Island served as the gateway to the US, which, I guess, makes its name even more fitting!

Anyone entering the US via Pacific had to pass through Angel Island starting in 1892 for document inspection and quarantine as necessary. While this was a fine idea in the beginning, it discriminated heavily against people from China, thanks to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882! Many immigrants were able to get by with little more than a cursory document check, but Chinese immigrants often had to stay in quarantine for months, sometimes even over a year! There is now a memorial to these newcomers who received the rudest welcome ever, though the only thing that can repay those who experienced this nightmare is to never let such a thing happen again!

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

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

  • Pay the entrance fee to help maintain trails, signs, structures, and other visitor services!
  • Volunteer with the Angel Island Conservancy!
  • Donate to the Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation!
  • Be a responsible visitor! Please respect the signs and pathways, and treat all structures and artifacts with respect. They’ve endured a lot to survive into the present. They’ll need our help to make it into the future!
Where is this place? LISTED DIRECTIONS:
Hospital Cove
Angel Island State Park
Tiburon, CA 94920

ANNOTATIONS:
There are a bunch of different boats that go to the island, but the quickest, in my experience, is the Tiburon Ferry, located at:

21 Main St
Belvedere Tiburon, CA 94920

When you get off the boat and walk south past the café toward the visitor center, you’ll see the plaque right by the picnic tables!

From Los Angeles: ~398mi (641km) — 6.7hrs
From Sacramento: ~93mi (150km) — 1.6hrs
From San Diego: ~518mi (834km) — 8.7hrs
From San Francisco: ~17mi (28km) — 0.3hrs

When should I go? Check the ferry schedule for departure times!

Angel Island

Angel Island

Angel Island

Angel Island

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