Difference between revisions of "Fort Barry"

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Latest revision as of 16:35, 4 March 2016

Fort Barry, constructed in 1908 in the Marin Headlands, is one of the park’s best examples of an “Endicott Period” army post. The Endicott Period, named for Secretary of War William C. Endicott, refers to the era when the War Department expressed growing concerns about the dilapidated condition of the country’s seacoast fortifications. As a response, the army made sweeping recommendations in the 1890s to modernize and re-arm all the U.S. seacoast forts. In 1902, the army constructed new seacoast fortifications at Fort Baker, just inside the Golden Gate strait. By 1908, the army recognized the need for additional defenses, outside the Golden Gate strait, and constructed Fort Barry and its batteries for this purpose.[1]


FD-1 Ft Barry antenna 003 8753026418 l.jpg


FD-1 Ft Barry 001 8753026314 l.jpg


FD-1 Ft Barry lead-ins 004 8751904085 l.jpg


References

  1. National Park Service, "Fort Barry", National Park Service Website, Obtained 25 March, 2015