Vallejo
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James E. Kern
Author James E. Kern, executive director of the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum, has selected the finest examples from his museum's superb photographic archives and has called in photographic reinforcements from the Vallejo Times-Herald and the U.S. Navy to make this visual narrative remarkably comprehensive and entertaining.
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Vallejo - James E. Kern
everything.
INTRODUCTION
Vallejo has always been a crossroads community,
a city of transitions. The earliest inhabitants of the region traveled through the area where the city of Vallejo is now located, but for the most part they did not stay. The Suscol Native American tribe to the north, the Suisun tribe to the east, and the Karkins, who lived along the straits that later would bear their name, all came to this area to gather tules to build their homes, hunt in the grass-covered hills, and fish in the abundance of the bay. But usually they returned to larger nearby villages and did not settle here permanently.
Europeans first came in the 1770s, but they too were just passing through. Members of an expedition led by Lieutenant Pedro Fages first saw the straits, the lush green hillsides, and the long, low island at the mouth of the Napa River in March 1772. Three years later, Jose Canizares, a member of the de Anza Expedition, drew the first map of the area and called the island Isla Plana—the flat island. But these were explorers, not settlers, and they continued on their way.
In 1833 a young Californio named Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo passed through the area on his way to Sonoma, where he would take up the post of commandante of Mexico’s northern frontier. General Vallejo obtained several large Mexican land grants and one of them, the Rancho Suscol, included the land where the cities of Vallejo and Benicia would later be built. Vallejo raised cattle for hides and tallow, and maintained a small garrison of troops at the Sonoma Barracks. Transportation was usually on foot, by horse or by boat. A popular story holds that Vallejo was transporting horses on a boat across the Carquinez Straits one day when the vessel capsized and the horses were swept into the water. Vallejo’s favorite horse, a white mare, swam ashore on the Isla Plana and, after she was rescued, the island gained a new name: Isla de la Yegua, or Island of the Mare.
As Vallejo advanced his career and increased his power in northern California, he became more and more convinced that Californians would best be served if they annexed themselves to the United States. Mexico was losing its tenuous grip on the northern frontier, and General Vallejo realized that the westward-expanding American empire would eventually reach California, and that Californians had better be ready for its arrival.
But events moved more rapidly than even Vallejo could anticipate. The Bear Flag Revolt in 1846 and the discovery of gold in 1848 changed California dramatically, although the ever-reliant General Vallejo stayed ahead of the game. When California was admitted to the Union in 1850, Vallejo offered 156 acres of his land to the State of California to build a new state capital. General Vallejo proposed that the city be named Eureka, but a grateful state legislature named the new city Vallejo in his honor. In 1852 the state capital moved from San Jose to Vallejo. Now the seat of state government, the town of Vallejo welcomed the state legislature with open arms, but the government officials also would just be passing through. Primitive conditions in the newly-built city forced the legislature to move, first to Benicia and then to Sacramento. Another transition.
In 1854 the U. S. Navy arrived. The navy acquired Mare Island and there they established the first U. S. Naval Base on the Pacific coast. As Mare Island grew, the city of Vallejo grew along with it. But as a maritime port, Vallejo would continue in its role as a crossroads community.
Sailors and their ships came and went. The civilian workforce at Mare Island grew and declined and grew again, reflecting the many vacillations in America’s military and political life.
Along with its identity as a navy town, Vallejo also became a center of trade and transportation. The railroad arrived in the 1860s and connected Vallejo with other communities in northern California and, ultimately, with the rest of the United States. Ships of all kind came and went, from scow-schooners transporting goods across the bay, to ferries carrying people between cities, to naval and commercial vessels from the four corners of the world. Within this maritime city, businesses connected to sea-going trade thrived. Lumber was shipped through the Carquinez Straits to build the cities of the growing state of California. Grain was shipped from the fruitful Central Valley where it was milled into flour at Vallejo and then continued on its journey to the cities of Europe, Asia and South America. These many businesses and industries also provided the opportunities for a better life that attracted new residents from across the United States and all around the world. Immigrants from China, Japan, and the Philippines reflected Vallejo’s connection with the Pacific Rim. Other immigrants arrived from South and Central America and from European nations like England, Ireland, Germany, Portugal, Italy, Russia, and France. The city became a crossroads for the world.
From its rough-and-tumble pioneer beginnings in the 19th century, Vallejo grew in the 20th century into a diverse and thriving community, supported by the reliable federal payroll at Mare Island. New highways, bridges, civic buildings, and comfortable homes reflected the stability of this solid, mostly blue-collar community. The United States broke out of its isolation and became a player on the world stage. Mare Island grew to support that role, and so too did the City of Vallejo. As America became involved in foreign affairs, Mare Island supplied the ships that supported that involvement. The Spanish-American War and World War I brought growth to the city and the shipyard, but their impact would pale in comparison to the tremendous changes caused by World War II. That tumultuous era brought unprecedented growth to Vallejo and saw the city’s population nearly triple. Once again, people from all over the United States came to the crossroads community
to work at the busy shipyard. Thousands of sailors passed through Mare Island to the Pacific War Zone. Many never returned.
When the war ended, many civilian workers went back to their home states. Others remained in Vallejo and built homes in the new post-war neighborhoods that sprang up east and north of the old part of town. The next transition would come in the early 1960s when city fathers decided to demolish much of old downtown Vallejo and build a new, forward looking town center and civic plaza. Surrounding rural land was annexed and the city continued to grow.
Vallejo faced the challenges and social changes of the 1960s and emerged with its strong sense of community intact. Vallejoans are, and always have been, avid sports fans, supporters of the arts, believers in education, strong in their faith, and have demonstrated the