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Folsom Preservation |
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The San
Francisco Quartermaster Depot, 1847-1928
By BERTHA BASH
The Quartermaster Review
May-June 1929
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“PEACE hath her victories no less renowned than war"-the line might
have been written of the early military occupation of California. To
put down the half hearted resistance of the Mexican-Californian
forces, few in numbers, and pitifully ill-equipped, was no very
brilliant feat; but to establish and maintain a military organization
in that remote outpost was a brilliant feat, in which the
Quartermaster Corps played a leading part. The Corps can look back
with pride to the work of its early representatives on the Pacific
Coast, accomplishing their prosaic but indispensable tasks in the
teeth of fantastic difficulties.
One of the first acts of General Stephen Watts Kearny, after the
conquest, was to order the establishment of a quartermaster depot on
San Francisco Bay. Upon the arrival in that port March 6, 1847, of the
first troops from the States, Stevenson's New York Volunteers, he
detailed the regimental quartermaster, Captain J. L. Folsom (a West
Point graduate and lieutenant in the regular army), to choose a
location, open and operate this depot. Not until 1849 were the
scattered troops in the territory organized as the Pacific Division.
Since the depot has been functioning continuously from 1847, it claims
the distinction of being the oldest military establishment on the
Coast.
FOUNDATION AMID DIFFICULTIES
Captain Folsom opened his office in the Mexican custom house in Yerba
Buena, the name at that time of the miserable little settlement that
afterward became the city of San Francisco. For his stores, he hired
the only two warehouses in the place, down by the beach, near what is
now the intersection of Sansome and California Streets. Two miles and
a half away, there were empty barracks at the Presidio, but the road
thither was a mere trail across the sand dunes, impassable to loaded
wagons. General Sherman in his memoirs describes Yerba Buena as it
looked in 1847. "At that day Montgomery Street was as now, the
business street, extending from Jackson to Sacramento, the water of
the bay barely leaving room for a few houses on its east side. Around
the Plaza were a few houses, among them the Custom House and the City
Hotel, single story adobes with tiled roofs, and they were by far the
most substantial and best houses in the place. The population was
estimated at about 400, of whom Kanakas, from the Sandwich Islands,
formed the bulk. At the foot of Clay Street was a small wharf, which
small boats could reach at high tide, but the principal landing place
was where some stones had fallen into the water, about where Broadway
now intersects Battery Street."
The depot quartermaster's duties and difficulties were many. In the
first years, procurement of necessary supplies depended upon his
individual efforts. For clothing for the troops and for many other
stores, he sent to the Sandwich Islands, three or four weeks away by
sailing vessel. Honolulu was a point of call for the great whaling
fleet, a metropolis compared to any place in California. In 1848, we
find Captain Folsom ordering from Valparaiso, Chili, barley for the
dragoons' horses; horse shoes and horse shoe nails; and stationery and
sperm candles for his own office, "there being none to be had anywhere
in California". Another of the difficulties of the office was to
procure the cash for these purchases. The government drafts must be
sent to the Sandwich Islands, or South America, and specie obtained at
20 or 21 per cent discount. Again and again Colonel Richard Barnes
Mason, who succeeded Kearny both as commander of the troops and as
military governor, beseeches Washington for more staff officers,
especially Quartermasters. "Captain Folsom," he writes, "is the only
assistant quartermaster in the department. I am very much in want of
disbursing officers. I will be obliged to send Captain Marcy, the only
assistant commissary, to Mazatalan as distributing officer there. . .
. I hope both an experienced quartermaster and paymaster are now on
their way here. A paymaster in New York could pay troops in all the
principal cities of Europe and part of India, with more ease than one
can pay in Upper and Lower California, such is the difficulty of
communication. Major Rich left this port on the 22d of October last,
to make a payment at La Paz (Lower California), and did not return
till the 29h of March. He was fortunate in getting back so soon, as
the general probability was, he would have to return via the Sandwich
Islands." If. such was the difficulty of paying the troops, the
greater difficulty of supplying them may be imagined.
The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, on February 2d, 1848, fixed the
status of California as a permanent United States possession. In a few
months thereafter army stores had begun to arrive on every vessel from
the Atlantic. But the quartermaster's troubles were only increased
thereby, for the gold rush was on. The two warehouses overflowed;
there was none other to be hired, and the stores piled up on the open
beach. Every able bodied man in the territory wanted to be at the
mines. Sailors deserted their vessels before the cargoes could be
unloaded; the soldiers at the Presidio deserted in such numbers that
there were not enough faithful men left to arrest the deserters.
Folsom was paying $10 a day to civilian guards for his stores, he
could not at any price hire stevedores to lighter his supplies from
the ships in the harbor to the beach. He writes in the summer of '48
to his classmate Sherman, at the capital at Monterey:
"The most mortifying state of affairs prevails here. Government, both
civil and military, is abandoned. Offenses are committed with
impunity, and property, and lives even are no longer safe. Last night
the crew of the Chilian bark Correo rose upon their officers with arms
in their hands, and after driving them into the cabin, the vessel was
robbed and the men escaped up the Sacramento in the long boat. Acts of
disgraceful violence occur almost daily aboard the shipping. My office
is left with a large amount of money and gold dust in it. If it is
possible to send a vessel of war here, it should be done at once.”
An important responsibility of the depot was to maintain communication
with Monterey; the express riders who carried the mail twice a week
between San Francisco and the capital were Quartermaster employees.
Water transportation was also a Quartermaster activity. A sort of scow
with a sail was bought and operated to unload cargoes, and to cruise
the bay after hay and lumber; the water at San Francisco was so
shallow that it took almost a day to pole the loaded scow up to the
only wharf. In addition, there were hired or bought four or five small
seagoing vessels to ply up and down the coast to the various army
outposts. One at least of this fleet, the barque Anita, was armed.
"She answers all the purposes of a sloop of war", writes Colonel
Mason, with pride. Thus we see that transport service is no new
undertaking for the corps, and that the operation of a warship is
nothing more in a Quartermaster's life than the operation of a scow.
MILITARY AND CIVIL ESTABLISHMENT
In January. 1849, began a new chapter in the military history of
California. Two years earlier, Colonel Mason improvised a military and
a civil establishment to carry on in the new territory 'till its
permanent fate should be decided. For nearly two years, Congress did
nothing whatever to help him; it seemed to be all but unaware that
California existed. No policy was laid down to guide him; no
assistance was sent him. He formed an official family chosen from
among the officers of his small command. Young Lieut. Henry W.
Halleck, of the Engineer Corps, went on his civil staff as Secretary
of State; young Lieut. William Tecumseh Sherman, of the 3d Artillery,
on his military staff, as Adjutant General; young Captain Folsom of
the volunteers, very lately a second lieutenant in the 5th Infantry,
organized and administered the Quartermaster Depot, which supplied a
territory from the bay of San Francisco on the north to the southern
tip of Lower California, and supplied it successfully, earning a
handsome official tribute from the grim old war dog in command.
But now, in the beginning of 1849, a permanent military establishment
was initiated. Maj. Gen. Persifor F. Smith, a veteran of the Mexican
War, arrived with a staff of experienced officers, to organize the
Division of the Pacific. One of Colonel Mason's last official acts had
been to authorize Captain Folsom to build a storehouse in San
Francisco (as Yerba Buena had now been rechristened). The lease of his
rented warehouses would run out in July, and a depot must be had, at
whatever preposterous price for materials and labor. But General Smith
put a stop to this project. On first setting foot in San Francisco he
became of opinion that the site was the poorest possible for a
military establishment, and that a better one could and must be found
immediately, somewhere else on the shores of the great bay. "The town
of San Francisco", he wrote, "is in no way fitted for military or
commercial purposes; there is no harbor, a bad landing place, bad
water, no supplies of provisions, an inclement climate, and it is cut
off from the rest of the country, except by a long circuit around the
southern extremity of the bay. * * * There are points on the bay, more
inland, having good harbor and landings, good water, and open to the
whole country in rear, and accessible without difficulty to ships of
the largest class."
General Smith lost no time in setting out to seek this ideal location.
A joint board of the two services decided on the Straits of Carquinez
as the suitable spot for the naval and military establishments. Mare
Island, chosen at that time, is the naval base to this day, but
Benicia survives only as an arsenal.
As there was no accommodation for troops at Benicia, which place
consisted of little more than a name, General Smith made his
headquarters some miles inland at Sonoma (scene of the Bear Flag
rebellion), where an old Spanish cuartel served as barracks for his
troops. The climate of Sonoma is delightful, but it had no other
advantage as a military center, and in 1851, after barracks and
quarters had been erected in Benicia, the commanding general moved his
headquarters thither.
NEW LOCATION AT BENICIA
When Captain Folsom was ordered, early in 1849, to build a depot and a
military post at Benicia, he found himself without materials, without
labor, without anything but a site. His first storehouse was the
French brig "Julie", which was bought and anchored close to shore, and
served as warehouse, office and living quarters. Some years later,
when the Quartermaster Department had vacated it. this ship was still
housing officers and men. On the first of July, 1849, Maj. Robert
Allen (later to distinguish himself greatly in the Civil War as Chief
Quartermaster of Missouri and of the Valley of the Mississippi)
arrived as Depot Quartermaster and to take charge of the building
operations. His report to Quartermaster General Jesup gives a picture
of the time. "The Quartermaster stores", he writes. "had been
transferred to this location from San Francisco and were piled on the
ground near where it was proposed to erect storehouses, having no
cover but old sails and no protection but the watchfulness of a single
agent. * * * One-half the men of the two companies stationed here had
deserted. The remainder refused to work unless paid the mining value
of labor, and could not be trusted to guard public property. Their
commanding officer was afraid to issue arms to them, and did not
attempt to exact from them any extra duty whatever. I had accordingly
to depend on hired labor, which proved to be of a transient and
inferior character."
Sherman speaks also of the building of Benicia: "Major Allen was
building a large warehouse, with a row of quarters, Out of lumber at
one hundred dollars per thousand feet, and the work done by men at
sixteen dollars a day. I have seen a detailed soldier, who only got
his monthly pay of eight dollars a month, and twenty cents a day for
extra duty, nailing on weatherboards and shingles alongside a citizen
who was paid sixteen dollars a day. This was a real injustice, made
the soldiers discontented, and it was hardly to be wondered at that so
many deserted."
Sherman's memory minimized rather than exaggerated the cost of these
buildings, for Major Allen says in his report: "On July 1, 1849,
lumber was selling at San Francisco for five hundred dollars a
thousand. A better quality could be purchased in New York for twelve
dollars, in Maine for ten."
To bring down the cost of lumber, the Quartermaster's Department
rented a tract of timberland at Corte Madera, in Mann County, and
there erected a small sawmill, operated at first by horse power. It
was a matter for congratulation when Major Allen was able to procure a
steam engine for it.
Sometimes there came a dramatic incident to vary the Quartermaster’s
worried existence, such as the sending in the winter of 1849 of a
relief expedition to the immigrants snowbound in the mountains. Those
who arrived earlier in the fall reported thousands behind them, with
worn-out animals and little food. General Smith decided to attempt
relief. He ordered Maj. D. H. Rucker, Assistant Quartermaster, to be
supplied with a hundred thousand dollars out of the Civil Fund, to
purchase supplies and hire men and mules to send out and meet the
immigrants. "Major Rucker," relates Sherman, "performed his duty
perfectly, sending out pack trains by the many routes by which the
immigrants were known to be approaching, went himself with one of
these trains and remained in the mountains till the last immigrant had
got in. This expedition saved many a life." The selection of Rucker
was only one illustration of the dependence always placed upon the
depot in cases of emergency.
The situation of Benicia as the site for the main depot proved more
and more unsatisfactory. As early as 1850, Maj. D. H. Vinton of the
Quartermaster Corps, who had been sent out from Washington to report
on activities in the Pacific Division, wrote his chief as follows:
"The difficulties attending, at present, the sending of supplies from
the United States, are mostly found in the transhipment of commodities
into vessels bound for Benicia. This would seem to superinduce the
necessity of a resident agent in San Francisco. It is the wish and
intention of General Smith that no officer of the army shall be
stationed permanently in San Francisco.
EARLY GROWTH OF SAN FRANCISCO
Despite General Smith's contempt, the young city at the Golden Gate
was growing by leaps and bounds, due very largely to the shrewd act of
its leading citizens in changing its name from Yerba Buena to San
Francisco. Yerba Buena and Benicia were alike unheard of outside
California, but the name of the great bay was known in every port in
the world. Ships arrived from all over the globe, consigned to San
Francisco, and naturally dropped anchor off the settlement of that
name. Captains and crews making off for the gold mines, there the
ships and their loads remained, and there the city had to be. Its
wooden houses were again and again destroyed by fires, and again and
again rose from their ashes; the sand hills were leveled and the soil
used to fill in the "tide lots", the mud flats between the solid
ground and deep water; despite all calamities and discouragements, San
Francisco lived and grew. While Benicia, with its sheltered natural
anchorage, its excellent climate, free of the fogs cold winds and
sandstorms that afflicted its rival, its convenient location at the
gate to the Sacramento Valley and the mines, obstinately refused to
grow. In 1852, Gen. Ethan Allen Hitchcock moved the headquarters of
the Pacific Division and the main office of the Quartermaster Depot
back to San Francisco. For several years, offices and storehouses were
maintained in both places. General Wool, from 1855-1857, again tried
to command the division from Benicia, but though the Chief
Quartermaster of the division took station there, he found it
necessary to keep his assistant in San Francisco, and to spend a large
part of his own time in the city. The depot in San Francisco had been
steadily growing, that in Benicia dwindling. After 1857, the struggle
to carry out General Smith's scheme was abandoned; headquarters again
returned to San Francisco, and we find no further mention of Benicia
in the Quartermaster records.
The depot, then, was born in the Spanish custom house. the "Old Adobe"
on the Plaza, now Portsmouth Square. This building was destroyed in
the fire of 1852. In the meantime, the" office of the Depot
Quartermaster had been in a tent on the beach in San Francisco; in a
tent on the beach in Benicia; on the old hulk "Julie" in Benicia; and
later in a wooden storehouse there, built by Major Allen. At the time
of the fire of 1852, it was located in San Francisco in Folsom's Iron
Building, at California and Leidesdorf Streets, which withstood the
flames. A little later, the office of the depot was moved to Parrott's
Granite Building, at California and Montgomery Streets, where it
remained for more. than a decade. This structure, built by Chinese
workmen out of granite brought from China, survived the earthquake and
fire of 1906, remaining unchanged with its sidewalks of granite blocks
till a year or two ago it was laboriously torn down to make room for a
skyscraper.
In the next years, the depot moved several times about the business
district, its latest and longest stay during this period being at the
corner of Stockton and O'Farrell Streets. The year 1881 found it
settied at 36 New Montgomery Street, just behind the Palace Hotel,
where it operated for twenty-five years, long enough for "36 New
Montgomery" to become a well-known synonym for the San Francisco
Quartermaster Depot. In 1906, the old office went up in smoke, its
only surviving relic being the brass bell from the front door, now in
my possession. After the fire, the depot moved to the Fontana Building
at Van Ness Avenue and North Point Street, the site of the Pioneer
Woolen Mills of the fifties and sixties, just outside the reservation
of Fort Mason. In 1915. it moved again, this time into the
reservation, where it remains. At last, its offices, warehouses, shops
and piers, are all on government land.
One of the earliest exploits of the depot, after its return from
Benicia to San Francisco, was the outfitting and supply, in 1858, of
the troops for the "Modoc War", Col. George Wright's expedition
against the hostile Indians of Oregon and Washington. "A more
successful campaign," says General Jesup, Quartermaster General of the
Army, in his report, "has never before been witnessed in the whole
course of our history. The measures required to put the troops in the
field and to supply them in the extensive theater covered by their
operations were promptly adopted and ably carried out by Lieutenant
Colonel Swords, Deputy Quartermaster General, aided by Major Allen,
Captain Jordan, Captain Ingalls, and Captain Kirkham, Assistant
Quartermasters. Great credit is due all these officers." Col; Thomas
Swords, an officer of uncommon experience and ability, considerably
Senior to the others, was Chief Quartermaster of the Division; Maj.
Robert Allen, as we have seen, was Depot Quartermaster, with Capt. R.
W. Kirkham as his assistant. When, after a service of nearly ten years
on the coast, Allen was ordered to the front in 1861, Kirkham
succeeded to the command of the depot, where he did most valuable work
during the Civil War. In 1865 he was brevetted Brigadier General, for
faithful and meritorious services in the Quartermaster Corps during
the war. Resigning from the army in 1870, he made his home in the
place where he had served so long, and became one of the best-known
citizens of the bay region. Like Folsom, he was paid the honor of
having a street in San Francisco named for him.
Kirkham, as most of our officers prior to the Civil War, was a
graduate of the Military Academy, and a veteran of Mexico, where he
had twice been brevetted for gallantry; but the two Assistant
Quartermasters who served under him at the depot, each of whom
succeeded to command of it, came in for the emergency without previous
experience. Capt. J. T. Hoyt was a lawyer of San Francisco,
Quartermaster of Volunteers; he was brevetted Major in 1864 for
faithful and meritorious service, and received a commission in the
Regular Army as Captain and Quartermaster. Capt. R. L. Ogden was a
wealthy business man, an early member of the Bohemian Club, and a
president of the San Francisco Yacht Club. Both these officers were
men of ability and highest patriotism, and so well trained under Major
Kirkham that their work throughout the war won nothing but praise.
Both returned to civil life, their corps parting from them with
regret.
For the greater part of his service, Captain Ogden was in charge of
the Clothing Depot, which was established in 1861, as a
quasi-independent branch of the main depot, to procure garments and
equipage for the volunteers. The West Coast was famous for its wool,
and the blue uniform cloth, underwear, and blankets, which the
Clothing Depot procured from the Pioneer Woolen Mills of San Francisco
and from other mills of California and Oregon, were the real thing,
and not "shoddy", as was so much of the misnamed "woolen goods"
supplied to our soldiers in the Civil War. Like California gold,
California fleece played its part in winning the war. The Coast
contributed leather goods also, in shoes and various articles of
equipment.
In 1871, a bright official mind (not in the Quartermaster Corps)
conceived the idea of saving money for the government by moving the
entire Clothing Depot and the storehouses of the main depot over to
Goat Island, in the harbor. The government owned the island, and there
would be no rent to pay. The fact that there were no facilities there
for storing or handling the goods; that everything must be transhipped
to and from the island, at great inconvenience and expense, was not
considered. Wooden storehouses and a few sets of quarters were run up,
and the move was attempted. The main office of the depot remained in
San Francisco; twenty years earlier, when the experiment had been
tried of locating the depot at Benicia, it had been found
indispensable to maintain the business office in San Francisco, and so
it was now. This second effort to handle supplies from an
out-of-the-way and inconvenient base ended just as the first had done.
By the end of 1873, all Quartermaster activities were back in the
city. The Clothing Depot continued to function as a separate
establishment till 1898, usually in command of one of those now
obsolete officers of the Quartermaster Corps, known as Military Store
Keepers.
During the uneventful years between '65 and '98, one of the
achievements of the depot was the reclamation and beautification of
the sand dunes that constituted the Presidio. In 1888 and 1889, under
the direction of Lieut. Col. R. N. Batchelder, more than $60,000 from
two congressional appropriations was spent on the roads and walls of
the Presidio, and especially on trees. Fifty-five thousand acacias,
pines, cypresses and eucalyptus were set out on the windswept sand
hills, together with about five thousand native redwood, spruce and
madrone. Very nearly all these trees grew, till now the Presidio is
densely wooded over much of its extent, thereby greatly improved in
climate as well as in looks.
As long as forty years ago, Colonel Batchelder was concerned about the
water supply of the reservation, 'poor in quality and insufficient in
quantity". he remarks. His description is still applicable.
NEED FOR A TRANSPORT SERVICE
The outbreak of the Spanish-American War, in 1898, found the depot in
command of Captain-later, Brigadier General-Oscar F. Long, a most
resourceful and efficient officer with a fine record of accomplishment
in the line. The immediate result of Dewey's victory in May was a
demand for troops to take and hold Manila. The War Department had few
Regulars to spare, but soon had a large force of volunteers mobilized
in San Francisco and awaiting transportation. The supply and fitting
out of these new regiments threw a tremendous strain upon the depot,
which, of course, had not carried in stock during peace time the
various kinds and amounts of stores and equipment now needed. American
troops had never before been called upon to operate at such a distance
from the home country, under tropical conditions, against an enemy
whose very name had never been heard of. Not even a cotton uniform had
yet been adopted; and no one could guess many necessities of
Philippine service that afterwards become commonplace. Hence, the duty
of the Quartermaster was not only to find means of filling
requisitions but to instruct the troops what to requisition for.
Despite all the difficulties, each contingent sailed provided with the
essentials, and there was no suffering. This achievement was made
possible by the fine cooperation of the volunteers, whose patriotism
and ardent desire to see active service inspired them to help in every
way. The task of supply was also greatly simplified by the fact that
the depot was directly under the control of the Quartermaster General,
who wisely allowed his local Quartermaster great initiative, backing
him up in all he did. Such a condition in wartime necessarily results
in elimination of red tape, with consequent efficiency.
But the supply problem, knotty at is was, could be solved by the
application of routine principles. The prime difficulty was the
transportation of men and animals across the Pacific Ocean, in time of
war, and the landing of them in an unknown hostile country fit for
immediate service.
True, troops have been transported by the sea since the dawn of
history. Our corps had shipped many to Mexico and California during
the Mexican War, but that had been many years ago under different
conditions, and there were no data at hand for guidance. Furthermore,
there was but little suitable shipping available on the Pacific Coast.
In brief, a transport service had to be improvised on the spot. An
account of how every suitable ship (and some not so suitable) was
chartered, a shore organization collected, steamers rebuilt and
refitted would make a most interesting story for which there is no
space here. The first expedition was started in such old tubs as the
"Indiana", "Ohio" and "Senator", all of which reached their
destination safely and remained in service for several years-good
examples of the sound military principle of utilizing the means at
hand, and a credit to the ability of those who provided them.
Meantime, the best brains in the Department were at work upon the
building up of a permanent fleet, and the organization of the Army
Transport Service. The latter was the hardest task, but was
brilliantly performed by adopting the administrative methods of any
large commercial steamship line, efficiency of management with
consequent efficiency of service being the guiding principle. It was
prescribed that the Army Transport Service should be a special service
of the Quartermaster's Department, as nearly independent as possible
under the law, and with its own officers. At each principal port was a
General Superintendent under the direct control of the Quartermaster
General, with assistants in each subport, thus providing a simple and
military chain of responsibility and command. The principles of the
first Army Transport Service Regulations have never been improved
upon.
San Francisco was the most important port in the country from the
transport standpoint, and the depot soon had a fine fleet of its own
operating from rented docks at the foot of Folsom Street-the street
named very appropriately for the depot's first Quartermaster,
superintendent of the first transport service, in 1847. Included in
the modern service were the Sherman, Sheridan, Logan, Grant, Hancock,
Meade, Burnside, Crook, Buford, Hooker and Thomas, the last the only
one still on the list today. All these vessels were built for other
lines and other purposes. The Sheridan, Sherman, Logan and Thomas, to
mention the four which so long constituted the regular fleet after the
emergency was past and the other vessels were sold or laid up-these
four, the largest and best of the service, were old ships of the
Atlantic Transport Co., the cattle line between New York and London.
They were well built and staunch, and have done wonderful service on
the Pacific; but they were not new when we got them, and what with
constant repairs and with successive alterations in attempts to adapt
them to a purpose they were never planned for, they have cost in the
long run more than new ships built for transports. Shall we ever
achieve an army transport, planned for an army transport, planned by
an army transport service that through years of experience has learned
to know what is wanted?
NEW PROBLEMS AND NEW FEATS OF THE DEPOT
The years following the Spanish War brought increased responsibilities
and new problems to the depot, which now had to supply not only Hawaii
and the Philippines but also Alaska, whose garrison, though small, was
far scattered, with peculiar needs of its own After the Boxer
uprising, in 1901, a regiment in North China was added to the list of
the depot's wards.
The great disaster of April 18, 1906, wiped out the depot building
with all its stock, but this loss was only another test of the
efficiency of the organization. Again the resoucefulness and ability
of its officers were worthy of the highest traditions of the Corps. A
new and more commodious storehouse was immediately rented in the
unburned district. Purchases were made in open market with a lavish
hand, new stocks rolled in as fast as railroads were in shape to
handle shipments, bakeries and food stations were established to feed
the destitute and the efficient trained personnel were foremost in the
relief measures, cooperating with General Funston so as to earn the
deep gratitude of the people of San Francisco. In talking of those
trying times, people still refer affectionately to Maj. C. A. Devol
and his ever-ready help in saving a tragic situation. As in every
disaster occurring in this country, the army tent was the sign of
succor.
Not long after the fire the War Department began work on its own
docks, making a fill at the west of Fort Mason, and building three
concrete piers, with a number of warehouses and shops. The Transport
Service was operating from there in 1911, though it was 1915 before
all the Quartermaster activities were withdrawn from rented buildings
in the city.
In 1912 came the consolidation of the Quartermaster, Pay and
Subsistence Departments into the new Corps, the trying task of
reorganization being in the competent hands of Maj. John T. Knight. It
was no small undertaking to weld three distinct services, each with
its own organization and traditions, into one compact harmonious
whole, especially when the "Manchu" provisions of the law resulted in
the simultaneous relief from duty of practically all officers serving
by detail from the line. The pessimists predicted that it could never
be done, but the Quartermaster Corps did it.
Our entrance into the World War called to command of the depot the
same Devol who had been its head in the earthquake time, eleven years
earlier. A major general now, the brilliant reputation he brought from
the Canal Zone was an assurance of his performance in this emergency.
In the beginning, it was supposed that all army activities would be on
the East Coast, and consequently the depot was badly crippled by the
transfer of its regular officers and highly trained civilian personnel
to eastern stations. When it was decided to send an expedition to
Siberia, a hurried expansion became necessary. A large number of
emergency officers was assigned, some of whom were leaders in the
business life of California, but none of whom was familiar with Army
administration. As is usual in our service, their training had to
proceed coincidently with their work, but they learned in that most
valuable school experience. Fortunately, as it was wartime. the bonds
of red tape were relaxed, and General Devol was given a free hand. The
troops were shipped to Vladivostok, supplied during their long sojourn
in that bleak latitude, and finally brought home, without a hitch.
Later, a transport was dispatched to that same port to rescue the
famous battalion of Czecho-Slovakians who had fought a running fight
with the Bolsheviks clear across Siberia.
Another feat of the San Francisco Transport Service deserves mention.
General Pershing found himself short of tugs for handling arriving
ships in France. None were available, so the Quartermaster General
bethought himself of that fine vessel, the Slocum-the pride of San
Francisco harbor-and ordered her to Brest via the Panama Canal and
various way ports. After invaluable service throughout the war, she
steamed back to San Francisco.
During the war period, when storage space was a crying need, many
temporary storehouses were built on the Fort Mason reservation as well
as at the Presidio. Some of these unsightly, inconvenient fire traps
are still standing and in use, for want of replacement. It is a pity
that the War Department did not foresee that San Francisco is
predestined by its natural situation always to be the supply point on
the Pacific Coast and did not take advantage of the abundant funds
always available in wartime to build a magnificent and monumental
base. It is sad to think of what could have been accomplished for a
part of the money expended at certain eastern ports that have since
been abandoned.
Col. John T. Knight took command of the depot during the post-war
deflation period and carried out the difficult job of retrenchment to
a peace basis, as competently as he had managed the expansion of 1912.
There have been few changes in the scope or importance of the depot's
functions since then. As now organized, the Quartermaster Supply
Officer is also General Superintendent Army Transport Service. In
addition thereto he is Depot Quartermaster, is in charge of the
National Cemetery, commands the Motor Battalion and Motor Repair Shops
and is the real estate representative of the Quartermaster General for
the Ninth Corps Area. A number of additional minor duties are attached
to what is one of the most responsible positions in the Quartermaster
Corps.
In general, the depot is charged with the supply of the Ninth Corps
Area, Alaska, the Hawaiian and Philippine Departments and the forces
in China.
It has grown with the increased responsibilities imposed upon it as
our country has developed until it bears slight resemblance to its
original establishment by Captain Folsom on the mud flats so many
years ago. Its reputation for efficiency has been maintained at the
same high level and it is still the strong dependable organization
upon which the War Department and the country can count in any crisis.
It is an integral part of the business life of the city of San
Francisco, where its activities are known and appreciated. The
Quartermaster in charge of the depot is thus enabled to face serenely
and to handle smoothly whatever emergency may hereafter arise.
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