Day 3
4.4 miles
Drawbridge
Drawbridge
is an abandoned town on the outskirts of San Jose and is slowly sinking into
the sloughs of San Francisco Bay. It was created on Station Island in 1876 and
consisted of a single dwelling to house the operator of two drawbridges owned
by the Southern Pacific Railroad that crossed the Mud Creek Slough and Coyote
Creek Slough to connect Newark with Alviso
and San Jose. It eventually grew into a small town consisting mainly of hunting
cabins, hotels, and gun clubs (the San Francisco Bay, before salt evaporation
ponds and sewage dumping, was a hunting and fishing paradise). During Prohibition,
taking advantage of its location in no man's land between Santa Clara and Alameda
counties, it housed numerous speakeasies and brothels. In addition, the police
were reluctant to enter as nearly everyone in Drawbridge was armed.
Starting in
the late 1920's, the surrounding communities began to pump fresh water out from
the sloughs causing the land to sink. Two salt evaporation ponds around Drawbridge
prevented the tides from cleaning the waters and the pumping in of raw sewage
fouled what remained.
At its peak
in 1926, Drawbridge had 90 private residences and two hotels. The train stopped
five times daily. In 1979, the last remaining resident left, leaving behind
a dozen or so wooden shacks.
Drawbridge
is now off-limits to visitors,
but there is an informative display about the Bay Area's only ghost town at
the Don Edwards San Francisco
Bay National Wildlife Refuge in Fremont.
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