In the dark, frenzied years of World War II, the San Francisco Bay Area
was the geographic center of a $6.3 billion West Coast shipbuilding
industry. Stretching from the Golden Gate to Vallejo to Sunnyvale, 14
Bay Area yards launched many of the ships that helped save the free
world. Basalt Rock of Napa, Bethlehem Steel of San Francisco and
Alameda, Hunters Point and Mare Island Naval Shipyards, Joshua Hendy
Iron Works of Sunnyvale, Marinship of Sausalito, Permanente Metals in
Richmond, and Western Pipe and Steel in South San Francisco are names
that still conjure memories for many locals of one of the most
impassioned war efforts in human history. Offering new opportunities for
African Americans and women, recruiters searched the nation for workers
who relocated here by the thousands. These motivated men and women
delivered Liberty cargo ships like the SS Robert E. Peary, built in
seven and a half days, a shipbuilding record that stands to this day.