Camp Miramar (site)
| Second World War 1939-1945, military
USA /
California /
El Granada /
World
/ USA
/ California
/ El Granada
World / United States / California
Second World War 1939-1945, military, historical layer / disappeared object
The former Camp Miramar was established on 21 April 1943 when the U.S. Army entered into leases with several land owners in order to provide for a camp to house infantry units assigned to the Western Defense Command. The 1 June 1943 edition of the Station List of the Army of the United States, issued by the Adjutant General of the U.S. Army, stated that a single rifle company, Company G of the 125th Infantry Regiment, was present at Camp Miramar.
At the time of acquisition, there were two major buildings that the U.S. Army took control of. The first was the Miramar School, a small elementary school that served the local faming community and located on the eastern parcel, between State Highway 1 and Valencia Street. The other major building was the Palace Miramar Hotel and Resort, a large redwood-shingled building located on the beach in the western parcel of the Site.
To these substantial buildings, the U.S. Army added several temporary barracks, mess halls and support buildings. These were of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) design developed by the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps in the late 1930\'s. These prefabricated, wood framed buildings could be assembled in as little as three hours by joining components with lag screws. Creosote soaked posts served as the foundation for these buildings. With the CCC buildings included, the post had a capacity to house 495 soldiers.
Read more here: www.militarymuseum.org/CpMiramar.html
At the time of acquisition, there were two major buildings that the U.S. Army took control of. The first was the Miramar School, a small elementary school that served the local faming community and located on the eastern parcel, between State Highway 1 and Valencia Street. The other major building was the Palace Miramar Hotel and Resort, a large redwood-shingled building located on the beach in the western parcel of the Site.
To these substantial buildings, the U.S. Army added several temporary barracks, mess halls and support buildings. These were of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) design developed by the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps in the late 1930\'s. These prefabricated, wood framed buildings could be assembled in as little as three hours by joining components with lag screws. Creosote soaked posts served as the foundation for these buildings. With the CCC buildings included, the post had a capacity to house 495 soldiers.
Read more here: www.militarymuseum.org/CpMiramar.html
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 37°29'36"N 122°27'23"W
- Camp Stoneman (site) 75 km
- Skaggs Island 79 km
- Camp Beale (site) 211 km
- Camp Essex - Desert Training Center/California-Arizona Maneuver Area (site) 709 km
- Camp Clipper (site) 712 km
- Borrego Valley Manuever Area 714 km
- Camp Iron Mountain (site) 756 km
- Camp Granite (site) 759 km
- Poston War Relocation Center 819 km
- Los Alamos National Laboratory 1446 km
- Half Moon Bay State Beach 1.2 km
- El Granada, California 2.2 km
- Pillar Point Harbor 2.6 km
- Princeton by the Sea, California 3 km
- Moss Beach, California 5.2 km
- Fitzgerald Marine Reserve 5.3 km
- Wavecrest Open Space 5.4 km
- The Old Course - Half Moon Bay Golf Links 6.7 km
- SFPUC Peninsula Watershed 8.6 km
- San Francisco Bay 29 km