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Discovering Point Richmond
Walk Held on Saturday, October 7, 2006
by Susan Schwartz
Point Richmond and the rest of Potrero
San Pablo are geologically part of a
range of hills, older than the Berkeley-Oakland
Hills, that continues west of narrow
San Pablo Strait. At the coming of Europeans,
the Potrero San Pablo was effectively
an island, separated from the East Bay
mainland by tidal marsh. The area was
included in Mexico’s 1823 land
grant of 13 square miles to Francisco
Castro. His Rancho San Pablo stretched
south to Cerrito Creek (today’s
Alameda-Contra Costa County border) and
north to Pinole.
Like many of the grantees, Castro divided
his land among his children, who lost
most of it amid legal wrangles after
the United States siezed California.
Jacob Tewksbury, MD, a 49er, began acquiring,
diking, and filling the marshes in the
1860s. Most of what is now Point Richmond
was acquired by John Nicholl, a California-born
entrepeneur who also had large holdings
in Southern California. Nicholl sold
a right-of-way to the San Joaquin Valley
Railway in the 1890s. The Atcheson, Topeka,
and Santa Fe, seeking a route from Los
Angeles to San Francisco, bought out
this and other smaller railroads and
began service in 1900. At Ferry Point
(now part of Miller-Knox Regional Park),
deep water is just offshore, a rarity
in the East Bay. Here the Santa Fe’s
rails ended; passengers and freight continued
to San Francisco by boat.
In 1901, with automobiles becoming popular
and growing demand for oil abroad, Pacific
Coast Oil Company (soon Standard Oil,
now Chevron) began building an oil refinery
near the Santa Fe rails. They blasted
out a large chunk of Pt. Richmond’s
hills to fill the marsh.
Point Richmond thus got its start as
a brawling tent city of railroad, refinery,
and construction workers, with few businesses
other than bars and bordellos. By 1902,
though, it had acquired the amenities
of a town, including a hotel, bank, laundries,
dry-goods and grocery stores, a livery
stable, and a funeral parlor. Four churches
built before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake
(and used as refuges then) still stand.
Much of this growth was shepherded by
Nicholl, who also founded the water company
and first bank. The City of Richmond
was incorporated here in 1905, moving
in 1906 from a hotel to a city hall at
210 Washington (both built by Nicholl).
Growth was also spurred by the Keller’s
Beach area, where popular privately owned
parks offered changing facilities, boat
rental, and dance pavillions. Quarrying,
brick-making, and the nearby winery at
Winehaven (built in 1907) contributed
to prosperity. Gingerbread houses and
modest workers’ cottages rose on
narrow streets that twisted almost higglety-pigglety,
interspersed with gardens and goat-grazed
grassland.
Successful as he was, Nicholl made mistakes.
He sank a big chunk of profits into a
search for oil, but struck an artesian
well instead. Years later, he gave the
site to the city, which used the gusher
for the elegant Municipal Natatorium,
completed in 1925. Efforts to save the
magnificant building continue.
The refinery that gave birth to Point
Richmond also was its bane. In the 1920s,
many who could afford it moved away from
the smells, many to Richmond’s
present center. Refinery payrolls kept
the town more stable than many during
the Great Depression, and during WWII
workers at the nearby Kaiser Shipyards
filled every available nook. But industry
declined in the 1960s, although restaurants
flourished and views and atmosphere continued
to attract residents, especially artistic
ones, to the south side of the hill.
The eclectic mix of architecture includes
unusual homes like Lumiere, built of
translucent plastic shingles. Recent
gentrification is restoring the Victorians
and Craftsman-style homes and spurring
construction.
The four new street-end viewpoints,
a dream of open-space activist Lucretia
Edwards in the 1970s, opened in 2006
thanks to a Coastal Conservancy grant,
pro bono work of architects and designers,
and hands-on landscaping by neighbors.
The views are magnificent. Looking south,
it is easy to visualize the area before
the Bay, a mere 10,000 years ago or less,
when these hills edges a valley with
a great river pouring through what is
now San Pablo and Raccoon Straits.

Map of Pt. Richmond. Dotted lines are
a few of many interesting routes – discover
your own.
Caution: This map is OK for exploring
by foot, but NOT for driving Pt. Richmond’s
confusingly named, twisted, hilly, often
closed or one-way streets.
MORE TO DO IN THE AREA:
- Visit the history museum, open Thursdays
and Saturdays 11:30 – 2 pm. http://www.alkos.com/prha/
Enjoy lunch, explore the downtown’s historic
buildings following their walking tour ( http://rcvb-ca.com/pt_richmond.htm).
- Visit the Red Oak Victory, last surviving
Victory cargo ship built at Kaiser
Shipyards in Richmond – open
until 3 pm at the end of Canal Street.
http://www.ssredoakvictory.org/calendar.htm
- Visit the Golden State Model Railroad
Museum, open until 5 pm (layout only
on Saturdays; trains run Sundays),
900A Dornan Drive, south of the tunnel.
http://gsmrm.org/
- Hike in Miller-Knox East Bay Regional
Park including Nicholl Knob, Ferry
Point, and the Bay Trail (continuing
to the city’s south border, a
wonderful walk or bike ride). http://www.pointrichmond.com/baytrail/ferrypointshipyard3.htm
- A little farther afield, discover
Point Molate and historic Winehaven,
and Rosie the Riveter WW II Home Front
National Park ( http://www.rosietheriveter.org/ ,
http://www.nps.gov/rori).
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