Alcatraz Island
Alcatraz Island is a 22-acre rocky island situated in San Francisco Bay, approximately 1.25 miles offshore from the city of San Francisco, California. The island's history encompasses American incarceration, military fortification, Indigenous resistance, and civil rights protest — it served as a fort, a military prison, and a maximum-security federal penitentiary. The site of the first lighthouse on the Pacific Coast (1854), Alcatraz Island served as a Civil War bastion and became the nation's first official army prison, later transferred to civilian authority in 1934, gaining infamy as a place of incarceration for the nation's most hardened criminals. Today, the island is managed by the National Park Service as part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area and ranks among San Francisco's most visited destinations, drawing more than 1.4 million visitors annually.[1]
In May 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Bureau of Prisons to reopen Alcatraz as an active federal penitentiary, and the administration subsequently requested $152 million in funding for the project — a development that has reignited national debate over the island's future.[2]
Early History and Origins
The name Alcatraz is derived from the Spanish Alcatraces. In 1775, the Spanish explorer Juan Manuel de Ayala was the first European to sail into what is now known as San Francisco Bay — his expedition mapped the bay and named one of the three islands Alcatraces. Over time, the name was Anglicized to Alcatraz; while the exact meaning is still debated, the word is generally translated as "pelican" or "strange bird."[3]
The Ohlone indigenous people occupied much of the San Francisco Bay Area for more than 10,000 years before Europeans arrived. Evidence shows that Alcatraz Island served as an important transit point and food-gathering site — eggs from large waterfowl were collected on the island and fishing off its shores was common. While there is no evidence that Alcatraz ever hosted a long-term settlement, surviving oral histories indicate the island was used for camping, foraging, and to temporarily isolate community members who broke tribal laws and taboos.[4]
In 1850, a presidential order set aside the island for possible use as a United States military reservation. The California Gold Rush, the resulting boom in the growth of San Francisco, and the need to protect San Francisco Bay led the U.S. Army to build a Citadel, or fortress, at the top of the island in the early 1850s. The Army also made plans to install more than 100 cannons on the island, making Alcatraz the most heavily fortified military site on the West Coast at the time.[4]
In 1854, the Alcatraz lighthouse began service as the first lighthouse on the Pacific Coast. A larger lighthouse replaced it in 1909, and the current structure remains the oldest operating lighthouse on the West Coast of the United States.[5]
Military Fortification and Prison Era
After buildings were erected on the island, the first permanent army detachment was garrisoned there in 1859. In 1861, the island was designated a residence for military offenders. When the American Civil War broke out in 1861, the island mounted 85 cannons — increased to 105 cannons by 1866 — in casemates around its perimeter. It also served as the San Francisco Arsenal for storage of firearms to prevent them from falling into the hands of Confederate sympathizers. During the war, Fort Alcatraz was used to imprison Confederate sympathizers and privateers on the West Coast, but its guns were never fired at an enemy.[6]
In 1895, nineteen members of the Hopi Tribe from Arizona were imprisoned on Alcatraz for resisting the federal policy of forced education of their children and land allotment programs contrary to their Native American beliefs. Their imprisonment drew national attention to the coercive nature of federal assimilation policy and remains one of the more sobering chapters of the island's military era.[4] In 1907, the island was formally designated the Pacific Branch of the United States Military Prison.[5]
At the start of the Civil War, Alcatraz served as the key fort guarding the most important Pacific port in nineteenth-century America. It mounted the first permanent cannons on the West Coast and featured a brick and masonry defensive barracks that is particularly notable in the annals of American military architecture. In the areas of military and social history, Alcatraz holds significance as the first army prison in the nation.[7]
Federal Penitentiary (1934–1963)
During Prohibition and the Great Depression, the federal government developed a new category of prison designed specifically for the most incorrigible and dangerous offenders in the federal system. The maximum-security, minimum-privilege Alcatraz facility was purpose-built for inmates so disruptive that other federal prisons could not manage them. The U.S. Army transferred the island to the Department of Justice in 1934, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons opened the penitentiary that same year under the direction of Warden James A. Johnston.[8] During its 29 years of operation, more than 1,500 convicts were incarcerated there, though the population at any one time never exceeded 250 — well below the facility's stated capacity of 450.[8]
Among its most notable inmates were Al Capone, who arrived in 1934 following his conviction for tax evasion; George "Machine Gun" Kelly, the bootlegger and kidnapper whose name had become synonymous with Prohibition-era gangsterism; and Robert Stroud, known as the "Birdman of Alcatraz," who became a self-taught ornithologist during his earlier imprisonment at Leavenworth and whose life was dramatized in the 1962 film of the same name.[6] Cells measured approximately 9 feet by 5 feet and inmates were afforded few privileges — mail, reading, and limited recreation constituted the full scope of daily life outside work assignments.[8]
Prison officers and their families, including children, lived on the island alongside the inmate population. The residential community maintained its own apartments, a social hall, and access to mainland San Francisco by boat. Many of these children later formed an Alumni Association to preserve and share their unusual experience of growing up within the confines of one of the nation's most secure institutions.[5]
Escape Attempts
Escape from Alcatraz was the consuming obsession of many inmates, yet the island's geography conspired against would-be escapees at every turn. The principal obstacles were the cold water temperature of San Francisco Bay — averaging 50 to 55 degrees Fahrenheit — the powerful tidal currents running through the bay, and the distance of at least 1.25 miles to the nearest shoreline.[9]
Over the 29 years the federal prison operated, 36 men — including two who attempted escape twice — were involved in 14 separate escape attempts. Of these, 23 were caught, 6 were shot and killed during their attempt, and 2 drowned.[8]
One of the most violent episodes in the prison's history was the so-called "Battle of Alcatraz." From May 2 to May 4, 1946, six inmates participated in an escape attempt unprecedented in its ferocity. The incident began when prisoners overpowered guards and obtained firearms and cell block keys. Frustrated by a locked door that prevented their exit to the yard, the prisoners exchanged gunfire with the remaining guards. Order was restored only after U.S. Marines stormed the cell block under a barrage of grenades and rifle fire. Two guards and three escapees were killed, and more than a dozen guards were wounded in the firefight.[6]
The most celebrated escape attempt came in June 1962, when Frank Morris and brothers Clarence and John Anglin disappeared from the island. The three men spent months fashioning dummy heads from papier-mâché and soap to fool nightly cell checks, and constructed a raft and life preservers from more than 50 stolen raincoats. They were never found, and while they were officially presumed drowned, their bodies were never recovered. The FBI closed its active investigation in 1979, and the U.S. Marshals Service continued pursuing leads for decades afterward. Their story was dramatized in the 1979 film Escape from Alcatraz starring Clint Eastwood.[8]
Closure
Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary closed on March 21, 1963, under the direction of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. The primary reason was economics: the island's isolation, while ideal for security, made operations extraordinarily expensive. All fresh water had to be shipped to the island by barge — approximately one million gallons per year — and waste removal presented similar logistical challenges. By the early 1960s, it cost nearly three times as much per day to house an inmate at Alcatraz as at other federal penitentiaries. The infrastructure had also deteriorated significantly due to the corrosive effects of salt air and bay water. The 1962 escape of Morris and the Anglins, which had embarrassed the Bureau of Prisons, was widely seen as an additional factor contributing to the decision.[8][6]
Native American Occupation (1969–1971)
After the federal prison closed, the island sat largely vacant, and its fate became the subject of intense national debate. This vacancy gave rise to one of the most consequential acts of political protest in twentieth-century American history.
From November 20, 1969, to June 11, 1971, the island was occupied by a coalition of Native American activists operating under the name "Indians of All Tribes," including members of the American Indian Movement, who were protesting what they characterized as the U.S. government's ongoing economic, social, and political neglect of Native Americans. Mohawk tribal leader Richard Oakes led the initial landing and became the public face of the occupation in its early months.[3]
The occupiers justified their claim to the island through the provisions of the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868) between the United States and the Sioux Nation, which they argued promised to return all retired, abandoned, or out-of-use federal lands to the native peoples from whom they had been acquired. At its peak, some 400 people occupied the island. They established supply routes that evaded the Coast Guard and set up Radio Free Alcatraz, which broadcast programming from affiliated stations in Berkeley, Los Angeles, and New York.[5]
The group hoped to establish an American Indian cultural center and university on Alcatraz. When Oakes left the island following the tragic accidental death of his stepdaughter, public interest in the occupation waned and the internal organization among those remaining deteriorated. After 19 months, federal marshals moved in and removed the remaining occupiers in June 1971.[3]
While the occupation was short-lived, its ramifications extended well beyond the island. Native American political visibility surged nationally, and the Nixon administration subsequently reversed the longstanding federal policy of tribal termination, abandoning efforts to dissolve the Native American reservation system. The occupation is widely recognized as a watershed moment in the modern American Indian rights movement.[6] Each year, Indigenous people from many nations return to Alcatraz on what they call Indigenous Peoples' Sunrise Ceremony on Thanksgiving morning to commemorate the occupation and affirm ongoing ties to the island. Indigenous advocacy groups have also raised objections to the Trump administration's 2025 proposal to reopen Alcatraz as a prison, arguing that the island holds sacred significance and that the proposal disregards the history of the occupation.[10]
Proposed Reopening as Federal Prison (2025)
In May 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Federal Bureau of Prisons to reopen Alcatraz Island as an active federal penitentiary, framing the proposal as part of a broader effort to expand detention capacity for violent and repeat offenders. The Trump administration subsequently submitted a budget request of $152 million to fund the project.[11] Administration officials characterized the potential facility as a "state-of-the-art secure prison" that would serve as a symbol of law enforcement resolve.[12]
The proposal immediately drew opposition from the National Park Service, preservation advocates, and Indigenous groups. Critics noted that the same logistical and infrastructural challenges that prompted the prison's closure in 1963 — the cost of transporting water and supplies to an isolated island, the deteriorating physical plant, and the expense of operating a facility accessible only by water — remain unchanged. Indigenous advocates argued the proposal was not only fiscally unsound but culturally harmful, given the island's significance to Native American history and the legacy of the 1969–1971 occupation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Reopening Alcatraz prison is inhumane,
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