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Battery Rathbone McIndoe (Fort Barry), Marin Headlands, California
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Battery Rathbone (1905-1948) - Battery Rathbone was a reinforced concrete, Endicott Period 6 inch coastal gun battery on Fort Barry, Marin County, California. The battery was named in G.O. 194, 27 Dec 1904 after Lt. Samuel B. Rathbone, U.S. Artillery, who died of wounds received in action at Queenstown Heights, Canada, in 1812. Battery construction started in 1904, was completed in 1905 and transferred to the Coast Artillery for use 8 Jun 1905 at a cost of $ 92,511.11. The east half of the Battery was renamed in G.O. 13, 22 Mar 1922, for Brig. Gen James F. McIndoe, who died 6 Feb 1919. Battery deactivated in 1948.
Part of the Harbor Defense of San Francisco. Used primarily to protect the minefields at the entrance to the Golden Gate.
Originally built as an Endicott Period concrete coastal gun battery with four 6" M1900 rapid fire guns mounted on M1900 Barbette carriages. Each pair of gun emplacements has a magazine structure between them with a BC station of the top, rear of the magazine. Each shell room was 11' 9" by 38' and held 450 shells. The powder rooms were 11' 6" by 35' and held 175 powder cartridges.
In addition to the shell and powder rooms in each magazine, there are four other rooms that house a small plotting room, a guard room, store rooms and, in the Battery McIndoe magazine, a power plant. Between the two batteries is a structure that houses a guard room and a larger plotting room. There is a corridor in this structure that connects the two batteries. All three of the structures are covered on the top with earth for further protection. The Battery latrine is a separate building to the left of emplacement #4.
Source: Wikifort
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