The historic Alcatraz cell blocks made a dramatic back drop for the occupation but were not used to house the residents. |
On
the face of it the property was not very attractive. In fact it had serious issues. Stuck in the middle of San Francisco Bay it was typically damp and cold, shrouded often by
that famous fog. Access by boat from the shore was difficult and inconvenient. The property was largely occupied by hulking,
ugly abandon buildings sinking
rapidly into disrepair and perhaps haunted
by generations of human sufferings that had gone on within their walls.
None
the less, on November 20, 1969 a rag-tag and barely organized group of Native Americans, most of them local college students, dodged Coast Guard boats to land on Alcatraz Island and claim it in the
name of all Indian people by virtue
of the Right of Discovery and
provisions of the Fort Laramie Treaty of
1868 which reserved the right of the Indian Nations to claim all unused and surplus Federal Government property.
Alcatraz
certainly fit that bill. The rugged
island named for the pelicans that
roosted there by the Spanish came
into the possession of the United States
Government after the Mexican
War. A costal defense fortification was erected and garrisoned in the 1850’s. Not
long after, the first operational light
house on the West Coast was
built on its high point. During the Civil War the Fort doubled as a prison for the first time housing Confederate sympathizers and agents, and the crews of Rebel privateers captured by the Navy.
After the war the defenses were considered obsolete and the facility
became an official military prison in
1868 housing soldiers convicted of crimes and deserters. Later some Native
American “renegades” were also
detained there beginning with some Hopi men
in the 1870’s. After the San Francisco Earthquake in 1906
civilian prisoners from the city were transferred there for safe keeping.
Designated
as the main Army prison for the west coast an enormous new modern, multiple
story cell block was erected over
the subterranean first floor of the
former citadel and opened in 1912. During
World War I Draft evaders and conscientious objectors joined the
military offenders. The military prison
was decommissioned in 1933 and transferred to the Department of Justice. The
following year the Bureau of Prison re-opened
it as maximum security facility housing
prisoners who continuously caused
trouble at other federal prisons. Among its inmates was a who’s who of hardened criminals
including Al Capone—slipping rapidly
into syphilis induced dementia—George “Machine Gun” Kelly, Bumpy Johnson, Puerto Rican Nationalist Rafael Cancel Miranda, Mickey Cohen, Arthur “Doc” Barker, James “Whitey”
Bulger, and Alvin “Creepy” Karpis.
There
were no successful attempts to escape
the island, although several men died trying either by being shot in the
attempt or drowning in the treacherous waters of the Bay. Shortly after a particularly bloody botched
mass escape attempt in 1962, Attorney
General Robert F. Kennedy ordered the prison shut down and most of its prisoners
transferred to the new maximum security prison at Marion, Illinois in 1963.
The
island was soon deserted except for the Coast Guard lighthouse. Its buildings had been rapidly deteriorating
for years in the damp, salty conditions of the bay. Without constant attention they quickly got
worse. Although the old prison became
something of a tourist attraction,
with tour boats circling it, the
government had no clear plans for its future use.
It
first attracted the attention of local Indian activists in 1964. On March 8 of that year 40 Sioux activists led by Richard McKenzie, Mark Martinez, Garfield
Spotted Elk, Virgil Standing-Elk,
Walter Means, and Allen Cottie occupied the island for
four hours, laying symbolic claim to it under the Fort Laramie treaty but
generously offering to pay the government 47 cents per acre or $9.40 for the
entire island, the same price offered Red
Cloud for the vast tracks of land ceded in the 1868 treaty.
The
idea continued to percolate in the Native American activist community,
especially at Bay Area campuses
where Indian students began organizing inspired by the Civil Rights Movement.
Adam Fortunate Eagle, a 40 year old Ojibwa first conceived of a new
occupation of Alcatraz. He encountered Richard Oakes, a 30 year old Mohawk who had helped found the Native American Studies Department at San
Francisco State University, at a party.
The two, soon joined by Shoshone
Bannock LaNada Means, head of the Native
American Student Organization at the University
of California, Berkeley, began
to plan another occupation and Oaks recruited students from groups on several
campuses.
On
November 9, 1969 boats that were supposed to transport demonstrators to the
island failed to appear. Fortunate Eagle
somehow convinced the owner of the sailing yacht Monte Cristo, then giving
tours of the Bay, to take on the protestors and sail by Alcatraz Island. Oakes, Cherokee
Jim Vaughn, Inuit Joe Bill, Ho-Chunk Ross Harden, and Jerry Hatch jumped overboard, swam to
shore, and claimed the island by right of discovery. They were quickly removed by the Coast Guard
but later that day 14 others made it to the island and managed to camp out
overnight before being ejected. When
Fortunate Eagle presented an official document to the General Services Administration (GSA) in San Francisco that day
demanding that the island be turned over to the United Tribes it made headlines
across the country.
Organizer
then began planning a permanent
occupation.
That
effort was launched in the pre-dawn hours of November 20 and involved 79 native
activists, most of them students but also including some married couples and six children. An alerted Coast Guard prevented most of
the small boats transporting them from landing but 14 made it to shore
including Oakes, Means, Bill, and David Leach, John Whitefox, Ross Harden,
Jim Vaughn, Linda Arayando, Vernell
Blindman, Kay Many Horse, John Virgil, John Martell, Fred Shelton,
and Rick Evening.
Approaching the Alcatraz dock during the Occupation. |
That
effort was launched in the pre-dawn hours of November 20 and involved 79 native
activists, most of them students but also including some married couples and six children. An alerted Coast Guard prevented most of
the small boats transporting them from landing but 14 made it to shore
including Oakes, Means, Bill, and David Leach, John Whitefox, Ross Harden,
Jim Vaughn, Linda Arayando, Vernell
Blindman, Kay Many Horse, John Virgil, John Martell, Fred Shelton,
and Rick Evening.
This
time no effort was made to dislodge the occupiers and despite the harassment of
the Coast Guard over the next several days the number of occupiers
swelled. Some of these early arrivals
played key roles as events played out. Blackfoot Joe Morris was a member of
the Longshoremen’s Union, a group
with a long, storied, and proud radical heritage. He was instrumental in having the union
announce that it would launch a general strike of the docks if attempts were
made to remove the Indians. This was an excellent
insurance policy. He also later rented
space on Pier 40 to facilitate the
transportation of supplies and people to the island.
Sioux John
Trudell quickly became a public
spokesman of the movement and began broadcasting
Radio Free Alcatraz, daily
reports to the Berkley campus FM radio station.
Cleo Watterman, a Seneca, was President of the San
Francisco American Indian Center, and stayed on shore to organize broader
support for the organizers and to help collect and forward supplies and
provisions as the population on the island grew.
Grace Thorpe, the daughter of
legendary athlete Jim Thorpe, used
her wide connections with Hollywood celebrities,
to drum up star power support. She was aided by jazz singer Kay Starr, and Iroquois
born on a Dougherty, Oklahoma reservation. Jane Fonda, Anthony Quinn, Marlon Brando,
Jonathan Winters, Cree Buffy Sainte-Marie, and Dick Gregory were all enlisted to visit
the island and show their support.
Thorpe also personally donated a generator,
water barge, and an ambulance service to the island. She was instrumental in getting a $15,000
donation from Credence Clearwater Revival
which was used to purchase the Clearwater which provided reliable,
safe service to the island.
A
highlight of the early period of the occupation occurred on November 27, when
the first Unthanksgiving was thrown
attracting hundreds of day visitors. Two
days later a sympathetic Bureau of
Indian Affairs employee, Doris Purdy
came and shot a short film.
President
Richard Nixon appointed
his Special Counsel, Leonard Garment to take over negotiations from the GSA. He was instructed to concede nothing on the
Indian claims under Treaties and to try and get them off the island without
provoking a crisis. Talks were not successful.
Meanwhile
sympathy for the occupation was rising.
Press coverage was generally positive.
LaNada Means and other women played key leadership roles but she found herself challenged and pushed aside by the men. |
However
after the first of the year, things began to deteriorate on the island. On January 3 Richard Oakes’s 13 year old stepdaughter Anne fell to her death
from a wall. The heartbroken Oakes and
his wife Yvonne withdrew from the
island leaving something of a leadership vacuum which Means, Trudell, and Stella Leach strove to fill. Means, who was more comfortable with the
press than many of the others, became the most publicly visible spokesperson
for the movement, although she soon found herself facing internal discord.
Several
of the original occupiers departed to return to school. Meanwhile the population, which at one point
reached nearly 400, swelled with many of the Native American homeless,
including those with drinking and drug abuse problems. Incidents of violence
between residents increased as did harassment and sexual attacks on some women.
White supporters had been
welcome, but several street freaks moved
in brining increased drug use. Leaders
tried to counter with increased self-policing
and a ban on non-Indians staying overnight.
Bob Robertson, a Republican working for an outfit called
the National Council on Indian
Opportunity arrived in January.
Means and some of the others thought he was an unofficial emissary from
Nixon authorized to conduct back channel
negotiations. He proposed turning
the island over to the National Park
Service with a promise that some kind of Indian Cultural center and
continued access for events. This was
entirely unsatisfactory to almost everyone, but Means met privately with him
and three lawyers to solicit a $500,000 grant to renovate facilities on the
Island. Robertson considered the attempt
extortion and some of the other Native
leaders suspected Means was fishing for a sinecure
administrating the grant. Robertson
turned down the proposal and left the island.
Means
also hoped that if the United Tribes could secure a top-notch, high profile
lawyer to sue the Federal Government for possession of the Island under the
provisions of the Fort Laramie treaty, they would have a good chance to
succeed. She began traveling from the
island to raise funds for such a suit and to look for a hot-shot lawyer to take
the case. In here absence rumors
circulated, including that she had been offered a screen test and a movie
contract.
Trudell
and the occupiers local lawyers objected to Means’ plans. The majority of occupiers backed
Trudell. Means and many of her
supporters withdrew from the island.
Sensing
the discord on the Island, in May the government stepped up pressure by turning
off electricity and water service and increasing harassment
of supply boats. Living conditions on
the island began to deteriorate rapidly.
In
early June fires of suspicious origins destroyed four historic buildings on the
Island. Footage of black smoke drifting
over the Bay made for dramatic television
and the previously sympathetic press began turning on the occupiers. Numbers on the Island began dwindling down to
a hard core.
On
June 11, 1971, a large force of government officers removed the remaining 15
people from the island. Despite the
problems the occupation lasted 19 months and inspired a wave of more than 200
acts of Native American civil
disobedience, including an attempted take-over of an abandoned Nike missile site a few days later by
some of the occupiers.
They
also raised public sympathy for the Native American rights and land
claims. They have been credited with
influencing the shift in administrative policies away from away from
termination of reservations and toward recognition Indian autonomy. Leaders of subsequent actions including the Trail of Broken Treaties, seizure of
the Mayflower
replica the BIA Washington
Headquarters occupation, the Wounded
Knee incident, and the Longest Walk.
In
1972 Alcatraz became a National Recreation
area and received designation as a National
Historic Landmark in 1986. Today, the island’s facilities are managed by
the National Park Service as part of the Golden
Gate National Recreation Area. Park
Service interpreters include discussion of the occupation on their tours and
signs of it still remain.
And
every year Native Americans hold and Unthanksgiving dinner on Alcatraz.
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