In 1994, construction workers in San Francisco’s financial district began digging to build a new light-rail tunnel beneath the city when they hit something. It was a mᴀssive ship named “the Rome.”
The ship was so large that the crew had to tunnel through the ship’s hull to construct the tunnel. Now, the J, K, L, M, N, and T trains all ride through the hull of this ship every day.
The origins of San Francisco’s ships
When the gold rush began in 1848, thousands of people sailed into California, hoping to strike it rich. The ships that sailed there were often just enough to get the crew there. Many would never sail again.
A large portion of the ships that landed in San Francisco Bay were simply left to rot as the crews they brought got caught up in gold fever. At the height of the gold rush, there were 500 to one thousand ships moored in the harbor, clogging up traffic and making the waters almost un-navigable.
The city needed land, and since most of it had already been built on, politicians devised a brilliant solution: start building on the water. The city started selling plots of bay water on the condition that the new owner would turn it into new land. So, ships were intentionally run aground and built into H๏τels and bars – they became part of the city.
Source: U.S. National Park Service
One of the most famous examples is that of a ship named the Niantic. This ship was run aground in 1849 and used as a warehouse and a H๏τel. Nicer ships in the harbor were turned into permanent structures and became as much a part of San Francisco as buildings built on the original land.
The fire of 1851 changed everything
All that was fine until a mᴀssive fire broke out in 1851. The fire gutted nearly the entire city, and most of the ships sank into the bay. When the fire was finally put out days later, much of the wreckage was covered with earth from nearby hills to start the rebuilding process. This resulted in many still intact ships, like the Rome, ending up buried beneath the now ground of the city.
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