Few places in America experienced greater changes as a result of
World War II than San Diego. And few events, if any, in San Diego history have had more immediate and more long lasting impact on the people
who lived here.
The rapid growth that affected virtually all aspects of life in San Diego
received considerable national attention at the time, in newsreels,
newspapers and magazines. In January 1942, the National Geographic
described and illustrated the events taking place in San Diego in a feature
article entitled "San Diego Can't Believe It."
Down in the southwest nook of the United States there hums, hammers,
and whistles one of the world's most crowded, most astonishing cities. I
mean San Diego, "where California began." Today her once quiet, sunshiny
air is full of dust, smoke, steam, zooming planes, and the roar of gunfire.
Without taking thought she sees cubits added to her stature. Transformed,
she is, by the fury of men making ready to fight.
San Diego's military and industrial base was established well in advance
of the outbreak of war in Europe in the fall of 1939. San Diego was already
known as a "Navy Town" and much of the ship building, repair and
service facilities that expanded so rapidly during the war were already
here. San Diego's clear skies had already attracted the aviation industry
including such manufacturers as Ryan, Consolidated, and Solar. But the
outbreak of war in Europe quickly produced an unprecedented national
buildup of our industrial and military capacity, as part of the effort to be
the "arsenal of Democracy," by supplying the Allies in Europe.
The immediate impact of these national agendas on San Diego was
staggering. The population jumped from 200,000 to 300,000 in little more
than a year, eclipsing the growth forecast for the next two decades. The
aviation industry was the driving force as local companies worked around
the clock to fill orders. The arrival of workers from across America
created an instant housing shortage and changed forever the
demographic mix of the county.
If pre-war San Diego was a "Navy Town," then wartime San Diego was
equally an "Army Town." Camp Lockett in Campo, Camp Callan at Torrey
Pines, Camp Elliot in Kearny Mesa and other training bases and defense
installations joined the Navy and Marine bases already here. At the peak
of the war, more than 70 percent of the land in San Diego County was
devoted to military purposes.
If you lived in San Diego during the period of 1939 to 1945, you lived in
one of the busiest military communities in the country and your life was
affected every day by the wartime conditions. Some experiences were
widely shared and common to almost everyone, such as learning to live
with shortages, rationing, civil defense measures, scrap drives, bond
drives, and Red Cross drives. Other experiences were shared only by
smaller segments of the population such as those of Japanese American
families who were relocated during the war as potential security risks. For
many, the wartime San Diego experience was different, but for most it
was also one of the most significant and memorable events in their lives.
In today's society of television wars, it is difficult to imagine a single
event that would so permeate and dominate lives in the same way that
World War II altered the lives of its generation. Hopefully, the essays in
War Comes to San Diego will preserve and communicate to younger and
future generations some of that experience. Hopefully too, like all good
history, it will help us to better understand our community and to make
better informed decisions as we face new changes being imposed on San
Diego by national efforts to downsize the military at the end of the cold
war. As this volume indicates, you don't have to be a historian to
recognize that today's military and defense cutbacks are directly linked to
the sweeping changes that San Diego experienced more than fifty years
ago when "War Came To San Diego."