- Port of Stockton
The Port of Stockton is a major inland deep water port in
Stockton, California located on theSan Joaquin River before it joins theSacramento River to empty intoSuisun Bay , eighty miles inland. The port sits on about 1,440 acres, and occupies an island in theSan Joaquin Delta , and a portion of a neighborhood known as Boggs Tract.Geography
The only natural outlet for the waters of the Central Valley to pass into the sea is through the narrow
Carquinez Strait , at the inland eastern extreme of San Pablo Bay. Further inland are Suisun andGrizzly Bay s, arms of thePacific Ocean deep in the Californian interior. Further inland again from these last bays is the broadCalifornia Delta , formed where the San Joaquin andSacramento River s meet and cross together. This verdant triangle of land with deep black soils is at the heart of the Central Valley and stretches some fifty miles fromSusuin Bay on the west to the cities of Stockton and Sacramento on the east.History
Early years
In 1846, the first cargo boat ascended the San Joaquin River. In 1848, John Doak established the first ferry service on the river, and the first freight vessel, the sloop "Maria," visited Stockton. In 1849, Doak brought lumber from
San Francisco to Stockton and began a lumber business. By the 1850s, the Port had become a center of commodity shipping and the supply center for the goldfields. By the 1860s, the region saw a decline in gold production and an increase in agriculture.1930s-1960s
The first dredging contracts for the Stockton Deep Water Channel were awarded in 1930. The Port District officially opened in 1933.
References
* [http://www.portofstockton.com/ Port of Stockton website]
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