San Francisco Sights

Alcatraz

  • Address
    • The Piers Alcatraz Island
  • Transport
    • F to Pier 33 for ferry
  • Website
  • Phone
    • Alcatraz Cruises: 415 981 7625
  • Price
    • day tickets adult/child under 5yr/child 5-11yr/senior/family 2 adults, 2 children $26/free/16/24.50/79, night tours adult/child under 5yr/child 5-11yr/child 12-17yr/senior $33/free/19.50/30.50/32
  • Hours
    • call center 8am-7pm, ferries depart from Pier 33 every half hour 9am-3:55pm, night tours 6:10pm & 6:45pm

Correct these details

Lonely Planet review for Alcatraz

Alcatraz: for almost 150 years, the name has given the innocent chills and the guilty cold sweats. Over the years it’s been the nation’s first military prison, a forbidding maximum-security penitentiary and disputed territory between Native American activists and the FBI. No wonder that first step you take off the ferry and onto ‘the Rock’ seems to cue ominous music: dunh-dunh-dunnnnh! It all started innocently enough back in 1775, when Spanish lieutenant Juan Manuel de Ayala sailed the San Carlos past the 12-acre island he called Isla de Alcatraces (Isle of the Pelicans). In 1859 a new post on Alcatraz became the first US West Coast fort, and soon proved handy as a holding pen for Civil War deserters, insubordinates and those who had been court-martialed. Among the prisoners were Native American scouts and ‘unfriendlies, ’ including 19 Hopis who refused to send their children to government boarding schools where speaking Hopi and practicing their religion were punishable by beatings. By 1902 the four cell blocks of wooden cages were rotting, unsanitary and otherwise ill-equipped for the influx of US soldiers convicted of war crimes in the Philippines. The army began building a new concrete military prison in 1909, but upkeep was expensive and the US soon had other things to worry about: WWI, financial ruin and flappers. When the 18th Amendment to the Constitution declared selling liquor a crime in 1922, rebellious Jazz Agers weren’t prepared to give up their tipple – and gangsters kept the booze coming. Authorities were determined to make a public example of criminal ringleaders, and in 1934 the Federal Bureau of Prisons took over Alcatraz as a prominent showcase for its crime-fighting efforts. ‘The Rock’ averaged only 264 inmates, but its roster read like an America’s Most Wanted list. A-list criminals doing time on Alcatraz included Chicago crime boss Al ‘Scarface’ Capone, dapper kidnapper George ‘Machine Gun’ Kelly, hot-headed Harlem mafioso and sometime poet ‘Bumpy’ Johnson, and Morton Sobell, the military contractor found guilty of Soviet espionage along with Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Today, first-person accounts of daily life in the Alcatraz lockup are included on the award-winning audio tour provided by Alcatraz Cruises. But take your headphones off for just a moment, and notice the sound of carefree city life traveling across the water: this is the torment that made perilous escapes into rip tides worth the risk. Though Alcatraz was considered escape-proof, in 1962 the Anglin brothers and Frank Morris floated away on a makeshift raft and were never seen again. Security and upkeep proved prohibitively expensive, and finally the island prison was abandoned to the birds in 1963. Native Americans claimed sovereignty over the island in the ’60s, noting that Alcatraz had long been used by the Ohlone as a spiritual retreat, yet federal authorities refused their proposal to turn Alcatraz into a Native American study center. Then on the eve of Thanksgiving, 1969, 79 Native American activists broke a Coast Guard blockade to enforce their claim. Over the next 19 months, some 5600 Native Americans would visit the occupied island. Public support eventually pressured President Richard Nixon to restore Native territory and strengthen self-rule for Native nations in 1970. Each Thanksgiving Day since 1975, an ‘Un-Thanksgiving’ ceremony has been held at dawn on Alcatraz, with Native leaders and supporters showing their determination to reverse the course of colonial history. After the government regained control of the island, it became a national park, and by 1973 had already become a major draw. Today the cell blocks, ‘This Is Indian Land’ water-tower graffiti and rare wildlife are all part of the attraction. Tickets should be booked two weeks or more in advance – especially for the popular night tour – so plan your escape now.

 

Traveller reviews for Alcatraz (4)

  • Avatar
    To write a review sign in, register or   Connect_light_large_long
    Add your experience
    Say more…
  • Avatar

    Visiting brings all the stories to life!

    mula22 recommends this,

  • Avatar

    Awesome audio tour

    steveomac recommends this,

  • Avatar

    A fascinating prison tour

    remelila recommends this,

    Even without the ghostly former federal prison, the rocky little island of Alcatraz, so close to and yet so far from the bright lights of San Francisco, would make an interesting day tour. But the history and atmosphere at Alcatraz is palpable, and it makes for an unforgettable day trip when visiting San Francisco. Wear comfortable shoes and bring your camera.

  • Avatar

    Alcatraz By Night

    docbrown recommends this,

    Because of Alcatraz's fame, visitors to San Francisco might have worries about it being super touristy, overrated, or simply not worth the effort; luckily none of these are true, and Alcatraz is an absolute must-see sight in the San Francisco Bay Area.

    The tour is great at any time of day, and the audio tour is one of the best I've encountered, but for the full experience I highly recommend the night tour. This tour leaves late afternoon from San Francisco, getting you to Alcatraz just in time for sunset and a bit of darkness at the end. The light and time of day add to the already atmospheric qualities of the island and the prison, and the sunset and night views of the Golden Gate and San Francisco are priceless.

    A few tips to maximize your experience:
    1. Book well in advance online to ensure that you get to go at all - Alcatraz generally sells out in advance.
    2. Search around online - the ferry company and pier has changed a few times in recent years and a lot of published information is out of date.
    3. Bring a jacket. It's rarely warm out on Alcatraz.
    4. Once in the prison itself, before you start the audio tour, go straight through the cell block to the special tour sign-up table and get yourself a spot on some of the space-limited tours (e.g., the kitchen or the spooky hospital wing).
    5. Talk to the guides: they know a lot and are often willing to show you things you would never see on your own.