SS Palo Alto

SS Palo Alto and connecting fishing pier were battered by the 2022-23 winter storms. The ship deteriorated further and the pier was deemed to be beyond repair and removed in April, 2023.

Palo Alto
Palo Alto on sea trials, on 10 September 1920.
(Naval History and Heritage Command - Photo NH 799)
History
United States
NameSS Palo Alto
NamesakePalo Alto, California
BuilderSan Francisco Shipbuilding Company, Oakland, California
Launched29 May 1919
FateGrounded as a fishing pier at Seacliff Beach in Aptos, California
General characteristics [1]
TypeDesign 1100 tanker
Tonnage
Length420 ft (130 m)
Beam54 ft (16 m)
Depth35 ft (11 m)
Propulsion

SS Palo Alto was a concrete ship built as a tanker at the end of World War I. Completed too late to see war service, she was mothballed until 1929, when she was intentionally grounded off Seacliff State Beach in the Monterey Bay, becoming part of a pleasure pier entertainment complex. Palo Alto was damaged by the sea, leading her to be stripped and used only as a fishing pier. Subsequent decades have seen her be further broken by the sea, but large sections of her wreck remain somewhat intact.

  1. ^ Bender, Rob. "S.S. Palo Alto". concreteships.org. Retrieved 17 December 2012.