Doing Time on Alcatraz at Night

“Indians Welcome” read one sign.

“Peace and Freedom Home of the Free” and “Welcome to Indianland” were scrawled on the water tower.

An important historic preservation of the islands brief 19 month Indian occupation. Although fraught with controversy and a tragic ending, its lingering impact paved the way for Native American activism in government today. 

As we continued uphill in the darkness, you can feel a savage awakening of the cold-hearted aura of the islands past in its current occupants. Seagull combatants fall from the sky locked in a brutal battle over dominant status. Or perhaps over a food. Or a mate.  They squabble. They posture. They fight. Beaks become iron fist like past mammalian inmates. Now cormorants, seagulls, egrets and guillemots are the established ruling occupants of this rocky home. We stop a few times to observe one of the many bloody battles this possessed island encourages before continuing up the path. 

I've been to Alcatraz many times, but this was my first time being there at night. The first time I visited Alcatraz my tour guide was ex-inmate Bill Baker, a former Alcatraz convict and now author. He was 24 during his time at Alcatraz, a thief with an aptitude for escape. Now in his 80’s and reformed from past, he gave us a fascinating and very personal account of his life behind bars. 

He explained, “The beautiful clear nights were the worst. To be forced to see the twinkling lights of San Francisco and Golden Gate Bridge from a distance. I could hear laughter and music playing, it was all so close and a constant reminder of being stuck with my dull daily routine. It was enough to drive one mad.” I can hear Bill's hoarse voice replay in my head as I strolled the grounds enjoying a magnificent sunset on a clear moonlit night and the sounds of a bustling city swirling in my direction just as Bill recounted.

TIPS

If you snag tickets to The Alcatraz Night Tour consider yourself very luck. A limited number of tickets are sold and they go fast so be sure to book it well in advance.

Food is not allowed or served on the island. Fill your bellies before departure.

Add time to your travel for parking. Make sure to take note of closing time. There is off street parking however the meters run 2 hours. I parked at Imperial Parking Garage on Bay St because it's 24 hours and close to Pier 33 which opens at 8am....and not a minute earlier.