Livin' on the Dock of the Bay
From the Beats to CEOs, the residents of Sausalito’s houseboat community cherish their history and their neighbors
- By Jeff Greenwald
- Smithsonian.com, April 04, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Ecologist and Whole Earth Catalog creator Stewart Brand, who has lived on the tugboat Mirene since 1982, tells how “the former shipyard became a semi-outlaw area and riffraff moved in—floated in.” During the 1950s and ‘60s, as the Beats gave way to the hippies, the chance to construct rent-free homes out of abandoned boats and flotsam was a siren song that drew a spectrum of characters. Some were working artists, like Moyer, who bought and improved old boats. There were also musicians, drug dealers, misfits and other fringe-dwellers. The waterfront swelled into a community of squatters who, as Brand puts it, “had more nerve than money.”
“People lived here because they could afford it,” agreed Moyer. “You could find an old lifeboat hull to build on, and there was always stuff to recycle because of the shipyards. Whatever you wanted. If you needed a beam of wood ten feet long by one foot wide, one would come floating up.” Through the early 1970s, the Sausalito houseboat scene was a sort of anarchist commune. The heart and soul was the Charles Van Damme, a derelict 1916 ferry that served as community center, restaurant and rumpus room.
Shel Silverstein wasn’t the only celebrity in the mix. Artist Jean Varda shared the ferry Vallejo with Buddhist writer/philosopher Alan Watts. In 1967 Otis Redding wrote his hit “Dock of the Bay” on a Sausalito houseboat (which one, exactly, is still a matter of controversy). Actors Sterling Hayden, Rip Torn and Geraldine Page all kept floating homes. The roll call would in time include Brand, author Anne Lamott, Bill Cosby and environmentalist Paul Hawken.
But the good times didn’t last. A paradise for some, the chaotic community—with its wacky architecture, filched electricity and untreated sewage—was an eyesore to others. Local developers set their sites on revamping the Sausalito waterfront, with its dizzying real estate potential.
At the park’s edge stand the antique paddle wheel and steam stack of the Charles Van Damme, all that remain of the now bulldozed ferry. Doug Storms, a commercial diver who has lived on the waterfront since 1986, led me past a small waterfront garden.
“In the 1960s and early ‘70s, there was the classic conflict between the haves and have-nots,” said the sinewy Storms. "Between the developers and the local community, many who were living here rent-free."
The result was a long and ugly battle known as “The Houseboat Wars.” Dramatized in a folksy 1974 film (Last Free Ride), the battle pit the waterfront’s squatter community against the combined might of the local police, city council and Coast Guard.
Ultimately, the developers more or less prevailed. Most of the houseboats were relocated along a series of five new docks, built by the Waldo Point Harbor company. Their electricity and sewage lines are now up to code. The process of gentrification on the new docks has been steady and not altogether unwelcome. Though they bristle at the monthly slip fees, many old-timers have seen the value of their floating homes skyrocket.
But a small community of mavericks, including Storms, refused to be bullied. The “Gates Co-op,” as their dock is called, remains a throwback to the old days. With its tangles of electrical wire, wobbly walkways and erratic sanitation, it looks more like Katmandu than California.
And so it will stay until July, when Waldo Point Harbor is supposed to begin a long-delayed reconfiguration process. Along with many other “improvements” (depending on your point of view), the funky co-op will be dismantled, and its residents relocated in subsidized houseboats at new or existing berths.
Will it actually happen? No one knows. The obstacles to getting anything done on the waterfront seem endless. There’s a much-loved example of this phenomenon, known simply as “the pickleweed story.”
Some years ago, the story goes, a goat lived at the co-op docks. It grazed freely, cropping all the nearby pickleweed. Then, as now, the parking lots near the docks flooded at high tides, sometimes destroying cars. The locals had a permit—approved by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers—to raise the parking lots, using landfill.
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Comments (15)
For more information on this community and the history of the Charles Van Damme Ferry visit www.charlesvandammeferry.org We are wanting to save the memory of the Charles Van Damme Ferry by telling her story and finding a way to save the paddle wheel from destruction in the new configuration on the dock.
Posted by judyth Greenburgh on December 23,2012 | 12:35 PM
A wonderful article. Thank you. One small correction, if you please: The proper name for our little bay is "Richardson's Bay", not "Richardson Bay". Maps, charts, publications get it wrong frequently. Check the history books of the area to learn the truth. Oh, I owned "Water Colors" on Kappa's East Pier for 5 years and look forward to living on the water again one of these years.
Posted by Bonnie MacGregor, Secretary Richardson's Bay Maritime Association on December 22,2012 | 07:32 PM
I spent 3 years living on the dock of the Bay and I still miss it terribly. It wasn't my houseboat, though. It was a sad day indeed when it was time to go. Feels like most of Sausalito has moved to Fairfax. I'm in Panama City's Casco Viejo...forever, at 76, a bohemian.
Posted by Ken Milburn on April 19,2012 | 09:07 AM
My old pal & former colleague, Don Sherwood, a Bay Area legend,lived there before lift off to another galaxy where he's still living Lucifer-like and terrorizing the natives! You might want to checkout tomorrow's blogpost written by my phenomenally talented old school chum and author, Cyra McFadden on www.betteboomer.com. She's a Sausalito denizen, but doubt she's roaming her houseboot deck starkers these days, although I've been wrong before!Loved the article as it took me right back to a previous life of mine. Thanks!
Posted by Marci Jensen-Middlebrook on April 16,2012 | 01:26 PM
Thanks for your article. I lived through last winter 2010-11 on the very same houseboat you rented on South 40 Dock. It was thoroughly idyllic, even the list the boat would take every morning when I stepped up and outboard into the shower. One of the projects I did while there was to renew the brightwork in the galley - refinishing all the kitchen counters with 7 coats of spar varnish. It was nice to see them gleaming in the photograph.
Posted by sandy on April 16,2012 | 12:25 PM
Well I'll be darned. After being a non-subject for so many years, we are now in a Smithsonian story. Times have changed along with the waterfront. Thanks for telling it as it is Jeff!
Posted by Joe Tate on April 16,2012 | 10:40 AM
Beautiful story, Jeff! I have heard tidbits about the houseboat community from time to time, but have never had it all pulled together like this for me. Thank you.
Posted by Brad Newsham on April 15,2012 | 11:13 PM
Let's go to SF.
Posted by Clara Carson on April 12,2012 | 09:44 PM
This is a first-rate piece on a unique place to live. Jeff Greenwald really "got it." Thanks!
Posted by Cyra McFadden on April 12,2012 | 03:55 PM
i enjoy smithsonian in print. i'm subscriber i would like to read it via e mail. do i need a special password for that?
Posted by angie urkide on April 12,2012 | 03:53 PM
'Tis exactly why I love living here!!!! Wonderful people and magical sights -- hourly!
Posted by Janet on April 9,2012 | 10:08 PM
A touching tale of our community - thank you
Posted by Lovise mills on April 7,2012 | 10:28 AM
To my point.. Stroll the Docks of the Bay!
Posted by Victoria on April 6,2012 | 06:51 PM
Accurate and well written, with a brilliant through-line! ^_^
Posted by Paul on April 5,2012 | 09:27 PM