Stockton Ordnance Depot


The Stockton Ordance Depot was a World War II vehicle repair facility, supply depot, and camp for German and Italian prisoners of war. The installation was also used as a USAF radar station and a DLA Defense Distribution Center.

Acquisition

Construction of the military installation began by September 1941, and the leased areas included L-1 of which had the "Supply Depot" and the subsequent L-2 was for the "Stockton Motor Repair Depot" of. Parcels A-2-A, A-2-B, and A-2-C totaling were acquired "from the Estate of Frank Shackleford Boggs on May 11, 1942"; and

Naval Supply Annex Stockton

The Naval Supply Annex Stockton had four warehouses and storage yard built in 1945.

Radar station

The Stockton Bomb Plot was the Stockton Ordnance Depot callsign of the 3903rd Radar Bomb Scoring Group's Detachment I operating the Radar Bomb Scoring station for tracking bombers and evaluating aircrews' performance during simulated Cold War bomb runs for training/proficiency. Detachment I moved to Charlotte, North Carolina in 1950 and later becoming Detachment 4 of the 10th Radar Bomb Scoring Squadron at Houston, Texas, and RBS operations for California were subsequently performed by the 11 RBS Squadron's Det 2 at Cheli Air Force Station and Det 4 near McClellan AFB.

Stockton Air Force Station

Stockton Air Force Station was a site designated on March 2, 1955, after "portions of Parcels A-2-C and C-1 along with Parcels D-1, and E-1 were transferred to the Department of the Air Force on December 1, 1954." The USAF began the transfer of the site on December 14, 1956; and the property was conveyed after June 1967 payment by the Port of Stockton.

Defense Distribution Center San Joaquin

The Defense Logistics Agency used more than of the site, "including its four warehouses and storage yard built in 1945", "until 1998 when Defense Distribution Center San Joaquin Depot closed its Rough and Ready Island site."
In 2008, "the Port of Stockton attempting to acquire Rough and Ready Island from the Government."