Thirteen installations in the San Francisco area beyond Fort Mason were part of the San Francisco POE. The port used 20 piers with 43 berths for oceangoing ships and had of warehouse space, transit shed space and of open space. The port had accommodation space for 34,338 persons in its staging areas to include both transit troops and station personnel. Other facilities included the piers at Alameda, the
Richmond Parr Terminals, an Air Force depot, the Emeryville Ordnance Shops,
Hamilton Field for air shipments and the
Presidio which included an animal depot. The
Stockton Piers and the
Humboldt Bay Piers were more distant elements of the port. The Emeryville Motor Depot was created with parking lots, rail facilities and a large building specifically to be a centralized facility receiving all vehicles at one location where they could be inspected, repaired if necessary and prepared for overseas shipment. The facility was notable for its efficiency and between December 1941 and August 1945 the facility processed 100,054 and shipped out 99,731 tanks, tractors, trucks, and other vehicles. Troop staging areas included the Army camps for housing, final training and equipping the troops with equipment to be carried with them aboard transports. The troops generally arrived by train, were processed and given final training, including conduct aboard transports and abandon ship training, inspected for equipment and finally alerted and transported to the piers for boarding overseas transports on a schedule before sailing. Shortly after the Pacific war began the press of troops transshipping in the attempt to reinforce the Philippines required vacating the Presidio by the garrison and use by the port as a staging area. The staging camps were connected to the terminals and piers in Oakland and San Francisco by water transport. Army harbor boats made routine trips but the main transport for troops was by means of ferries. The well known excursion vessels that served
Santa Catalina Island, and , were drafted into service. Their Army designations were
FS-99 and
FS-100 respectively. The Oakland-San Francisco ferry , later renamed
Ernie Pyle, also joined the fleet. The trip to piers in San Francisco took three to four hours. The port's primary staging area and the largest on the west coast, Camp Stoneman at
Pittsburg, California, also included the Pacific Coast Transportation Corps Officer Training School. Two rail lines served Pittsburg and the
San Joaquin River offered water access. More than a million soldiers processed through the camp. Including operation during the
Korean War over 1,500,000 troops were processed through the camp. Processing took four to five days from arrival to departure with units known only by a shipment code number. Late in the war the SFPOE experimented with embarking troops directly aboard a
Liberty ship at Camp Stoneman but that was not successful due to difficulties of large ships navigation to the camp.
Fort McDowell on
Angel Island was the staging area for unassigned enlisted men termed "casuals" and also served as a prisoner of war facility. The camp's mess hall could seat 1,410 at one time but had to have three seatings for each meal. About 300,000 men processed through Fort McDowell. At the end of the war returning soldiers were processed and sent to troop trains in Oakland and San Francisco. At war's end the port's function reversed and its facilities became separation centers ensuring rapid processing so soldiers could be sent home. A record may have been set when in one day twenty trains loaded in Oakland and two in San Francisco. == Operations ==