by
Carleton Watkins Before Europeans arrived in the 18th century, the area around the strait and the bay was inhabited by
Native Americans the
Ohlone people to the south and
Coast Miwok to the north. Descendants of both tribes remain in the area. The opening to the strait was surprisingly elusive for early European explorers, apparently because the persistent summer fog masked the strait's narrow entrance. The strait is not recorded in the voyages of
Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo nor
Francis Drake, both of whom may have explored the nearby coast in the 16th century in search of the fabled
Northwest Passage. The strait is also unrecorded in observations by
Spanish galleons on the
Manila-Acapulco run from the
Philippines that laid up in nearby
Drakes Bay to the north. These rarely passed east of the
Farallon Islands ( west of the Golden Gate), for fear of the possibility of rocks between the islands and the mainland. The first recorded observation of the strait occurred nearly two hundred years later than the earliest European explorations of the coast. In 1769, Sgt
José Francisco Ortega, the leader of a scouting party sent north along the
San Francisco Peninsula by Don
Gaspar de Portolá from their expedition encampment in San Pedro Valley to locate the
Point Reyes headlands, reported back to Portolá that he could not reach the location because of the existence of the strait. On August 5, 1775
Juan de Ayala and the crew of his ship
San Carlos became the first Europeans known to have passed through the strait, anchoring in a cove behind
Angel Island, the cove now named in Ayala's honor. Until the 1840s, the strait was called the "Boca del Puerto de San Francisco" ("Mouth of the Port of San Francisco"). On July 1, 1846, before the discovery of
gold in
California, the entrance acquired a new name. In his memoirs,
John C. Frémont wrote: "To this Gate I gave the name of 'Chrysopylae', or 'Golden Gate'; for the same reasons that the harbor of
Byzantium was called Chrysoceras, or
Golden Horn." He went on to comment that the strait was "a golden gate to trade with the Orient". == Gallery ==