War conditions and other economic problems had caused
Asbury Park to be taken out of service in 1916.
Asbury Park was taken to the west coast under Capt. Fred Warner and Chief Engineer Samuel Sutton. Once the vessel arrived in San Francisco it was placed on the
Vallejo –
Mare Island, transporting workers to
Mare Island Naval Shipyard . In 1925 the vessel was extensively modified and renamed to become the commuter ferry '
SS City of Sacramento''''' crossing
San Francisco Bay between
San Francisco and
Vallejo. In 1925, she was refitted and more passenger deck space was added, and in 1927 she came under the ownership of Southern Pacific-Golden Gate Ferries following a series of mergers of the ferry companies operating on the Bay. In 1927
Southern Pacific acquired Monticello Steamship Company, and its three ships, including
City of Sacramento. The opening of the
San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge in 1936 and the
Golden Gate Bridge in 1937 put most of the ferry services on San Francisco Bay out of business, and in 1941 the
City of Sacramento was sold to the
Puget Sound Navigation Company (PSNC) and moved to
Puget Sound. There she operated between downtown
Seattle and
Bremerton, site of the
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, one of the
United States Navy's main centres for building, maintaining, and repairing warships during the
Second World War. == Puget Sound service ==