Arena y Fango: The Battle for Dutch Flats — A Page From Point Loma History
A sandy, muddy salt marsh is the reason San Diego is the West Coast home of the Marine Corps
By Eric DuVall / Point Loma– OB Monthly SDU-T / December 15, 2025
I liked the old main post office on Midway Drive. Perhaps I should have spoken up sooner. The place was intentionally, brutalistically, functional. Plus, it was close.
Remember the Old Town Philatelic Center in there? No? I don’t know if stamp collectors made much use of that desk or not, but somewhere in that big airplane hangar of a room I once noticed a plaque on the wall, maybe 16 inches square, that proclaimed “DUTCH FLATS — On this site on April 28, 1927, the Spirit of St. Louis was flight-tested by Charles A. Lindbergh.” How cool is that?
I had heard of Dutch Flats, but it is certainly not a place name that folks use these days.
The area referred to as Dutch Flats is simply the alluvial flood plain and former arroyo created by the watercourse of the San Diego River as it flowed past Old Town at the base of Presidio Hill, hung a hard left and was seemingly drawn directly toward San Diego Bay. A substantial portion of what is now arbitrarily referred to as the Midway District, all of the Marine Corps Recruit Depot and parts of Liberty Station and San Diego International Airport were once known as Dutch Flats.

Town Hall Hosted by San Diego Community Coalition on Dec. 13
By Alyssa Ray /
By William Menard / Op-Ed
Friends and family of popular fisherman and YouTuber, Mikey Rijavec, came together Saturday, Dec. 13, to honor his memory after his body was found off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, in November this year.
By Jillian Butler
Developers of 186-unit apartment building have the green light to continue work
By Lori Saldaña / Op-Ed
Coalition Bulletin: “This Week at City Hall”
From
By Paul Krueger / 






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