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California

 
Dictionary: Cal·i·for·nia   (kăl'ĭ-fôr'nyə, -fôr'nē-ə) pronunciation
(Abbr. CA or Cal. or Calif.)

A state of the western United States on the Pacific Ocean. It was admitted as the 31st state in 1850. The area was colonized by the Spanish and formally ceded to the United States by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848). California is often called the Golden State because of its sunny climate and the discovery of gold during its pioneering days. Sacramento is the capital and Los Angeles the largest city. Population: 36,600,000.

Californian Cal'i·for'nian adj. & n.

 

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State (pop., 2006 est.: 36,457,549), western U.S. Lying on the Pacific Ocean, it is bordered by Mexico and the U.S. states of Oregon, Nevada, and Arizona. California is the largest state in population and the third largest in area (158,633 sq mi [410,858 sq km]), extending about 800 mi (1,300 km) north to south and 250 mi (400 km) east to west. Its capital is Sacramento. Within 85 mi (137 km) of each other lie Mount Whitney and Death Valley, the highest and lowest points in the 48 contiguous states. California was inhabited originally by Native Americans. The first European coastal expansion took place in 1542 – 43 when Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo established a Spanish claim to the area. The first mission was established by Junípero Serra at San Diego in 1769. The region remained under Spanish and, after the 1820s, Mexican control until it was taken by U.S. forces in the Mexican War and ceded to the U.S. by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. Though settlement had begun by the U.S. in 1841, it was greatly accelerated by the 1848 gold rush. California was admitted to the union in 1850 as a nonslavery state under the Compromise of 1850. Its already expanding population grew immensely in the 20th century. It has the largest economy of any U.S. state. It has suffered severe earthquakes, most destructively those of San Francisco in 1906 and 1989 and Los Angeles in 1994.

For more information on California, visit Britannica.com.

US History Encyclopedia: California
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California, whose name derives from a fifteenth-century Spanish romance, lies along the Pacific Coast of the United States. Formidable natural barriers, including the Sierra Nevada and the Cascade Mountains to the east and the north and the Sonoran Desert to the south and southeast, isolate it from the rest of the continent. Streams plunging down from the mountains form the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers in the Great Central Valley, while coastal ranges divide the littoral into isolated plains, valleys, and marine terraces. The state contains a wide variety of ecologies, from alpine meadows to deserts, often within a few miles of each other. San Francisco Bay, near the center of the state, is the finest natural harbor in the eastern Pacific.

The first known people came to California thousands of years ago, filtering down from the north in small bands. In the varied geography, especially the many valleys tucked into the creases of the coastal mountains, these early immigrants evolved a mosaic of cultures, like the Chumash of the southern coast, with their oceangoing canoes and sophisticated trading network, and the Pomo, north of San Francisco Bay, who made the beads widely used as money throughout the larger community.

Spanish California

Spain claimed California as part of Columbus's discovery, but the extraordinary hardships of the first few voyages along the coast discouraged further exploration until Vitus Bering sailed into the northern Pacific in 1741 to chart the region for the czar of Russia. Alarmed, the viceroy in Mexico City authorized a systematic attempt to establish control of California. In 1769, a band of Franciscan monks under Fray Junipero Serra and a hundred-odd soldiers commanded by Gaspar de Portola traveled up the peninsula of Baja California to San Diego with two hundred cattle. From there de Portola explored north, found San Francisco Bay, and established the presidio at Monterey. Spanish California became a reality.

Spanish policy was to Christianize and civilize the Native peoples they found. To do this, Serra and his followers built a string of missions, like great semifeudal farms, all along what came to be called El Camino Real and forced the Indians into their confines. Ultimately, twenty-one missions stretched from San Diego to Sonoma. The missions failed in their purpose. Enslaved and stripped of their cultures, the Native people died by the thousands of disease, mistreatment, and despair. From an estimated 600,000 before the Spanish came, by 1846 their population dropped to around 300,000.

The soldiers who came north to guard the province had no place in the missions, and the friars thought them a bad influence anyway. Soldiers built the first town, San Jose, in 1777, and four years later, twenty-two families of mixed African, Indian, and Spanish blood founded the city of Los Angeles. The settlers, who called themselves Californios, planted orange trees and grapevines, and their cattle multiplied.

In 1821, Mexico declared its independence from Spain, dooming the mission system. By 1836, all the missions were secularized. The land was to be divided up among the Natives attached to the missions but instead fell into the hands of soldiers and adventurers. The new Mexican government also began granting large tracts of land for ranches. In 1830, California had fifty ranches, but by 1840 it had more than one thousand. Power gravitated inevitably to the land holders. Mexico City installed governors in Monterey, but the Californio dons rebelled against anybody who tried to control them.

When the Swiss settler Johann Sutter arrived in 1839, the government in Monterey, believing the land was worthless desert and hoping that Sutter would form a barrier between their holdings and greedy interlopers, gave him a huge grant of land in the Sacramento Valley. But in 1842, when a band of nineteen American immigrants came over the Sierras, Sutter welcomed them to his settlement and gave them land, tools, and encouragement. John Charles Frémont, a U.S. Army mapmaker, on his first trip to California also relied on Sutter's help. Frémont's book about his expedition fired intense interest in the United States, and within the next two years, hundreds of settlers crossed the Sierras into California. Many more came by ship around Cape Horn. By 1846, Americans outnumbered the Californios in the north.

The U.S. government itself had long coveted California. In 1829, President Andrew Jackson tried to buy it. When Mexico indignantly declined, American interest turned toward taking it by force. The argument with Mexico over Texas gave the United States the chance. In May 1846, U.S. forces invaded Mexico. On 7 July 1846, Commodore John Drake Sloat of the U.S. Navy seized Monterey, and Frémont raised the American flag at Sonoma and Sacramento. The Spanish period was over; California had become part of the United States.

The Americans Take Over

Signed on 20 May 1848, the Treaty of Guadeloupe Hidalgo officially transferred the northern third of Mexico to the United States for $15 million. Because of the gold rush, California now had a population sufficient to become a state, but the U.S. Congress was unwilling even to consider admitting it to the Union for fear of upsetting the balance between slave and free states. In this limbo a series of military governors squabbled over jurisdictions. Mexican institutions like the alcalde, or chief city administrator, remained the basic civil authorities.

Yet the American settlers demanded a functioning government. The gold rush, which began in 1848 and accelerated through 1849, made the need for a formal structure all the more pressing. When the U.S. Congress adjourned for a second time without dealing with the status of California, the military governor called for a general convention to write a constitution. On 1 September 1849, a diverse group of men, including Californios like Mariano Guadeloupe Vallejo, longtime settlers like Sutter, and newcomers like William Gwin, met in Monterey. The convention decided almost unanimously to ban slavery in California, not for moral reasons but for practical reasons: free labor could not compete with slaves. After some argument, the convention drew a line along the eastern foot of the Sierra Nevada as the state's boundary. Most important, the convention provided for the election of a governor and a state legislature in the same statewide polling that ratified the constitution itself on 13 November 1849. On 22 April 1850, the first California legislature elected two U.S. senators, gave them a copy of the constitution, and sent them to Washington, D.C., to demand recognition of California as a state.

Presented with this fait accompli, Congress tilted much in favor of California, but the issue of slavery still lay unresolved. Finally, Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky cobbled together the Compromise of 1850, a law that gave everybody something, and California entered the Union on 9 September 1850.

The state now needed a capital. Monterey, San Francisco, and San Jose all competed for the honor. General Vallejo offered to build a new capital on San Francisco Bay and donated a generous piece of his property for it, but the governor impetuously moved the state offices there long before the site was ready. In 1854, citizens from Sacramento lured the legislature north and showed the politicians such a good time that Sacramento became the capital of California.

After the Gold Rush

Before the discovery of gold, hardly fifteen thousand non-Indians inhabited California. By 1850, 100,000 newcomers had flooded in, most from the eastern United States, and the 1860 census counted 360,000 Californians. These people brought with them their prejudices and their politics, which often amounted to gang warfare. In San Francisco, Sam Brannan, who had become the world's first millionaire by selling shovels and shirts to the miners, organized a vigilante committee to deal with rowdy street thugs. This committee reappeared in 1851, and in 1856 it seized power in the city and held it for months, trying and hanging men at will and purging the city of the committee's enemies.

A Democratic politician, David Broderick, a brash Irish immigrant with a genius for political organization, dominated the early years of California politics and represented the state in the U.S. Senate. In Washington, his flamboyant antislavery speeches alienated the national Democratic leadership, and he was on the verge of being run out of the party when he was killed in a duel in 1856. At Broderick's death, his followers bolted the Democrats and joined the young Republican Party, sweeping Abraham Lincoln to victory in 1860 and electing Leland Stanford to the governorship. Republicans dominated state politics for decades.

San Francisco was California's first great city, growing during the gold rush from a tiny collection of shacks and a few hundred people to a thriving metropolis of fifty thousand people. The enormous wealth that poured through the city during those years raised mansions and splendid hotels and supported a bonanza culture. Writers like Bret Harte and Mark Twain got their starts in this expansive atmosphere; theater, which captivated the miners, lured international stars like Lola Montez and impresarios like David Belasco. By 1855, the gold rush was fading. Californians turned to the exploitation of other resources, farming, ranching, whaling, and manufacturing. In 1859, the discovery of the Comstock Lode in the eastern Sierra Nevada opened up another boom.

The state's most pressing need was better communication with the rest of the country, but, deeply divided over slavery, Congress could not agree on a route for a transcontinental railroad. With the outbreak of the Civil War, the slavery obstacle was removed. In 1862, Congress passed a railroad bill, and in 1863 the Central Pacific began building east from Sacramento.

The Era of the Southern Pacific

In 1869, the Central Pacific Railroad, building eastward, met the Union Pacific, building westward, at Promontory Point, Utah. The cross-country trek that had once required six grueling months now took three days. The opening of the railroad and the end of the Civil War accelerated the pace of economic and social change in California. A steady flood of newcomers swept away the old system of ranches based on Spanish grants. A land commission was set up to verify existing deeds, but confusion and corruption kept many titles unconfirmed for decades. Squatters overwhelmed Mexican-era land owners like Sutter and Vallejo. The terrible drought of the 1860s finished off the old-timers in the south, where cattle died by the thousands.

The panic of 1873 brought on a depression with steep unemployment and a yawning gap between the haves and the have-nots. A laborer might earn $2 a week, while Leland Stanford, a senator and railroad boss, spent a million dollars in a single year to build his San Francisco mansion. Yet as the railroad was vital to the growing country, labor was vital to the railroad. In 1877, railroad workers gave the country a taste of what they could do in the first national strike, which loosed a wave of violence on the country. In San Francisco the uprising took the form of anti-Chinese riots, finally put down by a recurrence of the vigilante committee of the 1850s, which raised a private army, armed it with pick handles, and battled rioters in the streets.

But labor had shown its strength. In San Francisco its chief spokesman was Denis Kearney, a fiery Irishman who in 1877 formed the Workingmen's Party, which demanded an eight-hour day, Chinese exclusion from California, restraints on the Southern Pacific Railroad, and bank reform. The sudden vigorous growth of the Workingmen's Party gave Kearney and his followers great clout in the 1878 convention, called to revise the state's out-grown 1849 constitution.

The new constitution was not a success, especially because it failed to restrain the Southern Pacific Railroad. The Southern Pacific controlled the legislature and many newspapers. Where it chose to build, new towns sprang up, and towns it by passed died off. The whole economy of California passed along the iron rails, and the Southern Pacific took a cut of everything. The railroad was bringing steadily more people into the state. The last Mexican-era ranchos were sold off, and whole towns were built on them, including Pasadena, which arose on the old Rancho San Pascual in 1877. This was a peak year for immigration, because the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad had finally built into Los Angeles, giving the Southern Pacific some competition. The resulting fare war reduced the ticket price to California to as low as $1, and 200,000 people moved into the state.

Immigration from Asia was a perennial political issue. Brought to California in droves to build the railroad, the Chinese were the target of savage racism from the white majority and endless efforts to exclude them. Later, the Japanese drew the same attacks. Meanwhile, the original people of California suffered near extinction. White newcomers drove them from their lands, enslaved them, and hunted them like animals. The federal government proposed a plan to swap the Indians' ancestral lands for extensive reservations and support. The tribes agreed, but Congress never accepted the treaty. The government took the lands but supplied neither reservations nor help. Perhaps 300,000 Native Americans lived in California in 1850, but by 1900, only 15,000 remained.

Progressivism

The entrenched interests of the railroad sparked widespread if fragmented opposition. Writers like Henry George, in Progress and Poverty (1880), and Frank Norris, in The Octopus (1901), laid bare the fundamental injustices of the economy. Labor organizers took the struggle more directly to the bosses. Activists, facing the brute power of an establishment that routinely used force against them, sometimes resorted to violence. In 1910, a bomb destroyed the Los Angeles Times Building, and twenty people died. The paper had opposed union organizing. In 1905, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) began to organize part-time and migrant workers in California, especially farm workers. This struggle climaxed in the Wheatland riot of 2 August 1913, in which several workers, the local sheriff, and the district attorney were killed. The National Guard stopped the riot, and the IWW was driven out of the Sacramento Valley. In 1919, the legislature passed the Criminal Syndicalism Law. Syndicalism was an IWW watchword, and the law basically attacked ideas. Protesting this law, the writer and politician Upton Sinclair contrived to be arrested for reading the U.S. Constitution out loud in public.

Nonetheless, the government of corruption and bossism was under serious assault. The great San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 only postponed the graft prosecution of the mayor and the city's behind-the-scenes boss. Grassroots progressives in Los Angeles helped build momentum for a statewide movement that swept the Progressive Republican Hiram Johnson to the governorship in 1910. In 1911, Johnson and other progressives passed a legislative agenda that destroyed the political power of the Southern Pacific and reformed the government, giving the voters the referendum, recall, and proposition and providing for direct primary election of senators with an allowance for cross-filing, by which a candidate could run in any or all party primaries. Cross-filing substantially weakened both parties but generally favored the better organized Republicans, who remained in control of the state government.

The Rise of the South

In 1914, the opening of the Panama Canal and the completion of the harbor at San Pedro made Los Angeles the most important port on the Pacific Coast. The southland was booming. Besides its wealth of orange groves and other agriculture, southern California now enjoyed a boffo movie industry, and vast quantities of oil, the new gold, lay just underfoot. The movie business took hold in southern California because the climate let filmmakers shoot pictures all year round. In 1914, seventy-three different local companies were making movies, while World War I destroyed the film business in Europe. The war stimulated California's whole economy, demanding, among other goods, cotton for uniforms, processed food, and minerals for the tools of war. Oil strikes in Huntington Beach and Signal Hill in the early 1920s brought in another bonanza.

All these industries and the people who rushed in to work in them required water. Sprawling Los Angeles, with an unquenchable thirst for water, appropriated the Owens River in the eastern Sierra in 1913. In 1936, when the Hoover Dam was finished, the city began sucking water from the Colorado River and in the 1960s from the Feather River of northern California. San Francisco, also growing, got its water by drowning the Hetch Hetchy Valley despite the efforts of John Muir, the eccentric, charismatic naturalist who founded the Sierra Club.

The boom of the Roaring Twenties collapsed in the Great Depression of the 1930s. Thousands of poor people, many from the Dust Bowl of Oklahoma and Arkansas, drifted into California, drawn by the gentle climate and the chimera of work. John Steinbeck's Pulitzer Prize–winning novel The Grapes of Wrath (1939) described the Okies' desperation and showed a California simmering with discontent. At the same time, utopian dreams sprouted everywhere. People seemed ready to try anything to improve their lives, and they had a passion for novelty. Spiritual and dietary fads abounded, and the yawning gap between the wealth of some and the hopeless poverty of so many spawned a steady flow of social schemes. Among others, Sinclair and the physician Francis E. Townsend proposed elaborate social welfare plans, which pre-figured social security.

More significant was the return of a vigorous labor movement, particularly in San Francisco's maritime industry. The organizing of Andrew Furuseth and then Harry Bridges, who built the International Longshoreman's Association, led to the great strike of 1934, which stopped work on waterfronts from San Diego to Seattle, Washington, for ninety days. Even in open-shop Los Angeles, workers were joining unions, and their numbers made them powerful. As part of his New Deal for bringing back prosperity, President Franklin Roosevelt supported collective bargaining under the aegis of federal agencies like the National Labor Relations Board, and instead of radical outsiders, labor leaders became partners in the national enterprise.

World War II

In 1891, Japanese immigration to California began to soar, and the racist exclusionary policies already directed against the Chinese turned on this new target. In 1924, the federal Immigration Act excluded Japanese immigration. The ongoing deterioration of Japanese-American relations ultimately led to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 and U.S. entry into World War II. In 1942, thousands of Japanese American Californians, most of them U.S. citizens, were forced into concentration camps.

The war itself brought California out of the depression. Defense industries surged, including shipbuilding, chemicals, and the new aircraft industry. California had been a center of airplane building since the early start of the industry. Lockheed and Douglas Aircraft plants had been building warplanes for other nations as well as for the United States since the beginning of the war in Europe, and with U.S. entry into the conflict, production surged. Douglas Aircraft alone built twenty thousand planes during the war.

The state's population continued its relentless growth. Thousands came to California to work in the defense industries, and thousands more passed through the great naval base in San Diego, the army depot at Fort Ord, and the marine facility at Camp Pendleton. In April 1945, the United Nations was founded in San Francisco. World War II brought California from the back porch of America into the center of the postwar order.

Modern California

In 1940 the population of California was 6,907,387; in 1950 it was 10,586,223; and in 2000 it was 33,871,648. In part this growth was due to a nationwide shift from the Northeast to the so-called Sunbelt, but also, especially after 1964, when the new federal Immigration Law passed, immigrants from Asia and South America flooded into California.

This extraordinary growth brought formidable problems and unique opportunities. The economy diversified and multiplied until by 2000 California's economy was ranked as the fifth largest in the world. Growth also meant that pollution problems reached a crisis stage, and the diversity of the population—by 2000 no one ethnic group was in the majority—strained the capacity of the political system to develop consensus. Yet the era began with one of the most popular governors in California history, Earl Warren, so well-liked that he secured both the Republican and the Democratic nominations for governor in 1946 and received 92 percent of the votes cast. He gained an unprecedented third term in 1950. In 1952, President Dwight Eisenhower appointed him chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, and Warren's opinions and judgments helped liberalize politics and made the African American struggle for social justice a mainstream issue.

California emerged from World War II with a huge production capacity and a growing labor force. The aircraft industry that had contributed so much to the war effort now turned to the production of jet planes, missiles, satellites, and spacecraft. Industrial and housing construction boomed, and agriculture continued as the ground of the state's wealth, producing more than one hundred cash crops. In 1955, Disneyland, the first great theme park, opened, reaffirming California's corner on the fantasy industry.

The opening of the Golden Gate Bridge in 1939 had signaled the state's increasing dependence on automobiles, fueled by an abundant supply of gas and oil and by Californians' love of flexibility and freedom. Highway projects spun ribbons of concrete around the major urban areas and out into the countryside. Los Angeles grew more rapidly than any other area, increasing its population by 49.8 percent between 1940 and 1950. Above it, the air thickened into a brown soup of exhaust fumes.

Population growth changed politics as well. In 1958, after decades of Republican control, the Democrat Edmund Brown Sr. took advantage of his opponents' divisions and, in a vigorous door-to-door campaign, won the governorship. California's political spectrum included extremes at either end. On the right, the John Birch Society incorporated all the paranoia of the postwar anticommunist crusade, and on the left, the free speech movement at the University of California demonstrated many young people's anarchistic defiance of authority. Throughout the rest of the century, political consensus and civility itself were often out of reach.

In 1962, Governor Brown campaigned for reelection against Richard M. Nixon, who, two years before had lost the U.S. presidency to John F. Kennedy. Brown won, sending Nixon into what seemed a political grave. But California's needs and priorities were changing, and steadily growing diversity meant sizable blocs developed behind a variety of conflicting philosophies. No politician could accommodate them all, and many, like Nixon, chose to exploit those divisions.

On 11 August 1965, the discontent of the poor African American community of Watts in Los Angeles exploded in one of the worst riots in U.S. history. Thirty-four people were killed, hundreds were wounded, and $200 million in property was destroyed. Watts inaugurated years of racial violence. An indirect casualty was Governor Brown, who lost the 1966 gubernatorial race to the former actor Ronald Reagan. Reagan came into office announcing his intentions to restore order, to trim the budget, to lower taxes, and to reduce welfare. In actuality, he more than doubled the budget, raised taxes, and greatly increased the number of people on the dole. Nonetheless, Reagan's personal charm and optimism made him irresistible to voters suffering a steady bombardment of evil news.

In 1965, the dissatisfaction of rebellious youth found a cause in the escalating war in Vietnam. Demonstrations featuring the burning of draft cards and the American flag spread from campuses to the streets. By 1968, it seemed the country was collapsing into civil war, and the country was obviously losing in Vietnam. Also in 1968, U.S. voters elected Nixon to the presidency, but his flagrant abuse of power led to his forced resignation in 1974.

Bruised and self-doubting, California and the rest of the nation limped into a post–Vietnam War economic and political gloom. In 1974, Edmund G. Brown Jr. was elected governor of California. Brown, whose frugal lifestyle charmed those tired of Reagan's grandiosity, talked of an era of limits, supported solar and wind power, and appointed a woman as chief justice of the state supreme court. At first, like Reagan, Brown enjoyed a steadily rising population and government revenues in the black. Then, in 1975, Proposition 13 and an accelerating recession derailed the state economy. Proposition 13, which rolled back and restricted property taxes, was a rebellion by middle-class home-owning Californians against apparently limitless state spending. The proposition was one of the tools Hiram Johnson had added to the California constitution in 1911. Although long underused, it has become a favorite tool of special interest groups, who have placed hundreds of propositions on state ballots calling for everything from exclusion of homosexuals from the teaching profession to demands that the government purchase redwood forests and legalize marijuana. Many propositions have been overturned in the courts, yet the proposition is uniquely effective in bringing popular will to bear on policy. Beginning in the 1970s, propositions helped make environmentalism a central issue in state politics.

George Deukmejian, a Republican, became governor in 1982. A former state attorney general, Deukmejian appointed more than one thousand judges and a majority of the members of the state supreme court. Continuing economic problems dogged the state. Revenues shrank, and unemployment rose. The Republican Pete Wilson, elected governor in 1990, faced this sluggish economy and an ongoing budget crisis. One year the state ran for sixty-one days without a budget, and state workers received vouchers instead of paychecks.

In 1992, Los Angeles erupted in another race riot. The sensational media circus of the O. J. Simpson murder trial in 1995 exacerbated racial tensions further, and Wilson's efforts to restrict immigration, especially the illegal immigration through California's porous border with Mexico, aroused the wrath of liberals and Latinos.

Fortunately, the state's economy was climbing out of the prolonged stagnation of the 1980s. Once again California was reinventing itself. Shortly after World War II, Stanford University had leased some of its endowment lands to high-technology companies, and by the 1990s, the Silicon Valley, so-called for the substance used in computer chips, was leading the explosively expanding computer and Internet industry. The irrational exuberance of this industry developed into a speculative bubble, whose bursting in 2000 precipitated the end of the long boom of the 1990s.

The 2000 census confirmed California's extraordinary diversity. Out of a total population of 33,871,648, no single ethnic group held a majority. Whites, at 46.7 percent of the total, still outnumbered any other group, but Latinos now boasted a healthy 32.4 percent, Asians amounted to 10.9 percent, and African Americans totaled 6.7 percent. Significantly, 4.7 percent of the state's residents described themselves as multiracial. But perhaps the happiest statistic was the jump in the number of Native California Indians, who had been nearly wiped out at the beginning of the twentieth century, to more than 100,000.

Bibliography

Beck, Warren A., and David A. Williams. California: A History of the Golden State. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1972.

Pomeroy, Earl S. The Pacific Slope: A History of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, and Nevada. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1973.

Rolle, Andrew F. California: A History. Rev. 5th ed. Wheeling, Ill.: Harlan Davidson, 1998.

Soule, Frank, et al. Annals of San Francisco. New York and San Francisco: D. Appleton, 1855.

Starr, Kevin. Americans and the California Dream, 1850–1915. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986.

———. Embattled Dreams: California in War and Peace, 1940– 1950. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.

—Cecelia Holland

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: California
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California (kăl'ĭfôr'nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W).

Facts and Figures

Area, 158,693 sq mi (411,015 sq km). Pop. (2000) 33,871,648, a 13.8% increase since the 1990 census. Capital, Sacramento. Largest city, Los Angeles. Statehood, Sept. 9, 1850 (31st state). Highest pt., Mt. Whitney, 14,491 ft (4,417 m); lowest pt., Death Valley, 282 ft (86 m) below sea level. Nickname, Golden State. Motto, Eureka [I Have Found It]. State bird, California valley quail. State flower, golden poppy. State tree, California redwood. Abbr., Calif.; CA

Geography

Ranking third among the U.S. states in area, California has a diverse topography and climate. A series of low mountains known as the Coast Ranges extends along the 1,200-mi (1,930-km) coast. The region from Point Arena, N of San Francisco, to the southern part of the state is subject to tremors and sometimes to severe earthquakes caused by tectonic stress along the San Andreas fault. The Coast Ranges receive heavy rainfall in the north, where the giant cathedrallike redwood forests prevail, but the climate of these mountains is considerably drier in S California, and S of the Golden Gate no major rivers reach the ocean. Behind the coastal ranges in central California lies the great Central Valley, a long alluvial valley drained by the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. In the southeast lie vast wastelands, notably the Mojave Desert, site of Joshua Tree National Park.

Rising as an almost impenetrable granite barrier E of the Central Valley is the Sierra Nevada range, which includes Mt. Whitney, Kings Canyon National Park, Sequoia National Park, and Yosemite National Park. The Cascade Range, the northern continuation of the Sierra Nevada, includes Lassen Volcanic National Park. Lying E of the S Sierra Nevada is Death Valley National Park. The drier portions of the state especially are subject periodically to large, wind-driven fires; in certain hilly areas sometimes devastating mudslides occur, particularly in the rainy season after large fires.

Sacramento is the state capital. The largest cities are Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, Long Beach, Oakland, and Sacramento.

Economy

California has an enormously productive economy, which for a nation would be one of the ten largest in the world. Although agriculture is gradually yielding to industry as the core of the state's economy, California leads the nation in the production of fruits and vegetables, including carrots, lettuce, onions, broccoli, tomatoes, strawberries, and almonds. The state's most valuable crops are grapes, cotton, flowers, and oranges; dairy products, however, contribute the single largest share of farm income, and California is again the national leader in this sector. The state also produces the major share of U.S. domestic wine. California's farms are highly productive as a result of good soil, a long growing season, and the use of modern agricultural methods. Irrigation is critical, especially in the San Joaquin Valley and Imperial Valley. The gathering and packing of crops is done largely by seasonal migrant labor, primarily Mexicans. Fishing is another important industry.

Much of the state's industrial production depends on the processing of farm produce and upon such local resources as petroleum, natural gas, lumber, cement, and sand and gravel. Since World War II, however, manufacturing, notably of electronic equipment, computers, machinery, transportation equipment, and metal products, has increased enormously. Defense industries, a base of the economy especially in S California, have declined following the end of the cold war, a serious blow to the state. But many high-tech companies and small low-tech, often low-wage, companies remain in S California, in what is said to be the largest manufacturing belt in the United States. Farther north, "Silicon Valley," between Palo Alto and San Jose, so called because it is the nation's leading producer of semiconductors, is also a focus of software development.

California continues to be a major U.S. center for motion-picture, television film, and related entertainment industries, especially in Hollywood and Burbank. Tourism also is an important source of income. Disneyland, Sea World, and other theme parks draw millions of visitors each year, as do San Francisco with its numerous attractions and several entertainment-dominated Los Angeles-area communities. California also abounds in natural beauty, seen especially in its many national parks and forests-home to such attractions as Yosemite Falls and giant sequoia trees-and along miles of Pacific beaches.

One of the state's most acute problems is its appetite for water. The once fertile Owens valley is now arid, its waters tapped by Los Angeles 175 mi (282 km) away. In the lush Imperial Valley, irrigation is controlled by the All-American Canal, which draws from the Colorado River. In the Central Valley the water problem is one of poor distribution, an imbalance lessened by the vast Central Valley project. Cutbacks in federally funded water projects in the 1970s and 80s led many California cities to begin buying water from areas with a surplus, but political problems associated with water sharing continue. California's failure to develop a long-term plan to end surplus withdrawals from the Colorado led the federal government to stop the release of surplus water to the state in 2003.

Government, Politics, and Higher Education

The state's first constitution was adopted in 1849. The present constitution, dating from 1879, is noted for its provisions for public initiative and referendum-which have led at times to difficulties in governance-and for recall of public officials. The state's executive branch is headed by a governor elected for a four-year term. California's bicameral legislature has a senate with 40 members and an assembly with 80 members. The state elects 2 senators and 53 representatives to the U.S. Congress and has 55 electoral votes. In the 1980s and 1990s, California elected Republican governors-George Deukemejian (1982, 1986) and Pete Wilson (1990, 1994)- before the Democrat Gray Davis was elected in 1998 (and reelected in 2002). In 2003, Davis was recalled and Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected to succeed him; Schwarzenegger was reelected in 2006. In 1992, California became the first state to simultaneously elect two women to the U.S. Senate-Democrats Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein.

Among the state's more prominent institutions of higher learning are the Univ. of California, with nine campuses; the California State University System, with 23 campuses; Occidental College and the Univ. of Southern California, at Los Angeles; Stanford Univ., at Stanford; the California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena; Mills College, at Oakland; and the Claremont Colleges, at Claremont. After a period from the 1960s through the 1970s when the state's well-financed public institutions were the envy of the nation, California's colleges have been forced to retrench by tax-cutting initiatives.

History

European Exploration and Colonization

The first voyage (1542) to Alta California (Upper California), as the region north of Baja California (Lower California) came to be known, was commanded by the Spanish explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, who explored San Diego Bay and the area farther north along the coast. In 1579 an English expedition headed by Sir Francis Drake landed near Point Reyes, N of San Francisco, and claimed the region for Queen Elizabeth I. In 1602, Sebastián Vizcaíno, another Spaniard, explored the coast and Monterey Bay.

Colonization was slow, but finally in 1769 Gaspar de Portolá, governor of the Californias, led an expedition up the Pacific coast and established a colony on San Diego Bay. The following year he explored the area around Monterey Bay and later returned to establish a presidio there. Soon afterward Monterey became the capital of Alta California. Accompanying Portolá's expedition was Father Junipero Serra, a Franciscan missionary who founded a mission at San Diego. Franciscans later founded several missions that extended as far N as Sonoma, N of San Francisco. The missionaries sought to Christianize the Native Americans but also forced them to work as manual laborers, helping to build the missions into vital agricultural communities (see Mission Indians). Cattle raising was of primary importance, and hides and tallow were exported. The missions have been preserved and are now open to visitors.

In 1776, Juan Bautista de Anza founded San Francisco, where he established a military outpost. The early colonists, called the Californios, lived a pastoral life and for the most part were not interfered with by the central government of New Spain (as the Spanish empire in the Americas was called) or later (1820s) by that of Mexico. The Californios did, however, become involved in local politics, as when Juan Bautista Alvarado led a revolt (1836) and made himself governor of Alta California, a position he later persuaded the Mexicans to let him keep. Under Mexican rule the missions were secularized (1833-34) and the Native Americans released from their servitude. The degradation of Native American peoples, which continued under Mexican rule and after U.S. settlers came to the area, was described by Helen Hunt Jackson in her novel Ramona (1884). Many mission lands were subsequently given to Californios, who established the great ranchos, vast cattle-raising estates. Colonization of California remained largely Mexican until the 1840s.

Russian and U.S. Settlement

Russian fur traders had penetrated south to the California coast and established Fort Ross, north of San Francisco, in 1812. Jedediah Strong Smith and other trappers made the first U.S. overland trip to the area in 1826, but U.S. settlement did not become significant until the 1840s. In 1839, Swiss-born John Augustus Sutter arrived and established his "kingdom" of New Helvetia on a vast tract in the Sacramento valley. He did much for the overland American immigrants, who began to arrive in large numbers in 1841. Some newcomers met with tragedy, including the Donner Party, which was stranded in the Sierra Nevada after a heavy snowstorm.

Political events in the territory moved swiftly in the next few years. After having briefly asserted the independence of California in 1836, the Californios drove out the last Mexican governor in 1845. Under the influence of the American explorer John C. Frémont, U.S. settlers set up (1846) a republic at Sonoma under their unique Bear Flag. The news of war between the United States and Mexico (1846-48) reached California soon afterward. On July 7, 1846, Commodore John D. Sloat captured Monterey, the capital, and claimed California for the United States. The Californios in the north worked with U.S. soldiers, but those in the south resisted U.S. martial law. In 1847, however, U.S. Gen. Stephen W. Kearny defeated the southern Californios. By the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), Mexico formally ceded the territory to the United States.

The Gold Rush

In 1848, the year that California became a part of the United States, another major event in the state's history occurred: While establishing a sawmill for John Sutter near Coloma, James W. Marshall discovered gold and touched off the California gold rush. The forty-niners, as the gold-rush miners were called, came in droves, spurred by the promise of fabulous riches from the Mother Lode. San Francisco rapidly became a boom city, and its bawdy, lawless coastal area, which became known as the Barbary Coast, gave rise to the vigilantes, extralegal community groups formed to suppress civil disorder. American writers such as Bret Harte and Mark Twain have recorded the local color as well as the violence and human tragedies of the roaring mining camps.

Statehood and Immigration

With the gold rush came a huge increase in population and a pressing need for civil government. In 1849, Californians sought statehood and, after heated debate in the U.S. Congress arising out of the slavery issue, California entered the Union as a free, nonslavery state by the Compromise of 1850. San Jose became the capital. Monterey, Vallejo, and Benicia each served as the capital before it was moved to Sacramento in 1854. In 1853, Congress authorized the survey of a railroad route to link California with the eastern seaboard, but the transcontinental railroad was not completed until 1869. In the meantime communication and transportation depended upon ships, the stagecoach, the pony express, and the telegraph.

Chinese laborers were imported in great numbers to work on railroad construction. The Burlingame Treaty of 1868 (see Burlingame, Anson) provided, among other things, for unrestricted Chinese immigration. That was at first enthusiastically endorsed by Californians; but after a slump in the state's shaky economy, the white settlers viewed the influx of the lower-paid Chinese laborers as an economic threat. Ensuing bitterness and friction led to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 (see Chinese exclusion).

A railroad-rate war (1884) and a boom in real estate (1885) fostered a new wave of overland immigration. Cattle raising on the ranchos gave way to increased grain production. Vineyards were planted by 1861, and the first trainload of oranges was shipped from Los Angeles in 1886.

Industrialization and Increased Settlement

By the turn of the century the discovery of oil, industrialization resulting from the increase of hydroelectric power, and expanding agricultural development attracted more settlers. Los Angeles grew rapidly in this period and, in population, soon surpassed San Francisco, which suffered greatly after the great earthquake and fire of 1906. Improvements in urban transportation stimulated the growth of both Los Angeles and San Francisco; the advent of the cable car and the electric railway made possible the development of previously inaccessible areas.

As industrious Japanese farmers acquired valuable land and a virtual monopoly of California's truck-farming operations, the issue of Asian immigration again arose. The bitter struggle for the exclusion of Asians plagued international relations, and in 1913 the California Alien Land Act was passed despite President Woodrow Wilson's attempts to block it. The act provided that persons ineligible for U.S. citizenship could not own agricultural land in California.

Successive waves of settlers arrived in California, attracted by a new real-estate boom in the 1920s and by the promise of work in the 1930s. The influx during the 1930s of displaced farm workers, depicted by John Steinbeck in his novel The Grapes of Wrath, caused profound dislocation in the state's economy. During World War II the Japanese in California were removed from their homes and placed in relocation centers. Industry in California expanded rapidly during the war; the production of ships and aircraft attracted many workers who later settled in the state.

Growing Pains and Natural Disasters

Prosperity and rapid population growth continued after the war. Many African Americans who came during World War II to work in the war industries settled in California. By the 1960s they constituted a sizable minority in the state, and racial tensions reached a climax. In 1964, California voters approved an initiative measure, Proposition 14, allowing racial discrimination in the sale or rental of housing in the state, a measure later declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1965 riots broke out in Watts, a predominantly black section of Los Angeles, touching off a wave of riots across the United States. Also in the 1960s migrant farm workers in California formed a union and struck many growers to obtain better pay and working conditions. Unrest also occurred in the state's universities, especially the Univ. of California at Berkeley, where student demonstrations and protests in 1964 provoked disorders.

Republicans have generally played a more dominant role than Democrats in California politics during the 20th cent. From the end of World War II through the mid-1990s alone, five of the seven governors were Republicans, starting with Earl Warren (1943-53). Ronald Reagan, a former movie actor and a leading conservative Republican, was elected governor in 1966 and reelected in 1970; he later served two terms as U.S president. The two Democrats were liberals Edmund G. (Pat) Brown (1959-67) and his son Jerry Brown (1975-83). In the late 1970s, Californians staged a "tax revolt" that attracted national attention, passing legislation to cut property taxes.

During the 1970s and 80s California continued to grow rapidly, with a major shift of population to the state's interior. The metropolitan areas of Riverside-San Bernardino, Modesto, Stockton, Bakersfield, and Sacramento were among the fastest growing in the nation during the 1980s. Much of the state's population growth was a result of largely illegal immigration from Mexico; there was also a heavy infux of immigrants from China, the Philippines, and SE Asia.

Population growth and immigration contributed to growing economic pressures, as did cuts in federal defense spending; meanwhile, social tensions also increased. In Apr., 1992, four white Los Angeles police officers were acquitted of brutality charges after they had been videotaped beating a black motorist; the verdict touched off riots in South-Central Los Angeles and other neighborhoods, resulting in 58 deaths, thousands of arrests, and approximately $1 billion in property damage.

In addition to periodic heavy flooding and brushfires, earthquakes have caused widespread damage in California. In Oct., 1989, a major earthquake killed about 60 people and injured thousands in Santa Cruz and the San Francisco Bay area. In Jan., 1994, an earthquake hit the Northridge area of N Los Angeles, killing some 60 people and causing at least $13 billion in damage.

In a backlash against illegal immigration, California voters in 1994 approved Proposition 187, an initiative barring the state from providing most services-including welfare, education, and nonemergency medical care-to illegal immigrants. Federal courts found much of Proposition 187 unconstitutional; the appeal of their rulings was dropped in 1999, at a time when the state's economy had rebounded and a Democratic administration was in Sacramento.

In late 2000, California began experiencing an electricity crisis as insufficient generating capacity and increasing short-term wholesale prices for power squeezed the state's two largest public utilities, who, under the "deregulation" plan they had agreed to in the early 1990s, were not allowed to pass along their increased costs. As the state worked to come up with both short-term and long-time solutions to the situation, consumers experienced sporadic blackouts and faced large rate hikes under the terms of a bailout plan. The crisis was severe enough that it was expected to slow the state's economic growth. Evidence subsequently emerged of both price gouging and market manipulation by a number of energy companies.

The economic downturn in the early 2000s resulted in enormous budget shortfalls for California's state government, and made Governor Gray Davis increasingly unpopular. A recall petition financed mainly by a Republican congressman who withdrew from the subsequent election led to a vote (Oct., 2003) that removed Davis from office. The actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, was elected to succeed him. The year the state experienced devastating wildfires in the greater San Diego area; the area was again hit with particularly dangerous wildfires in 2007. The housing bubble that burst in 2007 and the significant recession that followed it had especially severe consequences in California, both for the state's economy and government (which again faced enormous budget shortfalls).

Bibliography

See L. Pitt, The Decline of the Californios: A Social History of the Spanish Speaking Californians, 1846-1890 (1967); R. Kirsch, West of the West: Witnesses to the California Experience, 1542-1906 (1968); R. J. Roske, Everyman's Eden: A History of California (1968); C. A. Hutchinson, Frontier Settlement in Mexican California (1969); W. Bean, California: An Interpretive History (2d. ed. 1973); M. W. Donley, Atlas of California (1979); D. W. Lantis, California: Land of Contrast (3d ed. 1981); C. Miller and R. S. Hyslop, California: The Geography of Diversity (1983); T. H. Watkins, California: An Illustrated History (1983); J. D. Hart, A Companion to California (1984); T. Muller, The Fourth Wave: California's Newest Immigrants (1985); A. F. Rolle, California: A History (4th ed. 1987); P. Schrag, Paradise Lost (1998).


Geography: California
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State in the Far West bordered by Oregon to the north; Nevada and Arizona to the east; Baja California, Mexico, to the south; and the Pacific Ocean to the west. Its capital is Sacramento, and its largest city is Los Angeles.

  • During the California gold rush tens of thousands of people poured into California in search of gold. It is sometimes called the “Golden State.” (See forty-niners.)
  • California is the most populous state. It is known for its earthquakes, high-tech industries (see Silicon Valley), and agriculture.
  • The state is famous for all the fads and ideas that originate there, many of which are considered strange or eccentric.

Maps: California
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Local Time: California
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It is 1:07 PM, November 7, in California.

Wine Lover's Companion: California
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The California wine industry is said to have started during the period from 1769 to 1823 when the Franciscan monks began planting vineyards as they worked their way from southern to northern California establishing their missions. Unfortunately, the grape they planted was the mission, which produces wines of poor to medium quality. It wasn't until about 1830 that Jean-Louis Vignes began to import higher-quality vitis vinifera grapevines. In the 1850s and 1860s, agoston haraszthy expanded the effort by trying to determine which grape varieties would work best in various locations in the state. To this end, he imported thousands of cuttings of about 300 different grape varieties. In addition to planting these vines in sonoma county, he sold cuttings in various parts of the state, primarily in the San Francisco Bay and Los Angeles areas. The California wine-producing industry went through numerous ups and downs over the next 80 years, but the phylloxera infestation in the 1890s and prohibition from 1920 to 1933 severely curtailed wine business growth. The industry continued to grow sporadically from 1933 on, but most of the production was fairly ordinary wine from the giant central valley. At the time, most wines were made from grapes like thompson seedless, Emperor, and Flame Tokay, which could also be used for table grapes or raisins. This trend began to change in the 1960s when Joe Heitz started Heitz Wine Cellars in 1964, Dick Graff established Chalone Vineyard in 1965, and Robert Mondavi left the family (Charles Krug) winery and established his own in 1966. At that time, the boom for quality wine took off, with dramatic increases in acreage allotted to grapes like cabernet sauvignon and chardonnay. In the year 2000, the California Department of Food and Agriculture estimated that there were about 568,000 acres of wine grapes planted. Chardonnay is the most widely planted white wine grape, with over 103,000 acres, followed by French colombard, with less than half that amount. (This compares with a 1959 total of about 80,000 acres for all of California's wine grapes.) After Chardonnay and French Colombard, the white grapes in order of total acreage are chenin blanc, sauvignon blanc, riesling, gewürztraminer, pinot blanc and muscat. The most widely planted red grape (with about 70,000 acres) is Cabernet Sauvignon; zinfandel has about 50,000 acres. These two varieties are followed in order of total acreage by merlot, pinot noir, rubired, barbera, grenache, syrah, ruby cabernet, carignane, petite sirah and cabernet franc. At this writing, California produces about 90 percent of the wine made in the United States. Although it now competes favorably in producing some of the world's finest wines, it also still produces plenty of ordinary wine with over 70 percent of California wine production coming from the hot Central Valley. Much of this wine is still undistinguished, although the quality is higher than in the past because of modernized equipment and better crop selection. For fine California wines, the climate of the cooler growing areas along the coast is best. Because of this, the napa valley has become one of the premier wine-producing areas in the world. But it is not alone in the production of fine wine, as evidenced by other areas of the north coast in the counties of lake, sonoma, mendocino, solano and sonoma. As the California wine industry continues to grow, other quality viticultural areas are being discovered, including numerous locations in the central coast region and selected areas in the sierra foothills. In an effort to define growing areas around the state, California uses a system known variously as degree days, heat summation method, Winkler Scale, and Regions I-V (see climate regions of california). California has almost ninety american viticultural areas (ava); however, this system is still in its infancy, and there are myriad issues yet to be resolved. As California growers and winemakers understand more about the elements of what the French call terroir petitions are being submitted for subsections of larger AVAs to further define the areas where wines are produced.

Stats: California
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flag of California

  • Abbreviation: CA
  • Capital City: Sacramento
  • Date of Statehood: Sept. 9, 1850
  • State #: 31
  • Population: 33,871,648
  • Area: 163707 sq.mi. Land 155973 sq. mi. Water 7734 sq.mi.
  • Economy:
    Agriculture: vegetables, fruits and nuts, dairy products, cattle, nursery stock, grapes;
    Industry: electronic components and equipment, aerospace, film production, food processing, petroleum, computers and computer software, tourism
  • Where the name comes from: Named by Spanish after "Califia," a mythical paradise in a Spanish romance, written by Montalvo in 1510
  • State Bird: California Valley Quail
  • State Flower: California Poppy
  • About the Flag: The Historic Bear Flag was raised at Sonoma on June 14, 1846, by a group of American settlers rebelling against Mexican rule. Designed by William Todd, with a star which imitates the lone star of Texas, a grizzly bear to represent the state's many bears, and the words, "California Republic" beneath. The flag was officially adopted in 1911.
  • State Motto: Eureka -- I have found it
  • State Nickname: Golden State
  • State Song: I Love You, California
Parks: California
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  • Afton Canyon
  • Agua Caliente Cultural Museum
  • Agua Tibia Wilderness
  • Alabama Hills Recreation Management Area
  • Alcatraz Island
  • Alturas Recreation Area
  • American River North Middle South Forks
  • Angeles National Forest
  • Ansel Adams Wilderness
  • Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge
  • Arcata Recreation Management Area
  • Argus Range Wilderness
  • Autry Museum of Western Heritage
  • Bakersfield Recreation Sites
  • Barstow Field Recreation Sites
  • Big Maria Mountains Wilderness
  • Big Morongo Canyon Preserve
  • Bigelow Cholla Garden Wilderness
  • Bighorn Mountain Wilderness
  • Bishop Field Office Recreation Sites
  • Bitter Creek National Wildlife Refuge
  • Bizz Johnson Trail
  • Black Butte Lake
  • Black Mountain Wilderness
  • Blackhawk Museum
  • Blue Ridge National Wildlife Refuge
  • Boca Reservoir
  • Bradshaw Trail
  • Brea Dam
  • Bright Star Wilderness
  • Bristol Mountains Wilderness
  • Bucks Lake Wilderness
  • Butte Sink Wildlife Management Area
  • Cabrillo National Monument
  • Cache Creek Recreation Area
  • Cachuma Lake
  • Cadiz Dunes Wilderness
  • California Coastal National Monument
  • California Desert Conservation Area
  • California National Historic Trail
  • California Science Center
  • Carbon Canyon Dam
  • Caribou Wilderness
  • Carrizo Gorge Wilderness
  • Carrizo Plain National Monument
  • Carson Pass Information Station
  • Carson-Iceberg Wilderness
  • Castle Crags Wilderness
  • Cerritos Library
  • Chabot Space and Science Center
  • Chanchelulla Wilderness
  • Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary
  • Channel Islands National Park
  • Chappie/Shasta Off-Highway Vehicle Recreation Area
  • Chemehuevi Mountains Wilderness
  • Chilao Visitor Center
  • Chimney Peak Wilderness
  • Chuckwalla Mountains Wilderness
  • Chumash Wilderness
  • Cleghorn Lakes Wilderness
  • Cleveland National Forest
  • Clipper Mountain Wilderness
  • Coleman National Fish Hatchery
  • Contra Loma Reservoir
  • Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary
  • Coso Range Wilderness
  • Cosumnes River Preserve
  • Cow Mountain Recreation Management Area
  • Coyote Mountains Wilderness
  • Cucamonga Wilderness
  • Darwin Falls Wilderness
  • Dave Moore Nature Area
  • Dead Mountains Wilderness
  • Death Valley National Park
  • Death Valley Scenic Byway--Route 190
  • Death Valley Wilderness
  • Desolation Wilderness
  • Devils Postpile National Monument
  • Dick Smith Wilderness
  • Dinkey Lakes Wilderness
  • Domeland Wilderness
  • Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge
  • Dos Palmas Preserve
  • Dumont Dunes
  • East Park Reservoir
  • Eastman Lake
  • El Mirage Recreation Management Area
  • El Paso Mountains Wilderness
  • Eldorado National Forest
  • Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve
  • Emigrant Wilderness
  • Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site
  • Fish Creek Mountains Wilderness
  • Fish Slough Area of Critical Environmental Concern
  • Folsom Dam
  • Folsom Lake
  • Folsom Recreation Management Area
  • Folsom S. Canal Rec. Trail
  • Fort Ord
  • Fort Point National Historic Site
  • Fullerton Dam
  • Funeral Mountains Wilderness
  • Garcia Wilderness
  • Golden Gate National Recreation Area
  • Golden Trout Wilderness
  • Golden Valley Wilderness
  • Granite Chief Wilderness
  • Grass Valley Wilderness
  • Grassy Hollow Visitor Center
  • Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes National Wildlife Refuge
  • Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary
  • Hansen Dam
  • Harry L Englebright Lake
  • Hauser Wilderness
  • Havasu National Wildlife Refuge
  • Havasu Wilderness
  • Hensley Lake
  • High Rock Canyon
  • Hollister Recreation Management Area
  • Hollow Hills Wilderness
  • Hoover Wilderness
  • Hopper Mountain National Wildlife Refuge
  • Ibex Wilderness
  • Imperial Reservoir Area: Picacho State Recreation Area
  • Indian Pass Wilderness
  • Inyo Mountains Wilderness
  • Inyo National Forest
  • Ishi Wilderness
  • Jacumba Wilderness
  • Japanese American National Museum
  • Jawbone/Butterbredt Recreation Management Area
  • Jennie Lakes Wilderness
  • John Muir National Historic Site
  • John Muir Wilderness
  • Johnson Valley Off-Highway Vehicle Recreation area
  • Joshua Tree National Park
  • Joshua Tree Wilderness
  • Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail
  • Juniper Flats
  • Kaiser Wilderness
  • Kelso Dunes Wilderness
  • Kern National Wildlife Refuge
  • Keswick Reservoir
  • Kiavah Wilderness
  • King Range National Conservation Area
  • Kingston Range Wilderness
  • Klamath National Forest
  • Lake Berryessa
  • Lake Cahuilla
  • Lake Casitas
  • Lake Kaweah
  • Lake Mendocino
  • Lake Natoma
  • Lake Solano
  • Lake Sonoma
  • Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit
  • Lake Woollomes
  • Lassen National Forest
  • Lassen Volcanic National Park
  • Lassen Volcanic Wilderness
  • Lava Beds National Monument
  • Lava Beds Wilderness
  • Lewiston National Rec. Area
  • Little Chuckwalla Mountains Wilderness
  • Little Panoche Dam
  • Little Picacho Wilderness
  • Livingston Stone National Fish Hatchery
  • Los Banos Reservoir
  • Los Padres National Forest
  • Machesna Mountain Wilderness
  • Malpais Mesa Wilderness
  • Manly Peak Wilderness
  • Manzanar National Historic Site
  • Marble Mountain Wilderness
  • Martis Creek Lake
  • Matilija Wilderness
  • Mecca Hills Wilderness
  • Mendocino National Forest
  • Merced National Wildlife Refuge
  • Merced River Recreation Management Area
  • Mesquite Wilderness
  • Mexican Heritage Corporation
  • Millard Sheets Gallery
  • Millerton Lake
  • Modoc National Forest
  • Modoc National Wildlife Refuge
  • Mojave National Preserve
  • Mojave River Dam
  • Mojave Wilderness
  • Mokelumne Wilderness
  • Molina Ghost Run Trail
  • Monarch Wilderness
  • Mono Basin Scenic Area Visitor Center
  • Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary
  • Mt. Baldy Schoolhouse Visitor Center
  • Mt. Shasta Wilderness
  • Muir Woods National Monument
  • Museum of Latin American Art
  • Needles Recreation Management Area
  • New Hogan Lake
  • New Melones Lake
  • Newberry Mountains Wilderness
  • Nimbus Fish Hatchery
  • Nopah Range Wilderness
  • North Algodones Dunes Wilderness
  • North Fork Kaweah River
  • North Fork Wilderness
  • North Mesquite Mountains Wilderness
  • O'Neill Forebay
  • Old Woman Mountains Wilderness
  • Orocopia Mountains Wilderness
  • Otay Mountain Wilderness
  • Outdoors Santa Barbara Visitor Center
  • Owens Peak Wilderness
  • Owens Peak Wilderness Area (Short Canyon)
  • Pahrump Valley Wilderness
  • Palen/McCoy Wilderness
  • Palo Verde Mountains Wilderness
  • Panoche/Tumey Hills
  • Phillip Burton Wilderness
  • Picacho Peak Wilderness
  • Pine Creek Wilderness
  • Pine Flat Lake
  • Pinnacles National Monument
  • Pinnacles Wilderness
  • Piper Mountain Wilderness
  • Piute Mountains Wilderness
  • Pixley National Wildlife Refuge
  • Plumas National Forest
  • Point Reyes National Seashore
  • Point Sal
  • Pony Express National Historic Trail
  • Port Chicago Naval Magazine National Memorial
  • Prado Dam
  • Presidio of San Francisco
  • Prosser Creek Reservoir
  • Public Corporation for the Arts
  • Punta Gorda Lighthouse
  • Rasor Off-Highway Vehicle Area
  • Red Bluff Div. Dam & Reservoir
  • Red Buttes Wilderness
  • Red Elephant Mine Trail
  • Red Hills Recreation Management Area
  • Redding Recreation Management Area
  • Redwood National and State Parks
  • Resting Spring Range Wilderness
  • Rice Valley Wilderness
  • Ridgecrest Recreation Management Area
  • Riverside Mountains Wilderness
  • Rodman Mountains Wilderness
  • Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historical Park
  • Route 1 - Big Sur Coast Highway
  • Russian Wilderness
  • Sacatar Trail Wilderness
  • Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge
  • Sacramento River National Wildlife Refuge
  • Saddle Peak Hills Wilderness
  • Salinas Dam Santa Margarita Lake
  • Salton Sea State Recreation Area
  • San Bernardino National Forest
  • San Diego National Wildlife Refuge
  • San Diego Natural History Museum
  • San Francisco Bay Model Visitor Center
  • San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
  • San Gabriel Wilderness
  • San Gorgonio Wilderness
  • San Jacinto Wilderness
  • San Justo Reservoir
  • San Luis National Wildlife Refuge
  • San Luis Reservoir
  • San Mateo Canyon Wilderness
  • San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge
  • San Rafael Wilderness
  • Santa Fe Dam
  • Santa Lucia Wilderness
  • Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area
  • Santa Rosa Wilderness
  • Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument
  • Sawtooth Mountains Wilderness
  • Schulman Grove Visitor Center
  • Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge
  • Sepulveda Dam
  • Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks
  • Sequoia National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument
  • Sequoia-Kings Canyon Wilderness
  • Sespe Wilderness
  • Shasta National Rec. Area
  • Shasta-Trinity National Forest
  • Sheep Mountain Wilderness
  • Sheephole Valley Wilderness
  • Sierra National Forest
  • Silver Peak Wilderness
  • Siskiyou Wilderness
  • Six Rivers National Forest
  • Sly Park Reservoir
  • Snow Mountain Wilderness
  • Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge
  • South Nopah Range Wilderness
  • South Sierra Wilderness
  • South Warner Wilderness
  • South Yuba River
  • Spangler/Red Mountain
  • Squaw Leap Mgmt. Area
  • Squaw Leap Recreation Management Area
  • Stampede Reservoir
  • Stanislaus National Forest
  • Stanislaus River Parks
  • Stateline Wilderness
  • Stepladder Mountains Wilderness
  • Stoddard Valley OHV Area
  • Stone Lakes National Wildlife Refuge
  • Stony Gorge Reservoir
  • Success Lake
  • Sugar Pine Reservoir
  • Surprise Canyon Wilderness
  • Surprise Recreation Management Area
  • Sweetwater Marsh National Wildlife Refuge
  • Sylvania Mountains Wilderness
  • Tahoe National Forest
  • Thousand Lakes Wilderness
  • Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve
  • Tijuana Slough National Wildlife Refuge
  • Timbered Crater Wilderness Study Area
  • Tioga Road/Big Oak Flat Road
  • Trilobite Wilderness
  • Trinity Alps Wilderness
  • Trinity Lake
  • Trinity River Fish Hatchery
  • Trona Pinnacles
  • Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge
  • Turtle Mountains Wilderness
  • Ventana Wilderness
  • Volcanic Tablelands
  • Whipple Mountains Wilderness
  • Whiskeytown National Recreation Area
  • Whiskeytown û Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area
  • Whittier Narrows Dam
  • Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel Wilderness
  • Yosemite National Park
  • Yosemite Wilderness

  • Wikipedia: California
    Top
    State of California
    Flag of California State seal of California
    Flag Seal
    Nickname(s): The Golden State
    Motto(s): Eureka[1]
    before statehood, known as
    the California Republic
    Map of the United States with California highlighted
    Official language(s) English
    Demonym Californian
    Capital Sacramento
    Largest city Los Angeles
    Largest metro area Greater Los Angeles
    Area  Ranked 3rd in the US
     - Total 163,696 sq mi
    (423,970 km2)
     - Width 250 miles (400 km)
     - Length 770 miles (1,240 km)
     - % water 4.7
     - Latitude 32° 32′ N to 42° N
     - Longitude 114° 8′ W to 124° 26′ W
    Population  Ranked 1st in the US
     - Total 36,756,666 (2008 est.)[2]
    33,871,648 (2000)
     - Density 234.4/sq mi  (90.49/km2)
    Ranked 11th in the US
     - Median income  US$54,385 (11th)
    Elevation  
     - Highest point Mount Whitney[3]
    14,505 ft  (4,421 m)
     - Mean 2,900 ft  (884 m)
     - Lowest point Death Valley[3]
    -282 ft  (-86 m)
    Admission to Union  September 9, 1850 (31st)
    Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger (R)
    Lieutenant Governor vacant
    U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D)
    Barbara Boxer (D)
    U.S. House delegation 34 Democrats, 19 Republicans (list)
    Electoral votes {{{ElectoralVotes}}}
    Time zone Pacific: UTC-8/-7
    Abbreviations CA Calif. US-CA
    Website ca.gov
    California State Symbols
    Flag of California.svg
    The flag of California.

    Animate insignia
    Bird California Quail
    Fish Golden Trout
    Flower California Poppy
    Grass Purple Needlegrass
    Insect California Dogface Butterfly
    Reptile Desert Tortoise
    Tree California Redwood

    Inanimate insignia
    Beverage Wine
    Colors Blue & Gold
    Dance West Coast Swing
    Fossil Sabre-toothed cat
    Gemstone Benitoite
    Mineral Native Gold
    Soil San Joaquin
    Song(s) "I Love You, California"
    Tartan California State Tartan

    Route marker(s)
    California Route Marker

    State Quarter
    Quarter of California
    Released in 2005

    Lists of United States state insignia

    California (pronounced /kælɨˈfɔrnjə/ (Speaker Icon.svg listen)) is the most populous[4] state in the United States, and the third largest by area. California is the second most populous sub-national entity in the Americas, behind only São Paulo, Brazil. It is located on the West Coast of the United States, and is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the northeast, Arizona to the southeast, the Mexican state of Baja California to the south, and the Pacific Ocean to the west. Its four largest cities are Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, and San Francisco.[5] The state is home to the nation's second and sixth largest metropolitan areas as well as eight of the nation's fifty largest cities. It is known for its varied climate and geography, as well as its diverse population.

    California is the third-largest U.S. state by land area, after Alaska and Texas. Its geography ranges from the Pacific coast to the Sierra Nevada mountain range in the east, to Mojave desert areas in the southeast and the RedwoodDouglas fir forests of the northwest. The center of the state is dominated by the Central Valley, one of the most productive agricultural areas in the world. California is the most geographically diverse state in the nation, and contains the highest (Mount Whitney) and lowest (Death Valley) points in the contiguous United States.

    Beginning in the late 18th century, the area known as Alta California was colonized by the Spanish Empire. In 1821, Mexico, including Alta California, became an independent republic. In 1846 a group of American settlers in Sonoma declared the independence of a California Republic. As a result of the Mexican-American War, Mexico ceded California to the United States. It became the 31st state admitted to the union on September 9, 1850.

    In the 19th century, the California Gold Rush brought about dramatic changes, with a large influx of people and an economic boom that caused San Francisco to grow from a hamlet of tents to a world-renowned boomtown. Key developments in the early 20th century included the emergence of Los Angeles as center of the American entertainment industry, and the growth of a large, state-wide tourism sector. In addition to California's prosperous agricultural industry, other important contributors to the economy include aerospace, petroleum, and information technology. If California were a country, it would rank among the ten largest economies in the world, with a GDP similar to that of Italy. It would be the 35th most populous country.

    Contents

    Etymology

    The word California originally referred to the entire region composed of what is today the state of California, plus all or parts of Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and Wyoming, and the Mexican peninsula of Baja California.

    The name California is most commonly believed to have derived from a fictional paradise peopled by Black Amazons and ruled by a Queen Califia. The myth of Califia is recorded in a 1510 work The Exploits of Esplandian, written as a sequel to Amadís de Gaula by Spanish adventure writer Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo.[6] The kingdom of Queen Califia or Calafia, according to Montalvo, was said to be a remote land inhabited by griffins and other strange beasts and rich in gold.

    Know ye that at the right hand of the Indies there is an island named California, very close to that part of the terrestrial Paradise, which was inhabited by black women, without a single man among them, and that they lived in the manner of Amazons. They were robust of body, with strong and passionate hearts and great virtues. The island itself is one of the wildest in the world on account of the bold and craggy rocks. Their weapons were all made of gold. The island everywhere abounds with gold and precious stones, and upon it no other metal was found.[7]

    The name California is the fifth-oldest surviving European place-name in the U.S. and was applied to what is now the southern tip of Baja California as the island of California by a Spanish expedition led by Diego de Becerra and Fortun Ximenez, who landed there in 1533 at the behest of Hernando Cortes.[8]

    Geography and environment

    California adjoins the Pacific Ocean, Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, and the Mexican state of Baja California. With an area of 160,000 square miles (414,000 km2), it is the third-largest state in the United States in size, after Alaska and Texas.[9] If it were a country, California would be the 59th-largest in the world in area.

    Mount Shasta overlooks the town of the same name.

    In the middle of the state lies the California Central Valley, bounded by the coastal mountain ranges in the west, the Sierra Nevada to the east, the Cascade Range in the north and the Tehachapi Mountains in the south. The Central Valley is California's agricultural heartland and grows approximately one-third of the nation's food.[10] Divided in two by the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, the northern portion, the Sacramento Valley serves as the watershed of the Sacramento River, while the southern portion, the San Joaquin Valley is the watershed for the San Joaquin River; both areas derive their names from the rivers that transit them. With dredging, the Sacramento and the San Joaquin Rivers have remained sufficiently deep that several inland cities are seaports. The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta serves as a critical water supply hub for the state. Water is routed through an extensive network of canals and pumps out of the delta, that traverse nearly the length of the state, including the Central Valley Project and the State Water Project. Water from the Delta provides drinking water for nearly 23 million people, almost two-thirds of the state's population, and provides water to farmers on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley. The Channel Islands are located off the southern coast.

    Bridalveil Fall flows from a U-shaped hanging valley that was created by a tributary glacier.

    The Sierra Nevada (Spanish for "snowy range") includes the highest peak in the contiguous forty-eight states, Mount Whitney, at 14,505 ft (4,421 m).[3] The range embraces Yosemite Valley, famous for its glacially carved domes, and Sequoia National Park, home to the giant sequoia trees, the largest living organisms on Earth, and the deep freshwater lake, Lake Tahoe, the largest lake in the state by volume.

    To the east of the Sierra Nevada are Owens Valley and Mono Lake, an essential migratory bird habitat. In the western part of the state is Clear Lake, the largest freshwater lake by area entirely in California. Though Lake Tahoe is larger, it is divided by the California/Nevada border. The Sierra Nevada falls to Arctic temperatures in winter and has several dozen small glaciers, including Palisade Glacier, the southernmost glacier in the United States.

    About 45 percent of the state's total surface area is covered by forests, and California's diversity of pine species is unmatched by any other state. California contains more forestland than any other state except Alaska. Many of the trees in the California White Mountains are the oldest in the world; one Bristlecone pine has an age of 4,700 years.

    In the south is a large inland salt lake, the Salton Sea. Deserts in California make up about 25 percent of the total surface area.[citation needed] The south-central desert is called the Mojave; to the northeast of the Mojave lies Death Valley, which contains the lowest, hottest point in North America, Badwater Flat. The distance from the lowest point of Death Valley to the peak of Mount Whitney is less than 200 miles (322 km). Indeed, almost all of southeastern California is arid, hot desert, with routine extreme high temperatures during the summer.

    Along the California coast are several major metropolitan areas, including Greater Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area, and San Diego.

    California is famous for earthquakes due to a number of faults, in particular the San Andreas Fault. It is vulnerable to tsunamis, floods, droughts, Santa Ana winds, wildfires, landslides on steep terrain, and has several volcanoes.

    Climate

    Coastline at Big Sur.

    California climate varies from Mediterranean to subarctic. Much of the state has a Mediterranean climate, with cool, rainy winters and dry summers. The cool California Current offshore often creates summer fog near the coast. Further inland, one encounters colder winters and hotter summers.

    Northern parts of the state average higher annual rainfall than the south. California's mountain ranges influence the climate as well: some of the rainiest parts of the state are west-facing mountain slopes. Northwestern California has a temperate climate, and the Central Valley has a Mediterranean climate but with greater temperature extremes than the coast. The high mountains, including the Sierra Nevada, have a mountain climate with snow in winter and mild to moderate heat in summer.

    The east side of California's mountains produce a rain shadow, creating expansive deserts. The higher elevation deserts of eastern California see hot summers and cold winters, while the low deserts east of the southern California mountains experience hot summers and nearly frostless mild winters. Death Valley, a desert with large expanses below sea level, is considered the hottest location in North America; the highest temperature in the Western Hemisphere, 134 °F (57 °C), was recorded there on July 10, 1913.

    Ecology

    California is one of the richest and most diverse parts of the world, and includes some of the most endangered ecological communities. California is part of the Nearctic ecozone and spans a number of terrestrial ecoregions.

    California's large number of endemic species includes relict species, which have died out elsewhere, such as the Catalina Ironwood (Lyonothamnus floribundus). Many other endemics originated through differentiation or adaptive radiation, whereby multiple species develop from a common ancestor to take advantage of diverse ecological conditions such as the California lilac (Ceanothus). Many California endemics have become endangered, as urbanization, logging, overgrazing, and the introduction of exotic species have encroached on their habitat.

    California boasts several superlatives in its collection of flora: the largest trees, the tallest trees, and the oldest trees. California's native grasses are perennial plants.[11][12] After European contact, these were generally replaced by invasive species of European annual grasses; and, in modern times, California's hills turn a characteristic golden-brown in summer.

    Rivers

    The two most prominent rivers within California are the Sacramento River and the San Joaquin River, which drain the Central Valley and flow to the Pacific Ocean through San Francisco Bay. Two other important rivers are the Klamath River, in the north, and the Colorado River, on the southeast border.

    Regions

    Telegraph Peak in San Gabriel Mountains.





    History

    Californian poppy
    History of California
    To 1899
    Gold Rush (1848)
    US Civil War (1861-1865)
    Since 1900
    Maritime
    Railroad
    Highways
    Slavery
    Los Angeles
    Sacramento
    San Diego
    San Francisco
    San Jose

    Settled by successive waves of arrivals during the last 10,000 years, California was one of the most culturally and linguistically diverse areas in pre-Columbian North America; the area was inhabited by more than 70 distinct groups of Native Americans. Large, settled populations lived on the coast and hunted sea mammals, fished for salmon, and gathered shellfish, while groups in the interior hunted terrestrial game and gathered nuts, acorns, and berries. California groups also were diverse in their political organization with bands, tribes, villages, and on the resource-rich coasts, large chiefdoms, such as the Chumash, Pomo and Salinan. Trade, intermarriage, and military alliances fostered many social and economic relationships among the diverse groups.

    The first European to explore the coast as far north as the Russian River was the Portuguese João Rodrigues Cabrilho, in 1542, sailing for the Spanish Empire. Some 37 years later, the English explorer Francis Drake also explored and claimed an undefined portion of the California coast in 1579. Spanish traders made unintended visits with the Manila Galleons on their return trips from the Philippines beginning in 1565. Sebastián Vizcaíno explored and mapped the coast of California in 1602 for New Spain.

    Spanish missionaries began setting up twenty-one California Missions along the coast of what became known as Alta California (Upper California), together with small towns and presidios. The first mission in Alta California was established at San Diego in 1769.[13] In 1821, the Mexican War of Independence gave Mexico (including California) independence from Spain; for the next twenty-five years, Alta California remained a remote northern province of the nation of Mexico. Cattle ranches, or ranchos, emerged as the dominant institutions of Mexican California. After Mexican independence from Spain, the chain of missions became the property of the Mexican government and were secularized by 1832. The ranchos developed under ownership by Californios (Spanish-speaking Californians) who had received land grants and traded cowhides and tallow with Boston merchants.

    Beginning in the 1820s, trappers and settlers from the United States and Canada began to arrive in Northern California, harbingers of the great changes that would later sweep the Mexican territory. These new arrivals used the Siskiyou Trail, California Trail, Oregon Trail, and Old Spanish Trail to cross the rugged mountains and harsh deserts surrounding California. In this period, Imperial Russia explored the California coast and established a trading post at Fort Ross.

    The Bear Flag of the Republic of California.

    In 1846, settlers rebelled against Mexican rule during the Bear Flag Revolt. Afterwards, rebels raised the Bear Flag (featuring a bear, a star, a red stripe, and the words "California Republic") at Sonoma.

    [We] overthrow a Government which has seized upon the property of the Missions for its individual aggrandizement; which has ruined and shamefully oppressed the laboring people of California.

    —William Ide, Declaration from the Bear Flag Revolt

    The Republic's first and only president was William B. Ide,[14] who played a pivotal role during the Bear Flag Revolt. His term lasted twenty-five days and concluded when California was occupied by U.S. forces during the Mexican-American War.

    The California Republic was short lived. The same year marked the outbreak of the Mexican-American War (1846–1848). When Commodore John D. Sloat of the United States Navy sailed into Monterey Bay and began the military occupation of California by the United States. Northern California capitulated in less than a month to the U.S. forces. After a series of defensive battles in Southern California, including The Siege of Los Angeles, the Battle of Dominguez Rancho, the Battle of San Pasqual, the Battle of Rio San Gabriel, and the Battle of La Mesa, the Treaty of Cahuenga was signed by the Californios on January 13, 1847, securing American control in California. Following the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo that ended the war, the region was divided between Mexico and the United States; the western territory of Alta California, was to become the U.S. state of California, and Arizona, Nevada, Colorado and Utah became U.S. Territories, while the lower region of California, Baja California, remained in the possession of Mexico.

    In 1848, the non-native population of California has been estimated to be no more than 15,000. But after gold was discovered, the population burgeoned with U.S. citizens, Europeans, and other immigrants during the great California Gold Rush. On September 9, 1850, as part of the Compromise of 1850, California was admitted to the United States as a free state (one in which slavery was prohibited).

    The seat of government for California under Mexican rule was located at Monterey from 1777 until 1835, when Mexican authorities abandoned California, leaving their missions and military forts behind.[15] In 1849, the Constitutional Convention was first held there. Among the duties was the task of determining the location for the new State capital. The first legislative sessions were held in San Jose (1850–1851). Subsequent locations included Vallejo (1852–1853), and nearby Benicia (1853–1854), although these locations eventually proved to be inadequate as well. The capital has been located in Sacramento since 1854[16] with only a short break in 1861 when legislative sessions were held in San Francisco due to flooding in Sacramento.

    Travel between California and the central and eastern parts of the United States was time-consuming and dangerous. A more direct connection came in 1869 with the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad through Donner Pass in the Sierra Nevada mountains. After this rail link was established, hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens came west, where new Californians were discovering that land in the state, if irrigated during the dry summer months, was extremely well-suited to fruit cultivation and agriculture in general. Vast expanses of wheat and other cereal crops, vegetable crops, cotton, and nut and fruit trees were grown (including oranges in Southern California), and the foundation was laid for the state's prodigious agricultural production in the Central Valley and elsewhere.

    During the early 20th century, migration to California accelerated with the completion of major transcontinental highways like the Lincoln Highway and Route 66. In the period from 1900 to 1965, the population grew from fewer than one million to become the most populous state in the Union. The state is regarded as a world center of technology and engineering businesses, of the entertainment and music industries, and as the U.S. center of agricultural production.

    Demographics

    Population

    Historical populations
    Census Pop.  %±
    1850 92,597
    1860 379,994 310.4%
    1870 560,247 47.4%
    1880 864,694 54.3%
    1890 1,213,398 40.3%
    1900 1,485,053 22.4%
    1910 2,377,549 60.1%
    1920 3,426,861 44.1%
    1930 5,677,251 65.7%
    1940 6,907,387 21.7%
    1950 10,586,223 53.3%
    1960 15,717,204 48.5%
    1970 19,953,134 27.0%
    1980 23,667,902 18.6%
    1990 29,760,021 25.7%
    2000 33,871,648 13.8%
    Est. 2008[2] 36,756,666 8.5%
    California Population Density Map

    California's population is estimated by the US Census Bureau at 36,756,666 for the year 2008, making it the most populous state.[4] This includes a natural increase of 2,549,081 since the last census (4,498,700 births minus 1,949,619 deaths). During this time period, international migration produced a net increase of 1,825,697 people while domestic migration produced a net decrease of 1,378,706, resulting in a net in-migration of 446,991 people.[17] The state of California's own statistics show a population of 38,292,687 for January 1, 2009.[18]

    California is the second-most-populous sub-national entity of the Western Hemisphere, exceeded only by São Paulo, Brazil.[19] California's population is greater than that of all but 34 countries of the world.[20] Also, Los Angeles County has held the title of most populous U.S. county for decades, and it alone is more populous than 42 U.S. states.[21][22] The center of population of California is at the town of Buttonwillow in Kern County.[23]

    Cities

    California has eight of the top 50 U.S. cities in terms of population. Los Angeles is the nation's second-largest city with a population of 3,849,378 people, followed by San Diego (8th), San Jose (10th), San Francisco, California (12th), Fresno (35th), Sacramento (36th), Long Beach (37th), and Oakland (44th). Additionally, the metropolitan areas of Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, and Sacramento are the 2nd, 6th, 17th, and 23rd largest in the United States, respectively.

    Racial and ancestral makeup

    According to the 2005–2007 American Community Survey, California's population is:[24]

    With regard to demographics, California has the largest population of White Americans in the U.S., an estimated 21,892,718 residents, although most demographic surveys do not measure actual genetic ancestry, which in the case of the large number of people of Hispanic origin who are largely of mixed racial ancestry can be misleading. (See e.g. Demographics of Mexico). The state has the fifth-largest population of African Americans in the U.S., an estimated 2,273,292 residents. California's Asian American population is estimated at 4.6 million, approximately one-third of the nation's 15.2 million Asian Americans. California's Native American population of 375,093 is the most of any state.[25]

    According to estimates from 2005, California has the largest minority population in the United States, making up 57 percent of the state population. Non-Hispanic whites decreased from 80% of the state's population in 1970 to 43% in 2006.[26] While the population of minorities accounts for 100.7 million of 300 million U.S. residents, 21% of the national total live in California.

    Armed forces

    [27]

    • 2,569,340 veterans of US military service – 504,010 served in World War II; 301,034 in the Korean conflict; 754,682 during the Vietnam era; and 278,003 during 1990–2000 (including the Persian Gulf War).

    California's military forces consist of the Army and Air National Guard, the naval and state military reserve (militia), and the California Cadet Corps.

    Languages

    As of 2005, 57.59% of California residents age five and older spoke English as a first language at home, while 28.21% spoke Spanish. In addition to English and Spanish, 2.04% spoke Filipino, 1.59% spoke Chinese (which included Cantonese [0.63%] and Mandarin [0.43%]), 1.4% spoke Vietnamese, and 1.05% spoke Korean as their mother tongue. In total, 42.4% of the population spoke languages other than English.[28][29] Over 200 languages are known to be spoken and read in California. Including indigenous languages, California is viewed as one of the most linguistically diverse areas in the world (the indigenous languages were derived from 64 root languages in 6 language families).[30] About half of the indigenous languages are no longer spoken, and all of California's living indigenous languages are endangered and there are some efforts toward language revitalization.[which?]

    The official language of California has been English since the passage of Proposition 63 in 1986. However, many state, city, and local government agencies still continue to print official public documents in numerous languages.[31]

    Culture

    The culture of California is a Western culture and most clearly has its roots in the culture of the United States. As a border and coastal state, however, Californian culture has been greatly influenced by several large immigrant populations, especially those from Latin America and East Asia. California is a true melting pot as well as an international crossroad to the U.S.[32]

    California has long been a subject of interest in the public mind and has often been promoted by its boosters as a kind of paradise. In the early 20th Century, fueled by the efforts of state and local boosters, many Americans saw the Golden State as an ideal resort destination, sunny and dry all year round with easy access to the ocean and mountains. In the 1960s, popular music groups such as the Beach Boys promoted the image of Californians as laid-back, tanned beach-goers.

    In terms of socio-cultural mores and national politics, Californians are perceived as more liberal than other Americans, especially those who live in the inland states. In some ways, California is the quintessential Blue State-- accepting of alternative lifestyles, not uniformly religious, and preoccupied with environmental issues. California is also home to many prestigious universities including UC Berkeley, UCLA and Stanford.

    The gold rush of the 1850s is still seen as a symbol of California's economic style, which tends to generate technology, social, entertainment, and economic fads and booms and related busts.

    Religion

    Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph in San Jose

    The largest Christian denominations by number of adherents in 2000 were the Roman Catholic Church with 10,079,310; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with 529,575; and the Southern Baptist Convention with 471,119. Jewish congregations had 994,000 adherents.[33]

    The state has the most Roman Catholics of any state and a large Protestant population, a large American Jewish community, and an American Muslim population.

    With a Jewish population estimated at more than 550,000, Los Angeles has the second-largest Jewish community in North America.

    There are about 1 million Muslims, which has the largest population than any other state, mainly of African American descent and immigrant populations.[34] According to figures, approximately 100,000 Muslims reside in San Diego.[35]

    As the twentieth century came to a close, forty percent of all Buddhists in America resided in Southern California. The Los Angeles Metropolitan Area has become unique in the Buddhist world as the only place where representative organizations of every major school of Buddhism can be found in a single urban center.[36] The City of Ten Thousand Buddhas in Northern California and Hsi Lai Temple in Southern California are two of the largest Buddhist temples in the Western Hemisphere.

    California also has a growing Hindu population. 

    California has more members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Temples than any state except Utah.[37] Latter-day Saints (Mormons) have played important roles in the settlement of California throughout the state's history. For example, a group of a few hundred Mormon converts from the Northeastern United States and Europe arrived at what would become San Francisco in the 1840s aboard the ship Brooklyn, more than doubling the population of the small town. Before being called back to Utah by Brigham Young these settlers helped build up the city of Yerba Buena. A group of Mormons also established the city of San Bernardino in Southern California in 1851.[38] According to the LDS Church 2007 statistics, just over 750,000 Mormons reside in the state of California, attending almost 1400 congregations statewide.[38]

    However, a Pew Research Center survey revealed that California is somewhat less religious than the rest of the US: 62 percent of Californians say they are "absolutely certain" of the belief in God, while in the nation 71 percent say so. The survey also revealed 48 percent of Californians say religion is "very important," while the figure for the United States is 56 percent.[39]

    Economy

    The Hollywood Sign overlooking Los Angeles is a symbol of the motion-picture industry.
    The Adobe Systems headquarters in San Jose. One of many major facilities located in the Silicon Valley

    As of 2007, the gross state product (GSP) is about $1.812 trillion, the largest in the United States. California is responsible for 13 percent of the United States gross domestic product (GDP). As of 2006, California's GDP is larger than all but eight countries in the world (all but eleven countries by Purchasing Power Parity). However, California is facing a $26.3 billion budget deficit for the 2009–2010 budget year.[40] While the legislative bodies had appeared to address the problem in 2008 with the three-month delayed passage of a budget they in fact only postponed the deficit to 2009 and due to the late 2008 decline in the economy and the credit crisis the problem became urgent in November 2008. One problem is that a substantial portion of the state income comes from income taxes on a small proportion of wealthy citizens. For example, in 2004, the richest 3% of state taxpayers paid approximately 60% of all state taxes.[41] The taxable income of this population is highly dependent upon capital gains, which has been severely impacted by the stock market declines of this period. The governor has proposed a combination of extensive program cuts and tax increases to address this problem, but owing to longstanding problems in the legislature these proposals are likely to be difficult to pass as legislation.

    By 2008, California had the 6th highest tax burden of any state, when measured as a percentage of GDP.[42] State spending increased from $56 billion in 1998 to $131 billion in 2008, and the state was facing a budget deficit of $40 billion in 2008.[43]

    California is also the home of several significant economic regions, such as Hollywood (entertainment), Southern California (aerospace), the Central Valley (agriculture), Silicon Valley (computers and high tech), and wine producing regions, such as the Napa Valley, Sonoma Valley and Southern California's Santa Barbara, Temecula Valley and Paso Robles areas.

    In terms of jobs, the five largest sectors in California are trade, transportation, and utilities; government; professional and business services; education and health services; and leisure and hospitality. In terms of output, the five largest sectors are financial services, followed by trade, transportation, and utilities; education and health services; government; and manufacturing. California currently has the 4th highest unemployment rate in the nation at 9.3% in December 2008, up significantly from 5.9% a year earlier.[44]

    California's economy is very dependent on trade and international related commerce accounts for approximately one-quarter of the state’s economy. In 2007, California exported $134 billion worth of goods, up from $127 billion in 2006 and $117 billion in 2005, surpassing the 2000 peak of $125 billion for two consecutive years. Computers and electronic products are California's top export, accounting for 36 percent of all the state's exports in 2007.[45]

    Agriculture remains a very important sector in California's economy. Farming-related sales have more than quadrupled over the past three decades, from $7.3 billion in 1974 to nearly $31 billion in 2004. This increase has occurred despite a 15 percent decline in acreage devoted to farming during the period, and water supply suffering from chronic instability. Factors contributing to the growth in sales-per-acre include more intensive use of active farmlands and technological improvements in crop production.[46]

    Per capita GDP in 2007 was $41,805, ranking 7th in the nation.[47] Per capita income varies widely by geographic region and profession. The Central Valley is the most impoverished, with migrant farm workers making less than minimum wage. Recently, the San Joaquin Valley was characterized as one of the most economically depressed regions in the U.S., on par with the region of Appalachia.[48] Many coastal cities include some of the wealthiest per-capita areas in the U.S. The high-technology sectors in Northern California, specifically Silicon Valley, in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, have emerged from the economic downturn caused by the dot.com bust. In spring 2005, economic growth had resumed in California at 4.3 percent.[49]

    California levies a 9.3 percent maximum variable rate income tax, with six tax brackets. It collects about $40 billion per year in income taxes. California's combined state, county and local sales tax rate is from 7.25 to 9.75 percent.[50] The rate varies throughout the state at the local level. In all, it collects about $28 billion in sales taxes per year. All real property is taxable annually, the tax based on the property's fair market value at the time of purchase. This tax does not increase based on a rise in real property values (see Proposition 13). California collects $33 billion in property taxes per year.

    In 2009 the California economic crisis became severe as the state faces insolvency.[51] In June 2009 Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said "Our wallet is empty, our bank is closed and our credit is dried up."[52] He called for massive budget cuts of $24 billion, about 1/4 of the state's budget.[52]

    Energy

    California, as the most populous U.S. state and home of Silicon Valley, is one of the country's largest users of energy. However, due to its mild weather and strong environmental movement, its per capita energy use is one of the smallest of any U.S. state.

    Transportation

    The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, one of California's most famous landmarks

    California's vast terrain is connected by an extensive system of freeways, expressways, and highways. California is known for its car culture, giving California's cities a reputation for severe traffic congestion. Construction and maintenance of state roads and statewide transportation planning are primarily the responsibility of the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). The rapidly growing population of the state is straining all of its transportation networks, and a recurring issue in California politics is whether the state should continue to aggressively expand its freeway network or concentrate on improving mass transit networks in urban areas.

    One of the state's more visible landmarks, the Golden Gate Bridge was completed in 1937. With its orange paint and panoramic views of the bay, this highway bridge is a popular tourist attraction and also accommodates pedestrians and bicyclists. It is simultaneously designated as U.S. Route 101 which is part of the El Camino Real (Spanish for Royal Road or King's Highway), and State Route 1 which is also known as the Pacific Coast Highway. Another of the seven bridges in the San Francisco Bay Area is the San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge, completed in 1936. This bridge transports approximately 280,000 vehicles per day on two-decks, with its two sections meeting at Yerba Buena Island.

    Los Angeles International Airport and San Francisco International Airport are major hubs for trans-Pacific and transcontinental traffic. There are about a dozen important commercial airports and many more general aviation airports throughout the state.

    California also has several important seaports. The giant seaport complex formed by the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach in Southern California is the largest in the country and responsible for handling about a fourth of all container cargo traffic in the United States. The Port of Oakland, fourth largest in the nation, handles trade from the Pacific Rim and delivers most of the ocean containers passing through Northern California to the entire USA.

    Caltrans builds tall "stack" interchanges with soaring ramps that offer impressive views

    Intercity rail travel is provided by Amtrak California, which manages the three busiest intercity rail lines in the US outside the Northeast Corridor. Integrated subway and light rail networks are found in Los Angeles (Metro Rail) and San Francisco (MUNI Metro). Light rail systems are also found in San Jose (VTA), San Diego (San Diego Trolley), Sacramento (RT Light Rail), and Northern San Diego County (Sprinter). Furthermore, commuter rail networks serve the San Francisco Bay Area (ACE, BART, Caltrain), Greater Los Angeles (Metrolink), and San Diego County (Coaster). The California High Speed Rail Authority was created in 1996 by the state to implement an extensive 700 mile (1127 km) rail system. Construction was approved by the voters during the November 2008 general election, a $9.95 billion state bond will go toward its construction. Nearly all counties operate bus lines, and many cities operate their own bus lines as well. Intercity bus travel is provided by Greyhound and Amtrak Thruway Coach.

    Government and politics

    State government

    Capitol Building in Sacramento

    California is governed as a republic, with three branches of government: the executive branch consisting of the Governor of California and the other independently elected constitutional officers; the legislative branch consisting of the Assembly and Senate; and the judicial branch consisting of the Supreme Court of California and lower courts. The state also allows direct participation of the electorate by initiative, referendum, recall, and ratification. California allows each political party to choose whether to have a closed primary or a primary where only party members and independents vote. The state's capital is Sacramento.

    The Governor of California and the other state constitutional officers serve four-year terms and may be re-elected only once. The California State Legislature consists of a 40-member Senate and 80-member Assembly. Senators serve four-year terms and Assembly members two. Members of the Assembly are subject to term limits of three terms, and members of the Senate are subject to term limits of two terms.

    In the 2007–2008 session, there were 48 Democrats and 32 Republicans in the Assembly. In the Senate, there are 25 Democrats and 15 Republicans. The governor is Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    California's legal system is explicitly based on English common law[53] (as is the case with all other states except Louisiana) but carries a few features from Spanish civil law, such as community property. Capital punishment is a legal form of punishment and the state has the largest "Death Row" population in the country (though Texas is far more active in carrying out executions). California's "Death Row" is in San Quentin State Prison situated north of San Francisco in Marin County. Executions in California are currently on hold indefinitely as human rights issues are addressed.[54]

    California's judiciary is the largest in the United States (with a total of 1,600 judges, while the federal system has only about 840). It is supervised by the seven Justices of the Supreme Court of California. Justices of the Supreme Court and Courts of Appeal are appointed by the Governor, but are subject to retention by the electorate every 12 years.

    Federal politics

    Presidential elections results
    Year Republican Democratic
    2008 36.91% 5,011,781 60.94% 8,274,473
    2004 44.36% 5,509,826 54.40% 6,745,485
    2000 41.65% 4,567,429 53.45% 5,861,203
    1996 38.21% 3,828,380 51.10% 5,119,835
    1992 32.61% 3,630,574 46.01% 5,121,325
    1988 51.13% 5,054,917 47.56% 4,702,233
    1984 57.51% 5,467,009 41.27% 3,922,519
    1980 52.69% 4,524,858 35.91% 3,083,661
    1976 49.35% 3,882,244 47.57% 3,742,284
    1972 55.01% 4,602,096 41.54% 3,475,847
    1968 47.82% 3,467,664 44.74% 3,244,318
    1964 40.79% 2,879,108 59.11% 4,171,877
    1960 50.10% 3,259,722 49.55% 3,224,099

    California has an idiosyncratic political culture. It was the second state to legalize abortion and the second state to legalize marriage for gay couples (by judicial review, which was later revoked by the ballot initiative, Proposition 8).

    Since 1990, California has generally elected Democratic candidates; however, the state has elected Republican Governors, though many of its Republican Governors, such as Governor Schwarzenegger, tend to be considered "Moderate Republicans" and more liberal than the national party.

    Democratic strength is centered in coastal regions of Los Angeles County and the San Francisco Bay Area. The Democrats also hold a majority in Sacramento. The Republican strength is greatest the eastern parts of the state. Orange County remains mostly Republican.

    California politics has trended towards the Democratic Party and away from the Republican Party. The trend is most obvious in presidential elections. Additionally, the Democrats have easily won every U.S. Senate race since 1992 and have maintained consistent majorities in both houses of the state legislature. In the U.S. House, the Democrats hold a 34–19 edge for the 110th United States Congress. The U.S senators are Dianne Feinstein (D), a native of San Francisco, and Barbara Boxer (D). The districts in California are usually dominated by one or the other party with very few districts that could be considered competitive. Once very conservative having elected Republicans, California is now a reliable Democratic state. According to political analysts, California should soon gain three more seats, for a total of 58 electoral votes – the most electoral votes in the nation.[55]

    Cities, towns and counties

    For lists of cities, towns, and counties in California, see List of counties in California, List of cities in California (by population), List of cities in California, List of urbanized areas in California (by population), and California locations by per capita income.

    The state's local government is divided into 58 counties and 480 incorporated cities and towns; of which 458 are cities and 22 are towns. Under California law, the terms "city" and "town" are explicitly interchangeable; the name of an incorporated municipality in the state can either be "City of (Name)" or "Town of (Name)".[56]

    Sacramento became California's first incorporated city on February 27, 1850.[57] San Jose, San Diego and Benicia tied for California's second incorporated city, each receiving incorporation on March 27, 1850.[58][59][60] Menifee became the state's most recent and 480th incorporated municipality on October 1, 2008.[61]

    The majority of these cities and towns are within one of five metropolitan areas. Sixty-eight percent of California's population lives in its three largest metropolitan areas, Greater Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area and the Riverside-San Bernardino Area, known as the Inland Empire. Although smaller, the other two large population centers are the San Diego and the Sacramento metro areas. California is home to the largest county in the contiguous United States by area San Bernardino County.

    The state recognizes two kinds of cities: charter and general law.[62] General law cities owe their existence to state law and are consequentially governed by it; charter cities are governed by their own city charters. Cities incorporated in the 19th century tend to be charter cities. All of the state's ten most populous cities are charter cities.

    Education

    Public secondary education consists of high schools that teach elective courses in trades, languages, and liberal arts with tracks for gifted, college-bound and industrial arts students. California's public educational system is supported by a unique constitutional amendment that requires a minimum annual funding level for grades K-14 (kindergarten through community college) which grows with the economy and student enrollment figures.[63]

    California had over 6.2 million school students in the 2005–06 school year. Funding and staffing levels in California schools lag behind other states. In expenditure per pupil, California ranked 29th of the 51 states (including the District of Columbia) in 2005–06. In teaching staff expenditure per pupil, California ranked 49th of 51. In overall teacher-pupil ratio, California was also 49th, with 21 students per teacher. Only Arizona and Utah were poorer.[64]

    California's public postsecondary education offers a unique three tiered system:

    • The preeminent research university system in the state is the University of California (UC) which employs more Nobel Prize laureates than any other institution in the world, and is considered one of the world's finest public university systems. There are ten general UC campuses, and a number of specialized campuses in the UC system.
    • The California State University (CSU) system has almost 450,000 students, making it the largest university system in the United States. It is intended to accept the top one-third (1/3) of high school students. The 23 CSU schools are primarily intended for undergraduate education.[65]
    • The California Community Colleges system provides lower division coursework as well as basic skills and workforce training. It is the largest network of higher education in the US, composed of 110 colleges serving a student population of over 2.6 million.[66]

    California is also home to such notable private universities as Stanford University, the University of Southern California (USC), the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), and the Claremont Colleges (including Harvey Mudd College and Pomona College). California has hundreds of other private colleges and universities, including many religious and special-purpose institutions.

    Sports

    Previously the California Angels, the Los Angeles Angels play in Anaheim.

    California hosted the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley Ski Resort, the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, as well as the 1994 FIFA World Cup.

    California has nineteen major professional sports league franchises, far more than any other state. The San Francisco Bay Area has seven major league teams spread in three cities, San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose. While the Greater Los Angeles Area is home to ten major league franchises, it is also the largest metropolitan area not to have a team from the National Football League. San Diego has two major league teams, and Sacramento also has two.

    Home to some of the most prominent universities in the United States, California has long had many respected collegiate sports programs. In particular, the athletic programs of UC Berkeley, USC, UCLA, Stanford and Fresno State are often nationally ranked in the various collegiate sports. California is also home to the oldest college bowl game, the annual Rose Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl, among others.

    Below is a list of major sports teams in California:

    Club Sport League
    Oakland Raiders American football National Football League
    San Diego Chargers American football National Football League
    San Francisco 49ers American football National Football League
    Los Angeles Dodgers Baseball Major League Baseball
    Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim Baseball Major League Baseball
    Oakland Athletics Baseball Major League Baseball
    San Diego Padres Baseball Major League Baseball
    San Francisco Giants Baseball Major League Baseball
    Golden State Warriors Basketball National Basketball Association
    Los Angeles Clippers Basketball National Basketball Association
    Los Angeles Lakers Basketball National Basketball Association
    Sacramento Kings Basketball National Basketball Association
    Modesto Bearcats Basketball American Basketball Association (2000-)
    Anaheim Ducks Ice hockey National Hockey League
    Los Angeles Kings Ice hockey National Hockey League
    San Jose Sharks Ice hockey National Hockey League
    Chivas USA Soccer Major League Soccer
    Los Angeles Galaxy Soccer Major League Soccer
    San Jose Earthquakes Soccer Major League Soccer
    Los Angeles Avengers American football Arena Football League
    San Jose SaberCats American football Arena Football League
    Los Angeles Sparks Basketball Women's National Basketball Association
    Sacramento Monarchs Basketball Women's National Basketball Association
    San Jose Stealth Lacrosse National Lacrosse League
    California Cougars Soccer Professional Arena Soccer League

    Landmarks




    See also

    References

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    7. ^ Person-Lynn, 2004.
    8. ^ Florida, Dry Tortugas, Cape Canaveral, and Appalachian appeared earlier,....From Spanish historian Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas's accounts, published in 1601 – Stewart, George (1945). Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States. New York: Random House. pp. 11–17. 
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    13. ^ The first successful mission in Baja California had been established at Loreto, Baja California Sur in 1697.
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    19. ^ "The world's largest cities". www.citymayors.com. http://www.citymayors.com/features/largest_cities1.html. Retrieved 2008-07-10. 
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    24. ^ [1]
    25. ^ http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ACSSAFFPeople?_event=&geo_id=04000US06&_geoContext=01000US|04000US06&_street=&_county=&_cityTown=&_state=04000US06&_zip=&_lang=en&_sse=on&ActiveGeoDiv=&_useEV=&pctxt=fph&pgsl=040&_submenuId=people_10&ds_name=null&_ci_nbr=null&qr_name=null&reg=null%3Anull&_keyword=&_industry=
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    29. ^ Population Bureau (2003) (.PDF). Tab 5. Detailed List of Languages Spoken at Home for the Population 5 Years and Over by State: 2000. U.S. Census Bureau. http://www.census.gov/population/cen2000/phc-t20/tab05.pdf. Retrieved 2007-06-30. 
    30. ^ Native tribes, groups, language families and dialects of California in 1770 (map after Kroeber)(accessed 2006-12-30); Map of California showing areas of indigenous languages (accessed 2006-12-30)
    31. ^ Hull, Dana (2006-05-20). "English already is "official" in California". San Jose Mercury News. 
    32. ^ http://www.sariweb.ucdavis.edu/downloads/311AWorldOfOpportunity.pdf
    33. ^ http://www.thearda.com/mapsReports/reports/state/06_2000.asp
    34. ^ Richard Brent Turner (2003). Islam in the African-American experience. pp. 234. ISBN 9780253343239.
    35. ^ If I Did That Over There, They'd Cut My Hands Off
    36. ^ Ed. Melton, J. Gordon (2003). "Eastern Family Part II: Buddhism, Shintoism, Japanese New Religions". Encyclopedia of American Religions (Seventh Edition ed.). Detroit: Gale. pp. p201–211. OCLC 51255717. 
    37. ^ "Largest Latter-day Saint Communities". Adherents.com. http://www.adherents.com/largecom/com_lds.html. Retrieved 2009-01-15. 
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    40. ^ State's budget gap deepens $2 billion overnight, San Francisco Chronicle
    41. ^ Google's April surprise for state, San Francisco Chronicle, May 9, 2006
    42. ^ Enough said: Guess how Pennsylvania stacks up against other states on size of local/state tax burden, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 17, 2008
    43. ^ California's Gold Rush Has Been Reversed, Wall St. Journal, January 10, 2009
    44. ^ In California's meltdown, misery has long reach
    45. ^ California Chamber of Commerce: All About International Trade and Investment
    46. ^ Cal Facts 2006: California's Economy and Budget in Perspective
    47. ^ State Personal Income 2006, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce.
    48. ^ Report from Central Valley Business Times
    49. ^ "UCLA Anderson Forecast Affirms No Recession". UCLA Anderson Forecast. http://uclaforecast.com. Retrieved 2008-07-10. 
    50. ^ California City and County Sales and Use Tax Rates - Cities, Counties and Tax Rates - Board of Equalization
    51. ^ California at Budget Impasse as State Nears Insolvency February 15, 2009 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/02/15/california-budget-impasse-state-nears-insolvency/
    52. ^ a b California's time is running out Chronicle Editorials Wednesday, June 3, 2009 http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/06/03/ED3T180828.DTL
    53. ^ California Civil Code Section 22.2.
    54. ^ California's Death Penalty on Hold Indefinitely
    55. ^ Electoral Trends Warm Sunbelt, Freeze Frostbelt, Crystal Ball, U.Va
    56. ^ California Government Code Sections 34500-34504
    57. ^ "Instant City: Sacramento". California State Library. http://www.library.ca.gov/goldrush/sec08.html. Retrieved 2009-01-12. 
    58. ^ "San Jose at a Glance". City of San Jose. http://www.sanjoseca.gov/about.html. Retrieved 2008-07-19. "San José was one of the first incorporated cities in California" 
    59. ^ "A History of San Diego Government". City of San Diego. http://www.sandiego.gov/city-clerk/geninfo/history.shtml. Retrieved 2008-07-19. 
    60. ^ "California State Parks: 1846 to 1854". http://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=1096. Retrieved 2008-07-19. "March 27, 1850 Benicia incorporated" 
    61. ^ "Menifee celebrates cityhood". The Press-Enterprise. 2008-10-02. http://www.pe.com/localnews/inland/stories/PE_News_Local_S_sinauguration02.2188d3d.html. Retrieved 2008-10-02. 
    62. ^ League of California Cities: Types of (California) Cities
    63. ^ "Proposition 98 Primer". Legislative Analyst's Office. February 2005. http://www.lao.ca.gov/2005/prop_98_primer/prop_98_primer_020805.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-31. 
    64. ^ Ed-Data Website, California
    65. ^ "CSU Facts 2008". California State University. http://www.calstate.edu/PA/2008Facts/. Retrieved 2009-01-31. 
    66. ^ "Community Colleges". California Community Colleges System Office. http://www.cccco.edu/CommunityColleges/tabid/830/Default.aspx. Retrieved 2009-01-31. 

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