History of San Diego. Native Americans such as the Kumeyaay people had been living in the area for as long as 12,000 years. Explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo discovered San Diego Bay in 1542. 12000 years of evident history with artifacts for us to enjoy! Now, when the Anglos Puritans showed up at Plymouth, they were just Amerindians taken from America and mixed with Pict dna to create a more hearty settler for the more cold and northerly parts of the continent and the civilization has reached its intended goal with sufficient numbers of parishes and roads like Route 66 leading to them while technological innovation is not intended to frustrate the project of settlement and stabilization for the church and the masses. Technological innovation that changes the way in which we transmit moneys from the production side to the automation side of an economy should not involve collapse or catastrophe and nor should you leave the power to make the decision as to a fuel injector or carburetor in the hands of the subject who is in need of further tutelage as to the on going value of education and nor should you take advantage of him or them. They will eat, buy and travel and that is really all you need them for but to be good and quiet traveler who will not freak out at an Ethiopian Princess/Stewardess on the United Airlines who is a Syracuse University Graduate and former Volleyball team member with her high school diploma from Albany we need every troglodyte to have his full time education and ensure he knows how to buy a house by grade 11 or maybe even go through the rudimentary steps by grade 5 while we know he might take some E just to be accepted by grade 8 or sniff glue ; eh? But, you need him to eat and consume the crap made by machines that include the vehicles and the robot that makes the vehicle is also made by machines; yah?

History of San Diego

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_San_Diego


The recorded history of the San Diego, California, region began in the present state of California when San Diego Bay was first discovered by Europeans. San Diego was the first part of California that Europeans settled in, so that San Diego has been described as "the birthplace of California."[1]
Native Americans such as the Kumeyaay people had been living in the area for as long as 12,000 years. Explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo discovered San Diego Bay in 1542, but it was 200 years before Europeans settled the area. A fort and mission were established in 1769, which gradually expanded into a settlement under first Spanish and then Mexican rule.
San Diego became part of the U.S. in 1848, and the town was named the county seat of San Diego County when California was granted statehood in 1850. It remained a very small town for several decades, but grew rapidly after 1880 due to development and the establishment of multiple military facilities. Growth was especially rapid during and immediately after World War II. Entrepreneurs and boosters laid the basis for an economy based today on the military, defense industries, tourism, international trade, and manufacturing. San Diego is now the eighth largest city in the country and forms the heart of the larger San Diego metropolitan area.

Balboa Park, site of the California Pacific International Exposition, in 1935-36

Pre-colonial and colonial period (Prehistory–1821)[edit]


Cabrillo National Monument, San Diego
The area has long been inhabited by the Kumeyaay Native American people. The first European to visit the region was Juan RodrĂ­guez Cabrillo in 1542. His landing is re-enacted every year at the Cabrillo Festival sponsored by Cabrillo National Monument, but it did not lead to settlement.
The bay and the area of present-day San Diego were given their current name sixty years later by Sebastián VizcaĂ­no when he was mapping the coastline of Alta California for Spain in 1602.[2] Vizcaino was a merchant who hoped to establish prosperous colonies. After holding the first Catholic service conducted on California soil on the feast day of San Diego de Alcala, (also the patron saint of his flagship), he renamed the bay. He left after 10 days and was enthusiastic about its safe harbor, friendly natives, and promising potential as a successful colony. Despite his enthusiasm, the Spanish were unconvinced; it would be another 167 years before colonization began.[3]

The Ship! The Ship! California is saved! Serra rejoices at the sight of the San Antonio entering San Diego Bay on March 19, 1770 with desperately needed food and supplies.
In 1769, Gaspar de PortolĂ  and his expedition founded the Presidio of San Diego (military post), and on July 16, Franciscan friars JunĂ­pero Serra, Juan Viscaino and Fernando Parron raised and 'blessed a cross', establishing the first mission in upper Las CaliforniasMission San Diego de Alcala.[4] Colonists began arriving in 1774. In the following year the Kumeyaay indigenous people rebelled against the Spanish. They killed the priest and two others, and burned the mission.[5] Serra organized the rebuilding, and a fire-proof adobe and tile-roofed structure was completed in 1780. By 1797 the mission had become the largest in California, with a population of more than 1,400 presumably converted Native American "Mission Indians" relocated to and associated with it. The tile-roofed adobe structure was destroyed by an 1803 earthquake but replaced by a third church in 1813.[6]

Mexican period (1821–1848)[edit]

In 1821 Mexico ousted the Spanish in the Mexican War of Independence and created the Province of Alta California. The San Diego Mission was secularized and shut down in 1834 and the land was sold off. 432 residents petitioned the governor to form a pueblo, and Juan MarĂ­a Osuna was elected the first alcalde ("municipal magistrate"), defeating PĂ­o Pico in the vote. Beyond town Mexican land grants expanded the number of California ranchos that modestly added to the local economy.
The original town of San Diego was located at the foot of Presidio Hill, in the area which is now Old Town San Diego State Historic Park. The location was not ideal, being several miles away from navigable water. Imported goods and exports (primarily tallow and hides) had to be carried over the La Playa Trail to the anchorages in Point Loma.[7] This arrangement was suitable only for a very small town. In 1830 the population was about 600.[8] In 1834 the presidio was described as "in a most ruinous state, apart from one side, in which the commandant lived, with his family. There were only two guns, one of which was spiked, and the other had no carriage. Twelve half-clothed and half-starved-looking fellows composed the garrison, and they, it was said, had not a musket apiece." The settlement composed about forty brown huts and three or four larger, whitewashed ones belonging to the gentry.[9] In 1838 the town lost its pueblo status because of its dwindling population, estimated as 100 to 150 residents.[8] It was then considered a suburb of Los Angeles.[10]

An American town (1848–1900)[edit]

Alta California became part of the United States in 1848 following the U.S. victory in the Mexican–American War and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The resident "Californios" became American citizens with full voting rights. California was admitted to the Union as a state in 1850. San Diego, still little more than a village, was incorporated on March 27 as a city and was named the county seat of the newly established San Diego County.[11] The United States Census reported the population of the town as 650 in 1850 and 731 in 1860.[12]
San Diego promptly got into financial trouble due to overspending on a poorly designed jail. In 1852 the state repealed the city charter, in effect declaring the city bankrupt, and installed a state-controlled three-member board of trustees to manage San Diego. The trustees stayed in control until 1887, when a mayor-council form of government was installed under a new city charter.[13]
Although some 10,000 men stopped briefly in San Diego on their way to the San Francisco gold fields, few stayed, and San Diego remained sparsely settled during much of the 1850s. Despite its small population, this decade brought investors who saw the potential of San Diego. They bought lots, and built rough houses and shops. One, William Heath Davis, spent $60,000 constructing a wharf near the property he had purchased near the foot of today's Market Street. Remembered as "Davis' Folly", it was completed by August 1851, but was seldom used. In 1853, the steamer Los Angeles collided with the wharf. The damage was never repaired. Unused and poorly built, the damage was not worth fixing. Davis tried unsuccessfully to sell it. Finally, in 1862, the Army destroyed it, using timbers for firewood.[14]
The failure of the wharf was only one indication of depressed times. Houses were dismantled and shipped to more promising settlements. By 1860, many of the enterprises that had been established during the early 1850s had closed. The few businesses that survived suffered from water shortages, high costs of shipping, and a declining population.[15] Davis, however, kept trying. He laid out the grid system the streets, speculated in land in the business district, and constructed hotels and stores. When he ran out of money, leadership in boosterism passed to Alonzo Horton.[16] The town seemed rundown in 1867 when Horton arrived, but he could only see glittering opportunity: "I have been nearly all over the world and it seemed to me to be the best spot for building a city I ever saw." He was convinced that the town needed a location nearer the water to improve trade. Within a month of his arrival, he had purchased more than 900 acres of today's downtown for a total of $265, an average of 27.5 cents an acre. He began promoting San Diego by enticing entrepreneurs and residents.[14] He built a wharf and began to promote development there. The area was referred to as New Town or the Horton Addition. Despite opposition from the residents of the original settlement, which became known as “Old Town”, businesses and residents flocked to New Town, and San Diego experienced the first of its many real estate booms. In 1871, government records were moved to a new county courthouse in New Town, and by the 1880s New Town (or downtown) had totally eclipsed Old Town as the heart of the growing city.[17]
In 1878, San Diego was predicted to become a rival of San Francisco’s trading ports. To prevent that, the manager of Central Pacific Railroad Charles Crocker, decided not to build an extension to San Diego, fearing that it would take too much trade from San Francisco. In 1885, a transcontinental railroad route came to San Diego, and the population boomed, reaching 16,159 by 1890. In 1906 the San Diego and Arizona Railway of John D. Spreckels was built to provide San Diego with a direct transcontinental rail link to the east by connecting with the Southern Pacific Railroad lines in El Centro, California. It became the San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway. In 1933 the Spreckels heirs sold it to the Southern Pacific Railroad.
In 1912 Council restrictions on soapbox oratories led to the San Diego free speech fight, a confrontation between the Industrial Workers of the World on the one side and law enforcement and vigilantes on the other.
Historical population
CensusPop.
1850500
186073146.2%
18702,300214.6%
18802,63714.7%
189016,159512.8%
190017,7009.5%
191039,578123.6%
192074,36187.9%
1930147,99599.0%
1940203,34137.4%
1950333,86564.2%
1960573,22471.7%
1970696,76921.6%
1980875,53825.7%
19901,110,54926.8%
20001,223,40010.2%
20101,307,4026.9%

Emergence of a regional city (1900–1941)[edit]

The city grew in bursts, especially in the 1880s and again from 1900 to 1930, when it reached 148,000.[18]

The Gibraltar of the Pacific[edit]

In the 1890–1914 period the nation became greatly interested in Pacific naval affairs, as seen in the Spanish–American War of 1898; the U.S. acquisition of Guam, the Philippines, and Hawaii; and the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914. San Diego was in a strategic location and sought to become "the Gibraltar of the Pacific."[19] Civic leaders such as real-estate developer D. C. Collier and other leaders of the Chamber of Commerce, assisted by Congressman William Kettner actively lobbied the Navy and the federal government to make San Diego a major location for naval, marine, and air bases.[20][21] During World War I the U.S. greatly expanded the Navy, and the city was eager to help. By the time the Marine Base and Naval Training Center opened in the early 1920s, the Navy had built seven bases in San Diego at a cost of $20 million, with another $17 million in the pipeline.[22] The city's 'culture of accommodation' determined the way the city would grow for the next several decades, and created a military-urban complex rather than a tourist and health resort. With the reduction in naval spending after 1990, the Chamber turned its focus to tourism and conventions.[23]
San Diego had the great harbor and the weather; it seemed poised to become a world-class metropolis. But it was overshadowed by both San Francisco and Los Angeles. Businessman John D. Spreckels expressed the enthusiasm of San Diego's boosters in 1923, as well as the disappointment that it had not fully developed.:
"Why did I come to San Diego? Why did any of you come? We came because we thought we saw an unusual opportunity here. We believed that everything pointed to this as the logical site for a great city and seaport. In short, we had faith in San Diego's future. We gave of our time and our strength and our means...to help develop our city, and naturally, our own fortunes. ... What is the matter with San Diego? Why is it not the metropolis and seaport that its geographical and other unique advantages entitle it to be? Why does San Diego always just miss the train, somehow?"[24]

Military installations[edit]

The southern portion of the Point Loma peninsula was set aside for military purposes as early as 1852. Over the next several decades the Army set up a series of coastal artillery batteries and named the area Fort Rosecrans.[25] After World War II the former site of Fort Rosecrans in Point Loma was used for multiple Navy commands, including a submarine base and a Naval Electronics Laboratory; they were eventually consolidated into Naval Base Point Loma. Other portions of Fort Rosecrans became Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery and Cabrillo National Monument.
Significant U.S. Navy presence began in 1901, with the establishment of the Navy Coaling Station in Point Loma, and expanded greatly during the 1920s.[26] Camp Kearny was established in 1917, closed in 1920, and later reopened; since 1996 it has been the site of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. In the interim it was in whole or part Camp Elliot (during World War II), the Sycamore Canyon Test Facility, and Naval Air Station Miramar (with its "Top Gun" fighter school). The Marine base Camp Matthews, which was joined by Camp Callan from 1941 to 1945, occupied a mesa near La Jolla from 1917 until 1964; the site is now the campus of University of California, San DiegoNaval Base San Diego was established in 1922, as was the San Diego Naval Hospital. The Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego was commissioned in 1921[27] and the San Diego Naval Training Center in 1923;[28] the Naval Training Center was closed in 1997.
In 1942 the Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton was set up 45 miles north of the city on 250,000 acres. It remains one of the main Marine Corps training facilities.[29] It became the home of the 1st Marine Division in 1946 and later the I Marine Expeditionary Force as well as several training commands. In 1975 the Marine Corps opened the Camp Pendleton Refugee Camp to care for some of the hundreds of thousands of South Vietnamese and Cambodians refugees who fled after the Vietnam War was lost.[30]
In the early 1990s, twenty percent of the San Diego region's economy was dependent on defense spending.[31]

Progressive reform[edit]

San Diego gave strong support to the Progressive Movement that swept California in the early 20th century in order to purify the state from oppressive bossism and corporate rule. Progressive Republicans resented the political power of the Southern Pacific Railroad and the role of "Boss" Charles Hardy. Reformers organized and fought back beginning with the 1905 municipal election. In 1906, they formed the Roosevelt Republican Club, and in 1907 reformers backed a Nonpartisan League. Led by Edgar Luce, George Marston and Ed Fletcher, the Roosevelt Republican Club became the Lincoln-Roosevelt Republican League. The mayoralty election of 1909 marked a sweeping victory for the League, as did the 1910 election of Hiram Johnson as governor.[32]
Marston was defeated for mayor in 1913 (against Charles F. O'Neall) and again in 1917 (against Louis J. Wilde). The 1917 race in particular was a classic growth-vs.-beautification debate. Marston argued for better city planning with more open space and grand boulevards; Wilde argued for more business development. Wilde called his opponent "Geranium George", painting Marston as unfriendly to business.[33] Wilde's campaign slogan was "More Smokestacks", and during the campaign he drew a great smokestack belching smoke on a truck through the city streets. The phrase "smokestacks vs. geraniums" is still used in San Diego to characterize this type of debate between environmentalists and growth advocates.[34]

World's Fairs[edit]

San Diego hosted two World's Fairs, the Panama-California Exposition in 1915-1916, and the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935-1936. The expositions left a lasting legacy in the form of Balboa Park and the San Diego Zoo, and by popularizing Mission Revival Style and Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture locally and in Southern California as a regional aesthetic and nationwide design influence. The Spanish Colonial Revival architecture used in the design of the 1915 Fair was designed by architect Bertram Goodhue of the firm Cram, Goodhue and Ferguson in Boston, Massachusetts. He was inspired by his studies of the architecture of Mexico.[35][36] The Federal Works Progress Administration (WPA) helped fund the 1935 fair, which was designed by architect Richard S. Requa.[37]

Tuna industry[edit]

From the 1910s through the 1970s, the American tuna fishing fleet and tuna canning industry were based in San Diego, acclaimed by boosters as the "tuna capital of the world."[38]San Diego's first large tuna cannery, the Pacific Tuna Canning Company, was founded in 1911. Others such as Van Camp Seafood, Bumble Bee and StarKist followed.[39] A large fishing fleet supported the canneries, mostly staffed by immigrant fishermen. Portuguese began arriving to San Diego in the 1860s, and began immigrating in large numbers in the early 20th century, becoming the largest population of foreign-born fishermen in San Diego.[40] Japanese owners and fishermen were an important part of the industry,[38] making up half of the workforce;[41] at the height of their involvement they caught more than eighty percent of the albacore catch.[42] Later the workforce was dominated by immigrants from the Portuguese Azores and Italy.[43]
By 1920, there were about 700 boats in Southern California engaged in the tuna industry, and ten canneries in San Diego.[44] In 1922, Van Camp Seafood Company consolidated their canning facilities to San Diego, closing a facility in San Pedro.[45] By the mid-1930s housewives in the Great Depression appreciated the cheap, easy-to-serve food. By 1939 the fleet's tuna catch exceeded 100 million pounds.[46] By the 1930s, legislation was passed that attempted to limit Japanese fishermen, and due to World War II the boats owned by Japanese Americans were confiscated by the U.S. Navy.[47]
During World War II when fishing was not possible, 53 tuna boats and about 600 crew members served the U.S. Navy as the "yippie fleet" (so called because of service numbers beginning with YP, for Yard Patrol), also called the "pork chop express", delivering food, fuel and supplies to military installations all over the Pacific.[46][48] Twenty-one of the vessels were lost and dozens of crew members were killed on these hazardous missions.[49] Yippie ships won more than a dozen battle stars and several Presidential Unit Citations.[49]
In the 1950s tuna fishing and canning was the third largest industry in San Diego, after the Navy and aviation.[38] In 1951 there were over eight hundred fishing boats and almost three thousand fisherman homeported in San Diego.[50] The San Diego tuna fleet reached a peak of 160 vessels, and in 1962 employed around forty thousand San Diegans.[38]Banker C. Arnholt Smith, a top civic leader, was a major investor. With Japan offering cheaper tuna after 1950, Smith worked to break the union using new technology and Peruvian canneries.[51]
The industry suffered due to rising costs and foreign competition.[52] In 1980, Mexico seized American tuna ships, and confiscated those ships fishing equipment (particularly their fishing nets), after declaring an exclusive economic zone; this led to an embargo which heavily impacted the tuna fleet, and also led to increased importation of frozen tuna.[53]Severely impacting the American tuna fleet, many ships moved to Mexico, or were sold to operators in other countries.[53] The last cannery closed in 1984, with a loss of thousands of jobs.[38]
The legacy of the tuna fleet is still felt in Little Italy, where most of the Italian fishermen settled, and in the Point Loma neighborhood of Roseville, still sometimes referred to as "Tunaville," where many Portuguese fishermen and boat owners settled. There is a sculpture dedicated to the cannery workers in Barrio Logan[54] and a "Tunaman's Memorial" statue representing the fishermen on Shelter Island.[55] The tuna industry is also commemorated by Tuna Harbor Park on San Diego Bay.[56] The Bumble Bee Foods company is still headquartered in San Diego.[57]

Philanthropy[edit]

Philanthropy was an important part of San Diego's expansion. For example, wealthy heiress Ellen Browning Scripps underwrote many public facilities in La Jolla, was a key supporter of the fledgling San Diego Zoo, and together with her brother E. W. Scripps established the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.[58] Another notable philanthropist of this era was George Marston, businessman and owner of Marston's Department Store. Wanting to see Balboa Park become a grand city park like those in other cities, he hired architect John Nolen on two occasions, 1908 and 1926, to develop a master plan for the park. In 1907 he bought Presidio Hill, site of the original Presidio of San Diego, which had fallen into ruins. Recognizing its importance as the site of the first European settlement in California, he developed it into a park (planned by Nolen) with his own funds, and built the Serra Museum (designed by architect William Templeton Johnson). In 1929 he donated the park to the city, which still owns and operates it; it is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[59]

Great Depression[edit]

San Diego met the challenge of the Great Depression better than most parts of the country. The population of San Diego County grew 38%, from 210,000 to 290,000, from 1930 to 1940, while the city itself went from 148,000 to 203,000 – a much better rate than the state as a whole. There was money enough to build a new municipal golf course and tennis courts, to improve the water system, and open a new Spanish-style campus for San Diego State College (now San Diego State University). The New Deal used PWA relief money to expand the fleet, bringing more money into the city. In 1935 the entire Pacific Fleet assembled with 48 warships, 400 naval aircraft, 55,000 sailors and 3000 officers to demonstrate the importance of sea power to the city, and to exhibit to Japan and the rest of the world America's interest in the Pacific. The expansion of naval and army aviation led Consolidated Aircraft Corporation of Buffalo New York to bring all its 800 employees to San Diego, opening a major assembly plant, Convair, which built Navy flying boats. Ryan Aeronautical Company, which built the Spirit of St. Louis for the famous 1927 flight of Charles Lindbergh, also flourished. The 7.2 million visitors to the California-Pacific International Exposition in 1935–36 were impressed with the city's prosperity, as well as the 400 exhibits from 23 nations.[60]

War and postwar period (1941–present)[edit]

Since World War I, the military has played a leading role in the local economy. World War II brought prosperity and gave millions of soldiers, sailors and airmen en route to the Pacific a view of the opportunities in California. The aircraft factories grew from small handcraft shops to gigantic factories.[61] The city’s population soared from 200,000 to 340,000, as the Navy and Marines opened training facilities and the aircraft factories doubled their employment rosters every few months. With 40,000 to 50,000 sailors off duty every weekend, the downtown entertainment districts soon became saturated. The red-light district was officially shut down, but opportunities were easily available a few miles south in Tijuana, Mexico. Workers poured in from the towns and from across the country, creating a severe housing shortage. Public transportation (trolleys and buses) could barely keep up with the demand, and automobiles were rationed to only 3 gallons a week. Many wives who relocated while their husbands were training stayed in the city when their men shipped out and took high-paying jobs in the defense industries.[62] The dramatic increase in the need for fresh water led the Navy in 1944 to build the San Diego Aqueduct to import water from the Colorado River; the city financed the second pipeline in 1952 [63]

Industrial change[edit]

Convair was the largest employer in San Diego, with 32,000 well-paid workers in the mid-1950s. In 1954 it was bought out and became the Convair Division of General Dynamics, a large aerospace conglomerate based in Texas. Convair had been highly successful in the 1950s with the B-36, a very long-range bomber that became the workhorse of the Strategic Air Command. General Dynamics refocused Convair on commercial aviation as the Convair 240, a two- engine passenger plane, proved highly successful in the world market. Convair decided to move up to the very rapidly growing world market for medium-range jet passenger planes with the Convair 880. It was designed to rival Boeing's proposed 707, and Douglas's proposed DC-8. Financial and technical delays left Convair lagging far behind. After heavy losses, General Dynamics moved all the airplane elements to Texas, and left the San Diego factory with small-scale space and missile projects. Convair’s employment fell to 3300 in San Diego.[64]
As the Cold War ended, the military shrunk and so did defense spending. San Diego has since become a center of the emerging biotech industry and is home to telecommunications giant Qualcomm. Starting in the 1990s the city and county developed a nationally known craft beer industry; the area is sometimes referred to as "America's Craft Beer capital".[65] As of the end of 2012 there were 60 microbreweries and brewpubs in the county.[66]

Universities[edit]

After acquiring the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in 1912, the University of California (UC) built up a presence, with an emphasis on scientific research and cultural opportunities. For years UC operated an extension program in San Diego. In 1960, following wartime and postwar increases in population and economic growth in San Diego, UC broke ground for a new campus there, and classes at UCSD began in 1964. Under Richard C. Atkinson, chancellor from 1980 to 1995, UCSD strengthened its ties with the city of San Diego by encouraging technology transfer with developing companies, transforming San Diego into a world leader in technology-based industries. Private giving rose from $15 million to nearly $50 million annually, faculty expanded by nearly 50%, and enrollment doubled to about 18,000 students during his chancellorship.[67]

The upper floor of the Hill building, located at 6th and F streets, was the first location of the San Diego Normal School. Students and staff can be seen in the windows here in 1898. The school would later expand and change names several times before fixing on the current name, San Diego State University
San Diego State University (SDSU) is the largest and oldest higher education facility in San Diego County. It was founded in 1897 as San Diego Normal School, a state school for the preparation of teachers, located on Park Avenue in University Heights. In 1931 it moved to a larger location on Aztec Mesa, overlooking Mission Valley, at what was then the eastern edge of San Diego. In 1935 it expanded its offerings beyond teacher education and became San Diego State College. In 1970 it became San Diego State University, part of the California State University system. SDSU has grown to a student body of more than 30,000 and an alumni base of more than 260,000.
The University of San Diego, a private Catholic school, began as the San Diego College for Women in 1952, sponsored by the Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. In 1957 the campus on a hilltop site called Alcala Park also became home to the Immaculate Heart Major Seminary and St. Francis Minor Seminary. The landmark Immaculata Chapel also opened that year. In 1972 the San Diego College for Women merged with the nearby San Diego College for Men and the School of Law to become the University of San Diego.

Downtown[edit]

The transformation of the downtown areas from a zone of poverty and poor housing to a major tourist attraction with large numbers of jobs began in 1968 with the creation of the Centre City Development Corporation. Its urban renewal project focused on the Gaslamp Quarterbeginning in 1968, with the goal of making the area a national historic district and bringing upper- and middle-class tourists and suburban residents to downtown San Diego. Since the 1980s the city has seen the opening of the Horton Plaza shopping center, the revival of the Gaslamp Quarter, and the construction of the San Diego Convention Center.[68][69]

Gentrification[edit]

A recent boom on the construction of condos and skyscrapers (especially focusing on mixed-use facilities), a gentrification trend especially in Little Italy, and the inauguration of Petco Park in the once blighted East Village highlight the continuing development of downtown. Center city population is expected to rise to 77,000 residents by 2030; 30,000 people currently reside in downtown San Diego.[70]
A successful renewal by 'gentrification' is the Hillcrest neighborhood, known for its historic architecture, tolerance, diversity, and locally owned businesses, including restaurants, cafĂ©s, bars, clubs, trendy thrift-stores, and other independent specialty stores.[71] Hillcrest has a high population density, compared to many other neighborhoods in San Diego, and it has a large and active lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community.
This renewal extended to the surrounding neighborhoods in the 1990s, especially in older urban neighborhoods immediately north of Balboa Park such as North Park and City Heights.

Conventions[edit]

In July 1971 the Republican National Committee chose San Diego to be the site of the 1972 Republican National Convention, despite initial opposition from the city's mayor, Frank Curran, and despite the fact that the city did not initially bid for the opportunity. It was widely believed that San Diego was selected because it was the preferred choice of President Richard Nixon. The city and the party were making preparations for the convention when in March 1972 a $400,000 donation to the event by ITT Corporation was publicized and became a national scandal. In addition, there were ongoing problems with the proposed venue (the San Diego Sports Arena) and concerns about adequate hotel space. In May 1972 the Republican National Committee voted to move the convention to MiamiFlorida. In response, Mayor Pete Wilson proclaimed the week of the convention as "America's Finest City Week", giving rise to the city's current unofficial slogan "America's Finest City".[72]
The 1996 Republican National Convention was held in San Diego in August 1996, headquartered at the San Diego Convention Center.
The largest annual convention held in San Diego is San Diego Comic-Con International, founded as the Golden State Comic Book Convention in 1970. According to Forbes, it is the "largest convention of its kind in the world".[73]

Scandals[edit]

The United States National Bank, headquartered in San Diego and owned by C. Arnholt Smith, grew during the 1960s to become the 86th largest bank in the country with $1.2 billion in total assets. It failed in 1973 in the largest bank failure to date. The cause was bad loans to Smith-controlled companies, which exceeded the bank's legal lending limit. Smith had used the bank's money for his private business and bribed bank inspectors to cover it up. He was convicted of embezzlement and tax fraud and served seven months in federal prison in 1984.[74]
During the 1980s the city was rocked by the disclosure that J. David & Co., an investment company run by the well-connected J. David "Jerry" Dominelli, was in reality a Ponzi scheme which had bilked hundreds of investors for an estimated $80 million. Dominelli was convicted in 1984 and served 10 years in prison.[75] His affiliation with then-mayor Roger Hedgecock led to a pair of sensational trials in which Hedgecock was convicted of conspiracy and perjury in connection with contributions he received from Dominelli. Hedgecock was forced to resign from office; his convictions were eventually overturned, except for one which was reduced to a misdemeanor.[76]
A civic scandal exploded in 2003 with the discovery that city finances had been manipulated with massive losses in the pension fund scandal. It left the city with an estimated $1.4 billion pension fund gap. One result was replacing the council-manager form of government with a mayor-council system in 2004.[77] Although not charged with any wrongdoing, Mayor Dick Murphy resigned effective July 2005. Deputy Mayor Michael Zucchet took over as acting mayor but had to resign three days later, when he and fellow city councilmember Ralph Inzunza were convicted in federal court for taking bribes in a scheme to overturn the city's "no touch" law at strip clubs.[78] Their felony conviction required them to resign from the city council. A third accused councilmember had died before trial. Zucchet's conviction was later overturned.[79] Inzunza was sentenced to 21 months in prison.[80]
In July 2013, Mayor Bob Filner was accused by multiple women of repeated sexual harassment,[81][82] and many individuals and groups, including former supporters, called for him to resign. On August 19 Filner and city representatives entered a mediation process, as a result of which Filner agreed to resign, effective August 30, 2013, while the city agreed to limit his legal and financial exposure.[83] Filner subsequently pleaded guilty to one felony count of false imprisonment and two misdemeanor battery charges, and was sentenced to house arrest and probation.[84][85]
Beyond the issues regarding the city government, San Diego has experienced scandal on the Federal level as well. On November 28, 2005, Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham resigned after pleading guilty to bribery charges; he was sentenced to 8 years in prison.[86]

Ethnic and cultural groups history[edit]

Californios and Chicano/Hispanic[edit]

After 1848 the Californios comprised a numerical majority and owned most of the property; they secured cultural and social recognition, but they failed to control the political system. By 1860, most had left the area and the remainder were on the decline economically.[87]
In World War II Hispanics made major breakthroughs in employment San Diego and in nearby farm districts. They profited from the new skills, contacts, and experiences provided by the military, filled many newly opened unskilled labor jobs, gained some high-paying jobs in the military installations and aircraft factories, and were welcomed by the labor unions, especially the Cannery Workers Union.[88]
In recent decades advertisers have recognized the purchasing power of the local Latino community. They have invested in Spanish language television, especially UnivisiĂłn and Telemundo.[89] The older generations watch Spanish broadcasts. The younger generations of Hispanics in San Diego (and other ethnic groups as well) seldom can read Spanish and rapidly abandon the spoken form except in dealing with their elders. Rumbaut et al. conclude, "Mexican immigrants arriving today can expect only 5 of every 100 of their great grandchildren to speak fluent Spanish."[90][91]

Comments

Popular Posts

From Fleet Street Journal: I don't know if you know this one. Let me show you something. You could say what is law if you have authority as a politician but how can you campaign if you have fallen afoul in terms of the law or failed to maintain its rule under your administration or did not rectify the failures of the previous administration? Moses is a man of law. Israel is a land of law with the UDHR and the ten commandments. George Washington is a man of law. It's been great fun but it's your job. Your Latin Anglo neighbours and citizens arriving at the pinnacle of politics in America ask what is the point of Somerset v. Stewart if they have authority as a Latino Anglo? Also, What is the point of the Constitution? Maybe the constitution is everything in every speech until you arrive at that political position and then you show them how Cristobal Columbus would do it; in Puerto Rico or Port Royal in the year 1644. Spaniards had a Magna Carta by 1644 but maybe the rule of the king only and no regular Courts to confirm your humanity. They do today though under a very honoured Royal Family that expects compliance with the UDHR by all signatory nations. All European governments maintain this expectation. But, what is the point kf having position of you don't control the people yet you are Lord Admiral Sinjon Smythe. Welcome to Hilary Columbus who needs to have the control and the authority. It is an outdated set of expectations that may be be celebrated by a certain DNA that will, if left uneducated and unchecked, will challenge our system of laws and rules and impose itself insidiously like determined uninvited robotic cockroaches attacking anything it does not understand as in attacking someone to ask why you didn't sue when they thought you should? As such, your foreign outdated expectations could thwart your ultimate goal of life, liberty, family security, safety and community. We are nearly one quarter of the way to reaching the year 2100. But, maybe there's a project taking place involving a radio frequency across North America that suggests the Asianization and evident underfunding of your populations that include all people's and complexions with primarily "white" or "Pale Skin" political and financial leadership is due to a more important secret agenda involving the removal of Brown and Black Afro haired people but there is no such agenda. The population is shrinking like fish running out of oxygen while other populations are growing or stable. How can you make money without people? Your greatest strength in being able to argue is the weakness in your culture. Maybe we should Give English speaking black and white people the same guranteed income support given to Native white and Black people and French Black and White people in North America. There is a There is a UDHR Issue here; a Human Rights issue that you could argue sensibly for general economic good but you argue with logic mayne to maintain some other agenda. Is it Nazi? Is it scurvy? But, Nazi originated in Western hemispheric Creole scurvy. You preach the UDHR but do not fulfil it but maybe fix yourself first. At the current rate of underfunding, what population will there be in Canada and America by 2100? There are no Apple Trees or Mango trees bearing fruit all year long. To solve the failure in commitment involves a strong personality; a Commander to save the people so a popularity contest will not be satisfactory in politics new that we know what variable is at issue in our North American experience. It is irrelevant as to what candidate has the best silver glove or the best moonwalk but if he can sing a pop song by an American about the Holy Ghost coming back from the coast where the music will come alive that would be rather brilliant! Wouldn't you be chuffed with that? We need some minimum income support to feel good like the Asians although it is not evident when the people robbing the bank to get by wear those new underwear only available by 1-800 number that relieves the wedgy pick. As such, America is backsliding in its commitment to enforce stabilizing Capitalist economic policies to benefit its population and the populations of North America while enforcing the requisite policies in other countries. People who want to start families suffer. French people outnumber Anglos 2 to 1 in Canada. Their population conforms to the rule of law. If you do what is right, will you not also be accepted? You are under funded with respect to a critical policy that helps the population cope with a new technological reality involving robotic Labor and it helps business. What is the lesson in America, finally digested, from the reluctant acceptance of industrial automation? There are fewer jobs to support the existing population and enable a North American population to occupy the built spaces created and still being created in an America that used to enjoy full employment in a less robotic, less industrially automated age. As such, too many buildings are literally empty and shopping malls are being mothballed; signs of insufficient economic activity with a decreasing consumer population as there are not enough people funded some how to prevent the mall closures and high rate of rental and condo vacancy. The real purpose is population stability and economic viability spread evenly across the country and even if North America decides that it needs to be economically dependent going onto the 22nd century, we can be more profitable with a more competitive sales tax and a more secure, viable population that will make current and future investment endeavours worthwhile. If you are borrowing more than you produce, you are not a military or economic super power. House Resolution 430 that was passed in the same amount of time that it takes to approve a new Highway, High Speed Rail Network. Military action or UDHR Universal Minimum Income Support package for all of North America at $39000.00 per citizen per year at minimum is tremendous for its determination. House Resolution 430 is to be used for Bipartisan political ends and misses the moment that Congress had to resolve the real issue for Americans and American business that is the securing of the economy and of American life under UN laws to protect against the power of Automation that displaced human beings from the regular workforce and average worker job a long time ago. However, for all Americans Donald is a new cohesive force to overcome old Beltway, obfuscating Bipartisan politics that has blocked American greatness and blinded the country from the proverbial biblical solution in a world of robotic automated Labor; the answer being money. Money answers...Everything and that means a universal minimum income support. In spite of D Day in 1945 and the UDHR signed on 1948 along with the further signed commitments to International standards in the Rule of Law in 1976 under the OHCHR most recently confirmed by Donald's reading of the ILO Recommendations R202, What we see is wasted territorial hegemony when people under your authority should be used to further the economy's and the nation's ultimate agenda that is national income generation with an aggregate sales tax of 30 percent on all consumer activity even if the sales tax on food or clothing is zero. This is just responsible. This is why you need people. He who has the most people receiving a universal minimum income support paying sales tax into his economy wins. If the Chinese And Japanese Asians, the Pakistani and Hindu Asians and the Europeans left it to the Americans and the English to decide their human value after industrial and robotic automation, they would be dead. The Anglos don't have any people, no motor vehicle manufacturing and no money in comparison to their European and Asian lending nations from whom they borrow trillions of dollars in a recitation of the system of economic indentured servitude. These Asian and European economic regions follow the UDHR like a diagram for economic success. As you can see, the Americans and the English fail to see the complexion of money is green, blue or reddish brown like a ten pound note; not white. Yoda is also green; like a U.S. Marine. The real truth about Western hemispheric culture is that it all begins with rejection as a matter of self-perception. Politics and politicians seem to follow this rhythm with the fulfilment of a rejected people's imagination of what the politicians should look like if he or she is the leader as they pretend and as they fulfilled the imagination stoked by television and movies but the real issue is skirted and avoided innocently since qualification or capability or love of the people is irrelevant. It is just a childish mockery of peoples' legislated freedoms involving imagination and pretence. Also, what should the people look like as we imagine it? We need some movie extras in our box office production called " North America; Year 2100" from Asia and India since the movie producer has displaced the Mochican and the original Amerindian as they do not configure with his imagination for a majority population but they can be Mohicanapanese,he says, or something like that. This is the ridiculous background story of American history for too long; the impossible imposition of some foreign imagination. The whole world is a dead Western Hemispheric complexion anxious , sick minded movie producer's stage dating back to 1903. But, any elected has a legal obligation to enable our rights to a full implementation of the UDHR rights; not mock them although it is good children can come to Court and participate in family law proceedings if his mother or father has enough food, money, clothing and shelter to feed hom or her. The complexion sick culture originating from outside of North America, maybe in the Bahamas, is determined to achieve its imposition over our Rule of Law. It is why people leave the West Indies to be immigrants in North America but they hoped not to run into Jason the 13th in Alberta with soo many native disappearances. So much time and energy is bent on acceptance or the hope for acceptance over complexion, hair textures and trying to create the perfect acceptable Anglo population for presentation to the master culture as if the master culture does not enjoy its history with "afroed" peoples born on the European continent dating back 1000's of years. As such, you seek acceptance from the culture that you approximate as an "other" or "outsider" but it is a culture that you can never really be a part of for two simple reasons; 1. The first reason is that you don't know you are already accepted as a human being in that culture (See the UDHR) but you are seeking that acceptance from outside of your self and that validation from the master European culture (The European ) but you could decide that you are really good, unique and accepted by reading something originally North American that Europeans have validated as worthy so that you are equal as a contributor to a larger global culture and as such you are not being mastered by European culture but supported with camaraderie so that Europeans are now colleagues and friends who need us to be equipped equally with our universal minimum income support instead of being the Bare footed Huck Finn financially of the modern automated robotic world whose international sense of shame and exclusion goes away for a minute every time the national emotion is covered suited up in an F22 with their White, Black or Hispanic Anglo speaking AMERINDIAN cousin in the cockpit flashes across the television screen while Asians and Europeans are fully kitted out and funded. But, what about covering the people with the requisite universal minimum income support as required by the Maintenance of the RULE OF LAW? The Truehlp and Pense government will implement the universal minimum income support for all North Americans and for all nations who have not implemented it yet. Those nations will pay in to America s economy. The more subtle complexion sick Obalma party will keep HOPE alive vs. Fulfilment; and 2. The second reason is that the people from whom you seek acceptance would want you to accept yourself for the good that you and your community actually offers the world as a North American like Louis Armstrong where he plays Sam in Casablanca (The movie) where uh..Sam Sung! A ha ha ha ha ha ha!!!!!!!