Milpitas, California City of Milpitas Milpitas City Hall Milpitas City Hall Official seal of Milpitas, California Milpitas, California is positioned in the US Milpitas, California - Milpitas, California Milpitas /m l pi t s/ is a town/city in Santa Clara County, California.

It is positioned with San Jose to its south and Fremont to its north, at the easterly end of State Route 237 and generally between Interstates 680 and 880 which run roughly north/south through the city.

With Alameda County bordering directly on the north, Milpitas sits in the extreme northeast section of the South Bay, bordering the East Bay and Fremont.

Milpitas is also positioned inside the Silicon Valley.

2 Etymology of the name Milpitas 11 Films featuring Milpitas Milpitas was first inhabited by the Tamyen (also spelled Thomien, Tamien, Thamien, or Tamiayn), a linguistic subgroup of the Muwekma Ohlone citizens who had resided in the San Francisco Bay Area for thousands of years.

Some of the Ohlone lived in various villages inside what is now Milpitas, including sites underneath what are now the Calvary Assembly of God Church and Higuera Adobe Park. Archaeological evidence gathered from Ohlone graves at the Elmwood Correctional Facility in 1993 revealed a rich trade with other tribes from Sacramento to Monterey.

During the mission period, Milpitas served as a crossroads between Mission San Jose de Guadalupe in modern-day Fremont and Mission Santa Clara de Asis, in present Santa Clara.

The territory in modern-day Milpitas was divided between the 6,353-acre (25.71 km2) Rancho Rincon de Los Esteros (Spanish for "corner of the wetlands") granted to Ygnacio Alviso; the 4,457.8-acre (18.040 km2) Rancho Milpitas (Spanish for "little corn fields") granted to Jose Maria Alviso; and the 4,394.35-acre (17.7833 km2) Rancho Los Tularcitos (Spanish for "little tule marshes") granted to Jose Higuera.

(A son of Ygnacio Alviso was also titled Jose Maria Alviso, this has led to some confusion by researchers.) Due to Jose Maria Alviso's descendents' difficulty securing his claims to the Rancho Milpitas property, portions of his territory were either swindled from the Alviso family or were sold to American pioneer to pay for legal fees. Today, both adobes still exist and are the earliest structures in Milpitas.

Prior to the town/city acquiring the Alviso Adobe in 1995, it was the earliest continuously occupied adobe home in California dating from the Mexican reconstructionand today is still gradually being restored and undergoing seismic upgrades by the City of Milpitas.

Monument Peak is the most visible landmark in Milpitas and has long been a motif of Milpitas.

In the 1850s, large numbers of Americans of English, German, and Irish descent appeared to farm the fertile lands of Milpitas.

Yet another influx of immigration came in the 1870s and 1880s as Portuguese sharecroppers from the Azores came to farm the Milpitas hillsides.

Instead of choosing Penitencia, he suggested another prominent name for the area, Milpitas, after the name of Alviso's property, Rancho Milpitas.

Thus was born "Milpitas Township." For over a century, Milpitas served as a prominent rest stop for travelers on the old Oakland San Jose Highway.

The first murder in Milpitas was committed in the early 1860s in "Rathbone's Saloon" (alas, the murderer escaped).

Another of Milpitas' most prominent restaurants was the "Kozy Kitchen" established in 1940 by the Carlo family in the former "Central Market" building.

Kozy Kitchen was completed soon after Jimmy Carlo sold the restaurant in 1999. Even in the early 1950s, Milpitas served a farming improve of 800 citizens who walked a mere one or two blocks to work.

The new Milpitas Library (2009) integrates the historic Milpitas Grammar School building (1915).

On January 26, 1954, faced with getting swallowed up by a quickly expanding San Jose, Milpitas inhabitants incorporated as a town/city that encompassed the recently assembled Ford Auto Assembly plant.

When San Jose attempted to annex Milpitas barely seven years later, the "Milpitas Minutemen" were quickly organized to oppose annexation and keep Milpitas autonomous.

Following the election, the anti-annexation committee, who had compared themselves to the Revolutionary War Minutemen who fought the British on Lexington Green a part filled in this case by the neighboring town/city of San Jose - adopted the image of Daniel Chester French's Minuteman statue, that stands near the site of the Old North Bridge in Concord, MA, as part of the official town/city seal.

Hayfields in Milpitas quickly disappeared as industries and residentiary housing developments spread.

Soon, the once non-urban town of Milpitas found itself a San Jose suburb.

Gross, a civil rights activist, became Milpitas' first black town/city councilman with the backing of the UAW.

Gross became California's first black mayor when he was propel by the city's inhabitants and "the only black mayor of a dominantly white town in California". Mayor Gross was reelected in 1968 and continued fighting against Milpitas' annexation by San Jose.

In the early 21st century, Milpitas light rail transit fitness station was added, making it the northeasternmost light rail destination in the region.

On January 26, 2004, the town/city jubilated its 50th anniversary of incorporation and issued the book Milpitas: Five Dynamic Decades to memorialize 50 years of Milpitas' history as a busy, exciting crossroads community.

The name Milpitas is the plural diminutive of milpa, a Mexican-Spanish word for cornfield.

The name Milpitas, perhaps used by Jose Maria Alviso to name his territory grant, Rancho de las Milpitas, may have meant that previously there were small Native American plant nurseries close-by because of the rich alluvial soils of the area. The first deed of property sale in Milpitas is found in the Santa Clara County Records General Index 1850-1856 (K-143), and dated February 14, 1856 from Juana Galindo Alviso, widow of Jose Maria Alviso, to Michael and Ellen Hughes for 800 acres of territory that is today the Main Street region south of Carlo Street, however, the deed gives the name of the Rancho as "Rancho San Miguel", not as "Milpitas".

The southeastern foothills of Milpitas Milpitas is positioned at 37 26 5 N 121 53 42 W (37.434586, -121.895059). Milpitas lies in the northeastern corner of the Santa Clara Valley, which is south of San Francisco.

Milpitas is generally considered to be a San Jose suburb in the South Bay, a term used to denote the southern part of the San Francisco Bay Area.

The median altitude of Milpitas is 19 feet (6 m).

To the east of Milpitas is a range of high foothills and Mountains, part of the Diablo Range which runs along the east side of San Francisco Bay.

Monument Peak, the most prominent summit in the easterly Milpitas hills, is one of the earliest and most well-known symbols of Milpitas.

Although not inside Milpitas' town/city limits, Monument Peak, Calaveras Reservoir, Arroyo Hondo, Laguna Valley, and the encircling region are culturally and historically considered part of Milpitas.

(Loomis, Patricia - Milpitas: A Century of Little Cornfields) Many Portuguese farmers from the Azores have settled there, including the Coelho, Covo, Mattos, Serpa, and Silva families.

These Azorean families still own the undeveloped lands in the Milpitas foothills, such as the Silvas living on Old Calaveras Road. The southeasternmost hills belong to the City of Milpitas, which then leases the lands to cattle livestock companies.

There are also many creeks in Milpitas, most of which are part of the Berryessa Creek watershed.

Calera Creek, Arroyo de los Coches, Penitencia Creek and Piedmont Creek are some of the creeks that flow from the Milpitas hills and empty into the San Francisco Bay.

Large, new homes on Kristinridge Way, Milpitas.

Milpitas is divided into three sections by Interstates 680 and 880.

In reality, Milpitas has no concentrated downtown "center," but instead has a several small retail centers generally positioned near residentiary developments and anchored by a supermarket.

The so-called "Midtown" area, the earliest part of Milpitas, has several remaining historic residences and was the only commercial precinct that existed before 1945.

A USPS postal service, Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church, Elementary & Junior High Catholic School, the Milpitas Public Library (which incorporates the old Milpitas Grammar School building), the Smith/De - Vries mansion, the Senior Center, and Elmwood Correctional Facility are all in the Midtown section of Milpitas.

The Milpitas Civic Center, which includes City Hall, is not positioned in Midtown, but stands at the intersection of Milpitas and Calaveras Boulevards.

The boundaries that divide primary Milpitas neighborhoods and districts include Calaveras Boulevard running from east to west and the Union Pacific barns , which runs from north to south.

Photo of Mount Hamilton, a peak southeast of Milpitas.

Set inside a warm Mediterranean climate zone in Santa Clara County, Milpitas appreciates warm, sunny weather with several extreme temperatures.

From June to September, Milpitas experiences little rain, and as autumn approaches, the weather gradually cools down.

Climate data for Milpitas, California The 2010 United States Enumeration reported that Milpitas had a populace of 66,790.

The ethnic makeup of Milpitas was 13,725 (20.5%) White, 1,969 (2.9%) African American, 309 (0.5%) Native American, 41,536 (62.2%) Asian, 346 (0.5%) Pacific Islander, 5,811 (8.7%) from other competitions, and 3,094 (4.6%) from two or more competitions.

Compared to non-urban parts of California, living in Milpitas is more expensive, as it is throughout Silicon Valley.

Compared to other South Bay bedroom communities Milpitas is considered affordable.

These prices are slightly more affordable than the rest of the San Francisco Bay Area, as a similar sized home may cost well over a million dollars in more well-to-do metros/cities such as Palo Alto, Cupertino or Saratoga.

With the diminish in the housing market, however, median revenue prices in Milpitas have declined from nearly $700,000 to less than $500,000, and single-family new home assembly building permits have plummeted from a 2004 average price of $949,900 to $269,400 in 2007.

In 2014, Money Magazine ranked Milpitas 29th out of 50 for the best places in the USA to live. See also: List of mayors of Milpitas, California The Milpitas Town Seal was the idea of member Betty Mc - Dermott's husband John, who came up with the idea for a seal of the Minuteman from one of his son's history books.

He designed the seal and took it to Arnie's Signs and had 4,000 decals made. The city's seal shows Daniel Chester French's Minuteman statue, musket in hand, standing in the Santa Clara Valley, with the golden hills of Milpitas rising to the east.

He faces defiantly south toward San Jose because early inhabitants of Milpitas considered themselves like minutemen when they defeated accomplishments by San Jose to annex newly incorporated Milpitas.

In the California State Legislature, Milpitas is in the 10th Senate District, represented by Democrat Bob Wieckowski, and in the 25th Assembly District, represented by Democrat Kansen Chu. In the United States House of Representatives, Milpitas is in California's 17th congressional district, represented by Democrat Ro Khanna. Milpitas rates first in the United States with the biggest percent of inhabitants provided jobs to in the computer and electronic products industry.

While over 75% of citizens who live in Milpitas work out of the city; the daytime populace of Milpitas actually increases by nearly 20% as there are more citizens living in other metros/cities who work in Milpitas than citizens living in Milpitas who work in other cities. This results in heavy traffic commutes along key arterial roads twice each day. Milpitas is home to the command posts of Adaptec, Intersil, Viavi Solutions and Lumentum Holdings (formerly JDSU), KLA-Tencor, Linear Technology, LTX-Credence, Sandisk, Sigma Designs, and Flex.

Many other companies have offices in Milpitas including Quantum, Maxtor, Cisco Systems, Avaya, Seagate Technology, Life - Scan, Phoenix Technologies and International Microsystems Inc.

Milpitas is also home to one of Santa Clara County's two correctional facilities, the Elmwood Correctional Facility, which homes over 3,000 inmates. 7 Milpitas Unified School District 840 Milpitas High School Milpitas' enhance schools are run by the Milpitas Unified School District (MUSD). The school precinct was originally Milpitas Elementary S.D.

Formerly, James Lick High School in Alum Rock was the closest high school to Milpitas.

Samuel Ayer High School (now the Milpitas Sports Center, Teen Center, Calaveras Hills HS., and Adult Education Center) on Calaveras Road was assembled as the only high school positioned in the city.

In the 1970s, Milpitas High School was assembled on Escuela Parkway and, due to declining enrollment, Samuel Ayer High School closed.

Currently Milpitas High is one of the biggest high schools in the county, with approximately 3000 students.

Milpitas unified API score for 2013 is 851. Additionally, Milpitas schools have persistently attained API expansion year over year.

In 2013, two Milpitas Elementary schools, Sinnott and Curtner accomplished scores of 927 and 922 in the order given. Milpitas 830 The Santa Clara County Library fitness operates the Milpitas enhance library. Milpitas is a suburban improve in the South Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, and like all metros/cities it has a several areas of concern to its people.

Milpitas occasionally experiences odorous air traveling downwind from bay salt marshes from the Newby Island landfill from the anaerobic digestion facility at Zero Waste Energy Development Company and from the San Jose sewage treatment plant's percolation ponds.

The City of Milpitas would like to remedy this air character lured to the extent it can and encourages its inhabitants to file odor complaints. The creeks in Milpitas, especially Calera, Scott, and Berryessa Creeks, used to be prime fishing spots for native steelhead until pollutants from urban evolution and trade killed the fish starting in the 1950s.

In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Milpitas voters enacted measures to protect the west-facing hillsides east of the town/city from development.

The future new Milpitas Senior Center (formerly Milpitas Public Library) is to the right of Milpitas City Hall, and Milpitas Community Center is on the left edge of the panorama.

Milpitas inhabitants appreciate various visual and performing arts.

The "Art in Your Park" universal has put many sculptures in small-town Milpitas parks, including a ceramic fortress in Hillcrest Park, a sundial in Augustine Park, and a historical memorial in Murphy Park.

The town/city has many athletic and educational recreational programs which are positioned in a several city buildings, including the city's sports center, teen center, library, improve center, and senior center.

Milpitas is home to the biggest Bay Area enclosed shopping mall (in terms of territory area), the Great Mall of the Bay Area.

A large outside shopping center called Milpitas Square is anchored by the 99 Ranch Market west of Interstate 880.

Another shopping center in Milpitas is The Seasons Marketplace anchored by Seafood City.

Other Milpitas shopping centers and plazas include Ulferts Center, Milpitas Town Center, Jacklin Square, Mc - Carthy Ranch, Parktown Plaza, Beresford Square, and the City Square.

In the past, Milpitas had a very different culture from that of its undivided suburban state.

As late as the 1950s, Milpitas was an unincorporated non-urban town with the Midtown precinct on Main Street as its chief center of company and civil activities.

"As Milpitas Goes, So Goes the State" used to be a prominent slogan around the town.

Most of the territory now inside modern-day Milpitas' boundaries was used for strawberry, asparagus, apricot, and potato cultivation until the postwar boom amid the 1950s and 1960s.

Levin County Park is nestled in the foothills of Milpitas.

Levin County Park is the biggest county county-wide park near Milpitas.

The park also provides facilities for hang gliding and paragliding and includes a newly assembled dog park that was a joint accomplishment by the county and the town/city of Milpitas.

Two golf courses, Spring Valley Golf Course and Summitpointe Golf Course, are positioned in the Milpitas foothills.

Milpitas itself has 17 traditional neighborhood parks which are generally 3 to 10 acres (12,000 to 40,000 m ).

Milpitas has begun to precarious the San Francisco Water District's Hetch Hetchy right-of-way as park territory in lieu of using territory from new high density residentiary developments adjoining to it.

From north to south, the primary east-west roads in Milpitas are Dixon Landing Road, Jacklin Road, Calaveras Boulevard, and Landess Avenue/Montague Expressway.

From east to west, the primary north-south roads are Piedmont Road, Evans Road, Park Victoria Drive, Milpitas Boulevard, Main Street, Abel Street, and Mc - Carthy Boulevard.

Milpitas roads that reach into the hills are, from north to south, Country Club Drive, Old Calaveras Road, Calaveras Road, and a private ranch drive, the historic Urridias Ranch Road.

As with many other Californian suburbs, Milpitas has divided roads that are maintained well by the small-town town/city government.

Like the San Jose enhance works system, all pedestrians must manually press a button in order to turn the pedestrian signal lights on (unlike the South Bay cities, San Francisco has automatic pedestrian lights at intersections and does not have "press to cross" buttons for pedestrians).

Not all streets in Milpitas have bicycle lanes or sidewalks.

Piedmont Road, Evans Road, and Jacklin Road have excellent bike lanes and sidewalks with sizeable spacing, but Montague Expressway and South Milpitas Boulevard have limited sidewalks and narrow bike lanes, which causes some enigma for workers commuting by bike or on foot.

State Route 237, Interstate 680, and Interstate 880 link Milpitas to the rest of the Bay Area.

On the other hand, Highway 237 begins at Milpitas and goes west to Sunnyvale and Mountain View.

VTA bus routes in Milpitas are 46, 47, 66, 70, 71, 77. The Altamont Commuter Express provides 4 morning express train service towards Milpitas from neighboring metros/cities in San Joaquin and Alameda County, and 4 returning evening trips.

Although the nearest stop is positioned near Great America Park, in San Jose, shuttle buses are provided with stops in Milpitas.

Although Milpitas is bordered by the San Francisco Bay in the extreme northwest, that region is not accessible to ships and boats.

But, someday if the un-incorporated town/city of Alviso becomes part of Milpitas, one would be able to access Alviso marina and it can be made as a boat launching spot.

An extension of Bay Area Rapid Transit from Fremont to San Jose is being constructed, and will include a primary multi-modal station in Milpitas that is scheduled to open in 2017.

Like most other Bay Area cities, USPS, UPS, Fed - Ex, and DHL are readily available to Milpitas.

The USPS postal service on Abel Street is Milpitas' chief office for postal mail and is the only USPS postal service in the city.

ZIP code 95035 is exclusively for Milpitas and is the only standard ZIP code for the city.

95036 is a new ZIP that is used sometimes for postal service boxes in Milpitas.

Until the merge with SBC, Milpitas had relied on Pacific Bell for its telecommunications services.

As part of the agreement for the consolidation of AT&T with SBC, Milpitas inhabitants were offered high speed DSL internet access with AT&T for only $10 per month until December 2009, although several inhabitants were aware of the offer.

The Milpitas Monster was filmed in the town in 1976.

In the quiet town of Milpitas, California, a gigantic creature is spawned in a polluted, overflowing waste disposal site.

The movie River's Edge was inspired by the true story of a murder that happened in Milpitas in 1981.

He later dumped her body in a ditch in the East foothills of Milpitas.

Milpitas Post Digital tv service available to Milpitas includes: KICU, 36 - autonomous, "TV 36" (broadcast from Monument Peak in Milpitas) KQEH, 54 - PBS (broadcast from Monument Peak in Milpitas; shares same antenna as KICU) Black Mountain (Milpitas, California) Milpitas Ranchhouse, an historic hotel in Monterey County City of Milpitas.

Editors of the Milpitas History Homepage.

"2010 Enumeration Interactive Population Search: CA - Milpitas city".

"Milpitas, California (CA 95035) profile: population, maps, real estate, averages, homes, statistics, relocation, travel, jobs, hospitals, schools, crime, moving, homes, news, sex offenders".

City of Milpitas.

City of Milpitas.

City of Milpitas.

City of Milpitas.

"Milpitas History".

"Milpitas City Statistics".

"Milpitas Community-Based Transportation Plan" (PDF).

"Milpitas Schools' Overall Test Scores Fell for 2013 - Milpitas, CA Patch".

"API Scores: School By School for Milpitas - Milpitas, CA Patch".

"Milpitas Schools' Overall Test Scores Fell for 2013 - Milpitas, CA Patch".

Report to the Mayor and City Council on Odor Control in Milpitas January 18, 2011, by: Kathleen Phalen, Utility Engineer Michael Hogan, Marc Papineau, Ballard George et al., Environmental Assessment of the I880/Dixon Landing Road Interchange Improvement Project, Cities of Fremont and Milpitas, Earth Metrics Incorporated, Federal Highway Administration Publication, March 1989 Many of the books are not available at a regular store or are out of print, but all are available at the Milpitas branch of the Santa Clara County Library.

City of Milpitas.

Historic Sites Inventory, Milpitas, California 1990.

City of Milpitas.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Milpitas, California.

Milpitas, California at DMOZ Milpitas, California

Categories:
Milpitas, California - 1954 establishments in California - Cities in Santa Clara County, California - Cities in the San Francisco Bay Area - Incorporated metros/cities and suburbs in California - Populated places established in 1852 - Populated places established in 1954 - Silicon Valley