San Juan Capistrano, California San Juan Capistrano, California Mission San Juan Capistrano 02.jpg Railway Station San Juan C Trabuco - Falls.JPG Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano 01.jpg Egan House, San Juan Capistrano Depot, Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano, Trabuco Creek, Mission San Juan Capistrano Official seal of San Juan Capistrano, California Location of San Juan Capistrano inside Orange County, California.

Location of San Juan Capistrano inside Orange County, California.

San Juan Capistrano, California is positioned in the US San Juan Capistrano, California - San Juan Capistrano, California San Juan Capistrano (/s n w n k p str no /; Spanish: [sae xwae kapis t ano]) is a town/city in Orange County, California, United States.

The current OMB urbane designation for San Juan Capistrano and the Orange County Area is "Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, CA." The town/city was created around Mission San Juan Capistrano, and many of the homes and strip malls resemble the Spanish architecture that composes the building.

San Juan Capistrano formerly hosted a populace of cliff swallows that migrate each year from Argentina to the Mission San Juan Capistrano.

Mission San Juan Capistrano San Juan Capistrano is the site of a Catholic mission for which it is named, Mission San Juan Capistrano.

Describing the locale, which then encompassed what is now the neighboring town/city of Dana Point, he gushed, "San Juan is the only romantic spot in California." The 2010 United States Enumeration reported that San Juan Capistrano had a populace of 34,593.

The ethnic makeup of San Juan Capistrano was 26,664 (77.1%) White (55.8% Non-Hispanic White), 193 (0.6%) African American, 286 (0.8%) Native American, 975 (2.8%) Asian, 33 (0.1%) Pacific Islander, 5,234 (15.1%) from other competitions, and 1,208 (3.5%) from two or more competitions.

The populace was spread out with 8,518 citizens (24.6%) under the age of 18, 3,066 citizens (8.9%) aged 18 to 24, 7,804 citizens (22.6%) aged 25 to 44, 9,792 citizens (28.3%) aged 45 to 64, and 5,413 citizens (15.6%) who were 65 years of age or older.

According to the 2010 United States Census, San Juan Capistrano had a median homehold income of $75,356, with 12.7% of the populace living below the federal poverty line. In the California State Legislature, San Juan Capistrano is in the 36th Senate District, represented by Republican Patricia Bates, and in the 73rd Assembly District, represented by Republican Bill Brough. In the United States House of Representatives, San Juan Capistrano is in California's 49th congressional district, represented by Republican Darrell Issa. San Juan Capistrano is positioned in south Orange County and is bisected by Interstate 5.

Downtown San Juan Capistrano San Juan Capistrano Depot 4 Emeritus at San Juan Capistrano 159 The 85-foot (26 m) high chief rotunda and 104-foot (32 m) bell fortress make Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano the tallest building in town.

San Juan Capistrano is also known for its cliff swallows.

Since 2009, the famous swallows have floundered to return to San Juan Capistrano. They have instead begun migrating to and nesting in the Chino Hills of Southern California, north of San Juan Capistrano.

Mission San Juan Capistrano officials state it is because the mission is no longer the tallest building in the region due to urban sprawl and has thus stopped attracting the swallows for nesting. San Juan Hills High School The town/city is served by Capistrano Unified School District.

In the 2007 2008 academic year San Juan Hills High School opened with about 600 freshmen students.

Ultimately, nearly all San Juan Capistrano's high school students will move to this ground as well as some students from Capistrano Beach, San Clemente High School, and southern Ladera Ranch.

Residents from these other communities did not want to attend a school in San Juan on the basis that it was farther than the current schools they were attending and that the communities had too many differences.

Much of the tension has died down, but there is still substantial resentment that kids of inhabitants in Capistrano Beach, who have historically attended San Clemente High School, should be obliged to take the long journey to the new high school.

These inhabitants contend the County of Orange should follow its initial long range plan and complete La Pata Parkway through to San Clemente which would permit students in the Talega subdivision to attend the school which was assembled and intended for their use and redirect those students away from San Clemente High School.

This town/city also has four private, Christian, college prep schools titled Capistrano Valley Christian Schools (Pre-K through 12th grade), Saddleback Valley Christian School (Pre-K through 12th grade), St.

The town/city also has two private kindergarten through eighth undertaking schools titled Mission Basilica School and Rancho Capistrano Christian School.

Mission Basilica School is positioned on the historic Mission grounds, utilizes some of the historic buildings as classrooms, and is part of Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano.

Mission San Juan Capistrano Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano San Juan Capistrano is served by two newspapers, the Capistrano Valley News (owned by the Orange County Register) and The Capistrano Dispatch.

The San Juan Capistrano Patch, an online only news website, also serves the city.

San Juan Capistrano (Amtrak station) City of San Juan Capistrano.

City of San Juan Capistrano.

"San Juan Capistrano".

"San Juan Capistrano (city) Quick - Facts".

"2010 Enumeration Interactive Population Search: CA - San Juan Capistrano city".

"San Juan Capistrano (city), California".

"San Juan Capistrano city, California - Fact Sheet - American Fact - Finder".

City of San Juan Capistrano.

City of San Juan Capistrano CAFR San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce Visit San Juan Capistrano San Juan Capistrano

Categories:
San Juan Capistrano, California - 1961 establishments in California - Cities in Orange County, California - Incorporated metros/cities and suburbs in California - Populated places established in 1776 - Spanish mission settlements in North America