City of Sausalito Sausalito combines hillside with shoreline, as seen in this view from Bridgeway, the city's central street.

Sausalito combines hillside with shoreline, as seen in this view from Bridgeway, the city's central street.

Sausalito is positioned in the US Sausalito - Sausalito Sausalito is a San Francisco Bay Area town/city in Marin County, California.

Sausalito is 8 miles (13 km) south-southeast of San Rafael, at an altitude of 13 feet (4 m). The populace was 7,061 as of the 2010 census.

3.7 Postwar Sausalito 15 Sausalito in fiction 16 Sausalito in music 16.1 Songs referring to Sausalito The name of Sausalito comes from Spanish sauzalito, meaning "small willow grove", from sauce "willow" + collective derivative -al meaning "place of abundance" + diminutive suffix -ito; with orthographic corruption from z to s due to seseo; early variants of the name were Saucelito, San Salita, San Saulito, San Salito, Sancolito, Sancilito, Sousolito, Sousalita, Sousilito, Sausilito, and Sauz Saulita. It is sometimes claimed that Sausalito was titled for the precinct in Valparaiso, Chile where the bandit Joaquin Murrieta was born.

Located at 37 51 33 N 122 29 07 W, Sausalito encompasses both steep, wooded hillside and shoreline tidal flats.

Prominent geographic features associated with Sausalito include Richardson Bay and Pine Point.

When Sausalito was formally platted, it was anticipated that future evolution might extend the shoreline with landfill, as had been the practice in neighboring San Francisco.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, "State agencies say privately owned homeboats can't be positioned above the underwater streets because the streets are enhance trust lands intended for enhance benefit." Sausalito has a Mediterranean climate (Koppen climate classification Csb) with far lower temperatures than expected because of its adjacency to San Francisco Bay and the resultant onshore breezes.

Climate data for Sausalito, California Sausalito was once the site of a Coast Miwok settlement known as Liwanelowa.

As historian Jack Tracy has observed, "Their dwellings on the site of Sausalito were explored and mapped in 1907, nearly a century and a half later, by an archaeological survey.

The first European known to visit the present-day locale of Sausalito was Don Jose de Canizares, on August 5, 1775.

William Richardson (1795 1856), an English-born Mexican citizen, first claimed and advanced the site of Sausalito as a private rancho.

His ambitions now expanding to territory holdings of his own, Richardson submitted a petition to Governor Echienda for a rancho in the headlands athwart the water from the Presidio, to be called "Rancho Saucelito". Sausalito is believed to refer to a small cluster of willows, a most-soil tree, indicating the existence of a contaminating spring. After years of lobbying and legal wrangling, Richardson was given clear title to all 19,751 acres (79.93 km2) of Rancho del Sausalito on February 11, 1838.

In the post-Gold Rush era, Sausalito's unusual locale became a key factor in its formation as a community.

In the 1870s, the North Pacific Coast Railroad (NPC) extended its tracks southward to a new end in Sausalito, where a rail yard and ferry to San Francisco were established.

Car ferry service ended in March 1941 (passenger ferry service, however, continues to this day, linking downtown Sausalito with both the Ferry Building in San Francisco's Embarcadero, and Pier 39 in the Fisherman's Wharf district).

Northwestern Pacific also closed its Sausalito terminal in March 1941, although some tracks remained in use as "spur tracks" for freight trains as late as 1971. Sausalito was a center for bootlegging amid the era of Prohibition in the United States.

In honor of the city's donation to the war accomplishment, a Tacoma-class frigate was christened the USS Sausalito (PF-4) in 1943.

The ship Sausalito, however, was not assembled in Sausalito but at one of the Kaiser Shipyards in Richmond, California, also on the San Francisco Bay.

Sausalito Yacht Harbor By the late 1960s at least three home boat communities occupied the waterfront along and adjoining to Sausalito's shore.

Today three home boat communities still exist Galilee Harbor in Sausalito, Waldo Point Harbor and the Gates Cooperative, just outside the town/city limit.

In 1965, the City of Sausalito sued the County of Marin and a private developer for illegally zoning 2,000 acres (809 ha) of territory to build a town/city named Marincello adjoining to Sausalito.

In the United States House of Representatives, Sausalito is in California's 2nd congressional district, represented by Democrat Jared Huffman. From 2008 to 2012, Huffman represented Marin County in the California State Assembly.

In the California State Legislature, Sausalito is in: The 2010 United States Enumeration reported that Sausalito had a populace of 7,061.

The ethnic makeup of Sausalito was 6,400 (90.6%) White, 65 (0.9%) African American, 16 (0.2%) Native American, 342 (4.8%) Asian, 10 (0.1%) Pacific Islander, 53 (0.8%) from other competitions, and 175 (2.5%) from two or more competitions.

The populace was spread out with 615 citizens (8.7%) under the age of 18, 159 citizens (2.3%) aged 18 to 24, 1,962 citizens (27.8%) aged 25 to 44, 2,830 citizens (40.1%) aged 45 to 64, and 1,495 citizens (21.2%) who were 65 years of age or older.

Sausalito's harbor sidewalk Sausalito has three sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International: The relationship features a Sausalito Stadium and a Sausalito Lagoon.

Conversely, Sausalito's chief plaza is titled Vina del Mar with respect to the Chilean city.

The major program is 777 (7 women, 7 days, 7 dreams), an entrepreneurial training for Chilean Woman in Sausalito.

The major program is a youth sailing exchange between Cascais and Sausalito, Clube Naval and the Sausalito Yacht Club.

Service organizations in Sausalito include the Lions Club, Rotary Club, Sausalito Woman's Club, Sausalito Historical Society, the Sausalito Library Foundation, Friends of the Sausalito Library, Sausalito Art Festival Foundation and the Sausalito-on-the-Waterfront Foundation.

Clubs include the Sausalito Yacht Club, Presidio Yacht Club and the Sausalito Cruising Club.

Its mission is to educate the enhance on the history of the Sausalito waterfront and surroundingal issues related to San Francisco Bay, perpetuate life on San Francisco Bay and waterfront, sponsor boating activities and improve affairs and furnish educational scholarships and support to other non-profit organizations. Some activities of the foundation include the Sausalito Lighted Boat Parade and Fireworks, Opening Day on the Bay celebration, Youth Sailing Program, Burning Woman Artists Waterfront Exhibit, Kids Waterfront Day-in-the-Park and Jazz & Blues On-the-Waterfront.

The Sausalito Yacht Harbor has slips for 600 vessels and is the southernmost harbor in Sausalito and is adjoining to the central downtown area.

Due to its locale at the north end of the Golden Gate Bridge, Sausalito receives a steady stream of visitors via the bridge (auto and bicycle traffic) and a ferry service from San Francisco.

Sausalito has a small-town journal called the Marin - Scope, owned by Vijay Mallya and edited by Jessica Mullins.

Sausalito also has a small airways broadcast established by Jonathan Westerling, Radio Sausalito 1610 AM, which also serves as the city's Emergency Broadcasting System.

Sausalito is served by the Sausalito Marin City School District for major school and the Tamalpais Union High School District for secondary school. Residents have two enhance schools to choose from: the K-8 enhance school Bayside/Martin Luther King Academy in Marin City or the K-8 charter school Willow Creek Academy in Sausalito. There are two private elementary schools that have been recently established in Sausalito, The K-12 Waldorf style New Village School, and Pre - K - 5 ground of the Lycee Francais de San Francisco.

Sausalito City Hall homes the Sausalito Public Library. The enhance parks in Sausalito include Cazneau Playground, Cloud View Park, Dunphy Park, Gabrielson Park, Harrison Playground, Martin Luther King Park and Dog Park, Langendorf Park, Marinship Park, South View Park, Robin Sweeny Park, Tiffany Park, Vina del Mar Plaza, and Yee Tock Chee Park.

Sausalito also has a municipal fishing pier and the Turney Street Boat Ramp.

The Sausalito homeboat improve consists of more than 400 homeboats of various shapes, sizes, and values, along the north end of town, approximately two miles from downtown. Sausalito homeboats The following is a list of notable inhabitants of Sausalito, past and present.

Leon Adams, wine writer and author of Wines of America lived in Sausalito until his death. Harry Partch, American composer and creator of musical instruments, set up a studio in an abandoned Sausalito shipyard in 1953 Otis Redding, musician, wrote "Dock of the Bay" while staying on a homeboat at Waldo Point in Sausalito in 1967. Sally Stanford, former Sausalito City Council member and mayor, founder of the restaurant Valhalla, ran a well-known brothel at 1144 Pine Street in San Francisco. Sausalito C Antenna Audio has a branch in Sausalito.

In addition to Marinship, which assembled ships amid World War II, Sausalito has a long history of boatbuilding.

Many boatyards came and went in Sausalito in the late 19th century and early 20th century, including G.

Smith, Brixen and Manfrey, the California Launch Building Company, the Reliance Boat Company, Nunes Brothers (Manuel and Antonio), Atlantic Boatbuilding Plant, Crichton and Arques, Sausalito Shipbuilding, Madden and Lewis, Menotti Pasquinucci and Bob's Boatyard.

After World War II, the best known yards are, or were, Spaulding Boatworks, Bob's Boatyard, Easom Boatworks, Sausalito Marine, Bayside Boatworks, Richardson Bay Boat, the Boatbuilders Co-op and Anderson's Boat Yard. The Southern Pacific ferryboat Berkeley was docked in Sausalito for a several years amid the 1960s after being taken out of service.

The bakery concern Pepperidge Farm, which markets The American Collection line of cookies titled after various notable locales (Chesapeake, Nantucket, Tahoe), has given the name Sausalito to their milk chocolate/macadamia-nut combo.

Sausalito in fiction A section of the 1892 novel The Wrecker, by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osborn is set in Sausalito.

The opening of The Sea-Wolf by Jack London is set on a ferryboat travelling from Sausalito to San Francisco.

It is believed that London stayed for a time in Sausalito while he was writing the novel.

Scenes in the 1947 film The Lady from Shanghai, directed by Orson Welles, take place on the Sausalito waterfront.

The 1949 film Impact, directed by Arthur Lubin, features downtown Sausalito in its opening scenes.

In Jack Kerouac's On the Road, Sausalito is mentioned as "a little fishing village" and a joke is made about it being "filled with Italians." Many scenes in the 1965 film Dear Brigitte with James Stewart, Glynis Johns, Ed Wynn, Bill Mumy, and Fabian Forte were filmed on the Sausalito shores of Richardson Bay.

In the film, actors Woody Allen and Tony Roberts are seen entering the Spinnaker restaurant with the ferryboat Berkeley, then tied up in Sausalito with the retail emporium Trade Fair in the background.

In the 1978 comic farce mystery detective thriller Foul Play Gloria Mundy, played by Goldie Hawn comes under the protection, broadly speaking, of San Francisco detective Lt Tony Carlson played by Chevy Chase who happens to have an especially charming homeboat in Sausalito.

In the 1978 novel The House of God, the intern Hooper hails from Sausalito.

In Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, the fictional Cetacean Institute is in Sausalito.

Although a several scenes took place there, no recording was done in Sausalito itself.

Craig Thomas set the home of Alan Aubrey in Sausalito in his 1990 thriller The Last Raven.

Albert Brooks' Mother (1996), employs the town as the setting for its story, which features a several shots of Sausalito throughout.

In David Fincher's 1997 film The Game, set in San Francisco, Nicholas Van Orton's (Michael Douglas) ex-wife lives in Sausalito.

Sausalito is the English title of a 2000 Hong Kong film directed by Lau Wai Keung, starring Maggie Cheung.

In the tv series Star Trek: Enterprise, a Vulcan "compound" is based in Sausalito, although it is not depicted; Fort Baker, which borders Sausalito is shown, and has turn into the site of Starfleet Headquarters.

In Rise of the Federation - Uncertain Logic, set in 2165, Admiral Jonathan Archer lives in a homeboat in Sausalito.

In Sofia Coppola's 2003 film Lost in Translation, a Jazz Band called Sausalito performs at the Park Hyatt Bar.

In the 2005 video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, there is a town based on Sausalito, titled Bayside.

Judd Apatow's 2009 dramedy Funny People uses Sausalito as the backdrop for the film's third act where Leslie Mann and Eric Bana's characters live with their family.

2010 racing video game Blur featured a track ostensibly set in Sausalito, although the game track does not resemble the actual landscape.

The 2012 ABC series Red Widow was based in Sausalito.

Sausalito is one of the districts in the 2016 video game Watch Dogs 2.

Sausalito in music "Sausalito (The Governor's Song)", Bobby Darin, 1969 Sausalito Summernight, Diesel, 1980-1981 (#25 - Billboard, #1 in Canada) "Sausalito (is the Place to Go)", Ohio Express "Best of Ohio Express" "Let It Flow (Sausalito Calling)", Camelle Hinds, "Soul Degrees", 1996 "Sausalito in the Summetime" Benita Hill List of metros/cities and suburbs in the San Francisco Bay Area Sausalito, CA.

"Sausalito (city) Quick - Facts".

Robert Ryal Miller, Captain Richardson, Mariner, Ranchero, and Founder of San Francisco Berkeley: La Loma Press, 1995 [Call number at SSU: Regional Room F869 .S353 R546] 1995 Average weather for Sausalito Weather Channel Retrieved 2012-12-22 Sausalito Moments in Time: A Pictorial History of Sausalito 1850-1950.

Soils testing results for the Liberty Shipbuilding site, Sausalito California, EMI report 7291 - W2, City of Sausalito Community Development Department, November 1989 "2010 Enumeration Interactive Population Search: CA - Sausalito city".

"City of Sausalito : Home".

"Visit Sausalito, CA | Sausalito Chamber of Commerce".

"Sausalito California Hotels, Restaurants, Real Estate, Shopping".

School(Archive) Sausalito Marin City School District.

Sausalito Public Library.

City of Sausalito.

""Floating Through Life, Sausalito homeboat improve will show off its one-of-a-kind dwellings on Sunday" ''San Francisco Chronicle'', October 4, 2003".

"City of Sausalito : Alan Watts Audio Cassette Collection".

Sausalito Historical Society.

Sausalito (Images of America).

"Sausalito in the Summertime: Benita Hill: MP3 Downloads".

Sausalito Moments in Time: A Pictorial History of Sausalito 1850 1950.

Sausalito Historical Society.

Sausalito (Images of America).

Sausalito Chamber of Commerce Sausalito small-town journal Sausalito reference site Sausalito Historic Context Statement - Ver Planck Consulting Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Sausalito.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sausalito, California.

Sausalito, California

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Sausalito, California - Cities in Marin County, California - Cities in the San Francisco Bay Area - Incorporated metros/cities and suburbs in California - Tourist attractions in the San Francisco Bay Area - Populated coastal places in California