Stockton, California City of Stockton Official seal of Stockton, California Motto: "Stockton: All American City" Location in San Joaquin County and the State of California Location in San Joaquin County and the State of California Stockton, California is positioned in the US Stockton, California - Stockton, California Stockton is the governmental center of county of San Joaquin County positioned in the central valley portion of the U.S.
State of California and the . Stockton was established by Captain Charles Maria Weber in 1849 after he acquired Rancho Campo de los Franceses.
The town/city is positioned on the San Joaquin River in the northern San Joaquin Valley and had an estimated populace of 315,592 as of 2016.
Stockton is the 13th biggest city in California and the 63rd biggest city in the United States.
Built amid the California Gold Rush, Stockton's seaport serves as a gateway to the Central Valley and beyond.
The University of the Pacific (UOP), chartered in 1851, is the earliest college in California, and has been positioned in Stockton since 1923.
As a result of the 2008 financial crisis, Stockton was the second biggest city in the United States to file for bankruptcy protection.
Stockton successfully exited bankruptcy in February 2015.
6.2.2 Stockton Arts Commission Stockton is situated amidst the farmland of California's San Joaquin Valley, a subregion of the Central Valley.
In and around Stockton are thousands of miles of waterways, which make up the California Delta.
State Route 4 and the dredged San Joaquin River connect the town/city with the San Francisco Bay Area to its west.
Stockton and Sacramento are California's only inland sea ports.
When Europeans first visited the Stockton area, the Yatchicumne, a branch of the Northern Valley Yokuts Indians, occupied the Stockton area.
A Yokuts village titled Pasasimas was positioned on a mound between Edison and Harrison Streets on what is now the Stockton Channel in downtown Stockton. During the California Gold Rush, Stockton advanced as a river port, the core of roads to the gold settlements in the San Joaquin Valley and northern end of the Stockton - Los Angeles Road.
During its early years, Stockton was known by a several names, including "Tuleburg," "Fat City," "Mudville," and "California's Sunrise Seaport." Weber decided on "Stockton" with respect to Commodore Robert F.
Stockton.
Stockton was the first improve in California to have a name that was neither Spanish nor Native American in origin. Thousands of Chinese came to Stockton from the Kwangtung province of China amid the 1850s due to a combination of political and economic unrest in China and the discernment of gold in California.
After the gold rush, many worked for the barns s and territory reclamation projects in the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta and remained in Stockton.
By 1880, Stockton was home to the third-largest Chinese improve in California.
The Lincoln Hotel, assembled in 1920 by the Wong brothers on South El Dorado Street, was considered one of Stockton's finest hotels of the time.
The town/city was officially incorporated on July 23, 1850, by the county court, and the first town/city election was held on July 31, 1850.
In 1851, the City of Stockton received its charter from the State of California.
The historical populace range is reflected in Stockton street names, architecture, various ethnic festivals, and in the faces and tradition of a majority of its people.
In 1870, the Enumeration Bureau reported Stockton's populace as 87.6% white and 10.7% Asian.
Benjamin Holt settled in Stockton in 1883 and with his three brothers established the Stockton Wheel Co., and later the Holt Manufacturing Company.
Benjamin Holt (left) with British Colonel Ernest Dunlop Swinton in Stockton, April 1918.
On April 22, 1918 British Army officer Colonel Ernest Dunlop Swinton visited Stockton while on a tour of the United States.
Main Street, Stockton, California, from Robert N.
First Sikh temple in United States, Stockton, California, 1912.
The extensive network of waterways in and around Stockton was fished and navigated by Miwok Indians for centuries.
During the California Gold Rush, the San Joaquin River was navigable by ocean-going vessels, making Stockton a natural inland seaport and point of supply and departure for prospective gold-miners.
Stockton is the site of the first Sikh temple in the United States; Stockton Gurdwara Sahib opened on October 24, 1912.
In 1933, the port was modernized, and the Stockton Deepwater Channel, which improved water passage to San Francisco Bay, was deepened and completed.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stockton Assembly Center.
During World War II, the Stockton Assembly Center was assembled on the San Joaquin County Fairgrounds, a several blocks from what was then the town/city center.
Historically an agricultural community, Stockton's economy has since diversified into other industries, which include telecommunications and manufacturing.
Stockton's central location, relative to both San Francisco and Sacramento, as well as its adjacency to the state and interstate freeway system, together with its comparatively inexpensive territory costs, have prompted a several companies base their county-wide operations in the city.
Beginning in the late 1990s, under the mayorship of Gary Podesto, Stockton had commenced some revitalization projects. Newly assembled or renovated buildings include the Bob Hope Theater, Regal City Centre Cinemas and IMAX, San Joaquin RTD Downtown Transit Center, Lexington Plaza Waterfront Hotel, Hotel Stockton, Stockton Arena, San Joaquin County Administration Building, and the Stockton Ballpark. The "sunken parking lot" in front of the Hotel Stockton was transformed in the late 1990s into a enhance space titled "Dean De - Carli Waterfront Square." A new downtown marina and adjoining Joan Darah Promenade were added along the south shore of the Stockton Deep Water Channel amid 2009.
Various enhance art projects were also installed throughout the region (see Stockton's enhance art section). Cabral Train Station neighborhood, bridges athwart the Stockton Deep Water Channel, and a new San Joaquin County Court House. The Stockton real estate market was disproportionately affected by the 2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis, and the town/city led the United States in foreclosures for that year, with one of every 30 homes posted for foreclosure. From September 2006 to September 2007, the value of a median-priced home in Stockton declined by 44%. Stockton's Weston Ranch neighborhood, a subdivision of modest tract homes assembled in the mid-1990s, had the worst foreclosure rate in the region according to ACORN, a now defunct nationwide advocacy group for low and moderate-income families.
Stockton found itself squarely at the center of the United States' speculative housing bubble in the 2000s.
Real estate in Stockton more than tripled in value between 1998 and 2005, but when the bubble burst in 2007, the ensuing financial crisis made Stockton one of the hardest-hit metros/cities in United States. Stockton housing prices fell 39% in the 2008 fiscal year, and the town/city had the country's highest foreclosure rate (9.5%) as well.
Because of the shrinking economy, Stockton also had an unemployment rate of 13.3% in 2008, one of the highest in the United States.
Stockton was rated by Forbes in 2009 as America's fifth most dangerous town/city because of its crime rate. In 2010, mainly due to the aforementioned factors, Forbes titled it one of the top three worst places to live. Following county-wide losses to the economy due to the 2008 financial crisis, in July 2012, Stockton became the biggest city in U.S.
On June 28, 2012, Stockton filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy. On April 1, 2013, a federal judge accepted the bankruptcy application. On April 1, 2013, judge Christopher M.
Klein, United States Bankruptcy Court Easter District of California, Sacramento Division, ruled that Stockton was eligible for bankruptcy protection.
The Stockton bankruptcy case has lasted more than two years and received nationwide attention.
While there are many possible factors that led to the Chapter 9 filing including the real estate crash and floundered city projects, Stockton is being watched along with Detroit to see whether a federal judge will override state law and rule that pensions for municipal employees could be at risk.
On October 4, 2013, Stockton City Council allowed a bankruptcy exit plan by a six-zero vote to be filed with the U.S.
On October 30, 2014, a federal bankruptcy judge allowed the city's bankruptcy recovery plan, thus allowing the town/city to continue with the prepared pension payments to retired workers. Stockton in relation to the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta.
Stockton lies in the fertile heart of the California Mediterranean climate prairie delta, about equidistant from the Pacific Ocean and the Sierra Nevada.
Climate data for Stockton, California (Stockton Metropolitan Airport), 1981 2010 normals The 2010 United States Enumeration reported that Stockton had a populace of 291,707.
The ethnic makeup of Stockton was 108,044 (37.0%) white (22.1% non-Hispanic white), 35,548 (12.2%) African American, 3,086 (1.1%) Native American, 62,716 (21.5%) Asian (7.2% Filipino, 3.5% Cambodian, 2.1% Vietnamese, 2.0% Hmong, 1.8% Chinese, 1.6% Indian, 1.0% Laotian, 0.6% Pakistani, 0.5% Japanese, 0.2% Korean, 0.1% Thai), 1,822 (0.6%) Pacific Islander (0.2% Fijian, 0.2% Samoan, 0.1% Tongan, 0.1% Guamanian), 60,332 (20.7%) from other competitions, and 20,159 (6.9%) from two or more competitions.
35.7% of Stockton's populace was of Mexican descent, and 0.6% Puerto Rican.
Due to a number of socio-economic problems, Stockton has been subject to a series of negative nationwide rankings: In the February 2012 copy of Forbes, the periodical ranked Stockton the eighth most miserable US city, largely as a result of the steep drop in home values and high unemployment. In 2012 the National Insurance Crime Bureau ranked Stockton seventh in auto theft rate per capita in the US. In 2012, Stockton was ranked as the tenth most dangerous town/city in America and the second most dangerous in California (behind Oakland). In 2013, Stockton was ranked as the third least literate town/city in the U.S.
According to the city's 2009 elected annual financial report, the top employers in the town/city were: 2 Stockton Unified School District 4,000 7 City of Stockton 1,425 Stockton Symphony is the third-oldest experienced orchestra in California (founded in 1926), after the San Francisco Symphony and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Stockton hosts a several live music venues, including: Stockton Arena, which is home to a several sports teams, and has hosted nationally known entertainers such as Gwen Stefani, Rob Zombie, Ozzy Osbourne, Josh Groban, Carrie Underwood and Bob Dylan.
The annual Apollo Night talent show draws about 1,500 citizens to the Stockton Civic Memorial Auditorium (1925) to watch performances by aspiring Northern California musicians. The Bob Hope Theatre, formerly known as the Fox California Theatre in downtown Stockton, assembled in 1930, is one of a several movie palaces in the Central Valley.
The University of the Pacific Faye Spanos Concert Hall often hosts enhance performances, as does the Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium.
The Warren Atherton Auditorium at the Delta Center for the Arts on the ground of the San Joaquin Delta College is a 1,456-seat theater with a 60-foot (18 m) proscenium and full grid system. The Stockton Empire Theater is an art deco movie theater that has been revitalized as a venue for live music.
Stockton School of Performing Arts Stockton Ballet School Stockton Bukkyo Taiko (a Japanese drumming group affiliated with the Stockton Buddhist Temple) Stockton is home to a several exhibitions.
Stockton boomed as one of the biggest cities in California, the third-largest amid the years of the Gold Rush and latter 19th century.
Children's Museum of Stockton homed in a former warehouse in the Downtown Waterfront District, featuring many interactive displays.
Elsie May Goodwin Gallery directed by the Stockton Art League.
Stockton historically had one of the biggest populations of Filipino immigrants and U.S.
Stockton Field Aviation Museum sponsored by the Aeronautical Education Foundation, featuring WWII era memorabilia.
Stockton Arts Commission The Stockton Arts Commission, an advisory body to the City Council, oversees a town/city endowment fund that provides grants to small-town artists and arts and cultural organizations.
Stockton enhance art projects include: Kinetic sculptures on the South and North Shores of the Stockton Channel, Downtown (2008 2009); "Airbourne" a 32-foot-high (9.8 m) kinetic sculpture, brushed stainless steel, at the North Point by Moto Ohtake, Santa Cruz; A group of five stainless steel and aluminum kinetic sculptures on the South Point by Mark White, Santa Fe, NM.
Stainless steel and bronze images imbedded in the Downtown Stockton walkways (2004 2009) designed and installed by Dan Snyder, Berkeley.
Stockton's first public/private enhance art partnership commissioned by Guaranty Bank, Weber Avenue, Hunter Street, San Joaquin Street, and Downtown Marina.
Stockton Rising (2006) a concrete with bronze sculpture by Scott Donahue between the Stockton Arena and the Lexington Plaza Hotel.
Stockton Arena parking garage entryway feature (2005) a collage by Napa artist Gordon Huether featuring 22,000 Mattell toy cars, Fremont Street.
Confucius Monument 13 and a half foot high pagoda-like monument of red and green tile was t to the City of Stockton from the Chinese Community for the bi-centennial celebration.
With over 77,000 trees, the City of Stockton has been labeled Tree City USA some 30 times as stated to Arborday.org. Stockton has over 275 restaurants ranging in range reflective to the populace demographics.
Stockton hosts many annual celebrations celebrating the cultural tradition of the city, including: Great Stockton Asparagus Dine Out (April) Stockton Asparagus Festival annual Asparagus food festival (April) Stockton Obon Bazaar (July) Stockton Beer Week (August) Stockton Pride (August) The town/city of Stockton has two shopping malls, positioned adjoining to each other: Weberstown Mall and Sherwood Mall.
Stockton is home to two minor league franchises: Stockton Ports (High-A California League baseball team; partner of the Oakland Athletics) The Stockton Ports Baseball Team play their home games at Banner Island Ballpark, a 5,000 seat facility assembled for the team in downtown Stockton.
The Ports have been a single A team in Stockton since 1946 in the California Minor Leagues.
Stockton has minor league baseball dating back to 1886. The Ports have produced 244 Major League players including Gary Sheffield, Dan Plesac, Doug Jones, Pat Listach, and Stockton's own Dallas Braden among others. The Ports have eleven championships and are presently the A class team for the Oakland Athletics.
A 10,000 seat arena, Stockton Arena, positioned in Downtown Stockton, opened in December 2005 and was the home of the Stockton Thunder experienced hockey team (ECHL) for 10 years.
The team has moved to the East Coast in a realignment of the American Hockey League and the Arena is now the home of the Stockton Heat, a venture and partner of the Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League. Stockton is home to the earliest NASCAR certified race track West of the Mississippi.
Stockton's designation for Little League Baseball is District 8, which has 12 leagues of squads within the city.
Stockton also has a several softball leagues including Stockton Girls Softball Association, and Port City Softball League, each having a several hundred members. Rowing Regatta featuring Junior, Collegiate and Master Level Rowing & Sculling Competition is organized by the University of the Pacific annually on the Stockton's Deep Water Channel.
Stockton hosts a wide range of sports affairs every year: from resident hockey, baseball and soccer games through basketball at the University of the Pacific and at the Stockton Arena; golf championships at two 18-hole courses and a Par 3 Executive Course; rowing, sailing and fishing on the Delta and the Stockton Channel; martial arts and cage fighting.
Private courses include The Stockton Golf & Country Club, Oakmoore, and Brookside Golf & Country Club. Stockton is one of a handful of metros/cities that lays claim to being the inspiration for Casey at the Bat. The University of the Pacific was the summer home of the San Francisco 49ers Summer Training Camp from 1998 through 2002.
Nick, a middleweight in the UFC, is the former WEC and Strikeforce Welterweight champion, while Nate is one of the top 5 ranked UFC lightweights and the winner of The Ultimate Fighter 5. Both brothers are Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belts under Cesar Gracie and operate a school in Stockton which teaches Brazilian jiu-jitsu to kids and youth. The City of Stockton has a small children's amusement park, Pixie Woods.
Stockton is also part of San Joaquin County, for which the government of San Joaquin County is defined and authorized under the California Constitution and law as a general law county.
The Stockton Police Department was established on August 14, 1850.
Taber was propel the first Chief of Police for the town/city of Stockton.
Amtrak Police cars at the Stockton San Joaquin Street Station in Stockton, 2012.
In 2012, the City of Stockton was the 10th most dangerous town/city in America, reporting 1,417 violent crimes per 100,000 persons, well above the nationwide average, and 22 murders per 100,000 (above the average of 4.7). In 2013, violent crime lessened to 1,230.3 crimes per 100,000 population, making it 19th on the list of the most dangerous cities. Stockton has experienced a high rate of violent crime, reaching a record high of 71 homicides in 2012 before dropping to 32 for all of 2013. Stockton Police Chief Eric Jones credited 2013's drop in the murder rate to Operation Ceasefire, a gun violence intervention strategy pioneered in Boston and implemented in Stockton in 2012, combined with a federal gun and narcotics operation. Main article: Cleveland Elementary School shooting (Stockton) On January 17, 1989, the Stockton Police Department received a threat against Cleveland Elementary School from an unknown person.
The Stockton Fire Department was first rated as a Class 1 fire department by the Insurance Services Office in 1971.
The department maintained this rating until 2011, when amid the city's Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceedings and following a Civil Grand Jury investigation, the town/city reduced staffing levels from 220 full-time staff to 177, and the 2011 budget from $59 million to $40 million.
The department was cut by 30%. The bankruptcy was due in part to a 1996 decision made by the town/city to furnish firefighters with no-charge community care after retirement, which they later period to all town/city employees.
According to the city's most recent[when?] Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the town/city reported a momentous deficit with US$443.9 million in revenue and US$485.4 million in expenditures.
Former Fairfield, California City Manager Kevin O'Rouke was hired as Interim City Manager after the retirement of Palmer,[who?] until the Stockton City Council announced that former County of Sonoma Administrator Bob Deis as permanent replacement and who assumed the position in July 2010.
The town/city council appointed former Deputy City Manager Kurt O.
Wilson as interim City Manager on November 1, 2013, and he was made City Manager in January 2014. Stockton is part of four enhance school districts: Stockton Unified School District, Lincoln Unified School District, Lodi Unified School District, and Manteca Unified School District.
Stockton is also home to enhance charter school systems including Aspire Public Schools, Stockton Collegiate, Stockton Unified Early College Academy, and Venture Academy. The University of the Pacific moved to Stockton in 1924 from San Jose.
Also positioned in Stockton are: California State University, Stanislaus established a Stockton ground on the grounds of the former Stockton State Hospital.
Stockton is centrally positioned with access to: Port of Stockton an global deep-water port.
Due to its locale at the "crossroads" of the Central Valley and a mostly extensive highway system, Stockton is easily accessible from virtually anywhere in California.
Stockton is the end of State Route 26 and State Route 88, which extends to the Nevada border.
In addition, Stockton is inside an hour of Interstate 80, Interstate 205 and Interstate 580. Stockton is served by San Joaquin Regional Transit District Stockton is also connected to the rest of the country through a network of stockyards s.
Amtrak and Altamont Commuter Express (ACE) both make stops in Stockton, with Amtrak providing passenger access to the rest of the nation.
Union Pacific and BNSF Railway, the two biggest barns networks in North America both service Stockton and its port via connections with the Stockton Terminal and Eastern Railroad and Central California Traction Company, who furnish small-town and interconnecting services between the various rail lines.
Stockton is served by Stockton Metropolitan Airport, positioned on county territory just south of town/city limits.
The Port of Stockton is a fully operating seaport approximately 75 nautical miles (86 mi; 139 km) east of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.
Set on the San Joaquin River, the port operates a 4,200 acres (17 km2) transit center with berthing space for 17 vessels up to 900 ft in length. As of 2014, the Port of Stockton had 136 tenants and is served by BNSF & UP Railroads. The port also includes 1.1 million square feet (102,000 m ) of dockside transit sheds and shipside rail track and 7.7 million square feet (715,000 m ) of warehousing. Artifact is a San Joaquin Delta College periodical based in Stockton since December 2006.
San Joaquin Magazine is a county-wide lifestyle periodical covering Stockton, Lodi, Tracy, and Manteca.
In addition, a several airways broadcasts from close-by San Francisco, Sacramento and Modesto are receivable in Stockton.
As part of the Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto tv market, Stockton is primarily served by stations based in Sacramento, but may carry some San Francisco Bay region tv stations' airwaves.
KOVR Channel 13 (CBS O&O) Stockton KTFK-DT Channel 64 (Tele - Futura affiliate) Stockton A number of motion pictures have been filmed in Stockton. Over the years, filmmakers have used Stockton's waterways to stand in for the Mississippi delta, the encircling farmland as the American plains and Midwest, and Pacific's ground as an Ivy League college.
Some of the movies filmed in Stockton include: Fat City (1972), based on Leonard Gardner's acclaimed 1969 novel Fat City.
The 1960s Western TV series The Big Valley was set just outside Stockton.
Show Sons of Anarchy (2008 2014), is set in and outside of Stockton.
Stockton received an All-America City award from the National Civic League twice, in 1999 and 2004.
2004's award was based on a 60-member delegation's presentation titled "The Dream Lives On!", and featured three community-driven projects: Community Partnership for Families, Downtown Alliance, and the Peace Keeper Program. The 1999 award recognized the Apollo Night Talent and Performing Series, the conversion of the Stockton Developmental Center into an off-campus center for the California State University at Stanislaus, and the LEAP (Let Education Attack Pollution) program. Sunset periodical titled Stockton Best Tree City in the United States in March 2002, and "Best of the West Food Fest" in March 2000.
Stockton contains 49 city, state, and nationwide historical landmarks, dating as far back as 1855.
In February 2009, and again in February 2011, Stockton was titled "America's Most Miserable City" by Forbes, reflecting the city's issues with commuting times, violent crime rates, income tax levels, and unemployment rates.
Main article: List of citizens from Stockton, California Stockton was home to the world's first radio disc jockey, Ray Newby.
Nick and Nate Diaz, who are MMA fighters fighting under the UFC promotional banner, are also famously from the "209" Stockton, California.
Their team, which includes other MMA fighters such as Gilbert Melendez, Jake Shields, Nick Diaz, Daniel Roberts, Nate Diaz and David Terrell under the leadership of Cesar Gracie, are known as the Stockton Skrap Pack and have been involved in a several continuing brawls in and outside the Octagon.
In 2013 the City of Stockton released a nearly 1 billion dollar 5 year capital enhancement plan. However, the capital enhancement plan was still inadequate to address ongoing maintenance and upkeep of Stockton's enhance infrastructure.
In April 2016, City Public Works Director Gordon Mackay estimated maintenance funding shortfalls for roads, parks, and town/city trees. a b c d e "Stockton Facts".
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City of Stockton 2013 to 2018 Capital Improvement Plan https://stocktongov.com/files/2013-18_CIP_Final.pdf Stockton Public Works Director Clarifies Maintenance Funding Shortfalls, Central California Land News, April 10, 2016, https://redefinedhorizons.com/cclnews/stockton-public-works-director-clarifies-maintenance-funding-shortfalls/ "History of the Stockton Fire Department 1850 1908".
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Stockton, California Stockton, California at DMOZ Stockton, California Official Visitor & Tourist Information Municipalities and communities of San Joaquin County, California, United States
Categories: Stockton, California - Cities in San Joaquin County, California - County seats in California - Incorporated metros/cities and suburbs in California - Inland port metros/cities and suburbs of the United States - San Joaquin Valley - Central Valley (California)Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta - Government units that have filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy - Special economic zones of the United States - Populated places established in 1849 - 1849 establishments in California
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