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Oakland, California

 
Oakland, California

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Oakland, California



 
 
Oakland , founded in 1852, is the eighth-largest city in the U.S. state
U.S. state

A U.S. state is any one of the 50 state of the United States that share sovereignty with the federal government of the United States . Because of this shared sovereignty, an United States is a citizen both of the federal entity and of his or her state of Domicile ....
 of California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
 and the county seat
County seat

A county seat or parish seat is a term for an administrative center for a county or civil parish, primarily used in the United States. In the Northeast United States, the statutory term often is shire town, but colloquially county seat is the term in use there....
 of Alameda County
Alameda County, California

Alameda County is a List of California counties in the U.S. state of California. It occupies most of the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area....
. Oakland is approximately 8 miles east of San Francisco and the cities are separated by San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay

San Francisco Bay is a shallow, productive estuary through which water draining from approximately forty percent of California, flowing in the Sacramento River and San Joaquin River rivers from the Sierra Nevada mountains, enters the Pacific Ocean....
. The San Francisco Bay Area
San Francisco Bay Area

The San Francisco Bay Area, commonly known as the Bay Area, or the Bay, is a metropolitan region that surrounds the San Francisco Bay and San Pablo Bay Bays in Northern California....
 is the sixth most populous
Table of United States Combined Statistical Areas

The United States Census Bureau has defined 123 Combined Statistical Areas for the United States of America. The Census Bureau defines a Combined Statistical Area as an aggregate of adjacent Core Based Statistical Areas that are linked by commuting ties....
 metropolitan area
Metropolitan area

A metropolitan area is a large population center consisting of a large metropolis and its adjacent zone of influence, or of more than one closely adjoining neighboring central city and their zone of influence....
 in the United States. Based on United States Census Bureau
United States Census Bureau

The United States Census Bureau is the government agency that is responsible for the United States Census. It also gathers other national demographic and economic data....
 estimates for 2006, Oakland is the 44th largest city in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 with a population of 397,067.

Oakland is a major West Coast
West Coast of the United States

The "West Coast", "Western Seaboard", or "Pacific Coastline" are terms for the westernmost coastal states of the United States. It most often comprises California, Oregon and Washington....
 port, and is home to several major corporations including Kaiser Permanente
Kaiser Permanente

Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R....
 and Clorox
Clorox

The Clorox Company is a manufacturer of various food and chemical products based in Oakland, California, which is best known for its bleach product, Clorox....
, as well as corporate headquarters for nationwide businesses like Dreyer's
Dreyer's

Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream Holdings, Inc., a division of Nestl?, is a United States-based producer of ice cream and frozen yogurt. Its products are marketed under the Dreyer's name in the Western United States and West Coast of the United States, and under the Edy's name in the Eastern United States and East Coast of the United St...
 and Cost Plus World Markets.






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Oakland , founded in 1852, is the eighth-largest city in the U.S. state
U.S. state

A U.S. state is any one of the 50 state of the United States that share sovereignty with the federal government of the United States . Because of this shared sovereignty, an United States is a citizen both of the federal entity and of his or her state of Domicile ....
 of California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
 and the county seat
County seat

A county seat or parish seat is a term for an administrative center for a county or civil parish, primarily used in the United States. In the Northeast United States, the statutory term often is shire town, but colloquially county seat is the term in use there....
 of Alameda County
Alameda County, California

Alameda County is a List of California counties in the U.S. state of California. It occupies most of the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area....
. Oakland is approximately 8 miles east of San Francisco and the cities are separated by San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay

San Francisco Bay is a shallow, productive estuary through which water draining from approximately forty percent of California, flowing in the Sacramento River and San Joaquin River rivers from the Sierra Nevada mountains, enters the Pacific Ocean....
. The San Francisco Bay Area
San Francisco Bay Area

The San Francisco Bay Area, commonly known as the Bay Area, or the Bay, is a metropolitan region that surrounds the San Francisco Bay and San Pablo Bay Bays in Northern California....
 is the sixth most populous
Table of United States Combined Statistical Areas

The United States Census Bureau has defined 123 Combined Statistical Areas for the United States of America. The Census Bureau defines a Combined Statistical Area as an aggregate of adjacent Core Based Statistical Areas that are linked by commuting ties....
 metropolitan area
Metropolitan area

A metropolitan area is a large population center consisting of a large metropolis and its adjacent zone of influence, or of more than one closely adjoining neighboring central city and their zone of influence....
 in the United States. Based on United States Census Bureau
United States Census Bureau

The United States Census Bureau is the government agency that is responsible for the United States Census. It also gathers other national demographic and economic data....
 estimates for 2006, Oakland is the 44th largest city in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 with a population of 397,067.

Oakland is a major West Coast
West Coast of the United States

The "West Coast", "Western Seaboard", or "Pacific Coastline" are terms for the westernmost coastal states of the United States. It most often comprises California, Oregon and Washington....
 port, and is home to several major corporations including Kaiser Permanente
Kaiser Permanente

Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R....
 and Clorox
Clorox

The Clorox Company is a manufacturer of various food and chemical products based in Oakland, California, which is best known for its bleach product, Clorox....
, as well as corporate headquarters for nationwide businesses like Dreyer's
Dreyer's

Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream Holdings, Inc., a division of Nestl?, is a United States-based producer of ice cream and frozen yogurt. Its products are marketed under the Dreyer's name in the Western United States and West Coast of the United States, and under the Edy's name in the Eastern United States and East Coast of the United St...
 and Cost Plus World Markets. Oakland is a major hub city for the Bay Area subregion collectively called the East Bay
East Bay (San Francisco Bay Area)

The East Bay is a subregion of the San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA and comprises Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California Counties....
.

According to the 2000 U.S. census
United States Census, 2000

File:US-Census-2000Logo.svgThe Twenty-Second United States Census, known as Census 2000 and conducted by the United States Census Bureau, determined the resident population of the United States on April 1, 2000, to be 281,421,906, an increase of 13.2% over the 248,709,873 persons Enumeration during the United States Census, 1990....
, Oakland and Long Beach, California
Long Beach, California

Long Beach is a large city located in southern California, USA, on the Pacific Ocean coast. It is situated in Los Angeles County, about south of downtown Los Angeles....
 are the most ethnically diverse cities in the United States, with over 150 languages spoken in Oakland. Attractions include Jack London Square
Jack London Square

Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
, the Oakland Zoo
Oakland Zoo

Oakland Zoo, in the past known as the Knowland Zoo, is a zoo located in southeastern Oakland, California, California, USA. Oakland Zoo is relatively small for a city of its size, but it contains modern exhibits....
, the Oakland Museum of California
Oakland Museum of California

Oakland Museum of California or Oakland Museum is a museum dedicated to the art, history, and natural science of California located in Oakland, California....
, the Chabot Space and Science Center
Chabot Space and Science Center

Chabot Space and Science Center, located in Oakland, California, is a hands-on center featuring interactive exhibits, a digital planetarium, a large screen theater, hands-on activities and three powerful telescopes....
, Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
, the East Bay Regional Park District
East Bay Regional Park District

The East Bay Regional Park District is a special district operating in Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California, within the East Bay area of the San Francisco Bay Area....
 ridge line parks and preserves, and Chinatown
Chinatown, Oakland, California

The Chinatown neighborhood in Oakland, California is a pan-Asian neighborhood which reflects Oakland's diverse Asian American community. It is frequently referred to as "Oakland Chinatown" in order to distinguish it from nearby Chinatown, San Francisco, California....
.

History

Oakland California 1900

The Ohlone

The earliest known civilization was that of the Huchiun tribe, who inhabited the area for thousands of years. The Huchiun belonged to a linguistic grouping later called the Ohlone
Ohlone

The Ohlone people, also known as the Costanoan and as the Muwekma, are the Native Americans in the United States of Northern California who have lived in the San Francisco Bay and Monterey Bay areas since the sixth century, spanning south into the Salinas Valley....
 (a Miwok
Miwok

Miwok can refer to any one of four linguistically-related groups of Native Americans in the United States, who lived in what is now Northern California, who spoke one of the Miwokan languages in the Utian languages family....
 word meaning "western people"). In Oakland, they were heavily concentrated around Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
 and Temescal Creek
Temescal Creek

Temescal Creek is one of the principal watercourses in the city of Oakland, California, United States.The word "temescal" derives from the word temescalli, which means "sweat house" in the Nahuatl language of the Mexica people of Mexico....
, a stream which enters the San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay

San Francisco Bay is a shallow, productive estuary through which water draining from approximately forty percent of California, flowing in the Sacramento River and San Joaquin River rivers from the Sierra Nevada mountains, enters the Pacific Ocean....
 at Emeryville
Emeryville, California

Emeryville is a small city located in Alameda County, California, in the United States. It is located in a corridor between the cities of Berkeley, California and Oakland, California, extending to the shore of San Francisco Bay....
.

Spanish colonialism

Conquistadors from New Spain
New Spain

The Viceroyalty of New Spain , was the political unit of Spain territories in North America and Asia-Pacific. The territory included the present-day Southwestern United States, Central America, the Caribbean, and the Philippines....
 purported to claim Oakland and other Ohlone lands of the East Bay, along with the rest of California, for the king of Spain in 1772. In the early 19th century, the Spanish crown deeded the area which later became Oakland (along with most of the East Bay), to Luís María Peralta
Luís María Peralta

D. Lu?s Mar?a Peralta was a soldier in the Spain Army, who received one of the largest of the Spanish land grants, Rancho San Antonio , a 44,800 acre plot that encompassed most of the East Bay region of California....
 for his Rancho San Antonio
Rancho San Antonio (Peralta Grant)

Rancho San Antonio, also known as the Peralta Grant, was a 44,800 acre land grant by Governor Pablo Vicente de Sol?, the last Spain governor of California, to D....
. The grant was confirmed by the successor Mexican republic upon its independence from Spain. The area of the ranch that is today occupied by the downtown and extending over into the adjacent part of Alameda
Alameda, California

Alameda is a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States. It is located on a small island of the same name next to Oakland, California in the San Francisco Bay....
 (originally not an island, but a peninsula), included a woodland of oak
Oak

The term oak can be used as part of the common name of any of about 400 species of trees and shrubs in the genus Quercus , which are listed in the List of Quercus species, and some related genera, notably Lithocarpus....
 trees. This area was called encinal by the Peraltas, a Spanish word which means "oak grove", the origin of the later city's name. Upon his death in 1842, Peralta divided his land among his four sons. Most of Oakland fell within the shares given to Antonio Maria and Vicente. They would open the land to settlement by American settlers, loggers, European whalers, and fur-traders.

1840s and 1850s


Continued development occurred after 1848 when the Mexican government ceded 1.36 million km² (525,000 square miles; 55% of its pre-war territory, not including Texas) to the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 in exchange for US$
United States dollar

The United States dollar is the unit of currency of the United States and was defined by the Coinage Act of 1792 to be between 371 and 416 grains of silver ....
15 million (equivalent to $313 million in 2006 dollars
Inflation

In economics, inflation is a rise in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over a period of time. The term "inflation" once referred to increases in the money supply ; however, economic debates about the relationship between money supply and price levels have led to its primary use today in describing price inflatio...
) as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo following the Mexican-American War. The original settlement in what is now the downtown was initially called "Contra Costa" and was included in Contra Costa County before Alameda County was established on March 25, 1853. The California state legislature incorporated the town of Oakland on May 4, 1852. In 1853, John Coffee "Jack" Hays
John Coffee Hays

Col. John Coffee "Jack" Hays was a Texas Ranger Division captain and military officer of the Republic of Texas and the United States Army armies....
, a famous Texas Ranger, was one of the first to establish residence in Oakland while performing his duties as sheriff of San Francisco .

1860s and 1870s


The town and its environs quickly grew with the railroads, becoming a major rail terminus in the late 1860s and 1870s. In 1868, the Central Pacific
Central Pacific

Central Pacific can refer to:* The Central Pacific Railroad, the western part of the First Transcontinental Railroad in the United States.* The Central Pacific Area, a subdivision of the Pacific Ocean Areas in World War II....
 constructed the Oakland Long Wharf
Oakland Long Wharf

The Oakland Long Wharf, later known as the Oakland Pier or the SP Mole was a massive railroad wharf and ferry pier in Oakland, California....
 at Oakland Point, the site of today's Port of Oakland
Port of Oakland

The Port of Oakland was the first major port on the Pacific Coast of the United States to build terminals for container ships. It is now the fourth busiest container port in the United States; behind Port of Long Beach, Port of Los Angeles, and Port Newark....
. The Long Wharf served as both the terminus of the Transcontinental Railroad
Transcontinental railroad

A Transcontinental Railroad is a railroad that crosses a continent from "coast-to-coast". Railroad terminal are at or connected to different oceans....
 as well as the local commuter trains of the Central (later, Southern) Pacific. The Central Pacific also established one of its largest rail yards and servicing facilities in West Oakland which continued to be a major local employer under the Southern Pacific well into the 20th century. The principal depot of the Southern Pacific in Oakland was the 16th Street Station
16th Street Station

For many decades, the 16th Street Station was a major railroad station of the Southern Pacific Railroad railroad in Oakland, California. It was a companion for the Oakland Terminal, which was located two miles away on the Oakland Pier....
 located at 16th and Wood which is currently (2006–8) being partially restored as part of a redevelopment
Urban renewal

File:Melbourne docklands urban renewal.jpgUrban renewal is a program of land re-development in areas of moderate to high density urban land use....
 project.

Streetcar suburbs


A number of horsecar
Horsecar

A horsecar was an animal-powered streetcar or tram.These early forms of transit developed out of industrial haulage routes or from the the bus that first ran on public streets in the 1820s, using the newly-invented iron or steel rail or 'Tramway '....
 and cable car
Cable car (railway)

A cable car or cable railway is a mass transit system using rail cars that are propelled by a continuously moving Wire rope running at a constant speed....
 lines were constructed in Oakland in the latter half of the 1800s. The first electric streetcar set out from Oakland to Berkeley
Berkeley, California

Berkeley is a city on the east shore of San Francisco Bay in Northern California, in the United States. Its neighbors to the south are the cities of Oakland, California and Emeryville, California....
 in 1891, and other lines were converted and added over the course of the 1890s. The various streetcar companies operating in Oakland were acquired by Francis "Borax" Smith and consolidated into what eventually became known as the Key System
Key System

The Key System was a privately owned company which provided mass transit in the cities of Oakland, California, Berkeley, California, Alameda, California, Emeryville, California, Piedmont, California, San Leandro, California, Richmond, California, Albany, California and El Cerrito, California in the East Bay San Francisco Bay Area from 190...
, the predecessor of today's publicly owned AC Transit
AC Transit

AC Transit is a regional bus agency serving parts of Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California in the western coastal area of the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, headquartered in Oakland, California....
. In addition to its system of streetcars in the East Bay, the Key System also operated commuter trains to its own pier and ferry boats to San Francisco, in competition with the Southern Pacific. Upon completion of the Bay Bridge, both companies ran their commuter trains on the south side of the lower deck direct to San Francisco. The Key System in its earliest years was actually in part a real estate venture, with the transit part serving to help open up new tracts for buyers. The Key's investors (incorporated as the "Realty Syndicate") also established two large hotels in Oakland, one of which survives as the Claremont Resort
Claremont Resort

The Claremont Resort & Spa is a historic hotel that straddles the border between Berkeley, California and Oakland, California, California. It is located at the foot of Claremont Canyon in the Berkeley Hills, providing the resort with scenic views of San Francisco Bay....
. The other, which burned down in the early 1930s, was the Key Route Inn
Key Route Inn

The Key Route Inn was a major hotel in Oakland, California in the early decades of the 20th century. It was constructed by the Realty Syndicate of Francis "Borax" Smith and Frank C....
, located at what is now West Grand and Broadway. From 1904 to 1929, the Realty Syndicate also operated a major amusement park in north Oakland called Idora Park
Idora Park

Idora Park was a Victorian era trolley park in north Oakland, California constructed in 1904 on the site of an informal park setting called Ayala Park on the north banks of Temescal Creek....
.

Early 1900s

The original extent of Oakland upon its incorporation lay south of today's major intersection of San Pablo Avenue, Broadway and 14th Street. The city gradually annexed farmlands and settlements to the east and north. Oakland's rise to industrial prominence and its subsequent need for a seaport led to the digging of a shipping and tidal channel in 1902, creating the "island" of nearby town Alameda
Alameda, California

Alameda is a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States. It is located on a small island of the same name next to Oakland, California in the San Francisco Bay....
. In 1906, its population doubled with refugees made homeless after the San Francisco earthquake and fire
1906 San Francisco earthquake

The San Francisco earthquake of 1906 was a major earthquake that struck San Francisco, California, California and the coast of Northern California at 5:12 A.M....
 who had fled to Oakland. Concurrently, a strong City Beautiful movement
City Beautiful movement

The City Beautiful Movement was a Progressivism reform movement in North American architecture and urban planning that flourished in the 1890s and 1900s with the intent of using beauty and monumental grandeur in cities....
, promoted by mayor Frank K. Mott, was responsible for creating and preserving parks and monuments in Oakland, including major improvements to Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
 and the construction of Oakland Civic Auditorium which cost US$1M in 1914. The Auditorium would briefly serve as emergency ward and quarantine for some of Oakland's Spanish flu
Spanish flu

The 1918 flu pandemic was an influenza pandemic that spread to nearly every part of the world. It was caused by an unusually severe and deadly Influenza A virus Strain of subtype H1N1....
 victims in 1918 and 1919. The three waves of that pandemic killed more than 1,400 Oaklanders (out of 216,000 residents).

By 1920, Oakland was the home of numerous manufacturing industries, including metals, canneries, bakeries, Internal combustion engines, automobiles, and shipbuilding.

1920s


The 1920s were economic boom years in the United States as a whole, and in California especially. Economic growth was fueled by the general post-war recovery, as well as oil discoveries in Los Angeles and the widespread introduction of the automobile. General Motors opened a major Chevrolet
Chevrolet

Chevrolet is a brand of automobile, produced by General Motors . It is the top selling GM marque, with "Chevrolet" or "Chevy" being at times synonymous with GM....
 automobile factory in Oakland at 73rd Avenue and Foothill (the current location of Eastmont Mall) in 1916, making cars and then trucks there until 1963. A large lot in East Oakland, 106th and Foothill Boulevard (the current location of Foothill Square), was chosen by the Fageol Motor Company
Fageol

Fageol Motors was founded in 1916 to manufacture motor trucks, farm tractors and automobiles in Oakland, California, California.In 1921 it became the first company to build a bus from the ground up....
 as the site for their first factory in 1916, turning out farming tractors from 1918 to 1923, and introducing an influential low-slung "Safety Bus" in 1921 followed quickly by the 22-seat "Safety Coach". Durant Motors
Durant Motors

Durant Motors Inc. was established in 1921 by former General Motors Corporation CEO William Crapo Durant following his termination by the GM board of directors and the New York bankers which financed GM....
 operated a plant in Oakland from 1921 to 1930, making two basic models: the low-priced "Forty" and the faster "Sixty", the latter with a greater number of styling options including two-door, four-door, hardtop
Hardtop

A hardtop is a term for a rigid, rather than canvas, automobile roof. It has been used in several contexts: detachable hardtops, retractable hardtop roofs, and the so-called pillarless hardtop body style....
, cabriolet (convertible) or open-air roadster
Roadster

A roadster, also known as a spyder or spider, is a two-seater car, traditionally without a roof and no side or rear windows. Modern day two-seaters commonly have windows and feature retractable roofs ....
. Mayor John L. Davie was on hand in 1922 at the occasion of the first Durant to roll off the line. By 1929, when Chrysler
Chrysler

Chrysler LLC is an American automobile manufacturer that has manufactured automobiles since 1925. From 1998 to 2007, Chrysler and its subsidiaries were part of the German based DaimlerChrysler ....
 expanded with a new plant in the city, Oakland had become known as the "Detroit of the West".

Russell Crapo Durant (called "Rex" or "Cliff" by his friends), a race car driver, speedboat enthusiast, amateur flyer, president of Durant Motors in Oakland and son of General Motors founder William "Billy" Crapo Durant
William C. Durant

William Crapo "Billy" Durant was a leading pioneer of the United States automobile industry, the founder of General Motors and Chevrolet who created the system of multi-brand holding companies with different lines of cars....
, established Durant Field at 82nd Avenue and East 14th Street in Oakland in 1916. The first experimental transcontinental airmail
Airmails of the United States

Airmails of the United States or U.S. Air Mail relates to the servicing of flown mail by the U.S. postal system within the United States, its possessions, and/or territories, marked as "Via Air Mail" , appropriately franking, and afforded any then existing class or sub-class of U.S....
 through flight finished its journey at Durant Field on August 9, 1920, with famed pilots Army captain Eddie Rickenbacker
Eddie Rickenbacker

Edward Vernon Rickenbacker was an United States fighter aircraft Flying ace in World War I and Medal of Honor recipient. He was also a race car driver and automotive designer, a government consultant in military matters and a pioneer in air transportation....
 and Navy lieutenant Bert Acosta at the controls of the Junkers F 13 rebadged as the model J.L.6 for US Postal Service. The airfield served only secondary duties after 1927, as its runway was not long enough for heavily loaded aircraft. A tragic death occurred in April 1930 at Durant Field when Lockheed test pilot Herbert "Hub" Fahy and his wife Claire hit a stump upon landing, flipping their plane and mortally wounding Hub without injuring Claire. Durant Field was often called Oakland Airport, though the current Oakland Airport was soon to be established four miles to the southwest.

On September 17, 1927, Charles Lindbergh
Charles Lindbergh

Charles Augustus Lindbergh was an United States aviator, author, inventor and explorer.On May 20?21, 1927, Lindbergh emerged instantaneously from virtual obscurity to world fame as the result of his Orteig Prize-winning solo non-stop flight from Roosevelt Field, Long Island in New York City to Paris - Le Bourget Airport in Paris in the s...
 attended the official dedication of the new Oakland Airport
Oakland International Airport

Oakland International Airport , also known as Metropolitan Oakland International Airport, is a public airport located ten miles south of the central business district of Oakland, California, a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States....
. A month earlier, participants in the disastrous Dole Air Race
Dole Air Race

The Dole Air Race was an air race to cross the Pacific Ocean from the coast of northern California to the Territory of Hawai'i. Inspired by Charles A....
 had taken off from Oakland's new 7,020 ft. runway on August 16, 1927, headed for Honolulu
Honolulu, Hawaii

Honolulu is the Capital and most populous census-designated place in the U.S. state of Hawaii. Although Honolulu refers to the urban area on the southeastern shore of the island of Oahu, the city and the county are consolidated, known as the Honolulu County, Hawaii, and the city and county is designated as the entire island....
 2,400 miles away; three fliers died before getting to the starting line in Oakland, five were lost at sea attempting to reach Honolulu and two more died searching for the lost five. On May 31, 1928, Charles Kingsford Smith
Charles Kingsford Smith

Sir Charles Edward Kingsford Smith Military Cross, Air Force Cross , often called Charles Kingsford Smith, or by his nickname Smithy, was a well-known early Australian aviator....
 and his crew took off from Oakland in Southern Cross
Southern Cross (aircraft)

Southern Cross is the name of the Fokker Fokker F.VII trimotor monoplane which in 1928 in aviation was flown by Australian aviator Charles Kingsford Smith and his crew in the first ever trans-Pacific Ocean flight, from the mainland United States of America to Australia, about 7,250 miles....
 on their successful bid to cross the Pacific by air to finish in Australia. Both Boeing Air Transport (one of the origins of United Airlines
United Airlines

United Air Lines, Inc., trading as United Airlines , is a major carrier of the United States. It is a subsidiary of UAL Corporation with corporate offices in Chicago at 77 West Wacker Drive, and its operations base in nearby Elk Grove Village, Illinois....
) and Model Airlines began service from the new airfield in 1927 and 1928, respectively. Oakland was used in October 1928 as a base for the World War I aircraft involved in the final shooting of Howard Hughes
Howard Hughes

Howard Robard Hughes, Jr. was an American aviator, industrialist, film producer and director, philanthropist, and one of the wealthiest people in the world....
' film Hell's Angels
Hell's Angels (film)

Hell's Angels is a Cinema of the United States epic film war film, directed by Howard Hughes and starring Jean Harlow, Ben Lyon, and James Hall ....
. On December 7, 1928, Louise Thaden
Louise Thaden

Iris Louise McPhetridge Thaden was an aviation pioneer, holder of numerous aviation records, and the first woman to win the Bendix trophy....
 lifted from Oakland to set a women's altitude record. She then set endurance and speed records in March and April, 1929, to become a triple record holder, all three flights in a Travel Air
Travel Air

The Travel Air Manufacturing Company was an aircraft manufacturer established in Wichita, Kansas in the United States in 1924 by Clyde Cessna, Walter Beech, and Lloyd Stearman....
 flown out of Oakland.

Oakland grew significantly in the 1920s, flexing to meet the influx of factory workers. 13,000 homes were built from 1921 to 1924, more than in the period 1907 to 1920. Many of the apartment buildings and single-family houses still standing in Oakland were built in the 1920s. Many large office buildings downtown were built in the 1920s, and reflect the architectural styles of the time.

Rocky Road ice cream
Rocky road ice cream

Rocky road ice cream is a chocolate flavor, recently ranked tenth in popularity in the United States. Though there are variations on the flavor, it is traditionally composed of chocolate ice cream, nut and marshmallows....
 was invented in Oakland in 1929, though accounts differ regarding its first promoter. William Dreyer of Dreyer's
Dreyer's

Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream Holdings, Inc., a division of Nestl?, is a United States-based producer of ice cream and frozen yogurt. Its products are marketed under the Dreyer's name in the Western United States and West Coast of the United States, and under the Edy's name in the Eastern United States and East Coast of the United St...
 is said to have carried the idea of marshmallow and walnut pieces in a chocolate base over from his partner Joseph Edy's similar candy creation.

World War II

During World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
, the East Bay Area was home to many war-related industries. Among these were the Kaiser Shipyards
Kaiser Shipyards

The Kaiser Shipyards were seven major shipbuilding yards located on the West Coast of the United States during World War II. They were owned by the Kaiser Shipbuilding Company, a creation of United States industrialist Henry J....
 in nearby Richmond
Richmond, California

Richmond is a city in western Contra Costa County, California, California, United States. The city was incorporated on August 7, 1905., El Cerrito Historical Society, June 2007, retrieved August 15, 2007 It is located in the East Bay , part of the San Francisco Bay Area....
 whose medical system for shipyard workers became the basis for the giant Kaiser Permanente
Kaiser Permanente

Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R....
 HMO, which has a large medical center at MacArthur and Broadway, the first to be established by Kaiser. Oakland's Moore Dry Dock Company
Moore Dry Dock Company

Moore Dry Dock Company was a ship repair and shipbuilding company in Oakland, California. It was started in San Francisco in 1905 as the Moore & Scott Iron Works, but was destroyed by fire in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake....
 expanded its shipbuilding capabilities and built over 100 ships.

Valued at US$100M in 1943, Oakland's canning industry was the city's second-most valuable war contribution after shipbuilding. Sited at both a major rail terminus and an important sea port, Oakland was a natural location for food processing plants whose preserved products fed domestic, foreign and military consumers. The largest canneries were in the Fruitvale district and included the Josiah Lusk Canning Company, the Oakland Preserving Company (which started the Del Monte brand), and the California Packing Company.

Prior to World War II, blacks constituted approximately 3% of Oakland's population. Aside from restrictive covenants pertaining to some Oakland hills properties, Jim Crow laws
Jim Crow laws

The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws in the United States enacted between 1876 and 1965. They mandated de jure Racial segregation in the United States in all public facilities, with a "separate but equal" status for black Americans and members of other non-white racial groups....
 mandating racial segregation did not exist in California, and relations between the races were mostly harmonious. What segregation did exist was voluntary; blacks could, and did, live in all parts of the city.

The war attracted to Oakland large numbers of laborers from around the country, though most were poor whites and blacks from Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Mississippi--sharecroppers who had been actively recruited by Henry J. Kaiser to work in his shipyards. These immigrants from the Jim Crow South brought their racial attitudes with them, and the racial harmony that Oakland blacks had been accustomed to prior to the war evaporated. Southern whites expected deference from their black co-workers, and initially Southern blacks were conditioned to grant same. As Southern blacks became cognizant of their more equal standing under California law, they began to reject subservient roles. The new immigrants prospered, though they were affected by rising racial discrimination and informal postwar neighborhood redlining
Redlining

Redlining is the practice of denying or increasing the cost of services such as banking, insurance, access to jobs, access to health care, or even supermarkets to residents in certain, often racially determined, areas....
.

The Mai Tai
Mai Tai

The Mai Tai is a well-known alcoholic cocktail purportedly invented at the Trader Vic "Tiki culture" restaurant in Oakland, California, California in 1944....
 drink was first concocted in Oakland in 1944, and became very popular with military and civilian customers at Trader Vic's restaurant located at San Pablo Avenue and 65th, very close to Berkeley and Emeryville. Established in 1932, Trader Vic's became successful enough by 1936 that San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Chronicle

The San Francisco Chronicle is Northern California's largest newspaper, serving primarily the San Francisco Bay Area, but distributed throughout Northern and Central California, from the Sacramento, California area and Emerald Triangle south to San Luis Obispo County....
 columnist Herb Caen
Herb Caen

Herbert Eugene Caen was a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist working in San Francisco. Born in Sacramento, California, California, Caen worked for the San Francisco Chronicle from the late 1930s until his death, with an interruption from 1950 to 1958 during which he wrote for the San Francisco Examiner. His collection of essays titled...
 was inspired to write that "the best restaurant in San Francisco is in Oakland." Trader Vic's in Oakland was chosen by the State Department
United States Department of State

The United States Department of State, often referred to as the State Department, is the United States Cabinet-level foreign affairs agency of the United States Federal government of the United States, similar to foreign ministries, foreign offices, ministries of external relations, etc....
 as the official entertainment center for foreign dignitaries attending United Nations
United Nations

The United Nations is an international organization whose stated aims are to facilitate cooperation in international law, international security, economic development, Social change, human rights and achieving world peace....
 meetings in San Francisco. The restaurant continued to grow in popularity but was running out of room until 1951 when founder Victor Bergeron opened a larger one in San Francisco. The Oakland location closed in 1972 when it moved operations to the Emeryville Marina.

Post-WWII (1940s and 1950s)

Merrittview
During the late 1940s the conspiratorial dissolution
General Motors streetcar conspiracy

The Great American streetcar scandal is a Conspiracy in which streetcar systems throughout the United States were dismantled and replaced with buses in the mid-20th century as a result of illegal actions by a number of prominent companies, acting through National City Lines , Pacific City Lines , and American City Lines ....
 of the Key System
Key System

The Key System was a privately owned company which provided mass transit in the cities of Oakland, California, Berkeley, California, Alameda, California, Emeryville, California, Piedmont, California, San Leandro, California, Richmond, California, Albany, California and El Cerrito, California in the East Bay San Francisco Bay Area from 190...
 of electric
Pantograph (rail)

A pantograph is a device that collects electric current from overhead lines for electric trains or trams. The term stems from the resemblance to Pantograph for copying writing and drawings....
 streetcars began following the National City Lines
National City Lines

National City Lines, Inc. , was a company formed in 1920, reorganized in 1936 into a holding company for the express purpose of acquiring local transit systems throughout the country....
 (NCL) holding company acquisition of 64% of its stock in 1946. The holding company
Holding company

A holding company is a company that owns other companies' outstanding stock stock. It usually refers to a company which does not produce goods or services itself, rather its only purpose is owning shares of other companies....
 converted the Key System's electric streetcar fleet to buses that operated on fossil fuel
Fossil fuel

Fossil fuels or mineral fuels are fossil source fuels, that is, carbon or hydrocarbons found in the earth?s Crust .Fossil fuel range from volatile materials with low carbon:hydrogen ratios like methane, to liquid petroleum to nonvolatile materials composed of almost pure carbon, like anthracite coal....
ed engines that required motor oil
Motor oil

Motor oil, or engine oil, is an oil used for lubrication of various internal combustion engines. While the main function is to lubricate moving parts, motor oil also cleans, inhibits corrosion, improves sealing and engine cooling by carrying heat away from the moving parts....
 changes, in addition to new tires periodically, and other suspension and mechanical parts that would wear down faster on bumpy
Pothole

A pothole is a type of disruption in the surface of a roadway where a portion of the road material has broken away, leaving a hole. Most potholes are formed due to fatigue of the pavement surface....
 streets surfaces instead of smooth tracks
Rail tracks

Rail tracks are used on rail transports , which, together with Railroad switch , guide trains without the need for steering. Tracks consist of two parallel steel Rail profile, which are laid upon Railroad tie that are embedded in track ballast to form the railroad track....
. Streetcar tracks were removed from Oakland streets and the lower deck of the Bay Bridge was converted to automobile traffic, which created a smaller carrying capacity
Carrying capacity

The supportable population of an organism, given the food, habitat, drinking water and other necessities available within an environment is known as the environment's carrying capacity for that organism....
 of passengers per hour. Freeways were planned and constructed, partitioning the social and retail fabric of neighborhoods with freeway flyovers and on ramps. Automobile ownership
Automobile ownership

Automobile ownership is the sum of all the aspects associated with owning an automobile. In developed countries owning an automobile has become very common because it is a widely available form of transportation....
 increased, which further reduced demand for mass transit. The state Legislature created the Alameda and Contra Costa Transit District in 1955, which still exists today as AC Transit
AC Transit

AC Transit is a regional bus agency serving parts of Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California in the western coastal area of the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, headquartered in Oakland, California....
, the third-largest bus-only transit system in the nation.

Soon after the war, with the disappearance of Oakland's shipbuilding industry and the decline of its automobile industry, jobs became more scarce. Many of the poor blacks who had come to the city from the South decided to stay in Oakland. Longstanding black residents complained that the new Southern arrivals "tended towards public disorder," and the segregationist attitudes that the Southern immigrants brought with them disrupted the racial harmony they had been accustomed to prior to the war. Many of the city's more affluent residents, both black and white, left the city after the war, moving to neighboring Berkeley, Albany and El Cerrito to the north and to the newly developing East Bay suburbs--Orinda, Pleasant Hill, Walnut Creek and Concord. The newly arrived poor Southern whites tended to move to Alameda, San Leandro and Hayward. Between 1950 and 1960, approximately 100,000 white property owners moved out of Oakland—part of a nationwide phenomenon called white flight
White flight

White flight is a term for the demographics trend in which working class and middle-class white people move away from suburbs or urban area neighborhoods that are becoming racially desegregation to white suburbs and Commuter town....
..

By the end of World War II, blacks constituted approximately 12% of Oakland's population, and the years following the war saw this percentage rise along with an increase in racial tensions. Starting in the 1950s, the Oakland Police Department began recruiting officers from the South to deal with the expanding black population and changing racial attitudes; many were openly racist, and their repressive police tactics exacerbated racial tensions.

Oakland was the center of a general strike
General strike

A general strike is a strike action by a critical mass of the labour in a city, region or country. While a general strike can be for political goals, economic goals, or both, it tends to gain its momentum from the ideological or Social class sympathies of the participants....
 during the first week of December, 1946, one of six cities across the county which experienced a general strike in the first few years after World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
. It was one of the largest strike movements in American history, as workers were determined not to let management repeat the union busting that followed the first World War.

In the late 1950s, the largest high rise up to that time was planned on the former site of Holy Names University
Holy Names University

Holy Names University is a private, coeducational university located in Oakland, California. It is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church and is administered by the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary....
, a parcel at the corner of 20th and Harrison Streets: the headquarters building of Kaiser Corporation. Also in this era, the seedy, rundown area at the foot of Broadway was transformed into Jack London Square
Jack London Square

Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
.

Despite this progress and development, by the late 1950s, Oakland, which had been racially harmonious and quite prosperous before the war, found itself with a population that was increasingly poor and racially divided.

1960s and 1970s

During the 1960s the city was home to an innovative funk music scene which produced well-known bands like Sly & the Family Stone
Sly & the Family Stone

Sly & the Family Stone is an Music of the United States Funk music, soul music and rock music band from San Francisco, California. Originally active from 1966 to 1983, the band was pivotal in the development of soul, funk, and psychedelic music....
, Graham Central Station
Graham Central Station

Graham Central Station was a funk music band named after founder Larry Graham and is a pun on New York City's Grand Central Station.The band's origins date from when Santana guitarist Neal Schon formed the band Azteca along with Larry Graham and Gregg Errico , both from Sly & the Family Stone, and Pete Sears , from Hot Tuna and Jefferso...
, Tower of Power
Tower of Power

Tower of Power is a 10-member horn-based Soul music band from Oakland, California, California....
, Cold Blood
Cold blood

Cold blood may refer to:* In Cold Blood, a book title* Cold Blood rock-funk-jazz band* Cold blooded category of animals* The 1995 movie about hitmen, Coldblooded ....
, and The Headhunters
The Headhunters

The Headhunters are a popular jazz-funk Jazz fusion Band , best known for their albums they recorded as a backing band of jazz Keyboard instrument player Herbie Hancock during the 1970s....
. Larry Graham
Larry Graham

Larry Graham, Jr. is an United States baritone singer, musician, songwriter, and record producer. He is best known as both the bass guitar player in the popular and influential psychedelic soul/funk band Sly & the Family Stone, and as the founder and frontman of Graham Central Station....
, the bass player for both Sly & the Family Stone and Graham Central Station, is credited with the creation of the influential slap and pop sound still widely used by bassist
Bassist

A bass player is a musician who plays a double bass, bass guitar, or another low-pitched instrument, such as keyboard bass or a low brass instrument such as tuba or sousaphone....
s in many musical idioms today.

By 1966 only 16 of the city's 661 police officers were black. Tensions between the poverty-stricken black community and the predominantly white police force were high, and police brutality against blacks was common. Killings of young black boys in Harlem
Harlem

Harlem is a Neighbourhood in the New York City borough of Manhattan, long known as a major African-American residential, cultural, and business center....
 and San Francisco added fuel to the fire. In this charged atmosphere, the Black Panther Party
Black Panther Party

The Black Panther Party was an African-American organization established to promote Black Power and Right of self-defense through acts of social agitation....
 was founded by Merritt College
Merritt College

Merritt College is a two-year community college located in the Oakland Hills in Alameda County, California. The school's enrollment is approximately 6,000 students....
 students Huey Newton and Bobby Seale
Bobby Seale

Robert George "Bobby" Seale , is an United States civil rights activist, and revolutionary, who along with Huey P. Newton, co-founded the Black Panther Party on October 15, 1966....
 as a response to police brutality.

It was also during the 1960s when the Hells Angels
Hells Angels

The Hells Angels Motorcycle Club is a world-wide "Motorcycle club#One Percenters" Motorcycle_club#Outlaw_Motorcycle_Gangs whose members typically ride Harley-Davidson motorcycles....
 Motorcycle Club's Oakland Chapter, began to grow into a formidable organization. By the 1980s it was the most feared and respected of all Hells Angels chapters. Its Oakland Clubhouse still sits on Foothill Boulevard.

President Johnson's "War on Poverty" found major expression in Oakland. At their peak, various federal programs dispensed monies each year that amounted to close than twice the city's annual budget.

During the 1940s and 1950s, drug use had been confined primarily to a low-key, underground drug scene centered around Oakland's jazz and music clubs. As in many other American cities, Oakland began to experience serious problems with gang-controlled drug dealing of hard drugs, like heroin and cocaine, along with attendant increases in both violent crime and property crime. The 1970s saw the rise of drug operations topped by drug lord Felix Mitchell
Felix Mitchell

Felix Wayne Mitchell Jr. was a well known drug kingpin from Oakland, California and leader of the notorious "69 Mob" criminal organization, whose empire stretched throughout California and into the midwest....
, whose activities, based in the public housing project known as San Antonio Villa, helped push Oakland's murder rate to twice that of San Francisco or New York City.

In late 1973, the Symbionese Liberation Army assassinated
Symbionese Liberation Army

The Symbionese Liberation Army was an United States self-styled urban guerrilla warfare group active between 1973 and 1975 that considered itself a revolutionary Vanguardism army....
 Oakland's superintendent of schools, Dr. Marcus Foster
Marcus Foster

Marcus A. Foster was a respected African-American educator who gained a national reputation for educational excellence while serving as principal of Simon Gratz High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as Associate Superintendent of Schools in Philadelphia, and as the first black Superintendent of the Oakland Unified School District in Oa...
, and badly wounded his deputy, Robert Blackburn. Two months later, two men were arrested and charged with the murder. Both received life sentences, though one would be acquitted after an appeal and a retrial seven years later. The SLA, led by the self-named "Cinque", went on to kidnap newspaper heiress Patty Hearst from her Berkeley apartment the following year.

In sports, the Oakland Athletics
Oakland Athletics

The Oakland Athletics are a professional baseball based in Oakland, California. The Athletics are a member of the American League West of Major League Baseball's American League....
 MLB club won three World Series
World Series

The World Series is the championship series of Major League Baseball, the culmination of the sport's playoff each October. Since the Series takes place in mid-autumn, sportswriters many years ago dubbed the event the Fall Classic, a usage reflected in the logo for the 2008 World Series; it is also sometimes known as the October Clas...
 in a row (1972, 1973, and 1974); the Golden State Warriors
Golden State Warriors

The Golden State Warriors are an USA professional basketball team based in Oakland, California, California, representing the San Francisco Bay Area....
 won the 1974–1975 NBA championship; and the Oakland Raiders
Oakland Raiders

The Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team based in the city of Oakland, California. They currently play in the AFC West of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 of the NFL won Super Bowl
Super Bowl

In professional American football, the Super Bowl is the championship game of the National Football League . The game and its ancillary festivities constitute Super Bowl Sunday....
 XI
Super Bowl XI

Super Bowl XI was an American football game played on January 9, 1977 at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California to decide the National Football League champion following the 1976 NFL season....
 in 1977.

1980s and 1990s

Starting in the early 1980s, the number of Latinos, mostly of Mexican origin, began to increase significantly in Oakland, especially in the Fruitvale
Fruitvale, Oakland, California

Fruitvale is a neighborhood in western Oakland, California, in the United States. It is located about two miles southeast of Lake Merritt and is home to Oakland's largest Latino population....
 district. This district is one of the oldest in Oakland, growing up around the old Peralta estate (now a city park). It has always had a concentration of Latino residents, businesses and institutions, but increased immigration which has continued right up to the 21st century has added greater numbers.

During the 1980s crack cocaine
Crack cocaine

Crack cocaine, crack or rock is a solid, smokable form of cocaine. It is a freebase form of cocaine that can be made using baking soda or sodium hydroxide, in a process to convert cocaine hydrochloride into methylbenzoylecgonine ....
 became a serious problem in Oakland. The drug culture that had gained a foothold during the 1970s became increasingly violent and socially disruptive. Poverty increased, and by the end of the 1980s, more than 20% of Oakland's population was on welfare.

In the late 1980s and 1990s, Oakland featured prominently in rap
Hip hop music

Hip hop music is a music genre typically consisting of a rhythmic vocal style called rapping which is accompanied with backing beats. Hip hop music is part of hip hop culture, which began in the Bronx, in New York City in the 1970s, predominantly among African Americans and Latino Americans....
 music, both as the hometown for such artists as MC Hammer
MC Hammer

Stanley Kirk Burrell , better known by his stage names MC Hammer and Hammer, is an American multi-platinum selling rapper and dancer most popular during the late 1980s until the mid-1990s, known for his dramatic rise and fall from fame and fortune and his trademark Hammer Pants....
, Digital Underground
Digital Underground

Digital Underground is an Alternative hip hop group from Oakland, California....
, Hieroglyphics
Hieroglyphics (band)

Hieroglyphics, also known as the Hieroglyphics Crew and Hiero, are an United States Alternative hip hop Musical collective based in Oakland, California....
 (including Souls of Mischief
Souls of Mischief

Souls of Mischief is an alternative hip hop group from Oakland, California, that is also part of the hip hop musical collective, Hieroglyphics ....
 and Del tha Funkee Homosapien
Del tha Funkee Homosapien

Teren Delvon Jones , better known as Del tha Funkee Homosapien, is an alternative hip hop artist....
), The Luniz
The Luniz

Luniz is a platinum-selling Hip hop music duo from Oakland, California formed by rappers Yukmouth and Numskull. They released an internationally successful hit in 1995 entitled "I Got 5 on It", two versions of which appear on their album Operation Stackola....
 and Too Short. Tupac Shakur
Tupac Shakur

Tupac Amaru Shakur , also known by his stage names 2Pac and Makaveli, was an American Rapping. In addition to his status as a top-selling recording artist, Shakur was a promising actor and a social activist....
, who grew up in New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
 and Baltimore and later moved to Oakland, lived there for 5 years, longer than in any other city. Outside of the rap genre, Grammy award winning artists such as Green Day
Green Day

Green Day is an American Rock music trio formed in 1987. The band has consisted of Billie Joe Armstrong , Mike Dirnt , and Tr? Cool for the majority of its existence....
, En Vogue
En Vogue

En Vogue is a Grammy nominated United States female Contemporary R&B vocal quartet assembled by music producers Denzil Foster and Thomas McElroy....
 and Tony! Toni! Tone!
Tony! Toni! Toné!

Tony! Toni! Ton?! was a new jack swing/R&B band from Oakland, California, California, popular during the late 1980s and early to mid 1990s in music....
 also emerged from Oakland.

The Loma Prieta earthquake
Loma Prieta earthquake

The Loma Prieta earthquake, also known as the Quake of '89 and the World Series Quake, was a major earthquake that struck the San Francisco Bay Area of California on October 17, 1989 at 5:04 p.m....
 occurred on October 17 1989, in the greater San Francisco Bay Area, its surface wave measuring 7.1 on the Richter magnitude scale
Richter magnitude scale

The Richter magnitude scale, or more correctly local magnitude ML scale, assigns a single number to quantify the amount of moment magnitude scale#Radiated seismic energy released by an earthquake....
. Several structures in Oakland were badly damaged. The double-decker portion of the Cypress Viaduct freeway (Interstate 880) structure, located in Oakland, collapsed, killing 42. The eastern span of the San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge also sustained significant damage and was closed to traffic for one month. Throughout the 1990s, buildings throughout Oakland were retrofitted to better withstand earthquakes.

On October 20 1991, a massive fire (see 1991 Oakland firestorm
1991 Oakland firestorm

The Oakland Firestorm of 1991 was a large urban fire that occurred on the hillsides of northern Oakland, California and southeastern Berkeley, California on Sunday October 20, 1991, almost exactly two years after the Loma Prieta earthquake....
) swept down from the Berkeley Hills
Berkeley Hills

The Berkeley Hills are a range of the Pacific Coast Ranges which overlook the northeast side of the valley in which San Francisco Bay is situated....
 above the Caldecott Tunnel. 25 were killed and 150 injured and over 2,000 homes were destroyed. The economic loss has been estimated at $1.5 billion. Many homes were rebuilt much larger than they originally were.

During the 1990s, the TV sitcom Hangin' with Mr. Cooper
Hangin' with Mr. Cooper

Hangin' with Mr. Cooper is an United States television sitcom that originally aired on American Broadcasting Company from 1992 in television to 1997 in television, starring Mark Curry and Holly Robinson Peete....
 was set in Oakland, starring actor/comedian Mark Curry
Mark Curry (actor)

'Mark G. Curry' is an African-American actor and comedian. He is best known as the star of the American Broadcasting Company sitcom Hangin' with Mr....
, who was born in Oakland.

In late 1996, Oakland was the center of a controversy surrounding Ebonics (African American Vernacular English
African American Vernacular English

African American Vernacular English ?also called African American English; less precisely Black English, Black Vernacular, Black English Vernacular , or Black Vernacular English ?is an African American Variety of American English....
), an ethnolect
Ethnolect

Ethnolect is a variety of a language spoken by a certain ethnic/culture subgroup and serves as a distinguishing mark of social identity. The term combines the concepts of an ethnic group and dialect....
 the outgoing Oakland Unified School District
Oakland Unified School District

Oakland Unified School District is a public education school district which operates elementary schools , middle schools , and high schools in Oakland, California....
 board voted to recognize on December 18.

2000s


Oaklandatnight02192006
After his 1999 inauguration, Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown
Jerry Brown

Edmund Gerald "Jerry" Brown, Jr. is the current California Attorney General and a former Governor of California of the State of California. Brown has had a lengthy political career spanning terms on the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees , as California Secretary of State , as Governor of California , as chair of the California...
 continued his predecessor Elihu Harris
Elihu Harris

Elihu Mason Harris is a former United States of America Democratic Party politician and college administrator. He served as mayor of Oakland, California from 1991 to until 1999....
' public policy of supporting downtown housing development in the area defined as the Central Business District in Oakland's 1998 General Plan. Since Brown's stated goal was to bring an additional 10,000 residents to Downtown Oakland, his plan was known as "10K." It has resulted in redevelopment projects in the Jack London District, where Brown purchased and later sold an industrial warehouse which he used as a personal residence, in the Lakeside Apartments District
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
 near Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
, where two infill projects were proposed and approved, one of which
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
 is in its 5th year of construction. The 10k plan has touched the historic Old Oakland
Old Oakland

Old Oakland, formally known as the Old Oakland Historic District, is a historic district in downtown Oakland, California. The area is located on the northwest side of Broadway, between the Oakland City Center complex and the Jack London Square district, and across Broadway from Chinatown, Oakland, California....
 district, the Chinatown
Chinatown, Oakland, California

The Chinatown neighborhood in Oakland, California is a pan-Asian neighborhood which reflects Oakland's diverse Asian American community. It is frequently referred to as "Oakland Chinatown" in order to distinguish it from nearby Chinatown, San Francisco, California....
 district, the Uptown
Uptown Oakland

Uptown is a neighborhood in Downtown Oakland Oakland, California, located just north of the center of downtown. Its boundaries are ill-defined, but most definitions include the area around Grand Avenue at the north, Castro Street on the west, Frank Ogawa Plaza on the south, and...
 district, and Downtown
Downtown Oakland

Downtown Oakland is the core area of Oakland, California's central business district....
.

The "10k" plan and other redevelopment projects have been controversial with many Oaklanders who believe these projects have lead to rent intensification and gentrification
Gentrification

Gentrification, or urban gentrification, is the change in an urban area associated with the population mobility of more affluent individuals into a lower-class area....
 which continues to displace lower-income residents from downtown Oakland into outlying neighborhoods and cities. Additional controversy over development proposals have arisen from the weakening of the Bay Area and national economy in 2000, 2001, 2007, and the credit crunch
Credit crunch

A credit crunch is a reduction in the general availability of loans or a sudden tightening of the conditions required to obtain a loan from the banks....
 and the recession of 2008. These downturns have resulted in low occupancy of the new housing and slower growth and economic recovery than expected.

The Oakland Athletics
Oakland Athletics

The Oakland Athletics are a professional baseball based in Oakland, California. The Athletics are a member of the American League West of Major League Baseball's American League....
 have long been searching for a site to build a new baseball
Baseball

Baseball is a bat-and-ball sport played between two team sport of nine players each. The goal of baseball is to score run by hitting a thrown Baseball with a baseball bat and touching a series of four markers called base arranged at the corners of a ninety-foot square, or diamond. Players on one team take turns hitting against...
 stadium
Stadium

A modern stadium is a place, or venue, for outdoor sports, concerts or other events, consisting of a field or stage partly or completely surrounded by a structure designed to allow spectators to stand or sit and view the event....
. The A's never showed interest in building a ballpark in Downtown Oakland. In 2006, the A's announced a deal to build a new stadium in Fremont, California
Fremont, California

Fremont is a city in Alameda County, California, California; it was incorporated on January 23, 1956, from the merger of five smaller communities: #Centerville, #Irvington, #Mission San Jose, #Niles, and #Warm Springs....
, to be called Cisco Field. However, as a result of opposition from businesses, and residents' strong opposition regarding another proposed site closer to a future rapid transit station, plans for Fremont ceased in February, 2009.

In 2001, the Oakland Diocese of the Roman Catholic Church proposed a replacement for the St. Francis de Sales Cathedral (1891), which was damaged in the 1989 earthquake and subsequently demolished. The Diocese proposed situating a Grand Cathedral, rising to a height of 15 stories, directly in front of the Kaiser Convention Center and surrounding it with a "grand plaza," which would have extended all the way to the edge of the lake. Coalition of Advocates for Lake Merritt (CALM), an Oakland group, proposed an alternative plan involving a remake of the 12th Street Dam, halving the number of traffic lanes. The underpasses and overpasses were proposed to be eliminated, with stoplights installed where the road intersects with 12th Street and 1st Avenue. The beach was proposed to be widened, with a gently sloping lawn leading up to the roadway, new walking and bike paths in each direction. Crosswalks with pedestrian-activated stoplights were proposed to replace the tunnels under the freeway. However, an alternative development resulted in the Cathedral of Christ the Light
Cathedral of Christ the Light

The Cathedral of Christ the Light and also called the Oakland Cathedral, is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Church Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland in Oakland, California, California....
 across Harrison Street, from the Lake's west-end.

In February 2006, the Oakland Ballet closed due to financial problems and the closure of their performance facility, the Calvin Simmons Theater at the Kaiser Convention Center
Kaiser Convention Center

The Kaiser Convention Center is a 5,492-seat multi-purpose arena in Oakland, California that opened in 1914. It was home to the Oakland Skates roller hockey team....
. The Oakland Ballet had been performing in Oakland since 1965. In 2007, however, founder Ronn Guidi announced the revival of the Ballet.

A new use for the Kaiser Convention Center
Kaiser Convention Center

The Kaiser Convention Center is a 5,492-seat multi-purpose arena in Oakland, California that opened in 1914. It was home to the Oakland Skates roller hockey team....
 at the South end of Lake Merritt was proposed in 2006: a redevelopment designed to nucleate a cultural and educational district with the neighboring Oakland Museum of California
Oakland Museum of California

Oakland Museum of California or Oakland Museum is a museum dedicated to the art, history, and natural science of California located in Oakland, California....
 and Laney College
Laney College

Laney College is a community college located in Oakland, California, next to the Lake Merritt and the Kaiser Convention Center. Laney is the largest of the four colleges of the Peralta Community College District which serves northern Alameda County....
. In July 2006, the Oakland City Council approved a bond measure to expand the city's library system and convert the closed Center into a replacement for the city's aging main library, but Oakland voters defeated the library bond measure in the November 2006 election.

In recent years, several skyscrapers have been proposed for various neighborhoods within the Central Business District. Of note is the 530 foot, 42 story,"Emerald Views/222 19th Street"
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
 luxury condominium tower which was proposed in 2006. This skyscraper has been proposed to be constructed on the historic Schilling Gardens parcel at the Lake's edge in the Lakeside Apartments District
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
. Also, a 395 foot, 37 story "1439 Alice Street"
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
 has been proposed for a parcel directly across the street from the Malonga Casquelord Arts Center
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
 also in the Lakeside Apartments District
Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
.

Four blocks away from the vicinity of the Schilling Gardens parcel where the 'Emerald Views' tower was proposed, another skyscraper project was proposed in 2008: the Encinal Tower
Encinal Tower

The Encinal Tower is a skyscraper proposed for construction in Downtown Oakland, California. The mixed-use tower is planned to rise and contain 56 floors for office and residential use....
, a mixed-use office and luxury residential skyscraper
Skyscraper

A skyscraper is a tall, continuously habitable building. There is no official definition nor height above which a building may clearly be classified as a skyscraper....
 proposed for a parcel on Broadway above the 19th Street BART station, which has been designed by the major architecture firm Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
Skidmore, Owings and Merrill

Skidmore, Owings and Merrill LLP is a Chicago-based architectural and engineering firm that was formed in 1936 by Louis Skidmore and Nathaniel A....
. If approved and constructed, it would become the tallest building in the city with 56 levels, which could defy developers' assertions that luxury condominium residences are infeasible at the edge of Broadway.

In the early morning hours of January 1, 2009, BART police officer Johannes Mehserle fatally shot transit passenger Oscar Grant in the back as he was detained in a face down position on a train platform at the Fruitvale BART station. Several days after the shooting, on the night of January 7, 2009, vandalism occurred along several Downtown Oakland
Downtown Oakland

Downtown Oakland is the core area of Oakland, California's central business district....
 streets, including businesses suffering broken windows; riot-type actions occurred on some as well. On January 14, 2009 Mehserle was arrested in Douglas County, Nevada
Douglas County, Nevada

Douglas County is a county located in the northwestern part of the U.S. state of Nevada. As of 2000, the population was 41,259. As of 2007, the population was estimated to be 52,386....
, returned to Oakland and charged by the Alameda County District Attorney's office with murder in the incident. Civil rights charges have not been filed by the United States Attorney's office. The protests that followed were more under control, despite broken windows of downtown businesses for one on January 14 by a smaller group (following the main protest). The protests to follow (the latest being February 6 when it was announced that Mehserle was freed on bail) continued to draw large amounts of local media attention. However, vandalism decreased dramatically each time.

February 5, 2009 marked a turning point for central Oakland's potential development, as an arts & entertainment district: The long-awaited (gala) grand-opening of the Fox Oakland Theatre
Fox Oakland Theatre

The Fox Oakland Theatre is a 3,800-seat movie theater, located at 1807 Telegraph Avenue in downtown Oakland, California. The theater was designed by Weeks and Day, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and reopened on February 5, 2009....
 happened that evening, with music events booked and sold out for the following two days. The theatre officially closed over 42 years prior, with only a few bookings since. After a thorough restoration, seismic retrofit, and many other improvements following years of severe neglect (including a fire as recently as 2004), the registered-historic landmark theatre's 1-block proximity to a center rapid transit station will draw patrons from all over the Bay Area--and perhaps the region--for frequent, headline acts.

Geography

Oakland is located around 37°48' North, 122°15' West (37.8, -122.25), in the longitudinal middle of California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
, on the east side of San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay

San Francisco Bay is a shallow, productive estuary through which water draining from approximately forty percent of California, flowing in the Sacramento River and San Joaquin River rivers from the Sierra Nevada mountains, enters the Pacific Ocean....
.

According to the United States Census Bureau
United States Census Bureau

The United States Census Bureau is the government agency that is responsible for the United States Census. It also gathers other national demographic and economic data....
, the city has a total area of 78.2 sq mi
Square mile

The square mile is an Imperial system and US customary system of measure for an area equal to the area of a square of one mile. It should not be confused with miles square, which refers to the number of miles on each side squared....
 (202.4 km²). 56.1 sq mi (145.2 km²) of it is land and 22.1 sq mi (57.2 km²) of it (28.28 percent) is water.

Oaklanders most broadly refer to their city's terrain as "the flatlands" and "the hills,"
Oakland Hills, Oakland, California

Oakland Hills is an informal term used to indicate the city neighborhoods lying within the eastern portion of Oakland, California, California....
 which up until recent waves of gentrification have also been a reference to Oakland's deep economic divide, with "the hills" being more affluent communities. About two-thirds of Oakland lies within the flat plain of the San Francisco Bay, with one-third rising into the foothills and hills of the East Bay range.

One of Oakland's most notable features is Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
 near downtown, the largest urban saltwater lake in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
. (Lake Merritt is technically an estuary
Estuary

An estuary is a semi-enclosed coastal body of water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea....
 of San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay

San Francisco Bay is a shallow, productive estuary through which water draining from approximately forty percent of California, flowing in the Sacramento River and San Joaquin River rivers from the Sierra Nevada mountains, enters the Pacific Ocean....
, not a lake.)

Neighborhoods

Oakland California 20041129
Oakland has more than 50 distinct neighborhoods across land running from the San Francisco Bay up into the East Bay hills, many of which are not "official" enough to be named on a map. The common large neighborhood divisions in the city are Downtown Oakland and its greater Central Business District, East Oakland
East Oakland, Oakland, California

East Oakland is the southeastern portion of Oakland, California, and takes up the largest portion of the city's land area. It stretches between Lake Merritt in the northwest and San Leandro in the southeast....
, North Oakland, and West Oakland. East Oakland actually encompasses more than half of Oakland's area, stretching from Lakeshore Drive on the east shore of Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
 southeast to San Leandro
San Leandro, California

San Leandro is a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States. The population was estimated to be 81,850 as of January 1, 2009....
. North Oakland encompasses the neighborhoods between downtown and Berkeley and Emeryville. West Oakland is the area between downtown and the Bay, partially surrounded by the Oakland Point
Oakland Point, Oakland, California

Oakland Point, in Oakland, California, USA, was the name of a small promontory on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay located in the vicinity of what is now the Port of Oakland shipping terminal....
, and encompassing the Port of Oakland
Port of Oakland

The Port of Oakland was the first major port on the Pacific Coast of the United States to build terminals for container ships. It is now the fourth busiest container port in the United States; behind Port of Long Beach, Port of Los Angeles, and Port Newark....
.

Another broad geographical distinction is between "the hills" and "the flatlands" (or "flats"). The flatlands are the working-class neighborhoods located relatively closer to San Francisco Bay, and the hills are the upper-class neighborhoods along the northeast side of the city. This hills/flats division is not only a characteristic of the City of Oakland, but extends beyond Oakland's borders into neighboring cities in the East Bay's urban core. Downtown and West Oakland are located entirely in the flatlands, while North and East Oakland incorporate lower hills and flatlands neighborhoods.

One island of "Non-Oakland" exists in the upscale city of Piedmont
Piedmont, California

Piedmont is a small affluent city in Alameda County, California, California, United States. It is surrounded by the city of Oakland, California....
, which incorporated into a separate city after the 1906 earthquake in Oakland's central foothills, completely surrounded by the city of Oakland.

Central Business District
Oakland's "Central Business District," as defined by the 1998 General Plan, which many refer to as "Downtown Oakland," contains all or a portion of the following neighborhoods:

  • Chinatown
    Chinatown, Oakland, California

    The Chinatown neighborhood in Oakland, California is a pan-Asian neighborhood which reflects Oakland's diverse Asian American community. It is frequently referred to as "Oakland Chinatown" in order to distinguish it from nearby Chinatown, San Francisco, California....
  • City Center
    Oakland City Center

    Oakland City Center is an office and shopping and hotel complex district in Downtown Oakland Oakland, California. The complex is the by-product of a redevelopment plan hatched in the late 1950's....
  • Civic Center
    Civic Center, Oakland, California

    Oakland's Civic Center neighborhood is a residential and public building district on the east side of Oakland's Central Business District. Its borders are roughly Downtown and Harrison Street to the west, the East Lake Neighborhood and Lakeshore Avenue to the east, the Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California and 14th Street to the North,...
  • Downtown Oakland
    Downtown Oakland

    Downtown Oakland is the core area of Oakland, California's central business district....
     (The core of the Central Business District)
  • Jack London District
  • Jack London Square/Waterfront
    Jack London Square

    Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
  • Lakeside Apartments District
    Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

    The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
  • Northgate/Waverly
  • Old Oakland
    Old Oakland

    Old Oakland, formally known as the Old Oakland Historic District, is a historic district in downtown Oakland, California. The area is located on the northwest side of Broadway, between the Oakland City Center complex and the Jack London Square district, and across Broadway from Chinatown, Oakland, California....
  • Laney College
    Laney College

    Laney College is a community college located in Oakland, California, next to the Lake Merritt and the Kaiser Convention Center. Laney is the largest of the four colleges of the Peralta Community College District which serves northern Alameda County....
  • Uptown
    Uptown Oakland

    Uptown is a neighborhood in Downtown Oakland Oakland, California, located just north of the center of downtown. Its boundaries are ill-defined, but most definitions include the area around Grand Avenue at the north, Castro Street on the west, Frank Ogawa Plaza on the south, and...


East Oakland

Lake Merritt
"Lake Merritt" is used to refer to the lake itself, and to the residential neighborhoods and commercial districts in its vicinity.
Oakland Adams Point
* Adams Point
Adams Point, Oakland, California

Adams Point is a neighborhood of Oakland, California. It is located on the northern shore of Lake Merritt, directly adjacent to Downtown Oakland and the Grand Lake, Oakland, California district....
  • East Lake (Merritt)
  • Grand Lake
    Grand Lake, Oakland, California

    Grand Lake, or the Grand Lake District, is a neighborhood of Oakland, California. The neighborhood is located near the northeast corner of Lake Merritt, where Grand and Lakeshore Avenues pass under Interstate 580 ....
     (A portmanteau of Grand Avenue and Lakeshore Drive)
  • Lake Merritt
    Lake Merritt

    Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
     (the body of water)
  • Lakeside Apartments District
    Lakeside Apartments District, Oakland, California

    The Lakeside Apartments District neighborhood, also known as 'The Gold Coast,' and simply as 'The Lakeside,' is one of Oakland, California historic residential neighborhoods between its Downtown Oakland district and Lake Merritt....
  • Cleveland Heights
    San Antonio, Oakland, California

    San Antonio is a large district in Oakland, California, encompassing the land east of Lake Merritt to Sausal Creek. It is one of the most diverse areas of the city....


North Oakland
  • Broadway Auto Row
    Broadway Auto Row, Oakland, California

    Oakland's Broadway Auto Row is a strip of land along Broadway between Grand Avenue at the Southwest, and 40th Street to the Northeast. The strip has a history of land use for car dealerships, light industrial businesses, and other automotive service businesses that serve motorists....
  • Bushrod Park
    Bushrod Park, Oakland, California

    The Bushrod Park neighborhood in North Oakland, California, Oakland, California is an area surrounding its namesake park, and bounded by Martin Luther King, Jr....
  • Golden Gate
    Golden Gate, Oakland, California

    The Golden Gate neighborhood of Oakland, California is located in the northwest corner of the city, east of Emeryville, California and south of Berkeley, California....
  • Longfellow
    Longfellow, Oakland, California

    Longfellow is a neighborhood of Oakland, California. It is bounded by Temescal Creek to the north, California State Route 24 to the east, Interstate 580 to the south, and Adeline Avenue to the west....
  • Piedmont (separate city surrounded by Oakland)
    Piedmont, California

    Piedmont is a small affluent city in Alameda County, California, California, United States. It is surrounded by the city of Oakland, California....
  • Piedmont Avenue
    Piedmont Avenue, Oakland, California

    The Piedmont Avenue Neighbourhood is a district in North Oakland, California. It is named for Piedmont Avenue, the main commercial street of the district....
  • Pill Hill
  • Rockridge
    Rockridge, Oakland, California

    Rockridge is a residential neighborhood and commercial district in Oakland, California. Rockridge is generally defined as the area east of Telegraph Avenue, south of the Berkeley, California city limits, west of the Oakland hills and north of the intersection of Pleasant Valley Avenue/51st Street and Broadway....
  • Temescal
    Temescal, Oakland, California

    Temescal is one of the oldest neighborhoods in the northern section of Oakland, California. It is centered on Telegraph Avenue, bordered by Broadway and State Route 24 to the east and west, and MacArthur Boulevard to the south....


West Oakland
  • West Oakland
    West Oakland, Oakland, California

    West Oakland is a neighborhood situated in the northwestern corner of Oakland, California along the waterfront near the Port of Oakland and San Francisco ? Oakland Bay Bridge....
  • Oakland Point
    Oakland Point, Oakland, California

    Oakland Point, in Oakland, California, USA, was the name of a small promontory on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay located in the vicinity of what is now the Port of Oakland shipping terminal....
  • Port of Oakland
    Port of Oakland

    The Port of Oakland was the first major port on the Pacific Coast of the United States to build terminals for container ships. It is now the fourth busiest container port in the United States; behind Port of Long Beach, Port of Los Angeles, and Port Newark....
  • Dogtown
  • Acorn
    Acorn, Oakland, California

    Acorn or Acorn Projects are a series of housing projects in the Acorn Redevelopment Project Area or the Acorn neighborhood of West Oakland....
  • Cypress Village
    Cypress Village, Oakland, California

    The Cypress Village housing projects are a series of housing complexes stretching from 10th Street to 14th Street and Kirkham Way. Cypress is located in between the Acorn neighborhood and Lower Bottoms neighborhood in West Oakland, Oakland, California....
  • Ghosttown


Oakland Hills

Northeast Hills
  • Claremont
    Claremont, Oakland/Berkeley, California

    The Claremont district is a neighborhood straddling the city limits of Oakland, California and Berkeley, California in the East Bay section of the San Francisco Bay Area in California, United States....
  • Montclair
    Montclair, Oakland, California

    Montclair is a neighborhood of Oakland, California. Montclair is located in the hills east of Piedmont, California in a valley formed by the Hayward Fault Zone....
  • Piedmont Pines
    Piedmont Pines, Oakland, California

    Piedmont Pines is a residential district in Oakland, California. It is generally bounded by California State Route 13 to the west, Shepherd Canyon Rd....
  • Panoramic Hill
  • Hiller Highlands
  • Glen Highlands
  • Merriwood
  • Mountain View Cemetery
  • Saint Mary's Cemetery
  • Forestland
  • Shepherd Canyon
  • Upper Rockridge
  • Montclair Business District
  • Oakmore
    Oakmore, Oakland, California

    Oakmore is a neighborhood in East Oakland, Oakland, California, Oakland, California that is off Leimert Street and above Dimond Park. This neighborhood was built in the 1920s and 1930s for people who worked in San Francisco, California and took the Key System to work....
  • Lake Temescal
    Lake Temescal

    Lake Temescal is a small lake in the northeastern hills section of Oakland, California. It is the centerpiece of Temescal Regional Park . It is part of the greater East Bay Regional Park District....
  • Joaquin Miller Park
    Joaquin Miller Park

    Joaquin Miller Park is a park in the Oakland Hills owned and operated by the city of Oakland, California, named after early California writer and poet Joaquin Miller....


Southeast Hills
  • Crestmont
  • Sequoyah Heights
    Sequoyah Heights, Oakland, California

    Sequoyah Heights is a smaller part of the Oak Knoll, Oakland neighborhood that runs alongside the southeastern part of the Oakland hills. The neighborhood borders San Leandro....
  • Sheffield
  • Skyline-Hillcrest Estates
  • Caballo Hills
  • Leona Heights
  • Chabot Park
  • Woodminster


Climate

Oakland's climate is typified by the temperate and seasonal Mediterranean climate
Mediterranean climate

A Mediterranean climate is one that resembles the climate of the lands in the Mediterranean Basin, which includes over half of the area with this climate type world-wide....
. Summers are usally dry and warm and winters are cool and wet More specifically, it has features found in both nearby coastal cities such as San Francisco and inland cities such as San Jose
San Jose, California

San Jose or San Jos? is the List of cities in California city in California and the List of United States cities by population in the United States....
, so it is warmer than San Francisco and cooler than San Jose. Its position on San Francisco Bay directly across from the Golden Gate
Golden Gate

The Golden Gate is the North American strait connecting San Francisco Bay to the Pacific Ocean. Since 1937 it has been spanned by the Golden Gate Bridge....
 means that the city gets significant cooling maritime fog during the summer. It is far enough inland, though, that the fog often burns off by midday, allowing it to have typically sunny California days.

The National Weather Service
National Weather Service

The National Weather Service , once known as the Weather Bureau, is one of the six scientific agencies that make up the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of the United States Federal government of the United States....
 has two official weather stations in Oakland: Oakland International Airport
Oakland International Airport

Oakland International Airport , also known as Metropolitan Oakland International Airport, is a public airport located ten miles south of the central business district of Oakland, California, a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States....
 and the Oakland Museum (established 1970).

Crime

Oakland continues to have a reputation as a city with a high rate of violent crime, a problem that began during the late 1960s. By the end of the 1970s, Oakland's murder rate had risen to twice that of San Francisco or New York City. Crime continued to escalate during the 1980s, and remains one of Oakland's most serious challenges today.

During the 1990s and 2000s, Oakland has consistently been listed as one of the most dangerous of large cities in the United States. A record number of 175 homicides were committed in Oakland in 1992. In 1993, Oakland's murder rate was 40.8 per 100,000; the 13th worst ranking for US cities with population over 100,000. Statistics published by Morgan Quitno
Morgan Quitno

Morgan Quitno Press is a research and publishing company based in Lawrence, Kansas, Kansas. They compile books with statistics of crime rates, health care, education, and other categories, ranking cities and states in the United States....
 put Oakland's crime at the 18th worst US city (out of 207 of the largest cities) in 1997, 16th worst in 1999, 22nd worst in 2000, 28th worst in 2002, 21st worst in 2004, and 21st worst in 2005. The 94 murders in Oakland in 2005 and 145 murders in 2006 contributed to making the city's ranking jump significantly worse, going to 8th most dangerous for 2006, and 4th for 2007. All rankings above are based on the crime stats from the previous [calendar] year, with the reports released in the fall. Oakland ranks high in California for most categories of crime. Rates of other violent crimes, such as assault and rape, are also far above the U.S. average. 120 murders recorded in 2007 made Oakland's murder rate third highest in California, behind Richmond
Richmond, California

Richmond is a city in western Contra Costa County, California, California, United States. The city was incorporated on August 7, 1905., El Cerrito Historical Society, June 2007, retrieved August 15, 2007 It is located in the East Bay , part of the San Francisco Bay Area....
 and Compton
Compton, California

Compton is a city in southern Los Angeles County, California, California, United States, south-southeast of downtown Los Angeles, California. The city was incorporated in 1888....
; however, Oakland suffered rape and robbery rates per capita that were almost twice those of Richmond and Compton, making Oakland's violent crime rate the highest overall.

In 2003, 109 murders in a city of 407,000 set Oakland 3.5 times higher than the national average. That same year, all violent crimes in Oakland were 2.31 times more numerous than the national average, and property crimes were 1.26 times more numerous. In 2004, there were 88 murders, and in 2005, there were 94. Police estimated that drugs played a part in 80% of the murders. Then-mayor Jerry Brown
Jerry Brown

Edmund Gerald "Jerry" Brown, Jr. is the current California Attorney General and a former Governor of California of the State of California. Brown has had a lengthy political career spanning terms on the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees , as California Secretary of State , as Governor of California , as chair of the California...
 said that it was harder to deal with specific crime issues with fewer police officers than in previous years.

Most violent crime occurs in West Oakland
West Oakland, Oakland, California

West Oakland is a neighborhood situated in the northwestern corner of Oakland, California along the waterfront near the Port of Oakland and San Francisco ? Oakland Bay Bridge....
 and the flatlands of East Oakland
East Oakland, Oakland, California

East Oakland is the southeastern portion of Oakland, California, and takes up the largest portion of the city's land area. It stretches between Lake Merritt in the northwest and San Leandro in the southeast....
 between I-580
Interstate 580 (California)

Interstate 580 is an Interstate Highway in Northern California California. The heavily traveled, 80-mile long spur route of Interstate 80 connects the San Francisco Bay Area to Interstate 5 in the state's Central Valley ....
 and I-880. Montclair, Rockridge and Lake Merritt have fewer problems with violent crime. Property crime is widespread throughout the city. In 2007, Oakland had by far the highest robbery and motor vehicle theft rates of all significant cities in California, with one robbery per 114 citizens and one car theft per 40 citizens, three to four times the state average. A rash of high-profile restaurant takeover robberies in 2008 has led to sharp criticism. Since the beginning of 2007 however, street crimes in Oakland have dropped substantially enough to bring overall crime down by a small percentage.

The five-year average for homicide victims in Oakland breaks down as follows: 77% Black, 15.4% Hispanic, 3.2% White, 2.8% Asian and 1.6% Unknown. The five-year average for homicide suspects in Oakland breaks down as follows: 64.7% Black, 8.6% Hispanic, 0.2% White, 2.0% Asian and 24.4% Unknown. In 2006, homicide victims under the age of 18 tripled compared to previous years. Five year averages compiled for 2001-2006 showed that 30% of murder victims were between the ages of 18 to 24 and another 33% were between 25 and 34 years old. Males made up 96% of suspects and 88% of victims.

Despite comprising only 30-35% of the population, African-Americans are over-represented in crime statistics, with the majority of crimes occurring in heavily African-American neighborhoods. Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a journalist, author and broadcaster. Hutchinson is also the author of nine books about the African American experience....
 mentions crime in Oakland as an example of a rising problem of "black-on-black" crime, which Oakland shares with other major cities in the US. Bill Cosby
Bill Cosby

William Henry "Bill" Cosby Jr. is an American comedian, actor, author, television producer and activist. A veteran stand-up performer, he got his start at various clubs, then landed a vanguard role in the 1960s action show I Spy....
 mentions Oakland as one of the many American cities where crime is "endemic" and young African-American men are being murdered and incarcerated in disproportionate numbers. Cosby alleges that the parents of such youths and young men, and the Black community in general, have failed to inculcate proper standards of moral behavior.

In a November, 2008 Congressional Quarterly Press publication, the city of Oakland has the dubious distinction of ranking fifth worst in a nationwide ranking of violent crime. The ranking takes into account six crime categories: murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary and motor vehicle theft. CQ Press has used these categories for determining city crime rankings since 1999. In contrast, other Bay Area cities ranked this way. Richmond was number nine, Vallejo 67, San Francisco 102, Hayward 125 and Berkeley 132.

Oakland finished with 2008 with 124 homicides. While only three less than the 2007 total, only 17 of 2008's happened during the last three months, with 21 happening in the first 6 weeks of the year alone. A rapid growth in the number of police officers by year's end, helped the downward trend continue through the first 7 weeks of 2009. Other serious crimes have dropped sharply since January 1, compared to last year's first 7 weeks; aggressive approaches by law enforcement toward illegal drug selling is a large factor.

Demographics


In the census
Census

A census is the procedure of systematically acquiring and recording information about the members of a given population. It is a regularly occurring and official count of a particular population....
 of 2000, there were 399,484 people, 150,790 households, and 86,402 families residing in the city. The population density
Population density

Population density is a measurement of population per unit area or unit volume. It is frequently applied to living organisms, and particularly to humans....
 was 7,126.6/sq mi (2,751.4/km²). There were 157,508 housing units at an average density of 2,809.8/sq mi (1,084.8/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 35.66% African American, 23.52% White, 0.66% Native American, 15.23% Asian American, 0.50% Pacific Islander, 11.66% from other races
Race (United States Census)

Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are Self-concept data items in which residents choose the Race in the United States or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are of Hispanic or Latino origin ....
, and 4.98% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 21.19 percent of the population.

The US Census Bureau 2005 estimates show 31.00 percent African American, 26.10 percent White, 0.60 percent Native American, 16.40 percent Asian American, 0.90 percent Pacific Islander, 14.00 percent from other races
Race (United States Census)

Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are Self-concept data items in which residents choose the Race in the United States or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are of Hispanic or Latino origin ....
, and 4.80 percent from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 15.00 percent of the population.

The U.S. Census Bureau 2006 estimates show 34.1 percent White, 30.3 percent African American, 0.9 percent Native American, 15.6 percent Asian American, 0.7 percent Pacific Islander, 14.6 percent from other races
Race (United States Census)

Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are Self-concept data items in which residents choose the Race in the United States or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are of Hispanic or Latino origin ....
, and 3.8 percent from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 25.9 percent of the population. There were 58,903 self-identifying "Asian" respondents, and 97,738 respondents who identified as "Hispanic or Latino of any race." There were 89,834 respondents who self-identified as "non-Hispanic Whites alone," in other words, not of "more than one race," which equals 23.8% of the "total population" estimate of 377,256. The African-American population "alone" was 113,078, or 29.97% of the total population estimate of 377,256. A statistically significant number of multi-racial respondents, 10,696, identified as being of at least two races.

Black Oakland1
The data shows that Oakland is one of the most ethnically diverse cities in the country.

Out of 150,790 households 28.6 percent had children under the age of 18 living with them, 34.0 percent were married couples
Marriage

Marriage is a social, spirituality, or law union of individuals. This union may also be called matrimony, while the ceremony that marks its beginning is usually called a wedding and the married status created is sometimes called wedlock....
 living together, 17.7 percent had a female householder with no husband present, and 42.7 percent were non-families. 32.5 percent of all households were made up of individuals and 8.6 percent had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.60 and the average family size was 3.38.

An analysis by the Urban Institute of U.S. Census 2000
United States Census, 2000

File:US-Census-2000Logo.svgThe Twenty-Second United States Census, known as Census 2000 and conducted by the United States Census Bureau, determined the resident population of the United States on April 1, 2000, to be 281,421,906, an increase of 13.2% over the 248,709,873 persons Enumeration during the United States Census, 1990....
 numbers showed that Oakland has the third-highest concentration of gays and lesbians among the 50 largest U.S. cities, behind San Francisco and Seattle. Census data show that, among incorporated areas that have at least 500 female couples, Oakland has the nation's largest percent per capita. In 2000, Oakland counted 2650 lesbian couples; one in every 41 Oakland couples listed themselves as a same-sex female partnership.

In 2000, Oakland's population was reported as 25.0 percent under the age of 18, 9.7 percent from 18 to 24, 34.0 percent from 25 to 44, 20.9 percent from 45 to 64, and 10.5 percent who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33 years. For every 100 females there were 93.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 90.2 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $40,055, and the median income for a family was $44,384. Males had a median income of $37,433 versus $35,088 for females. The per capita income
Per capita income

Per capita income means how much each individual receives, in monetary terms, of the yearly income generated in the country. This is what each citizen is to receive if the yearly national income is divided equally among everyone....
 for the city was $21,936. About 16.2 percent of families and 19.4 percent of the population were below the poverty line, including 27.9 percent of those under age 18 and 13.1 percent of those age 65 or over. 0.7% of the population is homeless. Home ownership is 41% and 14% of rental units are subsidized. The current unemployment rate is 8.4%.

Economy

Oakland is a major West Coast
West Coast of the United States

The "West Coast", "Western Seaboard", or "Pacific Coastline" are terms for the westernmost coastal states of the United States. It most often comprises California, Oregon and Washington....
 port, and is home to several major corporations including Kaiser Permanente
Kaiser Permanente

Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R....
 and Clorox
Clorox

The Clorox Company is a manufacturer of various food and chemical products based in Oakland, California, which is best known for its bleach product, Clorox....
, as well as corporate headquarters for national retailers like Dreyer's
Dreyer's

Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream Holdings, Inc., a division of Nestl?, is a United States-based producer of ice cream and frozen yogurt. Its products are marketed under the Dreyer's name in the Western United States and West Coast of the United States, and under the Edy's name in the Eastern United States and East Coast of the United St...
 and Cost Plus World Markets.

Politics

In the state legislature
California State Legislature

The California State Legislature is the State legislature of the U.S. state of California. It is a bicameral body consisting of the lower house, the California State Assembly, with 80 members, and the upper house, the California State Senate, with 40 members....
 Oakland is located in the 9th Senate
California State Senate

The California State Senate is the upper house of the California State Legislature. There are 40 State Senators. The state legislature meets in the state capital, Sacramento, California....
 District, represented by Democrat
Democratic Party (United States)

The Democratic Party is one of two major party contemporary political parties in the United States, along with the Republican Party . It is the oldest political party in continuous operation in the United States and it is one of the oldest parties in the world....
 Loni Hancock
Loni Hancock

Loni Hancock is currently serving in her first term as the representative of California State Senate District 9. The 9th Senate District currently includes Alameda, California, Albany, California, Berkeley, California, Castro Valley, California, Dublin, California, Emeryville, California, Emeryville, California, Livermore, California, Oakla...
, and in the 14th, 16th, and 18th Assembly
California State Assembly

The California State Assembly is the lower house of the California State Legislature. There are 80 members in the Assembly, representing an approximately equal number of constituents, with each district having a population of at least 420,000....
 Districts, represented by Democrats Nancy Skinner
Nancy Skinner

Nancy Skinner is a nationally syndicated radio and television commentator based in Detroit. She ran for the United States House of Representatives in Michigan's 9th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives elections, 2006....
, Sandré Swanson
Sandré Swanson

Sandr? Swanson was elected to the California State Assembly in November 2006. Mr. Swanson represents the 16th Assembly District. The district includes the cities of Alameda, California, Oakland, California, and Piedmont, California....
, and Mary Hayashi
Mary Hayashi

Mary Hayashi was elected to the California State Assembly in 2006. She is a United States Democratic Party. She represents the 18th Assembly District which includes San Leandro, California, Hayward, California, Dublin, California and the unincorporated areas of Ashland, California, Cherryland, California, and San Lorenzo, California....
 respectively. Oakland represented in the United States House of Representatives by Barbara Lee
Barbara Lee

Barbara Jean Lee , is an United States politician, and has been a Democratic Party member of the United States House of Representatives since 1998, representing ....
 and is located in California's 9th Congressional District
California's 9th congressional district

California's 9th congressional district covers a significant portion of the East Bay portion of the San Francisco Bay Area. It includes the cities of Oakland, California and Berkeley, California, among others....
, which has a Cook PVI
Cook Partisan Voting Index

The Cook Partisan Voting Index , sometimes referred to as simply the Partisan Voting Index , is a measurement of how strongly an United States congressional district leans toward one political party compared to the nation as a whole....
 of D +38.

Revitalization

Oakland experienced an increase of both its population and of land values in the early to mid 2000s. The 10k Plan
10k Plan

The 10K Plan was an urban planning doctrine for Downtown Oakland, Oakland, California to attract 10,000 new residents to the city's downtown and Jack London Square areas....
, which began during former mayor Elihu Harris
Elihu Harris

Elihu Mason Harris is a former United States of America Democratic Party politician and college administrator. He served as mayor of Oakland, California from 1991 to until 1999....
' administration, and intensified during former mayor Jerry Brown
Jerry Brown

Edmund Gerald "Jerry" Brown, Jr. is the current California Attorney General and a former Governor of California of the State of California. Brown has had a lengthy political career spanning terms on the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees , as California Secretary of State , as Governor of California , as chair of the California...
's administration resulted in several thousand units of new multi-family housing and development. In addition, Oakland's mild weather, central geographic location, and hillside neighborhoods with views of San Francisco and the Bay provide an attractive alternative to the high rents and home prices in nearby San Francisco. Because of its size, Oakland offers a substantial number of shopping districts and restaurants representing many American and international cuisines.

Gentrification

While Oakland has seen economic revitalization during the 2000s, the issue of gentrification
Gentrification

Gentrification, or urban gentrification, is the change in an urban area associated with the population mobility of more affluent individuals into a lower-class area....
 has become a controversial topic which has affected Oakland's politics, culture, longtime, and new residents throughout the city. In West Oakland a community land trust
Community land trust

A community land trust is a land trust which aims to benefit the surrounding community by ensuring the long-term availability of affordable housing....
 has been formed in an attempt to secure collective non-profit ownership of residentially-zoned land. The Institute for Community Economics has worked to retain West Oakland's longtime residents and mitigate the economic impacts of rent intensification. With some developers interested in a "village community" with the West Oakland BART station
West Oakland (BART station)

West Oakland is a Bay Area Rapid Transit metro station located in the neighborhood of West Oakland in Oakland, California. It has two elevated side platforms, and is located near the eastern end of the Transbay Tube....
 as its center, West Oakland has seen an influx of new residents. In response, programs such as the Anti-Displacement Network, have attempted to assist in the stabilization of costs for homeowners and renters in West Oakland. Redevelopment
Redevelopment

Redevelopment is any new construction on a site that has pre-existing uses on it such as the redevelopment of an industrial site into a mixed-use development or the redevelopment of a block of townhouses into a large apartment building....
 proponents believe such projects under way in West Oakland will provide employment, neighborhood-serving retail health services, recreational facilities, special placement facilities, and new affordable housing.

In East Oakland, average rents have increased during the 2000s as housing demand pressures in and around the Central Business District
Oakland, California

Oakland , founded in 1852, is the eighth-largest city in the U.S. state of California and the county seat of Alameda County, California. Oakland is approximately 8 miles east of San Francisco and the cities are separated by San Francisco Bay....
 and neighborhoods surrounding Lake Merritt
Lake Merritt

Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
 have affected outlying neighborhoods.

In September 2008, members of the Oakland City Council blocked Mayor Ron Dellums
Ron Dellums

Ronald Vernie "Ron" Dellums is the mayor of Oakland, California. From 1971-1998, he was elected to thirteen terms as a Member of the United States House of Representatives from Northern California's Progressivism 9th Congressional District, which currently has a Cook Partisan Voting Index of D +38....
' appointment of Ada Chan to the Oakland Planning Commission in a 3-4-1 vote. Chan was a San Francisco activist with tendency to use socialist rhetoric, and also had a radical history of opposing the construction of restaurants and health clubs even in designated commercial zones. In January 2008, newly-elected at-large City Coucilmember Rebecca Kaplan appointed Chan as her office's Policy Aide.

Nicknames

Oakland is known by several nicknames, of which the most common is "Oaktown". Other nicknames include "O-town" and "The Town". The moniker "Oaksterdam" sprang up in 2003 in association with the opening of several medical marijuana clubs in Uptown and on the north side of Downtown.

"There's no there there"


Many Oaklanders have been frustrated by the misuse of this famous quote about Oakland: "There's no there there", writer Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein

Gertrude Stein was an American writer who spent most of her life in France, and who became a catalyst in the development of modern art and Modernist literature....
 declared upon learning as an adult that her childhood Oakland home had been torn down. Contrary to popular belief, the comment was not meant to disparage the city, but rather to express a sentiment similar to "you can't go home again
The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby is a novel by the United States author F. Scott Fitzgerald. First published on April 10, 1925, it is set in Long Island's North Shore and New York City during the summer of 1922....
."

Modern-day Oakland has turned the quote on its head, with a statue downtown simply titled "There." Additionally, in 2005 a sculpture called HERETHERE was installed by the City of Berkeley on the Berkeley-Oakland border at Martin Luther King Jr. Way. The sculpture consists of eight-foot-tall letters spelling "HERE" and "THERE" in front of the BART tracks as they descend from their elevated section in Oakland to the subway through Berkeley.

Arts and culture


Annual cultural events

Many annual events celebrate the diverse cultures of Oakland:
  • (weekend nearest May 5)
  • (mid-May)
  • (June)
  • (late August)
  • (Labor Day weekend)
  • (mid-September)
  • (early October)
  • (September or October)
  • (Sunday before November 1)
  • (early December)


Attractions

  • Chabot Space and Science Center
    Chabot Space and Science Center

    Chabot Space and Science Center, located in Oakland, California, is a hands-on center featuring interactive exhibits, a digital planetarium, a large screen theater, hands-on activities and three powerful telescopes....
  • Children's Fairyland
    Children's Fairyland

    Children's Fairyland, U.S.A. was the first theme park in the United States created to cater to families with young children. Located in Oakland, California on the shore of Lake Merritt, Fairyland includes 10 acres of play sets, small rides, and animals....
  • Chinatown
  • Dunsmuir House
    Dunsmuir House

    The Dunsmuir House and Gardens is located in Oakland, California on a site. The Dunsmuir House has a neoclassical-revival architectural style and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places....
  • Fox Oakland Theatre
    Fox Oakland Theatre

    The Fox Oakland Theatre is a 3,800-seat movie theater, located at 1807 Telegraph Avenue in downtown Oakland, California. The theater was designed by Weeks and Day, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and reopened on February 5, 2009....
    , reopened: pending tour information TBA.
  • Jack London Square
    Jack London Square

    Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
  • Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, home of baseball’s Oakland Athletics
    Oakland Athletics

    The Oakland Athletics are a professional baseball based in Oakland, California. The Athletics are a member of the American League West of Major League Baseball's American League....
    , and the Oakland Raiders
    Oakland Raiders

    The Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team based in the city of Oakland, California. They currently play in the AFC West of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
     of the NFL
    National Football League

    The National Football League is the Major North American professional sports leagues American football Sports league in the United States. It is an unincorporated 501#501.28c.29.286.29 association controlled by its members....
    .
  • Lake Merritt
    Lake Merritt

    Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
    , Listed on the National Register of Historic Places
    National Register of Historic Places

    The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
    , Oldest wildlife/bird sanctuary in North America, Lake Merritt Garden Center, Bonsai Garden
  • Mountain View Cemetery, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
    Frederick Law Olmsted

    Frederick Law Olmsted was an United States journalist, landscape designer and father of American landscape architecture, famous for designing many well-known urban parks, including Central Park and Prospect Park in New York, New York....
     and resting place of many famous Californians
  • Oakland Museum of California
    Oakland Museum of California

    Oakland Museum of California or Oakland Museum is a museum dedicated to the art, history, and natural science of California located in Oakland, California....
  • Oakland Public Library
    Oakland Public Library

    The Oakland Public Library is the public library in Oakland, California, California. Opened in 1878, the Oakland Public Library currently serves the city of Oakland, along with the neighboring smaller cities of Emeryville and Piedmont....
  • Oracle Arena, directly adjacent to the Oakland Coliseum, home to the Golden State Warriors
    Golden State Warriors

    The Golden State Warriors are an USA professional basketball team based in Oakland, California, California, representing the San Francisco Bay Area....
     of the NBA
    National Basketball Association

    The National Basketball Association is North America's premier professional men's basketball league, composed of thirty teams: twenty-nine in the United States and one in Canada....
  • Paramount Theater
    Paramount Theater (Oakland, California)

    The Paramount Theatre is a massive Art Deco movie theatre located in downtown Oakland, California, United States. When it was built in 1931, it was the largest multi-purpose theatre on the West Coast, seating 3476 Today, the Paramount is the home of the Oakland East Bay Symphony and the Oakland Ballet, it regularly plays host to Rhythm and...
  • Pardee Home
    Pardee Home

    The Pardee Home is a house in Oakland, California that was home to three generations of the Pardee family. It is now a non-profit museum, showing over 100 years of the life of a prominent California family....
  • Preservation Park
  • USS Potomac
    USS Potomac (AG-25)

    The USS Potomac , formerly the USCGC Electra, was Franklin Delano Roosevelt?s presidential yacht from 1936 until his death in 1945....
    , Franklin Delano Roosevelt's presidential yacht
  • Oakland Zoo
    Oakland Zoo

    Oakland Zoo, in the past known as the Knowland Zoo, is a zoo located in southeastern Oakland, California, California, USA. Oakland Zoo is relatively small for a city of its size, but it contains modern exhibits....


Nightlife

Downtown Oakland has an assortment of bars
Bar (establishment)

A bar is a business that serves drinks, especially alcoholic beverages such as beer, liquor, and mixed drinks, for consumption on the premises....
 and nightclubs. They range from punk-rock makeovers of dive bars, such as The Stork Club and the Ruby Room, to modern bistros and dance clubs, such as Luka's Taproom and Lounge, @17th, Pat's bar, Roy's 19th Street Station, The Uptown, and The Oasis, to hipster spots such as Radio, Geoffreys, Karribean City, and art and jazz bar Cafe van Kleef. Also, the reopening of the aforementioned Fox Oakland Theatre
Fox Oakland Theatre

The Fox Oakland Theatre is a 3,800-seat movie theater, located at 1807 Telegraph Avenue in downtown Oakland, California. The theater was designed by Weeks and Day, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and reopened on February 5, 2009....
 (see sections for '2000's' & 'attractions') draws headline acts to include Jam Bands, rock, punk, blues, jazz, and reggae, among other genres of music. Shows performed by the Oakland School for the Arts
Oakland School for the Arts

Oakland School for the Arts is a charter school in Oakland, California....
--which is housed within the same complex--will give the theatre increased usage. Coupled with the Paramount Theatre, the two venues booking events simultaneously helps enhance the night-life atmosphere uptown, with more sites planned; owners of current nightlife spots are joining forces for a future venue in the rapidly-growing uptown district.

Oakland is home to a world-class jazz venue, Yoshi's, near Jack London Square
Jack London Square

Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
. Jack London Square is a nighttime destination because of its movie theaters, restaurants, and clubs.

Recent years have seen the growth of the "Oakland Art Murmur" event, occurring in the Uptown neighborhood the first Friday evening of every month, which features concurrent art openings from many galleries including 21 Grand, Fort, Johansson Project, Boontling Gallery, Ego Park, Mama Buzz, and Rock Paper Scissors.

Sports

Oakland has teams in three professional sports: Basketball, baseball, and football.

ClubSportFoundedLeagueVenue
Oakland Athletics
Oakland Athletics

The Oakland Athletics are a professional baseball based in Oakland, California. The Athletics are a member of the American League West of Major League Baseball's American League....
Baseball
Baseball

Baseball is a bat-and-ball sport played between two team sport of nine players each. The goal of baseball is to score run by hitting a thrown Baseball with a baseball bat and touching a series of four markers called base arranged at the corners of a ninety-foot square, or diamond. Players on one team take turns hitting against...
1901 (in Oakland since 1968)Major League Baseball
Major League Baseball

Major League Baseball is the highest level of play in American professional baseball. Specifically, Major League Baseball refers to the organization that operates the National League and the American League, by means of a joint organizational structure that has developed gradually between them since 1903 ....
: American League
American League

The American League of Professional Baseball Clubs, or simply the American League , is one of two leagues that make up Major League Baseball in the United States and Canada....
Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum
Oakland Raiders
Oakland Raiders

The Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team based in the city of Oakland, California. They currently play in the AFC West of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
American Football
American football

American football, known in the United States and Canada simply as football, is a competitive team sport known for mixing strategy with physical play....
1960 (in Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles is the largest city in the U.S. state of California and the List of United States cities by population in the United States. Often abbreviated as L.A. and nicknamed The City of Angels, Los Angeles is rated as a beta global city, has an estimated population of 3.8 million and spans over in Southern California....
 from 1982–1994)
National Football League
National Football League

The National Football League is the Major North American professional sports leagues American football Sports league in the United States. It is an unincorporated 501#501.28c.29.286.29 association controlled by its members....
: American Conference. AFC West
AFC West

The AFC West is a division of the National Football League's American Football Conference, formed as a result of the AFL-NFL merger in 1970. The new NFL was aligned into six divisions ....
Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum
Golden State Warriors
Golden State Warriors

The Golden State Warriors are an USA professional basketball team based in Oakland, California, California, representing the San Francisco Bay Area....
Basketball
Basketball

Basketball is a team sport in which two teams of five active players each try to score points against one another by propelling a basketball through a 10 feet  high hoop under organized rules....
1946 (In Oakland since 1971)National Basketball Association
National Basketball Association

The National Basketball Association is North America's premier professional men's basketball league, composed of thirty teams: twenty-nine in the United States and one in Canada....
: Western Conference.
Oracle Arena


Ballpark
Oakland's former sports teams include:

  • Oakland Oaks
    Oakland Oaks (PCL)

    The Oakland Oaks were a minor league baseball team in Oakland, California that played in the Pacific Coast League from 1903 through 1955, after which the club transferred to Vancouver, British Columbia....
    , Pacific Coast League
    Pacific Coast League

    The Pacific Coast League is a minor league baseball league operating in the West, Midwest, and Southeast of the United States. Along with the International League, it is one of two leagues playing at the Triple-A level, which is one step below Major League Baseball....
     of Baseball, 1903–1955. (The Oaks played at Oaks Park
    Oaks Park (stadium)

    Oaks Park, formally known as the Oakland Baseball Park, and at times nicknamed Emeryville Park and Ewing Field, was a baseball stadium in Emeryville, California....
     in Emeryville after 1912.)
  • Oakland Oaks
    Oakland Oaks (ABL)

    The Oakland Oaks were an American basketball team based in Oakland, California that was a member of the American Basketball League .The team was previously known as the San Francisco Saints ....
    , American Basketball League
    American Basketball League (1961-1963)

    The American Basketball League played one full season, 1961 in sports-1962 in sports, and part of 1962-1963. The league actually folded on December 31,1962....
    , 1962.
  • Oakland Oaks
    Oakland Oaks (ABA)

    The Oakland Oaks were a charter member of the original American Basketball Association. Formed in February 1967 as the Oakland Americans, the team changed its name to the Oaks prior to play that fall....
    , American Basketball Association, 1967–1969.
  • Oakland Seals, National Hockey League
    National Hockey League

    The National Hockey League is a professional ice hockey league composed of 30 teams in North America. It is considered to be the premier professional ice hockey league in the world, and one of the North American Major professional sports leagues of the United States and Canada....
    , 1967–1976.
  • Oakland Clippers
    Oakland Clippers

    The Oakland Clippers were a association football team based out of Oakland, California that played in the non-FIFA sanctioned National Professional Soccer League I....
    , North American Soccer League
    North American Soccer League

    North American Soccer League was a professional football league with teams in the United States of America and Canada that operated from 1968 to 1984....
    , 1968.
  • Oakland Stompers
    Oakland Stompers

    The Oakland Stompers were a soccer team in the North American Soccer League which played the 1978 season in the NASL. The Stompers played in the Western Division of the American Conference and finished the year with a 12-18 record....
    , North American Soccer League
    North American Soccer League

    North American Soccer League was a professional football league with teams in the United States of America and Canada that operated from 1968 to 1984....
    , 1978.
  • Oakland Invaders
    Oakland Invaders

    Oakland Invaders were a professional American football team that played in the United States Football League from 1983 through 1985....
    , United States Football League
    United States Football League

    The United States Football League was a short-lived professional American football league that played three seasons between 1983 and 1985. Although it lasted only three years and lost over $163 Million, it was by far the National Football League's strongest competitor since the 1960s version of the American Football League....
    , 1983–1985.
  • Oakland Skates
    Oakland Skates

    The Oakland Skates were a professional roller hockey team and were a member team in Roller Hockey International from 1993 through 1996. In 1993 the Skates were a finalist for the RHI league championship, named the Murphy Cup, for one of the league founders, Dennis Murphy, losing to the Anaheim Bullfrogs....
    , Roller Hockey International
    Roller Hockey International

    Roller Hockey International was a professional inline hockey league that operated in North America from 1993 RHI season to 1999 RHI season. It was the first major professional league for inline hockey....
    , 1993–1996.
  • Oakland Slammers
    Oakland Slammers

    The Oakland Slammers, based in Oakland, California were members of the International Basketball League for two seasons, and completed their second season in the league in 2006....
    , International Basketball League
    International Basketball League

    The International Basketball League was a short lived professional basketball league in the United States. The IBL was headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland....
    , 2005-2006.


Parks and recreation

  • Joaquin Miller Park
    Joaquin Miller Park

    Joaquin Miller Park is a park in the Oakland Hills owned and operated by the city of Oakland, California, named after early California writer and poet Joaquin Miller....
  • Joseph Knowland State Arboretum and Park
    Joseph Knowland State Arboretum and Park

    Joseph Knowland State Arboretum and Park is a park located in Grass Valley, Oakland, California.Joseph R. Knowland served on the California State Park Commission 1934-1960 and was chairman, 1938-1960....
    , home of the Oakland Zoo
    Oakland Zoo

    Oakland Zoo, in the past known as the Knowland Zoo, is a zoo located in southeastern Oakland, California, California, USA. Oakland Zoo is relatively small for a city of its size, but it contains modern exhibits....
  • Lake Merritt
    Lake Merritt

    Lake Merritt is a large tidal lagoon that lies just east of downtown Oakland, California. It is surrounded by parkland and city neighborhoods. A popular 3.5 mile walking and jogging path runs along its perimeter....
  • Morcom Rose Garden
    Morcom Rose Garden

    The Morcom Rose Garden is located in a residential neighborhood in Oakland, California, near the Piedmont, California border.The Rose Garden was constructed in 1932 as a project of the Works Progress Administration....
     best from July through October
  • William Joseph McInnes Botanic Garden and Campus Arboretum
    William Joseph McInnes Botanic Garden and Campus Arboretum

    The William Joseph McInnes Botanic Garden and Campus Arboretum is located at the corner of Seminary Avenue and MacArthur Boulevard, on the campus of Mills College in Oakland, California, United States....
    , located on the Mills College
    Mills College

    Mills College is an independent Liberal arts colleges in the United States Women's colleges in the United States founded in 1852 that offers bachelor's degrees to women and graduate degrees and certificates to women and men....
     campus


Additionally, the following seven East Bay Regional Parks
East Bay Regional Park District

The East Bay Regional Park District is a special district operating in Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California, within the East Bay area of the San Francisco Bay Area....
 are located entirely or partially in the city of Oakland:
  • Anthony Chabot Regional Park
    Anthony Chabot Regional Park

    Anthony Chabot Regional Park is a regional park on 5,067 acres  in the San Leandro Hills adjacent to Oakland, California, San Leandro, California and Castro Valley, California....
  • Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve
    Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve

    Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve is a regional park located in Oakland, CA that is part of the East Bay Regional Park District system....
  • Leona Canyon Regional Open Space Preserve
    Leona Canyon Regional Open Space Preserve

    Leona Canyon Regional Open Space Preserve is a regional park located in Oakland, CA that is part of the East Bay Regional Park District system....
  • Redwood Regional Park
    Redwood Regional Park

    Redwood Regional Park is a park of the East Bay Regional Parks District in the San Francisco Bay Area. It is located in the hills east of Oakland, California....
  • Robert Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve
    Robert Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve

    Robert Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve is located in the Berkeley Hills just east of Oakland, California, USA. Though it can only be entered via Oakland, it actually lies almost entirely within Contra Costa County....
  • Roberts Regional Recreation Area
    Roberts Regional Recreation Area

    Roberts Regional Recreation Area is a regional park located in Oakland, CA that is part of the East Bay Regional Park District system....
  • Temescal Regional Park
    Lake Temescal

    Lake Temescal is a small lake in the northeastern hills section of Oakland, California. It is the centerpiece of Temescal Regional Park . It is part of the greater East Bay Regional Park District....


Biology and ecology


The land that Oakland covers was once a mosaic of coastal terrace prairie, oak woodland, and north coastal scrub. Lake Merritt has only recently become a "lake", where it once was a productive estuary linked to the Bay. Oakland is home to many rare and endangered species including the Presidio Clarkia, Pallid Manzanita, Tiburon Buckwheat, Oakland Star-Tulip, Most-Beautiful Jewel Flower, Western Leatherwood, and the Alameda Whipsnake. Many rare species are localized to serpentine
Serpentine

The serpentine group describes a group of common rock-forming hydroxy magnesium iron Silicate minerals#Phyllosilicates minerals; they may contain minor amounts of other elements including chromium, manganese, cobalt and nickel....
 soils and bedrock.

Government

Oakland is a mayor-council government. The mayor is elected for a 4-year term. The council has eight council members representing seven districts in Oakland with one member elected at-large
At-Large

At-Large is a designation for representative members of a governing body who are elected or appointed to represent the whole membership of the body , rather than a subset of that membership....
; council members serve staggered 4-year terms. The mayor appoints a city administrator
City manager

A city manager is an official appointed as the Administration Management of a city, in a Council-manager government form of city government. Called the chief administrative officer in some municipalities....
, subject to the confirmation by the City Council, who is the chief administrative officer of the city. Other city officers include: city attorney
City attorney

A city attorney can be an elected or Appointment position in local government in the United States in the United States. The city attorney is the Attorney at law representing the city or municipality....
 (elected), city audit
Audit

The most general definition of an audit is an evaluation of a person, organization, system, process, project or product. Audits are performed to ascertain the validity and reliability of information, and also provide an assessment of a system's internal control....
or (elected), and city clerk
City clerk

The municipal clerk, along with the tax collector, is the oldest of public servants. The office can be traced to biblical times and even before.St....
 (appointed by city administrator).

Oakland native Ron Dellums
Ron Dellums

Ronald Vernie "Ron" Dellums is the mayor of Oakland, California. From 1971-1998, he was elected to thirteen terms as a Member of the United States House of Representatives from Northern California's Progressivism 9th Congressional District, which currently has a Cook Partisan Voting Index of D +38....
, a former Berkeley city council member and U.S. Representative, was elected mayor in June 2006. The mayoral election was a contentious one between Dellums and other candidates, including Oakland City Council president Ignacio De La Fuente
Ignacio De La Fuente

Ignacio De La Fuente, born New Years Day, 1949, Mexico City, is an Oakland City Council. He is also the President of Oakland City Council....
 and Councilmember Nancy Nadel
Nancy Nadel

Nancy Nadel is a U.S. politician, businesswoman, and member of the Oakland City Council serving her fourth consecutive term. After two terms on the Board of the East Bay Municipal Utility District, Nadel was elected to the District Three Downtown-West Oakland City Council seat in 1996....
. Each candidate had different visions of Oakland's future and different ideas about how to combat crime, encourage appropriate urban development, and foster successful public schools. In what was essentially a three-way race, Dellums gained the required majority of votes needed to win without a runoff election in November.

Dellums is a member of the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Coalition, an organization formed in 2006 and co-chaired by New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
 mayor Michael Bloomberg
Michael Bloomberg

Michael Rubens Bloomberg is an United States businessman and philanthropist, and the current Mayor of New York City. He was listed as the eighth-richest American, with a net worth of US$30 Billion, in the Forbes 400 on Sept....
 and Boston mayor Thomas Menino
Thomas Menino

Thomas Michael Menino is the List of mayors of Boston, Massachusetts of Boston, Massachusetts, United States and the city's first Italian-American mayor....
.

Education


Primary and secondary education

Most public schools in Oakland are operated by the Oakland Unified School District
Oakland Unified School District

Oakland Unified School District is a public education school district which operates elementary schools , middle schools , and high schools in Oakland, California....
 (OUSD), which covers the entire city of Oakland; due to financial troubles and administrative failures, it has been in receivership by the state of California since 2002. The Oakland Unified School District (2006-2007) includes 59 elementary schools, 23 middle schools, 19 high schools, with 9 alternative education schools and programs, 4 adult education schools and early childhood education centers at most of the elementary schools There are 46,000 K-12 students, 32,000 adult students, and 6,000 plus employees.

Overall, OUSD schools have performed poorly for years. In the 2005 results of the STAR testing, over 50 percent of students taking the test performed "below basic," while only 20 percent performed at least "proficient" on the English section of the test. Some individual schools have much better performance than the city-wide average, for instance, in 2005 over half the students at Hillcrest Elementary School performed at the "advanced" level in the English portion of the test, and students at Lincoln Elementary School
Lincoln Elementary School (Oakland, California)

Lincoln Elementary School is part of the Oakland Unified School District. It is located in Oakland Chinatown, in walking distance of Lake Merritt....
 performed at the "advanced" level in the math portion.

Oakland's three largest public high schools are Oakland High School
Oakland High School (California)

Oakland Senior High School is a public high school in California. It is the oldest high school in Oakland and the third oldest high school in the state....
, Oakland Technical High School
Oakland Technical High School

Oakland Technical High School, known locally as Oakland Tech, or just simply "Tech", is a public high school in Oakland, California, and is operated by the Oakland Unified School District....
, and Skyline High School
Skyline High School (Oakland, California)

Skyline High School is a public high school in Oakland, California, California, USA....
. There are also numerous small high schools within Castlemont Community of Small Schools
Castlemont Community of Small Schools

Castlemont Community of Small Schools is a community of three small schools movement in Oakland, California, California, created by splitting up Castlemont High School, formerly known as East Oakland High School....
, Fremont Federation of High Schools
Fremont Federation of High Schools

The Fremont Federation of High Schools is a group of four high schools in Oakland, California formerly known as Fremont Senior High School....
, and McClymonds Educational Complex
McClymonds Educational Complex

McClymonds Educational Complex is the collective name of the two small high schools occupying the building of McClymonds High School. McClymonds is operated by the Oakland Unified School District....
, all of which were once single, larger public high schools (Castlemont High School, Fremont High School, and McClymonds High School
McClymonds High School

hout fellow, shout McClymondsloud and clear.Rah, Rah McClymonds HighO' McClymonds High Scl: Afrocentric Reform, Urban Youth & the Promise of Hip-Hop Culture written by Shawn Ginwright....
, respectively).

There are 25 public charter schools with 5,887 students which operate outside the domain of OUSD. Lionel Wilson College Prep Academy and Oakland Unity High School
Unity High School (Oakland, California)

Oakland's Unity High School is an independent charter school serving all students in Oakland, California. The school opened in the fall of 2003 and currently enrolls about 210 ninth to twelfth grade students....
 have been certified by the . Other charter schools include the Oakland Military Institute
Oakland Military Institute

Oakland Military Institute, formally the Oakland Military Institute College Preparatory Academy, is a charter school affiliated with the Oakland Unified School District in Oakland, California....
, Oakland School for the Arts
Oakland School for the Arts

Oakland School for the Arts is a charter school in Oakland, California....
, Bay Area Technology School, and .

There are several private high schools. Notables include the secular The College Preparatory School
The College Preparatory School

The College Preparatory School , of Oakland, California, is a four-year private coeducational day high school. Its motto is mens conscia recti, Latin for "a mind aware of what is right."...
 and Head-Royce School
Head-Royce School

The Head-Royce School is a co-educational University-preparatory school K-12 school in Oakland, California, California. The forerunner of Head-Royce was the Anna Head School for Girls in Berkeley, California, founded in 1887....
, both with tuitions around $25,000 per year and the Catholic
Catholic school

Catholic schools are education ministries of the Roman Catholic Church. Presently, the Church operates the world's largest non-governmental school system....
 Bishop O'Dowd High School
Bishop O'Dowd High School

Bishop O'Dowd High School is a Roman Catholic, co-educational, college preparatory school in Oakland, California, California, administered by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland....
, Holy Names High School
Holy Names High School

Holy Names High School is a private Catholic girls college preparatory high school located in the Oakland, California in California. It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland....
 and St. Elizabeth High School
St. Elizabeth High School (Oakland, California)

St. Elizabeth High School is a private school, Roman Catholic high school in Oakland, California. It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland....
. Catholic schools in Oakland are operated by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland
Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in Northern California. The diocese comprises Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California in the San Francisco Bay Area....
 also include 8 K-8 schools (plus 1 in Piedmont on the Oakland city border).

Julia Morgan School for Girls is a private middle school
Middle school

Middle school or junior high school serves as a "bridge" between elementary school and high school. The terms can be used in different ways in different countries, sometimes interchangeably....
 for girls housed on the campus of Mills College
Mills College

Mills College is an independent Liberal arts colleges in the United States Women's colleges in the United States founded in 1852 that offers bachelor's degrees to women and graduate degrees and certificates to women and men....
. is a private nonprofit elementary and middle school.

Colleges and universities

Accredited colleges and universities include:
  • Peralta Community College District
    Peralta Community College District

    The Peralta Community College District is the community college district serving northern Alameda County, California. The district operates four community colleges: Berkeley City College, Laney College and Merritt College in Oakland, California, and College of Alameda....
    • Laney College
      Laney College

      Laney College is a community college located in Oakland, California, next to the Lake Merritt and the Kaiser Convention Center. Laney is the largest of the four colleges of the Peralta Community College District which serves northern Alameda County....
    • Merritt College
      Merritt College

      Merritt College is a two-year community college located in the Oakland Hills in Alameda County, California. The school's enrollment is approximately 6,000 students....
  • California College of the Arts
    California College of the Arts

    Founded in 1907, California College of the Arts is a regionally accredited, independent school of art and design in Oakland, California and San Francisco, California, California, USA....
     (formerly the California College of Arts and Crafts)
  • Holy Names University
    Holy Names University

    Holy Names University is a private, coeducational university located in Oakland, California. It is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church and is administered by the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary....
     (formerly Holy Names College)
  • Lincoln University
    Lincoln University (California)

    Lincoln University is a private, nonprofit, nonsectarian university based in Oakland, California. Dr. Benjamin Franklin Lickey with his wife Susan founded the university in San Francisco in 1919 to provide a means of higher education for returning veterans after the First World War and other working adults by offering evening classes for p...
  • Mills College
    Mills College

    Mills College is an independent Liberal arts colleges in the United States Women's colleges in the United States founded in 1852 that offers bachelor's degrees to women and graduate degrees and certificates to women and men....
  • Patten University
    Patten University

    Patten University is a private institution of higher education in Oakland, California.The school was founded in 1944 by evangelical preacher Dr....
  • Samuel Merritt College
    Samuel Merritt College

    Samuel Merritt University, formerly Samuel Merritt College, was founded in 1909 as a hospital school of nursing. It is a fully accredited health sciences institution located in Oakland, California....
     (a health science college)
  • The University of California, Berkeley
    University of California, Berkeley

    The University of California, Berkeley is a public university research university located in Berkeley, California, California, United States. The oldest of the ten major campuses affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley offers some 300 undergraduate and graduate degree programs in a wide range of disciplines....
     campus is located partially within the Oakland city limits.
    • Oakland is also the home of the headquarters of the University of California
      University of California

      The University of California is a public university system in the U.S. state of California. Under the California Master Plan for Higher Education, the University of California is a part of the state's three-tier public higher education system, which also includes the California State University system and the California Community Colleges s...
       system, the .


In 2001, the SFSU Oakland Multimedia Center was opened, allowing San Francisco State University
San Francisco State University

San Francisco State University is a public university, nonsectarian, coeducational university located in San Francisco, California. The university is situated in the southwest corner of San Francisco, bordering Lake Merced and Stonestown Galleria, at the corner of 19th Avenue and Holloway Avenues....
 to conduct classes near downtown Oakland.

The Oakland Higher Education Consortium and the City of Oakland's Community and Economic Development Agency (CEDA) opened the Oakland Higher Education Center downtown in 2002 in order to provide "access to multiple higher education service providers within a shared urban facility". Member schools include primary user California State University, East Bay
California State University, East Bay

California State University, East Bay is a public university, nonsectarian, coeducational university situated in the hills of Hayward, California, a city in the East Bay ....
 as well as Lincoln University, New College of California
New College of California

New College of California was founded in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1971 by former Gonzaga University President, Father John Leary. After 37 years, it ceased operations in early 2008, ...
, Saint Mary's College of California
Saint Mary's College of California

Saint Mary's College of California is a private, coeducational college located in Moraga, California, United States. It is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church and administered by the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools....
, SFSU Multimedia Studies Program, UC Berkeley Extension, University of Phoenix
University of Phoenix

The University of Phoenix is a For-profit school that specializes in adult education. The largest private university in North America, it has an enrollment of more than 345,300 students....
 and Peralta Community College District.

Media

Oakland is served by major television stations broadcasting primarily out of San Francisco and San Jose. The region's Fox
Fox Broadcasting Company

The Fox Broadcasting Company, commonly referred to as Fox and stylized as FOX, is an United States television network owned by Fox Entertainment Group, part of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation....
 affiliate, KTVU
KTVU

KTVU, channel 2, is the San Francisco Bay Area's Fox Broadcasting Company affiliate. Its studio facilities are located in Oakland, California at Jack London Square, and its transmitter is located at Sutro Tower in San Francisco, California....
, is based in (and licensed to) Oakland at Jack London Square
Jack London Square

Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
 along with independent station KICU-TV
KICU-TV

KICU-TV, known as TV36, is a digital-only television station in San Jose, California that broadcasts on channel 36. It is owned by Cox Enterprises....
 (licensed to San Jose). In addition, the city is served by various AM and FM radio stations as well; AM stations KMKY, KNEW
KNEW (AM)

KNEW is a radio station in San Francisco, California, Oakland, California, and San Jose, California, California, USA. KNEW is the newest of the San Francisco Bay Area's Conservatism talk radio stations, and is the flagship station of syndicated talk host Michael Savage ....
 and KQKE
KQKE

KKGN is a progressive talk talk radio radio station licensed to Oakland, California which serves the San Francisco Bay Area. The station is owned by Clear Channel Communications....
 are licensed to Oakland.

The Oakland Tribune published its first newspaper on February 21 1874. The Tribune Tower
Tribune Tower (Oakland)

The Tribune Tower is a 305 ft , 21 story building located in Downtown Oakland, Oakland, California. The 89,251 sq ft. , Tribune Tower was designed by Edward T....
, which sports a clock, is one of Oakland's landmarks. At key times throughout the day (8:00 am, noon and 5:00 pm), the clock tower carillon plays a variety of classic melodies, which change on a daily basis. In 2007, the Oakland Tribune announced they were leaving the Tribune tower (where they had actually been a tenant for several years) for a new location in East Oakland outside the downtown core. The East Bay Express
East Bay Express

The East Bay Express is an Emeryville, California-based weekly newspaper serving the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area. New Times Media, which owned the paper, merged with the parent company of the Village Voice to form Village Voice Media in October 2005....
, a locally-owned free weekly paper, is based in Emeryville near North Oakland and distributed throughout the East Bay.

Infrastructure


Transportation


Air

Residents of Oakland utilize three major airports in the San Francisco Bay Area: Oakland International Airport
Oakland International Airport

Oakland International Airport , also known as Metropolitan Oakland International Airport, is a public airport located ten miles south of the central business district of Oakland, California, a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States....
, San Francisco International Airport
San Francisco International Airport

San Francisco International Airport is a major international airport located south of downtown San Francisco, California, United States, adjacent to the cities of Millbrae, California and San Bruno, California in unincorporated area San Mateo County, California....
, and San Jose International Airport
San Jose International Airport

Norman Y. Mineta San Jos? International Airport is a city-owned public-use airport serving the city of San Jose, California in Santa Clara County, California, United States....
. Oakland International Airport, located within the city limits of Oakland, is 4 miles (6 km) south of downtown Oakland and serves domestic and international destinations. Southwest Airlines
Southwest Airlines

Southwest Airlines Co. is an American low-cost carrier airline with its largest focus city at Las Vegas, Nevada' McCarran International Airport....
 has a large presence at the airport and has been flying there since 1989. AC Transit
AC Transit

AC Transit is a regional bus agency serving parts of Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California in the western coastal area of the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, headquartered in Oakland, California....
 provides service to the airport from Oakland neighborhoods and the Coliseum Bart Station on its "50" line for fare of $1.75, and aboard its "805" "All Nighter" bus all the way to downtown Oakland where other All Nighter
All Nighter

The All Nighter is a night bus network of service in the San Francisco Bay Area, California, which shadows the rapid transit and commuter rail services of the BART System and Caltrain, the major rail services between San Francisco, the East Bay and the San Francisco Peninsula....
 connections are available. AirBART
AirBART

AirBART is a shuttle bus service that connects the Bay Area Rapid Transit's Oakland Coliseum Amtrak/BART Station station with Oakland International Airport ....
 provides more frequent shuttle bus service directly to the airport for a higher fare of $3.00.

Bridges, freeways, streets, and tunnels
Oakland is served by several major highways: Interstate 80 (Eastshore Freeway), Interstate 580
Interstate 580 (California)

Interstate 580 is an Interstate Highway in Northern California California. The heavily traveled, 80-mile long spur route of Interstate 80 connects the San Francisco Bay Area to Interstate 5 in the state's Central Valley ....
 (MacArthur Freeway), Interstate 880 (Nimitz Freeway), Interstate 980 (Williams Freeway), State Route 13 (Warren Freeway) and State Route 24
California State Route 24

State Route 24 in the U.S. state of California is a heavily-traveled east-west freeway in the eastern side of the San Francisco Bay Area of northern California that runs from the Interstate 580 /Interstate 980 interchange in Oakland, California to the Interstate 680 junction in Walnut Creek, California....
 (Grove Shafter Freeway). A stub of a planned freeway was constructed at the High Street exit from the Nimitz Freeway, but that freeway extension plan was abandoned.

Cypress Structure
In 1989, the Loma Prieta earthquake
Loma Prieta earthquake

The Loma Prieta earthquake, also known as the Quake of '89 and the World Series Quake, was a major earthquake that struck the San Francisco Bay Area of California on October 17, 1989 at 5:04 p.m....
 caused the Cypress Street Viaduct
Cypress Street Viaduct

The Cypress Street Viaduct was a 2-kilometer long, raised two-tier, multi-lane freeway constructed of reinforced concrete that was originally part of the Nimitz Freeway in Oakland, California....
 double-deck segment of the Nimitz Freeway I-880 to collapse, killing 42 people. The old freeway segment had passed right through the middle of West Oakland, forming a barrier between West Oakland neighborhoods. Following the earthquake, this section of the Nimitz Freeway was rerouted around the perimeter of West Oakland and rebuilt in 1999. The east span of the San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge also suffered damage from the quake when a 50-foot (15 m) section of the upper deck collapsed onto the lower deck; the damaged section was repaired one month after the earthquake. As a result of the earthquake, a significant seismic retrofit was performed on the western span of the Bay Bridge, and the eastern span is scheduled for replacement, with the new span projected to be completed in 2014.

Two underwater tunnels, the Webster and Posey Tubes, connect the main island of Alameda to Downtown Oakland, coming above ground in Chinatown. In addition, the Park Street
Park Street Bridge

The Park Street Bridge is a small drawbridge that crosses the Oakland Estuary in the San Francisco Bay Area. It links the cities of Oakland, California and Alameda, California....
, Fruitvale
Fruitvale Bridge

The Fruitvale Bridge is a small drawbridge that crosses the Oakland Estuary. It links the cities of Oakland, California and Alameda, California....
, and High Street bridges connect Alameda to East Oakland over the Oakland Estuary
Oakland Estuary

The Oakland Estuary is the body of water separating the cities of Oakland, California and Alameda, California, California, in the San Francisco Bay Area....
.

In the hills, the Leimert Bridge
Leimert Bridge

Leimert Bridge is located in the Oakmore neighborhood of Oakland, California. It spans 357 feet and is 117 feet high above Sausal Creek. It is a cement and steel arch bridge....
 crosses Dimond Canyon, connecting the Oakmore neighborhood to Park Boulevard. The Caldecott Tunnel
Caldecott Tunnel

The Caldecott Tunnel is a three bore highway tunnel in Oakland, California. The east-west tunnel is signed as a part of California State Route 24, and connects Oakland to communities in Contra Costa County, California, through the Berkeley Hills....
 carries Highway 24 through the Berkeley Hills
Berkeley Hills

The Berkeley Hills are a range of the Pacific Coast Ranges which overlook the northeast side of the valley in which San Francisco Bay is situated....
, connecting central Contra Costa County to Oakland. The Caldecott has three bores, with a fourth one planned.

Pavement conditions are "at risk" on the 1,974 "total lane miles" of Oakland streets, many of which are wide, multi-lane arterial boulevards. Between 2005 and 2007 Oakland streets were ranked poorly in the results of an Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) study released on January 5, 2009. Overall, Oakland streets scored in the "at risk" category of its Pavement Condition Index (PCI) over a three year moving average, resulting in rough pavement conditions for bicyclists and the possibility of increased vehicle suspension
Suspension (vehicle)

Suspension is the term given to the system of spring , shock absorbers and Linkage that connects a vehicle to its wheels. Suspension systems serve a dual purpose ? contributing to the car's car handling and brake for good active safety and driving pleasure, and keeping vehicle occupants comfortable and reasonably well isolated from road no...
 maintenance costs for private motorists and other motor vehicle operators. The MTC asserts that major repairs cost five to ten times more than routine maintenance, and scored Oakland streets overall as past the point where rehabilitation could have been used to prevent rapid deterioration.

Public transit

Bus transit service in Oakland and the inner East Bay
East Bay

East Bay may refer to:...
 is provided by the Alameda and Contra Costa Transit District, AC Transit
AC Transit

AC Transit is a regional bus agency serving parts of Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California in the western coastal area of the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, headquartered in Oakland, California....
. The district originated in 1958 after the conspiratorial dissolution
General Motors streetcar conspiracy

The Great American streetcar scandal is a Conspiracy in which streetcar systems throughout the United States were dismantled and replaced with buses in the mid-20th century as a result of illegal actions by a number of prominent companies, acting through National City Lines , Pacific City Lines , and American City Lines ....
 of the Key System
Key System

The Key System was a privately owned company which provided mass transit in the cities of Oakland, California, Berkeley, California, Alameda, California, Emeryville, California, Piedmont, California, San Leandro, California, Richmond, California, Albany, California and El Cerrito, California in the East Bay San Francisco Bay Area from 190...
 of streetcars which followed the National City Lines
National City Lines

National City Lines, Inc. , was a company formed in 1920, reorganized in 1936 into a holding company for the express purpose of acquiring local transit systems throughout the country....
 (NCL) holding company acquisition of 64% of its stock in 1946. In the 1948 federal case "United States v. National City Lines Inc.," the defendants were found guilty on a count of conspiring to monopolize the provision of parts and supplies to their subsidiary companies. The companies were each fined $5,000, and the directors were each fined one dollar. The verdicts were upheld on appeal in 1951.

Many AC Transit lines follow old Key System routes. Currently the district is planning a full scale Bus Rapid Transit
Bus rapid transit

Bus rapid transit is a broad term given to a variety of transportation systems that, through improvements to infrastructure, vehicles and scheduling, attempt to use buses to provide a service that is of a higher quality than an ordinary bus line....
 line for the 1 line on the International Boulevard and Telegraph Avenue corridors.

The metropolitan area is served by Bay Area Rapid Transit
Bay Area Rapid Transit

Bay Area Rapid Transit is a rapid transit system serving the San Francisco Bay Area. The Passenger rail terminology#Heavy rail public transit system connects downtown San Francisco with suburbs in the East Bay and northern San Mateo County, California....
 (BART) from eight stations in Oakland. The system has headquarters in Oakland, with major transfer hubs at MacArthur
MacArthur (BART station)

MacArthur is a Bay Area Rapid Transit metro station near MacArthur Boulevard in Oakland, California. The station's platforms are located in the Central reservation of California State Route 24 while the concourse mezzanine is located underneath the freeway's eastbound lanes....
 and Oakland City Center/12th Street
Oakland City Center/12th Street (BART station)

Oakland City Center/12th Street is an underground Bay Area Rapid Transit metro station located at 12th Street and Broadway next to the Oakland City Center in Downtown Oakland....
 stations. BART's headquarters was located in a building above the Lake Merritt Station
Lake Merritt (BART station)

The Lake Merritt Bay Area Rapid Transit metro station is located in Downtown Oakland on Oak Street near Lake Merritt, Chinatown, Oakland, Laney College and the Oakland Museum of California....
 until 2006, when it relocated to the Kaiser Center due to seismic safety concerns.

The city has regional and long distance passenger train service provided by Amtrak
Amtrak

The National Railroad Passenger Corporation, doing business as Amtrak , is a government-owned corporation that was organized on May 1, 1971 to provide Inter-city rail train#Passenger trains service in the United States....
, with a station located blocks from Jack London Square
Jack London Square

Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
 served by the Amtrak Capitol Corridor
Capitol Corridor

The Capitol Corridor is a 172-mile passenger train route operated by Amtrak in California. Because it is fully supported by the state, the Capitol Corridor operates under Amtrak California....
, Coast Starlight
Coast Starlight

The Coast Starlight is a 1,377-mile passenger train route operated by Amtrak on the West Coast of the United States. It runs from Seattle, Washington's King Street Station to Los Angeles, California's Union Station ....
 and San Joaquins
San Joaquins

The San Joaquin is a passenger train operated by Amtrak California in the Central Valley . The train is run twelve times each day over two routes....
 train routes. Capitol Corridor trains also stop at a second, newer Oakland Coliseum station. Amtrak's California Zephyr
California Zephyr

The California Zephyr is a 2,438-mile long passenger train route operated by Amtrak in the Midwestern and Western United States.It runs from Chicago, Illinois in the east to Emeryville, California in the west, passing through the states of Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California....
 has its western terminus at Emeryville, CA station
Emeryville (Amtrak station)

The Emeryville Amtrak station is an Amtrak station in Emeryville, California that replaced the older Amtrak 16th Street Station in Oakland, California....
.

The Alameda / Oakland Ferry operates ferry
Ferry

A ferry is a form of transport, usually a boat or ship, used to carry passengers and their vehicles across a body of water. Ferries are also used to transport freight and even railroad cars....
 service from Jack London Square
Jack London Square

Jack London Square is a popular tourist attraction on the waterfront of Oakland, California. Named after the author Jack London and owned by the Port of Oakland, it is the home of stores, restaurants, hotels, an Amtrak Oakland-Jack London Square , a Blue & Gold Fleet, the historic Heinold?s First and Last Chance Saloon, the cabin Jack Lond...
 to Alameda
Alameda, California

Alameda is a city in Alameda County, California, California, United States. It is located on a small island of the same name next to Oakland, California in the San Francisco Bay....
, San Francisco, and Angel Island
Angel Island, California

Angel Island is an island in San Francisco Bay that offers spectacular views of the San Francisco, California skyline, the Marin County, California Headlands and Mount Tamalpais....
.

Oakland licenses taxi-cabs, and has zoned cab stands in its downtown. There is currently a movement underway to increase the supply of taxis by increasing the number of taxi licenses. A bicycle pedi-cab service operates downtown.

Freight Rail
Freight service, which consists primarily of moving shipping containers to and from the Port of Oakland, is provided today by Union Pacific Railroad
Union Pacific Railroad

The Union Pacific Railroad , headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska, is the largest railroad network in the United States. James R. Young is president, CEO and Chairman....
 (UP), and to a lesser extent by BNSF Railway
BNSF Railway

The BNSF Railway , often referred to as the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway, headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, Texas, is one of the four remaining transcontinental railroads and one of the largest railroad networks in North America....
 (which now shares the tracks of the UP between Richmond and Oakland).

Historically, Oakland was served by several railroads. Besides the transcontinental line of the Southern Pacific, there was also the Santa Fe (whose Oakland terminal was actually in Emeryville), the Western Pacific Railroad
Western Pacific Railroad

The Western Pacific Railroad was a Class I railroad railroad in the United States. It is now part of the Union Pacific Railroad . It was the second railroad company to use this name....
 (who built a pier adjacent to the SP's), and the Sacramento Northern Railroad (eventually absorbed by the Western Pacific which in turn was absorbed by UP in 1983).

Sea
As one of the three major ports on the West Coast of the United States
West Coast of the United States

The "West Coast", "Western Seaboard", or "Pacific Coastline" are terms for the westernmost coastal states of the United States. It most often comprises California, Oregon and Washington....
, the Port of Oakland
Port of Oakland

The Port of Oakland was the first major port on the Pacific Coast of the United States to build terminals for container ships. It is now the fourth busiest container port in the United States; behind Port of Long Beach, Port of Los Angeles, and Port Newark....
 is the largest seaport on San Francisco Bay and the fourth busiest container port in the United States. It was one of the earliest seaports to switch to containerization
Containerization

Containerization is a system of intermodal freight transport cargo transport using standard International Organization for Standardization containers ...
 and to intermodal container transfer
Intermodal freight transport

Intermodal freight transport involves the transportation of cargo in a containerization or vehicle, using multiple modes of transportation , without any handling of the freight itself when changing modes....
, thereby displacing the Port of San Francisco
Port of San Francisco

File:Fishermans Wharf aerial view.jpgThe Port of San Francisco lies on the western edge of the San Francisco Bay near the Golden Gate. It has been called one of the three great natural harbors in the world, but it took two long centuries for navigators from Spain and England to find the anchorage originally called Yerba Buena ....
 which never modernized its waterfront. One of the earlier limitations to growth was the inability to transfer containers to rail lines, all crane
Crane (machine)

A crane is a lifting machine equipped with a winder , wire ropes or chains and Sheave that can be used both to lift and lower materials and to move them horizontally....
s historically operating between ocean
Ocean

An ocean is a major body of Seawater, and a principal component of the hydrosphere. Approximately 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by ocean, a World Ocean that is customarily divided into several principal oceans and smaller seas....
 vessel
Ship

A ship is a large watercraft that floats on water. Ships are generally distinguished from boats based on size. Ships may be found on lakes, seas, and rivers and they allow for a variety of activities, such as the ferry or cargo ships, fishing, cruise ship, Coast guard, and warship....
s and truck
Truck

File:Red truck USA.JPGA truck is a type of motor vehicle commonly used for carrying goods and materials. Some light trucks are relatively small, similar in size to a passenger automobile....
s. In the 1980s the Port of Oakland began the evaluation of development of an intermodal container transfer capability, i.e. facilities that now allow trans-loading of containers from vessels to either trucks or rail modes.

Utilities

  • Water and sewage treatment
    Sewage treatment

    Sewage treatment, or domestic wastewater treatment, is the process of removing contaminants from wastewater and household sewage, both runoff and domestic....
     are provided by East Bay Municipal Utility District
    East Bay Municipal Utility District

    The East Bay Municipal Utility District , colloquially referred to as "East Bay Mud" or "ebmud" , provides water and sewage treatment for customers in portions of Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California in California, on the eastern side of San Francisco Bay ....
     (EBMUD).
  • Natural gas
    Natural gas

    Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills....
     and electricity
    Electricity distribution

    File:Electricity grid simple- North America.svg|thumb|380px|right|Simplified diagram of AC electricity distribution from generation stations to consumers...
     are provided by PG&E
    Pacific Gas and Electric Company

    The Pacific Gas and Electric Company , is the Public utility that provides natural gas and electricity to most of Northern California. The southern part of the state is generally served by Southern California Edison for power and natural gas from Southern California Gas....
    .
  • Waste management
    Waste management

    File:Kathmandu-M?llabfuhr.jpgWaste management is the waste collection, transport, waste treatment, recycling or disposal, and monitoring of waste materials....
     is contracted to Waste Management, Inc
    Waste Management, Inc

    Waste Management, Inc. is a waste management, comprehensive waste managements company in North America. The company is headquartered in Suite 4000 at 1001 Fannin Street in Downtown Houston Houston, Texas, United States....
    . A four-week lockout
    Lockout (industry)

    A lockout is a work stoppage in which an employer prevents employees from working. This is different from a strike action, in which employees refuse to work....
     by WMI left trash piling up on city streets in July 2007.
  • Telephone service is provided primarily by AT&T
    AT&T

    AT&T Inc. is the largest US provider of both local and long distance telephone services, and Digital subscriber line Internet access. AT&T is the second largest provider of wireless service in the United States, with over 77 million wireless customers, and more than 150 million total customers....
    .
  • Cable television
    Cable television

    Cable television is a system of providing television to consumers via radio frequency signals transmitted to televisions through fixed optical fibers or coaxial cables as opposed to the over-the-air method used in traditional television broadcasting in which a television antenna is required....
     is provided by Comcast
    Comcast

    Comcast Corporation is the largest cable television company, the second largest Internet service provider and the fourth largest telephone service provider in the United States....
    .


Healthcare

  • Kaiser Permanente
    Kaiser Permanente

    Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R....
    , a HMO started during World War II
    World War II

    World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
     in 1942 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser
    Henry J. Kaiser

    Henry John Kaiser was an American industrialist who became known as the father of modern American shipbuilding....
    , to provide medical care for Kaiser Shipyards
    Kaiser Shipyards

    The Kaiser Shipyards were seven major shipbuilding yards located on the West Coast of the United States during World War II. They were owned by the Kaiser Shipbuilding Company, a creation of United States industrialist Henry J....
     workers, is based in Oakland and has a large medical center in the Piedmont
    Piedmont Avenue, Oakland, California

    The Piedmont Avenue Neighbourhood is a district in North Oakland, California. It is named for Piedmont Avenue, the main commercial street of the district....
     neighborhood.
  • Alta Bates Summit Medical Center
    Alta Bates Summit Medical Center

    Alta Bates Summit Medical Center is a hospital located in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area. Its three campuses are located in Berkeley, California and Oakland, California ....
    , Oakland (Summit Campus, referred to as "Pill Hill") is a recent merger with the former Alta Bates Medical Center in Berkeley; it is part of the Sutter Health
    Sutter Health

    Sutter Health is a hospital network in Northern California based in Sacramento, California.Serving patients and their families in more than 100 Northern California cities and towns, Sutter Health doctors, hospitals and other health care service providers join resources and share expertise to advance health care quality and access....
     network.
  • Alameda County Medical Center is operated by the county
    Alameda County, California

    Alameda County is a List of California counties in the U.S. state of California. It occupies most of the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area....
     and provides medical services to the medically indigent
    Medically Indigent Adult

    Medically indigent adults "" in the health care system of the United States are persons who do not have health insurance and who are not eligible for other health care coverage, such as Medicaid, Medicare , or private health insurance....
     who do not have health insurance
    Health insurance

    The term health insurance is generally used to describe a form of insurance that pays for medical expenses. It is sometimes used more broadly to include insurance covering Disability insurance or Long term care insurance needs....
    . Highland Hospital
    Highland Hospital (Oakland, California)

    Highland Hospital is a hospital located in Oakland, California.It is a Level II trauma center. ...
     in Oakland also is the trauma center
    Trauma center

    A trauma center is a hospital equipped to provide comprehensive emergency medical services to patients suffering Physical trauma injuries. Trauma centers were established as the medical establishment realized that traumatic injuries often require complex and multi-disciplinary treatment, including surgery in order to give the victim the best...
     for the northern area of the East Bay
    East Bay (San Francisco Bay Area)

    The East Bay is a subregion of the San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA and comprises Alameda County, California and Contra Costa County, California Counties....
    .
  • Children's Hospital Oakland
    Children's Hospital Oakland

    Children's Hospital Oakland, full name Children?s Hospital & Research Center Oakland, is a children's hospital in Oakland, California, California....
     is the primary medical center specializing in pediatrics
    Pediatrics

    Differences between adult and pediatric medicinePediatrics differs from adult medicine in many respects. The obvious body size differences are paralleled by maturational changes....
     in the East Bay.


Despite large tax breaks East Bay nonprofit hospitals receive for community service, public hospitals such as Highland devote a much larger portion of their operating expenses to charity care
Charity care

In the United States, charity care is health care provided for free or at reduced prices to low income patients. The percentage of physicians providing charity care dropped from 76% in 1996-97 to 68% in 2004-2005....
.
Mergers and closings
Summit Medical Center was a previous merger with Samuel Merritt Medical Center and Providence Medical Center in the 1990s. Peralta Hospital earlier had merged with Samuel Merritt Hospital. Oakland Hospital in the Fruitvale district closed in the 1990s. Naval Hospital Oakland (Oak Knoll Naval Hospital) closed during the military Base Realignment and Closure
Base Realignment and Closure

Base Realignment and Closure is a process of the United States US federal government directed at the administration and operation of the United States Armed Forces, used by the United States Department of Defense and Congress of the United States to close excess military installations and realign the total asset inventory in order to save m...
 of 1993.

Sister cities

Oakland has nine sister cities:
- Dalian
Dalian

Dalian is the governing sub-provincial city in the eastern Liaoning Province of Northeast China. Dalian is China's northernmost Warm water port....
 (China
People's Republic of China

The People's Republic of China , commonly known as China, is the largest country in East Asia and the List of countries by population in the world with over 1.3 billion people, approximately a fifth of the world's population....
) - Fukuoka
Fukuoka, Fukuoka

is the capital cities of Japan of Fukuoka Prefecture and is situated on the northern shore of the island of Kyushu in Japan, across the Korea Strait from South Korea Busan....
 (Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
) - Nakhodka
Nakhodka

Nakhodka is a seaport types of inhabited localities in Russia in Primorsky Krai, Russia. The city had 148,826 inhabitants as of the Russian Census , down from 160,056 recorded in the Soviet Census ....
 (Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
) - Ocho Ríos
Ocho Rios

Ocho R?os , Spanish for Eight Rivers, is a town on the northern coast of Jamaica, located in the Parishes of Jamaica of Saint Ann Parish, Jamaica....
 (Jamaica
Jamaica

Jamaica is an island nation of the Greater Antilles, in length and as much as in width situated in the Caribbean Sea. It is about south of Cuba, and west of the island of Hispaniola, on which Haiti and the Dominican Republic are situated....
) - Ulaanbaatar
Ulaanbaatar

Ulan Bator, or Ulaanbaatar , is the Capital and largest city of Mongolia. The city is an independent municipality not part of any aimags of Mongolia, and its population as of 2008 is just over 1 million....
 (Mongolia
Mongolia

Mongolia is a landlocked country in East Asia and Central Asia. It borders Russia to the north and People's Republic of China to the south, east and west....
)
- Sekondi Takoradi
Sekondi-Takoradi

Sekondi-Takoradi, population 335,000 , is the capital of the Western Region of Ghana. It is Ghana's fourth largest city and an industrial and commercial center....
 (Ghana
Ghana

The Republic of Ghana is a country in West Africa. It borders C?te d'Ivoire to the west, Burkina Faso to the north, Togo to the east, and the Gulf of Guinea to the south....
) - Santiago de Cuba
Santiago de Cuba

Santiago de Cuba is the capital city of Santiago de Cuba Province in the south-eastern area of the island nation of Cuba, some east south-east of the Cuban capital of Havana....
 (Cuba
Cuba

The Republic of Cuba is a country in the Caribbean. It consists of the island of Cuba , the island of Isla de la Juventud, and several adjacent small islands....
) - Agadir
Agadir

Agadir is a major city in southwest Morocco, capital of the Agadir province and the Sous-Massa-Draa economic region ....
 (Morocco
Morocco

Morocco , officially the Kingdom of Morocco , is a country located in North Africa with a population of nearly 34 million and an area just under 447,000 km2....
) - Da Nang
Da Nang

Da Nang is a major port city in the Nam Trung Bo of Vietnam, on the coast of the South China Sea. It is one of the five independent municipalities in Vietnam....
 (Vietnam
Vietnam

Vietnam , officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam , is the easternmost country on the Indochina Peninsula in Southeast Asia. It is bordered by People's Republic of China to the north, Laos to the northwest, Cambodia to the southwest, and the South China Sea to the east....
)


See also


  • East Bay
  • Books about Oakland, California
    Books about Oakland, California

    Books about Oakland, California grouped by genre and listed by publication date. Along with commercially published works primarily focused on aspects of Oakland, this list also includes some regional and state-wide titles with substantial coverage of Oakland; some booklets and commemorative volumes; some privately printed volumes; and some l...
  • Ebonics Issue in Oakland
    African American Vernacular English

    African American Vernacular English ?also called African American English; less precisely Black English, Black Vernacular, Black English Vernacular , or Black Vernacular English ?is an African American Variety of American English....
  • Hyphy
    Hyphy

    Hyphy is a slang word created by Bay Area Rapper Keak Da Sneak which is used in the San Francisco Bay Area that literally means "rambunctious"....
  • List of people from Oakland, California


External links

  • *
  • images
  • - non-profit membership organization advocating the protection, preservation, and revitalization of Oakland's architectural, historic, cultural and natural resources.
  • - ongoing public arts and media campaign designed to illuminate the unique cultural legacy of Oakland,
  • from Oakland Public Library
  • of the Oakland Museum of California
    Oakland Museum of California

    Oakland Museum of California or Oakland Museum is a museum dedicated to the art, history, and natural science of California located in Oakland, California....
    . Over 7,000 Oakland objects including historical photographs, paintings, documents, objects, all about Oakland.
  • at the Oakland Museum website.
  • at the Oakland Convention Center's website.
  • The Claremont Hotel, Downtown Oakland, Jack London Square, Preservation Park, Port of Oakland
  • Photos of Oakland 2001-2003
  • Test scores, parent reviews and ratings for Oakland schools.