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Eureka, California

Eureka (Wiyot: Jaroujiji,[17] Hupa: do'-wi-lotl-ding,[18] Karuk: uuth[19]) is the principal city and county seat of Humboldt County in the Redwood Empire region of California. The city is located on U.S. Route 101 on the shores of Humboldt Bay, 270 miles (435 km) north of San Francisco and 100 miles (161 km) south of the Oregon border.[20] At the 2010 census, the population of the city was 27,191,[21][22][23] and the population of Greater Eureka[24][25] was 45,034.[12]

Eureka, California
Aerial view: Eureka on Humboldt Bay
Motto: 
Eureka! (I have found it!)[1]
Location within Humboldt County
Eureka
Location within California
Eureka
Location within the United States
Coordinates: 40°48′07″N 124°09′49″W / 40.80194°N 124.16361°W / 40.80194; -124.16361Coordinates: 40°48′07″N 124°09′49″W / 40.80194°N 124.16361°W / 40.80194; -124.16361[2]
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountyHumboldt
FoundedMay 13, 1850
Incorporated (town)April 18, 1856[3]
Re-incorporated (city)February 19, 1874
Government
 • TypeCouncil-Manager[4]
 • MayorSusan Seaman[5]
 • City managerGreg Sparks[6]
 • State senatorMike McGuire (D)[7]
 • AssemblymemberJim Wood (D)[8]
 • U. S. rep.Jared Huffman (D)[9]
Area
 • City14.45 sq mi (37.43 km2)
 • Land9.38 sq mi (24.30 km2)
 • Water5.07 sq mi (13.13 km2)  35.07%
 • Urban
18.498 sq mi (47.908 km2)
Elevation39 ft (12 m)
Population
 • City27,191
 • Estimate 
(2019)[14]
26,710
 • Density2,846.33/sq mi (1,098.96/km2)
 • Urban
45,034[11][12]
DemonymEurekan
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)
ZIP Codes[15]
95501–95503, 95534
Area code707
FIPS code06-23042
GNIS feature IDs277605, 2410463
Websitewww.ci.eureka.ca.gov
[16]
Reference no.477

Eureka is the largest coastal city between San Francisco and Portland, Oregon,[26] and the westernmost city of more than 25,000 residents in the 48 contiguous states.[27][28] The proximity to the sea causes the city to have an extremely maritime climate with very small annual temperature differences and seasons mainly being defined by the rainy winters and dry summers, whereas nearby inland areas are much hotter in summer. It is the regional center for government, health care, trade, and the arts on the North Coast north of the San Francisco Bay Area. Greater Eureka, one of California's major commercial fishing ports, is the location of the largest deep-water port between San Francisco and Coos Bay, a stretch of about 500 miles (805 km).[27]

The headquarters of both the Six Rivers National Forest and the North Coast Redwoods District of the California State Parks System are in Eureka. As entrepôt for hundreds of lumber mills that once existed in the area, the city played a leading role in the historic West Coast lumber trade. The entire city is a state historic landmark, which has hundreds of significant Victorian homes, including the nationally recognized Carson Mansion, and the city has retained its original 19th-century commercial core as a nationally recognized Old Town Historic District.[29] Eureka is home to California's oldest zoo, the Sequoia Park Zoo.[30]

History

Eureka's Pacific coastal location on Humboldt Bay, adjacent to abundant redwood forests, provided the reason for settlement of this 19th-century seaport town. Before the arrival of Euro-American settlers, including farmers, miners, fishermen, and loggers, the area was home to Native Americans.

Native Americans

The Wiyot people lived in Jaroujiji (Wiyot: "where you sit and rest"), now known as Eureka, for thousands of years before European arrival. Their traditional coastal homeland ranged from the lower Mad River through Humboldt Bay and south along the lower basin of the Eel River. The Wiyot are particularly known for their basketry and fishery management.[17] An extensive collection of intricate basketry of the area's indigenous groups exists in the Clarke Historical Museum in Old Town Eureka.

As of 2013, Eureka High School has the largest Yurok language program in California.[31]

The Wiyot and Yurok are the westernmost peoples to speak Algic languages.

Founding on Humboldt Bay

For nearly 300 years after 1579, European exploration of the coast of what would become northern California repeatedly missed definitively locating Humboldt Bay because of a combination of geographic features and weather conditions which concealed the narrow bay entrance from view. Despite a well-documented 1806 sighting by Russian explorers, the bay was not definitively known by Europeans until an 1849 overland exploration provided a reliable accounting of the exact location of what is the second-largest bay in California.[32] The timing of this discovery led to the May 13, 1850, founding of the settlement of Eureka on its shore by the Union and Mendocino Exploring (development) companies.[33]

Gold Rush era

After the primary California Gold Rush in the Sierras, Humboldt Bay was settled with the intent of providing a convenient alternative to the long overland route from Sacramento to supply miners on the Trinity, Klamath and Salmon Rivers where gold had been discovered. Though the ideal location on Humboldt Bay adjacent to naturally deeper shipping channels ultimately guaranteed Eureka's development as the primary city on the bay, Arcata's proximity to developing supply lines to inland gold mines ensured supremacy over Eureka through 1856.[29]

"Eureka" received its name from a Greek word meaning "I have found it!"[34][35][36] This exuberant statement of successful (or hopeful) gold rush miners is also the official motto of the State of California. Eureka is the only U.S. location to use the same seal as the state for its seal.[37]

Wiyot Massacre

The first Europeans venturing into Humboldt Bay encountered the indigenous Wiyot. After 1850, Americans ultimately overwhelmed the Wiyot, whose maximum population before the Europeans' arrival numbered in the hundreds in the area of what would become the county's primary city. But in almost every case, settlers ultimately cut off access to ancestral sources of food in addition to the outright theft of land, despite the efforts of some U.S. government and military officials to assist the native peoples or at least maintain peace. Fort Humboldt was established by the U.S. Army on January 30, 1853, as a buffer between Native Americans, gold-seekers and settlers, commanded by Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Robert C. Buchanan of the U.S. 4th Infantry Regiment.[38] The 1860 Wiyot Massacre took place on Indian Island in the spring of 1860, committed by a group of locals thought to be composed primarily of Eureka businessmen.[33] (The male Wiyot tribal members had left the island during their annual New Year ritual and the vigilantes killed as many as 250 children, women, and elderly tribal members)[39] Major Gabriel J. Rains, Commanding Officer of Fort Humboldt at the time, reported to his commanding officer that a local group of vigilantes had resolved to "kill every peaceable Indian – man, woman, and child."[40]

Lumber industry

 
Mill yard across the bay from Eureka

Eureka's first post office opened in 1853[41] just as the town began to carve its grid plan into the edge of a forest it would ultimately consume to feed the building of San Francisco and points beyond. Many of the first immigrants who arrived as prospectors were also lumbermen, and the vast potential for industry on the bay was soon realized, especially as many hopeful gold miners realized the difficulty and infrequency of striking it rich in the mines. By 1854, after only four years since the founding, seven of nine mills processing timber into marketable lumber on Humboldt Bay were within Eureka.[33] A year later, 140 lumber schooners operated in and out of Humboldt Bay moving lumber from the mills to booming cities along the Pacific coast.[33] By the time the charter for Eureka was granted in 1856, busy mills inside the city had a daily production capacity of 220,000 board feet.[42] This level of production, which would grow significantly and continue for more than a century, secured Eureka as the "timber capital" of California. Eureka was at the apex of rapid growth of the lumber industry because of its location between huge coast redwood forests and its control of the primary port facilities. Loggers brought the enormous redwood trees down. Dozens of movable narrow gauge railroads brought trainloads of logs and finished lumber products to the main rail line, which led directly to Eureka's wharf and waiting schooners. By the 1880s, railroads eventually brought the production of hundreds of mills throughout the region to Eureka, primarily for shipment through its port. After the early 1900s, shipment of products occurred by trucks, trains, and ships from Eureka, Humboldt Bay, and other points in the region, but Eureka remained the busy center of all this activity for over 120 years. These factors and others made Eureka a significant city in early California state history.[citation needed]

Commercial center

 
The Carson Mansion (1886) in Eureka's Old Town

A bustling commercial district with ornate Victorian-style buildings rose in proximity to the waterfront, reflecting the great prosperity experienced during this era. Hundreds of these Victorian homes remain today, of which many are totally restored and a few have always remained in their original elegance and splendor. The representation of these homes in Eureka, grouped with those in nearby Arcata and the Victorian village of Ferndale, are of considerable importance to the overall development of Victorian architecture built in the nation. The magnificent Carson Mansion on 2nd and M Streets, is perhaps the most spectacular Victorian in the nation. The home was built between 1884 and 1886 by renowned 19th-century architects Newsom and Newsom for lumber baron William M. Carson. This project was designed to keep mill workers and expert craftsman busy during a slow period in the industry. Old Town Eureka, the original downtown center of this busy city in the 19th century, has been restored and has become a lively arts center.[43] The Old Town area has been declared an Historic District by the National Register of Historic Places. The district is made up of over 150 buildings, which in total represents much of Eureka's original 19th-century core commercial center. This nexus of culture behind the redwood curtain still contains much of its Victorian architecture, which, if not maintained for original use as commercial buildings or homes, have been transformed into scores of unique lodgings, restaurants, and small shops featuring a burgeoning cottage industry of hand-made creations, from glassware to wood-burning stoves, and a large variety of locally created art.

Fishing, shipping, and boating

 
Illustrated map of Eureka (1902)

Eureka's founding and livelihood was and remains linked to Humboldt Bay, the Pacific Ocean, and related industries, especially fishing. Salmon fisheries sprang up along the Eel River as early as 1851, and, within seven years, 2,000 barrels of cured fish and 50,000 pounds (23,000 kg) of smoked salmon were processed and shipped out of Humboldt Bay annually from processing plants on Eureka's wharf.[citation needed] In 1858 the first of many ships built in Eureka was launched, beginning an industry that spanned scores of years. The bay is also the site of the West Coast's largest oyster farming operations, which began its commercial status in the nineteenth century. Eureka is the home port to more than 100 fishing vessels (with an all-time high of over 400 in 1981) in two modern marinas which can berth approximately 400 boats within the city limits[44] and at least 50 more in nearby Fields Landing, which is part of Greater Eureka. Area catches historically include, among other species, salmon, tuna, Dungeness crab, and shrimp, with historic annual total fishing landings totaling about 36,000,000 pounds (16,000,000 kg) in 1981.[42]

Chinese expulsion

Rising emigration from China in the late 19th century sparked conflict between white settlers and immigrants, which ultimately led to the Chinese Exclusion Act. Economic downturns resulting in competition for jobs led to sinophobia and violent actions against Chinese immigrants, especially on the Pacific coast. In February 1885, the racial tension in Eureka intensified when Eureka City Councilman David Kendall was caught in the crossfire of two rival Chinese gangs and killed. This led to the convening of 600 Eureka men and resulted in the forcible permanent expulsion of all 480 Chinese residents of Eureka's Chinatown.[45][1]

Among those who guarded the city jail during the height of the sinophobic tension was James Gillett, who went on to become Governor of California.[46] The anti-Chinese ordinance was repealed in 1959.[45][47]

Queen City of the Ultimate West

 
The Tudor Revival–style Eureka Inn (1922)

Completion of the Northwestern Pacific Railroad in 1914 provided the local lumber industry with an alternative to ships for transport of its millions of board feet of lumber to reach markets in San Francisco and beyond. It also provided the first safe land route between San Francisco and Eureka for people to venture to the Redwood Empire. As a result, Eureka's population of 7,300 swelled to 15,000 within ten years. By 1922, the Redwood Highway was completed, providing for the first reliable, direct overland route for automobiles from San Francisco.[citation needed] By 1931, the Eureka Street Railway operated fifteen streetcars over twelve miles (19 km) of track.[48] Eureka's transportation connection to the "outside" world had changed dramatically after more than half a century of stage rides or treacherous steamship passage through the Humboldt Bar and on the Pacific Ocean to San Francisco. The building of the Eureka Inn coincided with the opening of the new road to San Francisco. As a result of immense civic pride during this early-20th-century era of expansion, Eureka officially nicknamed itself "Queen City of the Ultimate West." The tourism industry, lodging to support it, and related marketing had been born.[29]

Post–World War II

The timber economy of Eureka is part of the Pacific Northwest timber economy which rises and falls with boom-and-bust economic times.[49] In Eureka, both the timber industry and commercial fishing declined after the Second World War.[citation needed]

The Columbus Day Storm of 1962 downed trees and caused a surplus in the domestic timber market, which caused increased shipping to foreign markets. The log trade with Japan and other Pacific Rim nations increased.[49] Despite many rumors to the contrary, little of this wood returned to U.S. markets.[49] In 1989, the U.S. changed log export laws, permitting lower-cost timber from public lands to be exported as raw logs overseas to help balance the federal budget.[50]

After 1990, the global log market declined, and exports fell at the same time as Pacific Northwest log prices increased; leading buyers to seek less expensive logs from Canada and the southern United States.[49] However, debate continues among four stakeholders: timber owners, domestic processors, consumers and communities, on the impact of log export on the local economy.[49][51] During the span 1991 to 2001, timber harvest peaked in 1997.[52] The local timber market was also affected by the Pacific Lumber Company hostile takeover[53] and ultimate bankruptcy.[54]

Local fisheries expanded through the 1970s and early 1980s. During the 1970s, Eureka fishermen landed more than half of the fish and shellfish produced and consumed in California.[55] In 2010 between 100 and 120 commercial fishing vessels listed Eureka as homeport.[55] The highest landings of all species were 36.9 million pounds (16.7 million kg) in 1981 while the lowest were in 2001 with 9.4 million pounds (4.3 million kg).[55]

After 1990 regulatory, economic, and other events led to a contraction of the local commercial fleet.[55] In 1991, the Woodley Island marina opened, providing docking facilities for much of Eureka's commercial and recreational fleet.[55] Many species are considered to be overfished.[55] Recreational fishing has increased over time. Fifty percent of recreational fishermen using local boats are tourists from outside the area.[55]

Commercial Pacific oyster aquaculture in Humboldt Bay produced an average of 7,600,000 pounds (3,400,000 kg) of oysters from 1956 to 1965[55] an average of 844,444 pounds (383,033 kg) per year. In 2004, only 600,000 pounds (270,000 kg) were harvested.[55] Oysters and oyster seed continue to be exported from Humboldt Bay.[55] The value of the oysters and spawn is more than $6 million per year.[55] Consolidation of buyers and landing facilities resulted in local vulnerability to unexpected events, leading the city to obtain grant funding for and complete the Fishermen's Terminal on the waterfront which will provide fish handling, marketing, and public spaces.[55]

 
Historical seismicity[56]

Significant earthquakes

The area regularly experiences large earthquakes as it is situated on the southern end the Cascadia subduction zone and near the San Andreas Fault, which interface around the Mendocino Triple Junction.[56] On January 9, 2010, a 6.5 magnitude earthquake occurred about 33 miles (53 km) off shore from Eureka.[57] After two seconds, it became a violent "jumper", making objects fly;[58] the mostly vertical shocks from the ground led to broken windows in shops, overturned shelving in homes and stores, and damage to architectural detail on a number of historic buildings.[57][59] Local hospitals treated mostly minor related injuries, and electrical power was out over a large area. Numerous natural gas leaks occurred, but no fires resulted.[58][60] This was the largest recent earthquake since the April 25–26, 1992 sequence.[61] It was followed on February 4, 2010, by a magnitude 5.9 earthquake which struck about 35 miles (56 km) northwest of the community of Petrolia and nearly 50 miles (80 km) west of Eureka. The shaking was felt within a 150-mile (240 km) radius, as far north as southern Oregon and as far south as Sonoma County.[61][62] The largest recorded in the area was the 7.2 Mw  event on November 8, 1980.[63][64] The larger earthquakes can pose a tsunami threat to coastal areas.[65]

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 14.5 square miles (38 km2), of which 9.4 square miles (24 km2) is land and 5.1 square miles (13 km2) or 35.07% is water.

Eureka is situated within California's Redwood Empire region which includes Pacific Ocean coast, Humboldt Bay, and several rivers in addition to Redwood National and State Parks and Humboldt Redwoods State Park. The location of Eureka on U.S. 101 is 283 miles (455 km) north of San Francisco and 315 mi (507 km) northwest of Sacramento.

The city marina is on one of three islands at a narrow point on the 13-mile-long (21 km) bay and increases in elevation slightly as it spreads north, south, and especially to the east. The city gently encroaches at least two miles (3.2 km) eastward into primarily Redwood and Douglas-fir second growth forests. The city has a traditional grid that generally radiates toward the points of the compass. Most post-1970 houses were built in formerly clear cut forested areas.

The transition between the official city limits and smaller unincorporated areas is mostly not discernible. Eastern areas including secluded developments on a golf course among or in close proximity to extensive second-growth forest have more recently developed. These new houses were built as a result of the Eureka Community Plan of 1995 in attempt to bring locals close to centers of recreation and encourage community interaction.[66] The city then gives way to hills and mountains of the rugged coast range, which quickly exceed 2,000 feet (610 m) in elevation.

Eureka is more or less on the same latitude as Atlantic cities New York City and Porto in Portugal along with the Mediterranean city of Naples in Italy,[67] all of whom have much warmer summers in spite of also being on coastlines.

Climate

Eureka enjoys a mild, temperate cool-summer mediterranean climate (Köppen climate classification: Csb). Due to the influence of the Pacific Ocean and being on the shoreline of the cold-water Humboldt Bay, its temperatures are cooler than those of a typical mediterranean climate. Winters are mild and rainy, and summers mild, cool, and dry. The average high in December, the coolest month, is 55.0 °F (12.8 °C), while the average high temperature in August, the warmest month, is 64.3 °F (17.9 °C), which is very cool and mild for an area at such a southerly latitude. Eureka's average summer temperatures are much cooler than New York City and Istanbul which lie on the same latitude (and its average winter temperatures are also milder than those two cities); and are similar to those of Southeast Alaska, Scotland or Tierra del Fuego in southern Argentina and Chile, which lie well above the 50th parallel.

The seasonal temperature variation is very small; the difference between the August average of 58.5 °F (14.7 °C) and the December average of 47.8 °F (8.8 °C) is only 10.7 °F (5.9 °C), about equal to the diurnal temperature variation. Eureka is unique among mid-latitude climates in that in more than 135 years of recorded temperatures, February has measured a warmer absolute maximum temperature than both the two high summer months of July and August. The absolute maximum temperature of July is merely 77 °F (25 °C) in spite of the high sun strength. The two warmest nights measured in Eureka were both during winter, as 18 January 1981 recorded a low of 63 °F (17 °C), tying a 26 February 1980 record.[68][69]

In addition, Eureka has a very short and milder range of temperatures compared to most of the contiguous US, with the all-time highest and lowest temperatures recorded in Eureka being only 87 °F (30.6 °C) on October 26, 1993, September 2, 2017,[70] and September 28, 2020,[71] and 20 °F (−6.7 °C) on January 14, 1888, respectively. On average, the highest temperature seen throughout the entire year is only 79 °F (26.1 °C), one of the mildest in the contiguous US, while on average the lowest temperature seen in the year (most often occurring at night) is only a similarly moderate 29 °F (−1.7 °C), yielding a very short and mild temperature range of about 50 °F (28 °C) throughout the year. Additionally, Eureka remains the only city on the West Coast of the continental United States to have never recorded a temperature of 90 °F (32.2 °C).

Temperatures drop to freezing or below only on a few nights per year, and daytime temperatures for these days are typically mild temperatures ranging between 43–58 °F (6.1–14.4 °C). Eureka has never recorded an ice day, with the coldest daytime maximum being 34 °F (1 °C) in 1990.[69] Between 1991 and 2020, the coldest daytime high of the year was 45 °F (7 °C) and the warmest night averaged 59 °F (15 °C).[69] NOAA’s weather station averages indicate only 0.18 in (4.6 mm) of rainfall in July, which is well within the mediterranean range, only with rainier winters, cooler and milder air than a typical mediterranean climate. Winter temperatures instead are similar to many climates found in Southern Europe from which basin the climate type is named.

The area experiences coastal fog throughout the year, especially during summer on the coast when temperatures in the city remain consistently around a mild 64 °F (17.8 °C). This phenomenon, together with cool breezes from the Pacific Ocean, keeps Eureka relatively cool and mild, while contrasting with inland areas in relative proximity to Humboldt Bay, which are prone to extreme temperatures that often exceed 100 °F (37.8 °C). This causes frequent temperature differences between Eureka and nearby inland areas during summer and early fall of 30 to 40 °F (17 to 22 °C). Despite the common coastal fog, Eureka enjoys on average about 55% possible sunshine per year, about on par with cities such as Calgary, Portland, New York City and Chicago.[72][73][74][75]

Annual precipitation averages 40.3 in or 1,024 mm. Measurable precipitation falls on an average of 127.5 days each year, concentrated heavily from October to April. On average, December is the wettest month, averaging over 8 in (203.2 mm) of precipitation, virtually all of it rain. The wettest "rain year" was from July 1889 to June 1890 with 73.30 in (1,861.8 mm) and the driest from July 1976 to June 1977 with 17.56 in (446.0 mm). The greatest monthly precipitation was 23.21 in (589.5 mm) in December 2002. The greatest 24-hour precipitation was 6.79 in (172.5 mm) on December 27, 2002. However, historic 100-year dramatic weather events such as the Christmas Week flood of 1955 and, especially, the Christmas flood of 1964, which severely damaged the region, may not be reflected in records listed herein. Snowfall on the coast happens only on rare occasions, averaging 0.2 in or 0.51 cm as of the 1981–2010 normals, but only five years during that period received measurable snowfall.[76] The most snowfall in one month was 6.9 in or 18 cm in January 1907.

Climate data for Eureka, California (NWS Forecast Office, Woodley Island), 1991–2020 normals,[a] extremes 1886–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 78
(26)
85
(29)
78
(26)
80
(27)
84
(29)
85
(29)
77
(25)
82
(28)
87
(31)
87
(31)
81
(27)
77
(25)
87
(31)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 66.1
(18.9)
66.5
(19.2)
65.9
(18.8)
67.6
(19.8)
69.4
(20.8)
69.0
(20.6)
69.4
(20.8)
71.7
(22.1)
74.3
(23.5)
74.8
(23.8)
68.2
(20.1)
64.8
(18.2)
78.4
(25.8)
Average high °F (°C) 55.1
(12.8)
55.4
(13.0)
56.1
(13.4)
57.4
(14.1)
59.6
(15.3)
61.9
(16.6)
63.1
(17.3)
64.0
(17.8)
63.9
(17.7)
61.9
(16.6)
57.8
(14.3)
54.7
(12.6)
59.2
(15.1)
Daily mean °F (°C) 47.9
(8.8)
48.4
(9.1)
49.2
(9.6)
50.8
(10.4)
53.7
(12.1)
56.0
(13.3)
57.7
(14.3)
58.5
(14.7)
57.2
(14.0)
54.3
(12.4)
50.5
(10.3)
47.4
(8.6)
52.6
(11.4)
Average low °F (°C) 40.8
(4.9)
41.3
(5.2)
42.4
(5.8)
44.2
(6.8)
47.7
(8.7)
50.1
(10.1)
52.4
(11.3)
53.0
(11.7)
50.5
(10.3)
46.8
(8.2)
43.2
(6.2)
40.0
(4.4)
46.0
(7.8)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 31.8
(−0.1)
32.7
(0.4)
34.2
(1.2)
36.6
(2.6)
40.9
(4.9)
44.4
(6.9)
48.6
(9.2)
48.8
(9.3)
44.9
(7.2)
38.7
(3.7)
33.3
(0.7)
30.7
(−0.7)
28.9
(−1.7)
Record low °F (°C) 20
(−7)
24
(−4)
29
(−2)
31
(−1)
35
(2)
40
(4)
43
(6)
44
(7)
36
(2)
32
(0)
27
(−3)
21
(−6)
20
(−7)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 6.67
(169)
5.64
(143)
5.75
(146)
3.64
(92)
1.66
(42)
0.70
(18)
0.18
(4.6)
0.18
(4.6)
0.68
(17)
2.31
(59)
4.89
(124)
8.10
(206)
40.40
(1,026)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 0.03
(0.08)
0.03
(0.08)
0.04
(0.10)
0.01
(0.03)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0.17
(0.43)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 16.5 15.2 16.0 13.8 9.3 5.5 3.0 3.5 4.7 8.7 14.3 17.1 127.6
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 0.07 0.03 0.03 0.03 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.17
Mean monthly sunshine hours 140.1 143.7 207.4 253.1 280.5 277.7 273.4 236.5 220.3 175.8 131.3 126.2 2,466
Percent possible sunshine 47 48 56 63 63 62 60 55 59 51 44 44 55
Source: NOAA (sun and relative humidity 1961–1990)[76][77][78]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
1860612
18702,049234.8%
18802,63928.8%
18904,85884.1%
19007,32750.8%
191011,84561.7%
192012,9239.1%
193015,75221.9%
194017,0558.3%
195023,05835.2%
196028,13722.0%
197024,337−13.5%
198024,153−0.8%
199027,02511.9%
200026,128−3.3%
201027,1914.1%
202026,512−2.5%
U.S. Decennial Census[79][80]
2010–2020[81]
 
Bookstore in Eureka's Old Town
 
The Eureka Theatre (built in 1937) is on the National Register of Historic Places. It is listed as a Streamline Moderne Theater.

The population of the city was 27,191 at the 2010 census, up from 26,128 at the 2000 census, representing a 4.1% increase, and the population of Greater Eureka[24] was 45,034[12][21] at the 2010 Census, up from 43,452[82] at the 2000 census, representing a 3.6% increase.

According to a report by the City of Eureka, the Greater Eureka area minimally includes the unincorporated adjacent or nearby neighborhoods and Census Defined Populated Areas of Bayview, Cutten, Elk River, Freshwater, Humboldt Hill, Indianola, Myrtletown, Pine Hill, Ridgewood Heights, and Rosewood,[83] all of which have Eureka addresses, postal zip codes and Eureka-specific telephone numbers. The Greater Eureka area makes up the largest urban settlement on the Pacific Coast between San Francisco and Portland.[24] This area is similar to what the U.S. Census officially defines as the Eureka UC (urban cluster), which is a "densely settled core of census tracts and/or census blocks that meet minimum population density requirements, along with adjacent territory containing non-residential urban land uses as well as territory with low population density included to link outlying densely settled territory with the densely settled core" of up to 50,000 in population. The bayside communities of Manila, Samoa, and Fairhaven (all on the Samoa Peninsula), and King Salmon and Fields Landing (both located south of the city), and communities listed above, with the exception of Elk River and Freshwater, are shown to be part of the Eureka Urban Cluster.[84] Eureka is the largest city of the Eureka-Arcata-Fortuna Micropolitan Area, a construct of the U.S. Census Bureau, which is synonymous with the County of Humboldt.[85]

2000 Census data

As of the census[86] of 2000, there were 26,128 people. The population density was 2,764.5 inhabitants per square mile (1,067.4/km2). There were 11,637 housing units at an average density of 1,231.3 per square mile (475.4/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 88.5% White, 1.2% Black or African American, 4.2% Native American, 2.6% Asian, 0.3% Pacific Islander, 2.7% from other races, and 5.10% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 10.8% of the population.

There were 10,957 households, out of which 25.8% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 34.8% were married couples living together, 14.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 46.3% were non-families. 35.3% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.26 and the average family size was 2.93. In the city, the population dispersal was 22.4% under the age of 18, 11.6% from 18 to 24, 28.9% from 25 to 44, 23.5% from 45 to 64, and 13.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.7 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $25,849, and the median income for a family was $33,438. Males had a median income of $28,706 versus $22,038 for females. The per capita income for the city was $16,174. About 15.8% of families and 23.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 29.6% of those under the age of 18 and 11.1% of those 65 and older.

2010 Census data

The 2010 United States Census[87] reported that Eureka had a population of 27,191. The population density was 1,881.3 inhabitants per square mile (726.4/km2). The racial makeup of Eureka was 21,565 (79.3%) White, 514 (1.9%) African American, 1,011 (3.7%) Native American, 1,153 (4.2%) Asian, 176 (0.6%) Pacific Islander, 1,181 (4.3%) from other races, and 1,591 (5.9%) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 3,143 persons (11.6%).

The census reported that 25,308 people (93.1% of the population) lived in households, 1,434 (5.3%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 449 (1.7%) were institutionalized.

There were 11,150 households, out of which 2,891 (25.9%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 3,554 (31.9%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 1,449 (13.0%) had a female householder with no husband present, 710 (6.4%) had a male householder with no wife present. There were 1,161 (10.4%) unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 146 (1.3%) same-sex married couples or partnerships. 3,971 households (35.6%) were made up of individuals, and 1,183 (10.6%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.27. There were 5,713 families (51.2% of all households); the average family size was 2.93.

The population dispersal was 5,431 people (20.0%) under the age of 18, 3,102 people (11.4%) aged 18 to 24, 8,021 people (29.5%) aged 25 to 44, 7,422 people (27.3%) aged 45 to 64, and 3,215 people (11.8%) who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 36.2 years. For every 100 females, there were 106.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 105.7 males. There were 11,891 housing units at an average density of 822.7 per square mile (317.6/km2), of which 11,150 were occupied, of which 4,829 (43.3%) were owner-occupied, and 6,321 (56.7%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.0%; the rental vacancy rate was 3.7%. 11,251 people (41.4% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 14,057 people (51.7%) lived in rental housing units.

Economy

 
Carson Block Building

The economic base of the city was founded on timber and fishing and supplying gold mining efforts inland. Gold mining diminished quickly in the early years, and activities of timber and fishing have also diminished, especially in the latter decades of the twentieth century. Today, the major industries are tourism, timber (in value), and healthcare and services (in number of jobs). Major employers today in Eureka include the following governmental entities: College of the Redwoods, The County of Humboldt, and the Humboldt County Office of Education. St. Joseph Hospital is the largest private employer in Eureka.[88]

Government

 
Eureka's Historic Old Town. View is to the east on 2nd Street, which was the equivalent of Main St. in the Victorian era.

Local government

The City of Eureka has a mayor-council system of governance. Primary power lies with the five council members, divided into five wards. The mayor has the power to appoint, as well as ceremonial duties, though the job includes presiding over council meetings and meeting visiting dignitaries.[89] Official city business is administered by the Office of the City Manager. The Eureka City Council regularly meets on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of the month at 5:30 pm for closed session, and 6:30 pm for open session. Open sessions are open to the public.[90]

State and federal government

Eureka is in the 2nd Senate District, represented by Democrat Mike McGuire,[7] and the 2nd Assembly District, represented by Democrat Jim Wood.[8] Federally, Eureka is in California's 2nd congressional district, represented by Democrat Jared Huffman.[9]

Infrastructure

Transportation

 
View of southernmost span of Route 255 "Samoa Bridge." Woodley Island Marina (on Humboldt Bay), Eureka, is visible in the foreground with northeasterly views of Fickle Hill (Coast Ranges) in the background.

Land

  U.S. Route 101 is the major north and south highway, which connects Eureka to the rest of the North Coast region. The highway connects to Oregon, located approximately 100 miles (161 km) to the north, and San Francisco, over 250 miles (402 km) to the south. The highway follows city streets through the city, with flow and cross-traffic controlled by traffic signals. Highway 101 enters Eureka from the south as Broadway. As it reaches the downtown area, it splits into a one-way couplet composed of 4th Street and 5th Street. On the north side of the city, northbound and southbound rejoin at the northeast side before the highway becomes a restricted (safety corridor) expressway (to Arcata and points beyond) as double bridges cross the Eureka Slough (mouth of the Freshwater Creek).[91]

  State Route 255 is an alternate route of U.S. 101 between Eureka and the nearby city of Arcata, running along the western shore of Humboldt Bay. It begins in the downtown area at U.S. 101 and proceeds north along R Street towards the Samoa Bridge and the community of Samoa.[91]

  State Route 299 (formerly U.S. Route 299) connects to U.S. Route 101 at the northern end of Arcata. Route 299 begins at that point and extends easterly to serve as the major traffic artery to the east for Eureka.[91]

Air

Eureka's full-service airport is the Arcata-Eureka Airport, located 15 miles (24 km) north in McKinleyville. This airport has one airline, United Airlines, and connects to San Francisco and Los Angeles. Murray Field and Eureka Municipal Airport are general aviation airports for private and charter air service. Both are located adjacent to Humboldt Bay. Kneeland Airport, at 2,737 feet (834 m) in elevation, is a general aviation airport that provides an option for pilots choosing to land when the prevalent marine layer is affecting airports nearer sea level.[92]

Water

The Humboldt Bay Harbor Recreation & Conservation District manages the resources of Humboldt Bay and its environs, including the deep-water port. The port is located directly west of the city and is serviced across the bay in the community of Samoa. In addition to two deep-water channel docks for large ships, several modern small-craft marinas are available for private use, with a total capacity of more than 400 boats.[93]

Bus service

Public bus transportation services within Eureka are provided by the Eureka Transit Service. The Redwood Transit System provides bus transportation through Eureka and connects to major towns and places outside the city, including educational institutions. Dial-A-Ride service is available through an application process.

Amtrak provides Thruway Bus service to Eureka at its unstaffed bus stop. The bus service connects passengers from the northernmost coastal train station in Martinez, California, and continues to southern Oregon.

Greyhound provides bus service to San Francisco from Eureka. Tickets may be purchased online or at the nearest full-service station in Arcata.

Transit in Eureka is expected to be improved by the $30 million Eureka Regional Transit and Housing Center, or EaRTH Center, which was greenlighted by the Eureka City Council in mid-February 2022. The development will contain an intermodal transit center, including car share facilities and regional bus connections, in addition to 31 affordable apartments. It is slated for completion in the fall of 2024.[94]

Utilities

Electricity and natural gas

Eureka residents are served by Pacific Gas and Electric Company. Some reserves of natural gas are located south of the city. These and other fuels help power the Humboldt Bay Power Plant (which includes the defunct Humboldt Bay Nuclear Power Plant). In 2010, the cogeneration plant increased its capacity from 130 MW to 163 MW.[95]

Water

The City of Eureka is the largest of the local water districts supplied by the Humboldt Bay Municipal Water District. The entire region is one of the few places in California that has historically enjoyed a significant surplus of water.[96] The reduction in major forest products manufacturing in recent decades has left the area with a 45 MGD surplus of industrial water.[97]

Healthcare

Eureka is the regional center for healthcare. The city is served by St. Joseph Hospital, which is the largest medical acute care hospital north of the San Francisco Bay Area on the California Coast. The hospital was first opened in 1920 and was operated by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange until 2016. The facility is composed of two parts: a main campus contains the acute care facility and a nearby second site, the former General Hospital Campus, which contains a rehabilitation facility and a skilled nursing site.

In November 2012, the hospital completed required earthquake safety standards upgrades. The new primary wing contains surgical suites, intensive care, 24-hour emergency care, as well as new and enlarged patient rooms for those requiring care beyond short stay or outpatient procedures, assisted living facilities, skilled nursing facilities, surgery centers, and radiology (including MRI) facilities.[citation needed]

In June 2016, the California Attorney General's office approved merging the St. Joseph Health system and the Providence Health and Services which includes St. Joseph's in Eureka, making it part of the third-largest non-profit health system in the nation.[98] The merger raises local and regional concerns about health care.[99]

Eureka is also the site of the only comprehensive private and county-operated mental health emergency and hospitalization facilities north of San Francisco within California. Most of the doctors for the many medical specialties available on the far North Coast are located in or near Eureka, which also has the only oncology program and dialysis clinic in the region.[citation needed]

Education

Institutions of higher learning include the College of the Redwoods and California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt in Arcata. College of the Redwoods manages a downtown satellite campus as well.

Eureka City Schools, the largest school district in the region, administers the public schools of the city. Eureka High School receives all students from city grammar schools as well as all those from nearby unincorporated communities. Specific schools include: Alice Birney Elementary, Grant Elementary, Lafayette Elementary, Washington Elementary, Winship Middle School, Zane Middle School, Eureka High School, Humboldt Bay High School, Zoe Barnum High School, the Eureka Adult School, and Winzler Children's Center. The district offices are located in the remodeled Marshall School, which also contains the Marshall Family Resource Center, a site designed to offer programs in support of parents and families.[100]

Shopping

The North Coast's primary shopping facility, the Bayshore Mall, is the largest north of the San Francisco Bay Area on the California coast. The mall features over 70 stores, which is anchored by Kohl's and Walmart. TJ Maxx and Ulta opened in 2013. Other major shopping areas and centers include Henderson Center, the Eureka Mall, Burre Center, and Downtown and Old Town Eureka.[citation needed]

Arts and culture

 
The Richard Sweasey Theater, originally built in 1920, was refurbished to an earlier era in 2007 and serves as the home of the Eureka Symphony.[101][102]

Eureka is one of California's historic landmarks. The California State Historical marker, #477, designating Eureka, is located in Old Town, one of the nation's best-preserved original Victorian-era commercial districts.[103] The city was voted as the No. 1 best small art town in John Villani's book The 100 Best Small Art Towns in America.[104] Eureka hosts the region's largest monthly cultural and arts event, "Arts' Alive!" on the first Saturday of each month.[105] More than 80 Eureka business and local galleries open their doors to the public.[105] Often local cuisine and beverages accompany live performances by acclaimed regional bands and other types of performance art.[105] The downtown Eureka area is also decorated with many murals.[106]

Theater offerings include year-round productions from several various theater groups, including the North Coast Repertory Theater, the Redwood Curtain Theatre, and the Eureka Theater. Various events occur throughout the year at the Redwood Acres Fairgrounds.[107] Museums include the Clarke Historical Museum, the Humboldt Bay Maritime Museum, the Morris Graves Museum of Art, HSU First Street Gallery, Discovery Museum for Children, the Fort Humboldt State Historic Park and the Blue Ox Millworks and Historic Park.

Annual cultural events

 
A participant team in the World Championship Kinetic Sculpture Race approaches the Old Town Eureka finish line, completing the first day of three in the internationally known event of people-powered art.
  • Redwood Coast Music Festival – May[108]
  • Perilous Plunge – March[109]
  • Rhododendron Festival – April[110]
  • Kinetic sculpture race – May
  • Redwood Acres Fair and Rodeo – June[111]
  • Humboldt Wood Fair – June[112]
  • Summer Concert Series on the Boardwalk – June – August[113]
  • Fourth of July Celebration – July[114]
  • Humboldt Bay Full of Blues – August 30 & 31, 2014[115]
  • Chicken Wingfest – September[116]
  • Excalibur Medieval Tournament and Market Faire – September[117]
  • Pride Parade and Celebration – September[118]
  • Humboldt Bay Paddle Fest – September[119]
  • Craftsman's Days – November[120]
  • Christmas Truckers Parade – December[121]

Museums and galleries

Museums include the Clarke Historical Museum, the Humboldt Bay Maritime Museum, the Morris Graves Museum of Art, HSU First Street Gallery, Kinetic Museum, Discovery Museum for Children, the Fort Humboldt State Historic Park and the Blue Ox Millworks and Historic Park.

Architecture

 
The William S. Clarke "cottage", completed in 1888, is an excellent example of a Victorian using many characteristics of Eastlake style architectural detail. The home is a National Historic Landmark.
 
Milton Carson Home (aka the "Pink Lady"), a Queen Anne–style Victorian, completed in 1889, was a wedding gift to the eldest son of William Carson, owner of the stunning Carson Mansion located across the street.

Because of northern isolation and unfavorable economic conditions in the latter part of the twentieth century, much of the post-war redevelopment and urban renewal that other cities experienced did not occur in Eureka. As a result, Eureka has hundreds of examples of 19th- and early-20th-century architecture and historic districts.

The original Queen Anne-style Murphy home in San Francisco was completely destroyed by the fire resulting from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.[122] Mark Carter found the blueprints for the home in an antique store and rebuilt the structure, but in Eureka; it is now the Carter House Inn.[123]

Approximately 16% of the city's structures are cataloged as important historical structures, with many of those attaining the status of state and national significance in terms of a particular structure's importance in relationship to the body of surviving examples of the architectural style attributed to its construction and related detail.[citation needed] Thirteen distinct districts have been identified which meet the criteria for the National Register of Historic Places. Among them are the 2nd Street District (10 buildings), 15th Street district (13 buildings) and the O Street district (43 buildings). Hillsdale Street, a popular and well-preserved district, contains 17 buildings of historic interest. In all, some 1,500 buildings have been recognized as qualifying for the National Register. The Eureka Heritage Society, a local architectural preservation group founded in 1973, has been instrumental in protecting and preserving many of Eureka's fine Victorians.[citation needed]

Parks and recreation

Sequoia Park Zoo, situated on more than 67 acres (270,000 m2) of mature second-growth Redwood forest, includes Eureka's largest public playground and a duck pond, in addition to gardens and examples of the area's many varieties of rhododendron bushes. The City of Eureka Recreation Department manages 13 playgrounds, including Cooper Gulch, which is 33 acres (13 ha), and many ball fields as well as tennis courts and others, including basketball and soccer. Other parks in or near Eureka include the Humboldt Botanical Garden and the Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge, and the Eureka Marsh, an accessible protected marsh between the Bayshore Mall and Humboldt Bay. There is a modern boardwalk along the city's waterfront.[124] Halvorsen Park includes a walkway along the water.[125]

Media

Though Eureka has been the base for two major daily newspapers at different times in its 150 years, only the Times-Standard, owned by the Colorado-based Media News Group, survives. Media News Group also owns a weekly classified advertiser, the Tri-City Weekly.[126] The Eureka Reporter, founded in 2003, became a daily in 2006, began publishing five days per week at the end of 2007, and permanently closed in November 2008.[127] The Times-Standard printed nearly 20,000 papers per day as of 2004;[128] as of 2018, its distribution was 13,000 and it published online-only on Mondays.[129] The LostCoast Outpost is another web based news source

The North Coast Journal, a regional weekly, moved from Arcata to Eureka in 2009. Eureka is also home to several alternative weekly publications. Senior News[130] is a 24-page monthly newspaper distributed along a 150-mile (240 km) stretch of the Northwest California coast, published by the Humboldt Senior Resource Center since 1981. The small staff is augmented by community volunteer writers and by senior volunteers who distribute 5,000 free newspapers to more than 100 locations from Crescent City to Garberville.

Many of Humboldt County's commercial radio stations are based in Eureka: KINS-FM (106.3),[131] KWSW (980 AM),[132] and KEKA-FM (101.5),[133] owned and operated by Eureka Broadcasting Co. Inc. KFMI, KRED, KJNY and KATA. Lost Coast Communications owns and operates several stations broadcasting to Eureka: KSLG-FM, KHUM, KLGE, and KWPT. Eureka also hosts KMUE, the local repeater for Redway-based community radio station KMUD. On August 26, 2006, the Blue Ox Millworks launched KKDS-LP, a low power FM station focused on youth and community issues. On November 3, 2008, a low-power part 15 AM radio station, Old Glory Radio 1650 AM,[134] based in the Myrtletown neighborhood of Eureka, went on the air; it offers the area's only daily live local call-in program in the morning. KHSU, the region's local public radio station, is broadcast from Cal Poly Humboldt in Arcata. A traveler's information station owned by the State of California, KMKE-LP, operates at 98.1 MHz.[135]

Eureka's first television station was KIEM, which signed on the air on October 25, 1953. Additional stations signed on in the years following that first telecast, beginning in 1958, including KVIQ-LD and KAEF-TV.

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.

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Further reading

  • Ray Raphael; Freeman House (January 1, 2007). Two Peoples, One Place. Humboldt County Historical Society for the Writing Humboldt History Project. ISBN 978-1-883254-01-8. Retrieved March 25, 2013.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Eureka Art and Culture Commission
  • Greater Eureka Chamber of Commerce
  • Eureka Heritage Society
  • "Eureka" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.

eureka, california, other, uses, eureka, disambiguation, confused, with, yreka, california, eureka, wiyot, jaroujiji, hupa, lotl, ding, karuk, uuth, principal, city, county, seat, humboldt, county, redwood, empire, region, california, city, located, route, sho. For other uses see Eureka disambiguation Not to be confused with Yreka California Eureka Wiyot Jaroujiji 17 Hupa do wi lotl ding 18 Karuk uuth 19 is the principal city and county seat of Humboldt County in the Redwood Empire region of California The city is located on U S Route 101 on the shores of Humboldt Bay 270 miles 435 km north of San Francisco and 100 miles 161 km south of the Oregon border 20 At the 2010 census the population of the city was 27 191 21 22 23 and the population of Greater Eureka 24 25 was 45 034 12 Eureka CaliforniaCityAerial view Eureka on Humboldt BaySealMotto Eureka I have found it 1 Location within Humboldt CountyEurekaLocation within CaliforniaShow map of CaliforniaEurekaLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 40 48 07 N 124 09 49 W 40 80194 N 124 16361 W 40 80194 124 16361 Coordinates 40 48 07 N 124 09 49 W 40 80194 N 124 16361 W 40 80194 124 16361 2 CountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaCountyHumboldtFoundedMay 13 1850Incorporated town April 18 1856 3 Re incorporated city February 19 1874Government TypeCouncil Manager 4 MayorSusan Seaman 5 City managerGreg Sparks 6 State senatorMike McGuire D 7 AssemblymemberJim Wood D 8 U S rep Jared Huffman D 9 Area 10 City14 45 sq mi 37 43 km2 Land9 38 sq mi 24 30 km2 Water5 07 sq mi 13 13 km2 35 07 Urban18 498 sq mi 47 908 km2 Elevation 2 39 ft 12 m Population 2010 13 City27 191 Estimate 2019 14 26 710 Density2 846 33 sq mi 1 098 96 km2 Urban45 034 11 12 DemonymEurekanTime zoneUTC 8 Pacific Summer DST UTC 7 PDT ZIP Codes 15 95501 95503 95534Area code707FIPS code06 23042GNIS feature IDs277605 2410463Websitewww wbr ci wbr eureka wbr ca wbr gov 16 California Historical LandmarkReference no 477Eureka is the largest coastal city between San Francisco and Portland Oregon 26 and the westernmost city of more than 25 000 residents in the 48 contiguous states 27 28 The proximity to the sea causes the city to have an extremely maritime climate with very small annual temperature differences and seasons mainly being defined by the rainy winters and dry summers whereas nearby inland areas are much hotter in summer It is the regional center for government health care trade and the arts on the North Coast north of the San Francisco Bay Area Greater Eureka one of California s major commercial fishing ports is the location of the largest deep water port between San Francisco and Coos Bay a stretch of about 500 miles 805 km 27 The headquarters of both the Six Rivers National Forest and the North Coast Redwoods District of the California State Parks System are in Eureka As entrepot for hundreds of lumber mills that once existed in the area the city played a leading role in the historic West Coast lumber trade The entire city is a state historic landmark which has hundreds of significant Victorian homes including the nationally recognized Carson Mansion and the city has retained its original 19th century commercial core as a nationally recognized Old Town Historic District 29 Eureka is home to California s oldest zoo the Sequoia Park Zoo 30 Contents 1 History 1 1 Native Americans 1 2 Founding on Humboldt Bay 1 3 Gold Rush era 1 4 Wiyot Massacre 1 5 Lumber industry 1 6 Commercial center 1 7 Fishing shipping and boating 1 8 Chinese expulsion 1 9 Queen City of the Ultimate West 1 10 Post World War II 1 11 Significant earthquakes 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 2000 Census data 3 2 2010 Census data 4 Economy 5 Government 5 1 Local government 5 2 State and federal government 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Transportation 6 1 1 Land 6 1 2 Air 6 1 3 Water 6 1 4 Bus service 6 2 Utilities 6 2 1 Electricity and natural gas 6 2 2 Water 6 3 Healthcare 7 Education 8 Shopping 9 Arts and culture 9 1 Annual cultural events 9 2 Museums and galleries 9 3 Architecture 10 Parks and recreation 11 Media 12 Notable people 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksHistory EditEureka s Pacific coastal location on Humboldt Bay adjacent to abundant redwood forests provided the reason for settlement of this 19th century seaport town Before the arrival of Euro American settlers including farmers miners fishermen and loggers the area was home to Native Americans Native Americans Edit The Wiyot people lived in Jaroujiji Wiyot where you sit and rest now known as Eureka for thousands of years before European arrival Their traditional coastal homeland ranged from the lower Mad River through Humboldt Bay and south along the lower basin of the Eel River The Wiyot are particularly known for their basketry and fishery management 17 An extensive collection of intricate basketry of the area s indigenous groups exists in the Clarke Historical Museum in Old Town Eureka As of 2013 update Eureka High School has the largest Yurok language program in California 31 The Wiyot and Yurok are the westernmost peoples to speak Algic languages Founding on Humboldt Bay Edit For nearly 300 years after 1579 European exploration of the coast of what would become northern California repeatedly missed definitively locating Humboldt Bay because of a combination of geographic features and weather conditions which concealed the narrow bay entrance from view Despite a well documented 1806 sighting by Russian explorers the bay was not definitively known by Europeans until an 1849 overland exploration provided a reliable accounting of the exact location of what is the second largest bay in California 32 The timing of this discovery led to the May 13 1850 founding of the settlement of Eureka on its shore by the Union and Mendocino Exploring development companies 33 Gold Rush era Edit After the primary California Gold Rush in the Sierras Humboldt Bay was settled with the intent of providing a convenient alternative to the long overland route from Sacramento to supply miners on the Trinity Klamath and Salmon Rivers where gold had been discovered Though the ideal location on Humboldt Bay adjacent to naturally deeper shipping channels ultimately guaranteed Eureka s development as the primary city on the bay Arcata s proximity to developing supply lines to inland gold mines ensured supremacy over Eureka through 1856 29 Eureka received its name from a Greek word meaning I have found it 34 35 36 This exuberant statement of successful or hopeful gold rush miners is also the official motto of the State of California Eureka is the only U S location to use the same seal as the state for its seal 37 Wiyot Massacre Edit The first Europeans venturing into Humboldt Bay encountered the indigenous Wiyot After 1850 Americans ultimately overwhelmed the Wiyot whose maximum population before the Europeans arrival numbered in the hundreds in the area of what would become the county s primary city But in almost every case settlers ultimately cut off access to ancestral sources of food in addition to the outright theft of land despite the efforts of some U S government and military officials to assist the native peoples or at least maintain peace Fort Humboldt was established by the U S Army on January 30 1853 as a buffer between Native Americans gold seekers and settlers commanded by Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Robert C Buchanan of the U S 4th Infantry Regiment 38 The 1860 Wiyot Massacre took place on Indian Island in the spring of 1860 committed by a group of locals thought to be composed primarily of Eureka businessmen 33 The male Wiyot tribal members had left the island during their annual New Year ritual and the vigilantes killed as many as 250 children women and elderly tribal members 39 Major Gabriel J Rains Commanding Officer of Fort Humboldt at the time reported to his commanding officer that a local group of vigilantes had resolved to kill every peaceable Indian man woman and child 40 Lumber industry Edit Mill yard across the bay from EurekaEureka s first post office opened in 1853 41 just as the town began to carve its grid plan into the edge of a forest it would ultimately consume to feed the building of San Francisco and points beyond Many of the first immigrants who arrived as prospectors were also lumbermen and the vast potential for industry on the bay was soon realized especially as many hopeful gold miners realized the difficulty and infrequency of striking it rich in the mines By 1854 after only four years since the founding seven of nine mills processing timber into marketable lumber on Humboldt Bay were within Eureka 33 A year later 140 lumber schooners operated in and out of Humboldt Bay moving lumber from the mills to booming cities along the Pacific coast 33 By the time the charter for Eureka was granted in 1856 busy mills inside the city had a daily production capacity of 220 000 board feet 42 This level of production which would grow significantly and continue for more than a century secured Eureka as the timber capital of California Eureka was at the apex of rapid growth of the lumber industry because of its location between huge coast redwood forests and its control of the primary port facilities Loggers brought the enormous redwood trees down Dozens of movable narrow gauge railroads brought trainloads of logs and finished lumber products to the main rail line which led directly to Eureka s wharf and waiting schooners By the 1880s railroads eventually brought the production of hundreds of mills throughout the region to Eureka primarily for shipment through its port After the early 1900s shipment of products occurred by trucks trains and ships from Eureka Humboldt Bay and other points in the region but Eureka remained the busy center of all this activity for over 120 years These factors and others made Eureka a significant city in early California state history citation needed Commercial center Edit The Carson Mansion 1886 in Eureka s Old TownA bustling commercial district with ornate Victorian style buildings rose in proximity to the waterfront reflecting the great prosperity experienced during this era Hundreds of these Victorian homes remain today of which many are totally restored and a few have always remained in their original elegance and splendor The representation of these homes in Eureka grouped with those in nearby Arcata and the Victorian village of Ferndale are of considerable importance to the overall development of Victorian architecture built in the nation The magnificent Carson Mansion on 2nd and M Streets is perhaps the most spectacular Victorian in the nation The home was built between 1884 and 1886 by renowned 19th century architects Newsom and Newsom for lumber baron William M Carson This project was designed to keep mill workers and expert craftsman busy during a slow period in the industry Old Town Eureka the original downtown center of this busy city in the 19th century has been restored and has become a lively arts center 43 The Old Town area has been declared an Historic District by the National Register of Historic Places The district is made up of over 150 buildings which in total represents much of Eureka s original 19th century core commercial center This nexus of culture behind the redwood curtain still contains much of its Victorian architecture which if not maintained for original use as commercial buildings or homes have been transformed into scores of unique lodgings restaurants and small shops featuring a burgeoning cottage industry of hand made creations from glassware to wood burning stoves and a large variety of locally created art Fishing shipping and boating Edit Illustrated map of Eureka 1902 Eureka s founding and livelihood was and remains linked to Humboldt Bay the Pacific Ocean and related industries especially fishing Salmon fisheries sprang up along the Eel River as early as 1851 and within seven years 2 000 barrels of cured fish and 50 000 pounds 23 000 kg of smoked salmon were processed and shipped out of Humboldt Bay annually from processing plants on Eureka s wharf citation needed In 1858 the first of many ships built in Eureka was launched beginning an industry that spanned scores of years The bay is also the site of the West Coast s largest oyster farming operations which began its commercial status in the nineteenth century Eureka is the home port to more than 100 fishing vessels with an all time high of over 400 in 1981 in two modern marinas which can berth approximately 400 boats within the city limits 44 and at least 50 more in nearby Fields Landing which is part of Greater Eureka Area catches historically include among other species salmon tuna Dungeness crab and shrimp with historic annual total fishing landings totaling about 36 000 000 pounds 16 000 000 kg in 1981 42 Chinese expulsion Edit Main article 1885 Chinese expulsion from Eureka Rising emigration from China in the late 19th century sparked conflict between white settlers and immigrants which ultimately led to the Chinese Exclusion Act Economic downturns resulting in competition for jobs led to sinophobia and violent actions against Chinese immigrants especially on the Pacific coast In February 1885 the racial tension in Eureka intensified when Eureka City Councilman David Kendall was caught in the crossfire of two rival Chinese gangs and killed This led to the convening of 600 Eureka men and resulted in the forcible permanent expulsion of all 480 Chinese residents of Eureka s Chinatown 45 1 Among those who guarded the city jail during the height of the sinophobic tension was James Gillett who went on to become Governor of California 46 The anti Chinese ordinance was repealed in 1959 45 47 Queen City of the Ultimate West Edit The Tudor Revival style Eureka Inn 1922 Completion of the Northwestern Pacific Railroad in 1914 provided the local lumber industry with an alternative to ships for transport of its millions of board feet of lumber to reach markets in San Francisco and beyond It also provided the first safe land route between San Francisco and Eureka for people to venture to the Redwood Empire As a result Eureka s population of 7 300 swelled to 15 000 within ten years By 1922 the Redwood Highway was completed providing for the first reliable direct overland route for automobiles from San Francisco citation needed By 1931 the Eureka Street Railway operated fifteen streetcars over twelve miles 19 km of track 48 Eureka s transportation connection to the outside world had changed dramatically after more than half a century of stage rides or treacherous steamship passage through the Humboldt Bar and on the Pacific Ocean to San Francisco The building of the Eureka Inn coincided with the opening of the new road to San Francisco As a result of immense civic pride during this early 20th century era of expansion Eureka officially nicknamed itself Queen City of the Ultimate West The tourism industry lodging to support it and related marketing had been born 29 Post World War II Edit The timber economy of Eureka is part of the Pacific Northwest timber economy which rises and falls with boom and bust economic times 49 In Eureka both the timber industry and commercial fishing declined after the Second World War citation needed The Columbus Day Storm of 1962 downed trees and caused a surplus in the domestic timber market which caused increased shipping to foreign markets The log trade with Japan and other Pacific Rim nations increased 49 Despite many rumors to the contrary little of this wood returned to U S markets 49 In 1989 the U S changed log export laws permitting lower cost timber from public lands to be exported as raw logs overseas to help balance the federal budget 50 After 1990 the global log market declined and exports fell at the same time as Pacific Northwest log prices increased leading buyers to seek less expensive logs from Canada and the southern United States 49 However debate continues among four stakeholders timber owners domestic processors consumers and communities on the impact of log export on the local economy 49 51 During the span 1991 to 2001 timber harvest peaked in 1997 52 The local timber market was also affected by the Pacific Lumber Company hostile takeover 53 and ultimate bankruptcy 54 Local fisheries expanded through the 1970s and early 1980s During the 1970s Eureka fishermen landed more than half of the fish and shellfish produced and consumed in California 55 In 2010 between 100 and 120 commercial fishing vessels listed Eureka as homeport 55 The highest landings of all species were 36 9 million pounds 16 7 million kg in 1981 while the lowest were in 2001 with 9 4 million pounds 4 3 million kg 55 After 1990 regulatory economic and other events led to a contraction of the local commercial fleet 55 In 1991 the Woodley Island marina opened providing docking facilities for much of Eureka s commercial and recreational fleet 55 Many species are considered to be overfished 55 Recreational fishing has increased over time Fifty percent of recreational fishermen using local boats are tourists from outside the area 55 Commercial Pacific oyster aquaculture in Humboldt Bay produced an average of 7 600 000 pounds 3 400 000 kg of oysters from 1956 to 1965 55 an average of 844 444 pounds 383 033 kg per year In 2004 only 600 000 pounds 270 000 kg were harvested 55 Oysters and oyster seed continue to be exported from Humboldt Bay 55 The value of the oysters and spawn is more than 6 million per year 55 Consolidation of buyers and landing facilities resulted in local vulnerability to unexpected events leading the city to obtain grant funding for and complete the Fishermen s Terminal on the waterfront which will provide fish handling marketing and public spaces 55 Historical seismicity 56 Significant earthquakes Edit See also List of earthquakes in California The area regularly experiences large earthquakes as it is situated on the southern end the Cascadia subduction zone and near the San Andreas Fault which interface around the Mendocino Triple Junction 56 On January 9 2010 a 6 5 magnitude earthquake occurred about 33 miles 53 km off shore from Eureka 57 After two seconds it became a violent jumper making objects fly 58 the mostly vertical shocks from the ground led to broken windows in shops overturned shelving in homes and stores and damage to architectural detail on a number of historic buildings 57 59 Local hospitals treated mostly minor related injuries and electrical power was out over a large area Numerous natural gas leaks occurred but no fires resulted 58 60 This was the largest recent earthquake since the April 25 26 1992 sequence 61 It was followed on February 4 2010 by a magnitude 5 9 earthquake which struck about 35 miles 56 km northwest of the community of Petrolia and nearly 50 miles 80 km west of Eureka The shaking was felt within a 150 mile 240 km radius as far north as southern Oregon and as far south as Sonoma County 61 62 The largest recorded in the area was the 7 2 Mw event on November 8 1980 63 64 The larger earthquakes can pose a tsunami threat to coastal areas 65 Geography EditAccording to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 14 5 square miles 38 km2 of which 9 4 square miles 24 km2 is land and 5 1 square miles 13 km2 or 35 07 is water Eureka is situated within California s Redwood Empire region which includes Pacific Ocean coast Humboldt Bay and several rivers in addition to Redwood National and State Parks and Humboldt Redwoods State Park The location of Eureka on U S 101 is 283 miles 455 km north of San Francisco and 315 mi 507 km northwest of Sacramento The city marina is on one of three islands at a narrow point on the 13 mile long 21 km bay and increases in elevation slightly as it spreads north south and especially to the east The city gently encroaches at least two miles 3 2 km eastward into primarily Redwood and Douglas fir second growth forests The city has a traditional grid that generally radiates toward the points of the compass Most post 1970 houses were built in formerly clear cut forested areas The transition between the official city limits and smaller unincorporated areas is mostly not discernible Eastern areas including secluded developments on a golf course among or in close proximity to extensive second growth forest have more recently developed These new houses were built as a result of the Eureka Community Plan of 1995 in attempt to bring locals close to centers of recreation and encourage community interaction 66 The city then gives way to hills and mountains of the rugged coast range which quickly exceed 2 000 feet 610 m in elevation Eureka is more or less on the same latitude as Atlantic cities New York City and Porto in Portugal along with the Mediterranean city of Naples in Italy 67 all of whom have much warmer summers in spite of also being on coastlines Climate Edit Eureka enjoys a mild temperate cool summer mediterranean climate Koppen climate classification Csb Due to the influence of the Pacific Ocean and being on the shoreline of the cold water Humboldt Bay its temperatures are cooler than those of a typical mediterranean climate Winters are mild and rainy and summers mild cool and dry The average high in December the coolest month is 55 0 F 12 8 C while the average high temperature in August the warmest month is 64 3 F 17 9 C which is very cool and mild for an area at such a southerly latitude Eureka s average summer temperatures are much cooler than New York City and Istanbul which lie on the same latitude and its average winter temperatures are also milder than those two cities and are similar to those of Southeast Alaska Scotland or Tierra del Fuego in southern Argentina and Chile which lie well above the 50th parallel The seasonal temperature variation is very small the difference between the August average of 58 5 F 14 7 C and the December average of 47 8 F 8 8 C is only 10 7 F 5 9 C about equal to the diurnal temperature variation Eureka is unique among mid latitude climates in that in more than 135 years of recorded temperatures February has measured a warmer absolute maximum temperature than both the two high summer months of July and August The absolute maximum temperature of July is merely 77 F 25 C in spite of the high sun strength The two warmest nights measured in Eureka were both during winter as 18 January 1981 recorded a low of 63 F 17 C tying a 26 February 1980 record 68 69 In addition Eureka has a very short and milder range of temperatures compared to most of the contiguous US with the all time highest and lowest temperatures recorded in Eureka being only 87 F 30 6 C on October 26 1993 September 2 2017 70 and September 28 2020 71 and 20 F 6 7 C on January 14 1888 respectively On average the highest temperature seen throughout the entire year is only 79 F 26 1 C one of the mildest in the contiguous US while on average the lowest temperature seen in the year most often occurring at night is only a similarly moderate 29 F 1 7 C yielding a very short and mild temperature range of about 50 F 28 C throughout the year Additionally Eureka remains the only city on the West Coast of the continental United States to have never recorded a temperature of 90 F 32 2 C Temperatures drop to freezing or below only on a few nights per year and daytime temperatures for these days are typically mild temperatures ranging between 43 58 F 6 1 14 4 C Eureka has never recorded an ice day with the coldest daytime maximum being 34 F 1 C in 1990 69 Between 1991 and 2020 the coldest daytime high of the year was 45 F 7 C and the warmest night averaged 59 F 15 C 69 NOAA s weather station averages indicate only 0 18 in 4 6 mm of rainfall in July which is well within the mediterranean range only with rainier winters cooler and milder air than a typical mediterranean climate Winter temperatures instead are similar to many climates found in Southern Europe from which basin the climate type is named The area experiences coastal fog throughout the year especially during summer on the coast when temperatures in the city remain consistently around a mild 64 F 17 8 C This phenomenon together with cool breezes from the Pacific Ocean keeps Eureka relatively cool and mild while contrasting with inland areas in relative proximity to Humboldt Bay which are prone to extreme temperatures that often exceed 100 F 37 8 C This causes frequent temperature differences between Eureka and nearby inland areas during summer and early fall of 30 to 40 F 17 to 22 C Despite the common coastal fog Eureka enjoys on average about 55 possible sunshine per year about on par with cities such as Calgary Portland New York City and Chicago 72 73 74 75 Annual precipitation averages 40 3 in or 1 024 mm Measurable precipitation falls on an average of 127 5 days each year concentrated heavily from October to April On average December is the wettest month averaging over 8 in 203 2 mm of precipitation virtually all of it rain The wettest rain year was from July 1889 to June 1890 with 73 30 in 1 861 8 mm and the driest from July 1976 to June 1977 with 17 56 in 446 0 mm The greatest monthly precipitation was 23 21 in 589 5 mm in December 2002 The greatest 24 hour precipitation was 6 79 in 172 5 mm on December 27 2002 However historic 100 year dramatic weather events such as the Christmas Week flood of 1955 and especially the Christmas flood of 1964 which severely damaged the region may not be reflected in records listed herein Snowfall on the coast happens only on rare occasions averaging 0 2 in or 0 51 cm as of the 1981 2010 normals but only five years during that period received measurable snowfall 76 The most snowfall in one month was 6 9 in or 18 cm in January 1907 Climate data for Eureka California NWS Forecast Office Woodley Island 1991 2020 normals a extremes 1886 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 78 26 85 29 78 26 80 27 84 29 85 29 77 25 82 28 87 31 87 31 81 27 77 25 87 31 Mean maximum F C 66 1 18 9 66 5 19 2 65 9 18 8 67 6 19 8 69 4 20 8 69 0 20 6 69 4 20 8 71 7 22 1 74 3 23 5 74 8 23 8 68 2 20 1 64 8 18 2 78 4 25 8 Average high F C 55 1 12 8 55 4 13 0 56 1 13 4 57 4 14 1 59 6 15 3 61 9 16 6 63 1 17 3 64 0 17 8 63 9 17 7 61 9 16 6 57 8 14 3 54 7 12 6 59 2 15 1 Daily mean F C 47 9 8 8 48 4 9 1 49 2 9 6 50 8 10 4 53 7 12 1 56 0 13 3 57 7 14 3 58 5 14 7 57 2 14 0 54 3 12 4 50 5 10 3 47 4 8 6 52 6 11 4 Average low F C 40 8 4 9 41 3 5 2 42 4 5 8 44 2 6 8 47 7 8 7 50 1 10 1 52 4 11 3 53 0 11 7 50 5 10 3 46 8 8 2 43 2 6 2 40 0 4 4 46 0 7 8 Mean minimum F C 31 8 0 1 32 7 0 4 34 2 1 2 36 6 2 6 40 9 4 9 44 4 6 9 48 6 9 2 48 8 9 3 44 9 7 2 38 7 3 7 33 3 0 7 30 7 0 7 28 9 1 7 Record low F C 20 7 24 4 29 2 31 1 35 2 40 4 43 6 44 7 36 2 32 0 27 3 21 6 20 7 Average precipitation inches mm 6 67 169 5 64 143 5 75 146 3 64 92 1 66 42 0 70 18 0 18 4 6 0 18 4 6 0 68 17 2 31 59 4 89 124 8 10 206 40 40 1 026 Average snowfall inches cm 0 03 0 08 0 03 0 08 0 04 0 10 0 01 0 03 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 0 43 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 16 5 15 2 16 0 13 8 9 3 5 5 3 0 3 5 4 7 8 7 14 3 17 1 127 6Average snowy days 0 1 in 0 07 0 03 0 03 0 03 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17Mean monthly sunshine hours 140 1 143 7 207 4 253 1 280 5 277 7 273 4 236 5 220 3 175 8 131 3 126 2 2 466Percent possible sunshine 47 48 56 63 63 62 60 55 59 51 44 44 55Source NOAA sun and relative humidity 1961 1990 76 77 78 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 1860612 18702 049234 8 18802 63928 8 18904 85884 1 19007 32750 8 191011 84561 7 192012 9239 1 193015 75221 9 194017 0558 3 195023 05835 2 196028 13722 0 197024 337 13 5 198024 153 0 8 199027 02511 9 200026 128 3 3 201027 1914 1 202026 512 2 5 U S Decennial Census 79 80 2010 2020 81 Bookstore in Eureka s Old Town The Eureka Theatre built in 1937 is on the National Register of Historic Places It is listed as a Streamline Moderne Theater The population of the city was 27 191 at the 2010 census up from 26 128 at the 2000 census representing a 4 1 increase and the population of Greater Eureka 24 was 45 034 12 21 at the 2010 Census up from 43 452 82 at the 2000 census representing a 3 6 increase According to a report by the City of Eureka the Greater Eureka area minimally includes the unincorporated adjacent or nearby neighborhoods and Census Defined Populated Areas of Bayview Cutten Elk River Freshwater Humboldt Hill Indianola Myrtletown Pine Hill Ridgewood Heights and Rosewood 83 all of which have Eureka addresses postal zip codes and Eureka specific telephone numbers The Greater Eureka area makes up the largest urban settlement on the Pacific Coast between San Francisco and Portland 24 This area is similar to what the U S Census officially defines as the Eureka UC urban cluster which is a densely settled core of census tracts and or census blocks that meet minimum population density requirements along with adjacent territory containing non residential urban land uses as well as territory with low population density included to link outlying densely settled territory with the densely settled core of up to 50 000 in population The bayside communities of Manila Samoa and Fairhaven all on the Samoa Peninsula and King Salmon and Fields Landing both located south of the city and communities listed above with the exception of Elk River and Freshwater are shown to be part of the Eureka Urban Cluster 84 Eureka is the largest city of the Eureka Arcata Fortuna Micropolitan Area a construct of the U S Census Bureau which is synonymous with the County of Humboldt 85 2000 Census data Edit As of the census 86 of 2000 there were 26 128 people The population density was 2 764 5 inhabitants per square mile 1 067 4 km2 There were 11 637 housing units at an average density of 1 231 3 per square mile 475 4 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 88 5 White 1 2 Black or African American 4 2 Native American 2 6 Asian 0 3 Pacific Islander 2 7 from other races and 5 10 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 10 8 of the population There were 10 957 households out of which 25 8 had children under the age of 18 living with them 34 8 were married couples living together 14 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 46 3 were non families 35 3 of all households were made up of individuals and 11 8 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 26 and the average family size was 2 93 In the city the population dispersal was 22 4 under the age of 18 11 6 from 18 to 24 28 9 from 25 to 44 23 5 from 45 to 64 and 13 7 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 37 years For every 100 females there were 98 1 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 95 7 males The median income for a household in the city was 25 849 and the median income for a family was 33 438 Males had a median income of 28 706 versus 22 038 for females The per capita income for the city was 16 174 About 15 8 of families and 23 7 of the population were below the poverty line including 29 6 of those under the age of 18 and 11 1 of those 65 and older 2010 Census data Edit The 2010 United States Census 87 reported that Eureka had a population of 27 191 The population density was 1 881 3 inhabitants per square mile 726 4 km2 The racial makeup of Eureka was 21 565 79 3 White 514 1 9 African American 1 011 3 7 Native American 1 153 4 2 Asian 176 0 6 Pacific Islander 1 181 4 3 from other races and 1 591 5 9 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 3 143 persons 11 6 The census reported that 25 308 people 93 1 of the population lived in households 1 434 5 3 lived in non institutionalized group quarters and 449 1 7 were institutionalized There were 11 150 households out of which 2 891 25 9 had children under the age of 18 living in them 3 554 31 9 were opposite sex married couples living together 1 449 13 0 had a female householder with no husband present 710 6 4 had a male householder with no wife present There were 1 161 10 4 unmarried opposite sex partnerships and 146 1 3 same sex married couples or partnerships 3 971 households 35 6 were made up of individuals and 1 183 10 6 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 27 There were 5 713 families 51 2 of all households the average family size was 2 93 The population dispersal was 5 431 people 20 0 under the age of 18 3 102 people 11 4 aged 18 to 24 8 021 people 29 5 aged 25 to 44 7 422 people 27 3 aged 45 to 64 and 3 215 people 11 8 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 36 2 years For every 100 females there were 106 0 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 105 7 males There were 11 891 housing units at an average density of 822 7 per square mile 317 6 km2 of which 11 150 were occupied of which 4 829 43 3 were owner occupied and 6 321 56 7 were occupied by renters The homeowner vacancy rate was 2 0 the rental vacancy rate was 3 7 11 251 people 41 4 of the population lived in owner occupied housing units and 14 057 people 51 7 lived in rental housing units Economy Edit Carson Block Building The economic base of the city was founded on timber and fishing and supplying gold mining efforts inland Gold mining diminished quickly in the early years and activities of timber and fishing have also diminished especially in the latter decades of the twentieth century Today the major industries are tourism timber in value and healthcare and services in number of jobs Major employers today in Eureka include the following governmental entities College of the Redwoods The County of Humboldt and the Humboldt County Office of Education St Joseph Hospital is the largest private employer in Eureka 88 Government Edit Eureka s Historic Old Town View is to the east on 2nd Street which was the equivalent of Main St in the Victorian era Local government Edit The City of Eureka has a mayor council system of governance Primary power lies with the five council members divided into five wards The mayor has the power to appoint as well as ceremonial duties though the job includes presiding over council meetings and meeting visiting dignitaries 89 Official city business is administered by the Office of the City Manager The Eureka City Council regularly meets on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of the month at 5 30 pm for closed session and 6 30 pm for open session Open sessions are open to the public 90 State and federal government Edit Eureka is in the 2nd Senate District represented by Democrat Mike McGuire 7 and the 2nd Assembly District represented by Democrat Jim Wood 8 Federally Eureka is in California s 2nd congressional district represented by Democrat Jared Huffman 9 Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit View of southernmost span of Route 255 Samoa Bridge Woodley Island Marina on Humboldt Bay Eureka is visible in the foreground with northeasterly views of Fickle Hill Coast Ranges in the background Land Edit U S Route 101 is the major north and south highway which connects Eureka to the rest of the North Coast region The highway connects to Oregon located approximately 100 miles 161 km to the north and San Francisco over 250 miles 402 km to the south The highway follows city streets through the city with flow and cross traffic controlled by traffic signals Highway 101 enters Eureka from the south as Broadway As it reaches the downtown area it splits into a one way couplet composed of 4th Street and 5th Street On the north side of the city northbound and southbound rejoin at the northeast side before the highway becomes a restricted safety corridor expressway to Arcata and points beyond as double bridges cross the Eureka Slough mouth of the Freshwater Creek 91 State Route 255 is an alternate route of U S 101 between Eureka and the nearby city of Arcata running along the western shore of Humboldt Bay It begins in the downtown area at U S 101 and proceeds north along R Street towards the Samoa Bridge and the community of Samoa 91 State Route 299 formerly U S Route 299 connects to U S Route 101 at the northern end of Arcata Route 299 begins at that point and extends easterly to serve as the major traffic artery to the east for Eureka 91 Air Edit Eureka s full service airport is the Arcata Eureka Airport located 15 miles 24 km north in McKinleyville This airport has one airline United Airlines and connects to San Francisco and Los Angeles Murray Field and Eureka Municipal Airport are general aviation airports for private and charter air service Both are located adjacent to Humboldt Bay Kneeland Airport at 2 737 feet 834 m in elevation is a general aviation airport that provides an option for pilots choosing to land when the prevalent marine layer is affecting airports nearer sea level 92 Water Edit The Humboldt Bay Harbor Recreation amp Conservation District manages the resources of Humboldt Bay and its environs including the deep water port The port is located directly west of the city and is serviced across the bay in the community of Samoa In addition to two deep water channel docks for large ships several modern small craft marinas are available for private use with a total capacity of more than 400 boats 93 Bus service Edit Public bus transportation services within Eureka are provided by the Eureka Transit Service The Redwood Transit System provides bus transportation through Eureka and connects to major towns and places outside the city including educational institutions Dial A Ride service is available through an application process Amtrak provides Thruway Bus service to Eureka at its unstaffed bus stop The bus service connects passengers from the northernmost coastal train station in Martinez California and continues to southern Oregon Greyhound provides bus service to San Francisco from Eureka Tickets may be purchased online or at the nearest full service station in Arcata Transit in Eureka is expected to be improved by the 30 million Eureka Regional Transit and Housing Center or EaRTH Center which was greenlighted by the Eureka City Council in mid February 2022 The development will contain an intermodal transit center including car share facilities and regional bus connections in addition to 31 affordable apartments It is slated for completion in the fall of 2024 94 Utilities Edit Electricity and natural gas Edit Eureka residents are served by Pacific Gas and Electric Company Some reserves of natural gas are located south of the city These and other fuels help power the Humboldt Bay Power Plant which includes the defunct Humboldt Bay Nuclear Power Plant In 2010 the cogeneration plant increased its capacity from 130 MW to 163 MW 95 Water Edit The City of Eureka is the largest of the local water districts supplied by the Humboldt Bay Municipal Water District The entire region is one of the few places in California that has historically enjoyed a significant surplus of water 96 The reduction in major forest products manufacturing in recent decades has left the area with a 45 MGD surplus of industrial water 97 Healthcare Edit Eureka is the regional center for healthcare The city is served by St Joseph Hospital which is the largest medical acute care hospital north of the San Francisco Bay Area on the California Coast The hospital was first opened in 1920 and was operated by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange until 2016 The facility is composed of two parts a main campus contains the acute care facility and a nearby second site the former General Hospital Campus which contains a rehabilitation facility and a skilled nursing site In November 2012 the hospital completed required earthquake safety standards upgrades The new primary wing contains surgical suites intensive care 24 hour emergency care as well as new and enlarged patient rooms for those requiring care beyond short stay or outpatient procedures assisted living facilities skilled nursing facilities surgery centers and radiology including MRI facilities citation needed In June 2016 the California Attorney General s office approved merging the St Joseph Health system and the Providence Health and Services which includes St Joseph s in Eureka making it part of the third largest non profit health system in the nation 98 The merger raises local and regional concerns about health care 99 Eureka is also the site of the only comprehensive private and county operated mental health emergency and hospitalization facilities north of San Francisco within California Most of the doctors for the many medical specialties available on the far North Coast are located in or near Eureka which also has the only oncology program and dialysis clinic in the region citation needed Education EditInstitutions of higher learning include the College of the Redwoods and California State Polytechnic University Humboldt in Arcata College of the Redwoods manages a downtown satellite campus as well Eureka City Schools the largest school district in the region administers the public schools of the city Eureka High School receives all students from city grammar schools as well as all those from nearby unincorporated communities Specific schools include Alice Birney Elementary Grant Elementary Lafayette Elementary Washington Elementary Winship Middle School Zane Middle School Eureka High School Humboldt Bay High School Zoe Barnum High School the Eureka Adult School and Winzler Children s Center The district offices are located in the remodeled Marshall School which also contains the Marshall Family Resource Center a site designed to offer programs in support of parents and families 100 Shopping EditThe North Coast s primary shopping facility the Bayshore Mall is the largest north of the San Francisco Bay Area on the California coast The mall features over 70 stores which is anchored by Kohl s and Walmart TJ Maxx and Ulta opened in 2013 Other major shopping areas and centers include Henderson Center the Eureka Mall Burre Center and Downtown and Old Town Eureka citation needed Arts and culture Edit The Richard Sweasey Theater originally built in 1920 was refurbished to an earlier era in 2007 and serves as the home of the Eureka Symphony 101 102 Eureka is one of California s historic landmarks The California State Historical marker 477 designating Eureka is located in Old Town one of the nation s best preserved original Victorian era commercial districts 103 The city was voted as the No 1 best small art town in John Villani s book The 100 Best Small Art Towns in America 104 Eureka hosts the region s largest monthly cultural and arts event Arts Alive on the first Saturday of each month 105 More than 80 Eureka business and local galleries open their doors to the public 105 Often local cuisine and beverages accompany live performances by acclaimed regional bands and other types of performance art 105 The downtown Eureka area is also decorated with many murals 106 Theater offerings include year round productions from several various theater groups including the North Coast Repertory Theater the Redwood Curtain Theatre and the Eureka Theater Various events occur throughout the year at the Redwood Acres Fairgrounds 107 Museums include the Clarke Historical Museum the Humboldt Bay Maritime Museum the Morris Graves Museum of Art HSU First Street Gallery Discovery Museum for Children the Fort Humboldt State Historic Park and the Blue Ox Millworks and Historic Park Annual cultural events Edit A participant team in the World Championship Kinetic Sculpture Race approaches the Old Town Eureka finish line completing the first day of three in the internationally known event of people powered art Redwood Coast Music Festival May 108 Perilous Plunge March 109 Rhododendron Festival April 110 Kinetic sculpture race May Redwood Acres Fair and Rodeo June 111 Humboldt Wood Fair June 112 Summer Concert Series on the Boardwalk June August 113 Fourth of July Celebration July 114 Humboldt Bay Full of Blues August 30 amp 31 2014 115 Chicken Wingfest September 116 Excalibur Medieval Tournament and Market Faire September 117 Pride Parade and Celebration September 118 Humboldt Bay Paddle Fest September 119 Craftsman s Days November 120 Christmas Truckers Parade December 121 Museums and galleries Edit See also List of museums in the North Coast California Museums include the Clarke Historical Museum the Humboldt Bay Maritime Museum the Morris Graves Museum of Art HSU First Street Gallery Kinetic Museum Discovery Museum for Children the Fort Humboldt State Historic Park and the Blue Ox Millworks and Historic Park Architecture Edit The William S Clarke cottage completed in 1888 is an excellent example of a Victorian using many characteristics of Eastlake style architectural detail The home is a National Historic Landmark Milton Carson Home aka the Pink Lady a Queen Anne style Victorian completed in 1889 was a wedding gift to the eldest son of William Carson owner of the stunning Carson Mansion located across the street Because of northern isolation and unfavorable economic conditions in the latter part of the twentieth century much of the post war redevelopment and urban renewal that other cities experienced did not occur in Eureka As a result Eureka has hundreds of examples of 19th and early 20th century architecture and historic districts The original Queen Anne style Murphy home in San Francisco was completely destroyed by the fire resulting from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake 122 Mark Carter found the blueprints for the home in an antique store and rebuilt the structure but in Eureka it is now the Carter House Inn 123 Approximately 16 of the city s structures are cataloged as important historical structures with many of those attaining the status of state and national significance in terms of a particular structure s importance in relationship to the body of surviving examples of the architectural style attributed to its construction and related detail citation needed Thirteen distinct districts have been identified which meet the criteria for the National Register of Historic Places Among them are the 2nd Street District 10 buildings 15th Street district 13 buildings and the O Street district 43 buildings Hillsdale Street a popular and well preserved district contains 17 buildings of historic interest In all some 1 500 buildings have been recognized as qualifying for the National Register The Eureka Heritage Society a local architectural preservation group founded in 1973 has been instrumental in protecting and preserving many of Eureka s fine Victorians citation needed Parks and recreation EditSequoia Park Zoo situated on more than 67 acres 270 000 m2 of mature second growth Redwood forest includes Eureka s largest public playground and a duck pond in addition to gardens and examples of the area s many varieties of rhododendron bushes The City of Eureka Recreation Department manages 13 playgrounds including Cooper Gulch which is 33 acres 13 ha and many ball fields as well as tennis courts and others including basketball and soccer Other parks in or near Eureka include the Humboldt Botanical Garden and the Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge and the Eureka Marsh an accessible protected marsh between the Bayshore Mall and Humboldt Bay There is a modern boardwalk along the city s waterfront 124 Halvorsen Park includes a walkway along the water 125 Media EditThough Eureka has been the base for two major daily newspapers at different times in its 150 years only the Times Standard owned by the Colorado based Media News Group survives Media News Group also owns a weekly classified advertiser the Tri City Weekly 126 The Eureka Reporter founded in 2003 became a daily in 2006 began publishing five days per week at the end of 2007 and permanently closed in November 2008 127 The Times Standard printed nearly 20 000 papers per day as of 2004 128 as of 2018 its distribution was 13 000 and it published online only on Mondays 129 The LostCoast Outpost is another web based news sourceThe North Coast Journal a regional weekly moved from Arcata to Eureka in 2009 Eureka is also home to several alternative weekly publications Senior News 130 is a 24 page monthly newspaper distributed along a 150 mile 240 km stretch of the Northwest California coast published by the Humboldt Senior Resource Center since 1981 The small staff is augmented by community volunteer writers and by senior volunteers who distribute 5 000 free newspapers to more than 100 locations from Crescent City to Garberville Many of Humboldt County s commercial radio stations are based in Eureka KINS FM 106 3 131 KWSW 980 AM 132 and KEKA FM 101 5 133 owned and operated by Eureka Broadcasting Co Inc KFMI KRED KJNY and KATA Lost Coast Communications owns and operates several stations broadcasting to Eureka KSLG FM KHUM KLGE and KWPT Eureka also hosts KMUE the local repeater for Redway based community radio station KMUD On August 26 2006 the Blue Ox Millworks launched KKDS LP a low power FM station focused on youth and community issues On November 3 2008 a low power part 15 AM radio station Old Glory Radio 1650 AM 134 based in the Myrtletown neighborhood of Eureka went on the air it offers the area s only daily live local call in program in the morning KHSU the region s local public radio station is broadcast from Cal Poly Humboldt in Arcata A traveler s information station owned by the State of California KMKE LP operates at 98 1 MHz 135 Eureka s first television station was KIEM which signed on the air on October 25 1953 Additional stations signed on in the years following that first telecast beginning in 1958 including KVIQ LD and KAEF TV Notable people EditMain article List of people from Eureka CaliforniaSee also Edit California portalClarke Historical Museum HSU First Street Gallery Humboldt Arts Council Humboldt Bay Maritime Museum Humboldt Botanical Gardens Humboldt County Historical Society List of cities and towns in California Sequoia Park ZooNotes Edit Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 References Edit California Coastal Commission January 1 1987 California Coastal Resource Guide University of California Press pp 104 ISBN 978 0 520 06186 6 a b Eureka Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved November 5 2014 California Cities by Incorporation Date California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions Archived from the original Word on November 3 2014 Retrieved April 7 2013 Charter of the City of Eureka American Legal Publishing Retrieved February 13 2015 City of Eureka CA Mayor Mayor amp City Council Bios City of Eureka Retrieved April 14 2021 Message from the City Manager City of Eureka Retrieved December 30 2014 a b Senators State of California Retrieved April 7 2013 a b Members Assembly State of California Retrieved April 7 2013 a b California s 2nd Congressional District Representatives amp District Map Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved April 7 2013 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2020 2010 Census Urban and Rural Classification U S Census Bureau Retrieved December 9 2012 a b c Starting a Business in Eureka Greater Eureka Chamber of Commerce Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved December 9 2012 Eureka city QuickFacts United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved March 11 2015 Population and Housing Unit Estimates United States Census Bureau May 24 2020 Retrieved May 27 2020 ZIP Code tm Lookup United States Postal Service Retrieved November 23 2014 Population and Housing City of Eureka PDF City of Eureka Marina Center Mixed Use Development Project IV L 1 ESA Eureka California Retrieved December 9 2012 a b Wiyot Tribe Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved December 9 2012 Cal Poly Humboldt Center For Community Development 1974 Hupa Language Literature and Culture Hoopa Area Office Hoopa CA U S Bureau of Indian Affairs p 12 Gerh Susan 2005 Karuk Dictionary LBD Publishers p 301 Find a County National Association of Counties Archived from the original on May 31 2011 Retrieved June 7 2011 a b US Gazetteer files 2010 2000 and 1990 United States Census Bureau February 12 2011 Retrieved April 23 2011 Eureka CA Population Census 2010 and 2000 Interactive Map Demographics Statistics Quick Facts CensusViewer censusviewer com Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved January 15 2019 Eureka California Population 2018 worldpopulationreview com May 26 2018 Archived from the original on January 14 2019 Retrieved January 15 2019 a b c Section 5 Population and Economic Growth General Plan City of Eureka December 9 1996 Archived from the original on August 21 2012 Retrieved December 9 2012 About Eureka Greater Eureka Chamber of Commerce Archived from the original on December 26 2012 Retrieved December 9 2012 Walters Heidi January 17 2013 Eureka Has a New Boss North Coast Journal Retrieved August 22 2013 a b General Plan PDF City of Eureka California February 23 1999 p 30 Retrieved December 9 2011 Page 3 Located on California s North Coast Eureka is the westernmost city of the contiguous United States and the largest coastal city in California north of San Francisco Eureka is situated on Humboldt Bay which is the most important port between San Francisco and Coos Bay Oregon Eureka city California Archived September 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine State amp County QuickFacts January 10 2013 note in data set a b c Eureka An Architectural View Eureka California Eureka Heritage Society 1987 p 267 ISBN 978 0 9615004 0 5 Archived from the original on February 12 2006 Sequoia Park Zoo Over 100 Years of Change sequoiaparkzoo net Sequoia Park Zoo amp Foundation Romney Lee February 6 2013 Revival of nearly extinct Yurok language is a success story Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 7 2013 Davidson George 1891 The discovery of Humboldt Bay California Geographical Society of the Pacific p 16 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20 2011 Cobb David June 12 2008 Maxxam s sordid history with Pacific Lumber Eureka Times Standard MediaNews Group Northern California Network Archived from the original on March 10 2012 Retrieved August 20 2011 Driscoll John May 2 2008 Deal struck by Palco Mendocino Redwood Eureka Times Standard MediaNews Group Northern California Network Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Retrieved August 18 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l Pomeroy Caroline Thomson Cynthia J Stevens Melissa M August 2010 California s North Coast Fishing Communities Historical Perspective and Recent Trends Eureka Fishing Community Profile PDF National Oceans and Atmospheres Administration California Sea Grant Program p 79 Retrieved December 9 2012 a b Mendocino Triple Junction Offshore Northern California A Policy for Rapid Mobilization of USGS OBS RMOBS Woods Hole Science Center USGS Retrieved April 30 2013 a b Magnitude 6 5 earthquake rattles Eureka in Northern California Los Angeles Times January 9 2010 Archived from the original on January 11 2010 Retrieved January 9 2010 a b Radio news report KCBS San Francisco Bay Area Mahin Stephen Preliminary Observations from the Ferndale Area Earthquake of Jan 9 2010 Archived April 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center January 12 2010 Retrieved April 30 2013 Magnitude 5 9 OFFSHORE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA 2010 February 04 20 20 21 UTC Archived October 15 2011 at the Wayback Machine USGS Retrieved April 30 2013 a b Historic Earthquakes Cape Mendocino Archived December 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine USGS Retrieved April 30 2013 Robbins Gary 5 9 earthquake shakes northern California Archived October 29 2013 at the Wayback Machine Orange County Register February 4 2010 Retrieved April 30 2013 Biggest Earthquakes Near Eureka California United States USGS 2013 Retrieved April 30 2013 7 2 magnitude earthquake November 08 1980 10 27 UTC USGS 2013 Retrieved April 30 2013 Data PDF nctr pmel noaa gov Retrieved September 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Retrieved September 23 2015 WMO Climate Normals for Eureka WSO City CA 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved September 23 2015 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 Table III Population of Civil Divisions Less Than Counties PDF The Statistics of the Population of the United States PDF Washington DC Department of the Interior 1872 Archived PDF from the original on March 1 2020 Retrieved March 14 2020 QuickFacts Eureka city California United States Census Bureau Retrieved September 16 2021 Eureka CA USA Urban Areas City Population Retrieved December 9 2012 HFD Home Humboldt 1 FPD Archived from the original on September 16 2013 Retrieved August 21 2013 Eureka California Urban Map citypopulation de Retrieved August 21 2013 Eureka California Archived September 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine Quick Facts U S Census Bureau 2013 Retrieved August 24 2013 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 2010 Census Interactive Population Search CA Eureka city U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved July 12 2014 Eureka California Community Profile Retrieved November 22 2006 from Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 30 2006 Retrieved November 22 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sims Hank October 26 2006 City Asunder North Coast Journal Retrieved December 9 2012 Mayor and City Council City of Eureka Retrieved December 9 2012 a b c About District 1 California Department of Transportation Retrieved December 9 2012 Humboldt County Public Works Department Humboldt County Public Works Department Retrieved December 9 2012 Discover Humboldt Bay Humboldt Bay Harbor Recreation and Conservation District Retrieved August 20 2011 Vanderheiden Isabella February 25 2022 Eureka City Council to Discuss Future EaRTH Center Project Site Lost Coast Outpost Retrieved February 28 2022 Post Carbon Institute Report Paper Humboldt County CA Energy Element Background Technical Report Archived March 4 2008 at the Wayback Machine Post Carbon Cities Helping local governments understand and respond to the challenges of peak oil and global warming Post Carbon Institute Retrieved January 19 2014 Eureka City Council Approves Water Shortage Plan times standard com Times Standard Retrieved May 2 2017 Humboldt Bay Municipal Water District Services Archived January 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved February 26 2008 St Joseph Health receives regulatory approval to merge with Providence L A Biz June 23 2016 Retrieved July 6 2016 Chandler Jenna June 3 2016 Proposed St Joseph Providence merger raises concerns over health services Retrieved July 6 2016 Welcome to Eureka City Schools The Educational Leader on the North Coast Retrieved November 22 2006 from http www eurekacityschools org Arkley Center for the Performing Arts in Eureka CA Cinema Treasures cinematreasures org Retrieved June 8 2017 Eureka Symphony Welcome Archived from the original on February 19 2014 Historical Landmarks Humboldt County California State Parks Office of Historic Preservation 2012 Retrieved March 3 2012 Villani John October 1998 The 100 Best Small Art Towns in America Avalon Travel Publishing p 256 ISBN 978 1 56261 405 8 a b c Arts Alive First Saturday Night 1 1 2012 12 31 2012 Travel Site of Humboldt County Humboldt County Convention and Visitors Bureau March 2012 Archived from the original on March 6 2012 Retrieved March 3 2012 Mural Tour Eureka Travel Site of Humboldt County Humboldt County Convention and Visitors Bureau March 2012 Retrieved March 3 2012 A Multi Purpose Meeting Exhibit amp Event Facility Redwood Acres Fairground February 27 2012 Retrieved March 3 2012 Redwood Coast Music Festival Retrieved June 8 2017 Perilous Plunge Discovery Museum of Eureka Rhododendron Festival Archived April 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine Redwood Acres Retrieved June 8 2017 Humboldtwoodfair org www humboldtwoodfair org Retrieved June 8 2017 Summer Concerts on the boardwalk Eureka Humboldt Bay Humboldt County California Archived from the original on April 19 2013 Retrieved March 2 2012 Fourth of July Celebration Archived July 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Humboldt Bay Full of Blues Archived April 20 2014 at the Wayback Machine Chicken Wingfest Archived February 27 2012 at the Wayback Machine excaliburfaire org Registered at Namecheap com www excaliburfaire org Archived from the original on July 4 2011 Humboldt Pride humboldtpride org Archived from the original on April 22 2013 Retrieved June 8 2017 マンション賃貸のための不動産会社選びについて マンション賃貸のための不動産会社選びについて紹介します humboldtbaypaddlefest com Retrieved June 8 2017 Craftsman s Days Archived May 25 2013 at the Wayback Machine Christmas Truckers Parade Archived May 25 2013 at the Wayback Machine The San Francisco Earthquake 1906 Eyewitness to History 1997 Retrieved January 23 2011 Unique Histories Unique Inns Retrieved January 23 2011 City of Eureka Parks and Playgrounds Archived May 1 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 7 2011 Halvorsen Park City of Eureka Retrieved February 28 2022 Our Newspapers Archived May 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Media News Group Eureka Reporter to close doors Saturday The Times Standard November 6 2008 Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved January 27 2009 Honoring the 150th Anniversary of the Times Standard Congressional Record Tam Donna January 8 2012 Going digital Times Standard to stop printing Monday editions this week Times Standard Retrieved July 22 2016 Humboldt Senior Resource Center Supporting seniors in maintaining health dignity and self determination KINS 106 3 FM KWSW 980 AM The Songs You Love to Hear KEKA Classic Country Hits Old Glory Radio 1650 AM Archived from the original on December 16 2008 Retrieved December 22 2008 KMKE LPFM 98 1 MHz radio locator com Retrieved August 11 2020 Further reading EditRay Raphael Freeman House January 1 2007 Two Peoples One Place Humboldt County Historical Society for the Writing Humboldt History Project ISBN 978 1 883254 01 8 Retrieved March 25 2013 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Eureka Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eureka California Official website Eureka Art and Culture Commission Greater Eureka Chamber of Commerce Eureka Heritage Society Eureka Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eureka California amp oldid 1133546176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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