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Fremont, California

Fremont is a city in Alameda County, California, United States. Located in the East Bay region of the Bay Area, Fremont has a population of 230,504 as of 2020,[11] making it the fourth most populous city in the Bay Area, behind San Jose, San Francisco, and Oakland. It is the closest East Bay city to the high-tech Silicon Valley network of businesses, and has a strong tech industry presence.[13][14]

Fremont, California
Holy Spirit Church
Dominican Convent of the Holy Rosary
Country United States
State California
CountyAlameda
IncorporatedJanuary 23, 1956[1]
Named forJohn C. Frémont
Government
 • TypeCouncil–manager[2]
 • City council[8]Mayor Lily Mei
Vice Mayor Raj Salwan
Vinnie Bacon
Rick Jones
Teresa Keng
Yang Shao
Jenny Kassan[3]
 • City managerKarena Shackelford[4]
 • State senatorAisha Wahab (D)[5]
 • Assembly membersLiz Ortega (D) and Ash Kalra (D)[6]
 • United States RepresentativesEric Swalwell (D) and Ro Khanna (D)[7]
Area
 • Total88.46 sq mi (229.10 km2)
 • Land78.31 sq mi (202.83 km2)
 • Water10.14 sq mi (26.27 km2)  11.6%
Elevation56 ft (17 m)
Population
 • Total230,504
 • Rank2nd in Alameda County
16th in California
96th in the United States
 • Density2,600/sq mi (1,000/km2)
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)
ZIP codes[12]
94536–94539, 94555
Area code510, 341
FIPS code06-26000
GNIS feature IDs277521, 2410545
Websitewww.fremont.gov

The city's origins lie in the community that arose around Mission San José, founded in 1797 by the Spanish under Padre Fermín Lasuén. Fremont was incorporated on January 23, 1956, when the former towns of Mission San José, Centerville, Niles, Irvington, and Warm Springs unified into one city.[15] Fremont is named after John C. Frémont, a general who helped lead the American Conquest of California from Mexico and later served as Military Governor of California and then U.S. Senator.

History Edit

 
Fremont's origins lie in the community that arose around Mission San José, founded in 1795 by the Spanish under Padre Fermín de Lasuén.

Early history Edit

 
Vallejo Mill, built in 1853 by José de Jesús Vallejo.

The recorded history of the Fremont area began on June 6, 1797, when Mission San José was founded by the Spaniard Father Fermín de Lasuén. The Mission was established at the site of the Ohlone village of Oroysom. The tribe lived between present-day San Francisco and Monterey and more lands eastward. They lived in dome-shaped shelters made out of redwood bark or woven tule. They were primarily hunter-gatherers; men hunted and trapped waterfowl, rabbits, deer, elk, and bears, whilst women gathered nuts, berries, and root vegetables.[16] The Ohlone tribe lived beside rivers and estuaries because of the natural resources like fish and shellfish. In warm weather, men wore mostly nothing; in the winter, they wore animal hide or feather capes. Other than the weather, ceremonies also decided what the Ohlone men wore. The women wore deerskin aprons over skirts made of tule or shredded bark.[16]

Until 1769, the tribe lived peacefully but Spanish soldiers and missionaries arrived in California to expand Spanish dominion in the Americas and convert the Native Americans to Catholicism.[16] The Ohlone people weren't intimidated by the Franciscan priests, who welcomed them into their missions to live and work. Before missions, the Natives used tools made of stone, animal bones, and wood.[16] The missionaries taught them how to make metal tools and weapons and priests also showed them how to make adobe bricks. The bricks were then used to build missions rather than for the tribe to utilize. The Spaniards brought cattle, pigs and sheep and encouraged the Ohlone to give up hunting and gathering to try farming and ranching instead.[16] Living in the missions meant Ohlone people were forced into converting to Christianity and told to forget the superstitious beliefs that connected them to nature. Along with that, overpopulation caused food shortages and the Spanish brought diseases to the tribe, causing a lot of deaths and trouble that made an impact on a lot of lives.[16]

On their second day in the area, the Mission party killed a grizzly bear in Niles Canyon. The first English-speaking visitor to Fremont was the renowned trapper and explorer Jedediah Smith in 1827. The Mission prospered, eventually reaching a population of 1,887 inhabitants in 1831. The influence of the missionaries declined after 1834 when the Mexican government enacted secularization.

José de Jesus Vallejo, brother of Mariano Vallejo, was the grantee of the Rancho Arroyo de la Alameda Mexican land grant. His family was influential in the Fremont area in the late colonial era and owned and built a flour mill at the mouth of Niles Canyon.[17] In 1846 the town's namesake John C. Frémont led a military expedition to map a trail through Mission Pass for reaching the Pacific coast and to take possession of California from Mexico for the United States.

 
Dominican Convent of the Holy Rosary, founded in 1906.

The Fremont area grew rapidly at the time of the California Gold Rush. A town called Mission San José grew up around the old mission, with its own post office from 1850. Agriculture dominated the economy with grapes, nursery plants and olives as leading crops. In 1868 the 6.8-magnitude Hayward earthquake on the Hayward Fault collapsed buildings throughout the Fremont area, ruining Mission San José and its outbuildings. Until the 1906 San Francisco earthquake caused its destruction, the Fremont area's Palmdale Winery was the largest in California. The ruins of the Palmdale Winery are still visible near the Five Corners in Irvington.[18] From 1912 to 1915, the Niles section of the Fremont area was the earliest home of California's motion picture industry[19] (see Essanay Studios). Charlie Chaplin filmed several movies in the Fremont area, most notably The Tramp.

Incorporation Edit

Fremont was incorporated in 1956 under the leadership of Wally Pond, chair of the incorporation committee, when five towns in the area, Irvington, Centerville, Mission San José, Niles, and Warm Springs, came together to form a city.[20] Glenmoor Gardens, the largest subdivision in Fremont, was under construction in the area, by developers Ralph E. Cotter, Jr., James R. Meyer, civil engineer Fred T. Duvall, and contractors James L. Reeder, and Robert H. Reeder. When the Glenmoor Gardens Homeowners Association (GGHA) was incorporated, in March 1953, there were no more than 75 houses in the subdivision. It was probably the first such organization in the Fremont area; in its scope and structure. The five-member board of directors (which included James Meyer and James Reeder) was set up to oversee a full range of services, from police and fire protection to street maintenance (which later became the purview of the city government).[21]

Fremont became more industrialized between 1953 and 1962. The first Fremont post office opened in 1956.[22] A boom in high-tech employment in the 1980s to the late 1990s, especially in the Warm Springs District, caused rapid development in the city and linked the city with the Silicon Valley. The Apple factory where the first Mac computer was manufactured was located in Fremont;[23] production ceased in 1993.[23] Other semiconductor and telecommunications firms soon opened in the city, including Cirrus Logic, Asyst Technologies, Mattson Technology, Lam Research, Premisys Communications, and Nextlink California.[23] Approximately 750 high tech companies had offices, headquarters or production facilities in Fremont by 1999.[23] These firms included fifteen of the top one hundred fastest-growing public companies in the San Francisco Bay Area and eighteen of the top fifty companies in the East Bay.[23] The high-tech growth in Fremont continues today and is a major industry for the city.

 
Tesla Factory (2012) in South Fremont

The General Motors automotive assembly plant in South Fremont was the town's largest employer, and Fremont was known for its drag strip. In the 1980s, the plant became a joint venture automotive assembly plant of Toyota and General Motors, and was renamed NUMMI. Toyota and NUMMI shut down its operations in early 2010. Part of the plant was acquired in June 2010 by Tesla Motors as its primary production plant, known as the Tesla Factory.

Solyndra, a solar panel manufacturer, was promoted in 2010 by President Barack Obama as a model for government investment in green technology[24] after his administration approved a $535-million Department of Energy loan guarantee and the company built a $733 million state-of-the-art robotic facility, but in 2011 the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and laid-off 1,000 workers.[25] Data storage company Seagate Technology, incorporated in the Republic of Ireland with executive offices in Cupertino, acquired the former Solyndra building, which serves as Seagate's headquarters since 2020.

Geography Edit

In 1956, five small, independent towns (Centerville, Niles, Irvington, Mission San José, and Warm Springs) located between the East Bay rolling hills and the San Francisco Bay were annexed into a single new, incorporated city called Fremont. Six decades later, these places have greatly expanded, are no longer separate communities, and are considered districts or community plan areas of the City of Fremont. The town of Newark was originally slated to join the annex, but ultimately its voters declined since Newark representatives suspected that they would become an industrial district; Newark became its own incorporated city in 1955. Later, Newark annexed a patch of unincorporated land between Mowry Avenue and Stevenson Blvd; Land which is now occupied by Newpark Mall and the surrounding plazas. Since incorporation, Fremont has created six more districts, which it calls "community plan areas" for planning purposes. These include Central, North Fremont, South Fremont, and Bayside. The two other districts, Baylands and the Hill Areas, are primarily open space.[26][27]

The area consisting of Fremont and the cities of Newark and Union City is known collectively as the Tri-City Area (different from the adjacent Tri-Valley area encompassing Pleasanton, Dublin, and Livermore).

Centerville District Edit

Centerville was the main town in Washington Township. Centerville is located at 37°33′15″N 121°59′57″W / 37.55417°N 121.99917°W / 37.55417; -121.99917 (Centerville). It lies at an elevation of 52 feet (16 m). Centerville was started by George Lloyd who started selling cold beer to stage passengers from a tent in 1850.[28] Capt. George Bond set up a general store and the name Centerville was chosen.[28] The post office opened Centreville post office in 1855 and changed the spelling to Centerville in 1893.[28] The Centerville Pioneer Cemetery contains the burial places of many of the city's founding pioneers.

Centerville can be traced back to its native American roots. Spanish, Mexican, Italian, Portuguese and Swiss (Swiss Park), peoples were among the early settlers that contributed greatly to the growth of Centerville.

Early Centerville was a quiet farming community, which consisted of large Spanish land grants divided into smaller farms. The Freitas Ranch on Thornton Ave was probably the largest of the working farms. There were acres of apricot along with other fruit and nut orchards and large fields of various types of fresh produce.[29]

 
Families of Japanese ancestry being removed from Centerville, California during World War II.

After President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which authorized military commanders to exclude "any or all persons" from certain areas in the name of national defense, the Western Defense Command began ordering Japanese Americans living on the West Coast to present themselves for "evacuation" from the newly created military zones. This included many Centerville farming families.

Centerville was also a main stop for the early railways. This gave the local farmers a way to quickly get their produce to market. With the access to railway service there was once a large cannery on Baine Ave. west of Fremont Ave. (now Peralta) next to the tracks. In 1959, the cannery was destroyed in the largest fire in Fremont's history.[30] The fire lasted for two days, and effectively put an end to what had been the largest employer in Centerville at the time. The cannery was never rebuilt.[31]

Housing developments began to appear in the area after WWII. Most of the early housing stood along Fremont Blvd from Decoto Road south to Washington High school, along Thornton Ave from Fremont Blvd west to the Newark city border, and along Peralta Blvd from Fremont Blvd to Niles.

For city planning purposes, Centerville was enlarged to encompass most of the north central residential section of Fremont, from Mowry Ave to Decoto Rd, from I-880 to the BART line. This Centerville community plan area includes the sprawling subdivisions, developed in the 1950s and 1960s, of Glenmoor Gardens, bounded by Central Avenue, Fremont Boulevard, Mowry Avenue, and the I-880 freeway. and the Cabrillo Park subdivision bound by Thornton Ave, Fremont Blvd, Decoto Road and the I-880 freeway. Also the Brookvale subdivisions, the Quarry Lakes Regional Park, and part of Parkmont.[32] The area is served by two high schools, Washington High School (Fremont, California) established in 1892, which for a long time was the only high school in the area and American High School established in 1972. It also has two junior high schools, Centerville Junior High School and Thornton Junior High School, which now stands on the old main site of the Freitas ranch.

Niles District Edit

 
Niles Art Walk 2005

The town is physically divided from other parts of Fremont and neighboring Union City by Mission Boulevard (State Route 238) to the east and north, Alameda Creek to the south, Union Pacific Railroad to the west and southeast, and the Quarry Lakes to the southwest. The hills of Niles are lower than those of the area south of the Alameda Creek in Mission San Jose. Old Town Niles features its own library, post office, and silent movie theater as well as a large number of antique and craft stores. Niles is located at 37°34′44″N 121°58′40″W / 37.57889°N 121.97778°W / 37.57889; -121.97778 (Niles District). It lies at an elevation of 112 feet (34 m).

The community, once called Vallejo Mills, got its name from the Central Pacific Railroad's Niles depot, built in 1870 as part of the First transcontinental railroad and named after their railroad attorney and stockholder Addison Niles, who became associate justice on the California Supreme Court two years later.[33] A post office was opened at Niles in 1873.[33]

Niles was the home of one of the first West Coast motion picture companies, Essanay Studios. Charlie Chaplin and Broncho Billy Anderson filmed some of their most famous silent movies in Niles. Scenic Niles Canyon stretches between Niles and Sunol. The nonprofit Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum offers both artifacts of Niles' early years and each Saturday evening, screenings of early-twentieth-century silent films, many of which were filmed locally.

The Niles Canyon Railway runs along Alameda Creek in Niles Canyon and carries passengers on weekend excursions, including a holiday "train of lights", which is extremely popular – tickets for these trains typically sell out by early October. The Niles Canyon Railroad has a small but well-maintained collection of historic rail stock.

Part of historic Niles is Mayhew Spring, also known as Mayhew's Sulphur Spring, which was located 600 feet (180 m) north of the Niles railroad depot.[33] The facility was owned by H.A. Meyhew.[33] The coast-to-coast completion of the Transcontinental Railroad is reported to have occurred in nearby Niles Canyon. In September 1869, four months after the famous golden spike ceremony at Promontory Summit, Utah, the Central Pacific Railroad completed the transcontinental rail link between Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay, finishing the track through the canyon. The Central Pacific had acquired the Western Pacific and other local railroads and built track to connect them at a waterfront terminal at Alameda Point.

Also part of Niles is Niles Junction on the Western Pacific Railroad,[33] located at 37°34′35″N 121°58′17″W / 37.57639°N 121.97139°W / 37.57639; -121.97139 (Niles Junction WPRR) and situated at an elevation of 79 ft (24 m).

Irvington District Edit

The Irvington District area has cycled through many name changes over time. In the early 1850's two emancipated black men were traveling with E.L. Beard through California, reputedly in search of a fortune. The former slaves noticed the busy traffic at the crossroads of what is today the "Five Corners" intersection. Although now gone, there were two embarcaderos (water crossings) at this area. One of these crossings had a ferry. Realizing the financial opportunity of the area, the former slaves constructed the first building at the cross roads, a tavern with an inn. This tavern was later known as Dave's Saloon.[34] This corner, today the intersection of Fremont and Washington Boulevards, Union and Bay Streets, is now commonly known as "Five Corners" or Irvington Square. Irvington Square's marker, Irvington Plaza park, is located at 37°31′22″N 121°58′18″W / 37.52278°N 121.97167°W / 37.52278; -121.97167 (Irvington Square). The inn and several of the other original buildings were demolished by the city of Fremont in the early 1980s. During the 1850's until re-designated in 1871 by the U. S Post Office, the cross roads were locally known as "Niggers Corners". In 1871 Washington College, the first industrial educational institution in California was established in Washington township near the crossroads. As a result, the US Postal Service established a post office called Washington Corners at the college in 1870, which became the name of the settlement on the 1878 Alameda County map of Washington Township.

In 1884, realizing the need for a proper town name, local inhabitants selected the name of Irving. The name was chosen in honor of Judge Irving, the local traveling circuit judge of the time. Later, when the railroad came through the area, the published train schedule pamphlets erroneously listed the Irving train depot as "Irvington." The town petitioned the railroad about the error. The railroad company notified the town that it was too costly for them to replace the train schedule pamphlets (over $100,000); and in 1887 following the recommendation, the people of Irving changed the town name to Irvington.[citation needed]

The Irvington district has two main neighborhoods: Irvington Woods and the Irvington Square. The neighborhood is ethnically mixed and is primarily working class.[35] For city planning purposes, the Irvington area was enlarged to encompass most of the south central residential section of Fremont, from Auto Mall Parkway to Mowry Avenue, from I-880 to roughly the BART line (excluding the Central District described below). This Irvington community plan area includes the Sundale neighborhood, the South Sundale neighborhood, 28 Palms, Blacow, and Grimmer subdivisions. The area is served by three high schools: Irvington High School, Robertson High School, and John F. Kennedy High School.

The Irvingtonian period of North American mammals is named for this district due to the fossil sequence excavated here.[36]

Mission San Jose District Edit

 
Dominican Convent of the Holy Rosary.

At the time of the California Gold Rush, a boom town grew up around the old Mission, to equip and transport 49ers overland to the gold fields. A post office was opened at Mission San Jose in 1850.[37]

The district, like Niles, is surrounded by hills. The hills are higher and steeper than Niles, with the highest points being on the Mission Ridge. Mission San Jose district lies close to the northern two peaks, Mission Peak and Mount Allison. Mission Peak is very distinctive and is one of Fremont's emblems. These peaks go from 2,517 to 2,604 ft (794 m), taller than Mount Tamalpais, a great height for the San Francisco Bay Area. They see some deep snow occasionally.

Fremont's community college, Ohlone College, is situated one block away from the mission and serves over 12,000 students.

Mission San Jose has the highest concentration of Asian Americans in Fremont – over 50% of the population as of the 2000 census. The local high school is Mission San Jose High School, ranked 67 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. The median family income for the Mission San Jose area (ZIP code 94539) exceeded $114,595 in 2005. Owing to an influx of professionals and other affluent families seeking access to the top-performing local public schools, Mission San Jose's median home value reached $831,000 in 2006, earning the community a rank of 237 on Forbes magazine's list of the 500 most affluent communities in the United States.[38]

Mission San Jose Edit

 
The main facade of the restored 1809 Mission San José chapel, on the National Register of Historic Places

Nestled at the base of Fremont's rolling hills is the Mission San José, one of the oldest of the Spanish missions in California, for which this district is named. The church building that exists today is a re-construction (dedicated in 1985 for daily Mass and tours) of the original 1809 adobe church that was destroyed by the 1868 Hayward-fault earthquake. One side of the original mission quadrangle remains and houses a museum. Mission San Jose is located at 37°31′59″N 121°55′13″W / 37.53306°N 121.92028°W / 37.53306; -121.92028 (Mission San Jose); and lies at an elevation of 305 feet (93 m).

Warm Springs District Edit

 
Don Antonio Suñol, owner of Rancho Agua Caliente, from which the Warm Springs district takes its name.

Warm Springs is located on Rancho Agua Caliente and is so named for the springs that are located there.[39] In early times, there was a settlement called Harrisburgh (also, Harrisburg and Peacock's) a short distance east from the small settlement of Warm Springs.[39] A post office opened in Harrisburgh in 1865 and changed its name to Warm Springs in 1885.[39] The name Harrisburgh commemorated Abram Harris, who settled there in 1858.[39] The name Peacock's commemorated George W. Peacock, its first postmaster.[39] The post office name changed to Warmsprings in 1895 and reverted to Warm Springs in 1950.[39]

The Warm Springs district is the southernmost portion of Fremont whose hub is the Warm Springs and Mission Boulevard intersection. It is located at 37°29′14″N 121°55′45″W / 37.48722°N 121.92917°W / 37.48722; -121.92917 (Warm Springs), and lies at an elevation of 62 feet (19 m). Warm Springs has attracted the headquarters of many high-tech companies including Nielsen Norman Group, Lam Research, Corsair and Lexar of the US as well as foreign high-tech companies such as Elitegroup Computer Systems, and Asus. The district is also home to blue-collar industry. The San Jose mission is also present.

Warm Springs also serves as commercial center for the mainly residential Mission San Jose district, especially since the construction of Pacific Commons, a large, modern regional shopping center. The Oakland Athletics talked about moving their stadium to this area. Warm Springs was home to one of the SF Bay Area's only two coffee houses to employ baristas who wear bikinis, Your Coffee Cups, a concept that's gained some controversy from Bay Area newspapers and news stations.[40][41][42][43] This controversy led to the eventual closing of the business.

The BART extension to Warm Springs began construction in 2009[44] and Warm Springs/South Fremont station opened for service on March 25, 2017.[45]

Central district Edit

 
Lake Elizabeth of Fremont Central Park

The central district is surrounded by the Centerville, Niles, Mission San Jose, and Irvington communities. The central district contains retail shopping centers (e.g., the Fremont Hub), the Fremont Bay Area Rapid Transit station, health care centers and Central Park (Lake Elizabeth).

City planners envision a mid-density, pedestrian friendly, transit oriented development, bounded by Mowry Ave, Fremont Blvd, Walnut Ave, and Paseo Padre Pkwy.[26][46] One of the central streets, the Capital Avenue extension to Fremont Blvd, was completed in 2016, as the city pursues its plans for a Downtown Fremont December 24, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.

Most of Fremont is part of the Laguna Creek Watershed.

North Fremont District Edit

 
George Washington Patterson House (1857), Ardenwood, on the National Register of Historic Places

North Fremont is a primarily residential district surrounded by Union City, Centerville District, Newark, and Coyote Hills Regional Park. It is a growing community that includes the Ardenwood neighborhood, the Lakes and Birds neighborhood, and the Northgate neighborhood.[47] It is the site of the Ardenwood Historic Farm, which has the George Washington Patterson House as one of its highlights, and the Ardenwood Technology Park. A 99 Ranch Market is one of many Asian businesses in the North Fremont District. Thornton Junior High School and American High School, which are both physically located in the enlarged Centerville District, also serve as the junior high and high school, respectively, for this community.

South Fremont District Edit

South Fremont is a primarily industrial district, east of Interstate 880 and west of Interstate 680, south of Auto Mall Parkway and north of Brown Rd. The area overlaps with Warm Springs, with which it shares the eponymous BART station. The composition of the area will change, because thousands of residential units were under construction as of 2016. It is sandwiched between the Irvington and Warm Springs community plan areas.[26][46] It is noted as the site of the Tesla Factory as well as the site of the Warm Springs / South Fremont BART station. In 2022, a pedestrian bridge was built from the BART station to Lopes Court. It costed $41 million.[48][49]

Bayside Industrial District Edit

Bayside Industrial is a primarily industrial and commercial district, west of Interstate 880 between Newark and Milpitas.[26][46]

Hill Area District Edit

Hill Area is an open land district that forms the eastern edge of Fremont.[26][46] It is the site of Mission Peak.

Climate Edit

Fremont has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen: Csb) typical of the San Francisco Bay Area. This climate features warm, dry summers and cool, wet winters. Like nearby San Jose, precipitation is fairly low (about 17 inches per year) because the city lies in the rain shadow of the Santa Cruz Mountains to the west. The lowest temperature recorded was 21 °F (−6 °C) on December 23, 1990.

Climate data for Fremont, California, 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1996–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 74
(23)
79
(26)
87
(31)
91
(33)
98
(37)
108
(42)
103
(39)
102
(39)
104
(40)
98
(37)
84
(29)
73
(23)
108
(42)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 67.5
(19.7)
72.3
(22.4)
77.2
(25.1)
83.6
(28.7)
87.9
(31.1)
94.1
(34.5)
91.1
(32.8)
92.0
(33.3)
93.1
(33.9)
86.1
(30.1)
77.1
(25.1)
67.5
(19.7)
96.6
(35.9)
Average high °F (°C) 58.6
(14.8)
61.4
(16.3)
65.1
(18.4)
67.7
(19.8)
71.1
(21.7)
75.3
(24.1)
77.9
(25.5)
78.2
(25.7)
78.3
(25.7)
73.3
(22.9)
64.6
(18.1)
58.4
(14.7)
69.2
(20.7)
Daily mean °F (°C) 50.6
(10.3)
52.9
(11.6)
55.8
(13.2)
58.0
(14.4)
61.5
(16.4)
65.0
(18.3)
67.3
(19.6)
67.7
(19.8)
67.2
(19.6)
62.6
(17.0)
55.4
(13.0)
50.5
(10.3)
59.5
(15.3)
Average low °F (°C) 42.6
(5.9)
44.4
(6.9)
46.4
(8.0)
48.3
(9.1)
51.9
(11.1)
54.7
(12.6)
56.8
(13.8)
57.1
(13.9)
56.0
(13.3)
52.0
(11.1)
46.2
(7.9)
42.5
(5.8)
49.9
(9.9)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 32.9
(0.5)
34.9
(1.6)
37.9
(3.3)
40.5
(4.7)
45.8
(7.7)
49.1
(9.5)
52.5
(11.4)
53.5
(11.9)
49.3
(9.6)
44.1
(6.7)
37.0
(2.8)
31.7
(−0.2)
30.6
(−0.8)
Record low °F (°C) 26
(−3)
31
(−1)
34
(1)
34
(1)
41
(5)
46
(8)
48
(9)
46
(8)
46
(8)
40
(4)
32
(0)
27
(−3)
26
(−3)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.00
(76)
3.17
(81)
2.52
(64)
1.22
(31)
0.50
(13)
0.16
(4.1)
0.00
(0.00)
0.02
(0.51)
0.10
(2.5)
0.69
(18)
1.59
(40)
2.97
(75)
15.94
(405)
Average precipitation days 9.9 9.5 9.6 5.9 3.1 0.9 0.0 0.3 0.7 2.9 7.0 10.3 60.1
Source 1: NOAA[50]
Source 2: National Weather Service (mean maxima/minima 2006–2020)[51]

Demographics Edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
196043,790
1970100,869130.3%
1980131,94530.8%
1990173,33931.4%
2000203,41317.3%
2010214,0895.2%
2020230,5047.7%
U.S. Decennial Census[52]

According to the 2020 census estimate, the median income for a household in the city is $142,374.[53] Males have a median household income of $59,274 versus $40,625 for females. The per capita income for the city was $31,411. About 4.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 5.9% of those under age 18 and 6.2% of those age 65 or over.

 
Map of racial distribution in the southern San Francisco Bay Area, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other

The 2010 United States Census[54] reported that Fremont had a population of 214,089. The population density was 2,443.7 inhabitants per square mile (943.5/km2).

The Census reported that 212,438 people (99.2% of the population) lived in households, 969 (0.5%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 682 (0.3%) were institutionalized.

There were 71,004 households, out of which 31,070 (43.8%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 45,121 (63.5%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 7,070 (10.0%) had a female householder with no husband present, 3,382 (4.8%) had a male householder with no wife present. There were 2,779 (3.9%) unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 444 (0.6%) same-sex married couples or partnerships. 11,576 households (16.3%) were made up of individuals, and 3,697 (5.2%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.99. There were 55,573 families (78.3% of all households); the average family size was 3.36.

The population was spread out, with 53,216 people (24.9%) under the age of 18, 15,610 people (7.3%) aged 18 to 24, 66,944 people (31.3%) aged 25 to 44, 56,510 people (26.4%) aged 45 to 64, and 21,809 people (10.2%) who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 36.8 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.9 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 96.4 males.

There were 73,989 housing units at an average density of 844.5 per square mile (326.1/km2), of which 71,004 were occupied, of which 44,463 (62.6%) were owner-occupied, and 26,541 (37.4%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 1.3%; the rental vacancy rate was 4.5%. 136,606 people (63.8% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 75,832 people (35.4%) lived in rental housing units.

Fremont has a large Deaf community, in large part because it is home of the Northern California campus of the California School for the Deaf. The school district is called the Fremont Unified School District which also serves parts of Union City and Hayward.

Race and ethnicity Edit

As of 2010 more than half the residents of Fremont were of Asian ancestry, with large populations of Chinese, Asian Indians, and Filipinos.

The racial makeup of Fremont was:

108,332 (50.6%) Asian (consisting of 18.1% Indian, 17.8% Chinese, 6.7% Filipino, 2.5% Vietnamese, 1.8% Korean, 1.0% Pakistani, 0.8% Japanese, 0.6% Burmese)
70,320 (32.8%) White, Non-Hispanic Whites were 26.5% of the population in 2010,[55] down from 85.4% in 1970.[56]
31,698 (14.8%) Hispanic or Latino of any race. (consisting of 11.0% Mexican, 0.6% Puerto Rican, 0.5% Salvadoran).
13,605 (6.4%) from other races,
12,584 (5.9%) from two or more races
7,103 (3.3%) African American,
1,169 (0.5%) Pacific Islander,
976 (0.5%) Native American,

Due in large part to a substantial influx of Afghans granted asylum in the United States following the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union, Fremont is the home to the largest concentration of Afghan Americans in the United States.[57] Judith Miller of City Journal wrote that unlike many ethnic groups, the Afghans in Fremont have few political representatives at various levels and an insular focus.[58] This concentration is noted in Khaled Hosseini's 2003 novel Kite Runner.

Fremont and nearby Union City have fairly large numbers of Pacific Islanders, Cubans and Puerto Ricans, Spanish and Portuguese, and a small number of American Indians.

Demographic profile[59] 2010 2018 estimate[60]
Total Population 214,089 – 100.0% 237,807
One Race 201,505 – 94.1% 94.5%
Not Hispanic or Latino 182,391 – 85.2% 86.5%
White alone 56,766 – 26.5% 24.9%
Black or African American alone 6,743 – 3.1% 3.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native alone 458 – 0.2% 0.4%
Asian alone 107,679 – 50.3% 57.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone 1,064 – 0.5% 0.9%
Some other race alone 388 – 0.2%
Two or more races alone 9,293 – 4.3% 5.5%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 31,698 – 14.8% 13.5%

Economy Edit

Companies headquartered in Fremont include Antec Inc, Corsair Gaming, Electronics for Imaging, Ikanos Communications, Lam Research, Fremont Bank, Nielsen Norman Group, Oplink Communications, SYNNEX, S3 Graphics, Tailored Brands and DCKAP.

Top employers Edit

According to the city's June 2022 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report,[61] the top employers in the city are:

# Employer # of Employees
1 Tesla, Inc. 22,000
2 Lam Research 3,000
3 Washington Hospital 2,400
4 Kaiser Permanente 1,600
5 Synnex 1,350
6 Western Digital 1,100
7 City of Fremont 1,000
8 Fremont Unified School District 800
9 Boehringer Ingelheim 800
10 Sutter Health 775

Culture and recreation Edit

The City of Fremont has been a Tree City USA since 1996. There are approximately 55,000 trees in city parks, streets, and landscaped boulevard areas. The city operates the Olive Hyde Art Gallery, adjacent to Mission San Jose, which has featured Bay Area artists such as Wendy Yoshimura, the California Society of Printmakers and the Etsy collective.[62][63] The public gallery is housed in a former home of Olive Hyde, a descendant of early San Francisco Mayor George Hyde.[64][65]

Other cultural, historical, or scientific landmarks include: Fremont Central Park and Lake Elizabeth, Ardenwood Historic Farm, California Nursery Historical Park, Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge, Mission Peak Regional Preserve, Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum, Washington Township Museum of Local History, Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area, Shinn Park and Arboretum, and Coyote Hills Regional Park.

Government Edit

An elected mayor heads Fremont city government for a four-year term. The mayor chairs the city council, which has four elected council members in addition to the mayor. Two new seats have been added to the council beginning in 2018, for a total of seven seats when district-based elections are phased in. The council adopts the city's budget, and decides major policies. The city council appoints a city manager and city attorney. The city manager hires city staff, and manages day-to-day business. Advisory bodies work with the city council on some issues, to facilitate the council's final decisions. The mayor appoints advisory body members, subject to the approval of a majority of the council. Most members serve four-year terms of office without pay, with the exception of planning commissioners.

The City of Fremont directly provides services related to public safety, land use regulation, infrastructure maintenance, parks and recreation, and local social services. To provide these services, the city government is organized into 22 departments, from Animal Services to Transportation Engineering.

According to a 2009 financial report, city revenues were $280 million, expenditures $200 million, assets $1,200 million, cash and investments $340 million, and liabilities $260 million.[66] As of 2015, the annual budget was $160 million and the city had 800 employees.[67]

The city council has adopted a balanced budget by July 1 of each year. Budget problems have in some past years involved cuts in services, reductions in city staffing and wage concessions by labor unions.

Special districts provide water and sewer services for the city: Alameda County Water District and Union Sanitary District. A private contractor, Allied Waste, provides garbage collection and recycling services to the city.

BoxART! Program: The City of Fremont boxART September 28, 2020, at the Wayback Machine! program transforms Fremont's traffic signal control boxes with compelling and creative imagery.

Grand Jury investigation of record-keeping Edit

A Grand Jury in 2015 found that the city government did not comply with state law on public records,[67] by deleting most emails after 30 days instead of the required two years. All emails were labeled automatically as "unsaved drafts" unless designated manually for retention. The city did not keep any record of councilmember emails, which used fremont.gov addresses and were relayed on to councilmembers' private email accounts. Though city officials held that automatic deletion would reduce data storage costs, the Grand Jury determined that the cost of complying with the state law would not be significant.[68][69]

District-based elections Edit

The city will phase in district-based instead of at-large elections for all but one seat on the city council, beginning in November 2018.[70][71] Two new seats will be added, from five seats to seven. Six of the seats will require residence inside a district, while the seat held by the mayor will remain at large. The council chose the new district boundaries in June 2017, a controversial vote that drew accusations of gerrymandering to favor two of the incumbents.[72][71]

The districting was forced by the threat of a legal action from a group claiming that Latino minorities comprising 14 percent of the population had not been adequately represented. Few or no Latinos were elected to the council during 1956–2017.[73] Some claimed that the results of precinct voting may have been polarized along racial lines.[71][74]

Politics Edit

According to the California Secretary of State, as of February 10, 2019, Fremont has 104,650 registered voters. Of those, 46,840 (44.8%) are registered Democrats, 13,989 (13.4%) are registered Republicans, and 40,161 (38.4%) have declined to state a political party.[75]

Education Edit

Primary and secondary schools Edit

 
Washington, the oldest high school in Fremont, on the National Register

The Fremont Unified School District has five high schools for grades 9–12: American, Irvington, Kennedy, Mission San Jose and Washington. The 5,000 seat Tak Fudenna Stadium serves all five high schools as a venue for football, track, soccer and high school graduation ceremonies.[76] These five high schools, along with James Logan High School in Union City and Newark Memorial High School in Newark, make up the Mission Valley Athletic League (M.V.A.L.).

The district has a continuation high school (Robertson); two independent study programs (Vista and COIL); an adult school; five middle schools for grades 7–8 (Centerville, Hopkins, Horner, Thornton and Walters); and 29 elementary schools, including Glenmoor Elementary.(K-6).[77] The district operates the Mission Valley Regional Occupational Program jointly with Newark and New Haven Unified School Districts.

For the year 2019, William Hopkins Junior High, Mission San Jose High, John F. Kennedy High, and American High all received the California Distinguished Schools Award, administered by the California Department of Education.[78]

Fremont Christian School and Averroes High School in Fremont are not part of FUSD. California School for the Deaf, Fremont serves Northern California and shares a campus with the statewide California School for the Blind.

Colleges and universities Edit

The Ohlone Community College District operates Ohlone College in Fremont, and a smaller campus in Newark. The University of Phoenix Bay Area Campus and Northwestern Polytechnic University offer undergraduate and graduate programs in technology and management areas. 42 is a private computer science university that opened in Fremont, as a sister school to the 42 campus in Paris, France. Gateway Seminary has a campus in Fremont.

Public libraries Edit

The Alameda County Library is headquartered in Fremont.[79] The Fremont Main Library is the largest branch with the highest circulation of the Alameda County Library, and shares its building with the Alameda County Library Administration. It has the Maurice Marks Center for Local and California History, and the Fukaya public meeting room. Alameda County Library has other branch libraries in Centerville, Irvington and Niles.

Transportation Edit

 
Entrance of Warm Springs South Fremont Station
 
View of Fremont-Centerville (Amtrak station) from Platform #1

Fremont is served by Interstate 880 (Nimitz Freeway) and Interstate 680 (Sinclair Freeway). Though they do not intersect, they are connected in the Warm Springs district via a very busy one-mile segment of Mission Boulevard which is SR 262. In addition, it is served by SR 84 and the segment of Mission Boulevard which is SR 238. The city is the eastern terminus of the Dumbarton Bridge.

Elevated sound levels exist along Interstate 880; Caltrans and the city have sought to mitigate sound levels by constructing noise barriers.[80]

Regional rail transportation is provided by BART and the Altamont Corridor Express (ACE). Fremont's BART station once served as the southernmost terminus for the BART system; a 5.4-mile (8.7 km) BART extension to the Warm Springs / South Fremont station opened on March 25, 2017. A southward BART extension into Santa Clara county and the Milpitas and Berryessa/North San José stations opened on June 13, 2020;[81] a further BART extension to downtown San Jose is in the planning stages. The Fremont-Centerville station provides a stopping point for ACE service, which travels from Stockton to San Jose, as well as for Amtrak's Capitol Corridor service. Bus service is provided by AC Transit locally.

Future rail Edit

Caltrain is undertaking environmental and engineering review for a planned Dumbarton Rail Corridor between the Peninsula and Alameda County. It would add Caltrain stations to Union City, Fremont-Centerville, Newark, and Menlo Park/East Palo Alto.[82]

Notable people Edit

Sister cities Edit

Fremont was formerly a sister city to Elizabeth, South Australia until Elizabeth merged with Munno Para to form the City of Playford in 1997.[85] Currently, Fremont is currently twinned with the following cities:[86]

City Subdivision Country Date
Puerto Peñasco Sonora Mexico 1971
Fukaya Saitama Prefecture Japan 1979
Horta Azores Portugal 1987
Lipa City Batangas Philippines 1992
Jaipur Rajasthan India 1993

See also Edit

References Edit

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General
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Fremont, California

External links Edit

  • City Of Fremont official website

fremont, california, unincorporated, community, yolo, county, california, fremont, yolo, county, california, fremont, city, alameda, county, california, united, states, located, east, region, area, fremont, population, 2020, making, fourth, most, populous, cit. For the unincorporated community in Yolo County California see Fremont Yolo County California Fremont is a city in Alameda County California United States Located in the East Bay region of the Bay Area Fremont has a population of 230 504 as of 2020 11 making it the fourth most populous city in the Bay Area behind San Jose San Francisco and Oakland It is the closest East Bay city to the high tech Silicon Valley network of businesses and has a strong tech industry presence 13 14 Fremont CaliforniaCityMission San JoseView of Mission Peak from Lake ElizabethHoly Spirit ChurchDominican Convent of the Holy RosaryWashington High SchoolSealShow FremontShow Alameda CountyShow CaliforniaShow the United StatesCountry United StatesState CaliforniaCountyAlamedaIncorporatedJanuary 23 1956 1 Named forJohn C FremontGovernment TypeCouncil manager 2 City council 8 Mayor Lily MeiVice Mayor Raj SalwanVinnie BaconRick JonesTeresa KengYang ShaoJenny Kassan 3 City managerKarena Shackelford 4 State senatorAisha Wahab D 5 Assembly membersLiz Ortega D and Ash Kalra D 6 United States RepresentativesEric Swalwell D and Ro Khanna D 7 Area 9 Total88 46 sq mi 229 10 km2 Land78 31 sq mi 202 83 km2 Water10 14 sq mi 26 27 km2 11 6 Elevation 10 56 ft 17 m Population 2020 11 Total230 504 Rank2nd in Alameda County16th in California96th in the United States Density2 600 sq mi 1 000 km2 Time zoneUTC 8 Pacific Summer DST UTC 7 PDT ZIP codes 12 94536 94539 94555Area code510 341FIPS code06 26000GNIS feature IDs277521 2410545Websitewww wbr fremont wbr govThe city s origins lie in the community that arose around Mission San Jose founded in 1797 by the Spanish under Padre Fermin Lasuen Fremont was incorporated on January 23 1956 when the former towns of Mission San Jose Centerville Niles Irvington and Warm Springs unified into one city 15 Fremont is named after John C Fremont a general who helped lead the American Conquest of California from Mexico and later served as Military Governor of California and then U S Senator Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Incorporation 2 Geography 2 1 Centerville District 2 2 Niles District 2 3 Irvington District 2 4 Mission San Jose District 2 4 1 Mission San Jose 2 5 Warm Springs District 2 6 Central district 2 7 North Fremont District 2 8 South Fremont District 2 9 Bayside Industrial District 2 10 Hill Area District 2 11 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Race and ethnicity 4 Economy 4 1 Top employers 5 Culture and recreation 6 Government 6 1 Grand Jury investigation of record keeping 6 2 District based elections 6 3 Politics 7 Education 7 1 Primary and secondary schools 7 2 Colleges and universities 7 3 Public libraries 8 Transportation 8 1 Future rail 9 Notable people 10 Sister cities 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Fremont s origins lie in the community that arose around Mission San Jose founded in 1795 by the Spanish under Padre Fermin de Lasuen Early history Edit nbsp Vallejo Mill built in 1853 by Jose de Jesus Vallejo The recorded history of the Fremont area began on June 6 1797 when Mission San Jose was founded by the Spaniard Father Fermin de Lasuen The Mission was established at the site of the Ohlone village of Oroysom The tribe lived between present day San Francisco and Monterey and more lands eastward They lived in dome shaped shelters made out of redwood bark or woven tule They were primarily hunter gatherers men hunted and trapped waterfowl rabbits deer elk and bears whilst women gathered nuts berries and root vegetables 16 The Ohlone tribe lived beside rivers and estuaries because of the natural resources like fish and shellfish In warm weather men wore mostly nothing in the winter they wore animal hide or feather capes Other than the weather ceremonies also decided what the Ohlone men wore The women wore deerskin aprons over skirts made of tule or shredded bark 16 Until 1769 the tribe lived peacefully but Spanish soldiers and missionaries arrived in California to expand Spanish dominion in the Americas and convert the Native Americans to Catholicism 16 The Ohlone people weren t intimidated by the Franciscan priests who welcomed them into their missions to live and work Before missions the Natives used tools made of stone animal bones and wood 16 The missionaries taught them how to make metal tools and weapons and priests also showed them how to make adobe bricks The bricks were then used to build missions rather than for the tribe to utilize The Spaniards brought cattle pigs and sheep and encouraged the Ohlone to give up hunting and gathering to try farming and ranching instead 16 Living in the missions meant Ohlone people were forced into converting to Christianity and told to forget the superstitious beliefs that connected them to nature Along with that overpopulation caused food shortages and the Spanish brought diseases to the tribe causing a lot of deaths and trouble that made an impact on a lot of lives 16 On their second day in the area the Mission party killed a grizzly bear in Niles Canyon The first English speaking visitor to Fremont was the renowned trapper and explorer Jedediah Smith in 1827 The Mission prospered eventually reaching a population of 1 887 inhabitants in 1831 The influence of the missionaries declined after 1834 when the Mexican government enacted secularization Jose de Jesus Vallejo brother of Mariano Vallejo was the grantee of the Rancho Arroyo de la Alameda Mexican land grant His family was influential in the Fremont area in the late colonial era and owned and built a flour mill at the mouth of Niles Canyon 17 In 1846 the town s namesake John C Fremont led a military expedition to map a trail through Mission Pass for reaching the Pacific coast and to take possession of California from Mexico for the United States nbsp Dominican Convent of the Holy Rosary founded in 1906 The Fremont area grew rapidly at the time of the California Gold Rush A town called Mission San Jose grew up around the old mission with its own post office from 1850 Agriculture dominated the economy with grapes nursery plants and olives as leading crops In 1868 the 6 8 magnitude Hayward earthquake on the Hayward Fault collapsed buildings throughout the Fremont area ruining Mission San Jose and its outbuildings Until the 1906 San Francisco earthquake caused its destruction the Fremont area s Palmdale Winery was the largest in California The ruins of the Palmdale Winery are still visible near the Five Corners in Irvington 18 From 1912 to 1915 the Niles section of the Fremont area was the earliest home of California s motion picture industry 19 see Essanay Studios Charlie Chaplin filmed several movies in the Fremont area most notably The Tramp Incorporation Edit Fremont was incorporated in 1956 under the leadership of Wally Pond chair of the incorporation committee when five towns in the area Irvington Centerville Mission San Jose Niles and Warm Springs came together to form a city 20 Glenmoor Gardens the largest subdivision in Fremont was under construction in the area by developers Ralph E Cotter Jr James R Meyer civil engineer Fred T Duvall and contractors James L Reeder and Robert H Reeder When the Glenmoor Gardens Homeowners Association GGHA was incorporated in March 1953 there were no more than 75 houses in the subdivision It was probably the first such organization in the Fremont area in its scope and structure The five member board of directors which included James Meyer and James Reeder was set up to oversee a full range of services from police and fire protection to street maintenance which later became the purview of the city government 21 Fremont became more industrialized between 1953 and 1962 The first Fremont post office opened in 1956 22 A boom in high tech employment in the 1980s to the late 1990s especially in the Warm Springs District caused rapid development in the city and linked the city with the Silicon Valley The Apple factory where the first Mac computer was manufactured was located in Fremont 23 production ceased in 1993 23 Other semiconductor and telecommunications firms soon opened in the city including Cirrus Logic Asyst Technologies Mattson Technology Lam Research Premisys Communications and Nextlink California 23 Approximately 750 high tech companies had offices headquarters or production facilities in Fremont by 1999 23 These firms included fifteen of the top one hundred fastest growing public companies in the San Francisco Bay Area and eighteen of the top fifty companies in the East Bay 23 The high tech growth in Fremont continues today and is a major industry for the city nbsp Tesla Factory 2012 in South FremontThe General Motors automotive assembly plant in South Fremont was the town s largest employer and Fremont was known for its drag strip In the 1980s the plant became a joint venture automotive assembly plant of Toyota and General Motors and was renamed NUMMI Toyota and NUMMI shut down its operations in early 2010 Part of the plant was acquired in June 2010 by Tesla Motors as its primary production plant known as the Tesla Factory Solyndra a solar panel manufacturer was promoted in 2010 by President Barack Obama as a model for government investment in green technology 24 after his administration approved a 535 million Department of Energy loan guarantee and the company built a 733 million state of the art robotic facility but in 2011 the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and laid off 1 000 workers 25 Data storage company Seagate Technology incorporated in the Republic of Ireland with executive offices in Cupertino acquired the former Solyndra building which serves as Seagate s headquarters since 2020 Geography EditThis section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1956 five small independent towns Centerville Niles Irvington Mission San Jose and Warm Springs located between the East Bay rolling hills and the San Francisco Bay were annexed into a single new incorporated city called Fremont Six decades later these places have greatly expanded are no longer separate communities and are considered districts or community plan areas of the City of Fremont The town of Newark was originally slated to join the annex but ultimately its voters declined since Newark representatives suspected that they would become an industrial district Newark became its own incorporated city in 1955 Later Newark annexed a patch of unincorporated land between Mowry Avenue and Stevenson Blvd Land which is now occupied by Newpark Mall and the surrounding plazas Since incorporation Fremont has created six more districts which it calls community plan areas for planning purposes These include Central North Fremont South Fremont and Bayside The two other districts Baylands and the Hill Areas are primarily open space 26 27 The area consisting of Fremont and the cities of Newark and Union City is known collectively as the Tri City Area different from the adjacent Tri Valley area encompassing Pleasanton Dublin and Livermore Centerville District Edit Centerville was the main town in Washington Township Centerville is located at 37 33 15 N 121 59 57 W 37 55417 N 121 99917 W 37 55417 121 99917 Centerville It lies at an elevation of 52 feet 16 m Centerville was started by George Lloyd who started selling cold beer to stage passengers from a tent in 1850 28 Capt George Bond set up a general store and the name Centerville was chosen 28 The post office opened Centreville post office in 1855 and changed the spelling to Centerville in 1893 28 The Centerville Pioneer Cemetery contains the burial places of many of the city s founding pioneers Centerville can be traced back to its native American roots Spanish Mexican Italian Portuguese and Swiss Swiss Park peoples were among the early settlers that contributed greatly to the growth of Centerville Early Centerville was a quiet farming community which consisted of large Spanish land grants divided into smaller farms The Freitas Ranch on Thornton Ave was probably the largest of the working farms There were acres of apricot along with other fruit and nut orchards and large fields of various types of fresh produce 29 nbsp Families of Japanese ancestry being removed from Centerville California during World War II After President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 which authorized military commanders to exclude any or all persons from certain areas in the name of national defense the Western Defense Command began ordering Japanese Americans living on the West Coast to present themselves for evacuation from the newly created military zones This included many Centerville farming families Centerville was also a main stop for the early railways This gave the local farmers a way to quickly get their produce to market With the access to railway service there was once a large cannery on Baine Ave west of Fremont Ave now Peralta next to the tracks In 1959 the cannery was destroyed in the largest fire in Fremont s history 30 The fire lasted for two days and effectively put an end to what had been the largest employer in Centerville at the time The cannery was never rebuilt 31 Housing developments began to appear in the area after WWII Most of the early housing stood along Fremont Blvd from Decoto Road south to Washington High school along Thornton Ave from Fremont Blvd west to the Newark city border and along Peralta Blvd from Fremont Blvd to Niles For city planning purposes Centerville was enlarged to encompass most of the north central residential section of Fremont from Mowry Ave to Decoto Rd from I 880 to the BART line This Centerville community plan area includes the sprawling subdivisions developed in the 1950s and 1960s of Glenmoor Gardens bounded by Central Avenue Fremont Boulevard Mowry Avenue and the I 880 freeway and the Cabrillo Park subdivision bound by Thornton Ave Fremont Blvd Decoto Road and the I 880 freeway Also the Brookvale subdivisions the Quarry Lakes Regional Park and part of Parkmont 32 The area is served by two high schools Washington High School Fremont California established in 1892 which for a long time was the only high school in the area and American High School established in 1972 It also has two junior high schools Centerville Junior High School and Thornton Junior High School which now stands on the old main site of the Freitas ranch Niles District Edit This section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Fremont California news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 nbsp Niles Art Walk 2005The town is physically divided from other parts of Fremont and neighboring Union City by Mission Boulevard State Route 238 to the east and north Alameda Creek to the south Union Pacific Railroad to the west and southeast and the Quarry Lakes to the southwest The hills of Niles are lower than those of the area south of the Alameda Creek in Mission San Jose Old Town Niles features its own library post office and silent movie theater as well as a large number of antique and craft stores Niles is located at 37 34 44 N 121 58 40 W 37 57889 N 121 97778 W 37 57889 121 97778 Niles District It lies at an elevation of 112 feet 34 m The community once called Vallejo Mills got its name from the Central Pacific Railroad s Niles depot built in 1870 as part of the First transcontinental railroad and named after their railroad attorney and stockholder Addison Niles who became associate justice on the California Supreme Court two years later 33 A post office was opened at Niles in 1873 33 Niles was the home of one of the first West Coast motion picture companies Essanay Studios Charlie Chaplin and Broncho Billy Anderson filmed some of their most famous silent movies in Niles Scenic Niles Canyon stretches between Niles and Sunol The nonprofit Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum offers both artifacts of Niles early years and each Saturday evening screenings of early twentieth century silent films many of which were filmed locally The Niles Canyon Railway runs along Alameda Creek in Niles Canyon and carries passengers on weekend excursions including a holiday train of lights which is extremely popular tickets for these trains typically sell out by early October The Niles Canyon Railroad has a small but well maintained collection of historic rail stock Part of historic Niles is Mayhew Spring also known as Mayhew s Sulphur Spring which was located 600 feet 180 m north of the Niles railroad depot 33 The facility was owned by H A Meyhew 33 The coast to coast completion of the Transcontinental Railroad is reported to have occurred in nearby Niles Canyon In September 1869 four months after the famous golden spike ceremony at Promontory Summit Utah the Central Pacific Railroad completed the transcontinental rail link between Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay finishing the track through the canyon The Central Pacific had acquired the Western Pacific and other local railroads and built track to connect them at a waterfront terminal at Alameda Point Also part of Niles is Niles Junction on the Western Pacific Railroad 33 located at 37 34 35 N 121 58 17 W 37 57639 N 121 97139 W 37 57639 121 97139 Niles Junction WPRR and situated at an elevation of 79 ft 24 m Irvington District Edit Irving California redirects here Not to be confused with Irvine California The Irvington District area has cycled through many name changes over time In the early 1850 s two emancipated black men were traveling with E L Beard through California reputedly in search of a fortune The former slaves noticed the busy traffic at the crossroads of what is today the Five Corners intersection Although now gone there were two embarcaderos water crossings at this area One of these crossings had a ferry Realizing the financial opportunity of the area the former slaves constructed the first building at the cross roads a tavern with an inn This tavern was later known as Dave s Saloon 34 This corner today the intersection of Fremont and Washington Boulevards Union and Bay Streets is now commonly known as Five Corners or Irvington Square Irvington Square s marker Irvington Plaza park is located at 37 31 22 N 121 58 18 W 37 52278 N 121 97167 W 37 52278 121 97167 Irvington Square The inn and several of the other original buildings were demolished by the city of Fremont in the early 1980s During the 1850 s until re designated in 1871 by the U S Post Office the cross roads were locally known as Niggers Corners In 1871 Washington College the first industrial educational institution in California was established in Washington township near the crossroads As a result the US Postal Service established a post office called Washington Corners at the college in 1870 which became the name of the settlement on the 1878 Alameda County map of Washington Township In 1884 realizing the need for a proper town name local inhabitants selected the name of Irving The name was chosen in honor of Judge Irving the local traveling circuit judge of the time Later when the railroad came through the area the published train schedule pamphlets erroneously listed the Irving train depot as Irvington The town petitioned the railroad about the error The railroad company notified the town that it was too costly for them to replace the train schedule pamphlets over 100 000 and in 1887 following the recommendation the people of Irving changed the town name to Irvington citation needed The Irvington district has two main neighborhoods Irvington Woods and the Irvington Square The neighborhood is ethnically mixed and is primarily working class 35 For city planning purposes the Irvington area was enlarged to encompass most of the south central residential section of Fremont from Auto Mall Parkway to Mowry Avenue from I 880 to roughly the BART line excluding the Central District described below This Irvington community plan area includes the Sundale neighborhood the South Sundale neighborhood 28 Palms Blacow and Grimmer subdivisions The area is served by three high schools Irvington High School Robertson High School and John F Kennedy High School The Irvingtonian period of North American mammals is named for this district due to the fossil sequence excavated here 36 Mission San Jose District Edit nbsp Dominican Convent of the Holy Rosary At the time of the California Gold Rush a boom town grew up around the old Mission to equip and transport 49ers overland to the gold fields A post office was opened at Mission San Jose in 1850 37 The district like Niles is surrounded by hills The hills are higher and steeper than Niles with the highest points being on the Mission Ridge Mission San Jose district lies close to the northern two peaks Mission Peak and Mount Allison Mission Peak is very distinctive and is one of Fremont s emblems These peaks go from 2 517 to 2 604 ft 794 m taller than Mount Tamalpais a great height for the San Francisco Bay Area They see some deep snow occasionally Fremont s community college Ohlone College is situated one block away from the mission and serves over 12 000 students Mission San Jose has the highest concentration of Asian Americans in Fremont over 50 of the population as of the 2000 census The local high school is Mission San Jose High School ranked 67 in the nation by U S News amp World Report The median family income for the Mission San Jose area ZIP code 94539 exceeded 114 595 in 2005 Owing to an influx of professionals and other affluent families seeking access to the top performing local public schools Mission San Jose s median home value reached 831 000 in 2006 earning the community a rank of 237 on Forbes magazine s list of the 500 most affluent communities in the United States 38 Mission San Jose Edit nbsp The main facade of the restored 1809 Mission San Jose chapel on the National Register of Historic PlacesNestled at the base of Fremont s rolling hills is the Mission San Jose one of the oldest of the Spanish missions in California for which this district is named The church building that exists today is a re construction dedicated in 1985 for daily Mass and tours of the original 1809 adobe church that was destroyed by the 1868 Hayward fault earthquake One side of the original mission quadrangle remains and houses a museum Mission San Jose is located at 37 31 59 N 121 55 13 W 37 53306 N 121 92028 W 37 53306 121 92028 Mission San Jose and lies at an elevation of 305 feet 93 m Warm Springs District Edit nbsp Don Antonio Sunol owner of Rancho Agua Caliente from which the Warm Springs district takes its name Warm Springs is located on Rancho Agua Caliente and is so named for the springs that are located there 39 In early times there was a settlement called Harrisburgh also Harrisburg and Peacock s a short distance east from the small settlement of Warm Springs 39 A post office opened in Harrisburgh in 1865 and changed its name to Warm Springs in 1885 39 The name Harrisburgh commemorated Abram Harris who settled there in 1858 39 The name Peacock s commemorated George W Peacock its first postmaster 39 The post office name changed to Warmsprings in 1895 and reverted to Warm Springs in 1950 39 The Warm Springs district is the southernmost portion of Fremont whose hub is the Warm Springs and Mission Boulevard intersection It is located at 37 29 14 N 121 55 45 W 37 48722 N 121 92917 W 37 48722 121 92917 Warm Springs and lies at an elevation of 62 feet 19 m Warm Springs has attracted the headquarters of many high tech companies including Nielsen Norman Group Lam Research Corsair and Lexar of the US as well as foreign high tech companies such as Elitegroup Computer Systems and Asus The district is also home to blue collar industry The San Jose mission is also present Warm Springs also serves as commercial center for the mainly residential Mission San Jose district especially since the construction of Pacific Commons a large modern regional shopping center The Oakland Athletics talked about moving their stadium to this area Warm Springs was home to one of the SF Bay Area s only two coffee houses to employ baristas who wear bikinis Your Coffee Cups a concept that s gained some controversy from Bay Area newspapers and news stations 40 41 42 43 This controversy led to the eventual closing of the business The BART extension to Warm Springs began construction in 2009 44 and Warm Springs South Fremont station opened for service on March 25 2017 45 Central district Edit nbsp Lake Elizabeth of Fremont Central ParkThe central district is surrounded by the Centerville Niles Mission San Jose and Irvington communities The central district contains retail shopping centers e g the Fremont Hub the Fremont Bay Area Rapid Transit station health care centers and Central Park Lake Elizabeth City planners envision a mid density pedestrian friendly transit oriented development bounded by Mowry Ave Fremont Blvd Walnut Ave and Paseo Padre Pkwy 26 46 One of the central streets the Capital Avenue extension to Fremont Blvd was completed in 2016 as the city pursues its plans for a Downtown Fremont Archived December 24 2014 at the Wayback Machine Most of Fremont is part of the Laguna Creek Watershed North Fremont District Edit nbsp George Washington Patterson House 1857 Ardenwood on the National Register of Historic PlacesNorth Fremont is a primarily residential district surrounded by Union City Centerville District Newark and Coyote Hills Regional Park It is a growing community that includes the Ardenwood neighborhood the Lakes and Birds neighborhood and the Northgate neighborhood 47 It is the site of the Ardenwood Historic Farm which has the George Washington Patterson House as one of its highlights and the Ardenwood Technology Park A 99 Ranch Market is one of many Asian businesses in the North Fremont District Thornton Junior High School and American High School which are both physically located in the enlarged Centerville District also serve as the junior high and high school respectively for this community South Fremont District Edit South Fremont is a primarily industrial district east of Interstate 880 and west of Interstate 680 south of Auto Mall Parkway and north of Brown Rd The area overlaps with Warm Springs with which it shares the eponymous BART station The composition of the area will change because thousands of residential units were under construction as of 2016 It is sandwiched between the Irvington and Warm Springs community plan areas 26 46 It is noted as the site of the Tesla Factory as well as the site of the Warm Springs South Fremont BART station In 2022 a pedestrian bridge was built from the BART station to Lopes Court It costed 41 million 48 49 Bayside Industrial District Edit Bayside Industrial is a primarily industrial and commercial district west of Interstate 880 between Newark and Milpitas 26 46 Hill Area District Edit Hill Area is an open land district that forms the eastern edge of Fremont 26 46 It is the site of Mission Peak Climate Edit Fremont has a warm summer Mediterranean climate Koppen Csb typical of the San Francisco Bay Area This climate features warm dry summers and cool wet winters Like nearby San Jose precipitation is fairly low about 17 inches per year because the city lies in the rain shadow of the Santa Cruz Mountains to the west The lowest temperature recorded was 21 F 6 C on December 23 1990 Climate data for Fremont California 1991 2020 normals extremes 1996 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 74 23 79 26 87 31 91 33 98 37 108 42 103 39 102 39 104 40 98 37 84 29 73 23 108 42 Mean maximum F C 67 5 19 7 72 3 22 4 77 2 25 1 83 6 28 7 87 9 31 1 94 1 34 5 91 1 32 8 92 0 33 3 93 1 33 9 86 1 30 1 77 1 25 1 67 5 19 7 96 6 35 9 Average high F C 58 6 14 8 61 4 16 3 65 1 18 4 67 7 19 8 71 1 21 7 75 3 24 1 77 9 25 5 78 2 25 7 78 3 25 7 73 3 22 9 64 6 18 1 58 4 14 7 69 2 20 7 Daily mean F C 50 6 10 3 52 9 11 6 55 8 13 2 58 0 14 4 61 5 16 4 65 0 18 3 67 3 19 6 67 7 19 8 67 2 19 6 62 6 17 0 55 4 13 0 50 5 10 3 59 5 15 3 Average low F C 42 6 5 9 44 4 6 9 46 4 8 0 48 3 9 1 51 9 11 1 54 7 12 6 56 8 13 8 57 1 13 9 56 0 13 3 52 0 11 1 46 2 7 9 42 5 5 8 49 9 9 9 Mean minimum F C 32 9 0 5 34 9 1 6 37 9 3 3 40 5 4 7 45 8 7 7 49 1 9 5 52 5 11 4 53 5 11 9 49 3 9 6 44 1 6 7 37 0 2 8 31 7 0 2 30 6 0 8 Record low F C 26 3 31 1 34 1 34 1 41 5 46 8 48 9 46 8 46 8 40 4 32 0 27 3 26 3 Average precipitation inches mm 3 00 76 3 17 81 2 52 64 1 22 31 0 50 13 0 16 4 1 0 00 0 00 0 02 0 51 0 10 2 5 0 69 18 1 59 40 2 97 75 15 94 405 Average precipitation days 9 9 9 5 9 6 5 9 3 1 0 9 0 0 0 3 0 7 2 9 7 0 10 3 60 1Source 1 NOAA 50 Source 2 National Weather Service mean maxima minima 2006 2020 51 Demographics EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information July 2017 Historical population CensusPop Note 196043 790 1970100 869130 3 1980131 94530 8 1990173 33931 4 2000203 41317 3 2010214 0895 2 2020230 5047 7 U S Decennial Census 52 According to the 2020 census estimate the median income for a household in the city is 142 374 53 Males have a median household income of 59 274 versus 40 625 for females The per capita income for the city was 31 411 About 4 5 of the population were below the poverty line including 5 9 of those under age 18 and 6 2 of those age 65 or over nbsp Map of racial distribution in the southern San Francisco Bay Area 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic OtherThe 2010 United States Census 54 reported that Fremont had a population of 214 089 The population density was 2 443 7 inhabitants per square mile 943 5 km2 The Census reported that 212 438 people 99 2 of the population lived in households 969 0 5 lived in non institutionalized group quarters and 682 0 3 were institutionalized There were 71 004 households out of which 31 070 43 8 had children under the age of 18 living in them 45 121 63 5 were opposite sex married couples living together 7 070 10 0 had a female householder with no husband present 3 382 4 8 had a male householder with no wife present There were 2 779 3 9 unmarried opposite sex partnerships and 444 0 6 same sex married couples or partnerships 11 576 households 16 3 were made up of individuals and 3 697 5 2 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 99 There were 55 573 families 78 3 of all households the average family size was 3 36 The population was spread out with 53 216 people 24 9 under the age of 18 15 610 people 7 3 aged 18 to 24 66 944 people 31 3 aged 25 to 44 56 510 people 26 4 aged 45 to 64 and 21 809 people 10 2 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 36 8 years For every 100 females there were 98 9 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 96 4 males There were 73 989 housing units at an average density of 844 5 per square mile 326 1 km2 of which 71 004 were occupied of which 44 463 62 6 were owner occupied and 26 541 37 4 were occupied by renters The homeowner vacancy rate was 1 3 the rental vacancy rate was 4 5 136 606 people 63 8 of the population lived in owner occupied housing units and 75 832 people 35 4 lived in rental housing units Fremont has a large Deaf community in large part because it is home of the Northern California campus of the California School for the Deaf The school district is called the Fremont Unified School District which also serves parts of Union City and Hayward Race and ethnicity Edit As of 2010 more than half the residents of Fremont were of Asian ancestry with large populations of Chinese Asian Indians and Filipinos The racial makeup of Fremont was 108 332 50 6 Asian consisting of 18 1 Indian 17 8 Chinese 6 7 Filipino 2 5 Vietnamese 1 8 Korean 1 0 Pakistani 0 8 Japanese 0 6 Burmese 70 320 32 8 White Non Hispanic Whites were 26 5 of the population in 2010 55 down from 85 4 in 1970 56 31 698 14 8 Hispanic or Latino of any race consisting of 11 0 Mexican 0 6 Puerto Rican 0 5 Salvadoran 13 605 6 4 from other races 12 584 5 9 from two or more races 7 103 3 3 African American 1 169 0 5 Pacific Islander 976 0 5 Native American Due in large part to a substantial influx of Afghans granted asylum in the United States following the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union Fremont is the home to the largest concentration of Afghan Americans in the United States 57 Judith Miller of City Journal wrote that unlike many ethnic groups the Afghans in Fremont have few political representatives at various levels and an insular focus 58 This concentration is noted in Khaled Hosseini s 2003 novel Kite Runner Fremont and nearby Union City have fairly large numbers of Pacific Islanders Cubans and Puerto Ricans Spanish and Portuguese and a small number of American Indians Demographic profile 59 2010 2018 estimate 60 Total Population 214 089 100 0 237 807One Race 201 505 94 1 94 5 Not Hispanic or Latino 182 391 85 2 86 5 White alone 56 766 26 5 24 9 Black or African American alone 6 743 3 1 3 0 American Indian and Alaska Native alone 458 0 2 0 4 Asian alone 107 679 50 3 57 4 Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone 1 064 0 5 0 9 Some other race alone 388 0 2 Two or more races alone 9 293 4 3 5 5 Hispanic or Latino of any race 31 698 14 8 13 5 Economy EditCompanies headquartered in Fremont include Antec Inc Corsair Gaming Electronics for Imaging Ikanos Communications Lam Research Fremont Bank Nielsen Norman Group Oplink Communications SYNNEX S3 Graphics Tailored Brands and DCKAP Top employers Edit According to the city s June 2022 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report 61 the top employers in the city are Employer of Employees1 Tesla Inc 22 0002 Lam Research 3 0003 Washington Hospital 2 4004 Kaiser Permanente 1 6005 Synnex 1 3506 Western Digital 1 1007 City of Fremont 1 0008 Fremont Unified School District 8009 Boehringer Ingelheim 80010 Sutter Health 775Culture and recreation EditThe City of Fremont has been a Tree City USA since 1996 There are approximately 55 000 trees in city parks streets and landscaped boulevard areas The city operates the Olive Hyde Art Gallery adjacent to Mission San Jose which has featured Bay Area artists such as Wendy Yoshimura the California Society of Printmakers and the Etsy collective 62 63 The public gallery is housed in a former home of Olive Hyde a descendant of early San Francisco Mayor George Hyde 64 65 Other cultural historical or scientific landmarks include Fremont Central Park and Lake Elizabeth Ardenwood Historic Farm California Nursery Historical Park Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge Mission Peak Regional Preserve Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum Washington Township Museum of Local History Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area Shinn Park and Arboretum and Coyote Hills Regional Park Government EditAn elected mayor heads Fremont city government for a four year term The mayor chairs the city council which has four elected council members in addition to the mayor Two new seats have been added to the council beginning in 2018 for a total of seven seats when district based elections are phased in The council adopts the city s budget and decides major policies The city council appoints a city manager and city attorney The city manager hires city staff and manages day to day business Advisory bodies work with the city council on some issues to facilitate the council s final decisions The mayor appoints advisory body members subject to the approval of a majority of the council Most members serve four year terms of office without pay with the exception of planning commissioners The City of Fremont directly provides services related to public safety land use regulation infrastructure maintenance parks and recreation and local social services To provide these services the city government is organized into 22 departments from Animal Services to Transportation Engineering According to a 2009 financial report city revenues were 280 million expenditures 200 million assets 1 200 million cash and investments 340 million and liabilities 260 million 66 As of 2015 the annual budget was 160 million and the city had 800 employees 67 The city council has adopted a balanced budget by July 1 of each year Budget problems have in some past years involved cuts in services reductions in city staffing and wage concessions by labor unions Special districts provide water and sewer services for the city Alameda County Water District and Union Sanitary District A private contractor Allied Waste provides garbage collection and recycling services to the city BoxART Program The City of Fremont boxART Archived September 28 2020 at the Wayback Machine program transforms Fremont s traffic signal control boxes with compelling and creative imagery Grand Jury investigation of record keeping Edit A Grand Jury in 2015 found that the city government did not comply with state law on public records 67 by deleting most emails after 30 days instead of the required two years All emails were labeled automatically as unsaved drafts unless designated manually for retention The city did not keep any record of councilmember emails which used fremont gov addresses and were relayed on to councilmembers private email accounts Though city officials held that automatic deletion would reduce data storage costs the Grand Jury determined that the cost of complying with the state law would not be significant 68 69 District based elections Edit The city will phase in district based instead of at large elections for all but one seat on the city council beginning in November 2018 70 71 Two new seats will be added from five seats to seven Six of the seats will require residence inside a district while the seat held by the mayor will remain at large The council chose the new district boundaries in June 2017 a controversial vote that drew accusations of gerrymandering to favor two of the incumbents 72 71 The districting was forced by the threat of a legal action from a group claiming that Latino minorities comprising 14 percent of the population had not been adequately represented Few or no Latinos were elected to the council during 1956 2017 73 Some claimed that the results of precinct voting may have been polarized along racial lines 71 74 Politics Edit According to the California Secretary of State as of February 10 2019 Fremont has 104 650 registered voters Of those 46 840 44 8 are registered Democrats 13 989 13 4 are registered Republicans and 40 161 38 4 have declined to state a political party 75 Education EditPrimary and secondary schools Edit nbsp Washington the oldest high school in Fremont on the National RegisterThe Fremont Unified School District has five high schools for grades 9 12 American Irvington Kennedy Mission San Jose and Washington The 5 000 seat Tak Fudenna Stadium serves all five high schools as a venue for football track soccer and high school graduation ceremonies 76 These five high schools along with James Logan High School in Union City and Newark Memorial High School in Newark make up the Mission Valley Athletic League M V A L The district has a continuation high school Robertson two independent study programs Vista and COIL an adult school five middle schools for grades 7 8 Centerville Hopkins Horner Thornton and Walters and 29 elementary schools including Glenmoor Elementary K 6 77 The district operates the Mission Valley Regional Occupational Program jointly with Newark and New Haven Unified School Districts For the year 2019 William Hopkins Junior High Mission San Jose High John F Kennedy High and American High all received the California Distinguished Schools Award administered by the California Department of Education 78 Fremont Christian School and Averroes High School in Fremont are not part of FUSD California School for the Deaf Fremont serves Northern California and shares a campus with the statewide California School for the Blind Colleges and universities Edit The Ohlone Community College District operates Ohlone College in Fremont and a smaller campus in Newark The University of Phoenix Bay Area Campus and Northwestern Polytechnic University offer undergraduate and graduate programs in technology and management areas 42 is a private computer science university that opened in Fremont as a sister school to the 42 campus in Paris France Gateway Seminary has a campus in Fremont Public libraries Edit The Alameda County Library is headquartered in Fremont 79 The Fremont Main Library is the largest branch with the highest circulation of the Alameda County Library and shares its building with the Alameda County Library Administration It has the Maurice Marks Center for Local and California History and the Fukaya public meeting room Alameda County Library has other branch libraries in Centerville Irvington and Niles Transportation EditSee also Fremont Station and Fremont BART station nbsp Entrance of Warm Springs South Fremont Station nbsp View of Fremont Centerville Amtrak station from Platform 1Fremont is served by Interstate 880 Nimitz Freeway and Interstate 680 Sinclair Freeway Though they do not intersect they are connected in the Warm Springs district via a very busy one mile segment of Mission Boulevard which is SR 262 In addition it is served by SR 84 and the segment of Mission Boulevard which is SR 238 The city is the eastern terminus of the Dumbarton Bridge Elevated sound levels exist along Interstate 880 Caltrans and the city have sought to mitigate sound levels by constructing noise barriers 80 Regional rail transportation is provided by BART and the Altamont Corridor Express ACE Fremont s BART station once served as the southernmost terminus for the BART system a 5 4 mile 8 7 km BART extension to the Warm Springs South Fremont station opened on March 25 2017 A southward BART extension into Santa Clara county and the Milpitas and Berryessa North San Jose stations opened on June 13 2020 81 a further BART extension to downtown San Jose is in the planning stages The Fremont Centerville station provides a stopping point for ACE service which travels from Stockton to San Jose as well as for Amtrak s Capitol Corridor service Bus service is provided by AC Transit locally Future rail Edit Caltrain is undertaking environmental and engineering review for a planned Dumbarton Rail Corridor between the Peninsula and Alameda County It would add Caltrain stations to Union City Fremont Centerville Newark and Menlo Park East Palo Alto 82 Notable people EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Buttencourt Avila father of sweet potato industry worked in Niles District during the 1880s Bud Harrelson Major League Baseball player and coach DeAnna Bennett mixed martial artist Karen Chen figure skater US National Champion 2017 Rosalie Chiang actress Emilio Castillo founding member of Tower of Power Vinod Dham father of the Intel Pentium Shawon Dunston Major League Baseball infielder Dina Eastwood ex wife of actor director Clint Eastwood Dennis Eckersley Major League Baseball Hall of Famer pitched for several MLB teams Washington High School graduate Harry Edwards sociologist and civil rights activist worked with San Francisco 49ers and Golden State Warriors professor at UC Berkeley resides in Fremont Yousef Erakat YouTube personality Qader Eshpari Afghan musical artist Robb Flynn musician Tony Gemignani World Champion Pizza Maker 83 Pragathi Guruprasad Indian playback singer MC Hammer musical artist Don Hertzfeldt animator Ariel Hsing Olympic table tennis player Khaled Hosseini award winning Afghan author Karin Ireland author Dominic Kinnear professional soccer player and coach Steven Kwan MLB player Steve Lewis sprinter Olympic gold medalist Christine Liang president and founder of ASI Corp 84 Allan Haines Loughead co founder of Lockheed Corporation Mikh McKinney basketball player Justin Medlock NFL placekicker Helen Wills Moody tennis pro won 31 Grand Slam championships Lamond Murray John F Kennedy High School graduate UC Berkeley and NBA basketball player Sammy Obeid comedian performed 1 000 nights of comedy in a row a world record Julie Pinson actress Gary Plummer football player Rome Ramirez of Sublime with Rome James Wesley Rawles bestselling novelist Randy Ready John F Kennedy High graduate Major League Baseball player 1983 1995 Dick Ruthven Irvington High graduate starting pitcher for 1980 World Series champion Philadelphia Phillies Ryan Sinn musician Sid Sriram Indian playback singer Ray Stevens pro wrestler Cal Stevenson born 1996 baseball outfielder for the San Francisco Giants Kevin Tan Olympic gymnast Meagan Tandy model and actress Pat Tillman football player who left his NFL career to enlist in the U S Army Robert Turbin NFL running back Kevin Turner Mission San Jose High School graduate linebacker in NFL for several teams Bill Walsh coach of NFL s San Francisco 49ers in Hall of Fame coached for Washington High School Len Wiseman film director John Woodcock NFL defensive lineman Kristi Yamaguchi figure skater Olympic gold medalistSister cities EditFremont was formerly a sister city to Elizabeth South Australia until Elizabeth merged with Munno Para to form the City of Playford in 1997 85 Currently Fremont is currently twinned with the following cities 86 City Subdivision Country DatePuerto Penasco Sonora Mexico 1971Fukaya Saitama Prefecture Japan 1979Horta Azores Portugal 1987Lipa City Batangas Philippines 1992Jaipur Rajasthan India 1993See also Edit nbsp Geography portal nbsp North America portal nbsp United States portal nbsp California portal nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portalCalifornia Nursery Company Mission Peak Narika Vallejo Flour MillReferences EditSpecific California Cities by Incorporation Date California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions Archived from the original Word on November 3 2014 Retrieved March 27 2013 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report Fiscal Year Ended June 30 2013 City of Fremont California Archived from the original on December 25 2018 Retrieved February 8 2015 url https fremont gov 598 Mayor Archived February 21 2020 at the Wayback Machine City of Fremont Official Website City Manager Retrieved May 28 2022 Senators State of California Retrieved March 18 2013 Members Assembly State of California Retrieved March 18 2013 California s 15th Congressional District Representatives amp District Map Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved March 13 2013 Mayor amp City Council City of Fremont Archived from the original on December 25 2018 Retrieved February 8 2015 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2020 Fremont Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved February 8 2015 a b U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Fremont city California United States Census Bureau Retrieved September 26 2021 ZIP Code tm Lookup United States Postal Service Retrieved November 23 2014 Fremont s tech community flourishes as city leaders look for more ways to be efficient KGO TV November 19 2020 Retrieved August 8 2020 Quinn The next Silicon Valley Fremont and Berkeley drive tech scene growth Mercury News April 29 2016 Retrieved August 8 2020 Oral History Associates Sausalito California 1989 City of Fremont The first thirty years history of growth LC 89 60547 ed The Mission Peak Heritage Foundation a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f Lopez Grecel April 2019 California s Lost Tribe Wild West 31 28 29 via MasterFILE Complete Alameda County California Historical Landmarks State of California Office of Historic Preservation Retrieved May 6 2011 Jill M Singleton Lost Wineries and Vineyards of Fremont California Fremont Museum of Local History Accessed 2006 11 09 Museumoflocalhistory org Archived from the original on February 11 2012 Retrieved March 18 2012 1 Archived February 24 2006 at the Wayback Machine Archived copy Archived from the original on September 29 2011 Retrieved May 5 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved July 17 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Durham David L 1998 California s Geographic Names A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State Clovis Calif Word Dancer Press p 634 ISBN 1 884995 14 4 a b c d e Dennis Rob December 30 2011 Fremont mayor Bob Wasserman dead at 77 The Argus Fremont Retrieved January 21 2012 FBI raids solar firm Solyndra The Oregonian The Associated Press September 8 2011 Goossens Ehren December 8 2009 Solyndra Solar Panel Company Visited by Obama Shuts Down Businessweek Archived from the original on July 20 2012 Retrieved September 2 2011 a b c d e Chapter 4 Community Character General Plan 2030 Working Draft City of Fremont California November 2010 Archived from the original PDF on December 29 2010 Retrieved November 24 2010 Group Linh Tat Southern California News September 19 2005 Newark Fremont have love hate bond East Bay Times Retrieved September 23 2021 a b c Durham David L 1998 California s Geographic Names A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State Clovis Calif Word Dancer Press p 615 ISBN 1 884995 14 4 Holmes Philip 2011 Centerville Fremont Images of America Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0738581774 History of the Fremont Fire Department fremont gov Archived from the original on June 29 2016 Retrieved September 23 2015 Holmes Philip June 24 2015 History Column Centerville Fire Department Tri City Voice Fremont Archived from the original on September 5 2015 Retrieved September 23 2015 Shape Our Fremont Community Plan Areas Archived from the original on September 28 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 a b c d e Durham David L 1998 California s Geographic Names A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State Clovis Calif Word Dancer Press p 672 ISBN 1 884995 14 4 African Americans in the Union City Area PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2014 Retrieved September 16 2013 Fremont Warrant Search www govwarrantsearch org Retrieved June 7 2018 The Blancan Irvingtonian and Rancholabrean Mammal Ages by Christopher J Bell and Ernest L Lundelius Jr Anthony D Barnosky Russell W Graham Everett H Lindsay Dennis R Ruez Jr Holmes A Semken Jr S David Webb and Richard J Zakrzewski January 2004 in the book Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America Biostratigraphy and Geochronology Chapter 7 Publisher Columbia University Press Editors Michael O Woodburne pp274 276 Durham David L 1998 California s Geographic Names A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State Clovis Calif Word Dancer Press p 665 ISBN 1 884995 14 4 237 94539 Forbes com September 13 2007 Retrieved September 9 2010 a b c d e f Durham David L 1998 California s Geographic Names A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State Clovis Calif Word Dancer Press p 720 ISBN 1 884995 14 4 Matthew Artz August 29 2010 San Jose Mercury News Entry Media News Group Retrieved August 29 2010 Bronstein Phil 2010 Are Bikini Baristas Bad Feminists San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved September 7 2010 One or Two Lumps in Your Cup Retrieved April 20 2018 Bikini Baristas Lure In Fremont Coffee Drinkers CBS News August 30 2010 Archived from the original on September 1 2010 Retrieved September 7 2010 Warm Springs BART link breaks ground in Fremont October 2 2009 Archived from the original on August 4 2016 Retrieved September 7 2016 First day of service at Warm Springs BART brings local visitors Retrieved April 6 2017 a b c d Chapter 2 Land Use General Plan 2030 Working Draft City of Fremont California November 2010 Archived from the original PDF on December 29 2010 Retrieved November 24 2010 Community Character Maps Archived from the original on April 12 2018 Retrieved April 20 2018 Fremont s 41 million BART Warm Springs pedestrian bridge open The Mercury News February 3 2022 Retrieved February 24 2022 New pedestrian bridge boosts access for thousands of riders to Warm Springs South Fremont Station bart gov www bart gov Retrieved February 24 2022 U S Climate Normals Quick Access Station Fremont CA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved February 18 2023 NOAA Online Weather Data NWS San Francisco National Weather Service Retrieved February 18 2023 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved September 20 2021 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Fremont city California 2010 Census Interactive Population Search CA Fremont city U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved July 12 2014 Fremont city California State amp County QuickFacts U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 3 2012 Retrieved April 30 2012 California Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places Earliest Census to 1990 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved April 30 2012 San Francisco Chronicle Fremont s Little Kabul eyes election with hope August 21 2009 Miller Judith Autumn 2010 The Afghans of Fremont City Journal Retrieved July 14 2021 Demographic Profile Bay Area Census Archived from the original on December 27 1996 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Fremont city California www census gov Retrieved September 26 2019 City of Fremont California Annual Comprehensive Financial Report Fiscal Year ended June 30 2022 Retrieved January 9 2023 City of Fremont Official Website Upcoming Exhibitions Fremont gov Archived from the original on June 30 2012 Retrieved March 18 2012 Past Exhibits Olive Hyde Art Guild Retrieved March 18 2012 City of Fremont Official Website Olive Hyde Art Gallery Fremont gov Archived from the original on February 1 2012 Retrieved March 18 2012 Olive Hyde Art Gallery Olive Hyde Art Guild Retrieved March 18 2012 City of Fremont CAFR Archived May 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 10 2009 a b 2014 2015 Alameda County Grand Jury Report PDF June 30 2015 pp 85 92 Retrieved July 8 2015 The Grand Jury is deeply concerned with Fremont s loose interpretation of California government transparency and retention statutes and the city s apparent intentional efforts to exclude the public from accessing city emails The Grand Jury concludes that the city of Fremont s interpretation of California statutes cited in this report is contrary to the spirit of open and transparent government and must be changed Grand jury Fremont defied spirit of transparency with email retention policy www ebcitizen com June 30 2015 Retrieved April 20 2018 Fremont s email retention policy subject of Alameda County Grand Jury report July 2 2015 Retrieved April 20 2018 District Based Election System fremont gov Archived from the original on June 15 2017 Retrieved July 9 2017 a b c Geha Joseph June 7 2017 Council picks city s first district voting map East Bay Times Retrieved July 9 2017 City of Fremont Plan C 2b 5 22 17 Council Districts fremont gov June 13 2017 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved July 9 2017 Geha Joseph March 23 2017 Fremont to switch to district based election system East Bay Times Retrieved September 10 2017 Merl Jean September 14 2013 Voting Rights Act leading California cities to dump at large elections The Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 10 2017 CA Secretary of State Report of Registration February 10 2019 PDF ca gov Retrieved March 12 2019 Tak Fudenna Stadium Aedisgroup com Archived from the original on August 18 2012 Retrieved March 18 2012 Fremont USD Directory of Schools Archived from the original on March 24 2008 California Distinguished Schools Awardees 2019 California Department of Education Archived from the original on February 5 2019 Retrieved October 16 2019 Library Administration Archived 2010 04 10 at the Wayback Machine Alameda County Library Retrieved on April 1 2010 Acoustical study for the widening of Interstate 880 in the cities of Newark and Fremont Alameda County California Earth Metrics Inc for the Federal Highway Administration October 1989 BART service to Milpitas and Berryessa stations starts Saturday KTVU Fox 2 June 12 2020 Retrieved June 12 2020 Dumbarton Rail Corridor San Mateo County Transportation Authority Archived from the original on April 17 2012 Retrieved January 24 2007 Gemignani Tony February 25 2009 Tony and the Pizza Champions Chronicle Books p Forward ISBN 978 0811861625 Channel Vision Goldsea 1997 Retrieved November 18 2015 City of Fremont Sister Cities About Fremont Archived from the original on June 23 2009 Retrieved October 5 2008 Archived copy Archived from the original on June 27 2014 Retrieved July 19 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link GeneralU S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Fremont CaliforniaExternal links EditFremont California at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage City Of Fremont official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fremont California amp oldid 1171081280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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