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Wikipedia

Sacramento, California

Sacramento (/ˌsækrəˈmɛnt/ SAK-rə-MEN-toh; Spanish: [sakɾaˈmento], Spanish for ''sacrament'') is the capital city of the U.S. state of California and the seat and largest city of Sacramento County. Located at the confluence of the Sacramento and American River in Northern California's Sacramento Valley, Sacramento's 2020 population of 524,943[7] makes it the sixth-largest city in California and the ninth-largest capital in the United States.[9][10] Sacramento is the seat of the California Legislature and the Governor of California, making it the state's political center and a hub for lobbying and think tanks. It features the California State Capitol Museum.

Sacramento, California
City of Sacramento
Nicknames: 
Motto(s): 
Latin: Urbs Indomita
(English: "Indomitable City")
Location within Sacramento County in California
Sacramento
Location within California
Sacramento
Location in the United States
Coordinates: 38°34′54″N 121°29′40″W / 38.58167°N 121.49444°W / 38.58167; -121.49444Coordinates: 38°34′54″N 121°29′40″W / 38.58167°N 121.49444°W / 38.58167; -121.49444
Country United States
State California
CountySacramento
RegionSacramento Valley
CSASacramento-Roseville
MSASacramento–Roseville–Arden-Arcade
IncorporatedFebruary 27, 1850[1]
Chartered1920[2]
Named forSacrament of the Holy Eucharist
Government
 • TypeCouncil–Manager[3]
 • BodySacramento City Council
 • MayorDarrell Steinberg (D)[4]
 • Vice MayorVacant
 • Mayor Pro TemEric Guerra (D)
 • City Council[4]
Council Members
  • Lisa Kaplan (D)
  • Sean Loloee (D)
  • Karina Talamantes (D)
  • Katie Valenzuela (D)
  • Caity Maple (D)
  • Eric Guerra (D)
  • Rick Jennings II (D)
  • Mai Vang (D)
Area
 • City99.77 sq mi (258.41 km2)
 • Land97.68 sq mi (253.00 km2)
 • Water2.09 sq mi (5.41 km2)  2.19%
Elevation30 ft (9 m)
Population
 • City524,943
 • Rank35th in the United States
6th in California
 • Density5,374.11/sq mi (2,074.87/km2)
 • Urban
1,946,618 (US: 25th)
 • Urban density4,163.2/sq mi (1,607.4/km2)
 • Metro2,397,382 (US: 26th)
DemonymSacramentan
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)
ZIP codes
942xx, 958xx
Area code916 and 279
FIPS code06-64000
GNIS feature IDs1659564, 2411751
Websitecityofsacramento.org

Sacramento is also the cultural and economic core of the Greater Sacramento area, which at the 2020 census had a population of 2,680,831,[8] the fourth-largest metropolitan area in California.[11]

Before the arrival of the Spanish, the area was inhabited by the historic Nisenan, Maidu, and other indigenous peoples of California. Spanish cavalryman Gabriel Moraga surveyed and named the Río del Santísimo Sacramento (Sacramento River) in 1808, after the Blessed Sacrament. In 1839, Juan Bautista Alvarado, Mexican governor of Alta California, granted the responsibility of colonizing the Sacramento Valley to Swiss-born Mexican citizen John Augustus Sutter, who subsequently established Sutter's Fort and the settlement at the Rancho Nueva Helvetia. Following the American Conquest of California and the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo, the waterfront developed by Sutter began to be developed, and incorporated in 1850 as the City of Sacramento.

Sacramento is the fastest-growing major city in California,[12] owing to its status as a notable political center on the West Coast and as a major educational hub, home of California State University, Sacramento and University of California, Davis. Similarly, Sacramento is a major center for the California healthcare industry, as the seat of Sutter Health, the world-renowned UC Davis Medical Center, and the UC Davis School of Medicine. It is a tourist destination, featuring the California Museum, Crocker Art Museum, California State Railroad Museum, California Hall of Fame, and Old Sacramento State Historic Park. Sacramento International Airport, located northwest of the city, is the city's major airport.

Sacramento is known for its evolving contemporary culture, and is dubbed the most "hipster city" in California.[13][14] In 2002, the Harvard University Civil Rights Project conducted for Time magazine ranked Sacramento as "America's Most Diverse City".[15]

History

Pre-Columbian period

Nisenan (Southern Maidu), Modoc, and Plains Miwok Native Americans lived in the area for perhaps thousands of years. Unlike the settlers who would eventually make Sacramento their home, these Native Americans left little evidence of their existence. Their diet was dominated by acorns taken from the plentiful oak trees in the region and by fruits, bulbs, seeds, and roots gathered throughout the year.

Spanish period

In 1808, the Spanish explorer Gabriel Moraga encountered and named the Sacramento Valley and the Sacramento River. A Spanish writer with the Moraga expedition wrote: "Canopies of oaks and cottonwoods, many festooned with grapevines, overhung both sides of the blue current. Birds chattered in the trees and big fish darted through the pellucid depths. The air was like champagne, and (the Spaniards) drank deep of it, drank in the beauty around them. "¡Es como el sagrado sacramento! (It's like the Blessed Sacrament.)"[16] The valley and the river were then christened after the "Most Holy Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ," referring to the Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist.

Mexican period

 
In 1839, John Augustus Sutter established Sutter's Fort, which he called Nueva Helvetia. In 1841, he was officially granted the land by Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado.

John Sutter, Sr. first arrived in the area on August 13, 1839, at the divergence of the American and Sacramento Rivers with a Mexican land grant of 50,000 acres (20,000 ha). The next year, his party and he established Sutter's Fort, a massive adobe structure with walls 18 feet (5.5 m) high and three feet (0.91 m) thick.[17]

Representing Mexico, Sutter Sr. called his colony New Helvetia, a Swiss-inspired name, and was the political authority and dispenser of justice in the new settlement. Soon, the colony began to grow as more and more pioneers headed west. Within just a few short years, Sutter Sr. had become a grand success, owning a 10-acre (4.0 ha) orchard and a herd of 13,000 cattle. Fort Sutter became a regular stop for the increasing number of immigrants coming through the valley. In 1847, Sutter Sr. received 2,000 fruit trees, which started the agriculture industry in the Sacramento Valley. Later that year, Sutter Sr. hired James Marshall to build a sawmill so he could continue to expand his empire,[17] but unbeknownst to many, Sutter Sr.'s "empire" had been built on thin margins of credit.[18]

American period

 
Sacramento in 1849, when the city was an economic center of the California Gold Rush

In 1848, when James W. Marshall discovered gold at Sutter's Mill in Coloma (some 50 mi or 80.5 km northeast of the fort), numerous gold-seekers came to the area, increasing the population. In August 1848, Sutter Sr.'s son, John Sutter Jr., arrived to assist his father in reducing his debt. The Sutters struggled to contain the effects of thousands of new gold miners and prospectors in the area, many of whom squatted on unwatched portions of the vast Sutter lands, or stole various unattended Sutter properties or belongings. For Sutter, his employee's discovery of gold in the area turned out to be a bane.

By December 1848, John Sutter Jr., in association with Sam Brannan, began laying out the City of Sacramento, 2 miles (3.2 km) south of his father's settlement of New Helvetia. This venture was undertaken against the wishes of Sutter Sr., but the father, being deeply in debt, was unable to stop it. For commercial reasons, the new city was named "Sacramento City" after the Sacramento River. Sutter Jr. and Brannan had United States Army Captain William H. Warner assigned to draft the official layout of the city, which included 26 lettered and 31 numbered streets (today's grid from C St. to Broadway and from Front St. to Alhambra Blvd.) Relations between Sutter and his son became embittered after Sacramento became an overnight commercial success. (Sutter's Fort, Mill, and the town of Sutterville, all founded by John Sutter Sr., eventually failed).

 
Old Sacramento, the oldest quarter of the city, grew up along the Sacramento River in the mid-1800's.

Residents of Sacramento adopted a city charter in 1849, which was recognized by the state legislature in 1850. Sacramento is the oldest incorporated city in California, incorporated on February 27, 1850.[19]

On January 10, 1850, a flood occurred that devastated the city. The rushing waters uprooted homes and drowned livestock. The city was almost completely destroyed. Due to the efforts of Hardin Bigelow, Sacramento's first elected mayor, the construction of the city's first levee was completed in early 1852 (the city became known as “The Levee City”). However, a month after it was completed, it was breeched during the first major storm of the season and the city flooded again. A new levee was built for $50,000, but it also broke, causing more flooding of the city.[20] Between October and December 1850, Sacramento was hit with a cholera epidemic that killed 1000 residents, including Mayor Bigelow and 17 of the city's 40 physicians. Up to 80 percent of the populace left town.[21][22] On November 2, 1852, a fire known as the Great Conflagration burned more than 80 percent of the structures in the city. It is estimated that the total damage was around six million dollars. Within a month 761 structures were re-built, many of them in brick.[23] In spite of all these hardships the new city's location just downstream from the Mother Lode in the Sierra Nevada proved irresistible, and it grew rapidly during the early 1850s, attracting a population of 10,000. The Great Flood of 1862 from December 1861 to January 1862 caused the worst flooding in Sacramento history. In 1861, Governor Leland Stanford, who was inaugurated in early January 1862, traveled to his inauguration in a rowboat.

 
An 1874 depiction of a Sacramento railway station by painter William Hahn.

The California State Legislature, with the support of Governor John Bigler, moved to Sacramento in 1854. The capital of California under Spanish (and, subsequently, Mexican) rule had been Monterey, where, in 1849, the first Constitutional Convention and state elections were held. The convention decided San Jose would be the new state's capital. After 1850, when California's statehood was ratified, the legislature met in San Jose until 1851, Vallejo in 1852, and Benicia in 1853, before moving to Sacramento. During the 1850s the city was consolidated with the County of Sacramento.[24] In the Sacramento Constitutional Convention of 1879, Sacramento was named as the permanent state capital.

The Classical Revival-style California State Capitol, similar to the national Capitol, was started in 1860 and completed in 1874. In 1861, the legislative session was moved to the Merchants Exchange Building in San Francisco for one session because of massive flooding in Sacramento. From 1862 to 1868, part of the Leland Stanford Mansion was used for the governor's offices during Stanford's tenure as the Governor; and the legislature met in the Sacramento County Courthouse. The legislative chambers were first occupied in 1869, while construction continued around them.

 
The California State Capitol, built between 1860 and 1874, shown here under construction in 1868.

With its new status and strategic location, Sacramento quickly prospered. It was designated as the western terminus of the Pony Express. Later it became a terminus of the First transcontinental railroad, which began construction in Sacramento in 1863 and was financed by "The Big Four"—Mark Hopkins, Charles Crocker, Collis P. Huntington, and Leland Stanford. Both the American and especially Sacramento rivers were key elements in the economic success of the city. Sacramento effectively controlled commerce on these rivers, and public works projects were funded through taxes levied on goods unloaded from boats and loaded onto rail cars in the historic Sacramento Rail Yards.

From 1862 until the mid-1870s, Sacramento raised the level of its downtown by building reinforced brick walls on its downtown streets, and filling the resulting street walls with dirt. The previous first floors of buildings became the basements, with open space between the street and the building, previously the sidewalk, now at the basement level. Over the years, many of these underground spaces have been filled or destroyed by subsequent development. However, it is still possible to view portions of the "Sacramento Underground".

Modern era

 
Built in 1935, Tower Bridge connects Sacramento to West Sacramento.

The city's current charter was adopted by voters in 1920.[25] As a charter city, Sacramento is exempt from many laws and regulations passed by the state legislature. The city has expanded continuously over the years. The 1964 merger of the City of North Sacramento with Sacramento substantially increased its population, and large annexations of the Natomas area eventually led to significant population growth throughout the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.

Sacramento County (along with a portion of adjacent Placer County) is served by a customer-owned electric utility, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD). Sacramento voters approved the creation of SMUD in 1923.[26] In April 1946, after 12 years of litigation, a judge ordered Pacific Gas & Electric to transfer title of Sacramento's electric distribution system to SMUD. Today SMUD is the sixth-largest public electric utility in the U.S., and is a leader for innovative programs and services, including the development of clean fuel resources, such as solar power.[27]

 
The Elks Tower was built in 1926 in an Italianate style.

The year following the creation of SMUD, 1924, brought several events in Sacramento: Standard Oil executive Verne McGeorge established McGeorge School of Law, American department store Weinstock & Lubin opened a new store at 12th and K street, the US$2 million Senator Hotel was opened, Sacramento's drinking water became filtered and treated drinking water, and Sacramento boxer Georgie Lee fought Francisco Guilledo, a Filipino professional boxer known as Pancho Villa, at L Street Auditorium on March 21.[28]

Early in World War II, the Sacramento Assembly Center (also known as the Walerga Assembly Center) was established to house Japanese Americans forcibly "evacuated" from the West Coast under Executive Order 9066. The camp was one of fifteen temporary detention facilities where over 110,000 Japanese Americans, two-thirds of them U.S. citizens, were held while construction on the more permanent War Relocation Authority camps was completed. The assembly center was built on the site of a former migrant labor camp, and inmates began arriving from Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties on May 6, 1942. It closed after only 52 days, on June 26, and the population of 4,739 was transferred to the Tule Lake concentration camp. The site was then turned over to the Army Signal Corps and dedicated as Camp Kohler.

After the war and the end of the incarceration program, returning Japanese Americans were often unable to find housing and so 234 families temporarily lived at the former assembly center. Camp Kohler was destroyed by a fire in December 1947, and the assembly center site is now part of the Foothill Farms-North Highlands subdivision.[29] The Sacramento-Yolo Port District was created in 1947, and ground was broken on the Port of Sacramento in 1949.

On June 29, 1963, with 5,000 spectators waiting to welcome her, the Motor Vessel Taipei Victory arrived.[30] The Nationalist Chinese flagship docked at the Port of Sacramento, being first ocean-going vessel in Sacramento since the steamship Harpoon in 1934.

In 1967, Ronald Reagan became the last Governor of California to live permanently in the city. The 1980s and 1990s saw the closure of several local military bases: McClellan Air Force Base, Mather Air Force Base, and Sacramento Army Depot. In 1980, there was another flood. In spite of military base closures and the decline of agricultural food processing, Sacramento has continued to experience population growth in recent years. Primary sources of population growth are an influx of residents from the nearby San Francisco Bay Area, as well as immigration from Asia and Latin America.

In 1985, Hugh Scrutton, a 38-year-old Sacramento, California, computer store owner, was killed by a nail-and-splinter-loaded bomb placed in the parking lot of his store. In 1996, his death was attributed to the Unabomber, Theodore Kaczynski.

After acquiring the majority stake in the Sacramento Kings, the team's new owner, Vivek Ranadivé, with the help of the city, agreed to build a new arena in the downtown area. With a final estimated cost of $558.2 million, Sacramento's Golden 1 Center opened on September 30, 2016.

Geography

 
Aerial view of Central Sacramento and the Sacramento River

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city covers 100.1 square miles (259 km2). 97.81% of it is land, and 2.19% of it is water.

Depth to groundwater is typically about 30 feet (9 m). Much of the land to the west of the city (in Yolo County) is permanently reserved for a vast flood control basin (the Yolo Bypass), due to the city's historical vulnerability to floods. As a result, the contiguous urban area sprawls only four miles (6 km) west of downtown (as West Sacramento, California) but 30 miles (48 km) northeast and east, into the Sierra Nevada foothills, and 10 miles (16 km) to the south into valley farmland.

The city is at the confluence of the Sacramento River and the American River, and has a deep-water port connected to the San Francisco Bay by a channel through the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta. It is the shipping and rail center for the Sacramento Valley.[31]

Trees

 
Satellite photo of Sacramento

Sacramento has long been known as the "City of Trees" owing to its abundant urban forest. The city has more trees per capita than anywhere else in the world[32] . The first recorded use of the term was in 1855, and it was popular by the early 20th century. It was not always so: it was at first called the “City of Plains” because of the lack of trees, but soon afterwards there were cottonwood trees planted, and eucalyptus varieties were imported in order to dry out swampland. Later, locust trees, and willows were planted along streets, then elms, then palm trees, then fruit trees in the late 1910s.[33] It was the first US city to be designated a City of Trees by the Arbor Day Foundation in 1978.[34]

In the early 21st century, the tree cover is well above that of the average tree cover of other major cities in the United States and the rest of the world, with the main species the London plane. Other species are being introduced to increase diversity and to help cope with the effects of climate change on vegetation in the future.[33] Treepedia, a project run by MIT using Google Maps’ street-view data to calculate tree coverage in cities, ranked Sacramento the greenest city of 15 studied in the US, and third globally, after Vancouver and Singapore.[35]

A prominent water tower bore the slogan "City of Trees" until 2017, when it was repainted with the words "America’s Farm-to-Fork Capital" (referring to the farm-to-fork movement, which promotes consumption of locally-grown food). After 4,000 displeased citizens signed a petition protesting the change, officials agreed to include both slogans on the water tower.[36]

Cityscape

 
Panoramic view of downtown Sacramento from West Sacramento

City neighborhoods

 
Downtown Sacramento is the home of numerous corporate headquarters.

The city groups most of its neighborhoods into four areas:

Additional prominent regions and neighborhoods in the city include American River Parkway, Arden-Arcade, Arden Fair, Cal Expo, Capital Avenue, Coffing, College Glen, College Greens, Cordova, Creekside, East Fruitridge, Elder Creek, Elkhorn, Elvas, Erikson Industrial Park, Excelsior Sunrise, Foothill Farms, Franklin, Frates Ranch, Gateway Center, Gateway West, Glenwood Meadows, Hansen Park, Heritage Park, Johnson Business Park, Johnson Heights, Mayhew, Metro Center, Mills, Natomas Corporate Center, Natomas Creek, Natomas Crossing, Natomas Park, Newton Booth, Noralto, Northpointe, Norwood, Oak Knoll, Old North Sacramento, Parker Homes, Point West, Raley Industrial Park, Regency Park, Richardson Village, Richmond Grove, Rosemont, Sierra Oaks, Sports Complex, Strawberry Manor, Sundance Lake, Swanston Palms, Town and Country Village, Upper Land Park, Village 5, Village 7, Village 12, Village 14, Village Green, Walerga, Walsh Station, West Del Paso Heights, Westlake, Willowcreek, Wills Acres, Winn Park, Woodside and Youngs Heights.[41][42]

Climate

 

Sacramento has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csa), characterized by very hot, dry summers and cool winters with a decent amount of rainfall. The wet season is generally October through April, though there may be a day or two of light rainfall in June or September. The normal annual mean temperature is 61.8 °F (16.6 °C), with the monthly daily average temperature ranging from 47.3 °F (8.5 °C) in December to 75.9 °F (24.4 °C) in July.[43] Summer heat is sometimes moderated by a sea breeze known as the "delta breeze" which comes through the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta from the San Francisco Bay, and temperatures cool down sharply at night.

The foggiest months are December and January. Tule fog can be extremely dense, lowering visibility to less than 100 feet (30 m) and making driving conditions extremely hazardous. Chilling tule fog events have been known to last for several consecutive days or weeks. During Tule fog events, temperatures do not exceed 50 °F (10 °C).

 
A market at César Chávez Plaza

Snowfall is rare in Sacramento, which is only 25 ft (8 m) above sea level. In the downtown area, only three significant snow accumulations have occurred since 1900, the last one being in 1976.[44] During especially cold winter and spring storms, intense showers do occasionally produce a significant amount of hail, which can create hazardous driving conditions. Snowfall in the city often melts upon ground contact, with traceable amounts occurring in some years. Significant annual snow accumulations occur in the foothills 40 mi (64 km) east of the city, which had brief and traceable amounts of snowfall in January 2002, December 2009, and February 2011.[45][46] The greatest snowfall ever recorded in Sacramento was 3 inches (7.6 cm) on January 5, 1888. On average, there are 76 days with a high of 90 °F (32 °C)+, and 14 days with a high of 100 °F (38 °C)+; On the other extreme, there are 8.5 days where the temperature remains below 50 °F (10 °C), and 15 freezing nights per year. Official temperature extremes range from 18 °F (−7.8 °C) on December 22, 1990, to 116 °F (46.7 °C) on September 6, 2022;[47] a station around 5 mi (8.0 km) east-southeast of the city dipped to 17 °F (−8.3 °C) on December 11, 1932.[48]

The average annual precipitation is 18.14 inches (461 mm). On average, precipitation falls on 58 days each year in Sacramento, and nearly all of this falls during the winter months. Average January rainfall is 3.66 in (93 mm), and measurable precipitation is rare during the summer months. In February 1992, Sacramento had 16 consecutive days of rain, resulting in an accumulation of 6.41 in (163 mm) for the period. On rare occasions, monsoonal moisture surges from the Desert Southwest can bring upper-level moisture to the Sacramento region, leading to increased summer cloudiness, humidity, and even light showers and thunderstorms. Monsoon clouds do occur, usually during late July through early September. Sacramento is the second most flood susceptible city in the United States after New Orleans.[49]

Sacramento has been noted as being the sunniest location on the planet for four months of the year, from May through August. It holds the distinction as the sunniest month, in terms of percent possible sunshine, of anywhere in the world; July in Sacramento averages 14 hours and 12 minutes of sunshine per day, amounting to approximately 100% of possible sunshine.[50]

Since 2010, statewide droughts in California have further strained Sacramento's water security.[51]

Climate data for Sacramento, California (Sacramento Executive Airport), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1941–present[a]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 76
(24)
78
(26)
88
(31)
95
(35)
105
(41)
115
(46)
114
(46)
112
(44)
114
(46)
104
(40)
87
(31)
74
(23)
115
(46)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 65.2
(18.4)
71.1
(21.7)
78.1
(25.6)
87.4
(30.8)
95.3
(35.2)
103.1
(39.5)
105.3
(40.7)
104.1
(40.1)
100.6
(38.1)
91.8
(33.2)
76.5
(24.7)
65.1
(18.4)
107.0
(41.7)
Average high °F (°C) 56.0
(13.3)
61.3
(16.3)
66.3
(19.1)
72.1
(22.3)
80.3
(26.8)
87.9
(31.1)
92.6
(33.7)
91.9
(33.3)
88.5
(31.4)
78.8
(26.0)
65.0
(18.3)
56.0
(13.3)
74.7
(23.7)
Daily mean °F (°C) 47.6
(8.7)
51.4
(10.8)
55.4
(13.0)
59.5
(15.3)
66.1
(18.9)
72.2
(22.3)
75.9
(24.4)
75.3
(24.1)
72.5
(22.5)
64.5
(18.1)
53.9
(12.2)
47.3
(8.5)
61.8
(16.6)
Average low °F (°C) 39.2
(4.0)
41.5
(5.3)
44.5
(6.9)
47.0
(8.3)
52.0
(11.1)
56.5
(13.6)
59.2
(15.1)
58.8
(14.9)
56.5
(13.6)
50.3
(10.2)
42.7
(5.9)
38.5
(3.6)
48.9
(9.4)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 29.1
(−1.6)
31.7
(−0.2)
35.1
(1.7)
37.9
(3.3)
44.1
(6.7)
49.5
(9.7)
54.1
(12.3)
53.8
(12.1)
49.6
(9.8)
41.7
(5.4)
32.7
(0.4)
28.7
(−1.8)
26.9
(−2.8)
Record low °F (°C) 20
(−7)
23
(−5)
26
(−3)
31
(−1)
34
(1)
41
(5)
48
(9)
48
(9)
42
(6)
35
(2)
26
(−3)
18
(−8)
18
(−8)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.66
(93)
3.49
(89)
2.68
(68)
1.26
(32)
0.75
(19)
0.23
(5.8)
trace 0.04
(1.0)
0.09
(2.3)
0.85
(22)
1.66
(42)
3.43
(87)
18.14
(461)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 10.0 9.1 9.0 5.1 3.6 1.1 0.1 0.2 0.7 3.1 6.1 9.6 57.7
Average relative humidity (%) 83.3 76.8 71.6 64.5 58.9 55.0 53.2 55.7 57.0 63.1 75.6 82.9 66.5
Average dew point °F (°C) 39.4
(4.1)
42.1
(5.6)
42.8
(6.0)
43.7
(6.5)
46.9
(8.3)
50.4
(10.2)
53.1
(11.7)
53.4
(11.9)
50.9
(10.5)
47.5
(8.6)
43.7
(6.5)
39.2
(4.0)
46.1
(7.8)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 145.5 201.3 278.0 329.6 406.3 419.5 440.2 406.9 347.8 296.7 194.9 141.1 3,607.8
Percent possible sunshine 48 67 75 83 92 94 98 96 93 86 64 48 81
Source: NOAA (relative humidity, dew point and sun 1961–1990)[53][43][54]
Climate data for Sacramento 5 ESE, California (Sacramento State[55]), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1877–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 79
(26)
80
(27)
90
(32)
98
(37)
107
(42)
112
(44)
114
(46)
112
(44)
116
(47)
102
(39)
86
(30)
72
(22)
116
(47)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 66.4
(19.1)
72.5
(22.5)
80.6
(27.0)
89.5
(31.9)
97.1
(36.2)
104.4
(40.2)
106.7
(41.5)
105.5
(40.8)
102.0
(38.9)
92.3
(33.5)
77.3
(25.2)
65.9
(18.8)
108.1
(42.3)
Average high °F (°C) 56.5
(13.6)
62.2
(16.8)
67.8
(19.9)
73.5
(23.1)
81.3
(27.4)
89.0
(31.7)
94.4
(34.7)
93.5
(34.2)
89.3
(31.8)
78.9
(26.1)
65.3
(18.5)
56.4
(13.6)
75.7
(24.3)
Daily mean °F (°C) 48.8
(9.3)
52.9
(11.6)
57.2
(14.0)
61.4
(16.3)
67.7
(19.8)
73.9
(23.3)
77.9
(25.5)
77.3
(25.2)
74.0
(23.3)
65.9
(18.8)
55.3
(12.9)
48.5
(9.2)
63.4
(17.4)
Average low °F (°C) 41.1
(5.1)
43.7
(6.5)
46.7
(8.2)
49.3
(9.6)
54.0
(12.2)
58.7
(14.8)
61.4
(16.3)
61.0
(16.1)
58.8
(14.9)
52.9
(11.6)
45.3
(7.4)
40.7
(4.8)
51.1
(10.6)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 32.5
(0.3)
35.4
(1.9)
38.8
(3.8)
41.6
(5.3)
47.2
(8.4)
51.9
(11.1)
55.9
(13.3)
55.9
(13.3)
52.4
(11.3)
45.1
(7.3)
36.2
(2.3)
31.9
(−0.1)
30.5
(−0.8)
Record low °F (°C) 19
(−7)
21
(−6)
29
(−2)
34
(1)
37
(3)
43
(6)
47
(8)
48
(9)
44
(7)
34
(1)
27
(−3)
17
(−8)
17
(−8)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.87
(98)
3.63
(92)
2.82
(72)
1.44
(37)
0.86
(22)
0.21
(5.3)
trace 0.02
(0.51)
0.15
(3.8)
0.93
(24)
1.78
(45)
3.49
(89)
19.20
(488)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 10.8 9.6 9.2 5.3 3.7 1.2 0.1 0.2 0.8 3.1 6.8 10.1 60.9
Source: NOAA[53][56][57], Western Regional Climate Center[58]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
18506,820
186013,785102.1%
187016,28318.1%
188021,42031.5%
189026,38623.2%
190029,28211.0%
191044,69652.6%
192065,90847.5%
193093,75042.2%
1940105,95813.0%
1950137,57229.8%
1960191,66739.3%
1970257,10534.1%
1980275,7417.2%
1990369,36534.0%
2000407,01810.2%
2010466,48814.6%
2020524,94312.5%
U.S. Decennial Census[59]
2010–2020[7]

In 2002, the Civil Rights Project at Harvard University conducted for Time magazine named Sacramento "America's Most Diverse City."[15] The U.S. Census Bureau also groups Sacramento with other U.S. cities having a "high diversity" rating of the diversity index.[60] Moreover, Sacramento is one of the most well-integrated U.S. cities, having a relatively high level of ethnic and racial heterogeneity within its neighborhoods.[61]

The Chinese are the largest Asian ethnic group in Sacramento, followed by Filipino, Indian, Vietnamese and Hmong.[62]

2010 census

The 2010 United States Census[63] reported Sacramento had a population of 466,488. The population density was 4,660.0 inhabitants per square mile (1,799.2/km2).

Racial composition 2020[64] 2010[64] 1990[65] 1970[65] 1940[65]
White 46.3% 45.0% 60.1% 81.5% 94.2%
—Non-Hispanic 32.4% 34.5% 53.4% 71.4%[66] n/a
African American 13.2% 14.6% 15.3% 10.7% 1.4%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 28.9% 26.9% 16.2% 11.0%[66] n/a
Asian 18.9% 18.3% 15.0% 6.5% 4.3%

Hispanic or Latino of any race were 138,165 persons (26.9%); 22.6% of Sacramento's population is of Mexican heritage which amounts to over four-fifths of the city's Hispanic/Latino diaspora, 0.7% Puerto Rican, 0.5% Salvadoran, 0.2% Guatemalan, and 0.2% Nicaraguan.[67] Non-Hispanic Whites were 34.5% of the population in 2010,[64] down from 71.4% in 1970.[65]

The Census reported 458,174 people (98.2% of the population) lived in households, 4,268 (0.9%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 4,046 (0.9%) were institutionalized. The recent[when?] housing crash has not impacted these numbers.[citation needed]

There were 174,624 households, out of which 57,870 (33.1%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 65,556 (37.5%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 27,640 (15.8%) had a female householder with no husband present, 10,534 (6.0%) had a male householder with no wife present. There were 13,234 (7.6%) unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 2,498 (1.4%) same-sex married couples or partnerships. 53,342 households (30.5%) were made up of individuals, and 14,926 (8.5%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.62. There were 103,730 families (59.4% of all households); the average family size was 3.37.

 
Map of racial distribution in Sacramento, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people: White, Black, Asian, Hispanic or other

The age distribution of the city was follows: 116,121 people (24.9%) were under the age of 18, 52,438 people (11.2%) aged 18 to 24, 139,093 people (29.8%) aged 25 to 44, 109,416 people (23.5%) aged 45 to 64, and 49,420 people (10.6%) who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33.0 years. For every 100 females, there were 94.9 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.2 males.

There were 190,911 housing units at an average density of 1,907.1 per square mile (736.3/km2), of which 86,271 (49.4%) were owner-occupied, and 88,353 (50.6%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.8%; the rental vacancy rate was 8.3%. 231,593 people (49.6% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 226,581 people (48.6%) lived in rental housing units.

Sacramento has one of the highest LGBT populations per capita, ranking seventh among major American cities, and third in California behind San Francisco and slightly behind Oakland, with roughly 10% of the city's total population identifying themselves as gay, lesbian, transgender, or bisexual.[68] Lavender Heights is the hub for LGBTQ activities in the city[citation needed] and is a centrally located district in Midtown Sacramento centered within and around K & 20th streets.

Economy

 
The historic Citizen Hotel in Downtown Sacramento

The Sacramento metropolitan area is the fifth largest in California after the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the San Francisco Bay Area, the Inland Empire, and the San Diego metropolitan area, and is the 27th largest in the United States.[11]

Sutter Health, Blue Diamond Growers, Aerojet Rocketdyne, Teichert, and The McClatchy Company are among the companies based in Sacramento.

The Port of Sacramento has been plagued with operating losses in recent years and faces bankruptcy. This severe loss in business is due to the heavy competition from the Port of Stockton, which has a larger facility and a deeper channel. As of 2006, the city of West Sacramento took responsibility for the Port of Sacramento. During the Vietnam War era, the Port of Sacramento was the major terminus in the supply route for all military parts, hardware and other cargo going to Southeast Asia.

Top employers

As of 2019,[69] the top employers in the County of Sacramento were:

Culture

Museums

 
The Crocker Art Museum is the oldest public art museum in the Western United States and has one of the largest public art collections in the country.

Sacramento is home to several major museums. The Crocker Art Museum is the oldest public art museum west of the Mississippi River. In 2010, the museum completed an expansion that tripled the museum's floor space to more than 145,000 square feet of exhibit space.

Also of interest is the Governor's Mansion State Historic Park, a large Victorian Mansion which was home to 14 of California's Governors. The Leland Stanford Mansion, which was completely restored in 2006, serves as the State's official address for diplomatic and business receptions. Guided public tours are available. The California Museum for History, Women, and the Arts, home of the California Hall of Fame, is a cultural destination dedicated to telling the rich history of California and its unique influence on the world of ideas, innovation, art and culture. The museum educates tens of thousands of school children through inspiring programs, sharing with world visitors California's rich art, history and cultural legacy through dynamic exhibits, and serving as a public forum and international meeting place. The California State Capitol is home to the California State Capitol Museum and offers free tours of the capitol's historic chambers and assembly rooms as well as a museum that is home to several historical artifacts.[70]

 

The California State Railroad Museum in Old Sacramento has historical exhibits and live steam locomotives that patrons may ride. The California Automobile Museum, just south of Old Sacramento, is filled with automotive history and vehicles from 1880 to 2006 and is the oldest non-profit automotive museum in the West. The mission of it is to preserve, promote, and teach automotive culture and its influence on our lives—past, present and future. McClellan Air Force Base is home to the Aerospace Museum of California where more than 40 civilian and military aircraft and 50 historical jet engines are displayed to the public. In addition, the Sacramento History Museum, in the heart of Old Sacramento, focuses on the history of Sacramento from the region's pre-Gold Rush history through the present day. In 2021, the Museum of Science and Curiosity (MOSAC) opened in the restored historic power station building of Matsui Waterfront Park.

There is a Museum Day held in Sacramento every year, when 26 museums in the greater Sacramento area offer free admission. The 2009 Sacramento Museum Day brought out more than 80,000 people, the largest number the event has gathered. Sacramento Museum Day is held every year on the first Saturday of February.

Performing arts

The Sacramento Ballet, Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra and the Sacramento Opera perform at the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center (formerly known as the Community Center Theater).

There are several major theater venues in Sacramento. The Sacramento Convention Center Complex governs both the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center and Memorial Auditorium. The H Street Theatre Complex consists of the Wells Fargo Pavilion, built in 2003 atop the old Music Circus tent foundations, the McClatchy Mainstage and the Pollock Stage, originally built as a television studio and renovated at the same time the Pavilion was built. These smaller venues seat 300 and 90, offering a more intimate presentation than the 2300-seat Pavilion. The Eagle Theatre in Old Sacramento is a reconstruction of the oldest permanent theater in California and hosts several performances year round.[71] The newest venue in the city, the Sophia Tsakopoulos Center for the Arts, consists of the 365-seat Sutter Theatre for Children and the Mainstage, seating 250.

Professional theatre is represented in Sacramento by a number of companies. Broadway Sacramento and its locally produced summer stock theatre, Broadway at Music Circus, lures many directors, performers, and artists from New York and Los Angeles to work alongside a large local staff at the Wells Fargo Pavilion. During the fall, winter and spring seasons Broadway Sacramento brings bus and truck tours to the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center. Resident at the H Street Theatre Complex for the remainder of the year (from September to May), the Sacramento Theatre Company prepares to celebrate its 75th season, beginning in the Fall of 2019. In addition to a traditional regional theatre fare of classical plays and musicals, the Sacramento Theatre Company has a large School of the Arts with a variety of opportunities for arts education. The B Street Theatre, having completed its 2018 move into the new Sophia Tsokopoulos Center for the Arts, continues its pursuit of producing smaller and more intimate professional works for families and children. Rounding out the professional companies is Capital Stage, which performed aboard the Delta King until the end of the 2010–2011 season and soon took up residence at its own venue along the J-Street corridor.

The Sacramento area has one of the largest collections of community theatres in California. Some of these include the Thistle Dew Dessert Theatre and Playwrights Workshop, Davis Musical Theatre Co., El Dorado Musical Theatre, Runaway Stage Productions, River City Theatre Company, Flying Monkey Productions, The Actor's Theatre, KOLT Run Productions, Kookaburra Productions, Big Idea Theatre, Celebration Arts, Lambda Player, Light Opera Theatre of Sacramento, Synergy Stage and the historic Eagle Theatre. The Sacramento Shakespeare Festival provides entertainment under the stars every summer in William Land Park. Many of these theatres compete annually for the Elly Awards overseen by The Sacramento Area Regional Theatre Alliance or SARTA.[72]

Visual arts

 
The Spanish Colonial Revival style Ramona Building, built in 1930.

The Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission is an organization that was established as the Sacramento arts council in 1977 to provide several arts programs for the city. These include Art in Public Places, Arts Education, Grants and Cultural Programs, Poet Laureate Program, Arts Stabilization Programs and Other Resources and opportunities.

Sacramento Second Saturday Art Walk is a program of local art galleries that stay open into the late evenings every second Saturday of each month, providing a unique experience for the local population as well as tourists to view original art and meet the artists themselves.

Sacramento is also home to the Wide Open Walls Festival where artists from across the world have added more than 140 murals across the city since the festival's inception in 2016.[73]

Sacramento is home to one of California's oldest Latino cultural centers, the Latino Center of Art and Culture The Latino Center of Art and Culture was founded in the early ‘70's by activist Chicano students to combat racism and instill pride in the Chicano community. Known as La Raza Galeria it was home to artists like Ricardo Favela, José Montoya and Esteban Villa who formed the Chicano artist collective, the Royal Chicano Air Force. LCAC maintains legacy of activism for cultural equity, accessibility to the arts, social justice. The center is a community hub offering support to emerging Latino artists and produces live programming.

Music

 
The Tower Theatre, where Tower Records was founded.

Tower Records was started and based in Sacramento until its closing.[74] Classical music is widely available. The Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra, the Sacramento Baroque Soloists, the Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra, the Sacramento Youth Symphony, the Sacramento Master Singers, the Sacramento Children's Chorus, and the Camellia Symphony each present a full season of concerts.

Each year, the city hosts the Sammies, the Sacramento Music Awards. Sacramento also has a reputation as a center for Dixieland jazz, because of the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee which was held every Memorial Day weekend until 2017. Events and performances are held in multiple locations throughout the city. Each year thousands of jazz fans from all over the world visit for this one weekend.

A growing number of rock, hardcore and metal bands hail from the Sacramento area, including Tesla, AS IS, Deftones, Papa Roach, Will Haven, Trash Talk,[75][76][77] Dance Gavin Dance, A Lot Like Birds, Far, CAKE, !!!, Oleander and Steel Breeze; plus some other famous musicians like record producer and recording artist Charlie Peacock, Duane Leinan, Bob Stubbs of Social Distortion and Craig Chaquico of Jefferson Starship.

Sacramento is home to several music festivals throughout the year. Since 2012, Sacramento hosts the four day Aftershock Festival at Discovery Park where acclaimed bands such as Evanescence, Kiss, and Muse perform for up to 160,000 visitors. Other notable music festivals include the country based GoldenSky Festival and soul and R&B based Sol Blume festival.[78][79]

Scottish pop band Middle of the Road sang kindly of Sacramento in their 1972 European hit song "Sacramento". Experimental groups such as Hella, Death Grips, and Tera Melos also come out of Sacramento.

Rappers C-Bo, Marvaless, Lunasicc, Mozzy, Hobo Johnson and Chuuwee are among those native to the area.

Film

 
The historic Crest Theatre.

Sacramento is home to the Sacramento French Film Festival, a cultural event held every year in July that features U.S. premieres of French films and classic masterpieces of French cinema and the Sacramento Japanese Film Festival,[80] also held in July. In addition, Sacramento is home to the Trash Film Orgy, a summer film festival celebrating the absurd, B-movies, horror, monster, and exploitation films.[81] Founded in 2007, the Sacramento Horror Film Festival showcases feature-length and short films as well as live musical and theatrical performances in the horror and macabre genres.[82]

Of note, Sacramento has been home to various actors, including Eddie Murphy, who resided in the Riverlake community of Pocket-Greenhaven with his then wife Nicole Mitchell Murphy, a fashion model and Sacramento native. It is also the home of director Greta Gerwig, whose solo directorial debut Lady Bird is set in Sacramento.

Landmarks

 
The historic Ebner's Hotel, built in 1856, in Old Sacramento.
Old Sacramento

The oldest part of the town besides Sutter's Fort is Old Sacramento, which consists of cobbled streets and many historic buildings, several from the 1850s and 1860s. Buildings have been preserved, restored, or reconstructed, and the district is now a substantial tourist attraction, with rides on steam-powered historic trains and horse-drawn carriages.

Poverty Ridge Historic District

The Poverty Ridge Historic District is within Sacramento's original 1848 street grid and bounded to the west by 21st Street, to the north by S Street, to the east by 23rd Street, to the south by W Street and U.S. Route 50, and includes the block bounded by 20th Street, 21st Street, S Street, and T Street.[83][84][85][86]

The Poverty Ridge Historic District was considered to be Sacramento's wealthiest neighborhood from 1868 to 1947.[83][87]

Historic Chinatown
 
Sacramento's historic Chinatown.

The Opium Wars of the 1840s and 1850s, along with the Gold Rush, brought many Chinese people to California. Most arrived at San Francisco, which was then the largest city in California and known as "Daai Fau" (Chinese: 大埠; Jyutping: daai6 fau6; Cantonese Yale: Daaihfauh). Some eventually came to Sacramento, then the second-largest city in California and consequently called "Yee Fow" (Chinese: 二埠; Jyutping: ji6 fau6). Today the city is known as "萨克拉门托" (pinyin: Sàkèlāméntuō) by Mainland Chinese and as "沙加緬度" Sāgāmíhndouh and Shājiāmiǎnduó by Cantonese speakers and Taiwanese respectively.

Sacramento's Chinatown was on "I" Street from Second to Sixth Streets. At the time, this area of "I" Street was considered a health hazard because, lying within a levee zone, it was lower than other parts of the city, which were situated on higher land. Throughout Sacramento's Chinatown history, there were fires, acts of discrimination, and prejudicial legislation such as the Chinese Exclusion Act that was not repealed until 1943. The mysterious fires were thought to be set off by those who did not take a liking to the Chinese working class.[88] Ordinances on what was viable building material were set into place to try to get the Chinese to move out. Newspapers such as The Sacramento Union wrote stories at the time that portrayed the Chinese in an unfavorable light to inspire ethnic discrimination and drive the Chinese away. While most of Sacramento's Chinatown has now been razed, a small Chinatown mall remains as well as a museum dedicated to the history of Sacramento's Chinatown.[89][90]

Newton Booth Historic District

The Newton Booth Historic District, named for Newton Booth, is located in the southeast corner of Sacramento's original 1848 street grid.[91][92][93][94]

Cuisine

 
The Old Tavern, built in the 1850s

In 2012, Sacramento started the marketing campaign as "America's Farm-to-Fork Capital" due to Sacramento's many restaurants that source their food from the numerous surrounding farms.[95] The city has an annual Farm-to-Fork festival that showcases various grocers, restaurants, and growers in the industry. In 2012, one of the city's farm-to-fork restaurants The Kitchen was nominated for Outstanding Restaurant by the James Beard Foundation.[96] It continues to excel, earning the AAA's Five Diamond dining award since 2011.[97] It received its first Michelin star on June 3, 2019, becoming the city's first Michelin-starred restaurant.[98] In 2022 Localis became the second Michelin star restaurant in the city.[99] Sacramento is home to well-known cookbook authors, Biba Caggiano of Biba's Restaurant and Mai Pham of Lemongrass and Star Ginger.[100]

Sacramento is also known for its beverage culture, with keystone events that include Cal Expo's Grape and Gourmet, Sacramento Beer Week, and Sacramento Cocktail Week. Its growing beer scene is evident, with over 60 microbreweries in the region as of 2017.[101] Some local brews include Track 7 Brewing Company, Big Stump Brew Co, Oak Park Brewing Co., and Sactown Union Brewery. Numerous beer festivals around the region highlight both local and visitor beers. In addition to festivals in Elk Grove,[102] Davis, Roseville, Placerville,[103] and Woodland,[104] Sacramento hosts the annual California Beer Craft Summit, an exposition dedicated to the art of brewing. The summit also hosts the largest beer festival on the West Coast, featuring over 160 breweries in downtown Sacramento.[105]

Sacramento's contemporary culture is reflected in its coffee. An "underrated coffee city",[106] Sacramento has above-average marks for local coffee.[107] The city has numerous community roasters and coffee shops. Examples include Temple Coffee, Insight Coffee Roasters, Old Soul Co., Chocolate Fish Roasters, Naked Lounge, Pachamama Coffee Cooperative, and Identity Coffees. In addition to local brands, the region offers other chains such as Starbucks, Peet's Coffee & Tea, and Philz Coffee.

Sports

Sacramento is home to one major league sports team – the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association. The Kings came to Sacramento from Kansas City in 1985. On January 21, 2013, a controlling interest of the Sacramento Kings was sold to hedge fund manager Chris Hansen, who intended to move the franchise to Seattle for the 2013–2014 NBA season and rename the team the Seattle SuperSonics.[108] Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, himself a former NBA basketball player, fought the move, forming an ownership group led by Vivek Ranadive to keep the Kings in Sacramento. On May 16, 2013, the NBA Board of Governors voted 22–8 to keep the Kings in Sacramento.[109]

Sacramento has two other professional teams. Sacramento Republic FC began play in April 2014 at Hughes Stadium before a sellout crowd of 20,231, setting a USL Pro regular-season single game attendance record.[110][111] They now play in Papa Murphy's Park. Republic FC won the USL championship in their first season. In October 2019, Republic FC's Major League Soccer expansion bid was approved; the team was expected to begin MLS play in the 2022 season,[112] until being delayed by COVID-19 to the 2023 season.[113] However, as of February 26, 2021, the bid is on indefinite hiatus.[114]

 

In 2000, AAA minor league baseball returned to Sacramento with the Sacramento River Cats, an affiliate of the San Francisco Giants and formerly an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics. The River Cats play at Sutter Health Park, in West Sacramento.

The Sacramento State Hornets of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) play at Hornet Stadium as part of the Big Sky Conference. Since 1954, the Hornets have won seven conference titles and have participated in four playoff appearances and two bowl games.

Sacramento is the former home of two professional basketball teams. The Sacramento Heatwave of the American Basketball Association previously played in the Sacramento area until 2013. Sacramento was also formerly home to the now defunct Sacramento Monarchs of the WNBA. The Monarchs were one of the eight founding members of the WNBA in 1997 and won the WNBA Championship in 2005, but folded in November 2009.

Sacramento has frequently hosted the NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championship as well as the first and second rounds of the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship. The California International Marathon (est. 1983) attracts a field of international elite runners who vie for a share of the $50,000 prize purse. The fast course is popular for runners seeking to achieve a Boston Marathon qualifying time and fitness runners.

Sacramento professional teams
Club League Sport Venue Attendance Established Championships
Sacramento Kings NBA Basketball Golden 1 Center 17,608 1923 (1985) 1 NBA, 2 NBL (as Rochester Royals)
Sacramento Republic FC USL Championship Soccer Papa Murphy's Park 11,800 2012 1 USL Pro
Sacramento River Cats PCL Baseball Sutter Health Park 14,200 1978 (2000) 3 Triple-A titles, 5 League titles
Sacramento State Hornets NCAA Division I FCS Football Hornet Stadium 21,195 1954 7 Conference Titles

Parks and recreation

 
The Capitol Mall is a major monumental parkway leading from Tower Bridge to the California Capitol.

Sacramento boasts an extensive park system consisting of over 5,000 acres (2,023 ha) of parkland and recreation centers.[115] In its 2013 ParkScore ranking, The Trust for Public Land reported Sacramento was tied with San Francisco and Boston for having the third best park system among the 50 most populous U.S. cities.[116] ParkScore ranks city park systems by a formula that analyzes the city's median park size, park acres as percent of city area, the percent of residents within a half-mile of a park, spending of park services per resident, and the number of playgrounds per 10,000 residents.

The city features a collection of smaller parks in the downtown district, including Crocker Park, Roosevelt Park, Fremont Park, and Southside Park and is home to basketball courts, playgrounds, and year-round farmers markets and local events. In addition, Cesar Chavez Plaza is home to concerts in the summer time and is a well known rallying spot for gatherings. In addition, surrounding the California State Capitol is Capitol Park, a 40 acres (16 ha) park consisting of more than 200 types of trees and 155 memorials. The most recent park constructed in Sacramento is the Hanami Line at Robert Matsui Waterfront Park, which is home to a line of Cherry Blossoms surrounding the park.[117] Popular parks outside the central core include American River Parkway which spans 23 miles along the American River, William McKinley Park and Memorial Rose Garden, and William Land Park.

William Land Park is home to several key attractions in the city. The Sacramento Zoo spans 14.3 acres (5.8 ha) and is home to more than 400 native and endangered animals around the world. The park is also home to Funderland, a small amusement park open from February to November consisting of 9 rides and Fairytale Town, which sees more than 250,000 visitors each year.[118][119][120]

Sacramento is a hotbed for high school rugby. Jesuit High is the recent defending national champion (winning five times in total). Their arch-rival school Christian Brothers came in second nationwide. Burbank, Del Campo, and Vacaville have also placed well in the national competition over the years. The Sacramento Valley High School Rugby Conference hosts the largest and arguably deepest preseason youth and high school rugby tournament in America.

 
The California State Fair is held annually at the California Exposition.

The California State Fair is held in Sacramento each year at the end of the summer, ending on Labor Day. In 2010, the State Fair moved to July. More than one million people attended this fair in 2001. The Jedediah Smith Memorial Trail that runs between Old Sacramento and Folsom Lake grants access to the American River Parkway, a natural area that includes more than 5,000 acres (20 km2) of undeveloped land. It attracts cyclists and equestrians from across the state. Among other recreational options in Sacramento is Discovery Park, a 275-acre (1.1 km2) park studded with stands of mature trees and grasslands. This park is situated where the American River flows into the Sacramento River.

There are several casinos and card rooms in the city and scattered throughout the Sacramento area. Since 1991, Sacramento's #1 Cards Room Capitol Casino has been open in downtown Sacramento and is home to several card games. Other notable casinos in the area include Thunder Valley Casino Resort, Cache Creek Casino Resort, Red Hawk Casino Resort, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Sacramento at Fire Mountain, Jackson Rancheria Casino Resort, and Sky River Casino in Elk Grove. In addition, Sacramento is a 2-hour drive from nearby Reno, providing residents and tourists with several options for gambling.

In amateur sports, Sacramento claims many prominent Olympians such as Mark Spitz, Debbie Meyer (6 time gold medalist in for US swimming), Mike Burton, Summer Sanders (Gold medalist in swimming, and trained in childhood by Debbie Meyer at Rio Del Oro Racquet Club), Jeff Float (all swimming), and Billy Mills (track). Coach Sherm Chavoor founded his world-famous Arden Hills Swim Club just east of the city and trained Burton, Spitz and others.

Government

 
Sacramento City Hall, built 1908-09 by architect Rudolph A. Herold, is the seat of the Government of Sacramento, hosting both the Mayor of Sacramento and Sacramento City Council.

Sacramento is both the capital city of California and the county seat of Sacramento County. As such, it hosts both the Californian government and the county administration, alongside the city government.

City government

The Government of Sacramento operates as a charter city (as opposed to a general law city) under the Charter of the City of Sacramento. The elected government is composed of the Sacramento City Council with 8 city council districts and the Mayor of Sacramento, which operate under a mayor-council government. In addition, there are numerous departments and appointed officers such as the City Manager, Sacramento Police Department (SPD), the Sacramento Fire Department (SFD), City Clerk, City Attorney, and City Treasurer.

As of 2016, the mayor is Darrell Steinberg and the council members are Angelique Ashby, Allen Warren, Jeff Harris, Steve Hansen, Jay Schenirer, Rich Jennings, and Larry Carr.[4] The City of Sacramento is part of Sacramento County, for which the government of Sacramento County is defined and authorized under the California Constitution, California law, and the Charter of the County of Sacramento.[121]

Californian government

As the capital city of California, Sacramento is home to the government of California. The California State Capitol is the seat of the governor of California and the California State Legislature, and the city is home to numerous California state agencies. The Supreme Court of California is headquartered in San Francisco, but maintains one of its two branch offices in Sacramento, where it shares a courtroom with the Court of Appeal for the Third Appellate District.

State and federal representation

In the California State Senate, Sacramento is the heart of the 6th district, represented by Democrat Richard Pan.[122] In the California State Assembly, it is split between the 7th Assembly District, represented by Republican Josh Hoover, and the 9th Assembly District, represented by Republican Heath Flora.[123]

In the United States House of Representatives, Sacramento forms the majority of the California's 6th congressional district, represented by Democrat Ami Bera.[124]

Education

 
 
The main campus of the University of California, Davis is in Davis, California (top) and the UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento (bottom)

Higher education

The Sacramento area hosts a wide variety of higher educational opportunities. There are two major public universities, many private institutions, community colleges, vocational schools, and the McGeorge School of Law.

Sacramento is home to Sacramento State (California State University, Sacramento), founded as Sacramento State College in 1947. In 2004, enrollment was 22,555 undergraduates and 5,417 graduate students in the university's eight colleges. The university's mascot is the hornet, and the school colors are green and gold. The 300-acre (1.2 km2) campus is along the American River Parkway a few miles east of downtown.

The University of California has a campus, UC Davis, in nearby Davis and has a graduate center in downtown Sacramento. The UC Davis Graduate School of Management (GSM) is near the UC Davis Medical Center off of Stockton Boulevard near Highway 50. Many students, about 400 out of 517, at the UC Davis GSM are working professionals and are completing their MBA part-time.[125] UC also maintains the University of California Sacramento Center (UCCS) for undergraduate and graduate studies.[126] The UC Davis School of Medicine is at the UC Davis Medical Center between the neighborhoods of Elmhurst, Tahoe Park, and Oak Park.

 
Sacramento State University is one of the best-ranked on the West Coast.

The Los Rios Community College District consists of several two-year colleges in the Sacramento area—American River College, Cosumnes River College, Sacramento City College, Folsom Lake College, plus a large number of outreach centers for those colleges. Sierra College is on the outskirts of Sacramento in Rocklin.

University of the Pacific has its Sacramento Campus in the Oak Park neighborhood of Sacramento. The campus has long included McGeorge School of Law and in 2015 was expanded to become a comprehensive graduate and professional campus, including programs in analytics, business, education, health sciences, and public policy.[127] The National University Sacramento regional campus offers bachelor's and master's degrees in business, education, health-care and teaching credential programs.

The University of San Francisco has one of its four regional campuses in Sacramento. At the undergraduate level they offer degrees in Applied Economics, Information Systems, Organizational Behavior and Leadership, and Public Administration. At the graduate level, Master's programs are offered in: Information Security and Assurance, Information Systems, Organization Development, Project Management, Public Administration, Nonprofit Administration, and Counseling.[128]

The private University of Southern California has an extension in downtown Sacramento, called the State Capital Center. The campus, taught by main campus professors, Sacramento-based professors, and practitioners in the State Capitol and state agencies, offers Master of Public Administration, Masters of Public Policy, and Master of Public Health degrees.[129]

Epic Bible College and the Professional School of Psychology are also based in Sacramento. Western Seminary has one of its four campuses in Sacramento, which opened on the campus of Arcade Church in 1991. Western is an evangelical, Christian graduate school that provides theological training for students who hope to serve in a variety of ministry roles including pastors, marriage and family therapists, educators, missionaries and lay leadership. The Sacramento campus offers four master's degrees, and a variety of other graduate-level programs.[130]

A satellite campus of Alliant International University offers graduate and undergraduate programs of study.

The Art Institute of California – Sacramento was established in 2007, and is a branch of The Art Institute of California – Los Angeles. The school is focused on educating students in the field of commercial arts. The school offers both a Bachelor of Science and an Associate of Science degree, as well as diplomas in some areas of study. Some majors the school offers are Digital Film-making & Video Production, Culinary Management, Graphic Design, and Game Art & Design. The school has since been closed.

On J Street, there is the Lincoln Law School of Sacramento, a private, evening-only law school program with a strong legal presence in the region.

The Universal Technical Institute (UTI) is in Sacramento; it offers automotive programs in auto mechanical, auto body, and diesel.

Primary and secondary education

 
The historic McClatchy High School
 
Saint Patrick Academy.
 
North Sacramento School.

The Sacramento Public Library system has 28 branches in the greater area. The Sacramento area is served by various public school districts, including the Sacramento City Unified School District, Natomas Unified School District, San Juan Unified School District, Twin Rivers Unified School District, and Elk Grove Unified School District. As of 2009, the area's schools employed 9,600 elementary school teachers (not including special education teachers),[131] and 7,410 middle school teachers (not including special education or vocational teachers).[132]

Almost all areas south of the American River are served by the Sacramento City Unified School District. The only exceptions are the Valley Hi/North Laguna and Florin areas served by the Elk Grove Unified School District.

Areas north of the American River are served by the remaining school districts. This area was not originally part of the City of Sacramento and as such is not served by Sacramento City Unified School District. North Sacramento outside of Natomas and Robla (for K-8) is served by the Twin Rivers Unified School District. The Robla area is served by the Robla School District for K-8 and by Twin Rivers for 9–12. The Natomas region is served by the Natomas Unified School District. The Campus Commons area and the small portions of the Sierra Oaks neighborhood that fall into the city of Sacramento are served by the San Juan Unified School District.

While Roman Catholic institutions still dominate the independent school scene in the Sacramento area, in 1964, Sacramento Country Day School opened and offered Sacramento citizens an independent school affiliated with the California Association of Independent Schools. SCDS has grown to its present-day status as a learning community for students from pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade. Additionally, the suburb of Fair Oaks hosts the expansive riverside campus of the Sacramento Waldorf School, a Steiner school adjacent to the Rudolf Steiner College, and the largest Waldorf school in North America. Sacramento Waldorf School educates students from pre-K through 12th grade on a secluded, pastoral site that incorporates a large, functioning biodynamic farm.

Shalom School is the only Jewish day school in Sacramento; however, Brookefield School on property owned by Congregation B'nai Israel provides extracurricular Jewish education.

Capital Christian School is a pre-school–12th grade private Christian school.[133] There is a small Bible college on campus offering associate degrees in Bible studies or theology. Sacramento Adventist Academy is another Christian school in Greater Sacramento. This is a pre-school–12 institution, as well.

There is one Islamic school in Sacramento, Masjid Annur, founded in 1988.

Media

 
Park Tower, Downtown Sacramento

Magazines

Newspapers

Top two newspapers
  • The Sacramento Bee, the primary newspaper, was founded in 1857 by James McClatchy. The Sacramento Bee is the flagship paper of The McClatchy Company, the second-largest newspaper publisher in the United States. The Sacramento Bee has won five Pulitzer Prizes in its history and numerous other awards, including many for its progressive public service campaigns promoting free speech (the Bee often criticized government policy, and uncovered many scandals hurting Californians), anti-racism (the Bee supported the Union during the American Civil War and later publicly denounced the Ku Klux Klan), worker's rights (the Bee has a strong history of supporting unionization), and environmental protection (leading numerous tree-planting campaigns and fighting against environmental destruction in the Sierra Nevada).
  • The Sacramento Union, the Sacramento Bee's rival, started publishing six years earlier, in 1851; it closed its doors in 1994, with an attempted revival lasting from 2005 to 2009. Writer and journalist Mark Twain wrote for the Union in 1866.
Other newspapers

Transportation

 
Tower Bridge crosses over the Sacramento River, connecting Sacramento to West Sacramento.

A 2011 study by Walk Score ranked Sacramento the 24th most walkable of fifty largest U.S. cities.[134]

Roads

Sacramento is a control city and the region is served by several highways and freeways. Interstate 80 (I-80) is the major east–west route, connecting Sacramento with San Francisco in the west, and Reno in the east. Business 80 (the Capital City Freeway) splits from I-80 in West Sacramento, runs through Sacramento, and then rejoins its parent in the northwest portion of the city. U.S. Highway 50 also begins its eastern journey in West Sacramento, co-signed with Business 80, but then splits off and heads toward South Lake Tahoe as the El Dorado Freeway. A sign at the eastern terminus of US 50 in Ocean City, Maryland, gives the distance to Sacramento as 3,073 miles (4,946 km).[135]

 
Guy West Bridge is a pedestrian and cyclist crossing over the American River, connecting California State University, Sacramento to the Campus Commons neighborhood.

Interstate 5 (I-5) runs through Sacramento, heads north up to Redding, and then heads south near the western edge of the California Central Valley towards Los Angeles. California State Highway 99 runs through Sacramento, heading closer to the eastern edge of the Central Valley, connecting to Marysville and Yuba City in the north, and Fresno and Bakersfield in the south. California State Highway 160 approaches the city after running along the Sacramento River from Contra Costa County in the south, and then becomes a major city street in Downtown Sacramento before turning into the North Sacramento Freeway, going over the American River to Business 80.

Some Sacramento neighborhoods, such as Downtown Sacramento and Midtown Sacramento are very bicycle friendly as are many other communities in the region. As a result of litigation, Sacramento has undertaken to make all city facilities and sidewalks wheelchair accessible. In an effort to preserve its urban neighborhoods, Sacramento has constructed traffic-calming measures in many areas.

Rail service

 
The historic Sacramento Valley Rail Station, utilized by Amtrak California, is a gateway to the Sacramento Valley.

Amtrak provides passenger rail service to the city of Sacramento. The Sacramento Valley Rail Station is on the corner of 5th and I streets near the historic Old Town Sacramento and underwent extensive renovations in 2007. The station serves as a Sacramento Regional Transit District Light Rail terminus.

Amtrak California operates the Capitol Corridor, a multiple-frequency service providing service from the capital city to its northeastern suburbs and the San Francisco Bay Area.[136]

Sacramento is the northern terminus of the Amtrak California San Joaquins route which provide direct multiple-frequency passenger rail service to California's Central Valley as far as Bakersfield; Thruway Motorcoach connections are available from the trains at Bakersfield to Southern California and Southern Nevada. An additional service under this banner is expected to be routed through Midtown in 2020.[137]

Sacramento is a stop along Amtrak's Coast Starlight route which provides scenic service to Seattle via Klamath Falls and Portland to the north and to Los Angeles via San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara to the south.

 
The historic Sacramento Western Pacific station was served by the California Zephyr until 1970.

Amtrak's California Zephyr serves Sacramento daily and provides service to the east serving Reno, Salt Lake, Denver, Omaha, Chicago and intermediate cities.

The Sacramento Valley Rail Station provides numerous Thruway Motorcoach routes. One route serves the cities of Marysville, Oroville, Chico, Corning, Red Bluff and Redding with additional service to Yreka and even Medford, Oregon. A second serves the cities of Roseville, Rocklin, Auburn, Colfax, Truckee, Reno and Sparks. The third and final thruway motorcoach route serves Placerville, Lake Tahoe, Stateline Casinos, and Carson City, Nevada. Each of these routes provides multiple frequencies each day.

Sacramento has the second busiest Amtrak station in California and the seventh busiest in the country.[138]

Altamont Corridor Express commuter rail service is expected to be routed through Sacramento in 2020.[137] This service will utilize the Union Pacific's Sacramento Subdivision, the route of the original California Zephyr, where additional passenger capacity is available.[139]

Sacramento is expected to serve as the northern terminus of the California High-Speed Rail system.

Airport

Sacramento International Airport (IATA: SMF, ICAO: KSMF, FAA LID: SMF) is a public airport 10 miles (16 kilometers) northwest of downtown Sacramento, in Sacramento County, California. Southwest Airlines is the dominant passenger airline with more than 104 daily flights to 25 cities across the US.[140] Other airlines include Delta, United, Spirit Airlines, American Airlines and Alaska Airlines. The airport handles flights to and from various US destinations (including Hawaii) as well as Mexico, Canada and connecting flights to Europe, Asia, and South America, and served more than 13 million passengers in 2019.[141] The airport is well known for the 56-foot (17 m) long red aluminum rabbit titled "Leap" by Lawrence Argent in Terminal B.[142]

Transit

The city and its suburbs are served by Sacramento Regional Transit District, which ranks as the eleventh busiest in the United States. Sac RT is a bus and light-rail system, with 274 buses and 76 light-rail vehicles providing service for 58,200 daily passengers. The three light-rail lines (Blue, Gold, & Green) is a 42.9 mi (69.0 km) system with 54 stations. The Gold Line was extended east as far as the city of Folsom, and more recently the Blue Line was extended south from Meadowview Rd to Cosumnes River College. Sacramento's light rail system goes to the Sacramento Valley Rail Station, Cosumnes River College Station in south Sacramento, and north to Watt/I-80 where I-80 and Business 80 meet. The light-rail Blue & Gold Lines have 15-minute weekday headways and 30-minute weekday evening and weekend/holiday headways; the Green Line has 30-minute weekday headways and no weekend service. Route 142 is an express bus line to/from downtown to Sacramento International Airport.[143] There are expansion plans to extend the Green Line to the airport and the Blue Line to the City of Roseville through the City of Citrus Heights. Yolobus provides bus service to West Sacramento and Yolo County.

 
Old Sacramento's riverfront docks.

Greyhound Lines provides intercity bus service to Portland, Reno, Los Angeles, and San Francisco from its new station along Richards Boulevard. Intercity bus service to San Francisco and Sparks, Nevada is offered by Megabus.[144]

Bicycling is an increasingly popular transportation mode in Sacramento, which enjoys a mild climate and flat terrain. Bicycling is especially common in the older neighborhoods of Sacramento's center, such as Alkali Flat, Midtown, McKinley Park, Land Park, and East Sacramento. Many employees who work downtown commute by bicycle from suburban communities on a dedicated bicycle path on the American River Parkway. Sacramento was designated as a Silver Level Bicycle Friendly Community by the League of American Bicyclists in September 2006. The advocacy organization Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates co-sponsors the Sacramento Area Council of Governments' May is Bike Month campaign. Rideshare companies such as Lime, Bird, and Helbiz have introduced up to 4,000 electric powered scooters and bikes in Downtown Sacramento for residents to rent as a faster and alternative way to get around the city. Sacramento ranks second worldwide in ride sharables, with ridership totaling 1 million riders in 8 months.[145][146]

There is a commuter bus service from Yolo County on Yolobus, from Solano County on FAST, on two bus lines from Yuba County's Yuba Sutter Transit,[147] from Amador Transit's Sacramento Line,[148] on Placer County Transit's Auburn to Light Rail Line,[149] and from San Joaquin County on several SMART bus lines.

Notable people

International relations

 
Stanford Mansion is the official reception center for the Californian government and one of the workplaces of the Governor of California.

As of 2015, the City of Sacramento has 13 sister cities. They are:[150]

Country City Date of partnership
  Israel Ashkelon August 15, 2012
  Palestine Bethlehem December 15, 2009
  Moldova Chişinău[151] December 12, 1989
  New Zealand Hamilton December 6, 1988
  China Jinan, Shandong October 16, 1984
  Switzerland Liestal March 21, 1989
  Philippines Manila June 8, 1961
  Japan Matsuyama, Ehime March 17, 1981
  Mexico Mexicali September 26, 2013
  Philippines Pasay February 28, 2006
  Nicaragua San Juan de Oriente February 28, 2006
  South Korea Yongsan-gu, Seoul July 22, 1997
  Spain Valencia July 12, 1990

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Official records for Sacramento were kept exclusively at the airport since 10 November 1941.[52]

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External links

  • Official website
  • from the Sacramento Convention and Visitors Bureau
  • Sacramento Wiki

sacramento, california, sacramento, redirects, here, other, uses, sacramento, disambiguation, sacramento, spanish, sakɾaˈmento, spanish, sacrament, capital, city, state, california, seat, largest, city, sacramento, county, located, confluence, sacramento, amer. Sacramento redirects here For other uses see Sacramento disambiguation Sacramento ˌ s ae k r e ˈ m ɛ n t oʊ SAK re MEN toh Spanish sakɾaˈmento Spanish for sacrament is the capital city of the U S state of California and the seat and largest city of Sacramento County Located at the confluence of the Sacramento and American River in Northern California s Sacramento Valley Sacramento s 2020 population of 524 943 7 makes it the sixth largest city in California and the ninth largest capital in the United States 9 10 Sacramento is the seat of the California Legislature and the Governor of California making it the state s political center and a hub for lobbying and think tanks It features the California State Capitol Museum Sacramento CaliforniaState capital cityCity of SacramentoFrom the top to right Downtown Sacramento California State Capitol Crocker Art Museum Downtown Sacramento Tower Bridge and the Sacramento Riverfront California Supreme CourtFlagSealNicknames Sactown Sac City of Trees River City Camellia City Motto s Latin Urbs Indomita English Indomitable City Location within Sacramento County in CaliforniaSacramentoLocation within CaliforniaShow map of CaliforniaSacramentoLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 38 34 54 N 121 29 40 W 38 58167 N 121 49444 W 38 58167 121 49444 Coordinates 38 34 54 N 121 29 40 W 38 58167 N 121 49444 W 38 58167 121 49444Country United StatesState CaliforniaCountySacramentoRegionSacramento ValleyCSASacramento RosevilleMSASacramento Roseville Arden ArcadeIncorporatedFebruary 27 1850 1 Chartered1920 2 Named forSacrament of the Holy EucharistGovernment TypeCouncil Manager 3 BodySacramento City Council MayorDarrell Steinberg D 4 Vice MayorVacant Mayor Pro TemEric Guerra D City Council 4 Council Members Lisa Kaplan D Sean Loloee D Karina Talamantes D Katie Valenzuela D Caity Maple D Eric Guerra D Rick Jennings II D Mai Vang D Area 5 City99 77 sq mi 258 41 km2 Land97 68 sq mi 253 00 km2 Water2 09 sq mi 5 41 km2 2 19 Elevation 6 30 ft 9 m Population 2020 7 City524 943 Rank35th in the United States6th in California Density5 374 11 sq mi 2 074 87 km2 Urban1 946 618 US 25th Urban density4 163 2 sq mi 1 607 4 km2 Metro 8 2 397 382 US 26th DemonymSacramentanTime zoneUTC 08 00 PST Summer DST UTC 07 00 PDT ZIP codes942xx 958xxArea code916 and 279FIPS code06 64000GNIS feature IDs1659564 2411751Websitecityofsacramento wbr orgSacramento is also the cultural and economic core of the Greater Sacramento area which at the 2020 census had a population of 2 680 831 8 the fourth largest metropolitan area in California 11 Before the arrival of the Spanish the area was inhabited by the historic Nisenan Maidu and other indigenous peoples of California Spanish cavalryman Gabriel Moraga surveyed and named the Rio del Santisimo Sacramento Sacramento River in 1808 after the Blessed Sacrament In 1839 Juan Bautista Alvarado Mexican governor of Alta California granted the responsibility of colonizing the Sacramento Valley to Swiss born Mexican citizen John Augustus Sutter who subsequently established Sutter s Fort and the settlement at the Rancho Nueva Helvetia Following the American Conquest of California and the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo the waterfront developed by Sutter began to be developed and incorporated in 1850 as the City of Sacramento Sacramento is the fastest growing major city in California 12 owing to its status as a notable political center on the West Coast and as a major educational hub home of California State University Sacramento and University of California Davis Similarly Sacramento is a major center for the California healthcare industry as the seat of Sutter Health the world renowned UC Davis Medical Center and the UC Davis School of Medicine It is a tourist destination featuring the California Museum Crocker Art Museum California State Railroad Museum California Hall of Fame and Old Sacramento State Historic Park Sacramento International Airport located northwest of the city is the city s major airport Sacramento is known for its evolving contemporary culture and is dubbed the most hipster city in California 13 14 In 2002 the Harvard University Civil Rights Project conducted for Time magazine ranked Sacramento as America s Most Diverse City 15 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre Columbian period 1 2 Spanish period 1 3 Mexican period 1 4 American period 1 5 Modern era 2 Geography 2 1 Trees 2 2 Cityscape 2 3 City neighborhoods 2 4 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 2010 census 4 Economy 4 1 Top employers 5 Culture 5 1 Museums 5 2 Performing arts 5 3 Visual arts 5 4 Music 5 5 Film 5 6 Landmarks 5 7 Cuisine 6 Sports 7 Parks and recreation 8 Government 8 1 City government 8 2 Californian government 8 3 State and federal representation 9 Education 9 1 Higher education 9 2 Primary and secondary education 10 Media 10 1 Magazines 10 2 Newspapers 11 Transportation 11 1 Roads 11 2 Rail service 11 3 Airport 11 4 Transit 12 Notable people 13 International relations 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Sacramento California For a chronological guide see Timeline of Sacramento California Pre Columbian period Edit Nisenan Southern Maidu Modoc and Plains Miwok Native Americans lived in the area for perhaps thousands of years Unlike the settlers who would eventually make Sacramento their home these Native Americans left little evidence of their existence Their diet was dominated by acorns taken from the plentiful oak trees in the region and by fruits bulbs seeds and roots gathered throughout the year Spanish period Edit In 1808 the Spanish explorer Gabriel Moraga encountered and named the Sacramento Valley and the Sacramento River A Spanish writer with the Moraga expedition wrote Canopies of oaks and cottonwoods many festooned with grapevines overhung both sides of the blue current Birds chattered in the trees and big fish darted through the pellucid depths The air was like champagne and the Spaniards drank deep of it drank in the beauty around them Es como el sagrado sacramento It s like the Blessed Sacrament 16 The valley and the river were then christened after the Most Holy Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ referring to the Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist Mexican period Edit In 1839 John Augustus Sutter established Sutter s Fort which he called Nueva Helvetia In 1841 he was officially granted the land by Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado John Sutter Sr first arrived in the area on August 13 1839 at the divergence of the American and Sacramento Rivers with a Mexican land grant of 50 000 acres 20 000 ha The next year his party and he established Sutter s Fort a massive adobe structure with walls 18 feet 5 5 m high and three feet 0 91 m thick 17 Representing Mexico Sutter Sr called his colony New Helvetia a Swiss inspired name and was the political authority and dispenser of justice in the new settlement Soon the colony began to grow as more and more pioneers headed west Within just a few short years Sutter Sr had become a grand success owning a 10 acre 4 0 ha orchard and a herd of 13 000 cattle Fort Sutter became a regular stop for the increasing number of immigrants coming through the valley In 1847 Sutter Sr received 2 000 fruit trees which started the agriculture industry in the Sacramento Valley Later that year Sutter Sr hired James Marshall to build a sawmill so he could continue to expand his empire 17 but unbeknownst to many Sutter Sr s empire had been built on thin margins of credit 18 American period Edit Sacramento in 1849 when the city was an economic center of the California Gold Rush In 1848 when James W Marshall discovered gold at Sutter s Mill in Coloma some 50 mi or 80 5 km northeast of the fort numerous gold seekers came to the area increasing the population In August 1848 Sutter Sr s son John Sutter Jr arrived to assist his father in reducing his debt The Sutters struggled to contain the effects of thousands of new gold miners and prospectors in the area many of whom squatted on unwatched portions of the vast Sutter lands or stole various unattended Sutter properties or belongings For Sutter his employee s discovery of gold in the area turned out to be a bane By December 1848 John Sutter Jr in association with Sam Brannan began laying out the City of Sacramento 2 miles 3 2 km south of his father s settlement of New Helvetia This venture was undertaken against the wishes of Sutter Sr but the father being deeply in debt was unable to stop it For commercial reasons the new city was named Sacramento City after the Sacramento River Sutter Jr and Brannan had United States Army Captain William H Warner assigned to draft the official layout of the city which included 26 lettered and 31 numbered streets today s grid from C St to Broadway and from Front St to Alhambra Blvd Relations between Sutter and his son became embittered after Sacramento became an overnight commercial success Sutter s Fort Mill and the town of Sutterville all founded by John Sutter Sr eventually failed Old Sacramento the oldest quarter of the city grew up along the Sacramento River in the mid 1800 s Residents of Sacramento adopted a city charter in 1849 which was recognized by the state legislature in 1850 Sacramento is the oldest incorporated city in California incorporated on February 27 1850 19 On January 10 1850 a flood occurred that devastated the city The rushing waters uprooted homes and drowned livestock The city was almost completely destroyed Due to the efforts of Hardin Bigelow Sacramento s first elected mayor the construction of the city s first levee was completed in early 1852 the city became known as The Levee City However a month after it was completed it was breeched during the first major storm of the season and the city flooded again A new levee was built for 50 000 but it also broke causing more flooding of the city 20 Between October and December 1850 Sacramento was hit with a cholera epidemic that killed 1000 residents including Mayor Bigelow and 17 of the city s 40 physicians Up to 80 percent of the populace left town 21 22 On November 2 1852 a fire known as the Great Conflagration burned more than 80 percent of the structures in the city It is estimated that the total damage was around six million dollars Within a month 761 structures were re built many of them in brick 23 In spite of all these hardships the new city s location just downstream from the Mother Lode in the Sierra Nevada proved irresistible and it grew rapidly during the early 1850s attracting a population of 10 000 The Great Flood of 1862 from December 1861 to January 1862 caused the worst flooding in Sacramento history In 1861 Governor Leland Stanford who was inaugurated in early January 1862 traveled to his inauguration in a rowboat An 1874 depiction of a Sacramento railway station by painter William Hahn The California State Legislature with the support of Governor John Bigler moved to Sacramento in 1854 The capital of California under Spanish and subsequently Mexican rule had been Monterey where in 1849 the first Constitutional Convention and state elections were held The convention decided San Jose would be the new state s capital After 1850 when California s statehood was ratified the legislature met in San Jose until 1851 Vallejo in 1852 and Benicia in 1853 before moving to Sacramento During the 1850s the city was consolidated with the County of Sacramento 24 In the Sacramento Constitutional Convention of 1879 Sacramento was named as the permanent state capital The Classical Revival style California State Capitol similar to the national Capitol was started in 1860 and completed in 1874 In 1861 the legislative session was moved to the Merchants Exchange Building in San Francisco for one session because of massive flooding in Sacramento From 1862 to 1868 part of the Leland Stanford Mansion was used for the governor s offices during Stanford s tenure as the Governor and the legislature met in the Sacramento County Courthouse The legislative chambers were first occupied in 1869 while construction continued around them The California State Capitol built between 1860 and 1874 shown here under construction in 1868 With its new status and strategic location Sacramento quickly prospered It was designated as the western terminus of the Pony Express Later it became a terminus of the First transcontinental railroad which began construction in Sacramento in 1863 and was financed by The Big Four Mark Hopkins Charles Crocker Collis P Huntington and Leland Stanford Both the American and especially Sacramento rivers were key elements in the economic success of the city Sacramento effectively controlled commerce on these rivers and public works projects were funded through taxes levied on goods unloaded from boats and loaded onto rail cars in the historic Sacramento Rail Yards From 1862 until the mid 1870s Sacramento raised the level of its downtown by building reinforced brick walls on its downtown streets and filling the resulting street walls with dirt The previous first floors of buildings became the basements with open space between the street and the building previously the sidewalk now at the basement level Over the years many of these underground spaces have been filled or destroyed by subsequent development However it is still possible to view portions of the Sacramento Underground Modern era Edit See also Urban redevelopment in Sacramento California Built in 1935 Tower Bridge connects Sacramento to West Sacramento The city s current charter was adopted by voters in 1920 25 As a charter city Sacramento is exempt from many laws and regulations passed by the state legislature The city has expanded continuously over the years The 1964 merger of the City of North Sacramento with Sacramento substantially increased its population and large annexations of the Natomas area eventually led to significant population growth throughout the 1970s 1980s and 1990s Sacramento County along with a portion of adjacent Placer County is served by a customer owned electric utility the Sacramento Municipal Utility District SMUD Sacramento voters approved the creation of SMUD in 1923 26 In April 1946 after 12 years of litigation a judge ordered Pacific Gas amp Electric to transfer title of Sacramento s electric distribution system to SMUD Today SMUD is the sixth largest public electric utility in the U S and is a leader for innovative programs and services including the development of clean fuel resources such as solar power 27 The Elks Tower was built in 1926 in an Italianate style The year following the creation of SMUD 1924 brought several events in Sacramento Standard Oil executive Verne McGeorge established McGeorge School of Law American department store Weinstock amp Lubin opened a new store at 12th and K street the US 2 million Senator Hotel was opened Sacramento s drinking water became filtered and treated drinking water and Sacramento boxer Georgie Lee fought Francisco Guilledo a Filipino professional boxer known as Pancho Villa at L Street Auditorium on March 21 28 Early in World War II the Sacramento Assembly Center also known as the Walerga Assembly Center was established to house Japanese Americans forcibly evacuated from the West Coast under Executive Order 9066 The camp was one of fifteen temporary detention facilities where over 110 000 Japanese Americans two thirds of them U S citizens were held while construction on the more permanent War Relocation Authority camps was completed The assembly center was built on the site of a former migrant labor camp and inmates began arriving from Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties on May 6 1942 It closed after only 52 days on June 26 and the population of 4 739 was transferred to the Tule Lake concentration camp The site was then turned over to the Army Signal Corps and dedicated as Camp Kohler After the war and the end of the incarceration program returning Japanese Americans were often unable to find housing and so 234 families temporarily lived at the former assembly center Camp Kohler was destroyed by a fire in December 1947 and the assembly center site is now part of the Foothill Farms North Highlands subdivision 29 The Sacramento Yolo Port District was created in 1947 and ground was broken on the Port of Sacramento in 1949 The 1975 assassination attempt of President Gerald Ford in Capitol Park On June 29 1963 with 5 000 spectators waiting to welcome her the Motor Vessel Taipei Victory arrived 30 The Nationalist Chinese flagship docked at the Port of Sacramento being first ocean going vessel in Sacramento since the steamship Harpoon in 1934 In 1967 Ronald Reagan became the last Governor of California to live permanently in the city The 1980s and 1990s saw the closure of several local military bases McClellan Air Force Base Mather Air Force Base and Sacramento Army Depot In 1980 there was another flood In spite of military base closures and the decline of agricultural food processing Sacramento has continued to experience population growth in recent years Primary sources of population growth are an influx of residents from the nearby San Francisco Bay Area as well as immigration from Asia and Latin America In 1985 Hugh Scrutton a 38 year old Sacramento California computer store owner was killed by a nail and splinter loaded bomb placed in the parking lot of his store In 1996 his death was attributed to the Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski After acquiring the majority stake in the Sacramento Kings the team s new owner Vivek Ranadive with the help of the city agreed to build a new arena in the downtown area With a final estimated cost of 558 2 million Sacramento s Golden 1 Center opened on September 30 2016 Geography Edit Aerial view of Central Sacramento and the Sacramento River According to the United States Census Bureau the city covers 100 1 square miles 259 km2 97 81 of it is land and 2 19 of it is water Depth to groundwater is typically about 30 feet 9 m Much of the land to the west of the city in Yolo County is permanently reserved for a vast flood control basin the Yolo Bypass due to the city s historical vulnerability to floods As a result the contiguous urban area sprawls only four miles 6 km west of downtown as West Sacramento California but 30 miles 48 km northeast and east into the Sierra Nevada foothills and 10 miles 16 km to the south into valley farmland The city is at the confluence of the Sacramento River and the American River and has a deep water port connected to the San Francisco Bay by a channel through the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta It is the shipping and rail center for the Sacramento Valley 31 Trees Edit Satellite photo of Sacramento Sacramento has long been known as the City of Trees owing to its abundant urban forest The city has more trees per capita than anywhere else in the world 32 The first recorded use of the term was in 1855 and it was popular by the early 20th century It was not always so it was at first called the City of Plains because of the lack of trees but soon afterwards there were cottonwood trees planted and eucalyptus varieties were imported in order to dry out swampland Later locust trees and willows were planted along streets then elms then palm trees then fruit trees in the late 1910s 33 It was the first US city to be designated a City of Trees by the Arbor Day Foundation in 1978 34 In the early 21st century the tree cover is well above that of the average tree cover of other major cities in the United States and the rest of the world with the main species the London plane Other species are being introduced to increase diversity and to help cope with the effects of climate change on vegetation in the future 33 Treepedia a project run by MIT using Google Maps street view data to calculate tree coverage in cities ranked Sacramento the greenest city of 15 studied in the US and third globally after Vancouver and Singapore 35 A prominent water tower bore the slogan City of Trees until 2017 when it was repainted with the words America s Farm to Fork Capital referring to the farm to fork movement which promotes consumption of locally grown food After 4 000 displeased citizens signed a petition protesting the change officials agreed to include both slogans on the water tower 36 Cityscape Edit Panoramic view of downtown Sacramento from West Sacramento City neighborhoods Edit Downtown Sacramento is the home of numerous corporate headquarters The city groups most of its neighborhoods into four areas Area One Alkali Flat Boulevard Park Campus Commons Sacramento State Dos Rios Triangle Downtown East Sacramento Fab Forties Mansion Flats Marshall School Midtown New Era Park McKinley Village Newton Booth Old Sacramento Poverty Ridge Richards Richmond Grove River Park Elmhurst Sierra Oaks Southside Park 37 Area Two Airport Carleton Tract Freeport Manor Golf Course Terrace Greenhaven Curtis Park Hollywood Park Land Park Little Pocket Mangan Park Meadowview Parkway Pocket Sacramento City College South Land Park Valley Hi North Laguna Z Berg Park 38 Area Three Alhambra Triangle Avondale Brentwood Carleton Tract Colonial Heights Colonial Manor Curtis Park Elmhurst Fairgrounds Florin Fruitridge Manor Glen Elder Glenbrook Granite Regional Park Industrial Park Lawrence Park Med Center North City Farms Oak Park Packard Bell South City Farms Southeast Village Tahoe Park Tahoe Park East Tahoe Park South Tallac Village Vintage Park Churchill Downs and Woodbine 39 Area Four Ben Ali Del Paso Heights Gardenland Hagginwood McClellan Heights West Natomas north south west North Sacramento Northgate Robla Swanston Estates Terrace Manor Valley View Acres and Woodlake 40 Old Sacramento and Downtown seen from the Sacramento River Additional prominent regions and neighborhoods in the city include American River Parkway Arden Arcade Arden Fair Cal Expo Capital Avenue Coffing College Glen College Greens Cordova Creekside East Fruitridge Elder Creek Elkhorn Elvas Erikson Industrial Park Excelsior Sunrise Foothill Farms Franklin Frates Ranch Gateway Center Gateway West Glenwood Meadows Hansen Park Heritage Park Johnson Business Park Johnson Heights Mayhew Metro Center Mills Natomas Corporate Center Natomas Creek Natomas Crossing Natomas Park Newton Booth Noralto Northpointe Norwood Oak Knoll Old North Sacramento Parker Homes Point West Raley Industrial Park Regency Park Richardson Village Richmond Grove Rosemont Sierra Oaks Sports Complex Strawberry Manor Sundance Lake Swanston Palms Town and Country Village Upper Land Park Village 5 Village 7 Village 12 Village 14 Village Green Walerga Walsh Station West Del Paso Heights Westlake Willowcreek Wills Acres Winn Park Woodside and Youngs Heights 41 42 Climate Edit The American River is popular for kayaking and recreational boating Sacramento has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Koppen Csa characterized by very hot dry summers and cool winters with a decent amount of rainfall The wet season is generally October through April though there may be a day or two of light rainfall in June or September The normal annual mean temperature is 61 8 F 16 6 C with the monthly daily average temperature ranging from 47 3 F 8 5 C in December to 75 9 F 24 4 C in July 43 Summer heat is sometimes moderated by a sea breeze known as the delta breeze which comes through the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta from the San Francisco Bay and temperatures cool down sharply at night The foggiest months are December and January Tule fog can be extremely dense lowering visibility to less than 100 feet 30 m and making driving conditions extremely hazardous Chilling tule fog events have been known to last for several consecutive days or weeks During Tule fog events temperatures do not exceed 50 F 10 C A market at Cesar Chavez Plaza Snowfall is rare in Sacramento which is only 25 ft 8 m above sea level In the downtown area only three significant snow accumulations have occurred since 1900 the last one being in 1976 44 During especially cold winter and spring storms intense showers do occasionally produce a significant amount of hail which can create hazardous driving conditions Snowfall in the city often melts upon ground contact with traceable amounts occurring in some years Significant annual snow accumulations occur in the foothills 40 mi 64 km east of the city which had brief and traceable amounts of snowfall in January 2002 December 2009 and February 2011 45 46 The greatest snowfall ever recorded in Sacramento was 3 inches 7 6 cm on January 5 1888 On average there are 76 days with a high of 90 F 32 C and 14 days with a high of 100 F 38 C On the other extreme there are 8 5 days where the temperature remains below 50 F 10 C and 15 freezing nights per year Official temperature extremes range from 18 F 7 8 C on December 22 1990 to 116 F 46 7 C on September 6 2022 47 a station around 5 mi 8 0 km east southeast of the city dipped to 17 F 8 3 C on December 11 1932 48 View of Downtown Sacramento The average annual precipitation is 18 14 inches 461 mm On average precipitation falls on 58 days each year in Sacramento and nearly all of this falls during the winter months Average January rainfall is 3 66 in 93 mm and measurable precipitation is rare during the summer months In February 1992 Sacramento had 16 consecutive days of rain resulting in an accumulation of 6 41 in 163 mm for the period On rare occasions monsoonal moisture surges from the Desert Southwest can bring upper level moisture to the Sacramento region leading to increased summer cloudiness humidity and even light showers and thunderstorms Monsoon clouds do occur usually during late July through early September Sacramento is the second most flood susceptible city in the United States after New Orleans 49 Sacramento has been noted as being the sunniest location on the planet for four months of the year from May through August It holds the distinction as the sunniest month in terms of percent possible sunshine of anywhere in the world July in Sacramento averages 14 hours and 12 minutes of sunshine per day amounting to approximately 100 of possible sunshine 50 Since 2010 statewide droughts in California have further strained Sacramento s water security 51 Climate data for Sacramento California Sacramento Executive Airport 1991 2020 normals extremes 1941 present a Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 76 24 78 26 88 31 95 35 105 41 115 46 114 46 112 44 114 46 104 40 87 31 74 23 115 46 Mean maximum F C 65 2 18 4 71 1 21 7 78 1 25 6 87 4 30 8 95 3 35 2 103 1 39 5 105 3 40 7 104 1 40 1 100 6 38 1 91 8 33 2 76 5 24 7 65 1 18 4 107 0 41 7 Average high F C 56 0 13 3 61 3 16 3 66 3 19 1 72 1 22 3 80 3 26 8 87 9 31 1 92 6 33 7 91 9 33 3 88 5 31 4 78 8 26 0 65 0 18 3 56 0 13 3 74 7 23 7 Daily mean F C 47 6 8 7 51 4 10 8 55 4 13 0 59 5 15 3 66 1 18 9 72 2 22 3 75 9 24 4 75 3 24 1 72 5 22 5 64 5 18 1 53 9 12 2 47 3 8 5 61 8 16 6 Average low F C 39 2 4 0 41 5 5 3 44 5 6 9 47 0 8 3 52 0 11 1 56 5 13 6 59 2 15 1 58 8 14 9 56 5 13 6 50 3 10 2 42 7 5 9 38 5 3 6 48 9 9 4 Mean minimum F C 29 1 1 6 31 7 0 2 35 1 1 7 37 9 3 3 44 1 6 7 49 5 9 7 54 1 12 3 53 8 12 1 49 6 9 8 41 7 5 4 32 7 0 4 28 7 1 8 26 9 2 8 Record low F C 20 7 23 5 26 3 31 1 34 1 41 5 48 9 48 9 42 6 35 2 26 3 18 8 18 8 Average precipitation inches mm 3 66 93 3 49 89 2 68 68 1 26 32 0 75 19 0 23 5 8 trace 0 04 1 0 0 09 2 3 0 85 22 1 66 42 3 43 87 18 14 461 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 10 0 9 1 9 0 5 1 3 6 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 7 3 1 6 1 9 6 57 7Average relative humidity 83 3 76 8 71 6 64 5 58 9 55 0 53 2 55 7 57 0 63 1 75 6 82 9 66 5Average dew point F C 39 4 4 1 42 1 5 6 42 8 6 0 43 7 6 5 46 9 8 3 50 4 10 2 53 1 11 7 53 4 11 9 50 9 10 5 47 5 8 6 43 7 6 5 39 2 4 0 46 1 7 8 Mean monthly sunshine hours 145 5 201 3 278 0 329 6 406 3 419 5 440 2 406 9 347 8 296 7 194 9 141 1 3 607 8Percent possible sunshine 48 67 75 83 92 94 98 96 93 86 64 48 81Source NOAA relative humidity dew point and sun 1961 1990 53 43 54 Climate data for Sacramento 5 ESE California Sacramento State 55 1991 2020 normals extremes 1877 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 79 26 80 27 90 32 98 37 107 42 112 44 114 46 112 44 116 47 102 39 86 30 72 22 116 47 Mean maximum F C 66 4 19 1 72 5 22 5 80 6 27 0 89 5 31 9 97 1 36 2 104 4 40 2 106 7 41 5 105 5 40 8 102 0 38 9 92 3 33 5 77 3 25 2 65 9 18 8 108 1 42 3 Average high F C 56 5 13 6 62 2 16 8 67 8 19 9 73 5 23 1 81 3 27 4 89 0 31 7 94 4 34 7 93 5 34 2 89 3 31 8 78 9 26 1 65 3 18 5 56 4 13 6 75 7 24 3 Daily mean F C 48 8 9 3 52 9 11 6 57 2 14 0 61 4 16 3 67 7 19 8 73 9 23 3 77 9 25 5 77 3 25 2 74 0 23 3 65 9 18 8 55 3 12 9 48 5 9 2 63 4 17 4 Average low F C 41 1 5 1 43 7 6 5 46 7 8 2 49 3 9 6 54 0 12 2 58 7 14 8 61 4 16 3 61 0 16 1 58 8 14 9 52 9 11 6 45 3 7 4 40 7 4 8 51 1 10 6 Mean minimum F C 32 5 0 3 35 4 1 9 38 8 3 8 41 6 5 3 47 2 8 4 51 9 11 1 55 9 13 3 55 9 13 3 52 4 11 3 45 1 7 3 36 2 2 3 31 9 0 1 30 5 0 8 Record low F C 19 7 21 6 29 2 34 1 37 3 43 6 47 8 48 9 44 7 34 1 27 3 17 8 17 8 Average precipitation inches mm 3 87 98 3 63 92 2 82 72 1 44 37 0 86 22 0 21 5 3 trace 0 02 0 51 0 15 3 8 0 93 24 1 78 45 3 49 89 19 20 488 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 10 8 9 6 9 2 5 3 3 7 1 2 0 1 0 2 0 8 3 1 6 8 10 1 60 9Source NOAA 53 56 57 Western Regional Climate Center 58 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 18506 820 186013 785102 1 187016 28318 1 188021 42031 5 189026 38623 2 190029 28211 0 191044 69652 6 192065 90847 5 193093 75042 2 1940105 95813 0 1950137 57229 8 1960191 66739 3 1970257 10534 1 1980275 7417 2 1990369 36534 0 2000407 01810 2 2010466 48814 6 2020524 94312 5 U S Decennial Census 59 2010 2020 7 In 2002 the Civil Rights Project at Harvard University conducted for Time magazine named Sacramento America s Most Diverse City 15 The U S Census Bureau also groups Sacramento with other U S cities having a high diversity rating of the diversity index 60 Moreover Sacramento is one of the most well integrated U S cities having a relatively high level of ethnic and racial heterogeneity within its neighborhoods 61 The Chinese are the largest Asian ethnic group in Sacramento followed by Filipino Indian Vietnamese and Hmong 62 2010 census Edit Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament seat of the Diocese of Sacramento The 2010 United States Census 63 reported Sacramento had a population of 466 488 The population density was 4 660 0 inhabitants per square mile 1 799 2 km2 Racial composition 2020 64 2010 64 1990 65 1970 65 1940 65 White 46 3 45 0 60 1 81 5 94 2 Non Hispanic 32 4 34 5 53 4 71 4 66 n aAfrican American 13 2 14 6 15 3 10 7 1 4 Hispanic or Latino of any race 28 9 26 9 16 2 11 0 66 n aAsian 18 9 18 3 15 0 6 5 4 3 Hispanic or Latino of any race were 138 165 persons 26 9 22 6 of Sacramento s population is of Mexican heritage which amounts to over four fifths of the city s Hispanic Latino diaspora 0 7 Puerto Rican 0 5 Salvadoran 0 2 Guatemalan and 0 2 Nicaraguan 67 Non Hispanic Whites were 34 5 of the population in 2010 64 down from 71 4 in 1970 65 The Census reported 458 174 people 98 2 of the population lived in households 4 268 0 9 lived in non institutionalized group quarters and 4 046 0 9 were institutionalized The recent when housing crash has not impacted these numbers citation needed There were 174 624 households out of which 57 870 33 1 had children under the age of 18 living in them 65 556 37 5 were opposite sex married couples living together 27 640 15 8 had a female householder with no husband present 10 534 6 0 had a male householder with no wife present There were 13 234 7 6 unmarried opposite sex partnerships and 2 498 1 4 same sex married couples or partnerships 53 342 households 30 5 were made up of individuals and 14 926 8 5 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 62 There were 103 730 families 59 4 of all households the average family size was 3 37 Westminster Presbyterian Church Map of racial distribution in Sacramento 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic or other The age distribution of the city was follows 116 121 people 24 9 were under the age of 18 52 438 people 11 2 aged 18 to 24 139 093 people 29 8 aged 25 to 44 109 416 people 23 5 aged 45 to 64 and 49 420 people 10 6 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 33 0 years For every 100 females there were 94 9 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 92 2 males There were 190 911 housing units at an average density of 1 907 1 per square mile 736 3 km2 of which 86 271 49 4 were owner occupied and 88 353 50 6 were occupied by renters The homeowner vacancy rate was 2 8 the rental vacancy rate was 8 3 231 593 people 49 6 of the population lived in owner occupied housing units and 226 581 people 48 6 lived in rental housing units Sacramento has one of the highest LGBT populations per capita ranking seventh among major American cities and third in California behind San Francisco and slightly behind Oakland with roughly 10 of the city s total population identifying themselves as gay lesbian transgender or bisexual 68 Lavender Heights is the hub for LGBTQ activities in the city citation needed and is a centrally located district in Midtown Sacramento centered within and around K amp 20th streets Economy Edit Renaissance Tower is the city s fifth tallest building The California State Capitol is the seat of the Government of California hosting the Governor of California and the California State Legislature The historic Citizen Hotel in Downtown Sacramento The Sacramento metropolitan area is the fifth largest in California after the Los Angeles metropolitan area the San Francisco Bay Area the Inland Empire and the San Diego metropolitan area and is the 27th largest in the United States 11 Sutter Health Blue Diamond Growers Aerojet Rocketdyne Teichert and The McClatchy Company are among the companies based in Sacramento The Port of Sacramento has been plagued with operating losses in recent years and faces bankruptcy This severe loss in business is due to the heavy competition from the Port of Stockton which has a larger facility and a deeper channel As of 2006 the city of West Sacramento took responsibility for the Port of Sacramento During the Vietnam War era the Port of Sacramento was the major terminus in the supply route for all military parts hardware and other cargo going to Southeast Asia Top employers Edit As of 2019 69 the top employers in the County of Sacramento were Employer Employees1 State of California 76 1312 UC Davis Health 12 6743 Kaiser Permanente 11 4044 Sacramento County 11 3305 U S Government 10 2276 Sutter Health 8 8097 Dignity Health Catholic Healthcare West 7 0698 Elk Grove Unified School District 6 3819 Intel 6 20010 City of Sacramento 5 70011 Sacramento City Unified School District 5 00012 San Juan Unified School District 4 700Culture EditMuseums Edit The Crocker Art Museum is the oldest public art museum in the Western United States and has one of the largest public art collections in the country Sacramento is home to several major museums The Crocker Art Museum is the oldest public art museum west of the Mississippi River In 2010 the museum completed an expansion that tripled the museum s floor space to more than 145 000 square feet of exhibit space Also of interest is the Governor s Mansion State Historic Park a large Victorian Mansion which was home to 14 of California s Governors The Leland Stanford Mansion which was completely restored in 2006 serves as the State s official address for diplomatic and business receptions Guided public tours are available The California Museum for History Women and the Arts home of the California Hall of Fame is a cultural destination dedicated to telling the rich history of California and its unique influence on the world of ideas innovation art and culture The museum educates tens of thousands of school children through inspiring programs sharing with world visitors California s rich art history and cultural legacy through dynamic exhibits and serving as a public forum and international meeting place The California State Capitol is home to the California State Capitol Museum and offers free tours of the capitol s historic chambers and assembly rooms as well as a museum that is home to several historical artifacts 70 The California Museum is dedicated to the history of California and also hosts the California Hall of Fame The California State Railroad Museum in Old Sacramento has historical exhibits and live steam locomotives that patrons may ride The California Automobile Museum just south of Old Sacramento is filled with automotive history and vehicles from 1880 to 2006 and is the oldest non profit automotive museum in the West The mission of it is to preserve promote and teach automotive culture and its influence on our lives past present and future McClellan Air Force Base is home to the Aerospace Museum of California where more than 40 civilian and military aircraft and 50 historical jet engines are displayed to the public In addition the Sacramento History Museum in the heart of Old Sacramento focuses on the history of Sacramento from the region s pre Gold Rush history through the present day In 2021 the Museum of Science and Curiosity MOSAC opened in the restored historic power station building of Matsui Waterfront Park There is a Museum Day held in Sacramento every year when 26 museums in the greater Sacramento area offer free admission The 2009 Sacramento Museum Day brought out more than 80 000 people the largest number the event has gathered Sacramento Museum Day is held every year on the first Saturday of February Performing arts Edit Sacramento Memorial Auditorium hosts the Sacramento Ballet and the Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra The Sacramento Ballet Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra and the Sacramento Opera perform at the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center formerly known as the Community Center Theater There are several major theater venues in Sacramento The Sacramento Convention Center Complex governs both the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center and Memorial Auditorium The H Street Theatre Complex consists of the Wells Fargo Pavilion built in 2003 atop the old Music Circus tent foundations the McClatchy Mainstage and the Pollock Stage originally built as a television studio and renovated at the same time the Pavilion was built These smaller venues seat 300 and 90 offering a more intimate presentation than the 2300 seat Pavilion The Eagle Theatre in Old Sacramento is a reconstruction of the oldest permanent theater in California and hosts several performances year round 71 The newest venue in the city the Sophia Tsakopoulos Center for the Arts consists of the 365 seat Sutter Theatre for Children and the Mainstage seating 250 The Wells Fargo Pavilion hosts the California Musical Theatre and the Sacramento Theatre Company Professional theatre is represented in Sacramento by a number of companies Broadway Sacramento and its locally produced summer stock theatre Broadway at Music Circus lures many directors performers and artists from New York and Los Angeles to work alongside a large local staff at the Wells Fargo Pavilion During the fall winter and spring seasons Broadway Sacramento brings bus and truck tours to the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center Resident at the H Street Theatre Complex for the remainder of the year from September to May the Sacramento Theatre Company prepares to celebrate its 75th season beginning in the Fall of 2019 In addition to a traditional regional theatre fare of classical plays and musicals the Sacramento Theatre Company has a large School of the Arts with a variety of opportunities for arts education The B Street Theatre having completed its 2018 move into the new Sophia Tsokopoulos Center for the Arts continues its pursuit of producing smaller and more intimate professional works for families and children Rounding out the professional companies is Capital Stage which performed aboard the Delta King until the end of the 2010 2011 season and soon took up residence at its own venue along the J Street corridor The Sacramento area has one of the largest collections of community theatres in California Some of these include the Thistle Dew Dessert Theatre and Playwrights Workshop Davis Musical Theatre Co El Dorado Musical Theatre Runaway Stage Productions River City Theatre Company Flying Monkey Productions The Actor s Theatre KOLT Run Productions Kookaburra Productions Big Idea Theatre Celebration Arts Lambda Player Light Opera Theatre of Sacramento Synergy Stage and the historic Eagle Theatre The Sacramento Shakespeare Festival provides entertainment under the stars every summer in William Land Park Many of these theatres compete annually for the Elly Awards overseen by The Sacramento Area Regional Theatre Alliance or SARTA 72 Visual arts Edit The Spanish Colonial Revival style Ramona Building built in 1930 The Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission is an organization that was established as the Sacramento arts council in 1977 to provide several arts programs for the city These include Art in Public Places Arts Education Grants and Cultural Programs Poet Laureate Program Arts Stabilization Programs and Other Resources and opportunities Sacramento Second Saturday Art Walk is a program of local art galleries that stay open into the late evenings every second Saturday of each month providing a unique experience for the local population as well as tourists to view original art and meet the artists themselves Sacramento is also home to the Wide Open Walls Festival where artists from across the world have added more than 140 murals across the city since the festival s inception in 2016 73 The Sacramento Masonic Temple Sacramento is home to one of California s oldest Latino cultural centers the Latino Center of Art and Culture The Latino Center of Art and Culture was founded in the early 70 s by activist Chicano students to combat racism and instill pride in the Chicano community Known as La Raza Galeria it was home to artists like Ricardo Favela Jose Montoya and Esteban Villa who formed the Chicano artist collective the Royal Chicano Air Force LCAC maintains legacy of activism for cultural equity accessibility to the arts social justice The center is a community hub offering support to emerging Latino artists and produces live programming Music Edit The Tower Theatre where Tower Records was founded Tower Records was started and based in Sacramento until its closing 74 Classical music is widely available The Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra the Sacramento Baroque Soloists the Sacramento Choral Society amp Orchestra the Sacramento Youth Symphony the Sacramento Master Singers the Sacramento Children s Chorus and the Camellia Symphony each present a full season of concerts Each year the city hosts the Sammies the Sacramento Music Awards Sacramento also has a reputation as a center for Dixieland jazz because of the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee which was held every Memorial Day weekend until 2017 Events and performances are held in multiple locations throughout the city Each year thousands of jazz fans from all over the world visit for this one weekend A growing number of rock hardcore and metal bands hail from the Sacramento area including Tesla AS IS Deftones Papa Roach Will Haven Trash Talk 75 76 77 Dance Gavin Dance A Lot Like Birds Far CAKE Oleander and Steel Breeze plus some other famous musicians like record producer and recording artist Charlie Peacock Duane Leinan Bob Stubbs of Social Distortion and Craig Chaquico of Jefferson Starship Sacramento is home to several music festivals throughout the year Since 2012 Sacramento hosts the four day Aftershock Festival at Discovery Park where acclaimed bands such as Evanescence Kiss and Muse perform for up to 160 000 visitors Other notable music festivals include the country based GoldenSky Festival and soul and R amp B based Sol Blume festival 78 79 Scottish pop band Middle of the Road sang kindly of Sacramento in their 1972 European hit song Sacramento Experimental groups such as Hella Death Grips and Tera Melos also come out of Sacramento Rappers C Bo Marvaless Lunasicc Mozzy Hobo Johnson and Chuuwee are among those native to the area Film Edit The historic Crest Theatre Sacramento is home to the Sacramento French Film Festival a cultural event held every year in July that features U S premieres of French films and classic masterpieces of French cinema and the Sacramento Japanese Film Festival 80 also held in July In addition Sacramento is home to the Trash Film Orgy a summer film festival celebrating the absurd B movies horror monster and exploitation films 81 Founded in 2007 the Sacramento Horror Film Festival showcases feature length and short films as well as live musical and theatrical performances in the horror and macabre genres 82 Of note Sacramento has been home to various actors including Eddie Murphy who resided in the Riverlake community of Pocket Greenhaven with his then wife Nicole Mitchell Murphy a fashion model and Sacramento native It is also the home of director Greta Gerwig whose solo directorial debut Lady Bird is set in Sacramento Landmarks Edit The historic Ebner s Hotel built in 1856 in Old Sacramento Old SacramentoThe oldest part of the town besides Sutter s Fort is Old Sacramento which consists of cobbled streets and many historic buildings several from the 1850s and 1860s Buildings have been preserved restored or reconstructed and the district is now a substantial tourist attraction with rides on steam powered historic trains and horse drawn carriages Poverty Ridge Historic DistrictThe Poverty Ridge Historic District is within Sacramento s original 1848 street grid and bounded to the west by 21st Street to the north by S Street to the east by 23rd Street to the south by W Street and U S Route 50 and includes the block bounded by 20th Street 21st Street S Street and T Street 83 84 85 86 The Poverty Ridge Historic District was considered to be Sacramento s wealthiest neighborhood from 1868 to 1947 83 87 Historic Chinatown Sacramento s historic Chinatown The Opium Wars of the 1840s and 1850s along with the Gold Rush brought many Chinese people to California Most arrived at San Francisco which was then the largest city in California and known as Daai Fau Chinese 大埠 Jyutping daai6 fau6 Cantonese Yale Daaihfauh Some eventually came to Sacramento then the second largest city in California and consequently called Yee Fow Chinese 二埠 Jyutping ji6 fau6 Today the city is known as 萨克拉门托 pinyin Sakelamentuō by Mainland Chinese and as 沙加緬度 Sagamihndouh and Shajiamiǎnduo by Cantonese speakers and Taiwanese respectively Sacramento s Chinatown was on I Street from Second to Sixth Streets At the time this area of I Street was considered a health hazard because lying within a levee zone it was lower than other parts of the city which were situated on higher land Throughout Sacramento s Chinatown history there were fires acts of discrimination and prejudicial legislation such as the Chinese Exclusion Act that was not repealed until 1943 The mysterious fires were thought to be set off by those who did not take a liking to the Chinese working class 88 Ordinances on what was viable building material were set into place to try to get the Chinese to move out Newspapers such as The Sacramento Union wrote stories at the time that portrayed the Chinese in an unfavorable light to inspire ethnic discrimination and drive the Chinese away While most of Sacramento s Chinatown has now been razed a small Chinatown mall remains as well as a museum dedicated to the history of Sacramento s Chinatown 89 90 Newton Booth Historic DistrictThe Newton Booth Historic District named for Newton Booth is located in the southeast corner of Sacramento s original 1848 street grid 91 92 93 94 Cuisine Edit The Old Tavern built in the 1850s In 2012 Sacramento started the marketing campaign as America s Farm to Fork Capital due to Sacramento s many restaurants that source their food from the numerous surrounding farms 95 The city has an annual Farm to Fork festival that showcases various grocers restaurants and growers in the industry In 2012 one of the city s farm to fork restaurants The Kitchen was nominated for Outstanding Restaurant by the James Beard Foundation 96 It continues to excel earning the AAA s Five Diamond dining award since 2011 97 It received its first Michelin star on June 3 2019 becoming the city s first Michelin starred restaurant 98 In 2022 Localis became the second Michelin star restaurant in the city 99 Sacramento is home to well known cookbook authors Biba Caggiano of Biba s Restaurant and Mai Pham of Lemongrass and Star Ginger 100 Sacramento is also known for its beverage culture with keystone events that include Cal Expo s Grape and Gourmet Sacramento Beer Week and Sacramento Cocktail Week Its growing beer scene is evident with over 60 microbreweries in the region as of 2017 101 Some local brews include Track 7 Brewing Company Big Stump Brew Co Oak Park Brewing Co and Sactown Union Brewery Numerous beer festivals around the region highlight both local and visitor beers In addition to festivals in Elk Grove 102 Davis Roseville Placerville 103 and Woodland 104 Sacramento hosts the annual California Beer Craft Summit an exposition dedicated to the art of brewing The summit also hosts the largest beer festival on the West Coast featuring over 160 breweries in downtown Sacramento 105 Sacramento s contemporary culture is reflected in its coffee An underrated coffee city 106 Sacramento has above average marks for local coffee 107 The city has numerous community roasters and coffee shops Examples include Temple Coffee Insight Coffee Roasters Old Soul Co Chocolate Fish Roasters Naked Lounge Pachamama Coffee Cooperative and Identity Coffees In addition to local brands the region offers other chains such as Starbucks Peet s Coffee amp Tea and Philz Coffee Sports EditMain article Sports in Sacramento California The Golden 1 Center is home of the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association NBA Sacramento is home to one major league sports team the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association The Kings came to Sacramento from Kansas City in 1985 On January 21 2013 a controlling interest of the Sacramento Kings was sold to hedge fund manager Chris Hansen who intended to move the franchise to Seattle for the 2013 2014 NBA season and rename the team the Seattle SuperSonics 108 Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson himself a former NBA basketball player fought the move forming an ownership group led by Vivek Ranadive to keep the Kings in Sacramento On May 16 2013 the NBA Board of Governors voted 22 8 to keep the Kings in Sacramento 109 Sacramento has two other professional teams Sacramento Republic FC began play in April 2014 at Hughes Stadium before a sellout crowd of 20 231 setting a USL Pro regular season single game attendance record 110 111 They now play in Papa Murphy s Park Republic FC won the USL championship in their first season In October 2019 Republic FC s Major League Soccer expansion bid was approved the team was expected to begin MLS play in the 2022 season 112 until being delayed by COVID 19 to the 2023 season 113 However as of February 26 2021 the bid is on indefinite hiatus 114 View from Sutter Health Park home of the Sacramento River Cats In 2000 AAA minor league baseball returned to Sacramento with the Sacramento River Cats an affiliate of the San Francisco Giants and formerly an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics The River Cats play at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento The Sacramento State Hornets of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision FCS play at Hornet Stadium as part of the Big Sky Conference Since 1954 the Hornets have won seven conference titles and have participated in four playoff appearances and two bowl games Sacramento is the former home of two professional basketball teams The Sacramento Heatwave of the American Basketball Association previously played in the Sacramento area until 2013 Sacramento was also formerly home to the now defunct Sacramento Monarchs of the WNBA The Monarchs were one of the eight founding members of the WNBA in 1997 and won the WNBA Championship in 2005 but folded in November 2009 Sacramento has frequently hosted the NCAA Men s Outdoor Track and Field Championship as well as the first and second rounds of the NCAA Men s Division I Basketball Championship The California International Marathon est 1983 attracts a field of international elite runners who vie for a share of the 50 000 prize purse The fast course is popular for runners seeking to achieve a Boston Marathon qualifying time and fitness runners Sacramento professional teams Club League Sport Venue Attendance Established ChampionshipsSacramento Kings NBA Basketball Golden 1 Center 17 608 1923 1985 1 NBA 2 NBL as Rochester Royals Sacramento Republic FC USL Championship Soccer Papa Murphy s Park 11 800 2012 1 USL ProSacramento River Cats PCL Baseball Sutter Health Park 14 200 1978 2000 3 Triple A titles 5 League titlesSacramento State Hornets NCAA Division I FCS Football Hornet Stadium 21 195 1954 7 Conference TitlesParks and recreation Edit The Capitol Mall is a major monumental parkway leading from Tower Bridge to the California Capitol Sacramento boasts an extensive park system consisting of over 5 000 acres 2 023 ha of parkland and recreation centers 115 In its 2013 ParkScore ranking The Trust for Public Land reported Sacramento was tied with San Francisco and Boston for having the third best park system among the 50 most populous U S cities 116 ParkScore ranks city park systems by a formula that analyzes the city s median park size park acres as percent of city area the percent of residents within a half mile of a park spending of park services per resident and the number of playgrounds per 10 000 residents The city features a collection of smaller parks in the downtown district including Crocker Park Roosevelt Park Fremont Park and Southside Park and is home to basketball courts playgrounds and year round farmers markets and local events In addition Cesar Chavez Plaza is home to concerts in the summer time and is a well known rallying spot for gatherings In addition surrounding the California State Capitol is Capitol Park a 40 acres 16 ha park consisting of more than 200 types of trees and 155 memorials The most recent park constructed in Sacramento is the Hanami Line at Robert Matsui Waterfront Park which is home to a line of Cherry Blossoms surrounding the park 117 Popular parks outside the central core include American River Parkway which spans 23 miles along the American River William McKinley Park and Memorial Rose Garden and William Land Park William Land Park is home to several key attractions in the city The Sacramento Zoo spans 14 3 acres 5 8 ha and is home to more than 400 native and endangered animals around the world The park is also home to Funderland a small amusement park open from February to November consisting of 9 rides and Fairytale Town which sees more than 250 000 visitors each year 118 119 120 Sacramento is a hotbed for high school rugby Jesuit High is the recent defending national champion winning five times in total Their arch rival school Christian Brothers came in second nationwide Burbank Del Campo and Vacaville have also placed well in the national competition over the years The Sacramento Valley High School Rugby Conference hosts the largest and arguably deepest preseason youth and high school rugby tournament in America The California State Fair is held annually at the California Exposition The California State Fair is held in Sacramento each year at the end of the summer ending on Labor Day In 2010 the State Fair moved to July More than one million people attended this fair in 2001 The Jedediah Smith Memorial Trail that runs between Old Sacramento and Folsom Lake grants access to the American River Parkway a natural area that includes more than 5 000 acres 20 km2 of undeveloped land It attracts cyclists and equestrians from across the state Among other recreational options in Sacramento is Discovery Park a 275 acre 1 1 km2 park studded with stands of mature trees and grasslands This park is situated where the American River flows into the Sacramento River There are several casinos and card rooms in the city and scattered throughout the Sacramento area Since 1991 Sacramento s 1 Cards Room Capitol Casino has been open in downtown Sacramento and is home to several card games Other notable casinos in the area include Thunder Valley Casino Resort Cache Creek Casino Resort Red Hawk Casino Resort Hard Rock Hotel amp Casino Sacramento at Fire Mountain Jackson Rancheria Casino Resort and Sky River Casino in Elk Grove In addition Sacramento is a 2 hour drive from nearby Reno providing residents and tourists with several options for gambling In amateur sports Sacramento claims many prominent Olympians such as Mark Spitz Debbie Meyer 6 time gold medalist in for US swimming Mike Burton Summer Sanders Gold medalist in swimming and trained in childhood by Debbie Meyer at Rio Del Oro Racquet Club Jeff Float all swimming and Billy Mills track Coach Sherm Chavoor founded his world famous Arden Hills Swim Club just east of the city and trained Burton Spitz and others Government Edit Sacramento City Hall built 1908 09 by architect Rudolph A Herold is the seat of the Government of Sacramento hosting both the Mayor of Sacramento and Sacramento City Council Sacramento is both the capital city of California and the county seat of Sacramento County As such it hosts both the Californian government and the county administration alongside the city government City government Edit Main article Government of Sacramento The Government of Sacramento operates as a charter city as opposed to a general law city under the Charter of the City of Sacramento The elected government is composed of the Sacramento City Council with 8 city council districts and the Mayor of Sacramento which operate under a mayor council government In addition there are numerous departments and appointed officers such as the City Manager Sacramento Police Department SPD the Sacramento Fire Department SFD City Clerk City Attorney and City Treasurer As of 2016 the mayor is Darrell Steinberg and the council members are Angelique Ashby Allen Warren Jeff Harris Steve Hansen Jay Schenirer Rich Jennings and Larry Carr 4 The City of Sacramento is part of Sacramento County for which the government of Sacramento County is defined and authorized under the California Constitution California law and the Charter of the County of Sacramento 121 Californian government Edit Main article Government of California As the capital city of California Sacramento is home to the government of California The California State Capitol is the seat of the governor of California and the California State Legislature and the city is home to numerous California state agencies The Supreme Court of California is headquartered in San Francisco but maintains one of its two branch offices in Sacramento where it shares a courtroom with the Court of Appeal for the Third Appellate District Government buildings in Sacramento California Department of Justice Supreme Court of California Matsui Federal Courthouse California EPA California Department of Health Care Services California State Controller Attorney General of California Unruh State BuildingState and federal representation Edit In the California State Senate Sacramento is the heart of the 6th district represented by Democrat Richard Pan 122 In the California State Assembly it is split between the 7th Assembly District represented by Republican Josh Hoover and the 9th Assembly District represented by Republican Heath Flora 123 In the United States House of Representatives Sacramento forms the majority of the California s 6th congressional district represented by Democrat Ami Bera 124 Education Edit The main campus of the University of California Davis is in Davis California top and the UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento bottom Higher education Edit See also California State University Sacramento University of California Davis and University of the Pacific United States The Sacramento area hosts a wide variety of higher educational opportunities There are two major public universities many private institutions community colleges vocational schools and the McGeorge School of Law Sacramento is home to Sacramento State California State University Sacramento founded as Sacramento State College in 1947 In 2004 enrollment was 22 555 undergraduates and 5 417 graduate students in the university s eight colleges The university s mascot is the hornet and the school colors are green and gold The 300 acre 1 2 km2 campus is along the American River Parkway a few miles east of downtown The University of California has a campus UC Davis in nearby Davis and has a graduate center in downtown Sacramento The UC Davis Graduate School of Management GSM is near the UC Davis Medical Center off of Stockton Boulevard near Highway 50 Many students about 400 out of 517 at the UC Davis GSM are working professionals and are completing their MBA part time 125 UC also maintains the University of California Sacramento Center UCCS for undergraduate and graduate studies 126 The UC Davis School of Medicine is at the UC Davis Medical Center between the neighborhoods of Elmhurst Tahoe Park and Oak Park Sacramento State University is one of the best ranked on the West Coast Drexel University Sacramento The Los Rios Community College District consists of several two year colleges in the Sacramento area American River College Cosumnes River College Sacramento City College Folsom Lake College plus a large number of outreach centers for those colleges Sierra College is on the outskirts of Sacramento in Rocklin University of the Pacific has its Sacramento Campus in the Oak Park neighborhood of Sacramento The campus has long included McGeorge School of Law and in 2015 was expanded to become a comprehensive graduate and professional campus including programs in analytics business education health sciences and public policy 127 The National University Sacramento regional campus offers bachelor s and master s degrees in business education health care and teaching credential programs The University of San Francisco has one of its four regional campuses in Sacramento At the undergraduate level they offer degrees in Applied Economics Information Systems Organizational Behavior and Leadership and Public Administration At the graduate level Master s programs are offered in Information Security and Assurance Information Systems Organization Development Project Management Public Administration Nonprofit Administration and Counseling 128 The private University of Southern California has an extension in downtown Sacramento called the State Capital Center The campus taught by main campus professors Sacramento based professors and practitioners in the State Capitol and state agencies offers Master of Public Administration Masters of Public Policy and Master of Public Health degrees 129 Epic Bible College and the Professional School of Psychology are also based in Sacramento Western Seminary has one of its four campuses in Sacramento which opened on the campus of Arcade Church in 1991 Western is an evangelical Christian graduate school that provides theological training for students who hope to serve in a variety of ministry roles including pastors marriage and family therapists educators missionaries and lay leadership The Sacramento campus offers four master s degrees and a variety of other graduate level programs 130 The McGeorge School of Law of the University of the Pacific is a law school in the Oak Park neighborhood A satellite campus of Alliant International University offers graduate and undergraduate programs of study The Art Institute of California Sacramento was established in 2007 and is a branch of The Art Institute of California Los Angeles The school is focused on educating students in the field of commercial arts The school offers both a Bachelor of Science and an Associate of Science degree as well as diplomas in some areas of study Some majors the school offers are Digital Film making amp Video Production Culinary Management Graphic Design and Game Art amp Design The school has since been closed On J Street there is the Lincoln Law School of Sacramento a private evening only law school program with a strong legal presence in the region The Universal Technical Institute UTI is in Sacramento it offers automotive programs in auto mechanical auto body and diesel Primary and secondary education Edit The historic McClatchy High School Saint Patrick Academy North Sacramento School The Sacramento Public Library system has 28 branches in the greater area The Sacramento area is served by various public school districts including the Sacramento City Unified School District Natomas Unified School District San Juan Unified School District Twin Rivers Unified School District and Elk Grove Unified School District As of 2009 the area s schools employed 9 600 elementary school teachers not including special education teachers 131 and 7 410 middle school teachers not including special education or vocational teachers 132 Almost all areas south of the American River are served by the Sacramento City Unified School District The only exceptions are the Valley Hi North Laguna and Florin areas served by the Elk Grove Unified School District Areas north of the American River are served by the remaining school districts This area was not originally part of the City of Sacramento and as such is not served by Sacramento City Unified School District North Sacramento outside of Natomas and Robla for K 8 is served by the Twin Rivers Unified School District The Robla area is served by the Robla School District for K 8 and by Twin Rivers for 9 12 The Natomas region is served by the Natomas Unified School District The Campus Commons area and the small portions of the Sierra Oaks neighborhood that fall into the city of Sacramento are served by the San Juan Unified School District While Roman Catholic institutions still dominate the independent school scene in the Sacramento area in 1964 Sacramento Country Day School opened and offered Sacramento citizens an independent school affiliated with the California Association of Independent Schools SCDS has grown to its present day status as a learning community for students from pre kindergarten through twelfth grade Additionally the suburb of Fair Oaks hosts the expansive riverside campus of the Sacramento Waldorf School a Steiner school adjacent to the Rudolf Steiner College and the largest Waldorf school in North America Sacramento Waldorf School educates students from pre K through 12th grade on a secluded pastoral site that incorporates a large functioning biodynamic farm Shalom School is the only Jewish day school in Sacramento however Brookefield School on property owned by Congregation B nai Israel provides extracurricular Jewish education Capital Christian School is a pre school 12th grade private Christian school 133 There is a small Bible college on campus offering associate degrees in Bible studies or theology Sacramento Adventist Academy is another Christian school in Greater Sacramento This is a pre school 12 institution as well There is one Islamic school in Sacramento Masjid Annur founded in 1988 Media Edit Park Tower Downtown Sacramento Magazines Edit Comstock s Magazine Government Technology Magazine Sacramento Magazine Sactown MagazineNewspapers Edit Top two newspapersThe Sacramento Bee the primary newspaper was founded in 1857 by James McClatchy The Sacramento Bee is the flagship paper of The McClatchy Company the second largest newspaper publisher in the United States The Sacramento Bee has won five Pulitzer Prizes in its history and numerous other awards including many for its progressive public service campaigns promoting free speech the Bee often criticized government policy and uncovered many scandals hurting Californians anti racism the Bee supported the Union during the American Civil War and later publicly denounced the Ku Klux Klan worker s rights the Bee has a strong history of supporting unionization and environmental protection leading numerous tree planting campaigns and fighting against environmental destruction in the Sierra Nevada The Sacramento Union the Sacramento Bee s rival started publishing six years earlier in 1851 it closed its doors in 1994 with an attempted revival lasting from 2005 to 2009 Writer and journalist Mark Twain wrote for the Union in 1866 Other newspapersSacramento Business Journal Sacramento News amp Review The Sacramento ObserverTransportation Edit Tower Bridge crosses over the Sacramento River connecting Sacramento to West Sacramento Main article Transportation in the Sacramento metropolitan area A 2011 study by Walk Score ranked Sacramento the 24th most walkable of fifty largest U S cities 134 Roads Edit Sacramento is a control city and the region is served by several highways and freeways Interstate 80 I 80 is the major east west route connecting Sacramento with San Francisco in the west and Reno in the east Business 80 the Capital City Freeway splits from I 80 in West Sacramento runs through Sacramento and then rejoins its parent in the northwest portion of the city U S Highway 50 also begins its eastern journey in West Sacramento co signed with Business 80 but then splits off and heads toward South Lake Tahoe as the El Dorado Freeway A sign at the eastern terminus of US 50 in Ocean City Maryland gives the distance to Sacramento as 3 073 miles 4 946 km 135 Guy West Bridge is a pedestrian and cyclist crossing over the American River connecting California State University Sacramento to the Campus Commons neighborhood Interstate 5 I 5 runs through Sacramento heads north up to Redding and then heads south near the western edge of the California Central Valley towards Los Angeles California State Highway 99 runs through Sacramento heading closer to the eastern edge of the Central Valley connecting to Marysville and Yuba City in the north and Fresno and Bakersfield in the south California State Highway 160 approaches the city after running along the Sacramento River from Contra Costa County in the south and then becomes a major city street in Downtown Sacramento before turning into the North Sacramento Freeway going over the American River to Business 80 Some Sacramento neighborhoods such as Downtown Sacramento and Midtown Sacramento are very bicycle friendly as are many other communities in the region As a result of litigation Sacramento has undertaken to make all city facilities and sidewalks wheelchair accessible In an effort to preserve its urban neighborhoods Sacramento has constructed traffic calming measures in many areas Rail service Edit The historic Sacramento Valley Rail Station utilized by Amtrak California is a gateway to the Sacramento Valley Amtrak provides passenger rail service to the city of Sacramento The Sacramento Valley Rail Station is on the corner of 5th and I streets near the historic Old Town Sacramento and underwent extensive renovations in 2007 The station serves as a Sacramento Regional Transit District Light Rail terminus Amtrak California operates the Capitol Corridor a multiple frequency service providing service from the capital city to its northeastern suburbs and the San Francisco Bay Area 136 Sacramento is the northern terminus of the Amtrak California San Joaquins route which provide direct multiple frequency passenger rail service to California s Central Valley as far as Bakersfield Thruway Motorcoach connections are available from the trains at Bakersfield to Southern California and Southern Nevada An additional service under this banner is expected to be routed through Midtown in 2020 137 Sacramento is a stop along Amtrak s Coast Starlight route which provides scenic service to Seattle via Klamath Falls and Portland to the north and to Los Angeles via San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara to the south The historic Sacramento Western Pacific station was served by the California Zephyr until 1970 Amtrak s California Zephyr serves Sacramento daily and provides service to the east serving Reno Salt Lake Denver Omaha Chicago and intermediate cities The Sacramento Valley Rail Station provides numerous Thruway Motorcoach routes One route serves the cities of Marysville Oroville Chico Corning Red Bluff and Redding with additional service to Yreka and even Medford Oregon A second serves the cities of Roseville Rocklin Auburn Colfax Truckee Reno and Sparks The third and final thruway motorcoach route serves Placerville Lake Tahoe Stateline Casinos and Carson City Nevada Each of these routes provides multiple frequencies each day Sacramento has the second busiest Amtrak station in California and the seventh busiest in the country 138 Altamont Corridor Express commuter rail service is expected to be routed through Sacramento in 2020 137 This service will utilize the Union Pacific s Sacramento Subdivision the route of the original California Zephyr where additional passenger capacity is available 139 Sacramento is expected to serve as the northern terminus of the California High Speed Rail system Airport Edit Sacramento International Airport Sacramento International Airport IATA SMF ICAO KSMF FAA LID SMF is a public airport 10 miles 16 kilometers northwest of downtown Sacramento in Sacramento County California Southwest Airlines is the dominant passenger airline with more than 104 daily flights to 25 cities across the US 140 Other airlines include Delta United Spirit Airlines American Airlines and Alaska Airlines The airport handles flights to and from various US destinations including Hawaii as well as Mexico Canada and connecting flights to Europe Asia and South America and served more than 13 million passengers in 2019 141 The airport is well known for the 56 foot 17 m long red aluminum rabbit titled Leap by Lawrence Argent in Terminal B 142 Transit Edit The Sacramento RT Light Rail The city and its suburbs are served by Sacramento Regional Transit District which ranks as the eleventh busiest in the United States Sac RT is a bus and light rail system with 274 buses and 76 light rail vehicles providing service for 58 200 daily passengers The three light rail lines Blue Gold amp Green is a 42 9 mi 69 0 km system with 54 stations The Gold Line was extended east as far as the city of Folsom and more recently the Blue Line was extended south from Meadowview Rd to Cosumnes River College Sacramento s light rail system goes to the Sacramento Valley Rail Station Cosumnes River College Station in south Sacramento and north to Watt I 80 where I 80 and Business 80 meet The light rail Blue amp Gold Lines have 15 minute weekday headways and 30 minute weekday evening and weekend holiday headways the Green Line has 30 minute weekday headways and no weekend service Route 142 is an express bus line to from downtown to Sacramento International Airport 143 There are expansion plans to extend the Green Line to the airport and the Blue Line to the City of Roseville through the City of Citrus Heights Yolobus provides bus service to West Sacramento and Yolo County Old Sacramento s riverfront docks Greyhound Lines provides intercity bus service to Portland Reno Los Angeles and San Francisco from its new station along Richards Boulevard Intercity bus service to San Francisco and Sparks Nevada is offered by Megabus 144 Bicycling is an increasingly popular transportation mode in Sacramento which enjoys a mild climate and flat terrain Bicycling is especially common in the older neighborhoods of Sacramento s center such as Alkali Flat Midtown McKinley Park Land Park and East Sacramento Many employees who work downtown commute by bicycle from suburban communities on a dedicated bicycle path on the American River Parkway Sacramento was designated as a Silver Level Bicycle Friendly Community by the League of American Bicyclists in September 2006 The advocacy organization Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates co sponsors the Sacramento Area Council of Governments May is Bike Month campaign Rideshare companies such as Lime Bird and Helbiz have introduced up to 4 000 electric powered scooters and bikes in Downtown Sacramento for residents to rent as a faster and alternative way to get around the city Sacramento ranks second worldwide in ride sharables with ridership totaling 1 million riders in 8 months 145 146 There is a commuter bus service from Yolo County on Yolobus from Solano County on FAST on two bus lines from Yuba County s Yuba Sutter Transit 147 from Amador Transit s Sacramento Line 148 on Placer County Transit s Auburn to Light Rail Line 149 and from San Joaquin County on several SMART bus lines Notable people EditSee also List of people from SacramentoInternational relations Edit Stanford Mansion is the official reception center for the Californian government and one of the workplaces of the Governor of California As of 2015 the City of Sacramento has 13 sister cities They are 150 Country City Date of partnership Israel Ashkelon August 15 2012 Palestine Bethlehem December 15 2009 Moldova Chisinău 151 December 12 1989 New Zealand Hamilton December 6 1988 China Jinan Shandong October 16 1984 Switzerland Liestal March 21 1989 Philippines Manila June 8 1961 Japan Matsuyama Ehime March 17 1981 Mexico Mexicali September 26 2013 Philippines Pasay February 28 2006 Nicaragua San Juan de Oriente February 28 2006 South Korea Yongsan gu Seoul July 22 1997 Spain Valencia July 12 1990See also Edit California portal United States portal Cities portalList of mayors of Sacramento California List of people from Sacramento California Northern California MegaregionNotes Edit Official records for Sacramento were kept exclusively at the airport since 10 November 1941 52 References Edit California Cities by Incorporation Date California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions Archived from the original Word on February 21 2013 Retrieved August 25 2014 City Hall City of Sacramento Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved February 23 2015 City Hall City of Sacramento Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved February 28 2015 a b c Mayor amp Council City of Sacramento Archived from the original on December 16 2014 Retrieved December 14 2014 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2020 Sacramento Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved January 28 2013 a b c QuickFacts Sacramento city California United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2021 a b 2020 Population and Housing State Data United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 22 2021 State of California Department of Finance E 1 Population Estimates for Cities Counties and the State with Annual percent change January 1 2016 and 2017 Sacramento California May 2017 Top 50 U S Cities by Population and Rank Infoplease Archived from the original on June 29 2016 Retrieved June 29 2016 a b Annual Estimates of the Resident Population April 1 2010 to July 1 2017 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved May 8 2018 Caraccio David Sacramento is fastest growing big city in California The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on May 2 2017 Retrieved May 3 2017 Milne Steve Serrieh Joanne Report Sacramento Fourth Most Hipster U S City Capital Public Radio Archived from the original on May 8 2017 Retrieved May 7 2017 STUDY Seattle Tops Portland As Most Hipster City in U S Infogroup Infogroup Archived from the original on April 29 2017 Retrieved May 7 2017 a b Stodghill Ron August 25 2002 Welcome to America s Most Diverse City Time Archived from the original on July 17 2010 Retrieved July 20 2013 Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament Sacramento California Cathedralsacramento org November 11 2012 Archived from the original on November 16 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 a b Old Sacramento California Walking on History Legends of America Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved October 2 2014 John Sutter A Life on the North American Frontier By Albert L Hurtado University of Oklahoma Press 2006 p 236 Retrieved September 10 2017 About the City of Sacramento City of Sacramento Archived from the original on November 23 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Solomon Samantha January 10 2020 When Sacramento became Levee City Marking the 170 year anniversary of the flood that started it all abc10 KXTV TV Retrieved August 20 2022 Gibbons Dr H THE CHOLERA IN CALIFORNIA IN 1850 UCR California Digital Newspaper Collection DL Consulting Retrieved August 20 2022 The 17 Doctors of the 1850 Sacramento Cholera Epidemic HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Retrieved August 20 2022 This Day in History November Sacramento history Museum February 23 2015 Retrieved August 20 2022 The California State register and year book of facts for the year 1859 Henry G Langley and Samuel A Morison San Francisco 1859 p 315 Status quo for city governance Sacramento Bee September 26 2009 Archived from the original on November 20 2012 Retrieved November 21 2012 Editorial Board September 26 2012 Endorsements Michael Picker is best pick for SMUD Ward 5 Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved November 21 2012 UARP Relicensing Public Participation Community Oriented Utility SMUD Archived from the original on February 8 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 Don Stanle July 30 1989 1920s A Wet Prohibition A City of North Sac The First Woman Mayor Sacramento Bee p 27 Sacramento detention facility Densho Encyclopedia Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Retrieved August 8 2014 Avella Steven M 2003 Sacramento Indomitable City Arcadia Publishing p 124 ISBN 978 0 7385 2444 3 Sacramento Vacation Information Hotels Restaurants Events and Things to Do Visit Sacramento Archived from the original on November 9 2015 Retrieved November 16 2015 Ko Walter April 24 2017 City of Trees or America s Farm to Fork Capital Water tower uproar reflects Sacramento s changing identity The Sacramento Bee a b White Randol December 20 2018 How Did Sacramento Get So Many Trees capradio org Retrieved March 1 2021 Ko Walter April 24 2017 City of Trees or America s Farm to Fork Capital Water tower uproar reflects Sacramento s changing identity NPR Treepedia study confirms Sacramento as City of Trees Sactown Magazine January 25 2017 Retrieved March 1 2021 McPhate Mike February 2 2018 Sacramento California s City of Trees Medium Retrieved March 1 2021 Area 1 PDF City of Sacramento Retrieved March 29 2018 permanent dead link Area 2 Archived from the original on September 26 2011 Area 3 Archived from the original on September 26 2011 Area 4 Archived from the original on September 26 2011 City of Sacramento Neighborhoods PDF City of Sacramento Archived from the original PDF on October 28 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 Community info neighborhoods schools homes for rent property management Horizon Properties Archived from the original on November 29 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 a b Summary of Monthly Normals SACRAMENTO EXECUTIVE AP CA US 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 14 2021 Forecasters Say Snow Possible in Sacramento capradio org February 24 2011 Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved November 16 2012 Snow in Sacramento December 19 2009 Archived from the original on July 7 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 via YouTube Arctic Blast Could Bring Dusting Of Snow To Sacramento Valley and Several Feet To Sierra Archived October 19 2013 at the Wayback Machine CBS Sacramento NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 14 2021 SACRAMENTO 5 ESE CALIFORNIA Western Regional Climate Center Archived from the original on June 28 2014 Retrieved October 24 2012 How the West May Flood Winter s Long Long Reach Time June 27 2011 Archived from the original on June 30 2011 Retrieved June 27 2011 Osborn Liz Sunniest Places and Countries in the World Current Results Archived from the original on February 14 2014 Retrieved November 16 2012 Southern California gets drastic water cutbacks amid drought What s next for Sacramento amp sacbee com Retrieved May 1 2022 ThreadEx a b NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 14 2021 WMO Climate Normals for SACRAMENTO EXECUTIVE ARPT CA 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved July 19 2020 Reese Phillip January 7 2015 2014 was hottest year in Sacramento s history Sacramento Bee Summary of Monthly Normals SACRAMENTO 5 ESE CA US 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 14 2021 Global Summary of the Month National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 14 2021 SACRAMENTO 5 ESE CALIFORNIA Western Regional Climate Center Census of Population and Housing U S Census Bureau Retrieved June 4 2015 The Geography of U S Diversity Archived January 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine PDF United States Census Retrieved on June 15 2007 Silver Nate May 1 2015 The Most Diverse Cities Are Often The Most Segregated FiveThirtyEight Archived from the original on December 2 2016 Retrieved December 12 2016 Census has stopped field work but improving outreach to ethnic communities has not The Sacramento Bee 2010 Census Interactive Population Search CA Sacramento city U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved July 12 2014 a b c Sacramento city California State amp County QuickFacts U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 14 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 a b c d 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 21 2012 a b From 15 sample U S Census website U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 27 2011 12 9 in Seattle are gay or bisexual second only to S F study says The Seattle Times November 15 2006 Archived from the original on April 15 2013 Retrieved June 13 2013 City of Sacramento Comprehensive Annual Financial Report Fiscal Year Ended June 30 2019 PDF City of Sacramento p 292 Archived PDF from the original on April 27 2015 Retrieved January 3 2021 Martinez Jeremiah November 27 2022 Historic sites you can visit while in Sacramento FOX 40 News Retrieved December 1 2022 Bhatia Aunindita November 16 2022 Top 10 Sacramento Things To Do If You Are History Buff The Travel Retrieved December 1 2022 kimadmin Theatres SARTA Archived from the original on October 21 2020 Retrieved October 19 2020 KCRA Staff May 4 2022 Artists in Sacramento prepare for Wide Open Walls mural festival KCRA 3 Retrieved May 19 2022 Sweeney Adam September 14 2011 Exclusive Interview Colin Hanks Playmaker Archived from the original on June 3 2013 Retrieved July 20 2013 a I was born and raised in Sacramento California which most people don t know is where Tower started and was based until the end 4 Deathwish Inc Deathwish Inc Archived from the original on November 24 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Trash Talk s anthology Shame is released this week Band of the Week is in the bag Rock Sound May 18 2010 Archived from the original on December 5 2009 Retrieved June 20 2010 Diver Mike May 5 2010 Trash Talk Eyes amp Nines Review BBC Archived from the original on May 10 2010 Retrieved June 20 2010 KCRA Staff April 29 2022 It s all about love Sol Blume music festival taking place in Sacramento this weekend KCRA 3 News Retrieved December 1 2022 Martinez Jeremiah November 7 2022 Dates for Aftershock GoldenSky festivals announced for 2023 FOX 40 News Retrieved December 1 2022 SJFF Home Sacramento Japanese Film Festival July 13 2012 Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Pham Jason February 27 2015 Grown up slumber party Trash Film Orgy overtake downtown art center Sactown Magazine Archived from the original on March 2 2015 Retrieved March 1 2015 Meyer Carla October 15 2007 Horror film fest to debut in Sac The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 1 2015 a b Poverty Ridge Historic District Plan PDF cityofsacramento org Sacramento California June 19 2020 Retrieved February 7 2022 Poverty Ridge Sacramento LocalWiki org Retrieved February 7 2022 Poverty Ridge Newton Booth Neighborhoods Association Retrieved February 7 2022 Tour Poverty Ridge Historic Street Marker Walking Tour PocketSights Retrieved February 7 2022 SACRAMENTO REGISTER OF HISTORIC AND CULTURAL RESOURCES 2 2 25 Poverty Ridge Historic District PDF cityofsacramento org Sacramento California July 24 2020 Retrieved February 7 2022 Sacramento s Chinatown News Local Stories June 28 2007 Sacramento News amp Review June 27 2007 Archived from the original on October 9 2007 Retrieved November 16 2012 Friends of the Yee Fow Museum Yee Fow Museum Archived from the original on January 7 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 An Evidentiary Timeline on the History of Sacramento s Chinatown Yee Fow Museum Archived from the original on March 4 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Newton Booth Historic District Plan PDF cityofsacramento org Sacramento California May 29 2020 Retrieved February 7 2022 SACRAMENTO REGISTER OF HISTORIC AND CULTURAL RESOURCES 2 2 20 Newton Booth Historic District PDF cityofsacramento org Sacramento California July 24 2020 Retrieved February 7 2022 Newton Booth Newton Booth Neighborhoods Association Retrieved February 7 2022 This Week Sacramento s Newton Booth proposed as historic district sacbee com December 14 2014 Retrieved February 7 2022 Macias Chris October 30 2012 Sacramento s farm to fork moniker to be official Food amp Wine The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on May 28 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 Macias Chris Appetizers The Kitchen former Sacramento chef receive James Beard nominations The Sacramento Bee blogs Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 AAA Five Diamond Award Lucky 7 The Kitchen Restaurant Archived from the original on May 21 2017 Retrieved May 7 2017 Sacramento restaurant earns coveted Michelin star KCRA TV June 3 2019 Retrieved March 2 2022 Reprinted the following day on the San Francisco Chronicle subscription required Miranda Mathew December 8 2022 A second Sacramento restaurant earned a Michelin star Why this Midtown spot got the honor Sacramento Bee Retrieved December 12 2022 Premier Italian Restaurant Sacramento Italian Restaurant Home of Biba Caggiano Biba Restaurant October 12 2012 Archived from the original on November 3 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Brewery Directory Beers in Sacramento Beers in Sacramento Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved May 7 2017 Elk Grove Brewfest Beers in Sac Archived from the original on October 18 2018 Retrieved June 18 2018 Placerville Brewfest Beers in Sac Archived from the original on November 17 2018 Retrieved June 18 2018 Yolo Brewfest Beers in Sac Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 18 2018 CA Craft Beer Summit 2017 California Craft Beer Summit and Brewers Showcase California Craft Brewers Association January 14 2015 Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved May 11 2017 McIntyre Emily Five Underrated Coffee Cities Sprudge Retrieved May 11 2017 Goldberg Elyssa 11 of the world s best cities for coffee lovers Matador Network Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved May 11 2017 Maloofs sell Kings to Hansen led Seattle group NBA January 21 2013 Archived from the original on January 24 2013 Retrieved February 19 2013 Seattle group has filed for relocation ESPN AP February 6 2013 Archived from the original on February 7 2013 Retrieved February 6 2013 Republic FC loses home opener before sellout crowd at Hughes Stadium Archived April 27 2014 at the Wayback Machine Sacramento Bee April 27 2014 Sacramento Republic FC opener sells out sets league record Archived May 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine Sacramento Bee April 25 2014 Bizjak Tony Breton Marcos October 21 2019 Goal Sacramento is officially a Major League Soccer city The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on October 21 2019 Retrieved October 21 2019 Jarosz Joseph July 17 2020 Sacramento Republic FC s inclusion into MLS delayed 1 year due to coronavirus Abc10 Abc10 Retrieved March 1 2021 Carlisle Jeff February 27 2021 Sacramento MLS team on indefinite hold after investor pulls out of deal ESPN ESPN Retrieved March 1 2021 Warner Anmargaret June 6 2013 www businessinsider com us cities with the best parks 2013 6 op 1 New York Parks Rank No 2 in a Survey of 50 U S cities Business Insider Accessed July 15 2013 Lindelof Bill Capitol rated highly for its parks Archived June 30 2014 at the Wayback Machine June 6 2013 The Sacramento Bee Retrieved on July 15 2013 Arrington Debbie April 22 2022 Sacramento to get its own Hanami Line Sacramento Bee Retrieved December 12 2022 It s all about the Animals Sacramento Zoo Retrieved November 30 2022 Adatia Noor May 30 2022 Funderland in Sacramento has a new attraction this season and it s not just for kids The Sacramento Bee Retrieved November 30 2022 Hamann Emily March 25 2022 Fairytale Town expansion gets 1 8 million grant from state Sacramento Business Journal Retrieved November 30 2022 California Government Code 23004 Statewide Database UC Regents Retrieved November 7 2014 Communities of Interest City California Citizens Redistricting Commission Archived from the original on October 23 2015 Retrieved November 6 2014 California s 6th Congressional District Representatives amp District Map Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved March 8 2013 1 Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Welcome University of California Center Sacramento University of California Archived from the original on January 31 2014 Retrieved November 16 2012 University of the Pacific to launch five new graduate programs in Sacramento Archived from the original on July 4 2015 Retrieved July 3 2015 2 Archived March 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine USC Price School in Sacramento USC Price School of Public Policy University of Southern California Archived from the original on November 26 2011 Retrieved November 16 2012 Western Seminary Sacramento Campus Western Seminary Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved November 26 2013 Sacramento Arden Arcade Roseville CA Elementary School Teachers Excluding Special Education Career Salary amp Employment Info CollegeDegreeReport com Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved March 8 2010 Sacramento Arden Arcade Roseville CA Middle School Teachers Excluding Special amp Vocational Education Career Salary amp Employment Info CollegeDegreeReport com Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved March 8 2010 Capital Christian Center Truth Growth Love Ccconline Archived from the original on April 7 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 2011 City and Neighborhood Rankings Walk Score 2011 Archived from the original on August 6 2012 Retrieved August 28 2011 Dildine Dave November 27 2017 How did that Sacramento road sign end up in Ocean City Washington DC WTOP FM Archived from the original on January 11 2018 Retrieved January 10 2018 3 Archived February 25 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b Holland John April 27 2018 Expanded train service coming to Modesto Merced what it means for commuters Modesto Bee Archived from the original on August 4 2019 Retrieved April 28 2018 Amtrak Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2017 State of California PDF Amtrak November 2017 Archived PDF from the original on December 22 2017 Retrieved June 2 2018 Bizjak Tony October 4 2017 Catch an Amtrak toward L A from midtown Sacramento Train officials propose new service Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved May 7 2018 City Fact Sheets Passenger Statistics PDF Sacramento County Retrieved February 22 2022 Sacramento airport s big red rabbit means business really The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Retrieved November 15 2015 142 INTERNATIONAL Sacramento Regional Transit Sacramento Regional Transit District Archived from the original on April 1 2010 Retrieved January 10 2020 Low cost Megabus com gets service rolling Wednesday bizjournals com December 11 2012 Archived from the original on January 18 2013 Retrieved January 28 2013 Information Officer Public February 7 2020 Sacramento ranks second only to paris in this category and it s not about trees Sacramento City Express Retrieved February 22 2022 Bizjak Tony July 5 2020 Electric Scooters are now back on Sacramento streets for rental But bring your wipes The Sacramento Bee Retrieved February 22 2022 Commuter and Midday Express Services Yuba Sutter Transit Archived from the original on March 31 2013 Retrieved November 16 2012 Amador Transit Route 1 Sacramento Amador Transit Archived from the original on September 9 2011 Retrieved November 15 2015 Placer County Transit PCT City of Placer Archived from the original on October 14 2008 Retrieved March 29 2018 Sacramento California Sister Cities International Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved February 21 2015 Orase infrăţite Twin cities of Minsk via WaybackMachine com in Romanian Primăria Municipiului Chisinău Archived from the original on September 3 2012 Retrieved July 21 2013 External links EditSacramento California at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Official website Official tourism website from the Sacramento Convention and Visitors Bureau Sacramento Wiki Portal California Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sacramento California amp oldid 1131820440, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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