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Wikipedia

San Diego

San Diego (/ˌsæn diˈɡ/ SAN dee-AY-goh, Spanish: [san ˈdjeɣo]; Spanish for 'Saint Didacus') is a city on the Pacific Ocean coast of Southern California located immediately adjacent to the Mexico–United States border. With a 2020 population of 1,386,932,[9] it is the eighth-most populous city in the United States and the seat of San Diego County, the fifth-most populous county in the United States, with 3,286,069 estimated residents as of 2021.[13] The city is known for its mild year-round climate, natural deep-water harbor, extensive beaches and parks, long association with the United States Navy, and recent emergence as a healthcare and biotechnology development center. San Diego is the second-largest city in the state of California, after Los Angeles.

San Diego
Nickname(s): 
"America's Finest City", "Birthplace of California", "City in Motion"[1]
Motto: 
Semper Vigilans (Latin for 'Ever Vigilant')
Location within San Diego County
San Diego
Location within California
San Diego
Location within the United States
Coordinates: 32°42′54″N 117°09′45″W / 32.71500°N 117.16250°W / 32.71500; -117.16250Coordinates: 32°42′54″N 117°09′45″W / 32.71500°N 117.16250°W / 32.71500; -117.16250
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountySan Diego County
EstablishedJuly 16, 1769
IncorporatedMarch 27, 1850[2]
Named forSaint Didacus of Alcalá
Government
 • TypeStrong Mayor[3]
 • BodySan Diego City Council
 • MayorTodd Gloria (D)
 • City AttorneyMara Elliott (D)[4]
 • City Council[5]
List
 • State Assembly Members
List
 • State Senators
List
Area
 • Total372.42 sq mi (964.56 km2)
 • Land325.88 sq mi (844.02 km2)
 • Water46.54 sq mi (120.54 km2)  12.68%
Elevation62 ft (19 m)
Highest elevation1,591 ft (485 m)
Lowest elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Population
 • Total1,386,932
 • Estimate 
(2021)[9]
1,381,611
 • Rank8th in the United States
2nd in California
 • Density4,255.96/sq mi (1,643.25/km2)
 • Urban3,070,300 (US: 15th)
 • Urban density4,550.5/sq mi (1,756.9/km2)
 • Metro3,298,634 (US: 17th)
DemonymSan Diegan
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)
ZIP Codes[12]
92101–92124, 92126–92132, 92134–92140, 92142, 92143, 92145, 92147, 92149–92155, 92158–92161, 92163, 92165–92179, 92182, 92186, 92187, 92190–92199
Area codes619/858
FIPS code06-66000
GNIS feature IDs1661377, 2411782
Websitewww.sandiego.gov

Historically home to the Kumeyaay, San Diego is frequently referred to as the "Birthplace of California", as it was the first site visited and settled by Europeans on what is now the U.S. west coast.[14] Upon landing in San Diego Bay in 1542, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo claimed the area for Spain, forming the basis for the settlement of Alta California 200 years later. The Presidio and Mission San Diego de Alcalá, founded in 1769, formed the first European settlement in what is now California. In 1821, San Diego became part of the newly declared Mexican Empire, which reformed as the First Mexican Republic two years later. California became part of the U.S. in 1848 following the Mexican–American War and was admitted to the union as a state in 1850.

San Diego's main economic engines are military and defense-related activities, tourism, international trade, research, and manufacturing. The city is the economic center of the San Diego–Tijuana conurbation, the second-most populous transborder metropolitan area in the Western Hemisphere (after Detroit–Windsor), home to an estimated 4,922,723 people as of 2012.[15] The primary border crossing between San Diego and Tijuana, the San Ysidro Port of Entry, is the busiest international land border crossing in the world outside of Asia (fourth-busiest overall). The city's airport, San Diego International Airport, is the busiest single-runway airport in the world.[a][16]

History

Pre-colonial period

 
The Kumeyaay, referred to by the Spanish as the Diegueño, have inhabited the area of San Diego for thousands of years.

What has been referred to as the San Dieguito complex was established in the area at least 9,000 years ago.[17] The Kumeyaay may have culturally evolved from this complex or migrated into the area around 1000 C.E.[18] Archaeologist Malcolm Rogers hypothesized that the early cultures of San Diego were separate from the Kumeyaay, yet this claim is disputed, with others noting that it does not account for cultural evolution.[19] Rogers later reevaluated his claims, yet they were influential in shaping historical tellings of early San Diego history.[19]

The Kumeyaay established villages scattered across the region, including the village of Kosa'aay which was the Kumeyaay village that the future settlement of San Diego would stem from in today's Old Town.[20][21] The village of Kosa'aay was made up of thirty to forty families living in pyramid-shaped housing structures and was supported by a freshwater spring from the hillsides.[20]

Spanish period

 
Portuguese explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo landing in San Diego Bay in 1542, claiming California for the Spanish Empire.

The first European to visit the region was explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, sailing under the flag of Castile but possibly born in Portugal. Sailing his flagship San Salvador from Navidad, New Spain, Cabrillo claimed the bay for the Spanish Empire in 1542, and named the site "San Miguel".[22] In November 1602, Sebastián Vizcaíno was sent to map the California coast. Arriving on his flagship San Diego, Vizcaíno surveyed the harbor and what are now Mission Bay and Point Loma and named the area for the Catholic Saint Didacus, a Spaniard more commonly known as San Diego de Alcalá. On November 12, 1602, the first Christian religious service of record in Alta California was conducted by Friar Antonio de la Ascensión, a member of Vizcaíno's expedition, to celebrate the feast day of San Diego.[23]

The permanent European colonization of both California and San Diego began in 1769 with the arrival of four contingents of Spaniards from New Spain and the Baja California peninsula. Two seaborne parties reached San Diego Bay: the San Carlos, under Vicente Vila and including as notable members the engineer and cartographer Miguel Costansó and the soldier and future governor Pedro Fages, and the San Antonio, under Juan Pérez. An initial overland expedition to San Diego from the south was led by the soldier Fernando Rivera and included the Franciscan missionary, explorer, and chronicler Juan Crespí, followed by a second party led by the designated governor Gaspar de Portolà and including the mission president (and now saint) Junípero Serra.[24]

In May 1769, Portolà established the Fort Presidio of San Diego on a hill near the San Diego River above the Kumeyaay village of Cosoy,[20] which would later become incorporated into the Spanish settlement,[21] making it the first settlement by Europeans in what is now the state of California. In July of the same year, Mission San Diego de Alcalá was founded by Franciscan friars under Serra.[25][26] The mission became a site for a Kumeyaay revolt in 1775, which forced the mission to relocate six miles (10 km) up the San Diego River.[27] By 1797, the mission boasted the largest native population in Alta California, with over 1,400 neophytes living in and around the mission proper.[28] Mission San Diego was the southern anchor in Alta California of the historic mission trail El Camino Real. Both the Presidio and the Mission are National Historic Landmarks.[29][30]

Mexican period

 
José María Estudillo served as commandant of the Presidio of San Diego and founded the Estudillo family, a powerful San Diego clan of Californios.

In 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain, and San Diego became part of the Mexican territory of Alta California. In 1822, Mexico began its attempt to extend its authority over the coastal territory of Alta California. The fort on Presidio Hill was gradually abandoned, while the town of San Diego grew up on the level land below Presidio Hill. The Mission was secularized by the Mexican government in 1834, and most of the Mission lands were granted to former soldiers. The 432 residents of the town petitioned the governor to form a pueblo, and Juan María Osuna was elected the first alcalde ("municipal magistrate"), defeating Pío Pico in the vote. Beyond the town, Mexican land grants expanded the number of California ranchos that modestly added to the local economy. (See, List of pre-statehood mayors of San Diego.) However, San Diego had been losing population throughout the 1830s, due to increasing tension between the settlers and the indigenous Kumeyaay and in 1838 the town lost its pueblo status because its size dropped to an estimated 100 to 150 residents.[31] The ranchos in the San Diego region would face Kumeyaay raids in the late 1830s and the town itself would face raids in the 1840s.[32]

Americans gained an increased awareness of California, and its commercial possibilities, from the writings of two countrymen involved in the often officially forbidden, to foreigners, but economically significant hide and tallow trade, where San Diego was a major port and the only one with an adequate harbor: William Shaler's "Journal of a Voyage Between China and the North-Western Coast of America, Made in 1804" and Richard Henry Dana's more substantial and convincing account, of his 1834–36 voyage, the classic Two Years Before the Mast.[33]

 
The 1846 Battle of San Pasqual was a decisive battle between American and Californio forces during the U.S. Conquest of California.

In 1846, the United States went to war against Mexico and sent a naval and land expedition to conquer Alta California. At first, they had an easy time of it, capturing the major ports including San Diego, but the Californios in southern Alta California struck back. Following the successful revolt in Los Angeles, the American garrison at San Diego was driven out without firing a shot in early October 1846. Mexican partisans held San Diego for three weeks until October 24, 1846, when the Americans recaptured it. For the next several months the Americans were blockaded inside the pueblo. Skirmishes occurred daily and snipers shot into the town every night. The Californios drove cattle away from the pueblo hoping to starve the Americans and their Californio supporters out. On December 1, the American garrison learned that the dragoons of General Stephen W. Kearney were at Warner's Ranch. Commodore Robert F. Stockton sent a mounted force of fifty under Captain Archibald Gillespie to march north to meet him. Their joint command of 150 men, returning to San Diego, encountered about 93 Californios under Andrés Pico. In the ensuing Battle of San Pasqual, fought in the San Pasqual Valley which is now part of the city of San Diego, the Americans suffered their worst losses in the campaign. Subsequently, a column led by Lieutenant Gray arrived from San Diego, rescuing Kearny's battered and blockaded command.[34]

Stockton and Kearny went on to recover Los Angeles and force the capitulation of Alta California with the "Treaty of Cahuenga" on January 13, 1847. As a result of the Mexican–American War of 1846–48, the territory of Alta California, including San Diego, was ceded to the United States by Mexico, under the terms of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. The Mexican negotiators of that treaty tried to retain San Diego as part of Mexico, but the Americans insisted that San Diego was "for every commercial purpose of nearly equal importance to us with that of San Francisco," and the Mexican–American border was eventually established to be one league south of the southernmost point of San Diego Bay, so as to include the entire bay within the United States.[35]

American period

 
The namesake of Horton Plaza, Alonzo Horton developed Downtown San Diego.

The state of California was admitted to the United States in 1850. That same year San Diego was designated the seat of the newly established County of San Diego and was incorporated as a city. Joshua H. Bean, the last alcalde of San Diego, was elected the first mayor. Two years later the city was bankrupt;[36] the California legislature revoked the city's charter and placed it under control of a board of trustees, where it remained until 1889. A city charter was reestablished in 1889, and today's city charter was adopted in 1931.[37]

The original town of San Diego was located at the foot of Presidio Hill, in the area which is now Old Town San Diego State Historic Park. The location was not ideal, being several miles away from navigable water at its port at La Playa. In 1850, William Heath Davis promoted a new development by the bay shore called "New San Diego", several miles south of the original settlement; however, for several decades the new development consisted only of a pier, a few houses and an Army depot for the support of Fort Yuma. After 1854, the fort became supplied by sea and by steamboats on the Colorado River and the depot fell into disuse. From 1857 to 1860, San Diego became the western terminus of the San Antonio-San Diego Mail Line, the earliest overland stagecoach and mail operation from the Eastern United States to California, coming from Texas through New Mexico Territory in less than 30 days.[38]

In the late 1860s, Alonzo Horton promoted a move to the bayside area, which he called "New Town" and which became Downtown San Diego. Horton promoted the area heavily, and people and businesses began to relocate to New Town because its location on San Diego Bay was convenient to shipping. New Town soon eclipsed the original settlement, known to this day as Old Town, and became the economic and governmental heart of the city.[39] Still, San Diego remained a relative backwater town until the arrival of a railroad connection in 1878. In 1884–1886, John J. Montgomery made the first controlled flights by an American in a heavier-than-air unpowered glider just south of San Diego at Otay Mesa, helping to pioneer a new science of aerodynamics.

In 1912, San Diego was the site of a free speech fight between the Industrial Workers of the World and the city government who passed an ordinance forbidding the freedom of speech along an area of "Soapbox Row" that led to civil disobedience, vigilantism, police violence, the abduction of Emma Goldman's husband Ben Reitman and multiple riots.[40][41] San Diego's proximity to Tijuana during the Mexican Revolution made this one of the most significant free speech fights during the Wobbly era.[42]

In 1916, the neighborhood of Stingaree, the original home of San Diego's first Chinatown and "Soapbox Row", was demolished by anti-vice campaigners to make way for the Gaslamp Quarter.[43]

 
Balboa Park on the cover of a guidebook for the World Exposition of 1915

In the early part of the 20th century, San Diego hosted the World's Fair twice: the Panama-California Exposition (1915) and the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935. Both expositions were held in Balboa Park, and many of the Spanish/Baroque-style buildings that were built for those expositions remain to this day as central features of the park. The buildings were intended to be temporary structures, but most remained in continuous use until they progressively fell into disrepair. Most were eventually rebuilt, using castings of the original façades to retain the architectural style.[44] The menagerie of exotic animals featured at the 1915 exposition provided the basis for the San Diego Zoo.[45] During the 1950s there was a citywide festival called Fiesta del Pacifico highlighting the area's Spanish and Mexican past.[46] In the 2010s there was a proposal for a large-scale celebration of the 100th anniversary of Balboa Park, but the plans were abandoned when the organization tasked with putting on the celebration went out of business.[47]

The southern portion of the Point Loma peninsula was set aside for military purposes as early as 1852. Over the next several decades the Army set up a series of coastal artillery batteries and named the area Fort Rosecrans.[48] Significant U.S. Navy presence began in 1901 with the establishment of the Navy Coaling Station in Point Loma, and expanded greatly during the 1920s.[49] By 1930, the city was host to Naval Base San Diego, Naval Training Center San Diego, San Diego Naval Hospital, Camp Matthews, and Camp Kearny (now Marine Corps Air Station Miramar). The city was also an early center for aviation: as early as World War I, San Diego was proclaiming itself "The Air Capital of the West".[50] The city was home to important airplane developers and manufacturers like Ryan Airlines (later Ryan Aeronautical), founded in 1925, and Consolidated Aircraft (later Convair), founded in 1923.[51] Charles A. Lindbergh's plane The Spirit of St. Louis was built in San Diego in 1927 by Ryan Airlines.[50]

During World War II, San Diego became a major hub of military and defense activity, due to the presence of so many military installations and defense manufacturers. The city's population grew rapidly during and after World War II, more than doubling between 1930 (147,995) and 1950 (333,865).[52] During the final months of the war, the Japanese had a plan to target multiple U.S. cities for biological attack, starting with San Diego. The plan was called "Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night" and called for kamikaze planes filled with fleas infected with plague (Yersinia pestis) to crash into civilian population centers in the city, hoping to spread plague in the city and effectively kill tens of thousands of civilians. The plan was scheduled to launch on September 22, 1945, but was not carried out because Japan surrendered five weeks earlier.[53][54][55]

After World War II, the military continued to play a major role in the local economy, but post-Cold War cutbacks took a heavy toll on the local defense and aerospace industries. The resulting downturn led San Diego leaders to seek to diversify the city's economy by focusing on research and science, as well as tourism.[56]

From the start of the 20th century through the 1970s, the American tuna fishing fleet and tuna canning industry were based in San Diego, "the tuna capital of the world".[57] San Diego's first tuna cannery was founded in 1911, and by the mid-1930s the canneries employed more than 1,000 people. A large fishing fleet supported the canneries, mostly staffed by immigrant fishermen from Japan, and later from the Portuguese Azores and Italy whose influence is still felt in neighborhoods like Little Italy and Point Loma.[58][59] Due to rising costs and foreign competition, the last of the canneries closed in the early 1980s.[60]

Downtown San Diego was in decline in the 1960s and 1970s, but experienced some urban renewal since the early 1980s, including the opening of Horton Plaza, the revival of the Gaslamp Quarter, and the construction of the San Diego Convention Center; Petco Park opened in 2004.[61] Outside of downtown, San Diego annexed large swaths of land and for suburban expansion to the north and control of the San Ysidro Port of Entry.

As the Cold War ended, the military shrank and so did defense spending. San Diego has since become a center of the emerging biotech industry and is home to telecommunications giant Qualcomm. San Diego had also grown in the tourism industry with the popularity of attractions such as the San Diego Zoo, SeaWorld San Diego, and Legoland California in Carlsbad.[citation needed]

Geography

 
Satellite view of San Diego and Tijuana, Mexico

According to SDSU professor emeritus Monte Marshall, San Diego Bay is "the surface expression of a north-south-trending, nested graben". The Rose Canyon and Point Loma fault zones are part of the San Andreas Fault system. About 40 miles (64 km) east of the bay are the Laguna Mountains in the Peninsular Ranges, which are part of the backbone of the American continents.[62]

The city lies on approximately 200 deep canyons and hills separating its mesas, creating small pockets of natural open space scattered throughout the city and giving it a hilly geography.[63] Traditionally, San Diegans have built their homes and businesses on the mesas, while leaving the urban canyons relatively wild.[64] Thus, the canyons give parts of the city a segmented feel, creating gaps between otherwise proximate neighborhoods and contributing to a low-density, car-centered environment. The San Diego River runs through the middle of San Diego from east to west, creating a river valley that serves to divide the city into northern and southern segments. During the historic period and presumably earlier as well, the river has shifted its flow back and forth between San Diego Bay and Mission Bay, and its fresh water was the focus of the earliest Spanish explorers. Miguel Costansó, a cartographer, wrote in 1769, "When asked by signs where the watering-place was, the Indians pointed to a grove which could be seen at a considerable distance to the northeast, giving to understand that a river or creek flowed through it, and that they would lead our men to it if they would follow."[65][66] That river was the San Diego River.[65] Several reservoirs and Mission Trails Regional Park also lie between and separate developed areas of the city.

 
Mission Valley facing Northwest, taken from Arista Street. Mission Bay can be seen in the distance.

Notable peaks within the city limits include Cowles Mountain, the highest point in the city at 1,591 feet (485 m);[8] Black Mountain at 1,558 feet (475 m); and Mount Soledad at 824 feet (251 m). The Cuyamaca Mountains and Laguna Mountains rise to the east of the city, and beyond the mountains are desert areas. The Cleveland National Forest is a half-hour drive from downtown San Diego. Numerous farms are found in the valleys northeast and southeast of the city.

In its 2013 ParkScore ranking, The Trust for Public Land reported that San Diego had the 9th-best park system among the 50 most populous U.S. cities.[67] ParkScore ranks city park systems by a formula that analyzes acreage, access, and service and investment.

Communities and neighborhoods

The City of San Diego recognizes 52 individual areas as Community Planning Areas.[68] Within a given planning area there may be several distinct neighborhoods. Altogether the city contains more than 100 identified neighborhoods.

Downtown San Diego is located on San Diego Bay. Balboa Park encompasses several mesas and canyons to the northeast, surrounded by older, dense urban communities including Hillcrest and North Park. To the east and southeast lie City Heights, the College Area, and Southeast San Diego. To the north lies Mission Valley and Interstate 8. The communities north of the valley and freeway, and south of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, include Clairemont, Kearny Mesa, Tierrasanta, and Navajo. Stretching north from Miramar are the northern suburbs of Mira Mesa, Scripps Ranch, Rancho Peñasquitos, and Rancho Bernardo. The far northeast portion of the city encompasses Lake Hodges and the San Pasqual Valley, which holds an agricultural preserve. Carmel Valley and Del Mar Heights occupy the northwest corner of the city. To their south are Torrey Pines State Reserve and the business center of the Golden Triangle. Further south are the beach and coastal communities of La Jolla, Pacific Beach, Mission Beach, and Ocean Beach. Point Loma occupies the peninsula across San Diego Bay from downtown. The communities of South San Diego (an Exclave), such as San Ysidro and Otay Mesa, are located next to the Mexico–United States border, and are physically separated from the rest of the city by the cities of National City and Chula Vista. A narrow strip of land at the bottom of San Diego Bay connects these southern neighborhoods with the rest of the city.[69]

For the most part, San Diego neighborhood boundaries tend to be understood by its residents based on geographical boundaries like canyons and street patterns.[70] The city recognized the importance of its neighborhoods when it organized its 2008 General Plan around the concept of a "City of Villages".[71]

Cityscape

 
San Diego skyline, seen in January 2021

San Diego was originally centered on the Old Town district, but by the late 1860s the focus had shifted to the bayfront, in the belief that this new location would increase trade. As the "New Town" – present-day Downtown – waterfront location quickly developed, it eclipsed Old Town as the center of San Diego.[39]

The development of skyscrapers over 300 feet (91 m) in San Diego is attributed to the construction of the El Cortez Hotel in 1927, the tallest building in the city from 1927 to 1963.[72] As time went on, multiple buildings claimed the title of San Diego's tallest skyscraper, including the Union Bank of California Building and Symphony Towers. Currently the tallest building in San Diego is One America Plaza, standing 500 feet (150 m) tall, which was completed in 1991.[73] The downtown skyline contains no super-talls, as a regulation put in place by the Federal Aviation Administration in the 1970s set a 500 feet (152 m) limit on the height of buildings within a one-mile (1.6 km) radius of the San Diego International Airport.[74] An iconic description of the skyline includes its skyscrapers being compared to the tools of a toolbox.[75]

There are several new high-rises under construction, including two that exceed 400 feet (122 m) in height.

Climate

San Diego
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
2
 
 
66
50
 
 
2.2
 
 
66
52
 
 
1.5
 
 
67
55
 
 
0.7
 
 
69
57
 
 
0.3
 
 
70
60
 
 
0.1
 
 
72
63
 
 
0.1
 
 
75
66
 
 
0
 
 
77
68
 
 
0.1
 
 
77
66
 
 
0.5
 
 
75
62
 
 
0.8
 
 
71
55
 
 
1.7
 
 
66
50
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: NOAA[76]
Metric conversion
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
50
 
 
19
10
 
 
56
 
 
19
11
 
 
37
 
 
19
13
 
 
17
 
 
20
14
 
 
7.1
 
 
21
16
 
 
1.3
 
 
22
17
 
 
2
 
 
24
19
 
 
0.3
 
 
25
20
 
 
3
 
 
25
19
 
 
13
 
 
24
16
 
 
20
 
 
22
13
 
 
42
 
 
19
10
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

San Diego has one of the top-ten best climates in the United States, according to the Farmers' Almanac[77] and has one of the two best summer climates in the country as scored by The Weather Channel.[78] Under the Köppen–Geiger climate classification system, the San Diego area has been variously categorized as having either a semi-arid climate (BSh in the original classification[79] and BSkn in modified Köppen classification with the n denoting summer fog)[80] or a Mediterranean climate[81] (Csa).[82] San Diego's climate is characterized by warm, dry summers and mild winters, with most of the annual precipitation falling between December and March. The city has a mild climate year-round,[83] with an average of 201 days above 70 °F (21 °C) and low rainfall (9–13 inches [230–330 mm] annually).

The climate in San Diego, like most of Southern California, often varies significantly over short geographical distances, resulting in microclimates. In San Diego, this is mostly because of the city's topography (the Bay, and the numerous hills, mountains, and canyons). Frequently, particularly during the "May gray/June gloom" period, a thick "marine layer" cloud cover keeps the air cool and damp within a few miles of the coast, but yields to bright cloudless sunshine approximately 5–10 miles (8–16 km) inland.[84] Sometimes the June gloom lasts into July, causing cloudy skies over most of San Diego for the entire day.[85][86] Even in the absence of June gloom, inland areas experience much more significant temperature variations than coastal areas, where the ocean serves as a moderating influence. Thus, for example, downtown San Diego averages January lows of 50 °F (10 °C) and August highs of 78 °F (26 °C). The city of El Cajon, just 12 miles (19 km) inland from downtown San Diego, averages January lows of 42 °F (6 °C) and August highs of 88 °F (31 °C).

The average surface temperature of the water at Scripps Pier in the California Current has increased by almost 3 °F (1.7 °C) since 1950, according to scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography.[87] Additionally, the mean minimum is now above 40 °F (4 °C), putting San Diego in hardiness zone 11, with the last freeze having occurred many decades ago.

 
Surfers at Pacific Beach

Annual rainfall along the coast averages 10.65 inches (271 mm) and the median is 9.6 inches (240 mm).[88] The months of December through March supply most of the rain, with February the only month averaging 2 inches (51 mm) or more. The months of May through September tend to be almost completely dry. Although there are few wet days per month during the rainy period, rainfall can be heavy when it does fall. Rainfall is usually greater in the higher elevations of San Diego; some of the higher areas can receive 11–15 inches (280–380 mm) per year. Variability from year to year can be dramatic: in the wettest years of 1883/1884 and 1940/1941, more than 24 inches (610 mm) fell, whilst in the driest years there was as little as 3.2 inches (80 mm). The wettest month on record is December 1921 with 9.21 inches (234 mm).

Snow in the city is so rare that it has been observed only six times in the century-and-a-half that records have been kept. In 1949 and 1967, snow stayed on the ground for a few hours in higher locations like Point Loma and La Jolla. The other three occasions, in 1882, 1946, and 1987, involved flurries but no accumulation.[89] On February 21, 2019, snow fell and accumulated in residential areas of the city, but none fell in the downtown area.[90]

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 88
(31)
91
(33)
99
(37)
98
(37)
98
(37)
101
(38)
100
(38)
98
(37)
111
(44)
107
(42)
100
(38)
88
(31)
111
(44)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 78.8
(26.0)
78.6
(25.9)
80.2
(26.8)
82.1
(27.8)
79.3
(26.3)
79.6
(26.4)
82.9
(28.3)
85.2
(29.6)
90.6
(32.6)
87.8
(31.0)
85.4
(29.7)
77.0
(25.0)
94.0
(34.4)
Average high °F (°C) 66.4
(19.1)
66.2
(19.0)
67.0
(19.4)
68.8
(20.4)
69.5
(20.8)
71.7
(22.1)
75.3
(24.1)
77.3
(25.2)
77.2
(25.1)
74.6
(23.7)
70.7
(21.5)
66.0
(18.9)
70.9
(21.6)
Daily mean °F (°C) 58.4
(14.7)
59.0
(15.0)
60.7
(15.9)
62.9
(17.2)
64.8
(18.2)
67.2
(19.6)
70.7
(21.5)
72.4
(22.4)
71.7
(22.1)
68.1
(20.1)
62.7
(17.1)
57.9
(14.4)
64.7
(18.2)
Average low °F (°C) 50.3
(10.2)
51.8
(11.0)
54.5
(12.5)
57.1
(13.9)
60.0
(15.6)
62.6
(17.0)
66.1
(18.9)
67.5
(19.7)
66.2
(19.0)
61.5
(16.4)
54.8
(12.7)
49.8
(9.9)
58.5
(14.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 43.7
(6.5)
46.1
(7.8)
48.7
(9.3)
51.9
(11.1)
55.8
(13.2)
59.3
(15.2)
63.0
(17.2)
63.9
(17.7)
61.8
(16.6)
55.5
(13.1)
48.2
(9.0)
43.0
(6.1)
42.6
(5.9)
Record low °F (°C) 25
(−4)
34
(1)
36
(2)
39
(4)
45
(7)
50
(10)
54
(12)
54
(12)
50
(10)
43
(6)
36
(2)
32
(0)
25
(−4)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 1.98
(50)
2.20
(56)
1.46
(37)
0.65
(17)
0.28
(7.1)
0.05
(1.3)
0.08
(2.0)
0.01
(0.25)
0.12
(3.0)
0.50
(13)
0.79
(20)
1.67
(42)
9.79
(249)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.5 7.1 6.2 3.8 2.2 0.7 0.7 0.3 0.9 2.4 3.7 5.8 40.3
Average relative humidity (%) 63.1 65.7 67.3 67.0 70.6 74.0 74.6 74.1 72.7 69.4 66.3 63.7 69.0
Average dew point °F (°C) 42.8
(6.0)
45.3
(7.4)
47.3
(8.5)
49.5
(9.7)
53.1
(11.7)
57.0
(13.9)
61.2
(16.2)
62.4
(16.9)
60.6
(15.9)
55.6
(13.1)
48.6
(9.2)
43.2
(6.2)
52.2
(11.2)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 239.3 227.4 261.0 276.2 250.5 242.4 304.7 295.0 253.3 243.4 230.1 231.3 3,054.6
Percent possible sunshine 75 74 70 71 58 57 70 71 68 69 73 74 69
Source: NOAA (sun, relative humidity, and dew point 1961–1990)[92][93][94]

Ecology

 
Coastal canyon in Torrey Pines State Reserve

Like much of Southern California, the majority of San Diego's current area was originally occupied on the west by coastal sage scrub and on the east by chaparral, plant communities made up mostly of drought-resistant shrubs.[95] The steep and varied topography and proximity to the ocean create a number of different habitats within the city limits, including tidal marsh and canyons. The chaparral and coastal sage scrub habitats in low elevations along the coast are prone to wildfire, and the rates of fire increased in the 20th century, due primarily to fires starting near the borders of urban and wild areas.[96]

San Diego's broad city limits encompass a number of large nature preserves, including Torrey Pines State Reserve, Los Peñasquitos Canyon Preserve, and Mission Trails Regional Park. Torrey Pines State Reserve and a coastal strip continuing to the north constitute one of only two locations where the rare species of Torrey Pine, Pinus torreyana, is found.[97]

 
San Diego viewed against the Witch Creek Fire smoke

Due to the steep topography that prevents or discourages building, along with some efforts for preservation, there are also a large number of canyons within the city limits that serve as nature preserves, including Switzer Canyon, Tecolote Canyon Natural Park,[98] and Marian Bear Memorial Park in San Clemente Canyon,[99] as well as a number of small parks and preserves.

San Diego County has one of the highest counts of animal and plant species that appear on the endangered list of counties in the United States.[100] Because of its diversity of habitat and its position on the Pacific Flyway, San Diego County has recorded 492 different bird species, more than any other region in the country.[101] San Diego always scores high in the number of bird species observed in the annual Christmas Bird Count, sponsored by the Audubon Society, and it is known as one of the "birdiest" areas in the United States.[102][103]

San Diego and its backcountry suffer from periodic wildfires. In October 2003, San Diego was the site of the Cedar Fire, at that time the largest wildfire in California over the past century.[104] The fire burned 280,000 acres (1,100 km2), killed 15 people, and destroyed more than 2,200 homes.[105] In addition to damage caused by the fire, smoke resulted in a significant increase in emergency room visits due to asthma, respiratory problems, eye irritation, and smoke inhalation; the poor air quality caused San Diego County schools to close for a week.[106] Wildfires four years later destroyed some areas, particularly within Rancho Bernardo, as well as the nearby communities of Rancho Santa Fe and Ramona.[100]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
1850500
186073146.2%
18702,300214.6%
18802,63714.7%
189016,159512.8%
190017,7009.5%
191039,578123.6%
192074,36187.9%
1930147,99599.0%
1940203,34137.4%
1950334,38764.4%
1960573,22471.4%
1970696,76921.6%
1980875,53825.7%
19901,110,54926.8%
20001,223,40010.2%
20101,307,4026.9%
20201,386,9326.1%
2022 (est.)1,374,790[107]−0.9%
Population History of Western
U.S. Cities & Towns, 1850–1990[52]
U.S. Decennial Census[108]
2010–2020[9]
Racial and ethnic composition 2020[109] 2010[110] 1990[111] 1970[111] 1940[111]
White (non-Hispanic) 40.7% 45.1% 58.7% 78.9%[112] n/a
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 29.7% 28.8% 20.7% 10.7%[112] n/a
Asian (non-Hispanic) 17.6% 15.9% 11.8% 2.2% 1.0%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 6.6% 6.7% 9.4% 7.6% 2.0%
 
Map of racial distribution in San Diego, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other

The city had a population of 1,307,402 according to the 2010 census, distributed over a land area of 372.1 square miles (963.7 km2).[113] The urban area of San Diego extends beyond the administrative city limits and had a total population of 2,956,746, making it the third-largest urban area in the state, after that of the Los Angeles metropolitan area and San Francisco metropolitan area. They, along with the Riverside–San Bernardino, form those metropolitan areas in California larger than the San Diego metropolitan area, which had a total population of 3,095,313 at the 2010 census.

The 2010 population represents an increase of just under 7% from the 1,223,400 people, 450,691 households, and 271,315 families reported in 2000.[110] The estimated city population in 2009 was 1,306,300. The population density was 3,771.9 inhabitants per square mile (1,456.3/km2). The racial makeup of San Diego was 58.9% White, 6.7% African American, 0.6% Native American, 15.9% Asian (5.9% Filipino, 2.7% Chinese, 2.5% Vietnamese, 1.3% Indian, 1.0% Korean, 0.7% Japanese, 0.4% Laotian, 0.3% Cambodian, 0.1% Thai). 0.5% Pacific Islander (0.2% Guamanian, 0.1% Samoan, 0.1% Native Hawaiian), 12.3% from other races, and 5.1% from two or more races. The ethnic makeup of the city was 28.8% Hispanic or Latino (of any race);[110][114] 24.9% of the total population were Mexican American, 1.4% were Spanish American and 0.6% were Puerto Rican. Median age of Hispanics was 27.5 years, compared to 35.1 years overall and 41.6 years among non-Hispanic whites; Hispanics were the largest group in all ages under 18, and non-Hispanic whites constituted 63.1% of population 55 and older.

 
A U.S. Navy vice admiral and an intelligence specialist celebrating Hispanic American Heritage Month in San Diego

As of January 2019, the San Diego City and County had the fifth-largest homeless population among major cities in the United States, with 8,102 people experiencing homelessness.[115] In the city of San Diego, 4,887 individuals were experiencing homelessness according to the 2020 count.[116]

In 2000 there were 451,126 households, out of which 30.2% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 44.6% were married couples living together, 11.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39.8% were non-families. Households made up of individuals account for 28.0%, and 7.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.61, and the average family size was 3.30.

The U.S. Census Bureau reported that in 2000, 24.0% of San Diego residents were under 18, and 10.5% were 65 and over.[110] As of 2011 the median age was 35.6; more than a quarter of residents were under age 20 and 11% were over age 65.[117] Millennials (ages 18 through 34) constitute 27.1% of San Diego's population, the second-highest percentage in a major U.S. city.[118] The San Diego County regional planning agency, SANDAG, provides tables and graphs breaking down the city population into five-year age groups.[119]

In 2000, the median income for a household in the city was $45,733, and the median income for a family was $53,060. Males had a median income of $36,984 versus $31,076 for females. The per capita income for the city was $35,199.[120] According to Forbes in 2005, San Diego was the fifth wealthiest U.S. city,[121] but about 10.6% of families and 14.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 20.0% of those under age 18 and 7.6% of those age 65 or over.[120] San Diego was rated the fifth-best place to live in the United States in 2006 by Money magazine,[122] and it was rated #6 in Best Big Cities in 2018.[123] As of January 1, 2008 estimates by the San Diego Association of Governments revealed that the household median income for San Diego rose to $66,715, up from $45,733 in 2000.[124]

San Diego was named the ninth-most LGBT-friendly city in the U.S. in 2013.[125] The city also has the seventh-highest population of gay residents in the U.S. Additionally in 2013, San Diego State University (SDSU), one of the city's prominent universities, was named one of the top LGBT-friendly campuses in the nation.[126] According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, 68% of the population of the city identified themselves as Christians, with 32% professing attendance at a variety of churches that could be considered Protestant, and 32% professing Roman Catholic beliefs.[127][128] while 27% claim no religious affiliation. The same study says that other religions (including Judaism, Buddhism, Islam, and Hinduism) collectively make up about 5% of the population.

Economy

The largest sectors of San Diego's economy are defense/military, tourism, international trade, and research/manufacturing.[129][130] In 2014, San Diego was designated by a Forbes columnist as the best city in the country to launch a small business or startup company.[131] San Diego recorded a median household income of $79,646 in 2018, an increase of 3.89% from $76,662 in 2017.[132] The median property value in San Diego in 2018 was $654,700,[132] and the average home has two cars per household.[132]

Defense and military

 
USS Midway museum ship
 
F/A-18 Hornet flying over San Diego and the USS John C. Stennis

The economy of San Diego is influenced by its deepwater port, which includes the only major submarine and shipbuilding yards on the West Coast.[133] Several major national defense contractors were started and are headquartered in San Diego, including General Atomics, Cubic, and NASSCO.[134][135]

San Diego hosts the largest naval fleet in the world:[136] In 2008 it was home to 53 ships, over 120 tenant commands, and more than 35,000 sailors, marines, Department of Defense civilian employees and contractors.[137] About 5 percent of all civilian jobs in the county are military-related, and 15,000 businesses in San Diego County rely on Department of Defense contracts.[137]

Military bases in San Diego include US Navy facilities, Marine Corps bases, and Coast Guard stations. The city is "home to the majority of the U.S. Pacific Fleet's surface combatants, all of the Navy's West Coast amphibious ships and a variety of Coast Guard and Military Sealift Command vessels".[137][138]

The military infrastructure in San Diego is still growing and developing, with numerous military personnel stationed there, numbers of which are expected to rise. This plays a significant role in the city's economy, as of 2020, it provides roughly 25% of the GDP and provides 23% of the total jobs in San Diego.[139][140][141]

Tourism

 
View on Harbor Drive

Tourism is a major industry owing to the city's climate, beaches,[142] and tourist attractions such as Balboa Park, Belmont amusement park, San Diego Zoo, San Diego Zoo Safari Park, and SeaWorld San Diego. San Diego's Spanish and Mexican heritage is reflected in many historic sites across the city, such as Mission San Diego de Alcalá and Old Town San Diego State Historic Park. Also, the local craft brewing industry attracts an increasing number of visitors[143] for "beer tours" and the annual San Diego Beer Week in November;[144] San Diego has been called "America's Craft Beer Capital."[145]

San Diego County hosted more than 32 million visitors in 2012; collectively they spent an estimated $8 billion. The visitor industry provides employment for more than 160,000 people.[146]

San Diego's cruise ship industry used to be the second-largest in California. Numerous cruise lines operate out of San Diego. However, cruise ship business has been in decline since 2008, when the Port hosted over 250 ship calls and more than 900,000 passengers. By 2016–2017, the number of ship calls had fallen to 90.[147]

Local sightseeing cruises are offered in San Diego Bay and Mission Bay, as well as whale-watching cruises to observe the migration of gray whales, peaking in mid-January.[148] Sport fishing is another popular tourist attraction; San Diego is home to southern California's biggest sport fishing fleet.[149]

International trade

San Diego's commercial port and its location on the United States–Mexico border make international trade an important factor in the city's economy. The city is authorized by the United States government to operate as a Foreign Trade Zone.[150]

The city shares a 15-mile (24 km) border with Mexico that includes two border crossings. San Diego hosts the busiest international border crossing in the world, in the San Ysidro neighborhood at the San Ysidro Port of Entry.[151] A second, primarily commercial border crossing operates in the Otay Mesa area; it is the largest commercial crossing on the California-Baja California border and handles the third-highest volume of trucks and dollar value of trade among all United States-Mexico land crossings.[152]

One of the Port of San Diego's two cargo facilities is located in Downtown San Diego at the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal. This terminal has facilities for containers, bulk cargo, and refrigerated and frozen storage, so that it can handle the import and export of many commodities.[153] In 2009 the Port of San Diego handled 1,137,054 short tons of total trade; foreign trade accounted for 956,637 short tons while domestic trade amounted to 180,417 short tons.[154]

Historically tuna fishing and canning was one of San Diego's major industries,[155] although the American tuna fishing fleet is no longer based in San Diego. Seafood company Bumble Bee Foods is headquartered in San Diego and Chicken of the Sea was until 2018.[156][157]

Companies

 
Qualcomm corporate headquarters

San Diego hosts several major producers of wireless cellular technology. Qualcomm was founded and is headquartered in San Diego, and is one of the largest private-sector employers in San Diego.[158] Other wireless industry manufacturers headquartered here include Nokia, LG Electronics,[159] Kyocera International,[160] Cricket Communications and Novatel Wireless.[161] San Diego also has the U.S. headquarters for the Slovakian security company ESET.[162] San Diego has been designated as an iHub Innovation Center for potential collaboration between wireless and the life sciences.[163]

The University of California, San Diego and other research institutions have helped to fuel the growth of biotechnology.[164] In 2013, San Diego had the second-largest biotech cluster in the United States, below the Boston area and above the San Francisco Bay Area.[165] There are more than 400 biotechnology companies in the area.[166] In particular, the La Jolla and nearby Sorrento Valley areas are home to offices and research facilities for numerous biotechnology companies.[167] Major biotechnology companies like Illumina and Neurocrine Biosciences are headquartered in San Diego, while many other biotech and pharmaceutical companies have offices or research facilities in San Diego. San Diego is also home to more than 140 contract research organizations (CROs) that provide contract services for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.[168]

Top employers

According to the city's 2022 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report,[169] the top employers in the city are:

Real estate

 
Skyline view of the Village of La Jolla in San Diego

San Diego has high real estate prices. San Diego home prices peaked in 2005, and then declined along with the national trend. As of December 2010, prices were down 36 percent from the peak,[170] median price of homes having declined by more than $200,000 between 2005 and 2010.[171] As of May 2015, the median price of a house was $520,000.[172] In November 2018 the median home price was $558,000. The San Diego metropolitan area had one of the worst housing affordability rankings of all metropolitan areas in the United States in 2009.[173]

Consequently, San Diego has experienced negative net migration since 2004. A significant number of people moved to adjacent Riverside County, commuting daily to jobs in San Diego, while others are leaving the region altogether and moving to more affordable regions.[174]

Government

Local government

 
Todd Gloria has been the mayor of San Diego since 2020

The city is governed by a mayor and a nine-member city council. In 2006, its government changed from a council–manager government to a strong mayor government, as decided by a citywide vote in 2004. The mayor is in effect the chief executive officer of the city, while the council is the legislative body.[175] The City of San Diego is responsible for police, public safety, streets, water and sewer service, planning and zoning, and similar services within its borders. San Diego is a sanctuary city,[176] however, San Diego County is a participant of the Secure Communities program.[177][178] As of 2011, the city had one employee for every 137 residents, with a payroll greater than $733 million.[179]

The members of the city council are each elected from single-member districts within the city. The mayor and city attorney are elected directly by the voters of the entire city. The mayor, city attorney, and council members are elected to four-year terms, with a two-term limit.[180] Elections are held on a non-partisan basis per California state law; nevertheless, most officeholders do identify themselves as either Democrats or Republicans. In 2007, registered Democrats outnumbered Republicans by about 7 to 6 in the city,[181] and Democrats currently (as of 2022) hold an 8–1 majority in the city council. The current mayor, Todd Gloria, is a member of the Democratic Party.

San Diego is part of San Diego County, and includes all or part of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th supervisorial districts of the San Diego County Board of Supervisors,[182] Other county officers elected in part by city residents include the Sheriff, District Attorney, Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk, and Treasurer/Tax Collector.

Areas of the city immediately adjacent to San Diego Bay ("tidelands") are administered by the Port of San Diego, a quasi-governmental agency which owns all the property in the tidelands and is responsible for its land use planning, policing, and similar functions. San Diego is a member of the regional planning agency San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG). Public schools within the city are managed and funded by independent school districts (see below).

State and federal representation

In the California State Senate, San Diego County encompasses the 38th, 39th and 40th districts,[183] represented by Catherine Blakespear (D), Toni Atkins (D), and Brian Jones (R), respectively.

In the California State Assembly, lying partially within the city of San Diego are the 77th, 78th, 79th, and 80th districts,[184] represented by Tasha Boerner Horvath (D), Chris Ward (D), Akilah Weber (D), and David Alvarez (D), respectively.

In the United States House of Representatives, San Diego County includes parts or all of California's 49th, 50th, 51st, and 52nd congressional districts,[185] represented by Mike Levin (D), Scott Peters (D), Sara Jacobs (D), and Juan Vargas (D) respectively.

Election history

After narrowly supporting Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, San Diego provided majorities to all six Republican presidential candidates from 1968 to 1988. However, in more recent decades, San Diego has trended in favor of Democratic presidential candidates for president. George H. W. Bush in 1988 is the last Republican candidate to carry San Diego in a presidential election.

San Diego city vote
by party in presidential elections
Year Democratic Republican Third Parties
2020[186] 68.55% 461,985 29.14% 196,373 2.32% 15,614
2016[187] 65.86% 364,108 28.00% 154,797 6.13% 33,909
2012[188] 61.29% 312,832 36.43% 185,922 2.28% 11,660
2008[189] 62.57% 335,724 35.73% 191,711 1.69% 9,086
2004[190] 55.06% 270,746 43.91% 215,904 1.03% 5,071
2000[191] 53.13% 221,979 42.27% 176,616 4.59% 19,193
1996[192] 50.75% 198,169 39.93% 155,912 9.33% 36,414
1992[193] 43.53% 192,829 31.85% 141,093 24.62% 109,084
1988[194] 43.94% 177,207 54.67% 220,472 1.40% 5,631
1984[195] 39.10% 142,985 59.61% 218,025 1.29% 4,716
1980[196] 31.32% 106,282 54.96% 186,491 13.72% 46,569
1976[197] 44.63% 131,525 53.54% 157,780 1.97% 5,801
1972[198] 39.04% 114,997 57.93% 170,636 3.03% 8,916
1968[199] 39.58% 91,276 54.10% 124,769 6.32% 14,572
1964[200] 51.38% 112,469 48.62% 106,422

Major scandals

San Diego was the site of the 1912 San Diego free speech fight, in which the city restricted speech, vigilantes brutalized and tortured anarchists, and the San Diego Police Department killed a member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).

In 1916, rainmaker Charles Hatfield was blamed for $4 million in damages and accused of causing San Diego's worst flood, during which about 20 Japanese American farmers died.[201]

Then-mayor Roger Hedgecock was forced to resign his post in 1985, after he was found guilty of one count of conspiracy and 12 counts of perjury, related to the alleged failure to report all campaign contributions.[202][203] After a series of appeals, the 12 perjury counts were dismissed in 1990 based on claims of juror misconduct; the remaining conspiracy count was reduced to a misdemeanor and then dismissed.[204]

A 2002 scheme to underfund pensions for city employees led to the San Diego pension scandal. This resulted in the resignation of newly re-elected Mayor Dick Murphy[205] and the criminal indictment of six pension board members.[206] Those charges were finally dismissed by a federal judge in 2010.[207]

On November 28, 2005, U.S. Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham resigned after being convicted on federal bribery charges. He had represented California's 50th congressional district, which includes much of the northern portion of the city of San Diego. In 2006, Cunningham was sentenced to a 100-month prison sentence.[208] He was released in 2013.

In 2005 two city council members, Ralph Inzunza and Deputy Mayor Michael Zucchet – who briefly took over as acting mayor when Murphy resigned – were convicted of extortion, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for taking campaign contributions from a strip club owner and his associates, allegedly in exchange for trying to repeal the city's "no touch" laws at strip clubs.[209] Both subsequently resigned. Inzunza was sentenced to 21 months in prison.[210] In 2009, a judge acquitted Zucchet on seven out of the nine counts against him, and granted his petition for a new trial on the other two charges;[211] the remaining charges were eventually dropped.[212]

In July 2013, three former supporters of mayor Bob Filner asked him to resign because of allegations of repeated sexual harassment.[213] Over the ensuing six weeks, 18 women came forward to publicly claim that Filner had sexually harassed them,[214] and multiple individuals and groups called for him to resign. Filner agreed to resign effective August 30, 2013, subsequently pleaded guilty to one felony count of false imprisonment and two misdemeanor battery charges, and was sentenced to house arrest and probation.[215][216]

Crime

 
San Diego Police Department car in the city center

Like most major cities, San Diego had a declining crime rate from 1990 to 2000. 1991 would mark the city's deadliest year, registering 179 homicides[217] within city limits (while the region as a whole peaked at 278 homicides),[218] capping off an unabated, eight-year climb in murders, rapes, robberies, and assault dating back to 1983. At the time, the city was ranked last among the 10 most populous U.S. cities in homicides per 1,000 population, and ninth in crimes per 1,000.[219] From 1980 to 1994, San Diego surpassed 100 murders ten times before tapering off to 91 homicides in 1995. That number would not exceed 79 for the next 15 years.[220] Crime in San Diego increased in the early 2000s.[221][222][223] In 2004, San Diego had the sixth lowest crime rate of any U.S. city with over half a million residents.[223] From 2002 to 2006, the crime rate overall dropped 0.8%, though not evenly by category. While violent crime decreased 12.4% during this period, property crime increased 1.1%. Total property crimes per 100,000 people were lower than the national average in 2008.[224]

According to Uniform Crime Report statistics compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in 2010, there were 5,616 violent crimes and 30,753 property crimes. Of these, the violent crimes consisted of forcible rapes, 73 robberies and 170 aggravated assaults, while 6,387 burglaries, 17,977 larceny-thefts, 6,389 motor vehicle thefts and 155 acts of arson defined the property offenses.[225] In 2013, San Diego had the lowest murder rate of the ten largest cities in the United States.[226]

Education

Primary and secondary schools

Public schools in San Diego are operated by independent school districts. The majority of the public schools in the city are served by the San Diego Unified School District, the second-largest school district in California, which includes 11 K–8 schools, 107 elementary schools, 24 middle schools, 13 atypical and alternative schools, 28 high schools, and 45 charter schools.[227]

Several adjacent school districts which are headquartered outside the city limits serve some schools within the city; these include the Poway Unified School District, Del Mar Union School District, San Dieguito Union High School District, and Sweetwater Union High School District. In addition, there are a number of private schools in the city.

Colleges and universities

 
San Diego State University's Hepner Hall

According to education rankings released by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2017, 44.4% of San Diegans (city, not county) ages 25 and older hold bachelor's degrees, compared to 30.9% in the United States as a whole. The census ranks the city as the ninth-most educated city in the United States, based on these figures.[228]

The largest university in the area is the University of California, San Diego (UC San Diego). The university is the southernmost campus of the University of California system and is the second largest employer in the city. It is the only university in the city that is classified "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity", and it has the 7th largest research expenditure in the country.[229]

Other public colleges and universities in the city include San Diego State University (SDSU) and the San Diego Community College District, which includes San Diego City College, San Diego Mesa College, and San Diego Miramar College.

Private non-profit colleges and universities in the city include the University of San Diego (USD), Point Loma Nazarene University (PLNU), National University's San Diego campus, University of Redlands' School of Business San Diego campus, Brandman University's San Diego campus, San Diego Christian College, and John Paul the Great Catholic University. For-profit institutions include Alliant International University (AIU), California International Business University (CIBU), California College San Diego, Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising's San Diego campus, NewSchool of Architecture and Design, Platt College, Southern States University (SSU), UEI College, and Woodbury University School of Architecture's satellite campus.

There is one medical school in the city, the UC San Diego School of Medicine. There are three ABA accredited law schools in the city, which include California Western School of Law, Thomas Jefferson School of Law, and University of San Diego School of Law. There is also one law school, Western Sierra Law School, not accredited by the ABA.

Libraries

 
UC San Diego's Geisel Library, named for Theodor Seuss Geisel ("Dr. Seuss")

The city-run San Diego Public Library system is headquartered downtown and has 36 branches throughout the city.[230] The newest location is in Skyline Hills, which broke ground in 2015.[231] The libraries have had reduced operating hours since 2003 due to the city's financial problems. In 2006 the city increased spending on libraries by $2.1 million.[232] A new nine-story Central Library on Park Boulevard at J Street opened on September 30, 2013.[233]

In addition to the municipal public library system, there are nearly two dozen libraries open to the public run by other governmental agencies, and by schools, colleges, and universities.[234] Noteworthy are the Malcolm A. Love Library at San Diego State University, and the Geisel Library at the University of California, San Diego.

Culture

Many popular museums, such as the San Diego Museum of Art, the San Diego Natural History Museum, the Museum of Us, the Museum of Photographic Arts, and the San Diego Air & Space Museum, are located in Balboa Park, which is also the location of the San Diego Zoo. The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD) is located in La Jolla and has a branch located at the Santa Fe Depot downtown. The downtown branch consists of two buildings on two opposite streets. The Columbia district downtown is home to historic ship exhibits belonging to the San Diego Maritime Museum, headlined by the Star of India, as well as the unrelated San Diego Aircraft Carrier Museum featuring the USS Midway aircraft carrier.

The San Diego Symphony at Symphony Towers performs on a regular basis; from 2004 to 2017, its director was Jahja Ling. The San Diego Opera at Civic Center Plaza, directed by David Bennett. Old Globe Theatre at Balboa Park produces about 15 plays and musicals annually. The La Jolla Playhouse at UCSD is directed by Christopher Ashley. Both the Old Globe Theatre and the La Jolla Playhouse have produced the world premieres of plays and musicals that have gone on to win Tony Awards[235] or nominations[236] on Broadway. The Joan B. Kroc Theatre at Kroc Center's Performing Arts Center is a 600-seat state-of-the-art theater that hosts music, dance, and theater performances. The San Diego Repertory Theatre at the Lyceum Theatres in Westfield Horton Plaza produces a variety of plays and musicals. Hundreds of movies and a dozen TV shows have been filmed in San Diego, a tradition going back as far as 1898.[237]

Sports

 
Petco Park, home of the Padres since 2004

San Diego is home to one major professional sports team, Major League Baseball (MLB)'s San Diego Padres. The area is home to several other highest-level professional teams, minor league teams, semi-pro and amateur teams, and college athletics teams.

The region has previously hosted the National Football League (NFL)'s Chargers and the National Basketball Association (NBA)'s Rockets and Clippers, all three of which relocated from the San Diego area (Chargers and Clippers going to the Los Angeles area, and Rockets going to Houston) due to a combination of ownership and stadium/arena issues. San Diego has additionally been the past home of two other defunct major professional teams: the San Diego Conquistadors/Sails, which competed in the American Basketball Association (ABA) for four seasons before folding less than a year prior to the ABA–NBA merger of 1976, and the San Diego Mariners, which played three seasons in the World Hockey Association (WHA) before folding less than two years before the NHLWHA merger of 1979.

Highest-level professional teams

The following teams compete at their sport's highest level of domestic competition

Bold indicates major professional league team

Italic indicates semi-pro or professional-level club team (highest competitive level leagues of sports with no fully-professional domestic competition)

Club Sport Since League Home venue Attendance[d] Titles
San Diego Padres Baseball 1936[e]
1969[f]
Major League Baseball (MLB) Petco Park 36,931 (2022)[238]
San Diego Wave FC Soccer (women's) 2022 National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) Snapdragon Stadium[g] 8,172 (2022)[240]
San Diego Seals Lacrosse 2018 National Lacrosse League (NLL) Pechanga Arena 5,730 (2022)
San Diego Legion Rugby 2018 Major League Rugby (MLR) Snapdragon Stadium[h] 3,043 (2019)
San Diego Sockers Indoor soccer 1978[i]
2009
Major Arena Soccer League (MASL) Pechanga Arena[j] 2,746 (2019–20) 16[k]
San Diego Strike Force Indoor football 2019[l] Indoor Football League (IFL) Pechanga Arena 1,734 (2019)
San Diego Aviators Tennis 2014[m] World TeamTennis (WTT) Omni La Costa Court 1[n]
San Diego Growlers Ultimate 2015 American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL) varies
San Diego Super Bloom Ultimate (women's) 2022 Western Ultimate League (WUL) varies
San Diego Surfers Rugby (women's) 1975[o]
2011
Women's Premier League Rugby (WPL) Robb Athletic Field
(Ocean Beach)
2[p]
San Diego Lions Australian football 1997 United States Australian Football League (USAFL) varies 2[q]
San Diego Yacht Club Sailing 1886 America's Cup[r] San Diego Bay 3[s]

Minor league professional teams

The following teams compete below their sport's highest level of domestic competition

College athletics

The San Diego State Aztecs (MW), the San Diego Toreros (WCC), and the UC San Diego Tritons (BWC) are NCAA Division I teams. The Cal State San Marcos Cougars (CCAA) and Point Loma Sea Lions (PacWest) are members of NCAA Division II, while the San Diego Christian Hawks (GSAC) and Saint Katherine Firebirds (CalPac) are members of the NAIA.

Club University Founding Affiliation Enrollment League Primary conference
San Diego State Aztecs San Diego State University 1897 Public (California State University 35,723[244] NCAA Division I (FBS) Mountain West Conference
San Diego Toreros University of San Diego 1949 Private (Roman Catholic) 8,815[245] NCAA Division I (FCS) West Coast Conference
UC San Diego Tritons University of California, San Diego 1960 Public (University of California) 42,968[246] NCAA Division I Big West Conference
Cal State San Marcos Cougars California State University San Marcos 1989 Public (California State University 14,311[247] NCAA Division II California Collegiate Athletic Association
Point Loma Sea Lions Point Loma Nazarene University 1902 Private (Church of the Nazarene) 3,179[248] NCAA Division II Pacific West Conference
San Diego Christian Hawks San Diego Christian College 1970 Private (Evangelical) 512 NAIA Golden State Athletic Conference
Saint Katherine Firebirds University of Saint Katherine 2011 Private (Eastern Orthodox) 264 NAIA California Pacific Conference

Annual sports events

San Diego has hosted numerous other major sports events. College football's annual bowl game, the Holiday Bowl, is held in the city. The annual Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament (formerly the San Diego Open and Buick Invitational) on the PGA Tour occurs at Torrey Pines Golf Course. This course was also the site of the 2008 U.S. Open Golf Championship. Soccer, American football, and track and field are also played in Balboa Stadium, the city's first stadium, which was constructed in 1914.[249]

The San Diego Yacht Club hosted the America's Cup yacht races three times during the period 1988 to 1995. The amateur beach sport Over-the-line was invented in San Diego,[250] and the annual world Over-the-line championships are held at Mission Bay every year.[251]

Media

Published within the city are the daily newspaper, The San Diego Union Tribune and its online portal of the same name,[252] and the alternative newsweeklies, the San Diego CityBeat and San Diego Reader. Times of San Diego is a free online newspaper covering news in the metropolitan area. Voice of San Diego is a non-profit online news outlet covering government, politics, education, neighborhoods, and the arts. The San Diego Daily Transcript is a business-oriented online newspaper.

San Diego is also the headquarters of national far-right cable TV channel One America News Network (OANN), which was founded in 2013 and is owned by Herring Networks. The network gained notoriety for being ardent supporters of Donald Trump and providing a platform for right-wing conspiracy theories.

San Diego led U.S. local markets with 69.6 percent broadband penetration in 2004 according to Nielsen//NetRatings.[253]

San Diego's first television station was KFMB, which began broadcasting on May 16, 1949.[254] Since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) licensed seven television stations in Los Angeles, two VHF channels were available for San Diego because of its relative proximity to the larger city. In 1952, however, the FCC began licensing UHF channels, making it possible for cities such as San Diego to acquire more stations. Stations based in Mexico (with ITU prefixes of XE and XH) also serve the San Diego market. Television stations today include XHCPDE 11 (Canal Once (Mexico)), XETV 6 (Canal 5/Nueve), KFMB 8 (CBS, with The CW/MNTV on DT2), KGTV 10 (ABC), XEWT 12 (Televisa Regional), KPBS 15 (PBS), KBNT-CD 17 (Univision), XHTIT-TDT 21 (Azteca 7), XHJK-TDT 1 (Azteca Uno), XHAS 33 (Azteca America), K35DG-D 35 (UCSD-TV), KDTF-LD 36 (Unimás), KNSD 39 (NBC), KUAN-LD 48 (Telemundo), KSEX-CD 42 (Infomercials), XHBJ-TDT 45 (Canal 6 (Mexico)), XHDTV 49 (Milenio Televisión), KUSI 51 (Independent), XHUAA-TDT 19 (Canal de las Estrellas), and KSWB-TV 69 (Fox). San Diego has an 80.6 percent cable penetration rate.[255]

Due to the ratio of U.S. and Mexican-licensed stations, San Diego is the largest media market in the United States that is legally unable to support a television station duopoly between two full-power stations under FCC regulations, which disallow duopolies in metropolitan areas with fewer than nine full-power television stations and require that there be eight unique station owners that remain once a duopoly is formed (there are only seven full-power stations on the California side of the San Diego-Tijuana market).[256] Though the E. W. Scripps Company owns KGTV and KZSD-LP, they are not considered a duopoly under the FCC's legal definition as common ownership between full-power and low-power television stations in the same market is permitted regardless to the number of stations licensed to the area. As a whole, the Mexico side of the San Diego-Tijuana market has two duopolies and one triopoly (Entravision Communications owns both XHAS-TV and XHDTV-TV, Azteca owns XHJK-TV and XHTIT-TV, and Grupo Televisa owns XHUAA-TV and XEWT-TV along with being the license holder for XETV-TV, which was formerly managed by California-based subsidiary Bay City Television).

San Diego's television market is limited to only San Diego County. The Imperial Valley, including El Centro, is in the Yuma, Arizona television market while neighboring Orange and Riverside counties are part of the Los Angeles market. (Sometimes in the past, a missing network affiliate in the Imperial Valley would be available on cable TV from San Diego.) As a result, San Diego is the largest single-county media market in the United States.

The radio stations in San Diego include nationwide broadcaster iHeartMedia; Entercom Communications, Local Media San Diego, and many other smaller stations and networks. Stations include: KOGO AM 600, KGB AM 760, KCEO AM 1000, KCBQ AM 1170, K-Praise, KLSD AM 1360, KFSD 1450 AM, KPBS-FM 89.5, Channel 933, Star 94.1, FM 94/9, FM News and Talk 95.7, Q96 96.1, KyXy 96.5, Free Radio San Diego (AKA Pirate Radio San Diego) 96.9FM FRSD, KWFN 97.3, KXSN 98.1, Big-FM 100.7, 101.5 KGB-FM, KLVJ 102.1, KSON 103.7, Rock 105.3, and another Pirate Radio station at 106.9FM, as well as a number of local Spanish-language radio stations.

Infrastructure

Utilities

Water is supplied to residents by the Water Department of the City of San Diego. The city receives most of its water from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.

Gas and electric utilities are provided by San Diego Gas & Electric, a division of Sempra Energy.

Street lights

In the mid-20th century the city had mercury vapor street lamps. In 1978, the city decided to replace them with more efficient sodium vapor lamps. This triggered an outcry from astronomers at Palomar Observatory 60 miles (100 km) north of the city, concerned that the new lamps would increase light pollution and hinder astronomical observation.[257] The city altered its lighting regulations to limit light pollution within 30 miles (50 km) of Palomar.[258]

In 2011, the city announced plans to upgrade 80% of its street lighting to new energy-efficient lights that use induction technology, a modified form of fluorescent lamp producing a broader spectrum than sodium vapor lamps. The new system is predicted to save $2.2 million per year in energy and maintenance.[259] The city stated the changes would "make our neighborhoods safer."[259] They also increase light pollution.[260]

In 2014, San Diego announced plans to become the first U.S. city to install cyber-controlled street lighting, using an "intelligent" lighting system to control 3,000 LED street lights.[261]

Transportation

 
I-5 looking south toward downtown San Diego

With the automobile being the primary means of transportation for over 80 percent of residents, San Diego is served by a network of freeways and highways. This includes Interstate 5, which runs south to Tijuana and north to Los Angeles; Interstate 8, which runs east to Imperial County and the Arizona Sun Corridor; Interstate 15, which runs northeast through the Inland Empire to Las Vegas and Salt Lake City; and Interstate 805, which splits from I-5 near the Mexican border and rejoins I-5 at Sorrento Valley.

Major state highways include SR 94, which connects downtown with I-805, I-15 and East County; SR 163, which connects downtown with the northeast part of the city, intersects I-805 and merges with I-15 at Miramar; SR 52, which connects La Jolla with East County through Santee and SR 125; SR 56, which connects I-5 with I-15 through Carmel Valley and Rancho Peñasquitos; SR 75, which spans San Diego Bay as the San Diego-Coronado Bridge, and also passes through South San Diego as Palm Avenue; and SR 905, which connects I-5 and I-805 to the Otay Mesa Port of Entry.

The stretch of SR 163 that passes through Balboa Park is San Diego's oldest freeway, and has been called one of America's most beautiful parkways.[262]

 
View of Coronado and San Diego from the air

San Diego's roadway system provides an extensive network of cycle routes. Its dry and mild climate makes cycling a convenient year-round option; however, the city's hilly terrain and long average trip distances make cycling less practicable. Older and denser neighborhoods around the downtown tend to be oriented to utility cycling. This is partly because of the grid street patterns now absent in newer developments farther from the urban core, where suburban style arterial roads are much more common. As a result, the majority of cycling is recreational. In 2006, San Diego was rated the best city (with a population over 1 million) for cycling in the U.S.[263]

San Diego is served by the San Diego Trolley light rail system,[264] by the SDMTS bus system,[265] private jitneys in some neighborhoods,[266] and by Coaster[267] and Amtrak Pacific Surfliner[268] commuter rail; northern San Diego county is also served by the Sprinter light rail line.[269] The trolley primarily serves downtown and surrounding urban communities, Mission Valley, east county, and coastal south bay. A mid-coast extension of the Trolley operates from Old Town to University City and the University of California, San Diego along the I-5 Freeway since November 2021. The Amtrak and Coaster trains currently run along the coastline and connect San Diego with Los Angeles, Orange County, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Ventura via Metrolink and the Pacific Surfliner. There are two Amtrak stations in San Diego, in Old Town and the Santa Fe Depot downtown. San Diego transit information about public transportation and commuting is available on the Web and by dialing "511" from any phone in the area.[270]

 
Cross Border Xpress bridge from the terminal in San Diego on the right to the main terminal of Tijuana Airport on the left

The city has two major commercial airports within or near its city limits. Downtown San Diego International Airport (SAN), also known as Lindbergh Field, is the busiest single-runway airport in the United States.[271] It served over 24 million passengers in 2018, and is dealing with larger numbers every year.[272] It is located on San Diego Bay, three miles (4.8 km) from downtown, and maintains scheduled flights to the rest of the United States (including Hawaii), as well as to Canada, Germany, Mexico, Japan, and the United Kingdom. It is operated by an independent agency, the San Diego Regional Airport Authority. Tijuana International Airport has a terminal within the city limits in the Otay Mesa district connected to the rest of the airport in Tijuana, Mexico, via the Cross Border Xpress cross-border footbridge. It is the primary airport for flights to the rest of Mexico, and offers connections via Mexico City to the rest of Latin America. In addition, the city has two general-aviation airports, Montgomery Field (MYF) and Brown Field (SDM).[273]

Recent regional transportation projects have sought to mitigate congestion, including improvements to local freeways, expansion of San Diego Airport, and doubling the capacity of the cruise ship terminal. Freeway projects included expansion of Interstates 5 and 805 around "The Merge" where these two freeways meet, as well as expansion of Interstate 15 through North County, which includes new high-occupancy-vehicle (HOV) "managed lanes". A tollway (the southern portion of SR 125, known as the South Bay Expressway) connects SR 54 and Otay Mesa, near the Mexican border. According to an assessment in 2007, 37 percent of city streets were in acceptable condition. However, the proposed budget fell $84.6 million short of bringing streets up to an acceptable level.[274] Expansion at the port has included a second cruise terminal on Broadway Pier, opened in 2010. Airport projects include expansion of Terminal Two.[275]

Notable people

Sister cities

San Diego's sister cities are:[276]

Notes

  1. ^ London-Gatwick and Mumbai International, which both handle more traffic, each have two operational runways, though only one can be used at a time because of aircraft separation requirements (leading to these airports frequently being misleadingly referred to as "single-runway airports").
  2. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  3. ^ Official precipitation records for San Diego were kept at the Weather Bureau Office in downtown from October 1850 to December 1859 at the Mission San Diego and from November 1871 to June 1939 and a variety of buildings at downtown, and at San Diego Int'l (Lindbergh Field) since July 1939.[91] Temperature records, however, only date from October 1874. For more information on data coverage, see ThreadEx
  4. ^ a b Average home game attendance
  5. ^ Original founding as a Minor League Baseball (MiLB) team: San Diego Padres (PCL)
  6. ^ First season in San Diego in Major League Baseball
  7. ^ Wave FC played at Torero Stadium prior to September 2022.[239]
  8. ^ The Legion move to Snapdragon Stadium (soccer/rugby capacity 32,000) in 2023.[241]
  9. ^ Original founding. Current team is the 3rd San Diego Sockers iteration of highest-level professional indoor soccer, revived in 2009. Previous teams: San Diego Sockers (1978–1996) and San Diego Sockers (2001–2004)
  10. ^ The Sockers plan to move to Frontwave Arena (capacity 6,367), a newly constructed arena in the suburb of Oceanside in 2023[242]
  11. ^ Sockers franchise includes titles won by its original iteration, San Diego Sockers (1978–1996), in preceding top professional indoor soccer leagues. The franchise's titles by league are as follows:
    MASL: 6 (2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2021, 2022)
    MISL: 8 (1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992)
    NASL Indoor: 2 (1982, 1984)
  12. ^ Team was temporarily dormant for 2021 season due to effects of COVID-19 pandemic
  13. ^ Franchise was founded in 1995 in New York City, relocated to San Diego in 2014
  14. ^ 2016
    The city's previous WTT franchise, the San Diego Buds, additionally won 2 titles (1984 & 1985)
    Count does not include 2 titles (2005 & 2008) won by the franchise as the New York Sportimes before relocating from New York City to San Diego
  15. ^ Original founding as an amateur club
  16. ^ 2016, 2018
    In addition to WPL championships, the team was won several club championships:
    USA Rugby Club 7s: 4 (2012, 2014, 2018, 2019)
  17. ^ 2001, 2006
  18. ^ Non-annual competition, no fixed schedule- matches held years apart on dates agreed upon between the defender and the challenger
  19. ^ 1987, 1988, 1992
  20. ^ Competition tier (parentheses indicate higher-level league(s)
  21. ^ Original founding. Current team is the 4th San Diego Gulls iteration of minor league professional ice hockey, revived in 2015. Previous teams: San Diego Gulls (1966–1974), San Diego Gulls (1990–1995) & San Diego Gulls (1995–2006)
  22. ^ Current AHL franchise was founded in 2000 as the Norfolk Admirals, later relocating to San Diego and assuming the Gulls name in 2015
  23. ^ Team was dormant for 2019–20 & 2021 seasons
  24. ^ 2019, 2022
  25. ^ Original founding as Albion SC youth academy
  26. ^ San Diego 1904 FC competed in the NISA from 2019–2021 before being absorbed into Albion San Diego in December 2021
  27. ^ First season as Albion San Diego following merger absorbing San Diego 1904 FC

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diego, this, article, about, city, california, other, uses, disambiguation, diegan, redirects, here, historical, train, diegan, train, spanish, ˈdjeɣo, spanish, saint, didacus, city, pacific, ocean, coast, southern, california, located, immediately, adjacent, . This article is about the city in California For other uses see San Diego disambiguation San Diegan redirects here For the historical train see San Diegan train San Diego ˌ s ae n d i ˈ eɪ ɡ oʊ SAN dee AY goh Spanish san ˈdjeɣo Spanish for Saint Didacus is a city on the Pacific Ocean coast of Southern California located immediately adjacent to the Mexico United States border With a 2020 population of 1 386 932 9 it is the eighth most populous city in the United States and the seat of San Diego County the fifth most populous county in the United States with 3 286 069 estimated residents as of 2021 13 The city is known for its mild year round climate natural deep water harbor extensive beaches and parks long association with the United States Navy and recent emergence as a healthcare and biotechnology development center San Diego is the second largest city in the state of California after Los Angeles San DiegoCityFrom top left to right Downtown La Jolla Casa de Balboa Old Point Loma lighthouse and Presidio Park FlagSealNickname s America s Finest City Birthplace of California City in Motion 1 Motto Semper Vigilans Latin for Ever Vigilant Location within San Diego CountySan DiegoLocation within CaliforniaShow map of CaliforniaSan DiegoLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 32 42 54 N 117 09 45 W 32 71500 N 117 16250 W 32 71500 117 16250 Coordinates 32 42 54 N 117 09 45 W 32 71500 N 117 16250 W 32 71500 117 16250CountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaCountySan Diego CountyEstablishedJuly 16 1769IncorporatedMarch 27 1850 2 Named forSaint Didacus of AlcalaGovernment TypeStrong Mayor 3 BodySan Diego City Council MayorTodd Gloria D City AttorneyMara Elliott D 4 City Council 5 List Joe LaCavaD District 1 Jennifer CampbellD District 2 Stephen WhitburnD District 3 Monica MontgomeryD District 4 Marni von WilpertD District 5 Chris CateR District 6 Raul CampilloD District 7 Vivian MorenoD District 8 Sean Elo RiveraD District 9 State Assembly MembersList Brian MaienscheinD 77th District Chris WardD 78th District Akilah WeberD 79th District David AlvarezD 80th District State SenatorsList Brian JonesR 38th District Toni AtkinsD 39th District Ben HuesoD 40th DistrictArea 6 Total372 42 sq mi 964 56 km2 Land325 88 sq mi 844 02 km2 Water46 54 sq mi 120 54 km2 12 68 Elevation 7 62 ft 19 m Highest elevation 8 1 591 ft 485 m Lowest elevation0 ft 0 m Population 2020 9 Total1 386 932 Estimate 2021 9 1 381 611 Rank8th in the United States2nd in California Density4 255 96 sq mi 1 643 25 km2 Urban 10 3 070 300 US 15th Urban density4 550 5 sq mi 1 756 9 km2 Metro 11 3 298 634 US 17th DemonymSan DieganTime zoneUTC 08 00 PST Summer DST UTC 07 00 PDT ZIP Codes 12 92101 92124 92126 92132 92134 92140 92142 92143 92145 92147 92149 92155 92158 92161 92163 92165 92179 92182 92186 92187 92190 92199Area codes619 858FIPS code06 66000GNIS feature IDs1661377 2411782Websitewww wbr sandiego wbr govHistorically home to the Kumeyaay San Diego is frequently referred to as the Birthplace of California as it was the first site visited and settled by Europeans on what is now the U S west coast 14 Upon landing in San Diego Bay in 1542 Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo claimed the area for Spain forming the basis for the settlement of Alta California 200 years later The Presidio and Mission San Diego de Alcala founded in 1769 formed the first European settlement in what is now California In 1821 San Diego became part of the newly declared Mexican Empire which reformed as the First Mexican Republic two years later California became part of the U S in 1848 following the Mexican American War and was admitted to the union as a state in 1850 San Diego s main economic engines are military and defense related activities tourism international trade research and manufacturing The city is the economic center of the San Diego Tijuana conurbation the second most populous transborder metropolitan area in the Western Hemisphere after Detroit Windsor home to an estimated 4 922 723 people as of 2012 15 The primary border crossing between San Diego and Tijuana the San Ysidro Port of Entry is the busiest international land border crossing in the world outside of Asia fourth busiest overall The city s airport San Diego International Airport is the busiest single runway airport in the world a 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre colonial period 1 2 Spanish period 1 3 Mexican period 1 4 American period 2 Geography 2 1 Communities and neighborhoods 2 2 Cityscape 2 3 Climate 2 4 Ecology 3 Demographics 4 Economy 4 1 Defense and military 4 2 Tourism 4 3 International trade 4 4 Companies 4 5 Top employers 4 6 Real estate 5 Government 5 1 Local government 5 2 State and federal representation 5 3 Election history 5 4 Major scandals 5 5 Crime 6 Education 6 1 Primary and secondary schools 6 2 Colleges and universities 6 3 Libraries 7 Culture 8 Sports 8 1 Highest level professional teams 8 2 Minor league professional teams 8 3 College athletics 8 4 Annual sports events 9 Media 10 Infrastructure 10 1 Utilities 10 2 Street lights 10 3 Transportation 11 Notable people 12 Sister cities 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 General sources 15 External linksHistory EditSee also History of San Diego For a chronological guide see Timeline of San Diego Pre colonial period Edit The Kumeyaay referred to by the Spanish as the Diegueno have inhabited the area of San Diego for thousands of years What has been referred to as the San Dieguito complex was established in the area at least 9 000 years ago 17 The Kumeyaay may have culturally evolved from this complex or migrated into the area around 1000 C E 18 Archaeologist Malcolm Rogers hypothesized that the early cultures of San Diego were separate from the Kumeyaay yet this claim is disputed with others noting that it does not account for cultural evolution 19 Rogers later reevaluated his claims yet they were influential in shaping historical tellings of early San Diego history 19 The Kumeyaay established villages scattered across the region including the village of Kosa aay which was the Kumeyaay village that the future settlement of San Diego would stem from in today s Old Town 20 21 The village of Kosa aay was made up of thirty to forty families living in pyramid shaped housing structures and was supported by a freshwater spring from the hillsides 20 Spanish period Edit Portuguese explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo landing in San Diego Bay in 1542 claiming California for the Spanish Empire The first European to visit the region was explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo sailing under the flag of Castile but possibly born in Portugal Sailing his flagship San Salvador from Navidad New Spain Cabrillo claimed the bay for the Spanish Empire in 1542 and named the site San Miguel 22 In November 1602 Sebastian Vizcaino was sent to map the California coast Arriving on his flagship San Diego Vizcaino surveyed the harbor and what are now Mission Bay and Point Loma and named the area for the Catholic Saint Didacus a Spaniard more commonly known as San Diego de Alcala On November 12 1602 the first Christian religious service of record in Alta California was conducted by Friar Antonio de la Ascension a member of Vizcaino s expedition to celebrate the feast day of San Diego 23 The permanent European colonization of both California and San Diego began in 1769 with the arrival of four contingents of Spaniards from New Spain and the Baja California peninsula Two seaborne parties reached San Diego Bay the San Carlos under Vicente Vila and including as notable members the engineer and cartographer Miguel Costanso and the soldier and future governor Pedro Fages and the San Antonio under Juan Perez An initial overland expedition to San Diego from the south was led by the soldier Fernando Rivera and included the Franciscan missionary explorer and chronicler Juan Crespi followed by a second party led by the designated governor Gaspar de Portola and including the mission president and now saint Junipero Serra 24 In May 1769 Portola established the Fort Presidio of San Diego on a hill near the San Diego River above the Kumeyaay village of Cosoy 20 which would later become incorporated into the Spanish settlement 21 making it the first settlement by Europeans in what is now the state of California In July of the same year Mission San Diego de Alcala was founded by Franciscan friars under Serra 25 26 The mission became a site for a Kumeyaay revolt in 1775 which forced the mission to relocate six miles 10 km up the San Diego River 27 By 1797 the mission boasted the largest native population in Alta California with over 1 400 neophytes living in and around the mission proper 28 Mission San Diego was the southern anchor in Alta California of the historic mission trail El Camino Real Both the Presidio and the Mission are National Historic Landmarks 29 30 Mexican period Edit Jose Maria Estudillo served as commandant of the Presidio of San Diego and founded the Estudillo family a powerful San Diego clan of Californios In 1821 Mexico won its independence from Spain and San Diego became part of the Mexican territory of Alta California In 1822 Mexico began its attempt to extend its authority over the coastal territory of Alta California The fort on Presidio Hill was gradually abandoned while the town of San Diego grew up on the level land below Presidio Hill The Mission was secularized by the Mexican government in 1834 and most of the Mission lands were granted to former soldiers The 432 residents of the town petitioned the governor to form a pueblo and Juan Maria Osuna was elected the first alcalde municipal magistrate defeating Pio Pico in the vote Beyond the town Mexican land grants expanded the number of California ranchos that modestly added to the local economy See List of pre statehood mayors of San Diego However San Diego had been losing population throughout the 1830s due to increasing tension between the settlers and the indigenous Kumeyaay and in 1838 the town lost its pueblo status because its size dropped to an estimated 100 to 150 residents 31 The ranchos in the San Diego region would face Kumeyaay raids in the late 1830s and the town itself would face raids in the 1840s 32 Americans gained an increased awareness of California and its commercial possibilities from the writings of two countrymen involved in the often officially forbidden to foreigners but economically significant hide and tallow trade where San Diego was a major port and the only one with an adequate harbor William Shaler s Journal of a Voyage Between China and the North Western Coast of America Made in 1804 and Richard Henry Dana s more substantial and convincing account of his 1834 36 voyage the classic Two Years Before the Mast 33 The 1846 Battle of San Pasqual was a decisive battle between American and Californio forces during the U S Conquest of California In 1846 the United States went to war against Mexico and sent a naval and land expedition to conquer Alta California At first they had an easy time of it capturing the major ports including San Diego but the Californios in southern Alta California struck back Following the successful revolt in Los Angeles the American garrison at San Diego was driven out without firing a shot in early October 1846 Mexican partisans held San Diego for three weeks until October 24 1846 when the Americans recaptured it For the next several months the Americans were blockaded inside the pueblo Skirmishes occurred daily and snipers shot into the town every night The Californios drove cattle away from the pueblo hoping to starve the Americans and their Californio supporters out On December 1 the American garrison learned that the dragoons of General Stephen W Kearney were at Warner s Ranch Commodore Robert F Stockton sent a mounted force of fifty under Captain Archibald Gillespie to march north to meet him Their joint command of 150 men returning to San Diego encountered about 93 Californios under Andres Pico In the ensuing Battle of San Pasqual fought in the San Pasqual Valley which is now part of the city of San Diego the Americans suffered their worst losses in the campaign Subsequently a column led by Lieutenant Gray arrived from San Diego rescuing Kearny s battered and blockaded command 34 Stockton and Kearny went on to recover Los Angeles and force the capitulation of Alta California with the Treaty of Cahuenga on January 13 1847 As a result of the Mexican American War of 1846 48 the territory of Alta California including San Diego was ceded to the United States by Mexico under the terms of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 The Mexican negotiators of that treaty tried to retain San Diego as part of Mexico but the Americans insisted that San Diego was for every commercial purpose of nearly equal importance to us with that of San Francisco and the Mexican American border was eventually established to be one league south of the southernmost point of San Diego Bay so as to include the entire bay within the United States 35 American period Edit The namesake of Horton Plaza Alonzo Horton developed Downtown San Diego The state of California was admitted to the United States in 1850 That same year San Diego was designated the seat of the newly established County of San Diego and was incorporated as a city Joshua H Bean the last alcalde of San Diego was elected the first mayor Two years later the city was bankrupt 36 the California legislature revoked the city s charter and placed it under control of a board of trustees where it remained until 1889 A city charter was reestablished in 1889 and today s city charter was adopted in 1931 37 The original town of San Diego was located at the foot of Presidio Hill in the area which is now Old Town San Diego State Historic Park The location was not ideal being several miles away from navigable water at its port at La Playa In 1850 William Heath Davis promoted a new development by the bay shore called New San Diego several miles south of the original settlement however for several decades the new development consisted only of a pier a few houses and an Army depot for the support of Fort Yuma After 1854 the fort became supplied by sea and by steamboats on the Colorado River and the depot fell into disuse From 1857 to 1860 San Diego became the western terminus of the San Antonio San Diego Mail Line the earliest overland stagecoach and mail operation from the Eastern United States to California coming from Texas through New Mexico Territory in less than 30 days 38 In the late 1860s Alonzo Horton promoted a move to the bayside area which he called New Town and which became Downtown San Diego Horton promoted the area heavily and people and businesses began to relocate to New Town because its location on San Diego Bay was convenient to shipping New Town soon eclipsed the original settlement known to this day as Old Town and became the economic and governmental heart of the city 39 Still San Diego remained a relative backwater town until the arrival of a railroad connection in 1878 In 1884 1886 John J Montgomery made the first controlled flights by an American in a heavier than air unpowered glider just south of San Diego at Otay Mesa helping to pioneer a new science of aerodynamics In 1912 San Diego was the site of a free speech fight between the Industrial Workers of the World and the city government who passed an ordinance forbidding the freedom of speech along an area of Soapbox Row that led to civil disobedience vigilantism police violence the abduction of Emma Goldman s husband Ben Reitman and multiple riots 40 41 San Diego s proximity to Tijuana during the Mexican Revolution made this one of the most significant free speech fights during the Wobbly era 42 In 1916 the neighborhood of Stingaree the original home of San Diego s first Chinatown and Soapbox Row was demolished by anti vice campaigners to make way for the Gaslamp Quarter 43 Balboa Park on the cover of a guidebook for the World Exposition of 1915 In the early part of the 20th century San Diego hosted the World s Fair twice the Panama California Exposition 1915 and the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935 Both expositions were held in Balboa Park and many of the Spanish Baroque style buildings that were built for those expositions remain to this day as central features of the park The buildings were intended to be temporary structures but most remained in continuous use until they progressively fell into disrepair Most were eventually rebuilt using castings of the original facades to retain the architectural style 44 The menagerie of exotic animals featured at the 1915 exposition provided the basis for the San Diego Zoo 45 During the 1950s there was a citywide festival called Fiesta del Pacifico highlighting the area s Spanish and Mexican past 46 In the 2010s there was a proposal for a large scale celebration of the 100th anniversary of Balboa Park but the plans were abandoned when the organization tasked with putting on the celebration went out of business 47 The southern portion of the Point Loma peninsula was set aside for military purposes as early as 1852 Over the next several decades the Army set up a series of coastal artillery batteries and named the area Fort Rosecrans 48 Significant U S Navy presence began in 1901 with the establishment of the Navy Coaling Station in Point Loma and expanded greatly during the 1920s 49 By 1930 the city was host to Naval Base San Diego Naval Training Center San Diego San Diego Naval Hospital Camp Matthews and Camp Kearny now Marine Corps Air Station Miramar The city was also an early center for aviation as early as World War I San Diego was proclaiming itself The Air Capital of the West 50 The city was home to important airplane developers and manufacturers like Ryan Airlines later Ryan Aeronautical founded in 1925 and Consolidated Aircraft later Convair founded in 1923 51 Charles A Lindbergh s plane The Spirit of St Louis was built in San Diego in 1927 by Ryan Airlines 50 During World War II San Diego became a major hub of military and defense activity due to the presence of so many military installations and defense manufacturers The city s population grew rapidly during and after World War II more than doubling between 1930 147 995 and 1950 333 865 52 During the final months of the war the Japanese had a plan to target multiple U S cities for biological attack starting with San Diego The plan was called Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night and called for kamikaze planes filled with fleas infected with plague Yersinia pestis to crash into civilian population centers in the city hoping to spread plague in the city and effectively kill tens of thousands of civilians The plan was scheduled to launch on September 22 1945 but was not carried out because Japan surrendered five weeks earlier 53 54 55 After World War II the military continued to play a major role in the local economy but post Cold War cutbacks took a heavy toll on the local defense and aerospace industries The resulting downturn led San Diego leaders to seek to diversify the city s economy by focusing on research and science as well as tourism 56 From the start of the 20th century through the 1970s the American tuna fishing fleet and tuna canning industry were based in San Diego the tuna capital of the world 57 San Diego s first tuna cannery was founded in 1911 and by the mid 1930s the canneries employed more than 1 000 people A large fishing fleet supported the canneries mostly staffed by immigrant fishermen from Japan and later from the Portuguese Azores and Italy whose influence is still felt in neighborhoods like Little Italy and Point Loma 58 59 Due to rising costs and foreign competition the last of the canneries closed in the early 1980s 60 Downtown San Diego was in decline in the 1960s and 1970s but experienced some urban renewal since the early 1980s including the opening of Horton Plaza the revival of the Gaslamp Quarter and the construction of the San Diego Convention Center Petco Park opened in 2004 61 Outside of downtown San Diego annexed large swaths of land and for suburban expansion to the north and control of the San Ysidro Port of Entry As the Cold War ended the military shrank and so did defense spending San Diego has since become a center of the emerging biotech industry and is home to telecommunications giant Qualcomm San Diego had also grown in the tourism industry with the popularity of attractions such as the San Diego Zoo SeaWorld San Diego and Legoland California in Carlsbad citation needed Geography EditSee also List of beaches in San Diego California and Parks in San Diego Satellite view of San Diego and Tijuana Mexico According to SDSU professor emeritus Monte Marshall San Diego Bay is the surface expression of a north south trending nested graben The Rose Canyon and Point Loma fault zones are part of the San Andreas Fault system About 40 miles 64 km east of the bay are the Laguna Mountains in the Peninsular Ranges which are part of the backbone of the American continents 62 The city lies on approximately 200 deep canyons and hills separating its mesas creating small pockets of natural open space scattered throughout the city and giving it a hilly geography 63 Traditionally San Diegans have built their homes and businesses on the mesas while leaving the urban canyons relatively wild 64 Thus the canyons give parts of the city a segmented feel creating gaps between otherwise proximate neighborhoods and contributing to a low density car centered environment The San Diego River runs through the middle of San Diego from east to west creating a river valley that serves to divide the city into northern and southern segments During the historic period and presumably earlier as well the river has shifted its flow back and forth between San Diego Bay and Mission Bay and its fresh water was the focus of the earliest Spanish explorers Miguel Costanso a cartographer wrote in 1769 When asked by signs where the watering place was the Indians pointed to a grove which could be seen at a considerable distance to the northeast giving to understand that a river or creek flowed through it and that they would lead our men to it if they would follow 65 66 That river was the San Diego River 65 Several reservoirs and Mission Trails Regional Park also lie between and separate developed areas of the city Mission Valley facing Northwest taken from Arista Street Mission Bay can be seen in the distance Notable peaks within the city limits include Cowles Mountain the highest point in the city at 1 591 feet 485 m 8 Black Mountain at 1 558 feet 475 m and Mount Soledad at 824 feet 251 m The Cuyamaca Mountains and Laguna Mountains rise to the east of the city and beyond the mountains are desert areas The Cleveland National Forest is a half hour drive from downtown San Diego Numerous farms are found in the valleys northeast and southeast of the city In its 2013 ParkScore ranking The Trust for Public Land reported that San Diego had the 9th best park system among the 50 most populous U S cities 67 ParkScore ranks city park systems by a formula that analyzes acreage access and service and investment Communities and neighborhoods Edit Main article List of communities and neighborhoods of San Diego Normal Heights a neighborhood of San Diego The City of San Diego recognizes 52 individual areas as Community Planning Areas 68 Within a given planning area there may be several distinct neighborhoods Altogether the city contains more than 100 identified neighborhoods Downtown San Diego is located on San Diego Bay Balboa Park encompasses several mesas and canyons to the northeast surrounded by older dense urban communities including Hillcrest and North Park To the east and southeast lie City Heights the College Area and Southeast San Diego To the north lies Mission Valley and Interstate 8 The communities north of the valley and freeway and south of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar include Clairemont Kearny Mesa Tierrasanta and Navajo Stretching north from Miramar are the northern suburbs of Mira Mesa Scripps Ranch Rancho Penasquitos and Rancho Bernardo The far northeast portion of the city encompasses Lake Hodges and the San Pasqual Valley which holds an agricultural preserve Carmel Valley and Del Mar Heights occupy the northwest corner of the city To their south are Torrey Pines State Reserve and the business center of the Golden Triangle Further south are the beach and coastal communities of La Jolla Pacific Beach Mission Beach and Ocean Beach Point Loma occupies the peninsula across San Diego Bay from downtown The communities of South San Diego an Exclave such as San Ysidro and Otay Mesa are located next to the Mexico United States border and are physically separated from the rest of the city by the cities of National City and Chula Vista A narrow strip of land at the bottom of San Diego Bay connects these southern neighborhoods with the rest of the city 69 For the most part San Diego neighborhood boundaries tend to be understood by its residents based on geographical boundaries like canyons and street patterns 70 The city recognized the importance of its neighborhoods when it organized its 2008 General Plan around the concept of a City of Villages 71 Cityscape Edit Main article List of tallest buildings in San Diego San Diego skyline seen in January 2021 San Diego was originally centered on the Old Town district but by the late 1860s the focus had shifted to the bayfront in the belief that this new location would increase trade As the New Town present day Downtown waterfront location quickly developed it eclipsed Old Town as the center of San Diego 39 The development of skyscrapers over 300 feet 91 m in San Diego is attributed to the construction of the El Cortez Hotel in 1927 the tallest building in the city from 1927 to 1963 72 As time went on multiple buildings claimed the title of San Diego s tallest skyscraper including the Union Bank of California Building and Symphony Towers Currently the tallest building in San Diego is One America Plaza standing 500 feet 150 m tall which was completed in 1991 73 The downtown skyline contains no super talls as a regulation put in place by the Federal Aviation Administration in the 1970s set a 500 feet 152 m limit on the height of buildings within a one mile 1 6 km radius of the San Diego International Airport 74 An iconic description of the skyline includes its skyscrapers being compared to the tools of a toolbox 75 There are several new high rises under construction including two that exceed 400 feet 122 m in height Climate Edit Main article Climate of San Diego San DiegoClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 2 66 50 2 2 66 52 1 5 67 55 0 7 69 57 0 3 70 60 0 1 72 63 0 1 75 66 0 77 68 0 1 77 66 0 5 75 62 0 8 71 55 1 7 66 50Average max and min temperatures in FPrecipitation totals in inchesSource NOAA 76 Metric conversionJ F M A M J J A S O N D 50 19 10 56 19 11 37 19 13 17 20 14 7 1 21 16 1 3 22 17 2 24 19 0 3 25 20 3 25 19 13 24 16 20 22 13 42 19 10Average max and min temperatures in CPrecipitation totals in mmSan Diego has one of the top ten best climates in the United States according to the Farmers Almanac 77 and has one of the two best summer climates in the country as scored by The Weather Channel 78 Under the Koppen Geiger climate classification system the San Diego area has been variously categorized as having either a semi arid climate BSh in the original classification 79 and BSkn in modified Koppen classification with the n denoting summer fog 80 or a Mediterranean climate 81 Csa 82 San Diego s climate is characterized by warm dry summers and mild winters with most of the annual precipitation falling between December and March The city has a mild climate year round 83 with an average of 201 days above 70 F 21 C and low rainfall 9 13 inches 230 330 mm annually The climate in San Diego like most of Southern California often varies significantly over short geographical distances resulting in microclimates In San Diego this is mostly because of the city s topography the Bay and the numerous hills mountains and canyons Frequently particularly during the May gray June gloom period a thick marine layer cloud cover keeps the air cool and damp within a few miles of the coast but yields to bright cloudless sunshine approximately 5 10 miles 8 16 km inland 84 Sometimes the June gloom lasts into July causing cloudy skies over most of San Diego for the entire day 85 86 Even in the absence of June gloom inland areas experience much more significant temperature variations than coastal areas where the ocean serves as a moderating influence Thus for example downtown San Diego averages January lows of 50 F 10 C and August highs of 78 F 26 C The city of El Cajon just 12 miles 19 km inland from downtown San Diego averages January lows of 42 F 6 C and August highs of 88 F 31 C The average surface temperature of the water at Scripps Pier in the California Current has increased by almost 3 F 1 7 C since 1950 according to scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography 87 Additionally the mean minimum is now above 40 F 4 C putting San Diego in hardiness zone 11 with the last freeze having occurred many decades ago Surfers at Pacific Beach Annual rainfall along the coast averages 10 65 inches 271 mm and the median is 9 6 inches 240 mm 88 The months of December through March supply most of the rain with February the only month averaging 2 inches 51 mm or more The months of May through September tend to be almost completely dry Although there are few wet days per month during the rainy period rainfall can be heavy when it does fall Rainfall is usually greater in the higher elevations of San Diego some of the higher areas can receive 11 15 inches 280 380 mm per year Variability from year to year can be dramatic in the wettest years of 1883 1884 and 1940 1941 more than 24 inches 610 mm fell whilst in the driest years there was as little as 3 2 inches 80 mm The wettest month on record is December 1921 with 9 21 inches 234 mm Snow in the city is so rare that it has been observed only six times in the century and a half that records have been kept In 1949 and 1967 snow stayed on the ground for a few hours in higher locations like Point Loma and La Jolla The other three occasions in 1882 1946 and 1987 involved flurries but no accumulation 89 On February 21 2019 snow fell and accumulated in residential areas of the city but none fell in the downtown area 90 vteClimate data for San Diego Int l Airport 1991 2020 normals b extremes 1874 present c Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 88 31 91 33 99 37 98 37 98 37 101 38 100 38 98 37 111 44 107 42 100 38 88 31 111 44 Mean maximum F C 78 8 26 0 78 6 25 9 80 2 26 8 82 1 27 8 79 3 26 3 79 6 26 4 82 9 28 3 85 2 29 6 90 6 32 6 87 8 31 0 85 4 29 7 77 0 25 0 94 0 34 4 Average high F C 66 4 19 1 66 2 19 0 67 0 19 4 68 8 20 4 69 5 20 8 71 7 22 1 75 3 24 1 77 3 25 2 77 2 25 1 74 6 23 7 70 7 21 5 66 0 18 9 70 9 21 6 Daily mean F C 58 4 14 7 59 0 15 0 60 7 15 9 62 9 17 2 64 8 18 2 67 2 19 6 70 7 21 5 72 4 22 4 71 7 22 1 68 1 20 1 62 7 17 1 57 9 14 4 64 7 18 2 Average low F C 50 3 10 2 51 8 11 0 54 5 12 5 57 1 13 9 60 0 15 6 62 6 17 0 66 1 18 9 67 5 19 7 66 2 19 0 61 5 16 4 54 8 12 7 49 8 9 9 58 5 14 7 Mean minimum F C 43 7 6 5 46 1 7 8 48 7 9 3 51 9 11 1 55 8 13 2 59 3 15 2 63 0 17 2 63 9 17 7 61 8 16 6 55 5 13 1 48 2 9 0 43 0 6 1 42 6 5 9 Record low F C 25 4 34 1 36 2 39 4 45 7 50 10 54 12 54 12 50 10 43 6 36 2 32 0 25 4 Average rainfall inches mm 1 98 50 2 20 56 1 46 37 0 65 17 0 28 7 1 0 05 1 3 0 08 2 0 0 01 0 25 0 12 3 0 0 50 13 0 79 20 1 67 42 9 79 249 Average rainy days 0 01 in 6 5 7 1 6 2 3 8 2 2 0 7 0 7 0 3 0 9 2 4 3 7 5 8 40 3Average relative humidity 63 1 65 7 67 3 67 0 70 6 74 0 74 6 74 1 72 7 69 4 66 3 63 7 69 0Average dew point F C 42 8 6 0 45 3 7 4 47 3 8 5 49 5 9 7 53 1 11 7 57 0 13 9 61 2 16 2 62 4 16 9 60 6 15 9 55 6 13 1 48 6 9 2 43 2 6 2 52 2 11 2 Mean monthly sunshine hours 239 3 227 4 261 0 276 2 250 5 242 4 304 7 295 0 253 3 243 4 230 1 231 3 3 054 6Percent possible sunshine 75 74 70 71 58 57 70 71 68 69 73 74 69Source NOAA sun relative humidity and dew point 1961 1990 92 93 94 Ecology Edit See also California coastal sage and chaparral Coastal canyon in Torrey Pines State Reserve Like much of Southern California the majority of San Diego s current area was originally occupied on the west by coastal sage scrub and on the east by chaparral plant communities made up mostly of drought resistant shrubs 95 The steep and varied topography and proximity to the ocean create a number of different habitats within the city limits including tidal marsh and canyons The chaparral and coastal sage scrub habitats in low elevations along the coast are prone to wildfire and the rates of fire increased in the 20th century due primarily to fires starting near the borders of urban and wild areas 96 San Diego s broad city limits encompass a number of large nature preserves including Torrey Pines State Reserve Los Penasquitos Canyon Preserve and Mission Trails Regional Park Torrey Pines State Reserve and a coastal strip continuing to the north constitute one of only two locations where the rare species of Torrey Pine Pinus torreyana is found 97 San Diego viewed against the Witch Creek Fire smokeDue to the steep topography that prevents or discourages building along with some efforts for preservation there are also a large number of canyons within the city limits that serve as nature preserves including Switzer Canyon Tecolote Canyon Natural Park 98 and Marian Bear Memorial Park in San Clemente Canyon 99 as well as a number of small parks and preserves San Diego County has one of the highest counts of animal and plant species that appear on the endangered list of counties in the United States 100 Because of its diversity of habitat and its position on the Pacific Flyway San Diego County has recorded 492 different bird species more than any other region in the country 101 San Diego always scores high in the number of bird species observed in the annual Christmas Bird Count sponsored by the Audubon Society and it is known as one of the birdiest areas in the United States 102 103 San Diego and its backcountry suffer from periodic wildfires In October 2003 San Diego was the site of the Cedar Fire at that time the largest wildfire in California over the past century 104 The fire burned 280 000 acres 1 100 km2 killed 15 people and destroyed more than 2 200 homes 105 In addition to damage caused by the fire smoke resulted in a significant increase in emergency room visits due to asthma respiratory problems eye irritation and smoke inhalation the poor air quality caused San Diego County schools to close for a week 106 Wildfires four years later destroyed some areas particularly within Rancho Bernardo as well as the nearby communities of Rancho Santa Fe and Ramona 100 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 1850500 186073146 2 18702 300214 6 18802 63714 7 189016 159512 8 190017 7009 5 191039 578123 6 192074 36187 9 1930147 99599 0 1940203 34137 4 1950334 38764 4 1960573 22471 4 1970696 76921 6 1980875 53825 7 19901 110 54926 8 20001 223 40010 2 20101 307 4026 9 20201 386 9326 1 2022 est 1 374 790 107 0 9 Population History of WesternU S Cities amp Towns 1850 1990 52 U S Decennial Census 108 2010 2020 9 Racial and ethnic composition 2020 109 2010 110 1990 111 1970 111 1940 111 White non Hispanic 40 7 45 1 58 7 78 9 112 n aHispanic or Latino of any race 29 7 28 8 20 7 10 7 112 n aAsian non Hispanic 17 6 15 9 11 8 2 2 1 0 Black or African American non Hispanic 6 6 6 7 9 4 7 6 2 0 Map of racial distribution in San Diego 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic Other The city had a population of 1 307 402 according to the 2010 census distributed over a land area of 372 1 square miles 963 7 km2 113 The urban area of San Diego extends beyond the administrative city limits and had a total population of 2 956 746 making it the third largest urban area in the state after that of the Los Angeles metropolitan area and San Francisco metropolitan area They along with the Riverside San Bernardino form those metropolitan areas in California larger than the San Diego metropolitan area which had a total population of 3 095 313 at the 2010 census The 2010 population represents an increase of just under 7 from the 1 223 400 people 450 691 households and 271 315 families reported in 2000 110 The estimated city population in 2009 was 1 306 300 The population density was 3 771 9 inhabitants per square mile 1 456 3 km2 The racial makeup of San Diego was 58 9 White 6 7 African American 0 6 Native American 15 9 Asian 5 9 Filipino 2 7 Chinese 2 5 Vietnamese 1 3 Indian 1 0 Korean 0 7 Japanese 0 4 Laotian 0 3 Cambodian 0 1 Thai 0 5 Pacific Islander 0 2 Guamanian 0 1 Samoan 0 1 Native Hawaiian 12 3 from other races and 5 1 from two or more races The ethnic makeup of the city was 28 8 Hispanic or Latino of any race 110 114 24 9 of the total population were Mexican American 1 4 were Spanish American and 0 6 were Puerto Rican Median age of Hispanics was 27 5 years compared to 35 1 years overall and 41 6 years among non Hispanic whites Hispanics were the largest group in all ages under 18 and non Hispanic whites constituted 63 1 of population 55 and older A U S Navy vice admiral and an intelligence specialist celebrating Hispanic American Heritage Month in San Diego As of January 2019 update the San Diego City and County had the fifth largest homeless population among major cities in the United States with 8 102 people experiencing homelessness 115 In the city of San Diego 4 887 individuals were experiencing homelessness according to the 2020 count 116 In 2000 there were 451 126 households out of which 30 2 had children under the age of 18 living with them 44 6 were married couples living together 11 4 had a female householder with no husband present and 39 8 were non families Households made up of individuals account for 28 0 and 7 4 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 61 and the average family size was 3 30 The U S Census Bureau reported that in 2000 24 0 of San Diego residents were under 18 and 10 5 were 65 and over 110 As of 2011 update the median age was 35 6 more than a quarter of residents were under age 20 and 11 were over age 65 117 Millennials ages 18 through 34 constitute 27 1 of San Diego s population the second highest percentage in a major U S city 118 The San Diego County regional planning agency SANDAG provides tables and graphs breaking down the city population into five year age groups 119 In 2000 the median income for a household in the city was 45 733 and the median income for a family was 53 060 Males had a median income of 36 984 versus 31 076 for females The per capita income for the city was 35 199 120 According to Forbes in 2005 San Diego was the fifth wealthiest U S city 121 but about 10 6 of families and 14 6 of the population were below the poverty line including 20 0 of those under age 18 and 7 6 of those age 65 or over 120 San Diego was rated the fifth best place to live in the United States in 2006 by Money magazine 122 and it was rated 6 in Best Big Cities in 2018 123 As of January 1 2008 estimates by the San Diego Association of Governments revealed that the household median income for San Diego rose to 66 715 up from 45 733 in 2000 124 San Diego was named the ninth most LGBT friendly city in the U S in 2013 125 The city also has the seventh highest population of gay residents in the U S Additionally in 2013 San Diego State University SDSU one of the city s prominent universities was named one of the top LGBT friendly campuses in the nation 126 According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center 68 of the population of the city identified themselves as Christians with 32 professing attendance at a variety of churches that could be considered Protestant and 32 professing Roman Catholic beliefs 127 128 while 27 claim no religious affiliation The same study says that other religions including Judaism Buddhism Islam and Hinduism collectively make up about 5 of the population Economy EditMain article Economy of San Diego The largest sectors of San Diego s economy are defense military tourism international trade and research manufacturing 129 130 In 2014 San Diego was designated by a Forbes columnist as the best city in the country to launch a small business or startup company 131 San Diego recorded a median household income of 79 646 in 2018 an increase of 3 89 from 76 662 in 2017 132 The median property value in San Diego in 2018 was 654 700 132 and the average home has two cars per household 132 Defense and military Edit USS Midway museum ship F A 18 Hornet flying over San Diego and the USS John C Stennis The economy of San Diego is influenced by its deepwater port which includes the only major submarine and shipbuilding yards on the West Coast 133 Several major national defense contractors were started and are headquartered in San Diego including General Atomics Cubic and NASSCO 134 135 San Diego hosts the largest naval fleet in the world 136 In 2008 it was home to 53 ships over 120 tenant commands and more than 35 000 sailors marines Department of Defense civilian employees and contractors 137 About 5 percent of all civilian jobs in the county are military related and 15 000 businesses in San Diego County rely on Department of Defense contracts 137 Military bases in San Diego include US Navy facilities Marine Corps bases and Coast Guard stations The city is home to the majority of the U S Pacific Fleet s surface combatants all of the Navy s West Coast amphibious ships and a variety of Coast Guard and Military Sealift Command vessels 137 138 The military infrastructure in San Diego is still growing and developing with numerous military personnel stationed there numbers of which are expected to rise This plays a significant role in the city s economy as of 2020 it provides roughly 25 of the GDP and provides 23 of the total jobs in San Diego 139 140 141 Tourism Edit View on Harbor Drive Tourism is a major industry owing to the city s climate beaches 142 and tourist attractions such as Balboa Park Belmont amusement park San Diego Zoo San Diego Zoo Safari Park and SeaWorld San Diego San Diego s Spanish and Mexican heritage is reflected in many historic sites across the city such as Mission San Diego de Alcala and Old Town San Diego State Historic Park Also the local craft brewing industry attracts an increasing number of visitors 143 for beer tours and the annual San Diego Beer Week in November 144 San Diego has been called America s Craft Beer Capital 145 San Diego County hosted more than 32 million visitors in 2012 collectively they spent an estimated 8 billion The visitor industry provides employment for more than 160 000 people 146 San Diego s cruise ship industry used to be the second largest in California Numerous cruise lines operate out of San Diego However cruise ship business has been in decline since 2008 when the Port hosted over 250 ship calls and more than 900 000 passengers By 2016 2017 the number of ship calls had fallen to 90 147 Local sightseeing cruises are offered in San Diego Bay and Mission Bay as well as whale watching cruises to observe the migration of gray whales peaking in mid January 148 Sport fishing is another popular tourist attraction San Diego is home to southern California s biggest sport fishing fleet 149 International trade Edit Downtown San Diego as seen from Coronado Island San Diego s commercial port and its location on the United States Mexico border make international trade an important factor in the city s economy The city is authorized by the United States government to operate as a Foreign Trade Zone 150 The city shares a 15 mile 24 km border with Mexico that includes two border crossings San Diego hosts the busiest international border crossing in the world in the San Ysidro neighborhood at the San Ysidro Port of Entry 151 A second primarily commercial border crossing operates in the Otay Mesa area it is the largest commercial crossing on the California Baja California border and handles the third highest volume of trucks and dollar value of trade among all United States Mexico land crossings 152 One of the Port of San Diego s two cargo facilities is located in Downtown San Diego at the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal This terminal has facilities for containers bulk cargo and refrigerated and frozen storage so that it can handle the import and export of many commodities 153 In 2009 the Port of San Diego handled 1 137 054 short tons of total trade foreign trade accounted for 956 637 short tons while domestic trade amounted to 180 417 short tons 154 Historically tuna fishing and canning was one of San Diego s major industries 155 although the American tuna fishing fleet is no longer based in San Diego Seafood company Bumble Bee Foods is headquartered in San Diego and Chicken of the Sea was until 2018 156 157 Companies Edit Qualcomm corporate headquarters San Diego hosts several major producers of wireless cellular technology Qualcomm was founded and is headquartered in San Diego and is one of the largest private sector employers in San Diego 158 Other wireless industry manufacturers headquartered here include Nokia LG Electronics 159 Kyocera International 160 Cricket Communications and Novatel Wireless 161 San Diego also has the U S headquarters for the Slovakian security company ESET 162 San Diego has been designated as an iHub Innovation Center for potential collaboration between wireless and the life sciences 163 The University of California San Diego and other research institutions have helped to fuel the growth of biotechnology 164 In 2013 San Diego had the second largest biotech cluster in the United States below the Boston area and above the San Francisco Bay Area 165 There are more than 400 biotechnology companies in the area 166 In particular the La Jolla and nearby Sorrento Valley areas are home to offices and research facilities for numerous biotechnology companies 167 Major biotechnology companies like Illumina and Neurocrine Biosciences are headquartered in San Diego while many other biotech and pharmaceutical companies have offices or research facilities in San Diego San Diego is also home to more than 140 contract research organizations CROs that provide contract services for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies 168 Top employers Edit See also List of companies headquartered in San Diego According to the city s 2022 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report 169 the top employers in the city are Employer EmployeesNaval Base San Diego 41 321University of California San Diego 37 064Sharp Health Care 18 839County of San Diego 16 744Scripps Health 13 787San Diego Unified School District 13 559Qualcomm Inc 11 546City of San Diego 11 466Kaiser Permanente 9 632Northrop Grumman Corporation 6 075Real estate Edit Skyline view of the Village of La Jolla in San Diego San Diego has high real estate prices San Diego home prices peaked in 2005 and then declined along with the national trend As of December 2010 prices were down 36 percent from the peak 170 median price of homes having declined by more than 200 000 between 2005 and 2010 171 As of May 2015 the median price of a house was 520 000 172 In November 2018 the median home price was 558 000 The San Diego metropolitan area had one of the worst housing affordability rankings of all metropolitan areas in the United States in 2009 173 Consequently San Diego has experienced negative net migration since 2004 A significant number of people moved to adjacent Riverside County commuting daily to jobs in San Diego while others are leaving the region altogether and moving to more affordable regions 174 Government EditLocal government Edit See also Mayor of San Diego San Diego City Council and Government of San Diego County Todd Gloria has been the mayor of San Diego since 2020 The city is governed by a mayor and a nine member city council In 2006 its government changed from a council manager government to a strong mayor government as decided by a citywide vote in 2004 The mayor is in effect the chief executive officer of the city while the council is the legislative body 175 The City of San Diego is responsible for police public safety streets water and sewer service planning and zoning and similar services within its borders San Diego is a sanctuary city 176 however San Diego County is a participant of the Secure Communities program 177 178 As of 2011 update the city had one employee for every 137 residents with a payroll greater than 733 million 179 The members of the city council are each elected from single member districts within the city The mayor and city attorney are elected directly by the voters of the entire city The mayor city attorney and council members are elected to four year terms with a two term limit 180 Elections are held on a non partisan basis per California state law nevertheless most officeholders do identify themselves as either Democrats or Republicans In 2007 registered Democrats outnumbered Republicans by about 7 to 6 in the city 181 and Democrats currently as of 2022 update hold an 8 1 majority in the city council The current mayor Todd Gloria is a member of the Democratic Party San Diego City Council chambers San Diego is part of San Diego County and includes all or part of the 1st 2nd 3rd and 4th supervisorial districts of the San Diego County Board of Supervisors 182 Other county officers elected in part by city residents include the Sheriff District Attorney Assessor Recorder County Clerk and Treasurer Tax Collector Areas of the city immediately adjacent to San Diego Bay tidelands are administered by the Port of San Diego a quasi governmental agency which owns all the property in the tidelands and is responsible for its land use planning policing and similar functions San Diego is a member of the regional planning agency San Diego Association of Governments SANDAG Public schools within the city are managed and funded by independent school districts see below State and federal representation Edit In the California State Senate San Diego County encompasses the 38th 39th and 40th districts 183 represented by Catherine Blakespear D Toni Atkins D and Brian Jones R respectively In the California State Assembly lying partially within the city of San Diego are the 77th 78th 79th and 80th districts 184 represented by Tasha Boerner Horvath D Chris Ward D Akilah Weber D and David Alvarez D respectively In the United States House of Representatives San Diego County includes parts or all of California s 49th 50th 51st and 52nd congressional districts 185 represented by Mike Levin D Scott Peters D Sara Jacobs D and Juan Vargas D respectively Election history Edit After narrowly supporting Lyndon B Johnson in 1964 San Diego provided majorities to all six Republican presidential candidates from 1968 to 1988 However in more recent decades San Diego has trended in favor of Democratic presidential candidates for president George H W Bush in 1988 is the last Republican candidate to carry San Diego in a presidential election San Diego city vote by party in presidential elections Year Democratic Republican Third Parties2020 186 68 55 461 985 29 14 196 373 2 32 15 6142016 187 65 86 364 108 28 00 154 797 6 13 33 9092012 188 61 29 312 832 36 43 185 922 2 28 11 6602008 189 62 57 335 724 35 73 191 711 1 69 9 0862004 190 55 06 270 746 43 91 215 904 1 03 5 0712000 191 53 13 221 979 42 27 176 616 4 59 19 1931996 192 50 75 198 169 39 93 155 912 9 33 36 4141992 193 43 53 192 829 31 85 141 093 24 62 109 0841988 194 43 94 177 207 54 67 220 472 1 40 5 6311984 195 39 10 142 985 59 61 218 025 1 29 4 7161980 196 31 32 106 282 54 96 186 491 13 72 46 5691976 197 44 63 131 525 53 54 157 780 1 97 5 8011972 198 39 04 114 997 57 93 170 636 3 03 8 9161968 199 39 58 91 276 54 10 124 769 6 32 14 5721964 200 51 38 112 469 48 62 106 422Major scandals Edit San Diego was the site of the 1912 San Diego free speech fight in which the city restricted speech vigilantes brutalized and tortured anarchists and the San Diego Police Department killed a member of the Industrial Workers of the World IWW In 1916 rainmaker Charles Hatfield was blamed for 4 million in damages and accused of causing San Diego s worst flood during which about 20 Japanese American farmers died 201 Then mayor Roger Hedgecock was forced to resign his post in 1985 after he was found guilty of one count of conspiracy and 12 counts of perjury related to the alleged failure to report all campaign contributions 202 203 After a series of appeals the 12 perjury counts were dismissed in 1990 based on claims of juror misconduct the remaining conspiracy count was reduced to a misdemeanor and then dismissed 204 A 2002 scheme to underfund pensions for city employees led to the San Diego pension scandal This resulted in the resignation of newly re elected Mayor Dick Murphy 205 and the criminal indictment of six pension board members 206 Those charges were finally dismissed by a federal judge in 2010 207 On November 28 2005 U S Congressman Randy Duke Cunningham resigned after being convicted on federal bribery charges He had represented California s 50th congressional district which includes much of the northern portion of the city of San Diego In 2006 Cunningham was sentenced to a 100 month prison sentence 208 He was released in 2013 In 2005 two city council members Ralph Inzunza and Deputy Mayor Michael Zucchet who briefly took over as acting mayor when Murphy resigned were convicted of extortion wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for taking campaign contributions from a strip club owner and his associates allegedly in exchange for trying to repeal the city s no touch laws at strip clubs 209 Both subsequently resigned Inzunza was sentenced to 21 months in prison 210 In 2009 a judge acquitted Zucchet on seven out of the nine counts against him and granted his petition for a new trial on the other two charges 211 the remaining charges were eventually dropped 212 In July 2013 three former supporters of mayor Bob Filner asked him to resign because of allegations of repeated sexual harassment 213 Over the ensuing six weeks 18 women came forward to publicly claim that Filner had sexually harassed them 214 and multiple individuals and groups called for him to resign Filner agreed to resign effective August 30 2013 subsequently pleaded guilty to one felony count of false imprisonment and two misdemeanor battery charges and was sentenced to house arrest and probation 215 216 Crime Edit Main article Crime in San Diego San Diego Police Department car in the city center Like most major cities San Diego had a declining crime rate from 1990 to 2000 1991 would mark the city s deadliest year registering 179 homicides 217 within city limits while the region as a whole peaked at 278 homicides 218 capping off an unabated eight year climb in murders rapes robberies and assault dating back to 1983 At the time the city was ranked last among the 10 most populous U S cities in homicides per 1 000 population and ninth in crimes per 1 000 219 From 1980 to 1994 San Diego surpassed 100 murders ten times before tapering off to 91 homicides in 1995 That number would not exceed 79 for the next 15 years 220 Crime in San Diego increased in the early 2000s 221 222 223 In 2004 San Diego had the sixth lowest crime rate of any U S city with over half a million residents 223 From 2002 to 2006 the crime rate overall dropped 0 8 though not evenly by category While violent crime decreased 12 4 during this period property crime increased 1 1 Total property crimes per 100 000 people were lower than the national average in 2008 224 According to Uniform Crime Report statistics compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI in 2010 there were 5 616 violent crimes and 30 753 property crimes Of these the violent crimes consisted of forcible rapes 73 robberies and 170 aggravated assaults while 6 387 burglaries 17 977 larceny thefts 6 389 motor vehicle thefts and 155 acts of arson defined the property offenses 225 In 2013 San Diego had the lowest murder rate of the ten largest cities in the United States 226 Education EditPrimary and secondary schools Edit Main article Primary and secondary schools in San Diego Public schools in San Diego are operated by independent school districts The majority of the public schools in the city are served by the San Diego Unified School District the second largest school district in California which includes 11 K 8 schools 107 elementary schools 24 middle schools 13 atypical and alternative schools 28 high schools and 45 charter schools 227 Several adjacent school districts which are headquartered outside the city limits serve some schools within the city these include the Poway Unified School District Del Mar Union School District San Dieguito Union High School District and Sweetwater Union High School District In addition there are a number of private schools in the city Colleges and universities Edit San Diego State University s Hepner Hall According to education rankings released by the U S Census Bureau in 2017 44 4 of San Diegans city not county ages 25 and older hold bachelor s degrees compared to 30 9 in the United States as a whole The census ranks the city as the ninth most educated city in the United States based on these figures 228 The largest university in the area is the University of California San Diego UC San Diego The university is the southernmost campus of the University of California system and is the second largest employer in the city It is the only university in the city that is classified R1 Doctoral Universities Very high research activity and it has the 7th largest research expenditure in the country 229 Other public colleges and universities in the city include San Diego State University SDSU and the San Diego Community College District which includes San Diego City College San Diego Mesa College and San Diego Miramar College Private non profit colleges and universities in the city include the University of San Diego USD Point Loma Nazarene University PLNU National University s San Diego campus University of Redlands School of Business San Diego campus Brandman University s San Diego campus San Diego Christian College and John Paul the Great Catholic University For profit institutions include Alliant International University AIU California International Business University CIBU California College San Diego Fashion Institute of Design amp Merchandising s San Diego campus NewSchool of Architecture and Design Platt College Southern States University SSU UEI College and Woodbury University School of Architecture s satellite campus There is one medical school in the city the UC San Diego School of Medicine There are three ABA accredited law schools in the city which include California Western School of Law Thomas Jefferson School of Law and University of San Diego School of Law There is also one law school Western Sierra Law School not accredited by the ABA Libraries Edit UC San Diego s Geisel Library named for Theodor Seuss Geisel Dr Seuss The city run San Diego Public Library system is headquartered downtown and has 36 branches throughout the city 230 The newest location is in Skyline Hills which broke ground in 2015 231 The libraries have had reduced operating hours since 2003 due to the city s financial problems In 2006 the city increased spending on libraries by 2 1 million 232 A new nine story Central Library on Park Boulevard at J Street opened on September 30 2013 233 In addition to the municipal public library system there are nearly two dozen libraries open to the public run by other governmental agencies and by schools colleges and universities 234 Noteworthy are the Malcolm A Love Library at San Diego State University and the Geisel Library at the University of California San Diego Culture EditMain article Culture of San Diego See also City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture The Museum of Us Many popular museums such as the San Diego Museum of Art the San Diego Natural History Museum the Museum of Us the Museum of Photographic Arts and the San Diego Air amp Space Museum are located in Balboa Park which is also the location of the San Diego Zoo The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego MCASD is located in La Jolla and has a branch located at the Santa Fe Depot downtown The downtown branch consists of two buildings on two opposite streets The Columbia district downtown is home to historic ship exhibits belonging to the San Diego Maritime Museum headlined by the Star of India as well as the unrelated San Diego Aircraft Carrier Museum featuring the USS Midway aircraft carrier The San Diego Symphony at Symphony Towers performs on a regular basis from 2004 to 2017 its director was Jahja Ling The San Diego Opera at Civic Center Plaza directed by David Bennett Old Globe Theatre at Balboa Park produces about 15 plays and musicals annually The La Jolla Playhouse at UCSD is directed by Christopher Ashley Both the Old Globe Theatre and the La Jolla Playhouse have produced the world premieres of plays and musicals that have gone on to win Tony Awards 235 or nominations 236 on Broadway The Joan B Kroc Theatre at Kroc Center s Performing Arts Center is a 600 seat state of the art theater that hosts music dance and theater performances The San Diego Repertory Theatre at the Lyceum Theatres in Westfield Horton Plaza produces a variety of plays and musicals Hundreds of movies and a dozen TV shows have been filmed in San Diego a tradition going back as far as 1898 237 Sports EditMain article Sports in San Diego Petco Park home of the Padres since 2004 San Diego is home to one major professional sports team Major League Baseball MLB s San Diego Padres The area is home to several other highest level professional teams minor league teams semi pro and amateur teams and college athletics teams The region has previously hosted the National Football League NFL s Chargers and the National Basketball Association NBA s Rockets and Clippers all three of which relocated from the San Diego area Chargers and Clippers going to the Los Angeles area and Rockets going to Houston due to a combination of ownership and stadium arena issues San Diego has additionally been the past home of two other defunct major professional teams the San Diego Conquistadors Sails which competed in the American Basketball Association ABA for four seasons before folding less than a year prior to the ABA NBA merger of 1976 and the San Diego Mariners which played three seasons in the World Hockey Association WHA before folding less than two years before the NHL WHA merger of 1979 Highest level professional teams Edit The following teams compete at their sport s highest level of domestic competitionBold indicates major professional league teamItalic indicates semi pro or professional level club team highest competitive level leagues of sports with no fully professional domestic competition Club Sport Since League Home venue Attendance d TitlesSan Diego Padres Baseball 1936 e 1969 f Major League Baseball MLB Petco Park 36 931 2022 238 San Diego Wave FC Soccer women s 2022 National Women s Soccer League NWSL Snapdragon Stadium g 8 172 2022 240 San Diego Seals Lacrosse 2018 National Lacrosse League NLL Pechanga Arena 5 730 2022 San Diego Legion Rugby 2018 Major League Rugby MLR Snapdragon Stadium h 3 043 2019 San Diego Sockers Indoor soccer 1978 i 2009 Major Arena Soccer League MASL Pechanga Arena j 2 746 2019 20 16 k San Diego Strike Force Indoor football 2019 l Indoor Football League IFL Pechanga Arena 1 734 2019 San Diego Aviators Tennis 2014 m World TeamTennis WTT Omni La Costa Court 1 n San Diego Growlers Ultimate 2015 American Ultimate Disc League AUDL variesSan Diego Super Bloom Ultimate women s 2022 Western Ultimate League WUL variesSan Diego Surfers Rugby women s 1975 o 2011 Women s Premier League Rugby WPL Robb Athletic Field Ocean Beach 2 p San Diego Lions Australian football 1997 United States Australian Football League USAFL varies 2 q San Diego Yacht Club Sailing 1886 America s Cup r San Diego Bay 3 s Minor league professional teams Edit The following teams compete below their sport s highest level of domestic competition Club Sport Since League Venue Attendance d Titles Tier t San Diego Gulls Ice hockey 1966 u 2015 v American Hockey League AHL Pechanga Arena 6 992 243 2021 22 2 NHL San Diego Loyal SC Soccer 2020 USL Championship USLC Torero Stadium 3 919 2022 2 MLS San Diego Surf Riders Cricket 2021 Minor League Cricket MiLC Canyonside Park PQ Mira Mesa 2 MLC San Diego Sockers 2 Indoor soccer 2017 2021 w Major Arena Soccer League 2 MASL2 Pechanga Arena 2 x 2 MASL Albion San Diego Soccer 1981 y 2019 z 2022 aa National Independent Soccer Association NISA Canyon Crest Stadium 3 MLS amp USLC College athletics Edit The San Diego State Aztecs MW the San Diego Toreros WCC and the UC San Diego Tritons BWC are NCAA Division I teams The Cal State San Marcos Cougars CCAA and Point Loma Sea Lions PacWest are members of NCAA Division II while the San Diego Christian Hawks GSAC and Saint Katherine Firebirds CalPac are members of the NAIA Club University Founding Affiliation Enrollment League Primary conferenceSan Diego State Aztecs San Diego State University 1897 Public California State University 35 723 244 NCAA Division I FBS Mountain West ConferenceSan Diego Toreros University of San Diego 1949 Private Roman Catholic 8 815 245 NCAA Division I FCS West Coast ConferenceUC San Diego Tritons University of California San Diego 1960 Public University of California 42 968 246 NCAA Division I Big West ConferenceCal State San Marcos Cougars California State University San Marcos 1989 Public California State University 14 311 247 NCAA Division II California Collegiate Athletic AssociationPoint Loma Sea Lions Point Loma Nazarene University 1902 Private Church of the Nazarene 3 179 248 NCAA Division II Pacific West ConferenceSan Diego Christian Hawks San Diego Christian College 1970 Private Evangelical 512 NAIA Golden State Athletic ConferenceSaint Katherine Firebirds University of Saint Katherine 2011 Private Eastern Orthodox 264 NAIA California Pacific ConferenceAnnual sports events Edit Event Sport Since League Current venueFarmers Insurance Open Golf 1952 PGA Tour Torrey Pines Golf CourseHoliday Bowl College football 1978 NCAA Division I FBS Petco ParkJTBC Classic Golf women s 2012 LPGA Tour Aviara Golf Club Carlsbad San Diego Bayfair Cup Hydroplane racing 1964 H1 Unlimited Mission Bay ParkSan Diego has hosted numerous other major sports events College football s annual bowl game the Holiday Bowl is held in the city The annual Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament formerly the San Diego Open and Buick Invitational on the PGA Tour occurs at Torrey Pines Golf Course This course was also the site of the 2008 U S Open Golf Championship Soccer American football and track and field are also played in Balboa Stadium the city s first stadium which was constructed in 1914 249 The San Diego Yacht Club hosted the America s Cup yacht races three times during the period 1988 to 1995 The amateur beach sport Over the line was invented in San Diego 250 and the annual world Over the line championships are held at Mission Bay every year 251 Media EditSee also Media in San Diego and List of media set in San Diego Published within the city are the daily newspaper The San Diego Union Tribune and its online portal of the same name 252 and the alternative newsweeklies the San Diego CityBeat and San Diego Reader Times of San Diego is a free online newspaper covering news in the metropolitan area Voice of San Diego is a non profit online news outlet covering government politics education neighborhoods and the arts The San Diego Daily Transcript is a business oriented online newspaper San Diego is also the headquarters of national far right cable TV channel One America News Network OANN which was founded in 2013 and is owned by Herring Networks The network gained notoriety for being ardent supporters of Donald Trump and providing a platform for right wing conspiracy theories San Diego led U S local markets with 69 6 percent broadband penetration in 2004 according to Nielsen NetRatings 253 San Diego s first television station was KFMB which began broadcasting on May 16 1949 254 Since the Federal Communications Commission FCC licensed seven television stations in Los Angeles two VHF channels were available for San Diego because of its relative proximity to the larger city In 1952 however the FCC began licensing UHF channels making it possible for cities such as San Diego to acquire more stations Stations based in Mexico with ITU prefixes of XE and XH also serve the San Diego market Television stations today include XHCPDE 11 Canal Once Mexico XETV 6 Canal 5 Nueve KFMB 8 CBS with The CW MNTV on DT2 KGTV 10 ABC XEWT 12 Televisa Regional KPBS 15 PBS KBNT CD 17 Univision XHTIT TDT 21 Azteca 7 XHJK TDT 1 Azteca Uno XHAS 33 Azteca America K35DG D 35 UCSD TV KDTF LD 36 Unimas KNSD 39 NBC KUAN LD 48 Telemundo KSEX CD 42 Infomercials XHBJ TDT 45 Canal 6 Mexico XHDTV 49 Milenio Television KUSI 51 Independent XHUAA TDT 19 Canal de las Estrellas and KSWB TV 69 Fox San Diego has an 80 6 percent cable penetration rate 255 Due to the ratio of U S and Mexican licensed stations San Diego is the largest media market in the United States that is legally unable to support a television station duopoly between two full power stations under FCC regulations which disallow duopolies in metropolitan areas with fewer than nine full power television stations and require that there be eight unique station owners that remain once a duopoly is formed there are only seven full power stations on the California side of the San Diego Tijuana market 256 Though the E W Scripps Company owns KGTV and KZSD LP they are not considered a duopoly under the FCC s legal definition as common ownership between full power and low power television stations in the same market is permitted regardless to the number of stations licensed to the area As a whole the Mexico side of the San Diego Tijuana market has two duopolies and one triopoly Entravision Communications owns both XHAS TV and XHDTV TV Azteca owns XHJK TV and XHTIT TV and Grupo Televisa owns XHUAA TV and XEWT TV along with being the license holder for XETV TV which was formerly managed by California based subsidiary Bay City Television San Diego s television market is limited to only San Diego County The Imperial Valley including El Centro is in the Yuma Arizona television market while neighboring Orange and Riverside counties are part of the Los Angeles market Sometimes in the past a missing network affiliate in the Imperial Valley would be available on cable TV from San Diego As a result San Diego is the largest single county media market in the United States The radio stations in San Diego include nationwide broadcaster iHeartMedia Entercom Communications Local Media San Diego and many other smaller stations and networks Stations include KOGO AM 600 KGB AM 760 KCEO AM 1000 KCBQ AM 1170 K Praise KLSD AM 1360 KFSD 1450 AM KPBS FM 89 5 Channel 933 Star 94 1 FM 94 9 FM News and Talk 95 7 Q96 96 1 KyXy 96 5 Free Radio San Diego AKA Pirate Radio San Diego 96 9FM FRSD KWFN 97 3 KXSN 98 1 Big FM 100 7 101 5 KGB FM KLVJ 102 1 KSON 103 7 Rock 105 3 and another Pirate Radio station at 106 9FM as well as a number of local Spanish language radio stations Infrastructure EditUtilities Edit Water is supplied to residents by the Water Department of the City of San Diego The city receives most of its water from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California Gas and electric utilities are provided by San Diego Gas amp Electric a division of Sempra Energy Street lights Edit In the mid 20th century the city had mercury vapor street lamps In 1978 the city decided to replace them with more efficient sodium vapor lamps This triggered an outcry from astronomers at Palomar Observatory 60 miles 100 km north of the city concerned that the new lamps would increase light pollution and hinder astronomical observation 257 The city altered its lighting regulations to limit light pollution within 30 miles 50 km of Palomar 258 In 2011 the city announced plans to upgrade 80 of its street lighting to new energy efficient lights that use induction technology a modified form of fluorescent lamp producing a broader spectrum than sodium vapor lamps The new system is predicted to save 2 2 million per year in energy and maintenance 259 The city stated the changes would make our neighborhoods safer 259 They also increase light pollution 260 In 2014 San Diego announced plans to become the first U S city to install cyber controlled street lighting using an intelligent lighting system to control 3 000 LED street lights 261 Transportation Edit Main articles Transportation in San Diego and Streets and highways of San Diego I 5 looking south toward downtown San Diego With the automobile being the primary means of transportation for over 80 percent of residents San Diego is served by a network of freeways and highways This includes Interstate 5 which runs south to Tijuana and north to Los Angeles Interstate 8 which runs east to Imperial County and the Arizona Sun Corridor Interstate 15 which runs northeast through the Inland Empire to Las Vegas and Salt Lake City and Interstate 805 which splits from I 5 near the Mexican border and rejoins I 5 at Sorrento Valley Major state highways include SR 94 which connects downtown with I 805 I 15 and East County SR 163 which connects downtown with the northeast part of the city intersects I 805 and merges with I 15 at Miramar SR 52 which connects La Jolla with East County through Santee and SR 125 SR 56 which connects I 5 with I 15 through Carmel Valley and Rancho Penasquitos SR 75 which spans San Diego Bay as the San Diego Coronado Bridge and also passes through South San Diego as Palm Avenue and SR 905 which connects I 5 and I 805 to the Otay Mesa Port of Entry The stretch of SR 163 that passes through Balboa Park is San Diego s oldest freeway and has been called one of America s most beautiful parkways 262 View of Coronado and San Diego from the air San Diego s roadway system provides an extensive network of cycle routes Its dry and mild climate makes cycling a convenient year round option however the city s hilly terrain and long average trip distances make cycling less practicable Older and denser neighborhoods around the downtown tend to be oriented to utility cycling This is partly because of the grid street patterns now absent in newer developments farther from the urban core where suburban style arterial roads are much more common As a result the majority of cycling is recreational In 2006 San Diego was rated the best city with a population over 1 million for cycling in the U S 263 San Diego is served by the San Diego Trolley light rail system 264 by the SDMTS bus system 265 private jitneys in some neighborhoods 266 and by Coaster 267 and Amtrak Pacific Surfliner 268 commuter rail northern San Diego county is also served by the Sprinter light rail line 269 The trolley primarily serves downtown and surrounding urban communities Mission Valley east county and coastal south bay A mid coast extension of the Trolley operates from Old Town to University City and the University of California San Diego along the I 5 Freeway since November 2021 The Amtrak and Coaster trains currently run along the coastline and connect San Diego with Los Angeles Orange County Riverside San Bernardino and Ventura via Metrolink and the Pacific Surfliner There are two Amtrak stations in San Diego in Old Town and the Santa Fe Depot downtown San Diego transit information about public transportation and commuting is available on the Web and by dialing 511 from any phone in the area 270 Cross Border Xpress bridge from the terminal in San Diego on the right to the main terminal of Tijuana Airport on the left The city has two major commercial airports within or near its city limits Downtown San Diego International Airport SAN also known as Lindbergh Field is the busiest single runway airport in the United States 271 It served over 24 million passengers in 2018 and is dealing with larger numbers every year 272 It is located on San Diego Bay three miles 4 8 km from downtown and maintains scheduled flights to the rest of the United States including Hawaii as well as to Canada Germany Mexico Japan and the United Kingdom It is operated by an independent agency the San Diego Regional Airport Authority Tijuana International Airport has a terminal within the city limits in the Otay Mesa district connected to the rest of the airport in Tijuana Mexico via the Cross Border Xpress cross border footbridge It is the primary airport for flights to the rest of Mexico and offers connections via Mexico City to the rest of Latin America In addition the city has two general aviation airports Montgomery Field MYF and Brown Field SDM 273 Recent regional transportation projects have sought to mitigate congestion including improvements to local freeways expansion of San Diego Airport and doubling the capacity of the cruise ship terminal Freeway projects included expansion of Interstates 5 and 805 around The Merge where these two freeways meet as well as expansion of Interstate 15 through North County which includes new high occupancy vehicle HOV managed lanes A tollway the southern portion of SR 125 known as the South Bay Expressway connects SR 54 and Otay Mesa near the Mexican border According to an assessment in 2007 37 percent of city streets were in acceptable condition However the proposed budget fell 84 6 million short of bringing streets up to an acceptable level 274 Expansion at the port has included a second cruise terminal on Broadway Pier opened in 2010 Airport projects include expansion of Terminal Two 275 Notable people EditMain article List of people from San DiegoSister cities EditSan Diego s sister cities are 276 Alcala de Henares Spain est 1982 Campinas Brazil est 1995 Cavite City Philippines est 1969 Edinburgh Scotland est 1977 Jalalabad Afghanistan est 2004 Jeonju South Korea est 1983 Leon Mexico est 1969 Panama City Panama est 2015 Perth Australia est 1986 Taichung Taiwan est 1983 Tema Ghana est 1976 Tijuana Mexico est 1993 Vladivostok Russia est 1991 Warsaw Poland est 1996 Yantai China est 1985 Yokohama Japan est 1957 Notes Edit London Gatwick and Mumbai International which both handle more traffic each have two operational runways though only one can be used at a time because of aircraft separation requirements leading to these airports frequently being misleadingly referred to as single runway airports Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official precipitation records for San Diego were kept at the Weather Bureau Office in downtown from October 1850 to December 1859 at the Mission San Diego and from November 1871 to June 1939 and a variety of buildings at downtown and at San Diego Int l Lindbergh Field since July 1939 91 Temperature records however only date from October 1874 For more information on data coverage see ThreadEx a b Average home game attendance Original founding as a Minor League Baseball MiLB team San Diego Padres PCL First season in San Diego in Major League Baseball Wave FC played at Torero Stadium prior to September 2022 239 The Legion move to Snapdragon Stadium soccer rugby capacity 32 000 in 2023 241 Original founding Current team is the 3rd San Diego Sockers iteration of highest level professional indoor soccer revived in 2009 Previous teams San Diego Sockers 1978 1996 and San Diego Sockers 2001 2004 The Sockers plan to move to Frontwave Arena capacity 6 367 a newly constructed arena in the suburb of Oceanside in 2023 242 Sockers franchise includes titles won by its original iteration San Diego Sockers 1978 1996 in preceding top professional indoor soccer leagues The franchise s titles by league are as follows MASL 6 2010 2011 2012 2013 2021 2022 MISL 8 1983 1985 1986 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 NASL Indoor 2 1982 1984 Team was temporarily dormant for 2021 season due to effects of COVID 19 pandemic Franchise was founded in 1995 in New York City relocated to San Diego in 2014 2016 The city s previous WTT franchise the San Diego Buds additionally won 2 titles 1984 amp 1985 Count does not include 2 titles 2005 amp 2008 won by the franchise as the New York Sportimes before relocating from New York City to San Diego Original founding as an amateur club 2016 2018 In addition to WPL championships the team was won several club championships USA Rugby Club 7s 4 2012 2014 2018 2019 2001 2006 Non annual competition no fixed schedule matches held years apart on dates agreed upon between the defender and the challenger 1987 1988 1992 Competition tier parentheses indicate higher level league s Original founding Current team is the 4th San Diego Gulls iteration of minor league professional ice hockey revived in 2015 Previous teams San Diego Gulls 1966 1974 San Diego Gulls 1990 1995 amp San Diego Gulls 1995 2006 Current AHL franchise was founded in 2000 as the Norfolk Admirals later relocating to San Diego and assuming the Gulls name in 2015 Team was dormant for 2019 20 amp 2021 seasons 2019 2022 Original founding as Albion SC youth academy San Diego 1904 FC competed in the NISA from 2019 2021 before being absorbed into Albion San Diego in December 2021 First season as Albion San Diego following merger absorbing San Diego 1904 FCReferences Edit California City Nicknames List www seecalifornia com Retrieved December 29 2020 California Cities by Incorporation Date California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions Archived from the original Word on November 3 2014 Retrieved August 25 2014 City of San Diego City Charter Article XV PDF City of San Diego Retrieved November 5 2014 Office of the City Attorney The City of San Diego Retrieved December 14 2016 City Council Offices City of San Diego Retrieved December 10 2014 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2020 City of San Diego Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved October 16 2014 a b San Diego Geography and Climate city data com Retrieved October 16 2014 a b c d QuickFacts San Diego city California census gov United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 22 2023 List of 2020 Census Urban Areas census gov United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 8 2023 2020 Population and Housing State Data United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 22 2021 ZIP code tm Lookup United States Postal Service Retrieved November 19 2014 QuickFacts San Diego County California census gov United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 22 2023 McGrew Clarence Alan 1922 City of San Diego and San Diego County the birthplace of California American Historical Society Retrieved July 23 2011 America metropolitan areas World Gazetteer 2011 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved February 19 2012 San Diego Int l Airport will dig up the runway every night for a year San Diego Union Tribune November 20 2017 Retrieved January 26 2021 Catalysts to complexity late Holocene societies of the California coast Los Angeles Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA 2002 p 30 ISBN 978 1 938770 67 8 OCLC 745176510 High Gary and Jerri Ann Jacobs High Tech 2007 San Diego Bay A Story of Exploitation and Restoration California Sea Grant College Program ISBN 978 1 888691 17 7 The Kumeyaay could have derived from the San Dieguito or they may have arrived from the desert around 1000 C E a b Loveless R Linton B 2020 Culturally Sensitive and Scientifically Sound Ethical approaches to human remains a global challenge in bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology Kirsty Squires David Errickson Nicholas Marquez Grant Cham Switzerland Springer Nature pp 419 420 ISBN 978 3 030 32926 6 OCLC 1135205590 He created a sequence of cultural periods the San Dieguito Complex and La Jolla Complex suggested that they were mutually exclusive and not associated with the ancestral populations of the contemporary Kumeyaay The problem with Rogers hypothesis is that it did not account for cultural evolution Rogers theories were and continue to be a popular paradigm At the end of his career Rogers re evaluated his original conclusions regarding the cultural groups he had established a b c Mogilner Geoffrey Cosoy Birthplace of New California San Diego History Center San Diego CA Our City Our Story Retrieved August 27 2020 a b Kosa aay Cosoy History www cosoy org Retrieved August 27 2020 San Diego Historical Society Sandiegohistory org Archived from the original on May 5 2009 Retrieved March 12 2011 Mills James October 1967 San Diego Where California Began Journal of San Diego History 13 4 Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved February 17 2017 Pourade Richard F 1960 The History of San Diego The Explorers Union Tribune Publishing Company San Diego Ide Arthur Frederick Fall 1976 San Diego The Saint and the City Journal of San Diego History 22 4 San Diego Historical Society Timeline of San Diego history Sandiegohistory org Archived from the original on December 24 2015 Retrieved May 4 2011 Carrico Richard Sociopolitical Aspects of the 1775 Revolt at Mission San Diego de Alcala San Diego History Center San Diego CA Our City Our Story Retrieved August 27 2020 Keyfacts missionscalifornia com Archived from the original on June 10 2010 Retrieved July 1 2010 Mission San Diego Mission San Diego Retrieved July 1 2010 National Park Service National Historical Landmarks Program San Diego Presidio Tps cr nps gov October 10 1960 Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved May 4 2011 Timeline of San Diego History San Diego History Center December 24 2015 Archived from the original on December 24 2015 Retrieved August 7 2018 Connolly Mike Kumeyaay The Mexican Period www kumeyaay com Bean Walton 1973 California An Interpretive History Second ed New York McGraw Hill Inc pp 74 76 ISBN 978 0 07 004224 7 Griswold del Castillo Richard Winter 2003 The U S Mexican War in San Diego 1846 1847 San Diego Historical Society Quarterly Griswold de Castillo 1990 p 39 A History of San Diego Government Office of the City Clerk City of San Diego Retrieved May 27 2014 City of San Diego website Sandiego gov Retrieved July 1 2010 Basil C 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Political Districts within Counties for United States President PDF California Secretary of State Supplement to the Statement of Vote Political Districts within Counties for President PDF California Secretary of State Supplement to the Statement of Vote Political Districts within Counties for President PDF California Secretary of State Supplement to the Statement of Vote Political Districts within Counties for President PDF California Secretary of State Supplement to the Statement of Vote Political Districts within Counties for President PDF California Secretary of State Statement of vote Sacramento Calif The Secretary November 17 1968 via Internet Archive Statement of vote Sacramento Calif The Secretary November 17 1968 via Internet Archive Statement of vote Sacramento Calif The Secretary November 17 1968 via Internet Archive Statement of vote Sacramento Calif The Secretary November 17 1968 via Internet Archive Statement of vote Sacramento Calif The Secretary November 17 1968 via Internet Archive California statement of vote Sacramento Calif Secretary of State November 17 1962 via Internet Archive California statement of vote Sacramento Calif Secretary of State November 17 1962 via Internet Archive Jenkins Garry 2005 The Wizard of Sun City The Strange True Story of Charles Hatfield the Rainmaker Who Drowned a City s Dreams Thunder s Mouth Press via Amazon Look Inside p Front flap a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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