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Stockton, California

Stockton is a city in and the county seat of San Joaquin County in the Central Valley of the U.S. state of California.[18] Stockton was founded by Carlos Maria Weber in 1849 after he acquired Rancho Campo de los Franceses. The city is named after Robert F. Stockton,[19] and it was the first community in California to have a name not of Spanish or Native American origin. The city is located on the San Joaquin River in the northern San Joaquin Valley. Stockton is the 11th largest city in California and the 58th largest city in the United States. It was named an All-America City in 1999, 2004, and 2015 and again in 2017.

Stockton, California
City of Stockton
Clockwise: Hotel Stockton; Fox Theatre; University of the Pacific; Downtown Stockton; Commercial & Savings Bank
Nickname(s): 
'"Tuleburg",[1] "Mudville",[1] "California's Sunrise Seaport".[2] "Port City".[1] "Asparagus Capital of America",[1]
Motto: 
"Stockton: All American City"[3]
Location within San Joaquin County and the state of California
Stockton
Location within California
Stockton
Location within the contiguous United States
Stockton
Location within North America
Coordinates: 37°58′32″N 121°18′03″W / 37.97556°N 121.30083°W / 37.97556; -121.30083Coordinates: 37°58′32″N 121°18′03″W / 37.97556°N 121.30083°W / 37.97556; -121.30083
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionSan Joaquin Valley
CountySan Joaquin
IncorporatedJuly 23, 1850[4]
Named forRobert F. Stockton
Government
 • TypeCity Manager-Council[5]
 • MayorKevin J. Lincoln, II (R)
 • City councilSol Jobrack[6]
Daniel Wright[7]
Paul Canepa[8]
Susan Lenz[9]
Christina Fugazi[10]
Kimberly Warmsley[11]
 • City managerHarry E. Black[12]
 • State senatorSusan Eggman (D)[13]
 • AssemblymemberCarlos Villapudua (D)[13]
Area
 • City65.25 sq mi (169.01 km2)
 • Land62.17 sq mi (161.02 km2)
 • Water3.08 sq mi (7.99 km2)  4.76%
Elevation13 ft (4 m)
Population
 • City320,804
 • Rank1st in San Joaquin County
11th in California
62nd in the United States
 • Density4,900/sq mi (1,900/km2)
 • Urban
414,847 (US: 101st)
 • Urban density4,486.7/sq mi (1,732.3/km2)
 • Metro
779,233 (US: 76th)
DemonymStocktonian
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)
ZIP codes
95201–95213, 95215, 95219, 95267, 95269, 95296–95297
Area code209
FIPS code06-75000
GNIS feature IDs1659872, 2411987
Websitewww.stocktongov.com

Built during the California Gold Rush, Stockton's seaport serves as a gateway to the Central Valley and beyond. It provided easy access for trade and transportation to the southern gold mines. The University of the Pacific (UOP), chartered in 1851, is the oldest university in California, and has been located in Stockton since 1923. In 2012, Stockton filed for what was then the largest municipal bankruptcy in US history – which had multiple causes, including financial mismanagement in the 1990s, generous fringe benefits to unionized city employees,[20] and the 2008 financial crisis. Stockton successfully exited bankruptcy in February 2015.

Geography

Stockton is situated amidst the farmland of California's San Joaquin Valley, a subregion of the Central Valley. In and around Stockton are thousands of miles of waterways that make up the California Delta.

Interstate 5 and State Route 99, inland California's major north–south highways, pass through the city. State Route 4 and the dredged San Joaquin River connect the city with the San Francisco Bay Area to its west, creating the Stockton Deepwater Shipping Channel. Stockton and Sacramento are California's only inland sea ports.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city occupies a total area of 64.8 square miles (168 km2), of which 61.7 square miles (160 km2) is land and 3.1 square miles (8.0 km2), comprising 4.76%, is water.

History

 
Carlos Maria Weber founded Stockton when he acquired and settled Rancho Campo de los Franceses.

When Europeans first arrived in the Stockton area, it was occupied by the Yatchicumne, a branch of the Northern Valley Yokuts Indians. They built their villages on low mounds to keep their homes above regular floods. A Yokuts village named Pasasimas was located on a mound between Edison and Harrison Streets on what is now the Stockton Channel in downtown Stockton.[21]

The Siskiyou Trail began in the northern San Joaquin Valley. It was a centuries-old Native American footpath that led through the Sacramento Valley over the Cascades and into present-day Oregon.[22]

The extensive network of waterways in and around Stockton was fished and navigated by Miwok Indians for centuries. During the California Gold Rush, the San Joaquin River was navigable by ocean-going vessels, making Stockton a natural inland seaport and point of supply and departure for prospective gold-miners. From the mid-19th century onward, Stockton became the region's transportation hub, dealing mainly with agricultural products.

19th century

 
Stockton, c. 1860
 
Main Street, Stockton, c. 1870
 
City of Stockton in 1895

Mexican era

Carlos Maria Weber was a German émigré in the United States in 1836. He was born Karl and then went by Charles in the United States, spending time in Texas. He then came overland from Missouri to California with the Bartleson-Bidwell Party in 1841 and began to go by Carlos, when he began working for John Sutter. In 1842 Weber settled in the Pueblo of San José.

As an alien, Weber could not secure a land grant directly, so he formed a partnership with Guillermo (William) Gulnac. Born in New York, Gulnac had married a Mexican woman and sworn allegiance to Mexico, which then ruled California. He applied in Weber's place for Rancho Campo de los Franceses, a land grant of 11 square leagues on the east side of the San Joaquin River.[23]

Gulnac and Weber dissolved their partnership in 1843. Gulnac's attempts to settle the Rancho Campo de los Franceses failed, and Weber acquired it in 1845. In 1846 Weber had induced a number of settlers to locate on the rancho, when the Mexican–American War broke out. Considered a Californio, Weber was offered the position of captain by Mexican Gen. José Castro, which he declined; he later, however, accepted the position of captain in the Cavalry of the United States. Capt. Weber's decision to change sides lost him a great deal of the trust he had built up among his Mexican business partners. As a result, he moved to the grant in 1847 and sold his business in San Jose in 1849.

Gold Rush era

At the start of the California Gold Rush in 1848, Europeans and Americans started to arrive in the area of Weber's rancho on their way to the goldfields. When Weber decided to try his hand at gold mining in late 1848, he soon found selling supplies to gold-seekers was more profitable.[24]

As the head of navigation on the San Joaquin River, the city grew rapidly as a miners' supply point during the Gold Rush. Weber built the first permanent residence in the San Joaquin Valley on a piece of land now known as Weber Point.[21] During the Gold Rush, the location of what is now Stockton developed as a river port, the hub of roads to the gold settlements in the San Joaquin Valley and northern terminus of the Stockton - Los Angeles Road. During its early years, Stockton was known by several names, including "Weberville," "Fat City," "Mudville" and "California's Sunrise Seaport."[2] In 1849 Weber laid out a town, which he named "Tuleburg," but he soon decided on "Stockton" in honor of Commodore Robert F. Stockton. Stockton was the first community in California to have a name that was neither Spanish nor Native American in origin.[1]

Chinese immigration

Thousands of Chinese came to Stockton from the Kwangtung province of China during the 1850s due to a combination of political and economic unrest in China and the discovery of gold in California. After the gold rush, many worked for the railroads and land reclamation projects in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta and remained in Stockton. By 1880 Stockton was home to the third-largest Chinese community in California. Discriminatory laws, in particular the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, restricted immigration and prevented the Chinese from buying property.[25] The Lincoln Hotel, built in 1920 by the Wong brothers on South El Dorado Street, was considered one of Stockton's finest hotels of the time. Only after the Magnuson Act was repealed in 1962 were American-born Chinese allowed to buy property and own buildings.[26][27]

Incorporation

The city was officially incorporated on July 23, 1850, by the county court, and the first city election was held on July 31, 1850. In 1851 the City of Stockton received its charter from the State of California. Early settlers included gold seekers from Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe, the Pacific Islands, Mexico and Canada. The historical population diversity is reflected in Stockton street names, architecture, numerous ethnic festivals and the faces and heritage of a majority of its citizens. In 1870 the Census Bureau reported Stockton's population as 87.6% white and 10.7% Asian. Many Chinese were immigrating to California as workers in these years, especially for the Transcontinental Railroad.[28]

Benjamin Holt settled in Stockton in 1883 and with his three brothers founded the Stockton Wheel Co., and later the Holt Manufacturing Company.

20th century

 
Benjamin Holt (left) with British Col. Ernest Dunlop Swinton in Stockton, April 1918. The vehicle on the right is a Holt tractor; on the left is a miniature replica of a British tank.
 
First Sikh temple in the United States, built in Stockton in 1912

On Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 1904, Holt successfully tested the first workable track-laying machine, plowing soggy San Joaquin Valley Delta farmland.[29] Company photographer Charles Clements was reported to have observed that the tractor crawled like a caterpillar, and Holt seized on the metaphor. "Caterpillar it is. That's the name for it."[30]

On April 22, 1918, British Army Col. Ernest Dunlop Swinton visited Stockton while on a tour of the United States. The British and French armies were using many hundreds of Holt tractors to haul heavy guns and supplies during World War I, and Swinton publicly thanked Holt and his workforce for their contribution to the war effort.[31] During 1914 and 1915, Swinton had advocated basing some sort of armored fighting vehicle on Holt's caterpillar tractors, but without success (although Britain did develop tanks, they came from a separate source and were not directly derived from Holt machines).[32] After the appearance of tanks on the battlefield, Holt built a prototype, the gas-electric tank, but it did not enter production.

On January 10, 1920, a major fire on Main Street threatened an entire city block. At about 2 a.m., a blaze was discovered in the basement of the Yost-Dohrmann store, which was gutted, and adjacent businesses were damaged by flames and water. Damage was estimated at $150,000.[33]

By 1931, the Stockton Electric Railroad Co. operated 40 streetcars over 28 miles (45 km) of track.[34]

Stockton is the site of the first Sikh temple in the United States; Gurdwara Sahib Stockton opened on October 24, 1912. It was founded by Baba Jawala Singh and Baba Wasakha Singh, successful Punjabi immigrants who farmed and owned 500 acres (202 ha) on the Holt River.[35]

In 1933, the port was modernized, and the Stockton Deepwater Channel, which improved water passage to San Francisco Bay, was deepened and completed. This created commercial opportunities that fueled the city's growth. Ruff and Ready Island Naval Supply Depot was established, placing Stockton in a strategic position during the Cold War.[36] During the Great Depression the town's canning industry became the battleground of a labor dispute resulting in the Spinach Riot of 1937.[37]

 
Partial view of the Stockton Assembly Center

During World War II, the Stockton Assembly Center was built on the San Joaquin County Fairgrounds, a few blocks from what was then the city center. One of 15 temporary detention sites run by the Wartime Civilian Control Administration, the center held some 4,200 Japanese-Americans removed from their West Coast homes under Executive Order 9066, while they waited for transfer to more permanent and isolated camps in the interior of the country. The center opened on May 10, 1942, and operated until October 17, when the majority of its population was sent to Rohwer, Arkansas. The former incarceration site was named a California Historical Landmark in 1980, and in 1984 a marker was erected at the entrance to the fairgrounds.[38]

In 1979, the development of a residential area in Stockton at a burial ground of the tribe unearthed two hundred Miwok remains. In an attempt to prevent the further desecration of the burial grounds, a descendant of the people initiated a legal case which became Wana the Bear v. Community Construction (1982). The decision ultimately sided with the development company, which was heavily criticized by Native Americans as a display of ethnocentrism.[39][40]

In September 1996, the Base Realignment and Closure Commission announced the final closure of Stockton's Naval Reserve Center on Rough and Ready Island. Formerly known as Ruff and Ready Island Naval Supply Depot, the island's facilities had served as a major communications outpost for submarine activities in the Pacific during the Cold War. The site is slowly being redeveloped as commercial property.[41]

Economy

 
The historic Commercial & Savings Bank building, Stockton

Historically an agricultural community, Stockton's economy has since diversified into other industries, which include telecommunications and manufacturing.

Stockton's central location, relative to both San Francisco and Sacramento, as well as its proximity to the state and interstate freeway system, together with its comparatively inexpensive land costs, have prompted several companies to base their regional operations in the city.

Shopping

The city of Stockton has two shopping malls, located adjacent to each other: Weberstown Mall and Sherwood Mall. It has the only Dillard's in the Northern California region at the Weberstown Mall, as well as one of the three Sears stores still operating in the Northern California region.

Construction and public spending

 

Beginning in the late 1990s, Stockton had commenced some revitalization projects.[42] Newly built or renovated buildings include the Bob Hope Theater, Regal City Centre Cinemas and IMAX, San Joaquin RTD Downtown Transit Center, Lexington Plaza Waterfront Hotel, Hotel Stockton, Stockton Arena, the San Joaquin County Administration Building, and the Stockton Ballpark.[citation needed]

A new downtown marina and adjacent Joan Darah Promenade were added along the south shore of the Stockton Deep Water Channel during 2009. Various public art projects were also installed throughout the area (see Stockton's public art section).[citation needed]

Real estate bubble

 
Stockton 2012 aerial view

The Stockton real estate market was disproportionately affected by the 2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis, and the city led the United States in foreclosures for that year, with one of every 30 homes posted for foreclosure.[43] From September 2006 to September 2007, the value of a median-priced house in Stockton declined by 44%.[44]

Stockton's Weston Ranch neighborhood, a subdivision of modest tract homes built in the mid-1990s, had the worst foreclosure rate in the area according to ACORN, a now defunct national advocacy group for low and moderate-income families.[citation needed] Stockton found itself squarely at the center of the 2000s' speculative housing bubble. Real estate in Stockton more than tripled in value between 1998 and 2005, but when the bubble burst in 2007, the ensuing financial crisis made Stockton one of the hardest-hit cities in United States.[45]

Stockton housing prices fell 39% in the 2008 fiscal year, and the city had the country's highest foreclosure rate (9.5%) as well. Stockton also had an unemployment rate of 13.3% in 2008, one of the highest in the United States. Stockton was rated by Forbes in 2009 as America's fifth most dangerous city because of its crime rate.[45] In 2010, mainly due to the aforementioned factors, Forbes named it one of the three worst places to live in the United States.[46]

City bankruptcy

Following the 2008 financial crisis, in June 2012 Stockton became the largest city in U.S. history to file for bankruptcy protection. It was surpassed by Detroit in July 2013. The city approved a plan to exit bankruptcy in October 2013,[47] and voters approved a sales tax on November 5, 2013, to help fund the exit.[48]

The collapse in real estate valuations had a negative effect on the city's revenue base. On June 28, 2012, Stockton filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy.[49] On April 1, 2013, the United States Bankruptcy Court Eastern District of California ruled that Stockton was eligible for bankruptcy protection.

The Stockton bankruptcy case lasted longer than two years and received nationwide attention. On October 4, 2013, Stockton City Council approved a bankruptcy exit plan by a 6–0 vote[47] to be filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of California, Sacramento. Voters approved a 34-cent sales tax on November 5, 2013, to help fund the bankruptcy exit.[48]

On October 30, 2014, a federal bankruptcy judge approved the city's bankruptcy recovery plan, thus allowing the city to continue with the planned pension payments to retired workers.[50] The city exited from Chapter 9 bankruptcy on February 25, 2015.

Experiment in Guaranteed Basic Income

As part of a privately funded experiment in Universal Basic Income in 2019, the Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration (S.E.E.D.) conducted a pilot project that gave a $500 stipend to 125 randomly selected residents for an 24-month period with “no strings attached."[51] It was made possible by the Economic Security Project,[52] an advocacy group chaired by Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes, which provided the first $1 million for the program, and a dozen other Silicon Valley organizations and private donors who funded the rest of its $3 million budget.[53][54] The positive benefits of the program during the first year were described in an interim report published in March 2021.[55]

Climate

 
Stockton in relation to the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta

Stockton’s climate lies right on the boundary of, and fluctuates between, hot-summer Mediterranean (Köppen: Csa) and cool semi-arid (BSk). Stockton is characterized by very hot, arid summer and cool, wet winter. In an average year, nearly 95% of the 13.45 inches (341.6 mm) of precipitation falls from October through April.[56] Located in the Central Valley, the temperature range is much greater than in the nearby Bay Area. The degree of diurnal temperature variation is roughly twice as high in the summer as in the winter. Tule fog blankets the area during some winter days. Stockton lies in the fertile heart of the California Mediterranean climate prairie delta, about equidistant from the Pacific Ocean and the Sierra Nevada.[citation needed] The intermediate climate between the coast and the Central Valley gives a similar climate to that of Badajoz, Spain.[57]

At the airport, the highest recorded temperature was 115 °F (46 °C) on July 23, 2006 and September 6, 2022, and the lowest was 16 °F (−9 °C) on January 11, 1949. There are an average of 88 afternoons annually with high temperatures of 90 °F (32.2 °C) or higher, and 19 afternoons of 100 °F (37.8 °C) or above; 19 mornings see low temperatures at or below freezing. The wettest "rain year" was from July 1982 to June 1983 with 27.89 inches (708.4 mm) and the driest from July 1975 to June 1976 with 5.71 inches (145.0 mm).[58] Note that regional difference of precipitation has been recorded in Stockton. The more northern part of Stockton receives more precipitation than southern Stockton.

The most rainfall in one month was 8.22 inches (208.8 mm) in February 1998 and the most rainfall in 24 hours was 3.01 inches (76.5 mm) on January 21, 1967.[58] There are an average of 56.5 days with measurable precipitation.[56] Only light amounts of snow have been recorded, and the only instance of measurable snowfall occurred on February 5, 1976, with 0.3 in (0.8 cm) measured.[58]

Climate data for Stockton Metropolitan Airport, California (1991–2020 normals,[a] extremes 1948–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 78
(26)
79
(26)
87
(31)
100
(38)
107
(42)
111
(44)
115
(46)
113
(45)
115
(46)
101
(38)
85
(29)
76
(24)
115
(46)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 65.3
(18.5)
71.6
(22.0)
79.3
(26.3)
89.3
(31.8)
97.3
(36.3)
104.3
(40.2)
105.8
(41.0)
104.9
(40.5)
101.4
(38.6)
92.2
(33.4)
77.8
(25.4)
65.9
(18.8)
107.7
(42.1)
Average high °F (°C) 57.0
(13.9)
62.9
(17.2)
68.5
(20.3)
74.5
(23.6)
82.8
(28.2)
90.4
(32.4)
95.4
(35.2)
94.4
(34.7)
90.4
(32.4)
80.3
(26.8)
66.6
(19.2)
57.1
(13.9)
76.7
(24.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 48.0
(8.9)
52.1
(11.2)
56.4
(13.6)
60.9
(16.1)
67.7
(19.8)
74.0
(23.3)
78.1
(25.6)
77.3
(25.2)
73.9
(23.3)
65.5
(18.6)
54.7
(12.6)
47.7
(8.7)
63.0
(17.2)
Average low °F (°C) 39.1
(3.9)
41.3
(5.2)
44.2
(6.8)
47.4
(8.6)
52.6
(11.4)
57.6
(14.2)
60.9
(16.1)
60.3
(15.7)
57.5
(14.2)
50.6
(10.3)
42.8
(6.0)
38.4
(3.6)
49.4
(9.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 28.2
(−2.1)
31.0
(−0.6)
35.0
(1.7)
38.3
(3.5)
44.5
(6.9)
49.8
(9.9)
54.1
(12.3)
53.8
(12.1)
49.9
(9.9)
41.0
(5.0)
31.9
(−0.1)
27.9
(−2.3)
26.0
(−3.3)
Record low °F (°C) 16
(−9)
22
(−6)
27
(−3)
32
(0)
36
(2)
45
(7)
49
(9)
47
(8)
42
(6)
33
(1)
25
(−4)
17
(−8)
16
(−9)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.67
(68)
2.50
(64)
1.91
(49)
1.11
(28)
0.57
(14)
0.10
(2.5)
trace 0.01
(0.25)
0.08
(2.0)
0.69
(18)
1.40
(36)
2.41
(61)
13.45
(342)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 9.7 9.2 9.0 5.3 2.9 1.0 0.2 0.2 0.7 2.8 6.4 9.1 56.5
Source: NOAA[58][56]
Climate data for STOCKTON FIRE STN 4, CALIFORNIA (averages 1981–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °F (°C) 55.8
(13.2)
63.0
(17.2)
68.4
(20.2)
74.2
(23.4)
81.8
(27.7)
88.7
(31.5)
93.6
(34.2)
92.9
(33.8)
89.5
(31.9)
80.3
(26.8)
66.4
(19.1)
56.5
(13.6)
76.0
(24.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 46.8
(8.2)
52.1
(11.2)
56.5
(13.6)
60.7
(15.9)
67.3
(19.6)
72.7
(22.6)
76.4
(24.7)
75.5
(24.2)
72.6
(22.6)
64.9
(18.3)
54.2
(12.3)
46.9
(8.3)
62.2
(16.8)
Average low °F (°C) 37.8
(3.2)
41.2
(5.1)
44.5
(6.9)
47.3
(8.5)
52.7
(11.5)
56.8
(13.8)
59.1
(15.1)
58.1
(14.5)
55.7
(13.2)
49.5
(9.7)
41.9
(5.5)
37.3
(2.9)
48.5
(9.2)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 3.41
(87)
3.10
(79)
2.68
(68)
1.41
(36)
0.56
(14)
0.10
(2.5)
trace 0.02
(0.51)
0.29
(7.4)
0.99
(25)
2.16
(55)
3.05
(77)
17.77
(451)
Source: Western Regional Climate Center[59]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
18603,679
187010,066173.6%
188010,2822.1%
189014,42440.3%
190017,50621.4%
191023,25332.8%
192040,29673.3%
193047,96319.0%
194054,71414.1%
195070,85329.5%
196086,32121.8%
1970109,96327.4%
1980148,28334.8%
1990210,94342.3%
2000243,77115.6%
2010291,70719.7%
2020320,80410.0%
U.S. Decennial Census[60][failed verification] 2020[16]
Ethnic composition 2010[61] 1990[62] 1970[62] 1940[62]
White 37.0% 57.5% 79.5% 90.7%
Non-Hispanic whites 22.1% 43.6% 63.3%[63] n/a
Black or African American 12.2% 9.6% 11.0% 1.6%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 40.3% 25.0% 17.5%[63] n/a
Asian 21.5% 22.8% 7.9% 7.6%

2010 US Census

The 2010 United States Census[64] reported that Stockton had a population of 291,707. The population density was 4,505.0 inhabitants per square mile (1,739.4/km2). The racial makeup of Stockton was 108,044 (37.0%) white (22.1% non-Hispanic white[61]), 35,548 (12.2%) African American, 3,086 (1.1%) Native American, 62,716 (21.5%) Asian (7.2% Filipino, 3.5% Cambodian, 2.1% Vietnamese, 2.0% Hmong, 1.8% Chinese, 1.6% Indian, 1.0% Laotian, 0.6% Pakistani, 0.5% Japanese, 0.2% Korean, 0.1% Thai), 1,822 (0.6%) Pacific Islander (0.2% Samoan, 0.1% Tongan, 0.1% Guamanian), 60,332 (20.7%) from other races, and 20,159 (6.9%) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 117,590 persons (40.3%). 35.7% of Stockton's population was of Mexican descent, and 0.6% Puerto Rican.

The 2010 census reported that 285,973 people (98.0% of the population) lived in households, 3,896 (1.3%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 1,838 (0.6%) were institutionalized.

There were 90,605 households, out of which 41,033 (45.3%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 41,481 (45.8%) were heterosexual married couples living together, 17,140 (18.9%) had a female householder with no husband present, 7,157 (7.9%) had a male householder with no wife present. There were 7,123 (7.9%) unmarried heterosexual partnerships, and 720 (0.8%) same-sex married or registered domestic partnerships. 19,484 households (21.5%) were made up of individuals, and 7,185 (7.9%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.16. There were 65,778 families (72.6% of all households); the average family size was 3.69.

The population was spread out, with 87,338 people (29.9%) under the age of 18, 34,126 people (11.7%) aged 18 to 24, 76,691 people (26.3%) aged 25 to 44, 64,300 people (22.0%) aged 45 to 64, and 29,252 people (10.0%) who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30.8 years. For every 100 females, there were 96.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.5 males.

There were 99,637 housing units at an average density of 1,538.7 per square mile (594.1/km2), of which 46,738 (51.6%) were owner-occupied, and 43,867 (48.4%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 3.2%; the rental vacancy rate was 9.4%. 146,235 people (50.1% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 139,738 people (47.9%) lived in rental housing units.

Rankings

  • In 2020, U.S. News & World Report named Stockton as America's most diverse city.[65]

Due to a number of socio-economic problems, Stockton has been subject to a series of negative national rankings:

  • In a 2010 Gallup poll, Stockton was tied with Montgomery, Alabama for the most obese metro area in the US with an obesity rate of 34.6 percent.[66]
  • In the February 2012 issue of Forbes, the magazine ranked Stockton the eighth most miserable US city, largely as a result of the steep drop in home values and high unemployment.[44]
  • In 2012 the National Insurance Crime Bureau ranked Stockton seventh in auto theft rate per capita in the US.[67]
  • In 2012, Stockton was ranked as the tenth most dangerous city in America and the second most dangerous in California (behind Oakland).[68]
  • In 2013, Stockton was ranked as the third least literate city in the U.S. in a study by Central Connecticut State University, with less than 17% of adults holding a college degree,[69] and ABC.com ranked the city as the third least literate of all U.S. cities with a population of more than 250,000 behind Bakersfield, California, and Corpus Christi, Texas.[70]

Top employers

According to the city's 2020 comprehensive annual financial report,[71] the top employers in the city were:a

No. Employer No. of employees
1 St. Joseph's Medical Center 4,600
2 Stockton Unified School District 3,894
3 City of Stockton 2,099
4 Amazon 2,000
5 Kaiser Permanente 1,065
6 University of the Pacific 1,029
7 San Joaquin Delta College 1,007
8 Lincoln Unified School District 857
9 Dameron Hospital 800
10 O'Reilly Auto Parts 600
a.^ San Joaquin County employers both within and outside the city. Details of the split were not available, and San Joaquin County has been excluded from the list.

Culture

Performing arts

 
The Fox California Theater

Music

Stockton hosts several live-music venues, including:

Theatre

The Bob Hope Theatre in downtown Stockton, formerly known as the Fox California Theatre, built in 1930,[76] is one of several movie palaces in the Central Valley. Bob Hope often came to Stockton to visit close friend and billionaire tycoon Alex Spanos, who donated much of the money to revitalize the theater after Hope's death. The University of the Pacific Faye Spanos Concert Hall often hosts public performances, as does the Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium. The Warren Atherton Auditorium at the Delta Center for the Arts on the campus of the San Joaquin Delta College is a 1,456-seat theater with a 60-foot (18 m) proscenium and full grid system.[77] The Stockton Empire Theater is an art deco movie theater that has been revitalized as a venue for live music.

Founded in 1951, the Stockton Civic Theatre offers an annual series of musicals, comedies and dramas. It maintains a 300-seat theater in the Venetian Bridges neighborhood. The company also hosts the annual Willie awards for the local performing arts.

Other performing arts organizations and venues include the Stockton Opera[78] and others.

Visual arts

Museums and galleries

Stockton is home to several museums:

  • Haggin Museum — the private, non-profit fine arts and history museum was built in Victory Park in 1931. The museum displays 19th and 20th-century works of art and houses local historical exhibits. The Haggin Museum features collections and exhibits related to local Valley history and California history. The museum also displays fine art of late 19th and early 20th century artists such as Jean Béraud, Albert Bierstadt, Rosa Bonheur, William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Paul Gauguin, Jean-Léon Gérôme, Childe Hassam, George Inness, Daniel Ridgway Knight, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Jehan-Georges Vibert, and Jules Worms.[21]
  • The San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum operates an 18-acre (7.3 ha) museum facility at Micke Grove Park, two miles (3.2 km) north of the city. The museum houses exhibits dedicated to the founding of Stockton, San Joaquin County's legacy of innovation in agriculture and manufacturing, immigrant communities in Stockton and Lodi, and historic industries in San Joaquin County.
  • Reynolds Gallery, and Horton Gallery — the University of the Pacific Reynolds Gallery, and the San Joaquin Delta College Horton Gallery, both feature contemporary work by students and local and nationally known artists.
  • Children's Museum of Stockton — housed in a former warehouse in the Downtown Waterfront District, featuring many interactive displays.
  • Elsie May Goodwin Gallery — operated by the Stockton Art League.
  • Filipino American National Historical Society proposed the construction of the National Pinoy Museum in the Little Manila district, dedicated to the history of Filipino Americans. Stockton historically had one of the largest populations of Filipinos, immigrants and U.S. citizens, in the United States.[79] The museum opened in 2015 after two decades of planning.[80][81]
  • Art Expressions of San Joaquin – an artists' cooperative featuring the works of local artists – with a prior gallery on the Miracle Mile and ongoing shows at the Hilton Hotel, the County Administration Building and the Stockton Metropolitan Airport.
  • Stockton Field Aviation Museum – sponsored by the Aeronautical Education Foundation, featuring WWII-era memorabilia.

Murals depicting the city's history decorate the exteriors of many downtown buildings.

  • Mexican Heritage Center & Gallery, Inc. — A non-profit located in downtown Stockton whose mission is to educate and promote art and culture for current and future generations. Since the late 1990s, the Mexican Heritage Center & Gallery has been a pioneer in bringing Mexican visual and performing arts to the Stockton community.

With over 77,000 trees, the City of Stockton has been labeled Tree City USA some 30 times.[21]

Stockton has over 275 restaurants, ranging in variety reflective of the population demographics. A mix of American, African American, BBQ, Cambodian, Chinese, Filipino, Greek, Italian, Mexican and Vietnamese restaurants are abundant in the community reflecting the city's diverse culture. Cantonese restaurant On Lock Sam still exists and dates back to 1895.[82]

Festivals

Stockton hosts many annual festivals celebrating the cultural heritage of the city, including:

  • San Joaquin Children's Film Festival
  • San Joaquin International Film Festival (February)[83]
  • Chinese New Year's Parade and Festival (First Sunday in March)
  • St. Patrick's Day and Shamrock Run (March)
  • Great Stockton Asparagus Dine Out (April)
  • Stockton Asparagus Festival — annual Asparagus food festival (April)[84]
  • Brubeck Jazz Festival (April)[85]
  • Earth Day Festival (April)
  • Cambodian New Year (April)
  • Annual Nagar Kirtan, Sikh parade (April)[86]
  • Boat Parade for the Opening of Yachting Season (April)
  • Stockton Flavor Fest (May)
  • Cinco de Mayo Parade and Festival (May)
  • Zion Academy's Reclaim (May)
  • Jewish Food Fair (June)
  • Juneteenth Day Celebration (June)
  • Stockton Obon Bazaar (July)[87]
  • Peruvian Independence Day Festival (July)
  • Taste of San Joaquin and West Coast BBQ Championships
  • Filipino Barrio Fiesta (August)[88]
  • Stockton Beer Week (August)[89]
  • Stockton Pride (August)
  • Christian Spirit Festival (September)
  • The Record's Family Day at the Park (Sept)
  • Stockton Restaurant Week (September)
  • Black Family Day (September)
  • San Joaquin County Coastal Cleanup Day (September)
  • Greek Festival (September) First weekend after Labor Day
  • Festa Italiana: Tutti In Piazza (September)
  • Stocktoberfest, Beer and Brats Festival on the Waterfront (October)
  • Dia De Los Muertos Festival (October)[90]
  • Hmong New Year (November)
  • Stockton Festival of Lights and Boat Parade (December)

Sports

Stockton is home to two minor league franchises:

The Stockton Ports Baseball Team play their home games at Banner Island Ballpark, a 5,000 seat facility built for the team in downtown Stockton. The Ports played their home games at Billy Hebert Field from 1953 to 2004. The Ports have been a single A team in Stockton since 1946 in the California Minor Leagues. Stockton has minor league baseball dating back to 1886.[91] The Ports have produced 244 Major League players including Gary Sheffield, Dan Plesac, Doug Jones, Pat Listach, and Stockton's own Dallas Braden among others.[92] The Ports have eleven championships and are currently the A class team for the Oakland Athletics. The Ports had the best win–loss percentage in all Minor League Baseball in the 1980s.[93]

A 10,000-seat arena, Stockton Arena, located in Downtown Stockton, opened in December 2005 and is home to the Stockton Kings (NBAGL)

Stockton is home to the oldest NASCAR certified race track West of the Mississippi. The Stockton 99 Speedway opened in 1947 and is a quarter mile oval paved track with grandstands that can accommodate 5,000 spectators.[citation needed]

Stockton's designation for Little League Baseball is District 8, which has 12 leagues of teams within the city. Stockton also has several softball leagues including Stockton Girls Softball Association, and Port City Softball League, each having several hundred members.[citation needed]

Rowing Regatta featuring Junior, Collegiate and Master Level Rowing & Sculling Competition is organized by the University of the Pacific[94] annually on the Stockton's Deep Water Channel. Teams from throughout Northern California compete in this Olympic sport which is also the oldest collegiate sport in the United States.

Stockton hosts a wide variety of sports events every year: from resident hockey, baseball and soccer games through basketball at the University of the Pacific and at the Stockton Arena; golf championships at two 18-hole courses and a Par 3 Executive Course; rowing, sailing and fishing on the Delta and the Stockton Channel; martial arts and cage fighting. There are four public golf courses open year-round, Van Buskirk, Swenson, and The Reserve at Spanos Park and Elkhorn Golf Course. Private courses include The Stockton Golf & Country Club, Oakmoore, and Brookside Golf & Country Club.[citation needed]

Stockton is one of a handful of cities that lays claim to being the inspiration for the 1888 poem "Casey at the Bat."[95] The University of the Pacific was the summer home of the San Francisco 49ers Summer Training Camp from 1998 through 2002.

Stockton is also the base of UFC fighters Nick and Nate Diaz. Nick is the former WEC and Strikeforce Welterweight champion,[96] while Nate is the winner of The Ultimate Fighter 5.[97] Both brothers are Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belts under Cesar Gracie[98] and operate a school in Stockton which teaches Brazilian jiu-jitsu to children and youth.[99][100]

Parks

 
Pixie Woods

The City of Stockton has a small children's amusement park, Pixie Woods; the park opened in 1954 and has since welcomed more than one million visitors.[101]

City government

On November 3, 2020, Kevin J. Lincoln II was elected mayor, defeating incumbent mayor Michael Tubbs. He assumed office on January 1, 2021.[102]

City council

The City Council consists of the following members as of January 1, 2021:[103]

  • Kevin Lincoln— Mayor
  • Sol Jobrack— District 1
  • Dan Wright— District 2
  • Paul Canepa— District 3
  • Susan Lenz— District 4
  • Christina Fugazi— District 5
  • Kimberly Warmsley— District 6

The current form of government is a city manager council.[104]

Stockton is also seat of San Joaquin County, for which the government of San Joaquin County is defined and authorized under the California Constitution and law as a general law county. The county government provides countywide services such as elections and voter registration, law enforcement, jails, vital records, property records, tax collection, public health, and social services. The county government is primarily composed of the elected five-member Board of Supervisors and other elected offices including the Sheriff, District Attorney, and Assessor, and numerous county departments and entities under the supervision of the county administrator.[105]

Police department

 
Stockton Police Department seal
Modern history

The city cut its police force by more than 20% during the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis, but voters approved a sales tax on November 5, 2013, that provided funds to hire an additional 120 police officers.[106][107]

On July 16, 2014, officers responded to an armed bank robbery, which resulted in the four perpetrators taking three hostages and leading them on an hour-long high-speed pursuit. Over the course of the car chase, one suspect fired over 100 rounds from an AK-47s at police, disabling 14 police vehicles, including the department's own Lenco BearCat armored personnel carrier. More than 30 officers shot over 600 rounds into the getaway vehicle. Two perpetrators were killed, two hostages were injured, one hostage was killed by police ammunition, and numerous vehicles and other property were damaged or destroyed by the nearly 1,000 rounds of ammunition fired by the robbers and police.[108] The department faced criticism with its handling of the incident in the aftermath.[109]

Crime
 
Amtrak Police cars at the Stockton – San Joaquin Street Station in Stockton, 2012

In 2012, the City of Stockton was the 10th[68] most dangerous city in America, reporting 1,417 violent crimes per 100,000 persons, well above the national average, and 22 murders per 100,000 (above the average of 4.7).[citation needed] In 2013, violent crime lessened to 1,230.3 crimes per 100,000 population, making it 19th on the list of the most dangerous cities.[110] Stockton has experienced a high rate of violent crime, reaching a record high of 71 homicides in 2012 before dropping to 32 for all of 2013.[110][111]

Stockton Police Chief Eric Jones credited 2013's drop in the murder rate to Operation Ceasefire, a gun violence intervention strategy pioneered in Boston and implemented in Stockton in 2012,[112] combined with a federal gun and narcotics operation.[113]

Cleveland Elementary School shooting

On January 17, 1989, the Stockton Police Department received a threat against Cleveland Elementary School from an unknown person. Later that day, Patrick Purdy, who was later found to be mentally ill, opened fire on the school's playground with a semi-automatic rifle, killing five children, all Cambodian or Vietnamese refugees, and wounding 29 others, and a teacher, before taking his own life. The Cleveland Elementary School shooting received national news coverage and is sometimes referred to as the Cleveland School massacre.[114]

Fire department

The Stockton Fire Department was first rated as a Class 1 fire department by the Insurance Services Office in 1971. In 2005, all 13 of the city's stations met the National Fire Protection Association standard of a 5-minute response time.[115] In 2009, it had 13 fire stations and over 275 career personnel.[116] Due in part to staffing levels that placed five staff on ladder companies and four staff on engines, it was one of only 57 departments among 44,000 to receive the Class 1 rating in 2010.[117]

The department maintained this rating until 2011, when during the city's Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceedings and following a Civil Grand Jury investigation, the city reduced staffing levels from 220 full-time staff to 177, and the 2011 budget from $59 million to $40 million. The department was cut by 30%.[118] The bankruptcy was due in part to a 1996 decision made by the city to provide firefighters with free health care after retirement, which they later expanded to all city employees. The benefit gradually grew into a $417 million liability.[119]

As of 2016, the department consists of 12 firehouses that house 12 Engine Companies and three Truck Companies. In 2015 the Fire Department responded to over 40,000 emergency calls for service, including more than 300 working structure fires. The department is one of the busiest in the United States. The Stockton Fire Department is assisted on medical emergency calls by American Medical Response.[120]

Education

Primary and secondary

 
Burns Tower on the University of the Pacific campus

Stockton is part of four public school districts: Stockton Unified School District, Lincoln Unified School District, Lodi Unified School District, and Manteca Unified School District. There are more than 40 private elementary and secondary schools, including Saint Mary's High School. Stockton is also home to public charter school systems including Aspire Public Schools, Stockton Collegiate, Stockton Unified Early College Academy, and Venture Academy.[citation needed]

Post-secondary

The University of the Pacific moved to Stockton in 1924 from San Jose. The university is the only private school in the United States with less than 10,000 students enrolled that offers eight different professional schools. It also offers a large number of degree programs relative to its student population.[121] The men's Pacific Tigers basketball team has been in the NCAA Tournament nine times. The Tigers have played their home games at the Alex G. Spanos Center since 1982, prior to that playing at the Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium since 1952. The campus has been used in the filming of a number of Hollywood films (see below), partly due to its likeness to East Coast Ivy League universities.[122]

Also located in Stockton are:

Transportation

Stockton is centrally located with access to:

Roads and railways

 
The San Joaquin Street Amtrak station in Stockton

Due to its location at the "crossroads" of the Central Valley and a relatively extensive highway system, Stockton is easily accessible from virtually anywhere in California. Interstate 5 and State Route 99, California's major north–south thoroughfares, pass through the city limits. The east–west highway State Route 4 also passes through the city, providing access to the San Francisco Bay Area as well as the Sierra Nevada and its foothills. Stockton is the western terminus of State Route 26 and State Route 88, which extends to the Nevada border. In addition, Stockton is within an hour of Interstate 80, Interstate 205 and Interstate 580.[citation needed]

Stockton is served by San Joaquin Regional Transit District.[124]

Stockton is also connected to the rest of the nation through a network of railways. Stockton has two passenger rail stations. Robert J. Cabral Station, which provides service to Sacramento on Amtrak's San Joaquins route, and also serves as the northern terminus of the Altamont Corridor Express commuter rail service to San Jose. San Joaquin Street station provides service to Oakland via the San Joaquins route.

Union Pacific and BNSF Railway, the two largest railroad networks in North America both service Stockton and its port via connections with the Stockton Terminal and Eastern Railroad and Central California Traction Company, who provide local and interconnecting services between the various rail lines. The Stockton Diamond was the busiest interchange point in the state by 2020;[125] a grade separation project to elevate the Union Pacific over the BNSF line is planned to be completed by 2026.

Air

 
Passenger terminal of Stockton Metropolitan Airport

Stockton is served by Stockton Metropolitan Airport, located on county land just south of city limits. The airport has been designated a Foreign Trade Zone and is mainly used by manufacturing and agricultural companies for shipping purposes. Since airline deregulation, passenger service has come and gone several times. Domestic service resumed on June 16, 2006, with service to Las Vegas by Allegiant Air.[126] The days of service and number of flights were expanded a few months later due to demand. Air service to Phoenix began in September 2007.

On July 1, 2010, Allegiant Air implemented non-stop service to and from Long Beach.[126] In 2006 Aeromexico had plans to provide flights to and from Guadalajara, Mexico, but the airport's plan to build a customs station at the airport was initially rejected by the customs service. However, the possibility of building this station is currently a continuing matter of negotiation between the airport and the customs service, and Aeromexico has indicated a continuing interest in eventually providing service. Ground transportation is available from Hertz, Enterprise, Yellow Cab and Aurora Limousine.[citation needed]

Seaport

The Port of Stockton is a fully operating seaport approximately 75 nautical miles (86 mi; 139 km) east of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Set on the San Joaquin River, the port operates a 4,200-acre (17 km2)[127] transportation center with berthing space for 17 vessels up to 900 feet (270 m) in length.[128] As of 2014, the Port of Stockton had 136 tenants[129] and is served by BNSF & UP Railroads.[130] The port also includes 1.1 million square feet (102,000 m2) of dockside transit sheds and shipside rail track and 7.7 million square feet (715,000 m2) of warehousing.[131]

Adjacent to the port is Rough and Ready Island, which served as a World War II–era naval supply base until it was decommissioned during the Base Realignment and Closure process in 1995.

Media

Periodicals

Daily periodicals
  • The Record is a daily newspaper
  • Stocktonia News Service is an online news site for Stockton.
Weekly periodicals
  • Bilingual Weekly News publishes a weekly newspaper, in both Spanish and English
Monthly periodicals
  • Artifact is a San Joaquin Delta College periodical based in Stockton from December 2006 - 2020. Writing in all genres, photography and visual media by students, staff and faculty as well as community members are accepted.
  • Caravan is a local community arts and events monthly tabloid.
  • Poets' Espresso Review is a periodical that has been based in Stockton, mostly distributed by mail, from 2005-2010.
  • San Joaquin Magazine is a regional lifestyle magazine covering Stockton, Lodi, Tracy, and Manteca.
  • The Central Valley Business Journal is a monthly business tabloid.
  • The Downtowner was a free monthly guide to downtown Stockton's events, commerce, real estate, and other cultural and community happenings.

Radio broadcast stations

AM stations

  • KCVR 1570: Spanish Adult Hits
  • KWG 1230: Catholic, switched formats to News/talk. Established in 1921, one of California's oldest running AM radio stations.[132]
  • KWSX 1280: Rock and Roll simulcast of KMRQ 96.7 Manteca
  • KSTN 1420 Modern Country Simulcast on 105.9FM

In addition, several radio stations from nearby San Francisco, Sacramento and Modesto are receivable in Stockton.

FM stations

Television stations

As part of the Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto television market, Stockton is primarily served by stations based in Sacramento, but may carry some San Francisco Bay area television stations' airwaves. These are listed below, with the city of license in bold:

In popular culture

Comics

Films

A number of motion pictures have been filmed in Stockton, including:

Television

Awards and recognition

Stockton received the All-America City award from the National Civic League in 1999, 2004, 2015, and 2017, a total of four times. 2004's award was based on a 60-member delegation's presentation titled "The Dream Lives On!", and featured three community-driven projects: Community Partnership for Families, Downtown Alliance, and the Peace Keeper Program.[155] The 1999 award recognized the Apollo Night Talent and Performing Series, the conversion of the Stockton Developmental Center into an off-campus center for the California State University at Stanislaus, and the LEAP (Let Education Attack Pollution) program.[156]

Sunset magazine named Stockton Best Tree City in the western United States in March 2002,[157] and "Best of the West Food Fest" in March 2000. Stockton contains 49 city, state, and national historical landmarks, dating as far back as 1855.

In February 2009, and again in February 2011, Stockton was named "America's Most Miserable City" by Forbes, reflecting the city's issues with commuting times, violent crime rates, income tax levels, and unemployment rates. Stockton had placed second in this listing in 2008.[158]

Notable people

Stockton was home to the world's first radio disc jockey, Ray Newby. In 1909, at 16 years of age, Newby began regularly playing records on a small transmitter while a student at Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless, located in San Jose, under the authority of radio pioneer Charles "Doc" Herrold.[159][160]

The indie rock band Pavement was formed in Stockton in 1989 by two local musicians, Stephen Malkmus and Scott Kannberg, known originally only as "S.M." and "Spiral Stairs".[161][162]

Nick and Nate Diaz, mixed martial arts fighters under the UFC promotional banner, are also famously from the "209", i.e. Stockton, California. They are known to promote themselves using Stockton almost like N.W.A. used Compton. They also wear fight clothes with 209 on them. They can be seen shouting "Stockton 209 motherfucker" in numerous interviews and press conferences. Their team, which includes other MMA fighters such as Gilbert Melendez, Jake Shields, Nick Diaz, Daniel Roberts, Nate Diaz and David Terrell under the leadership of Cesar Gracie, are known as the Stockton Skrap Pack[163] and have been involved in several infamous brawls in and outside the Octagon.

Jose M. Hernandez, a famous NASA astronaut and engineer,[164] also refers to Stockton as his hometown. Akiko Billings, a notable engineer and women's advocate born in Fiji, considers Stockton her American home. Chi Cheng, bass player for the Deftones, was born and raised in Stockton and attended Tokay High School. Reagan Maui'a, a former NFL fullback, originally played for Tokay High School. Musician Chris Isaak was born in Stockton.[165]

Sister cities

Stockton has seven sister cities:[166]

Country City Year of Partnership
  Japan Shizuoka March 9, 1959;[167] October 16, 1959[168]
  Philippines Iloilo City August 2, 1965
  Mexico Empalme September 4, 1973
  People's Republic of China Foshan April 11, 1988
  Italy Parma January 13, 1998
  Cambodia Battambang October 19, 2004
  Nigeria Asaba June 6, 2006

See also

Notes

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

References

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Further reading

  • Robinette, Allen M. (June 1908). "History of the Stockton Fire Department 1850–1908".
  • Tinkham, George Henry (1880). A history of Stockton from its organization up to the present time. W.M. Hinton & Co.
  • Mabalon, Dawn Bohulano (May 29, 2013). Little Manila Is in the Heart: The Making of the Filipina/o American Community in Stockton, California. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-9574-4.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Stockton, California at Curlie
  • Official visitor and tourist information
  • Historic Stockton Photographs at Holt-Atherton Special Collections
  • Spooner California Stereograph Collection at Holt-Atherton Special Collections

stockton, california, stockton, city, county, seat, joaquin, county, central, valley, state, california, stockton, founded, carlos, maria, weber, 1849, after, acquired, rancho, campo, franceses, city, named, after, robert, stockton, first, community, californi. Stockton is a city in and the county seat of San Joaquin County in the Central Valley of the U S state of California 18 Stockton was founded by Carlos Maria Weber in 1849 after he acquired Rancho Campo de los Franceses The city is named after Robert F Stockton 19 and it was the first community in California to have a name not of Spanish or Native American origin The city is located on the San Joaquin River in the northern San Joaquin Valley Stockton is the 11th largest city in California and the 58th largest city in the United States It was named an All America City in 1999 2004 and 2015 and again in 2017 Stockton CaliforniaCityCity of StocktonClockwise Hotel Stockton Fox Theatre University of the Pacific Downtown Stockton Commercial amp Savings BankFlagSealNickname s Tuleburg 1 Mudville 1 California s Sunrise Seaport 2 Port City 1 Asparagus Capital of America 1 Motto Stockton All American City 3 Location within San Joaquin County and the state of CaliforniaStocktonLocation within CaliforniaShow map of CaliforniaStocktonLocation within the contiguous United StatesShow map of the United StatesStocktonLocation within North AmericaShow map of North AmericaCoordinates 37 58 32 N 121 18 03 W 37 97556 N 121 30083 W 37 97556 121 30083 Coordinates 37 58 32 N 121 18 03 W 37 97556 N 121 30083 W 37 97556 121 30083CountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaRegionSan Joaquin ValleyCountySan JoaquinIncorporatedJuly 23 1850 4 Named forRobert F StocktonGovernment TypeCity Manager Council 5 MayorKevin J Lincoln II R City councilSol Jobrack 6 Daniel Wright 7 Paul Canepa 8 Susan Lenz 9 Christina Fugazi 10 Kimberly Warmsley 11 City managerHarry E Black 12 State senatorSusan Eggman D 13 AssemblymemberCarlos Villapudua D 13 Area 14 City65 25 sq mi 169 01 km2 Land62 17 sq mi 161 02 km2 Water3 08 sq mi 7 99 km2 4 76 Elevation 15 13 ft 4 m Population 2020 16 City320 804 Rank1st in San Joaquin County11th in California62nd in the United States Density4 900 sq mi 1 900 km2 Urban414 847 US 101st Urban density4 486 7 sq mi 1 732 3 km2 Metro779 233 US 76th DemonymStocktonianTime zoneUTC 8 Pacific Summer DST UTC 7 PDT ZIP codes95201 95213 95215 95219 95267 95269 95296 95297Area code209FIPS code06 75000GNIS feature IDs1659872 2411987Websitewww wbr stocktongov wbr comBuilt during the California Gold Rush Stockton s seaport serves as a gateway to the Central Valley and beyond It provided easy access for trade and transportation to the southern gold mines The University of the Pacific UOP chartered in 1851 is the oldest university in California and has been located in Stockton since 1923 In 2012 Stockton filed for what was then the largest municipal bankruptcy in US history which had multiple causes including financial mismanagement in the 1990s generous fringe benefits to unionized city employees 20 and the 2008 financial crisis Stockton successfully exited bankruptcy in February 2015 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 1 1 Mexican era 2 1 2 Gold Rush era 2 1 3 Chinese immigration 2 1 4 Incorporation 2 2 20th century 3 Economy 3 1 Shopping 3 2 Construction and public spending 3 3 Real estate bubble 3 4 City bankruptcy 3 5 Experiment in Guaranteed Basic Income 4 Climate 5 Demographics 5 1 2010 US Census 5 2 Rankings 5 3 Top employers 6 Culture 6 1 Performing arts 6 1 1 Music 6 1 2 Theatre 6 2 Visual arts 6 2 1 Museums and galleries 6 3 Festivals 6 4 Sports 6 5 Parks 7 City government 7 1 Police department 7 2 Fire department 7 3 Education 7 3 1 Primary and secondary 7 3 2 Post secondary 8 Transportation 8 1 Roads and railways 8 2 Air 8 3 Seaport 9 Media 9 1 Periodicals 9 2 Radio broadcast stations 9 2 1 AM stations 9 2 2 FM stations 9 3 Television stations 10 In popular culture 10 1 Comics 10 2 Films 10 3 Television 11 Awards and recognition 12 Notable people 13 Sister cities 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksGeography EditStockton is situated amidst the farmland of California s San Joaquin Valley a subregion of the Central Valley In and around Stockton are thousands of miles of waterways that make up the California Delta Interstate 5 and State Route 99 inland California s major north south highways pass through the city State Route 4 and the dredged San Joaquin River connect the city with the San Francisco Bay Area to its west creating the Stockton Deepwater Shipping Channel Stockton and Sacramento are California s only inland sea ports According to the United States Census Bureau the city occupies a total area of 64 8 square miles 168 km2 of which 61 7 square miles 160 km2 is land and 3 1 square miles 8 0 km2 comprising 4 76 is water History Edit Carlos Maria Weber founded Stockton when he acquired and settled Rancho Campo de los Franceses When Europeans first arrived in the Stockton area it was occupied by the Yatchicumne a branch of the Northern Valley Yokuts Indians They built their villages on low mounds to keep their homes above regular floods A Yokuts village named Pasasimas was located on a mound between Edison and Harrison Streets on what is now the Stockton Channel in downtown Stockton 21 The Siskiyou Trail began in the northern San Joaquin Valley It was a centuries old Native American footpath that led through the Sacramento Valley over the Cascades and into present day Oregon 22 The extensive network of waterways in and around Stockton was fished and navigated by Miwok Indians for centuries During the California Gold Rush the San Joaquin River was navigable by ocean going vessels making Stockton a natural inland seaport and point of supply and departure for prospective gold miners From the mid 19th century onward Stockton became the region s transportation hub dealing mainly with agricultural products 19th century Edit Stockton c 1860 Main Street Stockton c 1870 City of Stockton in 1895 Mexican era Edit Carlos Maria Weber was a German emigre in the United States in 1836 He was born Karl and then went by Charles in the United States spending time in Texas He then came overland from Missouri to California with the Bartleson Bidwell Party in 1841 and began to go by Carlos when he began working for John Sutter In 1842 Weber settled in the Pueblo of San Jose As an alien Weber could not secure a land grant directly so he formed a partnership with Guillermo William Gulnac Born in New York Gulnac had married a Mexican woman and sworn allegiance to Mexico which then ruled California He applied in Weber s place for Rancho Campo de los Franceses a land grant of 11 square leagues on the east side of the San Joaquin River 23 Gulnac and Weber dissolved their partnership in 1843 Gulnac s attempts to settle the Rancho Campo de los Franceses failed and Weber acquired it in 1845 In 1846 Weber had induced a number of settlers to locate on the rancho when the Mexican American War broke out Considered a Californio Weber was offered the position of captain by Mexican Gen Jose Castro which he declined he later however accepted the position of captain in the Cavalry of the United States Capt Weber s decision to change sides lost him a great deal of the trust he had built up among his Mexican business partners As a result he moved to the grant in 1847 and sold his business in San Jose in 1849 Gold Rush era Edit At the start of the California Gold Rush in 1848 Europeans and Americans started to arrive in the area of Weber s rancho on their way to the goldfields When Weber decided to try his hand at gold mining in late 1848 he soon found selling supplies to gold seekers was more profitable 24 As the head of navigation on the San Joaquin River the city grew rapidly as a miners supply point during the Gold Rush Weber built the first permanent residence in the San Joaquin Valley on a piece of land now known as Weber Point 21 During the Gold Rush the location of what is now Stockton developed as a river port the hub of roads to the gold settlements in the San Joaquin Valley and northern terminus of the Stockton Los Angeles Road During its early years Stockton was known by several names including Weberville Fat City Mudville and California s Sunrise Seaport 2 In 1849 Weber laid out a town which he named Tuleburg but he soon decided on Stockton in honor of Commodore Robert F Stockton Stockton was the first community in California to have a name that was neither Spanish nor Native American in origin 1 Chinese immigration Edit Thousands of Chinese came to Stockton from the Kwangtung province of China during the 1850s due to a combination of political and economic unrest in China and the discovery of gold in California After the gold rush many worked for the railroads and land reclamation projects in the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta and remained in Stockton By 1880 Stockton was home to the third largest Chinese community in California Discriminatory laws in particular the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 restricted immigration and prevented the Chinese from buying property 25 The Lincoln Hotel built in 1920 by the Wong brothers on South El Dorado Street was considered one of Stockton s finest hotels of the time Only after the Magnuson Act was repealed in 1962 were American born Chinese allowed to buy property and own buildings 26 27 Incorporation Edit The city was officially incorporated on July 23 1850 by the county court and the first city election was held on July 31 1850 In 1851 the City of Stockton received its charter from the State of California Early settlers included gold seekers from Asia Africa Australia Europe the Pacific Islands Mexico and Canada The historical population diversity is reflected in Stockton street names architecture numerous ethnic festivals and the faces and heritage of a majority of its citizens In 1870 the Census Bureau reported Stockton s population as 87 6 white and 10 7 Asian Many Chinese were immigrating to California as workers in these years especially for the Transcontinental Railroad 28 Benjamin Holt settled in Stockton in 1883 and with his three brothers founded the Stockton Wheel Co and later the Holt Manufacturing Company 20th century Edit Benjamin Holt left with British Col Ernest Dunlop Swinton in Stockton April 1918 The vehicle on the right is a Holt tractor on the left is a miniature replica of a British tank First Sikh temple in the United States built in Stockton in 1912 On Thanksgiving Day November 24 1904 Holt successfully tested the first workable track laying machine plowing soggy San Joaquin Valley Delta farmland 29 Company photographer Charles Clements was reported to have observed that the tractor crawled like a caterpillar and Holt seized on the metaphor Caterpillar it is That s the name for it 30 On April 22 1918 British Army Col Ernest Dunlop Swinton visited Stockton while on a tour of the United States The British and French armies were using many hundreds of Holt tractors to haul heavy guns and supplies during World War I and Swinton publicly thanked Holt and his workforce for their contribution to the war effort 31 During 1914 and 1915 Swinton had advocated basing some sort of armored fighting vehicle on Holt s caterpillar tractors but without success although Britain did develop tanks they came from a separate source and were not directly derived from Holt machines 32 After the appearance of tanks on the battlefield Holt built a prototype the gas electric tank but it did not enter production On January 10 1920 a major fire on Main Street threatened an entire city block At about 2 a m a blaze was discovered in the basement of the Yost Dohrmann store which was gutted and adjacent businesses were damaged by flames and water Damage was estimated at 150 000 33 By 1931 the Stockton Electric Railroad Co operated 40 streetcars over 28 miles 45 km of track 34 Stockton is the site of the first Sikh temple in the United States Gurdwara Sahib Stockton opened on October 24 1912 It was founded by Baba Jawala Singh and Baba Wasakha Singh successful Punjabi immigrants who farmed and owned 500 acres 202 ha on the Holt River 35 In 1933 the port was modernized and the Stockton Deepwater Channel which improved water passage to San Francisco Bay was deepened and completed This created commercial opportunities that fueled the city s growth Ruff and Ready Island Naval Supply Depot was established placing Stockton in a strategic position during the Cold War 36 During the Great Depression the town s canning industry became the battleground of a labor dispute resulting in the Spinach Riot of 1937 37 Partial view of the Stockton Assembly Center During World War II the Stockton Assembly Center was built on the San Joaquin County Fairgrounds a few blocks from what was then the city center One of 15 temporary detention sites run by the Wartime Civilian Control Administration the center held some 4 200 Japanese Americans removed from their West Coast homes under Executive Order 9066 while they waited for transfer to more permanent and isolated camps in the interior of the country The center opened on May 10 1942 and operated until October 17 when the majority of its population was sent to Rohwer Arkansas The former incarceration site was named a California Historical Landmark in 1980 and in 1984 a marker was erected at the entrance to the fairgrounds 38 In 1979 the development of a residential area in Stockton at a burial ground of the tribe unearthed two hundred Miwok remains In an attempt to prevent the further desecration of the burial grounds a descendant of the people initiated a legal case which became Wana the Bear v Community Construction 1982 The decision ultimately sided with the development company which was heavily criticized by Native Americans as a display of ethnocentrism 39 40 In September 1996 the Base Realignment and Closure Commission announced the final closure of Stockton s Naval Reserve Center on Rough and Ready Island Formerly known as Ruff and Ready Island Naval Supply Depot the island s facilities had served as a major communications outpost for submarine activities in the Pacific during the Cold War The site is slowly being redeveloped as commercial property 41 Economy Edit The historic Commercial amp Savings Bank building Stockton This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Historically an agricultural community Stockton s economy has since diversified into other industries which include telecommunications and manufacturing Stockton s central location relative to both San Francisco and Sacramento as well as its proximity to the state and interstate freeway system together with its comparatively inexpensive land costs have prompted several companies to base their regional operations in the city Shopping Edit The city of Stockton has two shopping malls located adjacent to each other Weberstown Mall and Sherwood Mall It has the only Dillard s in the Northern California region at the Weberstown Mall as well as one of the three Sears stores still operating in the Northern California region Construction and public spending Edit View across Stockton Metropolitan Airport 2009 Beginning in the late 1990s Stockton had commenced some revitalization projects 42 Newly built or renovated buildings include the Bob Hope Theater Regal City Centre Cinemas and IMAX San Joaquin RTD Downtown Transit Center Lexington Plaza Waterfront Hotel Hotel Stockton Stockton Arena the San Joaquin County Administration Building and the Stockton Ballpark citation needed A new downtown marina and adjacent Joan Darah Promenade were added along the south shore of the Stockton Deep Water Channel during 2009 Various public art projects were also installed throughout the area see Stockton s public art section citation needed Real estate bubble Edit Stockton 2012 aerial view The Stockton real estate market was disproportionately affected by the 2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis and the city led the United States in foreclosures for that year with one of every 30 homes posted for foreclosure 43 From September 2006 to September 2007 the value of a median priced house in Stockton declined by 44 44 Stockton s Weston Ranch neighborhood a subdivision of modest tract homes built in the mid 1990s had the worst foreclosure rate in the area according to ACORN a now defunct national advocacy group for low and moderate income families citation needed Stockton found itself squarely at the center of the 2000s speculative housing bubble Real estate in Stockton more than tripled in value between 1998 and 2005 but when the bubble burst in 2007 the ensuing financial crisis made Stockton one of the hardest hit cities in United States 45 Stockton housing prices fell 39 in the 2008 fiscal year and the city had the country s highest foreclosure rate 9 5 as well Stockton also had an unemployment rate of 13 3 in 2008 one of the highest in the United States Stockton was rated by Forbes in 2009 as America s fifth most dangerous city because of its crime rate 45 In 2010 mainly due to the aforementioned factors Forbes named it one of the three worst places to live in the United States 46 City bankruptcy Edit Following the 2008 financial crisis in June 2012 Stockton became the largest city in U S history to file for bankruptcy protection It was surpassed by Detroit in July 2013 The city approved a plan to exit bankruptcy in October 2013 47 and voters approved a sales tax on November 5 2013 to help fund the exit 48 The collapse in real estate valuations had a negative effect on the city s revenue base On June 28 2012 Stockton filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy 49 On April 1 2013 the United States Bankruptcy Court Eastern District of California ruled that Stockton was eligible for bankruptcy protection The Stockton bankruptcy case lasted longer than two years and received nationwide attention On October 4 2013 Stockton City Council approved a bankruptcy exit plan by a 6 0 vote 47 to be filed with the U S Bankruptcy Court Eastern District of California Sacramento Voters approved a 3 4 cent sales tax on November 5 2013 to help fund the bankruptcy exit 48 On October 30 2014 a federal bankruptcy judge approved the city s bankruptcy recovery plan thus allowing the city to continue with the planned pension payments to retired workers 50 The city exited from Chapter 9 bankruptcy on February 25 2015 Experiment in Guaranteed Basic Income Edit As part of a privately funded experiment in Universal Basic Income in 2019 the Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration S E E D conducted a pilot project that gave a 500 stipend to 125 randomly selected residents for an 24 month period with no strings attached 51 It was made possible by the Economic Security Project 52 an advocacy group chaired by Facebook co founder Chris Hughes which provided the first 1 million for the program and a dozen other Silicon Valley organizations and private donors who funded the rest of its 3 million budget 53 54 The positive benefits of the program during the first year were described in an interim report published in March 2021 55 Climate Edit Stockton in relation to the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta Stockton s climate lies right on the boundary of and fluctuates between hot summer Mediterranean Koppen Csa and cool semi arid BSk Stockton is characterized by very hot arid summer and cool wet winter In an average year nearly 95 of the 13 45 inches 341 6 mm of precipitation falls from October through April 56 Located in the Central Valley the temperature range is much greater than in the nearby Bay Area The degree of diurnal temperature variation is roughly twice as high in the summer as in the winter Tule fog blankets the area during some winter days Stockton lies in the fertile heart of the California Mediterranean climate prairie delta about equidistant from the Pacific Ocean and the Sierra Nevada citation needed The intermediate climate between the coast and the Central Valley gives a similar climate to that of Badajoz Spain 57 At the airport the highest recorded temperature was 115 F 46 C on July 23 2006 and September 6 2022 and the lowest was 16 F 9 C on January 11 1949 There are an average of 88 afternoons annually with high temperatures of 90 F 32 2 C or higher and 19 afternoons of 100 F 37 8 C or above 19 mornings see low temperatures at or below freezing The wettest rain year was from July 1982 to June 1983 with 27 89 inches 708 4 mm and the driest from July 1975 to June 1976 with 5 71 inches 145 0 mm 58 Note that regional difference of precipitation has been recorded in Stockton The more northern part of Stockton receives more precipitation than southern Stockton The most rainfall in one month was 8 22 inches 208 8 mm in February 1998 and the most rainfall in 24 hours was 3 01 inches 76 5 mm on January 21 1967 58 There are an average of 56 5 days with measurable precipitation 56 Only light amounts of snow have been recorded and the only instance of measurable snowfall occurred on February 5 1976 with 0 3 in 0 8 cm measured 58 Climate data for Stockton Metropolitan Airport California 1991 2020 normals a extremes 1948 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 78 26 79 26 87 31 100 38 107 42 111 44 115 46 113 45 115 46 101 38 85 29 76 24 115 46 Mean maximum F C 65 3 18 5 71 6 22 0 79 3 26 3 89 3 31 8 97 3 36 3 104 3 40 2 105 8 41 0 104 9 40 5 101 4 38 6 92 2 33 4 77 8 25 4 65 9 18 8 107 7 42 1 Average high F C 57 0 13 9 62 9 17 2 68 5 20 3 74 5 23 6 82 8 28 2 90 4 32 4 95 4 35 2 94 4 34 7 90 4 32 4 80 3 26 8 66 6 19 2 57 1 13 9 76 7 24 8 Daily mean F C 48 0 8 9 52 1 11 2 56 4 13 6 60 9 16 1 67 7 19 8 74 0 23 3 78 1 25 6 77 3 25 2 73 9 23 3 65 5 18 6 54 7 12 6 47 7 8 7 63 0 17 2 Average low F C 39 1 3 9 41 3 5 2 44 2 6 8 47 4 8 6 52 6 11 4 57 6 14 2 60 9 16 1 60 3 15 7 57 5 14 2 50 6 10 3 42 8 6 0 38 4 3 6 49 4 9 7 Mean minimum F C 28 2 2 1 31 0 0 6 35 0 1 7 38 3 3 5 44 5 6 9 49 8 9 9 54 1 12 3 53 8 12 1 49 9 9 9 41 0 5 0 31 9 0 1 27 9 2 3 26 0 3 3 Record low F C 16 9 22 6 27 3 32 0 36 2 45 7 49 9 47 8 42 6 33 1 25 4 17 8 16 9 Average precipitation inches mm 2 67 68 2 50 64 1 91 49 1 11 28 0 57 14 0 10 2 5 trace 0 01 0 25 0 08 2 0 0 69 18 1 40 36 2 41 61 13 45 342 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 9 7 9 2 9 0 5 3 2 9 1 0 0 2 0 2 0 7 2 8 6 4 9 1 56 5Source NOAA 58 56 Climate data for STOCKTON FIRE STN 4 CALIFORNIA averages 1981 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high F C 55 8 13 2 63 0 17 2 68 4 20 2 74 2 23 4 81 8 27 7 88 7 31 5 93 6 34 2 92 9 33 8 89 5 31 9 80 3 26 8 66 4 19 1 56 5 13 6 76 0 24 4 Daily mean F C 46 8 8 2 52 1 11 2 56 5 13 6 60 7 15 9 67 3 19 6 72 7 22 6 76 4 24 7 75 5 24 2 72 6 22 6 64 9 18 3 54 2 12 3 46 9 8 3 62 2 16 8 Average low F C 37 8 3 2 41 2 5 1 44 5 6 9 47 3 8 5 52 7 11 5 56 8 13 8 59 1 15 1 58 1 14 5 55 7 13 2 49 5 9 7 41 9 5 5 37 3 2 9 48 5 9 2 Average rainfall inches mm 3 41 87 3 10 79 2 68 68 1 41 36 0 56 14 0 10 2 5 trace 0 02 0 51 0 29 7 4 0 99 25 2 16 55 3 05 77 17 77 451 Source Western Regional Climate Center 59 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 18603 679 187010 066173 6 188010 2822 1 189014 42440 3 190017 50621 4 191023 25332 8 192040 29673 3 193047 96319 0 194054 71414 1 195070 85329 5 196086 32121 8 1970109 96327 4 1980148 28334 8 1990210 94342 3 2000243 77115 6 2010291 70719 7 2020320 80410 0 U S Decennial Census 60 failed verification 2020 16 This section needs to be updated The reason given is Newer information is available from the 2020 census report Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2022 Ethnic composition 2010 61 1990 62 1970 62 1940 62 White 37 0 57 5 79 5 90 7 Non Hispanic whites 22 1 43 6 63 3 63 n aBlack or African American 12 2 9 6 11 0 1 6 Hispanic or Latino of any race 40 3 25 0 17 5 63 n aAsian 21 5 22 8 7 9 7 6 2010 US Census Edit The 2010 United States Census 64 reported that Stockton had a population of 291 707 The population density was 4 505 0 inhabitants per square mile 1 739 4 km2 The racial makeup of Stockton was 108 044 37 0 white 22 1 non Hispanic white 61 35 548 12 2 African American 3 086 1 1 Native American 62 716 21 5 Asian 7 2 Filipino 3 5 Cambodian 2 1 Vietnamese 2 0 Hmong 1 8 Chinese 1 6 Indian 1 0 Laotian 0 6 Pakistani 0 5 Japanese 0 2 Korean 0 1 Thai 1 822 0 6 Pacific Islander 0 2 Samoan 0 1 Tongan 0 1 Guamanian 60 332 20 7 from other races and 20 159 6 9 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 117 590 persons 40 3 35 7 of Stockton s population was of Mexican descent and 0 6 Puerto Rican The 2010 census reported that 285 973 people 98 0 of the population lived in households 3 896 1 3 lived in non institutionalized group quarters and 1 838 0 6 were institutionalized There were 90 605 households out of which 41 033 45 3 had children under the age of 18 living in them 41 481 45 8 were heterosexual married couples living together 17 140 18 9 had a female householder with no husband present 7 157 7 9 had a male householder with no wife present There were 7 123 7 9 unmarried heterosexual partnerships and 720 0 8 same sex married or registered domestic partnerships 19 484 households 21 5 were made up of individuals and 7 185 7 9 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 3 16 There were 65 778 families 72 6 of all households the average family size was 3 69 The population was spread out with 87 338 people 29 9 under the age of 18 34 126 people 11 7 aged 18 to 24 76 691 people 26 3 aged 25 to 44 64 300 people 22 0 aged 45 to 64 and 29 252 people 10 0 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 30 8 years For every 100 females there were 96 1 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 92 5 males There were 99 637 housing units at an average density of 1 538 7 per square mile 594 1 km2 of which 46 738 51 6 were owner occupied and 43 867 48 4 were occupied by renters The homeowner vacancy rate was 3 2 the rental vacancy rate was 9 4 146 235 people 50 1 of the population lived in owner occupied housing units and 139 738 people 47 9 lived in rental housing units Rankings Edit In 2020 U S News amp World Report named Stockton as America s most diverse city 65 Due to a number of socio economic problems Stockton has been subject to a series of negative national rankings In a 2010 Gallup poll Stockton was tied with Montgomery Alabama for the most obese metro area in the US with an obesity rate of 34 6 percent 66 In the February 2012 issue of Forbes the magazine ranked Stockton the eighth most miserable US city largely as a result of the steep drop in home values and high unemployment 44 In 2012 the National Insurance Crime Bureau ranked Stockton seventh in auto theft rate per capita in the US 67 In 2012 Stockton was ranked as the tenth most dangerous city in America and the second most dangerous in California behind Oakland 68 In 2013 Stockton was ranked as the third least literate city in the U S in a study by Central Connecticut State University with less than 17 of adults holding a college degree 69 and ABC com ranked the city as the third least literate of all U S cities with a population of more than 250 000 behind Bakersfield California and Corpus Christi Texas 70 Top employers Edit According to the city s 2020 comprehensive annual financial report 71 the top employers in the city were a No Employer No of employees1 St Joseph s Medical Center 4 6002 Stockton Unified School District 3 8943 City of Stockton 2 0994 Amazon 2 0005 Kaiser Permanente 1 0656 University of the Pacific 1 0297 San Joaquin Delta College 1 0078 Lincoln Unified School District 8579 Dameron Hospital 80010 O Reilly Auto Parts 600a San Joaquin County employers both within and outside the city Details of the split were not available and San Joaquin County has been excluded from the list Culture EditPerforming arts Edit The Fox California Theater Music Edit Stockton Symphony is the third oldest professional orchestra in California founded in 1926 after the San Francisco Symphony and the Los Angeles Philharmonic 72 University of the Pacific is known for its music conservatory and for being the home of the Brubeck Institute named after Dave Brubeck a Pacific alumnus and jazz piano legend The institute maintains an archive of Brubeck s work and offers a fellowship program for young musicians The Brubeck Institute Jazz Quartet is composed of Pacific students and tours widely 73 San Joaquin Delta College has a growing jazz program and is home to several official and unofficial jazz bands composed of Delta and Pacific students and faculty 74 Christian Life College offers associate and Bachelor of Arts degrees in Christian music Stockton hosts several live music venues including Stockton Arena which is home to several sports teams and has hosted nationally known entertainers such as Gwen Stefani Rob Zombie Ozzy Osbourne Josh Groban Carrie Underwood and Bob Dylan The annual Apollo Night talent show draws about 1 500 people to the Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium 1925 to watch performances by aspiring Northern California musicians 75 Theatre Edit The Bob Hope Theatre in downtown Stockton formerly known as the Fox California Theatre built in 1930 76 is one of several movie palaces in the Central Valley Bob Hope often came to Stockton to visit close friend and billionaire tycoon Alex Spanos who donated much of the money to revitalize the theater after Hope s death The University of the Pacific Faye Spanos Concert Hall often hosts public performances as does the Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium The Warren Atherton Auditorium at the Delta Center for the Arts on the campus of the San Joaquin Delta College is a 1 456 seat theater with a 60 foot 18 m proscenium and full grid system 77 The Stockton Empire Theater is an art deco movie theater that has been revitalized as a venue for live music Founded in 1951 the Stockton Civic Theatre offers an annual series of musicals comedies and dramas It maintains a 300 seat theater in the Venetian Bridges neighborhood The company also hosts the annual Willie awards for the local performing arts Other performing arts organizations and venues include the Stockton Opera 78 and others Visual arts Edit Museums and galleries Edit Stockton is home to several museums Haggin Museum the private non profit fine arts and history museum was built in Victory Park in 1931 The museum displays 19th and 20th century works of art and houses local historical exhibits The Haggin Museum features collections and exhibits related to local Valley history and California history The museum also displays fine art of late 19th and early 20th century artists such as Jean Beraud Albert Bierstadt Rosa Bonheur William Adolphe Bouguereau Paul Gauguin Jean Leon Gerome Childe Hassam George Inness Daniel Ridgway Knight Pierre Auguste Renoir Jehan Georges Vibert and Jules Worms 21 The San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum operates an 18 acre 7 3 ha museum facility at Micke Grove Park two miles 3 2 km north of the city The museum houses exhibits dedicated to the founding of Stockton San Joaquin County s legacy of innovation in agriculture and manufacturing immigrant communities in Stockton and Lodi and historic industries in San Joaquin County Reynolds Gallery and Horton Gallery the University of the Pacific Reynolds Gallery and the San Joaquin Delta College Horton Gallery both feature contemporary work by students and local and nationally known artists Children s Museum of Stockton housed in a former warehouse in the Downtown Waterfront District featuring many interactive displays Elsie May Goodwin Gallery operated by the Stockton Art League Filipino American National Historical Society proposed the construction of the National Pinoy Museum in the Little Manila district dedicated to the history of Filipino Americans Stockton historically had one of the largest populations of Filipinos immigrants and U S citizens in the United States 79 The museum opened in 2015 after two decades of planning 80 81 Art Expressions of San Joaquin an artists cooperative featuring the works of local artists with a prior gallery on the Miracle Mile and ongoing shows at the Hilton Hotel the County Administration Building and the Stockton Metropolitan Airport Stockton Field Aviation Museum sponsored by the Aeronautical Education Foundation featuring WWII era memorabilia Murals depicting the city s history decorate the exteriors of many downtown buildings Mexican Heritage Center amp Gallery Inc A non profit located in downtown Stockton whose mission is to educate and promote art and culture for current and future generations Since the late 1990s the Mexican Heritage Center amp Gallery has been a pioneer in bringing Mexican visual and performing arts to the Stockton community With over 77 000 trees the City of Stockton has been labeled Tree City USA some 30 times 21 Stockton has over 275 restaurants ranging in variety reflective of the population demographics A mix of American African American BBQ Cambodian Chinese Filipino Greek Italian Mexican and Vietnamese restaurants are abundant in the community reflecting the city s diverse culture Cantonese restaurant On Lock Sam still exists and dates back to 1895 82 Festivals Edit Stockton hosts many annual festivals celebrating the cultural heritage of the city including San Joaquin Children s Film Festival San Joaquin International Film Festival February 83 Chinese New Year s Parade and Festival First Sunday in March St Patrick s Day and Shamrock Run March Great Stockton Asparagus Dine Out April Stockton Asparagus Festival annual Asparagus food festival April 84 Brubeck Jazz Festival April 85 Earth Day Festival April Cambodian New Year April Annual Nagar Kirtan Sikh parade April 86 Boat Parade for the Opening of Yachting Season April Stockton Flavor Fest May Cinco de Mayo Parade and Festival May Zion Academy s Reclaim May Jewish Food Fair June Juneteenth Day Celebration June Stockton Obon Bazaar July 87 Peruvian Independence Day Festival July Taste of San Joaquin and West Coast BBQ Championships Filipino Barrio Fiesta August 88 Stockton Beer Week August 89 Stockton Pride August Christian Spirit Festival September The Record s Family Day at the Park Sept Stockton Restaurant Week September Black Family Day September San Joaquin County Coastal Cleanup Day September Greek Festival September First weekend after Labor Day Festa Italiana Tutti In Piazza September Stocktoberfest Beer and Brats Festival on the Waterfront October Dia De Los Muertos Festival October 90 Hmong New Year November Stockton Festival of Lights and Boat Parade December Sports Edit Stockton is home to two minor league franchises Stockton Kings NBA G League basketball team affiliate of the Sacramento Kings Stockton Ports Low A West baseball team affiliate of the Oakland Athletics The Stockton Ports Baseball Team play their home games at Banner Island Ballpark a 5 000 seat facility built for the team in downtown Stockton The Ports played their home games at Billy Hebert Field from 1953 to 2004 The Ports have been a single A team in Stockton since 1946 in the California Minor Leagues Stockton has minor league baseball dating back to 1886 91 The Ports have produced 244 Major League players including Gary Sheffield Dan Plesac Doug Jones Pat Listach and Stockton s own Dallas Braden among others 92 The Ports have eleven championships and are currently the A class team for the Oakland Athletics The Ports had the best win loss percentage in all Minor League Baseball in the 1980s 93 A 10 000 seat arena Stockton Arena located in Downtown Stockton opened in December 2005 and is home to the Stockton Kings NBAGL Stockton is home to the oldest NASCAR certified race track West of the Mississippi The Stockton 99 Speedway opened in 1947 and is a quarter mile oval paved track with grandstands that can accommodate 5 000 spectators citation needed Stockton s designation for Little League Baseball is District 8 which has 12 leagues of teams within the city Stockton also has several softball leagues including Stockton Girls Softball Association and Port City Softball League each having several hundred members citation needed Rowing Regatta featuring Junior Collegiate and Master Level Rowing amp Sculling Competition is organized by the University of the Pacific 94 annually on the Stockton s Deep Water Channel Teams from throughout Northern California compete in this Olympic sport which is also the oldest collegiate sport in the United States Stockton hosts a wide variety of sports events every year from resident hockey baseball and soccer games through basketball at the University of the Pacific and at the Stockton Arena golf championships at two 18 hole courses and a Par 3 Executive Course rowing sailing and fishing on the Delta and the Stockton Channel martial arts and cage fighting There are four public golf courses open year round Van Buskirk Swenson and The Reserve at Spanos Park and Elkhorn Golf Course Private courses include The Stockton Golf amp Country Club Oakmoore and Brookside Golf amp Country Club citation needed Stockton is one of a handful of cities that lays claim to being the inspiration for the 1888 poem Casey at the Bat 95 The University of the Pacific was the summer home of the San Francisco 49ers Summer Training Camp from 1998 through 2002 Stockton is also the base of UFC fighters Nick and Nate Diaz Nick is the former WEC and Strikeforce Welterweight champion 96 while Nate is the winner of The Ultimate Fighter 5 97 Both brothers are Brazilian jiu jitsu black belts under Cesar Gracie 98 and operate a school in Stockton which teaches Brazilian jiu jitsu to children and youth 99 100 Parks Edit Pixie Woods The City of Stockton has a small children s amusement park Pixie Woods the park opened in 1954 and has since welcomed more than one million visitors 101 City government EditSee also Government of San Joaquin County California On November 3 2020 Kevin J Lincoln II was elected mayor defeating incumbent mayor Michael Tubbs He assumed office on January 1 2021 102 City councilThe City Council consists of the following members as of January 1 2021 103 Kevin Lincoln Mayor Sol Jobrack District 1 Dan Wright District 2 Paul Canepa District 3 Susan Lenz District 4 Christina Fugazi District 5 Kimberly Warmsley District 6The current form of government is a city manager council 104 Stockton is also seat of San Joaquin County for which the government of San Joaquin County is defined and authorized under the California Constitution and law as a general law county The county government provides countywide services such as elections and voter registration law enforcement jails vital records property records tax collection public health and social services The county government is primarily composed of the elected five member Board of Supervisors and other elected offices including the Sheriff District Attorney and Assessor and numerous county departments and entities under the supervision of the county administrator 105 Police department Edit Stockton Police Department seal Modern historyThe city cut its police force by more than 20 during the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis but voters approved a sales tax on November 5 2013 that provided funds to hire an additional 120 police officers 106 107 On July 16 2014 officers responded to an armed bank robbery which resulted in the four perpetrators taking three hostages and leading them on an hour long high speed pursuit Over the course of the car chase one suspect fired over 100 rounds from an AK 47s at police disabling 14 police vehicles including the department s own Lenco BearCat armored personnel carrier More than 30 officers shot over 600 rounds into the getaway vehicle Two perpetrators were killed two hostages were injured one hostage was killed by police ammunition and numerous vehicles and other property were damaged or destroyed by the nearly 1 000 rounds of ammunition fired by the robbers and police 108 The department faced criticism with its handling of the incident in the aftermath 109 Crime Amtrak Police cars at the Stockton San Joaquin Street Station in Stockton 2012 In 2012 the City of Stockton was the 10th 68 most dangerous city in America reporting 1 417 violent crimes per 100 000 persons well above the national average and 22 murders per 100 000 above the average of 4 7 citation needed In 2013 violent crime lessened to 1 230 3 crimes per 100 000 population making it 19th on the list of the most dangerous cities 110 Stockton has experienced a high rate of violent crime reaching a record high of 71 homicides in 2012 before dropping to 32 for all of 2013 110 111 Stockton Police Chief Eric Jones credited 2013 s drop in the murder rate to Operation Ceasefire a gun violence intervention strategy pioneered in Boston and implemented in Stockton in 2012 112 combined with a federal gun and narcotics operation 113 Cleveland Elementary School shootingMain article Cleveland Elementary School shooting Stockton On January 17 1989 the Stockton Police Department received a threat against Cleveland Elementary School from an unknown person Later that day Patrick Purdy who was later found to be mentally ill opened fire on the school s playground with a semi automatic rifle killing five children all Cambodian or Vietnamese refugees and wounding 29 others and a teacher before taking his own life The Cleveland Elementary School shooting received national news coverage and is sometimes referred to as the Cleveland School massacre 114 Fire department Edit The Stockton Fire Department was first rated as a Class 1 fire department by the Insurance Services Office in 1971 In 2005 all 13 of the city s stations met the National Fire Protection Association standard of a 5 minute response time 115 In 2009 it had 13 fire stations and over 275 career personnel 116 Due in part to staffing levels that placed five staff on ladder companies and four staff on engines it was one of only 57 departments among 44 000 to receive the Class 1 rating in 2010 117 The department maintained this rating until 2011 when during the city s Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceedings and following a Civil Grand Jury investigation the city reduced staffing levels from 220 full time staff to 177 and the 2011 budget from 59 million to 40 million The department was cut by 30 118 The bankruptcy was due in part to a 1996 decision made by the city to provide firefighters with free health care after retirement which they later expanded to all city employees The benefit gradually grew into a 417 million liability 119 As of 2016 update the department consists of 12 firehouses that house 12 Engine Companies and three Truck Companies In 2015 the Fire Department responded to over 40 000 emergency calls for service including more than 300 working structure fires The department is one of the busiest in the United States The Stockton Fire Department is assisted on medical emergency calls by American Medical Response 120 Education Edit Primary and secondary Edit Burns Tower on the University of the Pacific campus Stockton is part of four public school districts Stockton Unified School District Lincoln Unified School District Lodi Unified School District and Manteca Unified School District There are more than 40 private elementary and secondary schools including Saint Mary s High School Stockton is also home to public charter school systems including Aspire Public Schools Stockton Collegiate Stockton Unified Early College Academy and Venture Academy citation needed Post secondary Edit The University of the Pacific moved to Stockton in 1924 from San Jose The university is the only private school in the United States with less than 10 000 students enrolled that offers eight different professional schools It also offers a large number of degree programs relative to its student population 121 The men s Pacific Tigers basketball team has been in the NCAA Tournament nine times The Tigers have played their home games at the Alex G Spanos Center since 1982 prior to that playing at the Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium since 1952 The campus has been used in the filming of a number of Hollywood films see below partly due to its likeness to East Coast Ivy League universities 122 Also located in Stockton are San Joaquin Delta College which serves a district area that includes all of San Joaquin County and parts of Alameda Calaveras Sacramento and Solano counties 123 California State University Stanislaus established a Stockton campus on the grounds of the former Stockton State Hospital The hospital was the first state mental institution in California Humphreys University a private non profit institution offering undergraduate and graduate degrees including a Juris Doctor from the Laurence Drivon School of Law Kaplan College of Stockton Christian Life College a private four year Bible college offering associate and Bachelor of Arts degrees in Bible and theology or Christian music MTI Business College UEI CollegeTransportation EditStockton is centrally located with access to Port of Stockton an international deep water port Amtrak railroad system Intrastate and Interstate freeway systems Stockton Metropolitan AirportRoads and railways Edit The San Joaquin Street Amtrak station in Stockton Due to its location at the crossroads of the Central Valley and a relatively extensive highway system Stockton is easily accessible from virtually anywhere in California Interstate 5 and State Route 99 California s major north south thoroughfares pass through the city limits The east west highway State Route 4 also passes through the city providing access to the San Francisco Bay Area as well as the Sierra Nevada and its foothills Stockton is the western terminus of State Route 26 and State Route 88 which extends to the Nevada border In addition Stockton is within an hour of Interstate 80 Interstate 205 and Interstate 580 citation needed Stockton is served by San Joaquin Regional Transit District 124 Stockton is also connected to the rest of the nation through a network of railways Stockton has two passenger rail stations Robert J Cabral Station which provides service to Sacramento on Amtrak s San Joaquins route and also serves as the northern terminus of the Altamont Corridor Express commuter rail service to San Jose San Joaquin Street station provides service to Oakland via the San Joaquins route Union Pacific and BNSF Railway the two largest railroad networks in North America both service Stockton and its port via connections with the Stockton Terminal and Eastern Railroad and Central California Traction Company who provide local and interconnecting services between the various rail lines The Stockton Diamond was the busiest interchange point in the state by 2020 125 a grade separation project to elevate the Union Pacific over the BNSF line is planned to be completed by 2026 Air Edit Passenger terminal of Stockton Metropolitan Airport Stockton is served by Stockton Metropolitan Airport located on county land just south of city limits The airport has been designated a Foreign Trade Zone and is mainly used by manufacturing and agricultural companies for shipping purposes Since airline deregulation passenger service has come and gone several times Domestic service resumed on June 16 2006 with service to Las Vegas by Allegiant Air 126 The days of service and number of flights were expanded a few months later due to demand Air service to Phoenix began in September 2007 On July 1 2010 Allegiant Air implemented non stop service to and from Long Beach 126 In 2006 Aeromexico had plans to provide flights to and from Guadalajara Mexico but the airport s plan to build a customs station at the airport was initially rejected by the customs service However the possibility of building this station is currently a continuing matter of negotiation between the airport and the customs service and Aeromexico has indicated a continuing interest in eventually providing service Ground transportation is available from Hertz Enterprise Yellow Cab and Aurora Limousine citation needed Seaport Edit The Port of Stockton is a fully operating seaport approximately 75 nautical miles 86 mi 139 km east of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco Set on the San Joaquin River the port operates a 4 200 acre 17 km2 127 transportation center with berthing space for 17 vessels up to 900 feet 270 m in length 128 As of 2014 the Port of Stockton had 136 tenants 129 and is served by BNSF amp UP Railroads 130 The port also includes 1 1 million square feet 102 000 m2 of dockside transit sheds and shipside rail track and 7 7 million square feet 715 000 m2 of warehousing 131 Adjacent to the port is Rough and Ready Island which served as a World War II era naval supply base until it was decommissioned during the Base Realignment and Closure process in 1995 Media EditPeriodicals Edit Daily periodicalsThe Record is a daily newspaper Stocktonia News Service is an online news site for Stockton Weekly periodicalsBilingual Weekly News publishes a weekly newspaper in both Spanish and EnglishMonthly periodicalsArtifact is a San Joaquin Delta College periodical based in Stockton from December 2006 2020 Writing in all genres photography and visual media by students staff and faculty as well as community members are accepted Caravan is a local community arts and events monthly tabloid Poets Espresso Review is a periodical that has been based in Stockton mostly distributed by mail from 2005 2010 San Joaquin Magazine is a regional lifestyle magazine covering Stockton Lodi Tracy and Manteca The Central Valley Business Journal is a monthly business tabloid The Downtowner was a free monthly guide to downtown Stockton s events commerce real estate and other cultural and community happenings Radio broadcast stations Edit AM stations Edit KCVR 1570 Spanish Adult Hits KWG 1230 Catholic switched formats to News talk Established in 1921 one of California s oldest running AM radio stations 132 KWSX 1280 Rock and Roll simulcast of KMRQ 96 7 Manteca KSTN 1420 Modern Country Simulcast on 105 9FMIn addition several radio stations from nearby San Francisco Sacramento and Modesto are receivable in Stockton FM stations Edit KQED FM 88 5 NPR affiliate News Talk KLOVE 89 7 Christian KYCC 90 1 Christian KUOP 91 3 Capital Public Radio NPR affiliate News Talk and Jazz KWDC LP 93 5 NPR News Talk and Music Varieties KHOP 95 1 Top 40 KWIN 97 7 Urban Contemporary KRXQ 98 5 Alternative Rock KJOY 99 3 Lite Rock KQOD 100 1 Rhythmic Oldies KMIX 100 9 Regional Mexican KATM 103 3 Country KELR LP 104 7 3ABN Radio Christian The Hawk 104 1 Classic Rock KSTN 105 9 Modern Country KLVS 107 3 Christian Television stations Edit As part of the Sacramento Stockton Modesto television market Stockton is primarily served by stations based in Sacramento but may carry some San Francisco Bay area television stations airwaves These are listed below with the city of license in bold KCRA Channel 3 NBC affiliate Sacramento KRON Channel 4 My Network TV affiliate San Francisco KVIE Channel 6 PBS affiliate Sacramento KQED Channel 9 PBS affiliate San Francisco KXTV Channel 10 ABC affiliate Sacramento KOVR Channel 13 CBS O amp O Stockton KUVS Channel 19 Univision affiliate Modesto KSPX TV Channel 29 ION Media Networks affiliate Sacramento KMAX Channel 31 The CW O amp O Sacramento KCSO LD Channel 33 Telemundo affiliate Sacramento KTXL Channel 40 Fox affiliate Sacramento KTNC Channel 42 Estrella TV affiliate Concord KQCA Channel 58 My Network TV affiliate Sacramento KTFK DT Channel 64 UniMas affiliate StocktonIn popular culture EditComics Edit Stan Lee named Stockton as the birthplace of the Fantastic Four in 1986 after Joe Field successfully petitioned Marvel Comics to change it from the fictional Central City 133 Films Edit A number of motion pictures have been filmed in Stockton including All the King s Men 1949 134 The Big Country 1958 134 Bird 135 Big Stan 2007 136 Blood Alley 1955 134 Bound for Glory 1976 134 Coast to Coast 1980 137 Cool Hand Luke 1967 138 Day of Independence 2003 139 Dead Man on Campus 1998 140 Dirty Mary Crazy Larry 1974 141 Dreamscape 1984 142 Fat City 1972 134 based on Leonard Gardner s acclaimed 1969 novel Fat City It is set in Stockton in the late 1950s and was filmed by director John Huston Flubber 1997 142 Friendly Fire 1979 143 Glory Days 1988 144 God s Little Acre 1958 145 High Time 1960 142 Hot Shots Part Deux 1993 135 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade 1989 142 Inventing the Abbotts 1997 142 Natzee Zombie Carnage 2019 146 Oklahoma Crude 1973 134 Psychopomp 2020 147 Porgy and Bess 1959 134 Raid on Entebbe 1977 148 Raiders of the Lost Ark 1981 142 Rampage 1988 149 R P M 1970 142 Steamboat Round the Bend 1935 150 The Great Race 135 The Strawberry Statement 1970 151 The Sure Thing 1985 142 Valentino s Return 1989 152 The World s Greatest Athlete 1973 153 Television Edit The 1960s Western TV series The Big Valley was set just outside Stockton The hit FX TV show Sons of Anarchy 2008 2014 is set in and near Stockton Road Trip with Huell Howser Episode 142 154 Awards and recognition EditStockton received the All America City award from the National Civic League in 1999 2004 2015 and 2017 a total of four times 2004 s award was based on a 60 member delegation s presentation titled The Dream Lives On and featured three community driven projects Community Partnership for Families Downtown Alliance and the Peace Keeper Program 155 The 1999 award recognized the Apollo Night Talent and Performing Series the conversion of the Stockton Developmental Center into an off campus center for the California State University at Stanislaus and the LEAP Let Education Attack Pollution program 156 Sunset magazine named Stockton Best Tree City in the western United States in March 2002 157 and Best of the West Food Fest in March 2000 Stockton contains 49 city state and national historical landmarks dating as far back as 1855 In February 2009 and again in February 2011 Stockton was named America s Most Miserable City by Forbes reflecting the city s issues with commuting times violent crime rates income tax levels and unemployment rates Stockton had placed second in this listing in 2008 158 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Stockton California Stockton was home to the world s first radio disc jockey Ray Newby In 1909 at 16 years of age Newby began regularly playing records on a small transmitter while a student at Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless located in San Jose under the authority of radio pioneer Charles Doc Herrold 159 160 The indie rock band Pavement was formed in Stockton in 1989 by two local musicians Stephen Malkmus and Scott Kannberg known originally only as S M and Spiral Stairs 161 162 Nick and Nate Diaz mixed martial arts fighters under the UFC promotional banner are also famously from the 209 i e Stockton California They are known to promote themselves using Stockton almost like N W A used Compton They also wear fight clothes with 209 on them They can be seen shouting Stockton 209 motherfucker in numerous interviews and press conferences Their team which includes other MMA fighters such as Gilbert Melendez Jake Shields Nick Diaz Daniel Roberts Nate Diaz and David Terrell under the leadership of Cesar Gracie are known as the Stockton Skrap Pack 163 and have been involved in several infamous brawls in and outside the Octagon Jose M Hernandez a famous NASA astronaut and engineer 164 also refers to Stockton as his hometown Akiko Billings a notable engineer and women s advocate born in Fiji considers Stockton her American home Chi Cheng bass player for the Deftones was born and raised in Stockton and attended Tokay High School Reagan Maui a a former NFL fullback originally played for Tokay High School Musician Chris Isaak was born in Stockton 165 Sister cities EditStockton has seven sister cities 166 Country City Year of Partnership Japan Shizuoka March 9 1959 167 October 16 1959 168 Philippines Iloilo City August 2 1965 Mexico Empalme September 4 1973 People s Republic of China Foshan April 11 1988 Italy Parma January 13 1998 Cambodia Battambang October 19 2004 Nigeria Asaba June 6 2006See also EditPortals Geography North America United States CaliforniaNotes Edit Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 References Edit a b c d e Stockton Facts Stockton Convention amp Visitors Bureau Retrieved October 31 2016 a b About Stockton www pacific edu University of the Pacific Retrieved October 31 2016 AAC Winners by State and City National Civic League Retrieved May 4 2013 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 Council City of Stockton Retrieved February 13 2015 City Council District 1 Councilmember Jobrack City of Stockton Retrieved January 17 2019 City Council District 2 Councilmember Wright City of Stockton Retrieved January 17 2019 City Council District 3 Councilmember Canepa City of Stockton Retrieved January 17 2019 City Council District 4 Councilmember Lenz City of Stockton Retrieved January 17 2019 City Council District 5 Councilmember Fugazi City of Stockton Retrieved January 17 2019 City Council District 6 Councilmember Warmsley City of Stockton Retrieved January 5 2021 The City Manager City of Stockton CA Retrieved November 6 2014 a b Statewide Database UC Regents Archived from the original on February 1 2015 Retrieved October 9 2014 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2020 Stockton Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved October 14 2014 a b QuickFacts Stockton city California census gov Retrieved February 27 2022 Population and Housing Unit Estimates Retrieved May 21 2020 Find a County National Association of Counties Archived from the original on May 31 2011 Retrieved June 7 2011 Register of the Stockton Calif Public Documents 1947 www oac cdlib org Retrieved June 27 2018 How Stockton went broke A 15 year spending binge Reuters July 3 2012 Retrieved November 16 2019 a b c d History A Look into Stockton s Past Before the Gold Rush City of Stockton Retrieved February 21 2016 Archaeological Investigations of the Siskiyou Trail Cascade Siskiyou National Monument Jackson County Retrieved July 16 2016 Tinkham George Henry 1880 A History of Stockton from Its Organization up to the Present Time W M Hinton amp Co p 397 Captain Charles M Weber Award City of Stockton Cultural Heritage Board May 23 2008 Archived from the original on March 22 2008 Retrieved February 4 2010 Aviles Gwen November 15 2019 An ugly legacy Latino couple finds racist covenant in housing paperwork NBC News Retrieved November 16 2019 No persons other than those wholly of the white Caucasian race shall use occupy or reside upon any part of or within any building located on the above described real property except servants or domestics of another race employed by or domiciled with a white Caucasian owner or tenant Spirit of Stockton s Chinatown Downtown Stockton Alliance Archived from the original on February 2 2016 Retrieved February 21 2016 Some State of California and City of San Francisco Anti Chinese Legislation and Subsequent Action PDF The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois 2006 Retrieved February 26 2016 California Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places Earliest Census to 1990 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Pernie Gwenyth Laird March 3 2009 Benjamin Holt 1849 1920 The Father of the Caterpillar tractor permanent dead link Lea Ralph February 16 2008 Ben Holt pioneered tractors for farming construction war Lodi News Sentinel Archived from the original on November 11 2009 Retrieved February 27 2008 Caterpillar Times report May 1918 pages 5 to 8 Eyewitness being Personal Reminiscences of Certain Phases of the Great War Including the Genesis of the Tank by Major General Sir Ernest D Swinton Garden City N Y Doubleday Doran amp Company Inc 1933 Throughout United Press Stockton Is Scene Of 150 000 Fire Riverside Daily Press Riverside California Saturday 10 January 1920 Volume XXXV Number 9 page 1 Demoro Harre W 1986 California s Electric Railways Glendale California Interurban Press p 202 ISBN 978 0 916374 74 7 History of Stockton Gurwara Archived from the original on September 27 2013 Retrieved September 22 2013 Historic California Posts Stockton Ordnance Depot californiamilitaryhistory org The California State Military Museum Archived from the original on December 14 2017 Retrieved September 11 2018 The Cornell Daily Sun 27 April 1937 The Cornell Daily Sun cdsun library cornell edu Retrieved July 16 2016 Stockton detention facility Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved August 8 2014 Echo Hawk Walter 2010 In the Courts of the Conqueror the 10 Worst Indian Law Cases Ever Decided New York Fulcrum ISBN 978 1 55591 788 3 OCLC 646788565 The future of the past archaeologists Native Americans and repatriation Tamara L Bray New York Garland Pub 2001 p 15 ISBN 978 1 136 54352 4 OCLC 817236389 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Ready no longer Rough Retrieved July 16 2016 McGrath M 2016 Stockton California A My Brother s Keeper Community National Civic Review 105 1 36 43 doi 10 1002 ncr 21261 Christie Les August 14 2007 California cities fill top 10 foreclosure list Money cnn com Retrieved February 4 2010 a b Christie Les December 2 2008 Home sellers suffer amid wave of foreclosures Money cnn com Retrieved February 26 2010 a b America s Most Dangerous Cities Forbes April 23 2009 Retrieved February 4 2010 Forbes Magazine Names Worst Places to Live in America Fox News March 24 2010 Archived from the original on May 31 2010 Retrieved June 5 2010 a b Smith Scott October 4 2013 Council approves Chap 9 exit plan The Record Retrieved November 6 2013 a b Marcum Diana November 6 2013 Stockton voters approve of new tax measure for bankrupt city Los Angeles Times Retrieved November 6 2013 Stockton California Chapter 9 Voluntary Petition PDF PacerMonitor PacerMonitor Retrieved June 22 2016 Lifsher Marc Petersen Melody October 30 2014 Judge approves Stockton bankruptcy plan worker pensions safe LA Times Retrieved October 30 2014 SEED Stocktondemonstration org March 3 2021 Retrieved March 8 2022 Who We Are economicsecurityproject org Retrieved March 29 2021 Can 500 a month change a city Stockton tests universal basic income SFChronicle com January 2 2020 Retrieved December 23 2020 California city fights poverty with guaranteed income Reuters Retrieved April 4 2019 Guaranteed Income Increases Employment Improves Financial and Physical Health stocktondemonstration org March 3 2021 Retrieved March 29 2021 a b c Summary of Monthly Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 16 2021 Average Weather in Stockton California United States Year Round Weather Spark weatherspark com Retrieved November 25 2018 a b c d NOWData NOAA Online Weather Data W2 weather gov Retrieved October 16 2021 STOCKTON FIRE STN 4 CALIFORNIA Climate Summary Western Regional Climate Center Retrieved January 4 2023 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 a b Stockton city California State amp County QuickFacts U S Census Bureau a b c California Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places Earliest Census to 1990 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved April 20 2012 a b From 15 sample 2010 Census Interactive Population Search CA Stockton city U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved July 12 2014 U S News Special Report Stockton Calif Is the Most Diverse City in America U S News amp World Report January 22 2020 Retrieved July 19 2022 David Siders March 5 2010 Stockton area tops poll of nation s most obese regions Recordnet com Retrieved February 16 2013 Money MSN com 8 2012 a b Rogers Abby November 1 2012 The 25 Most Dangerous Cities in America Yahoo Finance Finance yahoo com Retrieved February 16 2013 America s most and least literate cities Archived February 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine 247wallst com February 11 2013 turnto23 com City of Stockton Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year ended June 30 2020 Stockton Symphony Association Stockton California Stockton Symphony Association Retrieved February 4 2010 The Brubeck Institute University of the Pacific Archived from the original on April 20 2008 Retrieved February 4 2010 Delta instructor hopes to prove live jazz can draw Stockton fans The Record San Joaquin Media Group a division of Dow Jones Local Media Group October 19 2006 Retrieved February 4 2010 Ian Hill June 28 2007 Apollo Night marks decade of entertainment The Record San Joaquin Media Group a division of Dow Jones Local Media Group Retrieved February 4 2010 Stockton Live SMG Stockton 2019 Entertainment Retrieved February 26 2010 Stockton Opera Stockton Opera Rachael Myrow September 2 2013 Stockton s Little Manila the Heart of Filipino California KQED San Francisco Archived from the original on December 23 2014 Retrieved January 1 2015 Little Manila Filipinos in California s Heartland KVIE 2014 Archived from the original on January 1 2015 Retrieved January 1 2015 New on SF State bookshelf SF State News San Francisco State University April 11 2008 Retrieved January 1 2015 Deborah Kong December 26 2002 Filipino Americans work to preserve heritage Star Bulletin Honolulu Associated Press Retrieved January 1 2015 Steven Winn October 8 2008 Romance of Magno Rubio Filipino homecoming San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 1 2014 The Secrets of Giron Arnis Escrima Tuttle Publishing March 15 1998 p 11 ISBN 978 0 8048 3139 0 Angeles Monrayo Raymundo 2003 Tomorrow s Memories A Diary 1924 1928 University of Hawaii Press p 263 ISBN 978 0 8248 2688 8 Austin Leonard 1959 Around the World in San Francisco San Francisco Fearon Publishers pp 26 28 LCCN 59065441 Archived from the original on February 11 2009 Retrieved January 1 2015 Jon Sterngass January 1 2009 Filipino Americans Infobase Publishing p 71 ISBN 978 1 4381 0711 0 Conclara Rommel March 5 2015 Fil Am museum to open in California ABS CBN News Retrieved March 6 2015 Filipino American National Historic Society Museum downtownstockton org San Joaquin International Film Festival San Joaquin International Film Festival Stockton San Joaquin Asparagus Festival April 20 22 2018 SeeCalifornia Brubeck Institute University of the Pacific The Brubeck Festival Gurdwara Sahib Stockton March 2 2017 2018 Nagar Kirtan Route Michael Fitzgerald August 7 2016 Obon Odori and Cultural Bazaar a hit with the crowd Recordnet com The Record Nicholas Filipas August 11 2018 Filipinos celebrate Barrio Fiesta with heavy hearts Recordnet com The Record Downtown Stockton Alliance 2018 Stockton Beer Week Almendra Carpizo October 27 2018 Downtown Stockton Comes Alive for Day of the Dead Recordnet com The Record baseball reference com milb com milb com Stockton Ports history web pacific edu Archived February 2 2007 at the Wayback Machine Where the Mighty Casey Struck Out Thediamondangle com Archived from the original on February 24 2012 Retrieved February 16 2013 Sherdog com Nick Diaz MMA Stats Pictures News Videos Biography Sherdog com Sherdog Retrieved July 16 2016 Sherdog com Nate Diaz MMA Stats Pictures News Videos Biography Sherdog com Sherdog Retrieved July 16 2016 Edwards James March 6 2016 Who is Nate Diaz 5 things you need to know the man who beat Conor McGregor Daily Mirror Retrieved July 16 2016 Nate Diaz Will Teach Your Kids FIGHTLAND Retrieved July 16 2016 Nate Diaz Academy Gracie Fighter Lodi Gracie Jiu Jitsu Stockton CA natediaz209 com Retrieved July 16 2016 Pixie Woods City of Stockton CA stocktongov com Mayor Kevin J Lincoln II stocktongov com January 4 2021 Retrieved January 5 2021 City Council City of Stockton CA City of Stockton CA Retrieved February 26 2010 San Joaquin County San Joaquin County Retrieved December 5 2019 DuHain Tom September 3 2013 Stockton PD reaches highest staff in 5 years KCRA Archived from the original on December 12 2013 Retrieved November 7 2013 Klocke Mike November 3 2013 Important step to filling out the thin blue line The Record Stockton Retrieved November 7 2013 BELL DEVON A POLICE FOUNDATION CRITICAL INCIDENT REVIEW OF THE STOCKTON POLICE RESPONSE TO THE BANK OF THE WEST ROBBERY AND HOSTAGE TAKING PDF Phillips Roger Third hostage in Bank of the West robbery speaks a b By the numbers Here are the 20 most dangerous cities in America Tribune Media Company May 8 2015 Retrieved December 26 2015 Anderson Jason October 12 2013 Violent crime continues downward trend The Record Stockton Retrieved November 6 2013 Goldeen Joe December 28 2012 Patience urged as new Ceasefire kicks in The Record Retrieved June 14 2013 Harless William October 14 2013 Cities Use Sticks Carrots to Rein In Gangs The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 6 2013 Slaughter in A School Yard Time June 24 2001 Archived from the original on March 10 2007 Retrieved February 4 2010 California Response Times Investigated Firehouse Firehouse KCRA Retrieved November 3 2016 City of Stockton CA Homepage Official City Government Website user govoutreach com Retrieved November 3 2016 Central Valley Business Times www centralvalleybusinesstimes com May 19 2010 Archived from the original on November 4 2016 Retrieved November 3 2016 Funkhouser Mark April 8 2013 Sharing the Burdens of a Broken City www governing com C Johnson Steven Francescani Chris Public Safety Compensation www firefighterclosecalls com Retrieved November 3 2016 2015 Stockton Fire Department Year In Review 2015 Stockton Fire Department Year In Review February 27 2016 Archived from the original on October 30 2021 Retrieved November 3 2016 A Broad Selection of Courses Archived from the original on January 17 2010 Retrieved February 26 2010 Hollywood at Pacific University of the Pacific Archived from the original on October 2 2011 Retrieved June 21 2010 San Joaquin Delta College Fact Sheet PDF deltacollege edu San Joaquin Delta College Retrieved October 7 2021 San Joaquin RTD Sanjoaquinrtd com Retrieved February 4 2010 Wanek Libman Mischa September 15 2020 The Stockton Diamond project lands 20 million BUILD grant Mass Transit Retrieved October 11 2020 a b Stockton Metropolitan Airport SCK Sjgov org July 1 2012 Archived from the original on March 7 2013 Retrieved February 16 2013 Caltrans Port of Stockton Fact Sheet PDF Retrieved April 7 2014 The Port of Stockton Today Portofstockton com Retrieved October 5 2015 Port of Stockton 2014 Annual Report PDF Portofstockton com pp 22 23 Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 General Services Portofstockton com Retrieved October 5 2015 Port of Stockton California Portofstockton com Retrieved February 4 2010 Fitzgerald Michael September 13 2013 AM radio heartbeat faint but still kicking recordnet com Retrieved February 3 2021 Ian Hill July 10 2005 Fantastic return Recordnet com Retrieved February 8 2014 a b c d e f g Grant Lee July 2 1977 Waiting to Be Discovered Los Angeles Times p 10 Retrieved February 27 2022 a b c Burrell Jackie June 24 2016 Travel Top 10 Films shot in Stockton The Mercury News Retrieved February 27 2022 Rob Schneider collapses on film set Visalia Times Delta Visalia California June 30 2006 p 19 Retrieved February 27 2022 Masullo Robert A April 23 1980 Candid Actor Unpromotes A Film The Sacramento Bee p 81 Retrieved February 27 2022 For Movie Scene Roberts Island As a Backdrop Tracy Press Tracy California November 14 1966 p 4 Retrieved February 27 2022 Lachtman Howard Day of Independence tells timeless tale The Stockton Record Retrieved February 27 2022 Johnson G Allen August 24 1998 Dead Man On Campus black comedy at its worst Santa Maria Times p 9 Retrieved February 27 2022 Hobbs Carolyn October 17 1973 For Dirty Mary Crazy Larry cast Tracy Press Tracy California p 13 Retrieved February 27 2022 a b c d e f g h Filmed on campus University of the Pacific April 23 2021 Retrieved February 27 2022 Huber Dean July 18 1978 In Focus The Sacramento Bee p 27 Retrieved February 27 2022 Ross Lisa September 15 1988 Cameras rolling at UOP stadium The Modesto Bee p 3 Retrieved February 27 2022 God s Little Acre Will Be Filmed Near Stockton The Modesto Bee Modesto California August 26 1957 p 14 Retrieved February 27 2022 Local Horror Film Fitzgerald Michael The Record Stockton October 31 2015 p C7 Filmmakers looking for talent in Stockton Sacramento region March 23 2019 Marie Estrada abc10 News Valenti Valdene January 5 1977 Three locals take part in Entebbe Oakdale Leader Oakdale California p 3 Retrieved February 27 2022 Doyle Michael November 30 1986 Stockton County the scene of Hollywood courtroom tale The Modesto Bee p 17 Retrieved February 27 2022 Isetti Ronald Eugene 2019 Competing voices a critical history of Stockton California Denver Colorado Outskirts Press p 312 ISBN 1 9772 1483 5 OCLC 1119604979 Johnson Charles November 13 1969 Strawberry Statement is Filmed The Sacramento Bee p 12 Retrieved February 27 2022 Mills will pursue film making career The Gustine Press Gustine California January 30 1986 p 1 Retrieved February 27 2022 Hollywood Goes Stockton Santa Cruz Sentinel November 16 1972 p 21 Retrieved February 27 2022 Stockton Road Trip with Huell Howser 142 Huell Howser Archives at Chapman University City of Stockton CA All America City City of Stockton Retrieved February 4 2010 City of Stockton CA All America City 1999 City of Stockton Archived from the original on March 16 2010 Retrieved February 4 2010 Best tree city Stockton California Archived February 24 2008 at the Wayback Machine Badenhausen Kurt June 2 2009 America s Most Miserable Cities Forbes Retrieved July 2 2009 Ray Newby appearance on CBS I ve Got a Secret 27 September 1965 Secret listed as I was the world s first radio disc jockey in 1909 Rebroadcast on the Game Show Network on 22 May 2008 Bay Area Radio Museum Doc Herrold and Ray Newby Archived from the original on July 22 2010 Retrieved May 21 2008 Weisbard Eric M Pavement Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved December 31 2019 Pavement PopRockBands com Retrieved December 31 2019 Dale de Souza February 24 2012 The Skrap Pack The Tightest Group of Fighters in MMA Bleacher Report Turner Broadcasting NASA 2004 Astronaut Candidate Jose Hernandez Mission Specialist NASA Chris Isaak Biography oldies com June 26 1956 Retrieved March 12 2016 Sister Cities City of Stockton CA Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Sister Cities City of Stockton CA Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Northern and Central California Sister Cities in Japan Further reading EditRobinette Allen M June 1908 History of the Stockton Fire Department 1850 1908 Tinkham George Henry 1880 A history of Stockton from its organization up to the present time W M Hinton amp Co Mabalon Dawn Bohulano May 29 2013 Little Manila Is in the Heart The Making of the Filipina o American Community in Stockton California Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 9574 4 External links EditStockton California at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Official website Stockton California at Curlie Official visitor and tourist information Stockton San Joaquin County Public Library Historic Stockton Photographs at Holt Atherton Special Collections Spooner California Stereograph Collection at Holt Atherton Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stockton California amp oldid 1131524868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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