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See also: Santa See also: Clara county, California, U.S.A., situated in the See also: coast ranges, about 46 m
.
S.E. of See also: San Francisco and 8_ m
.
S.E. of the See also: southern end of San Francisco See also: Bay, in thej See also: heart of the beautiful Santa Clara Valley
.
Pop
.
(189o) 18,o6o; (1900) 21,500, of whom 4577 were See also: foreign-See also: born; (1910 census) 28,946; See also: land See also: area (1go6), about 6 sq. m
.
It is served by the Southern Pacific railway, which has See also: car shops and terminal yards here
.
The city lies mainly on a gently rising See also: plateau (altitude, 90 to 125 ft.) between the See also: Coyote and Guadalupe See also: rivers
.
It is a popular See also: health resort
.
Besides St See also: James and City
See also: Hall parks in the city, San Jose has
See also: Alum See also: Rock Canyon See also: Park, a See also: tract of woo acres, with sixteen See also: mineral springs, in Penitencia Canyon, 7 M. See also: east
.
This park is connected by electric railway with the city
.
San Jose is the seat of the University of the Pacific (Methodist Episcopal), which was founded at Santa Clara in 1851, removed to its See also: present site just outside the city in 1871, and had 358 students in all departments in '1909-1910; of the See also: College of Notre See also: Dame (1851; See also: Roman Catholic), and of a See also: State Normal School
.
Among charitable institutions are a Home of Benevolence (1878) for orphans and abandoned See also: children, the Notre Dame Institute (for orphans) under the Sisters of Notre Dame, and the O'Connor Sanatorium
.
The Lick See also: Observatory, opened in 1888 on the top of See also: Mount See also: Hamilton (4209 ft.) with a
See also: legacy of $700,000 See also: left by James Lick (1796–1876) of San Francisco, is 26 m. distant by road, and the New See also: Almaden quicksilver mine (the greatest producer in California and long among the greatest in the See also: world) is about 14 M. See also: south
.
The Santa Clara Valley has many See also: vegetable and flower-seed farms; it is one of the most fertile of the fruit regions of California, prunes, grapes, peaches and apricots being produced in especial abundance
.
More than See also: half the prune crop of California comes from Santa Clara county
.
In 1905 the See also: total value of the factory product of San Jose was $6,388,445 (94.1 % more than in 1900) ; nearly one-half ($3,039,803) was the value of canned and preserved fruits and vegetables, $619,532 of planing-See also: mill products, and $518,728 of malt liquors—much
See also: barley is grown in the Santa Clara Valley
.
San Jose de Guadalupe (after 1836 for a See also: time " de See also: Alvarado " in honour of Governor J
.
B
.
Alvarado) was founded in See also: November 1777, and was the first See also: Spanish See also: pueblo of California
.
The See also: mission of Santa Clara was founded in the vicinity in See also: January 1777, and the mission of San Jose, about 12 M. See also: north-east, in 1797
.
Near the See also: original site of the former, in the See also: town of Santa Clara (pop
.
1900, 3650), a suburb of San Jose, now stands Santa Clara College (Jesuit; founded 1851, chartered 1855)
.
Throughout the Spanish-Mexican See also: period San Jose was a place of considerable importance
.
In 1840 its population was about 750
.
In the last years of Mexican dominion it was the most prominent of the See also: northern settlements in which the Hispano-Californian See also: element predominated over the new See also: American element
.
The town was occupied by the forces of the See also: United States in See also: July 1846; and a skirmish with the natives occurred in its vicinity in January 1847
.
San Jose was the first capital of the state of California (1849-1851) and in 185o was chartered as a city
.
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