Online Encyclopedia

SAN JOSE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 150 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
SAN JOSE  , a city and the-county-seat of
See also:
Santa Clara county, California, U.S.A., situated in the 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 heart of the beautiful Santa Clara Valley . Pop . (189o) 18,o6o; (1900) 21,500, of whom 4577 were
See also:
foreign-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 car shops and terminal yards here . The city lies mainly on a gently rising plateau (altitude, 90 to 125 ft.) between the
See also:
Coyote and Guadalupe rivers . It is a popular
See also:
health resort . Besides St James and City Hall parks in the city, San Jose has
See also:
Alum Rock Canyon Park, a tract of woo acres, with sixteen
See also:
mineral springs, in Penitencia Canyon, 7 M. 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 College of Notre Dame (1851;
See also:
Roman Catholic), and of a State Normal School . Among charitable institutions are a Home of Benevolence (1878) for orphans and abandoned 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 Mount Hamilton (4209 ft.) with a legacy of $700,000
See also:
left by James Lick (1796–1876) of San Francisco, is 26 m. distant by road, and the New Almaden quicksilver mine (the greatest producer in California and long among the greatest in the
See also:
world) is about 14 M. 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-mill products, and $518,728 of malt liquors—much barley is grown in the Santa Clara Valley . San Jose de Guadalupe (after 1836 for a time " de Alvarado " in honour of Governor J . B . Alvarado) was founded in 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. 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 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 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 .

End of Article: SAN JOSE
[back]
SAN GIMIGNANO
[next]
SAN JOSE, or SAN JOSE DE COSTA RICA

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.