Posts Tagged ‘california’
In recent years the USA has seen a decline in traditional local industries such as logging and fishing. This is because environmentally, both these industries have to be closely controlled. But the offshoot of this is not that more people are out of work, it means that small towns based on these industries have become popular as tourist or vacation destinations. Fort Bragg has become a vacation destination and Fort Bragg hotels are reasonably priced as well as unique.
Quaint fishing and logging towns like Fort Bragg have taken on the over-shoot of the urban sprawls of major commercial centers such as Mendocino. Business owners are taking their boutiques, galleries and restaurant out of town to place such as Fort Bragg to escape this urban sprawl and also take advantage of the good tourism industry.
This town is popular with both locals and tourists. During the Whale Festival and Labor Day weekend, it is even busier, and literally buzzes with activity. There are plenty of places to stay and loads of thing to do.
The Golden State has never been a stranger to metropolises. From San Francisco to Los Angeles to Newport Beach and back up the coast again, there are no shortages of big cities to choose from. To be sure, smaller college towns like Berkeley, Davis, and Irvine also get folded into the Golden State batter. With all of these options, what makes Sacramento the capitol?
Named by the Spaniard, Gabriel Moraga, Sacramento was little more than a trading post when John Sutter arrived in 1839 from Switzerland. Within ten years he and his heirs would guide the transformation of the trading post into a military barracks for the U.S. Army and eventually into an incorporated city. Sacramento is the oldest incorporated city in the state, having been invested in 1850. This does not mean it is the oldest, however, as that distinction belongs to Monterey.
With the defeat of the Mexican army in 1848, the capital of California was moved from Monterey. The first city to be designated the new capitol was San Jose. When the state legislature met there in 1850, it was argued the capitol should be moved further inland to avoid retribution either from Mexico or the Spanish Empire.
California is rife with major cities. To be sure, international tourist destinations, like San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Newport Beach seem to dominate talk of California. The same can be said of quaint college towns like Berkeley, Davis, and Irvine, or alternative lifestyle meccas, like Big Sur and San Francisco again, seldom does the capital of the Golden State get its due.
When John Sutter arrived in 1839 from Switzerland, Sacramento was little more than a trading post. Within ten years he and his heirs would guide the transformation of the trading post into a military barracks for the U.S. Army and eventually into an incorporated city. Sacramento is the oldest incorporated city in the state, having been invested in 1850. This does not mean it is the oldest, however, as that distinction belongs to Monterey.
Following the defeat of Mexico during the Mexican-American War (1846-1848), the capital of California was moved from Monterey. The first city to be designated the new capitol was San Jose. When the state legislature met there in 1850, it was argued the capitol should be moved further inland to avoid retribution either from Mexico or the Spanish Empire.