California
California,
most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by
Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and
the Pacific Ocean (W).
Facts
and Figures
Area, 158,693
sq mi (411,015 sq km). Pop. (2000) 33,871,648, a 13.8% increase since
the 1990 census. Capital, Sacramento. Largest city, Los Angeles. Statehood,
Sept. 9, 1850 (31st state). Highest pt., Mt. Whitney, 14,491 ft (4,417
m); lowest pt., Death Valley, 282 ft (86 m) below sea level. Nickname,
Golden State. Motto, Eureka [I Have Found It]. State bird,
California valley quail. State flower, golden poppy. State tree,
California redwood. Abbr., Calif.; CA
Geography
Ranking
third among the U.S. states in area, California has a diverse topography and
climate. A series of low mountains known as the Coast Ranges extends
along the 1,200-mi (1,930-km) coast. The region from Point Arena, N of San
Francisco, to the southern part of the state is subject to tremors and
sometimes to severe earthquakes caused by tectonic stress along the San Andreas fault.
The Coast Ranges receive heavy rainfall in the north, where the giant
cathedrallike redwood forests prevail, but the climate of these mountains is
considerably drier in S California, and S of the Golden Gate no
major rivers reach the ocean. Behind the coastal ranges in central California
lies the great Central
Valley, a long alluvial valley drained by the Sacramento
and San
Joaquin rivers. In the southeast lie vast wastelands, notably the Mojave Desert,
site of Joshua Tree National Park.
Rising
as an almost impenetrable granite barrier E of the Central Valley is the Sierra Nevada
range, which includes Mt. Whitney,
Kings Canyon National Park, Sequoia National
Park, and Yosemite
National Park. The Cascade Range,
the northern continuation of the Sierra Nevada, includes Lassen Volcanic
National Park. Lying E of the S Sierra Nevada is Death Valley
National Park.
Sacramento is
the state capital. The largest cities are Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco,
Long Beach,
Oakland,
and Sacramento.
Economy
California
has an enormously productive economy, which for a nation would be one of the
ten largest in the world. Although agriculture is gradually yielding to
industry as the core of the state's economy, California leads the nation in the
production of fruits and vegetables, including carrots, lettuce, onions,
broccoli, tomatoes, strawberries, and almonds. The state's most valuable crops
are grapes, cotton, flowers, and oranges; dairy products, however, contribute
the single largest share of farm income, and California is again the national
leader in this sector. The state also produces the major share of U.S. domestic
wine. California's farms are highly productive as a result of good soil, a long
growing season, and the use of modern agricultural methods. Irrigation is
critical, especially in the San Joaquin Valley and Imperial Valley. The
gathering and packing of crops is done largely by seasonal migrant labor,
primarily Mexicans. Fishing is another important industry.
Much
of the state's industrial production depends on the processing of farm produce
and upon such local resources as petroleum, natural gas, lumber, cement, and
sand and gravel. Since World War II, however, manufacturing, notably of
electronic equipment, computers, machinery, transportation equipment, and metal
products, has increased enormously. Defense industries, a base of the economy
especially in S California, have declined following the end of the cold war, a
serious blow to the state. But many high-tech companies and small low-tech,
often low-wage, companies remain in S California, in what is said to be the
largest manufacturing belt in the United States. Farther north, Silicon Valley,
between Palo Alto and San Jose, so called because it is the nation's leading
producer of semiconductors, is also a focus of software development.
California
continues to be a major U.S. center for motion-picture, television film, and
related entertainment industries, especially in Hollywood and Burbank.
Tourism also is an important source of income. Disneyland, Sea World, and other
theme parks draw millions of visitors each year, as do San Francisco with its
numerous attractions and several entertainment-dominated Los Angeles-area
communities. California also abounds in natural beauty, seen especially in its
many national parks and forests-home to such attractions as Yosemite Falls and
giant sequoia
trees-and along miles of Pacific beaches.
One
of the state's most acute problems is its appetite for water. The once fertile Owens valley
is now arid, its waters tapped by Los Angeles 175 mi (282 km) away. In the lush
Imperial Valley,
irrigation is controlled by the All-American Canal,
which draws from the Colorado River. In the Central Valley the water problem is
one of poor distribution, an imbalance lessened by the vast Central Valley
project. Cutbacks in federally funded water projects in the 1970s and 80s
led many California cities to begin buying water from areas with a surplus, but
political problems associated with water sharing continue.
Government,
Politics, and Higher Education
The
state's first constitution was adopted in 1849. The present constitution,
dating from 1879, is noted for its provisions for public initiative and
referendum-which have led at times to difficulties in governance-and for recall
of public officials. The state's executive branch is headed by a governor
elected for a four-year term. California's bicameral legislature has a senate
with 40 members and an assembly with 80 members. The state elects 2 senators
and 52 representatives to the U.S. Congress and has 54 electoral votes. In the
1980s and 1990s, California elected Republican governors-George Deukemejian
(1982, 1986) and Pete Wilson (1990, 1994)- before the Democrat Gray Davis was
elected in 1998. In 1992, California became the first state to simultaneously
elect two women to the U.S. Senate-Democrats Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein.
Among
the state's more prominent institutions of higher learning are the Univ. of California,
with nine campuses; the California State
University System, with 21 campuses; Occidental College and the Univ. of Southern
California, at Los Angeles; Stanford Univ.,
at Stanford; the California
Institute of Technology, at Pasadena; Mills College,
at Oakland; and the Claremont Colleges,
at Claremont. After a period from the 1960s through the 1970s when the state's
well-financed public institutions were the envy of the nation, California's
colleges have been forced to retrench by tax-cutting initiatives.
History
European
Exploration and Colonization
The
first voyage (1542) to Alta California (Upper California), as the region north
of Baja
California (Lower California) came to be known, was commanded by the
Spanish explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, who
explored San Diego Bay and the area farther north along the coast. In 1579 an
English expedition headed by Sir Francis Drake landed
near Point Reyes, N of San Francisco, and claimed the region for Queen
Elizabeth I. In 1602, Sebastian Vizcaino,
another Spaniard, explored the coast and Monterey Bay.
Colonization
was slow, but finally in 1769 Gaspar de Portola,
governor of the Californias, led an expedition up the Pacific coast and
established a colony on San Diego Bay. The following year he explored the area
around Monterey Bay and later returned to establish a presidio there. Soon
afterward Monterey
became the capital of Alta California. Accompanying Portola's expedition was
Father Junipero Serra,
a Franciscan missionary who founded a mission at San Diego. Franciscans later
founded several missions that extended as far N as Sonoma, N of San Francisco.
The missionaries sought to Christianize the Native Americans but also forced
them to work as manual laborers, helping to build the missions into vital
agricultural communities (see Mission Indians).
Cattle raising was of primary importance, and hides and tallow were exported.
The missions have been preserved and are now open to visitors.
In
1776, Juan Bautista de Anza founded
San Francisco, where he established a military outpost. The early colonists,
called the Californios, lived a pastoral life and for the most part were not
interfered with by the central government of New Spain (as the Spanish empire
in the Americas was called) or later (1820s) by that of Mexico. The Californios
did, however, become involved in local politics, as when Juan Bautista Alvarado led a
revolt (1836) and made himself governor of Alta California, a position he later
persuaded the Mexicans to let him keep. Under Mexican rule the missions were
secularized (1833-34) and the Native Americans released from their servitude.
The degradation of Native American peoples, which continued under Mexican rule
and after U.S. settlers came to the area, was described by Helen Hunt Jackson
in her novel Ramona (1884). Many mission lands were subsequently given
to Californios, who established the great ranchos, vast cattle-raising estates.
Colonization of California remained largely Mexican until the 1840s.
Russian
and U.S. Settlement
Russian
fur traders had penetrated south to the California coast and established Fort
Ross, north of San Francisco, in 1812. Jedediah Strong Smith and
other trappers made the first U.S. overland trip to the area in 1826, but U.S.
settlement did not become significant until the 1840s. In 1839, Swiss-born John
Augustus Sutter
arrived and established his kingdom of New Helvetia on a vast tract in the
Sacramento valley. He did much for the overland American immigrants, who began
to arrive in large numbers in 1841. Some newcomers met with tragedy, including
the Donner
Party, which was stranded in the Sierra Nevada after a heavy snowstorm.
Political
events in the territory moved swiftly in the next few years. After having
briefly asserted the independence of California in 1836, the Californios drove
out the last Mexican governor in 1845. Under the influence of the American
explorer John C. Fremont,
U.S. settlers set up (1846) a republic at Sonoma under their unique Bear Flag.
The news of war between the United States and Mexico (1846-48) reached
California soon afterward. On July 7, 1846, Commodore John D. Sloat
captured Monterey, the capital, and claimed California for the United States.
The Californios in the north worked with U.S. soldiers, but those in the south
resisted U.S. martial law. In 1847, however, U.S. Gen. Stephen W. Kearny
defeated the southern Californios. By the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
(1848), Mexico formally ceded the territory to the United States.
The
Gold Rush
In
1848, the year that California became a part of the United States, another
major event in the state's history occurred: While establishing a sawmill for
John Sutter near Coloma, James W. Marshall discovered gold and touched off the
California gold rush. The forty-niners, as the gold-rush miners were called,
came in droves, spurred by the promise of fabulous riches from the Mother Lode.
San Francisco rapidly became a boom city, and its bawdy, lawless coastal area,
which became known as the Barbary Coast, gave rise to the vigilantes,
extralegal community groups formed to suppress civil disorder. American writers
such as Bret Harte
and Mark Twain
have recorded the local color as well as the violence and human tragedies of
the roaring mining camps.
Statehood
and Immigration
With
the gold rush came a huge increase in population and a pressing need for civil
government. In 1849, Californians sought statehood and, after heated debate in
the U.S. Congress arising out of the slavery issue, California entered the
Union as a free, nonslavery state by the Compromise of 1850. San Jose became
the capital. Monterey, Vallejo, and Benicia each served as the capital before
it was moved to Sacramento in 1854. In 1853, Congress authorized the survey of
a railroad route to link California with the eastern seaboard, but the
transcontinental railroad was not completed until 1869. In the meantime
communication and transportation depended upon ships, the stagecoach, the pony
express, and the telegraph.
Chinese
laborers were imported in great numbers to work on railroad construction. The
Burlingame Treaty of 1868 (see Burlingame, Anson)
provided, among other things, for unrestricted Chinese immigration. That was at
first enthusiastically endorsed by Californians; but after a slump in the
state's shaky economy, the white settlers viewed the influx of the lower-paid
Chinese laborers as an economic threat. Ensuing bitterness and friction led to
the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 (see Chinese exclusion).
A
railroad-rate war (1884) and a boom in real estate (1885) fostered a new wave
of overland immigration. Cattle raising on the ranchos gave way to increased
grain production. Vineyards were planted by 1861, and the first trainload of
oranges was shipped from Los Angeles in 1886.
Industrialization
and Increased Settlement
By
the turn of the century the discovery of oil, industrialization resulting from
the increase of hydroelectric power, and expanding agricultural development
attracted more settlers. Los Angeles grew rapidly in this period and, in
population, soon surpassed San Francisco, which suffered greatly after the
great earthquake and fire of 1906. Improvements in urban transportation
stimulated the growth of both Los Angeles and San Francisco; the advent of the
cable car and the electric railway made possible the development of previously
inaccessible areas.
As
industrious Japanese farmers acquired valuable land and a virtual monopoly of
California's truck-farming operations, the issue of Asian immigration again
arose. The bitter struggle for the exclusion of Asians plagued international
relations, and in 1913 the California Alien Land Act was passed despite
President Woodrow Wilson's attempts to block it. The act provided that persons
ineligible for U.S. citizenship could not own agricultural land in California.
Successive
waves of settlers arrived in California, attracted by a new real-estate boom in
the 1920s and by the promise of work in the 1930s. The influx during the 1930s
of displaced farm workers, depicted by John Steinbeck in
his novel The Grapes of Wrath, caused profound dislocation in the
state's economy. During World War II the Japanese in California were removed from
their homes and placed in relocation centers. Industry in California expanded
rapidly during the war; the production of ships and aircraft attracted many
workers who later settled in the state.
Growing
Pains and Natural Disasters
Prosperity
and rapid population growth continued after the war. Many African Americans who
came during World War II to work in the war industries settled in California.
By the 1960s they constituted a sizable minority in the state, and racial
tensions reached a climax. In 1964, California voters approved an initiative
measure, Proposition 14, allowing racial discrimination in the sale or rental
of housing in the state, a measure later declared unconstitutional by the U.S.
Supreme Court. In 1965 riots broke out in Watts, a predominantly black section
of Los Angeles, touching off a wave of riots across the United States. Also in
the 1960s migrant farm workers in California formed a union and struck many
growers to obtain better pay and working conditions. Unrest also occurred in
the state's universities, especially the Univ. of California at Berkeley, where
student demonstrations and protests in 1964 provoked disorders.
Republicans
have generally played a more dominant role than Democrats in California
politics during the 20th cent. From the end of World War II through the
mid-1990s alone, five of the seven governors were Republicans, starting with
Earl Warren
(1943-53). Ronald Reagan, a
former movie actor and leading conservative Republican, was elected governor in
1966 and reelected in 1970; he later served two terms as U.S. President. The
two Democrats were Edmund G. (Pat) Brown (1959-67) and his son Jerry Brown
(1975-83). In the late 1970s, Californians staged a tax revolt that attracted
national attention, passing legislation to cut property taxes.
During
the 1970s and 80s California continued to grow rapidly, with a major shift of
population to the state's interior. The metropolitan areas of Riverside-San
Bernardino, Modesto, Stockton, Bakersfield, and Sacramento were among the
fastest growing in the nation during the 1980s. Much of the state's population
growth was a result of largely illegal immigration from Mexico; there was also
a heavy infux of immigrants from China, the Philippines, and SE Asia.
Population
growth and immigration contributed to growing economic pressures, as did cuts
in federal defense spending; meanwhile, social tensions also increased. In
Apr., 1992, four white Los Angeles police officers were acquitted of brutality
charges after they had been videotaped beating a black motorist; the verdict
touched off riots in South-Central Los Angeles and other neighborhoods,
resulting in 58 deaths, thousands of arrests, and approximately $1 billion in
property damage.
In
addition to periodic heavy flooding and brushfires, earthquakes have caused
widespread damage in California. In Oct., 1989, a major earthquake killed about
60 people and injured thousands in Santa Cruz and the San Francisco Bay area.
In Jan., 1994, an earthquake hit the Northridge area of N Los Angeles, killing some
60 people and causing at least $13 billion in damage.
In
a backlash against illegal immigration, California voters in 1994 approved
Proposition 187, an initiative barring the state from providing most
services-including welfare, education, and nonemergency medical care-to illegal
immigrants. Federal courts found much of Proposition 187 unconstitutional; the
appeal of their rulings was dropped in 1999, at a time when the state's economy
had rebounded and a Democratic administration was in Sacramento.
In
late 2000, California began experiencing an electricity crisis as insufficient
generating capactiy and increasing short-term wholesale prices for power
squeezed the state's two largest public utilities, who, under the deregulation
plan they had agreed to in the early 1990s, were not allowed to pass along
their increased costs. As the state worked to come up with both short-term and
long-time solutions to the situation, consumers experienced sporadic blackouts
and faced large rate hikes under the terms of a bailout plan. The crisis was
severe enough that it was expected to slow the state's economic growth.
Bibliography
See
L. Pitt, The Decline of the Californios: A Social History of the Spanish
Speaking Californians, 1846-1890 (1967); R. Kirsch, West of the West:
Witnesses to the California Experience, 1542-1906 (1968); R. J.
Roske, Everyman's Eden: A History of California (1968); C. A.
Hutchinson, Frontier Settlement in Mexican California (1969); W. Bean, California:
An Interpretive History (2d. ed. 1973); M. W. Donley, Atlas of
California (1979); D. W. Lantis, California: Land of Contrast (3d
ed. 1981); C. Miller and R. S. Hyslop, California: The Geography of
Diversity (1983); T. H. Watkins, California: An Illustrated History
(1983); J. D. Hart, A Companion to California (1984); T. Muller, The
Fourth Wave: California's Newest Immigrants (1985); A. F. Rolle, California:
A History (4th ed. 1987); P. Schrag, Paradise Lost (1998).