San Jose California State University Art Museum Competition Entry 2003

City in Orange County, California, United States

City in California, United states

Anaheim, California

Metropolis

City of Anaheim

Sleeping beauty castle dlr 2019.jpg

Angelstadiummarch2019.jpg

New Anaheim Amtrak Station Inside.JPG

Anaheim convention center 2021.jpg

Honda center 2021.jpg

Clockwise from meridian: Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland Park, Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center, Honda Center, Anaheim Convention Middle, Angel Stadium of Anaheim

Flag of Anaheim, California

Official seal of Anaheim, California

Location within Orange County

Location within Orange County

Anaheim is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area

Anaheim

Anaheim

Location within the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area

Show map of the Los Angeles metropolitan area

Anaheim is located in California

Anaheim

Anaheim

Location within California

Show map of California

Anaheim is located in the United States

Anaheim

Anaheim

Location inside the United states of america

Evidence map of the United States

Anaheim is located in North America

Anaheim

Anaheim

Anaheim (North America)

Evidence map of N America

Coordinates: 33°50′ten″N 117°53′23″West  /  33.83611°N 117.88972°West  / 33.83611; -117.88972 Coordinates: 33°50′ten″N 117°53′23″West  /  33.83611°Due north 117.88972°Due west  / 33.83611; -117.88972
Country Us
State California
County Orangish
Founded 1857
Incorporated March 18, 1876[1]
Named for "Ana", subsequently the Santa Ana River, and "Heim", the German word for "home".
Authorities
 • Mayor Harry Sidhu[2] (R)
 • United States representatives[vi] Immature Kim (R),[three]
Katie Porter (D),[4] and
Lou Correa (D)[five]
 • State senators[vii] Josh Newman (D),
Tom Umberg (D), and
Dave Min (D)
 • Assemblymembers[8] Sharon Quirk-Silva (D),
Steven Choi (R), and
Tom Daly (D)
Area

[9]

 • Full l.88 sq mi (131.78 kmtwo)
 • Land 50.27 sq mi (130.xx km2)
 • Water 0.61 sq mi (1.58 km2)
Elevation

[10]

157 ft (48 chiliad)
Population

(2020)[11]

 • Full 346,824
 • Rank 56th in the United States
10th in California
 • Density 6,899.22/sq mi (two,663.78/km2)
Fourth dimension zone UTC−08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC−07:00 (PDT)
Nil codes[12]

92801–92809, 92812, 92814–92817, 92825, 92850, 92899

Area codes 657/714
FIPS code 06-02000
GNIS feature IDs 1652663, 2409704
Website www.anaheim.internet

Anaheim ( AN-ə-hyme) is a city in Orange County, California, part of the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Equally of the 2020 United States Census, the city had a population of 346,824, making information technology the near populous city in Orange County, the 10th-nigh populous urban center in California, and the 56th-about populous city in the Us.[13] Anaheim is the 2d-largest city in Orange County in terms of land area, and is known for being the habitation of the Disneyland Resort, the Anaheim Convention Center, and two major sports teams: the Anaheim Ducks water ice hockey club and the Los Angeles Angels baseball team.

Anaheim was founded by fifty German families in 1857 and incorporated as the 2nd city in Los Angeles County on March eighteen, 1876;[1] Orange County was split off from Los Angeles County in 1889. Anaheim remained largely an agricultural customs until Disneyland opened in 1955. This led to the structure of several hotels and motels around the area, and residential districts in Anaheim soon followed. The city also developed into an industrial center, producing electronics, aircraft parts and canned fruit. Anaheim is a charter city.[14]

Anaheim's city limits extend about the full width of Orange Canton, from Cypress in the due west, twenty miles e to the Riverside County line, encompassing a diverse range of neighborhoods. In the west, mid-20th-century tract houses predominate. Downtown Anaheim has 3 mixed-use historic districts, the largest of which is the Anaheim Colony. Due south of downtown, a center of commercial activity of regional importance begins, the Anaheim–Santa Ana edge city, which stretches east and south into the cities of Orangish, Santa Ana and Garden Grove. This border city includes the Disneyland Resort, with ii theme parks, multiple hotels, and its retail district; Disney is part of the larger Anaheim Resort district with numerous other hotels and retail complexes. The Platinum Triangle, a neo-urban redevelopment district surrounding Angel Stadium, which is planned to be populated with mixed-employ streets and high-rises. Farther east, Anaheim Canyon is an industrial district north of the Riverside State highway and east of the Orange Freeway. The city's eastern tertiary consists of Anaheim Hills, a community congenital to a master programme, and open land east of the Route 241 tollway.

Toponymy [edit]

Anaheim's name is a blend of Ana, later the nearby Santa Ana River, and German -heim pregnant "home", which is also a mutual Germanic place proper name compound (compare Trondheim in Norway and many place names in Germany).[fifteen]

History [edit]

Tongva era [edit]

Tongva people are indigenous to Anaheim's region of Southern California. Evidence suggests their presence since 3500 BCE. The Tongva village at Anaheim was chosen Hutuukuga[sixteen]

Spanish and Mexican era [edit]

The area that makes up mod-day Anaheim, along with Placentia and Fullerton, were part of the Rancho San Juan Cajón de Santa Ana, a Mexican-era rancho grant, given to Juan Pacífico Ontiveros in 1837 by Juan Bautista Alvarado, and then Governor of Alta California. Post-obit the American Conquest of California, the rancho was patented to Ontiveros by Public Country Commission. In 1857, Ontiveros sold 1,160 acres (out of his more than 35,000 acre estate) to 50 German-American families for the founding of Anaheim.

Founding [edit]

The city of Anaheim was founded in 1857 by 50 German-Americans who were residents of San Francisco[17] and whose families had originated in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Franconia in Bavaria.[eighteen] [19] After traveling through the state looking for a suitable area to grow grapes, the group decided to purchase a 1,165 acres (iv.71 km2) parcel from Juan Pacífico Ontiveros' large Rancho San Juan Cajón de Santa Ana in nowadays-24-hour interval Orange Canton for $2 per acre.[17]

For $750 a share, the grouping formed the Anaheim Vineyard Company headed by George Hansen.[17] Their new customs was named Annaheim, meaning "home by the Santa Ana River" in German.[17] The proper name later was altered to Anaheim. To the Castilian-speaking neighbors, the settlement was known as Campo Alemán (English: German Field).

Although grape and vino-making was their primary objective, the majority of the 50 settlers were mechanics, carpenters and craftsmen with no experience in wine-making.[17] The customs set aside twoscore acres (16 ha) for a town center and a school was the first building erected there.[17] The first home was built in 1857, the Anaheim Gazette paper was established in 1870 and a hotel in 1871. The demography of 1870 reported a population of 565 for the Anaheim district.[twenty] For 25 years, the area was the largest wine producer in California.[17] Withal, in 1884, a affliction infected the grape vines and past the following twelvemonth the entire industry was destroyed. Other crops – walnuts, lemons and oranges – shortly filled the void. Fruits and vegetables had become viable cash crops when the Los Angeles – Orange County region was connected to the continental railroad network in 1887.[21]

Helena Modjeska [edit]

Smooth actress Helena Modjeska settled in Anaheim with her husband and diverse friends, amongst them Henryk Sienkiewicz, Julian Sypniewski and Łucjan Paprocki. While living in Anaheim, Helena Modjeska became proficient friends with Clementine Langenberger, the second wife of August Langenberger.[22] Helena Street[23] and Clementine Street[23] are named after these two ladies, and the streets are located next to each other as a symbol of the potent friendship which Helena Modjeska and Clementine Lagenberger shared. Modjeska Park[24] in West Anaheim, is also named after Helena Modjeska.

Early 20th century [edit]

Anaheim High School, c. 1900

During the commencement half of the 20th century, Anaheim was a massive rural community dominated by orangish groves and the landowners who farmed them. One of the landowners was Bennett Payne Baxter, who owned much land in northeast Anaheim that today is the location of Angel Stadium.[25] He came upward with many new ideas for irrigating orange groves and shared his ideas with other landowners. He was not only successful, he helped other landowners and businesspeople succeed equally well. Ben Baxter and other landowners helped to make Anaheim a thriving rural community before the opening of Disneyland transformed the city. A street along Edison Park[25] is named Baxter Street. Also during this time, Rudolph Boysen served as Anaheim's first Park Superintendent from 1921 to 1950. Boysen created a hybrid berry which Walter Knott later named the boysenberry, after Rudy Boysen. Boysen Park[26] in East Anaheim was too named after him.

In 1924, Ku Klux Klan members were elected to the Anaheim City Council on a platform of political reform. Up until that point, the city had been controlled by a long-standing business concern and borough aristocracy that was mostly German American. Given their tradition of moderate social drinking, the German Americans did not strongly back up prohibition laws of the day. The mayor himself was a former saloon keeper. Led by the government minister of the First Christian Church, the Klan represented a rise group of politically oriented not-ethnic Germans who denounced the elite as corrupt, undemocratic, and self-serving. The Klansmen aimed to create what they saw as a model, orderly customs, i in which prohibition against alcohol would exist strictly enforced. At the time, the KKK had about 1200 members in Orange County. The economic and occupational profile of the pro and anti-Klan groups shows the two were similar and near equally prosperous. Klan members were Protestants, as were the majority of their opponents; even so, the opposition to the Klan also included many Catholic Germans. Individuals who joined the Klan had earlier demonstrated a much higher rate of voting and borough activism than did their opponents, and many of the individuals in Orange County who joined the Klan did so out of a sense of borough activism. Upon easily winning the local Anaheim election in April 1924, the Klan representatives promptly fired metropolis employees who were known to be Cosmic and replaced them with Klan appointees. The new city council tried to enforce prohibition. After its victory, the Klan affiliate held large rallies and initiation ceremonies over the summer.[27]

The opposition to the KKK'south hold on Anaheim politics organized, bribed a Klansman for their hush-hush membership list, and exposed the Klansmen running in the state primaries, defeating most of the candidates. Klan opponents in 1925 took back local government, and succeeded in a special election in recalling the Klansmen who had been elected in Apr 1924. The Klan in Anaheim chop-chop collapsed; its newspaper closed after losing a libel arrange, and the minister who led the local Klavern moved to Kansas.[27]

Mid to belatedly 20th century: Disneyland and the Anaheim Resort [edit]

Aerial view of Anaheim and Disneyland in 1965

Construction of the Disneyland theme park began on July 16, 1954, and information technology opened to the public on July 17, 1955. It has become ane of the world's most visited tourist attractions, with over 650 million visitors since its opening. The location was formerly 160 acres (0.65 km2) of orange and walnut trees. The opening of Disneyland created a tourism boom in the Anaheim area. Walt Disney had originally intended to buy additional land to build accommodations for Disneyland visitors; notwithstanding, the park's construction drained his financial resources and he was unable to acquire more land. Entrepreneurs eager to capitalize on Disney's success moved in and congenital hotels, restaurants, and shops around Disneyland and eventually boxed in the Disney property, and turned the area surrounding Disneyland into the boulevards of colorful neon signs that Walt Disney had tried to avert. The city of Anaheim, eager for taxation revenue these hotels would generate, did piddling to obstruct their construction.[28]

By the mid-1960s, the city'southward explosive growth would attract a Major League Baseball team, with the California Angels relocating from Los Angeles to Anaheim in 1966, where they have remained since. In 1980, the National Football League's Los Angeles Rams relocated from the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum to the Angels' home field, Anaheim Stadium, playing at that place until their relocation to St. Louis in 1995. In 1993, Anaheim gained its ain National Hockey League team when The Walt Disney Company founded the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.

In the 1990s, while Disneyland was undergoing a pregnant expansion project surrounding the construction of Disney California Take a chance Park, the city of Anaheim rebranded the surrounding area as the Anaheim Resort. The Anaheim Resort district is roughly bounded by the Santa Ana River to the east, Ball Road to the north, Walnut Street to the west, and the Garden Grove metropolis limits to the south at Chapman Avenue, and Orangewood Avenue to the southwest.[29] Attractions within the Resort District include the Disneyland Resort, the Anaheim Convention Center, the Honda Center, Anaheim/Orangish Canton Walk of Stars, and Angel Stadium of Anaheim.[30]

Part of the project included removing the colorful neon signs and replacing them with shorter, more than modest signs, as well every bit widening the arterial streets in the area into tree-lined boulevards.[31] [32]

21st century [edit]

In 2001, Disney'south California Adventure (renamed Disney California Take a chance Park in 2010), the most expansive project in Disneyland's history, opened to the public.[33] In 2007, Anaheim celebrated its sesquicentennial.[34]

In July 2012, political protests by Hispanic residents occurred post-obit the fatal shooting of two men, the commencement of whom was unarmed. Protesting occurred in the area between Country Higher and Due east Street, and was motivated by concerns over police brutality, gang action, domination of the city by commercial interests, and a perceived lack of political representation of Hispanic residents in the metropolis authorities.[35] [36] [37] The protests were accompanied by annexation of businesses and homes.[38] [39]

Geography [edit]

Anaheim is located at 33°50′10″N 117°53′23″W  /  33.836165°N 117.889769°Westward  / 33.836165; -117.889769 [40] and is approximately 25 miles (40 km) southeast of downtown Los Angeles. The city roughly follows the east-to-west route of the 91 Pike from the Orange-Riverside county border to Buena Park. To the north, Anaheim is divisional past Yorba Linda, Placentia, Fullerton, and Buena Park (from eastward to due west). The urban center shares its western border with Buena Park and Cypress. Anaheim is bordered on the southward by Stanton, Garden Grove, and Orangish (from westward to east). Various unincorporated areas of Orange County too adjoin the city, including Anaheim Island.[41] According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total expanse of l.eight square miles (132 km2), 49.8 square miles (129 km2) of which is state and 1.0 square mile (2.6 kmtwo) of which (1.92%) is water.

Cityscape [edit]

The city recognizes several districts, including the Anaheim Resort (the area surrounding Disneyland), Anaheim Canyon (an industrial area due north of California State Road 91 and eastward of California State Route 57), and the Platinum Triangle (the expanse surrounding Angel Stadium). Anaheim Hills also maintains a singled-out identity. The contiguous commercial development from the Disney Resort through into the cities of Orangish, Garden Grove and Santa Ana has collectively been termed the Anaheim–Santa Ana edge city.

Panorama of part of East Anaheim in the Santa Ana Canyon

Climate [edit]

Anaheim, California
Climate nautical chart (explanation)

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

Due north

D

iii.3

71

49

3.5

71

49

i.ix

74

51

0.eight

77

53

0.v

78

58

0.2

82

62

0.one

87

66

0.1

89

66

0.1

88

64

0.vii

83

59

1

77

53

2

71

48

Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

Like many other South Coast cities, Anaheim maintains a borderline hot semi-arid climate (Köppen BSh), a petty brusque of a Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csa) characterized by warm winters with erratic heavy rainfalls, and hot, substantially rainless summers.[42] The tape high temperature in Anaheim is 115 °F (46 °C) on July 6, 2018[43] [44] and the record low temperature is 30 °F (–1 °C) on Feb 15, 1990, and January 30, 2002.[45]

Climate data for Anaheim, California (1991–2020 normals)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Twelvemonth
Record high °F (°C) 95
(35)
97
(36)
98
(37)
106
(41)
106
(41)
112
(44)
115
(46)
107
(42)
110
(43)
107
(42)
102
(39)
91
(33)
115
(46)
Average high °F (°C) 71.0
(21.7)
71.0
(21.7)
73.vii
(23.2)
76.half dozen
(24.eight)
78.0
(25.6)
81.vii
(27.6)
86.8
(30.4)
88.eight
(31.6)
87.eight
(31.0)
83.four
(28.half dozen)
76.8
(24.nine)
70.six
(21.4)
78.viii
(26.0)
Average low °F (°C) 48.nine
(9.four)
49.3
(nine.vi)
51.iv
(10.8)
52.8
(eleven.six)
58.2
(xiv.6)
61.vii
(16.v)
65.half dozen
(xviii.7)
66.0
(eighteen.9)
64.i
(17.8)
59.3
(15.2)
53.0
(11.7)
48.2
(ix.0)
56.5
(13.6)
Record low °F (°C) 30
(−1)
xxx
(−1)
37
(iii)
38
(iii)
45
(vii)
50
(10)
54
(12)
52
(11)
51
(eleven)
44
(7)
33
(ane)
32
(0)
30
(−1)
Boilerplate rainfall inches (mm) iii.34
(85)
3.47
(88)
one.86
(47)
0.83
(21)
0.53
(13)
0.xv
(3.viii)
0.07
(ane.viii)
0.01
(0.25)
0.ten
(two.5)
0.72
(eighteen)
0.99
(25)
ii.02
(51)
14.09
(356.35)
Source i: [46]
Source 2: [45] [47]

Demographics [edit]

Historical population
Census Pop.
1870 881
1880 833 −5.4%
1890 1,273 52.8%
1900 1,456 14.4%
1910 2,628 80.5%
1920 five,526 110.3%
1930 10,995 99.0%
1940 11,031 0.3%
1950 14,556 32.0%
1960 104,184 615.7%
1970 166,408 59.7%
1980 219,494 31.9%
1990 266,406 21.4%
2000 328,014 23.1%
2010 336,265 2.5%
2020 346,824 iii.1%
U.S. Decennial Census[48]

2010 [edit]

The 2010 United States Census[49] reported that Anaheim had a population of 336,265. The population density was 6,618.0 people per square mile (2,555.2/kmii). The racial makeup of Anaheim was:

  • 177,237 (52.7%) White (27.5% non-Hispanic White solitary),
  • lxxx,705 (24.0%) from other races
  • 49,857 (14.8%) Asian (4.4% Vietnamese, 3.6% Filipino, 2.0% Korean, 1.4% Chinese, ane.three% Indian), one,607 (0.v%) Pacific Islander
  • 14,864 (4.4%) from 2 or more than races (multiracial/mestizo)
  • 9,347 (2.8%) African American
  • two,648 (0.8%) Native American

At that place were 177,467 Hispanic or Latino residents, of any race (52.eight%); 46.0% of Anaheim's population was of Mexican descent, 1.2% Salvadoran, and 1.0% Guatemalan; the residuum of the Hispanic population came from smaller bequeathed groups.[fifty]

The demography reported that 332,708 people (98.9% of the population) lived in households, ii,020 (0.vi%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 1,537 (0.5%) were institutionalized.

There were 98,294 households, out of which 44,045 (44.viii%) had children under the age of xviii living in them, 52,518 (53.4%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, fourteen,553 (14.8%) had a female person householder with no husband present, 7,223 (seven.three%) had a male householder with no wife present. At that place were half-dozen,173 (6.3%) unmarried opposite-sexual practice partnerships, and 733 (0.vii%) aforementioned-sexual practice married couples or partnerships. 17,448 households (17.8%) were made up of individuals, and half-dozen,396 (vi.five%) had someone living lonely who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.38. There were 74,294 families (75.vi% of all households); the average family size was three.79.

The age distribution of the population was as follows: 91,917 people (27.3%) nether the age of xviii, 36,506 people (10.9%) aged xviii to 24, 101,110 people (30.1%) aged 25 to 44, 75,510 people (22.5%) aged 45 to 64, and 31,222 people (nine.3%) who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 32.4 years. For every 100 females, there were 99.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97.i males.

In that location were 104,237 housing units at an average density of ii,051.5 per square mile (792.1/kmtwo), of which 47,677 (48.five%) were possessor-occupied, and 50,617 (51.v%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 1.vii%; the rental vacancy charge per unit was 7.2%. 160,843 people (47.viii% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 171,865 people (51.ane%) lived in rental housing units.

According to the 2010 Us Census, Anaheim had a median household income of $59,627, with xv.6% of the population living below the federal poverty line.[51]

2000 [edit]

As of the census[52] of 2000, at that place were 328,014 people, 96,969 households, and 73,502 families residing in the city. The population density was half dozen,842.7 inhabitants per square mile (two,587.8/kmtwo). There were 99,719 housing units at an boilerplate density of 2,037.5 per square mile (786.7/kmii). The racial makeup of the city was 55% White, 3% Blackness or African American, 0.ix% Native American, 12% Asian, 0.4% Pacific Islander, 24% from other races, and 5% from 2 or more races. 46% of the population were Hispanic or Latino.

Of Anaheim's 96,969 households, 43.0% had children under the age of xviii living with them, 56.3% were married couples living together, 13.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 24.two% were non-families. 18.1% of all households were made up of individuals, and 6.1% had someone living solitary who was 65 years of historic period or older. The average household size was 3.34 and the average family unit size was iii.75.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 30.2% under the age of 18, 10.5% from 18 to 24, 33.5% from 25 to 44, 17.7% from 45 to 64, and eight.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was xxx years. For every 100 females, there were 100.one males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 98.1 males.

The median income household income was $47,122, and the median family income was $49,969. Males had a median income of $33,870 versus $28,837 for females. The per capita income for the metropolis was $18,266. Most 10.4% of families and 14.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 18.9% of those under age 18 and 7.v% of those age 65 or over.

Economy [edit]

Anaheim's income is based on a tourism economy. In addition to The Walt Disney Company beingness the city's largest employer, the Disneyland Resort itself contributes about $4.7 billion annually to Southern California'due south economy. It also produces $255 1000000 in taxes every year.[53] Some other source of tourism is the Anaheim Convention Centre, which is habitation to many important national conferences. Many hotels, particularly in the city's Resort commune, serve theme park tourists and conventiongoers. Continuous development of commercial, entertainment, and cultural facilities stretches from the Disney area due east to the Santa Ana River, south into the cities of Garden Grove, Orangish and Santa Ana – collectively, this surface area has been labeled the Anaheim–Santa Ana edge city and is one of the iii largest such clusters in Orange County, together with the S Declension Plaza–John Wayne Airport edge city and Irvine Spectrum.

The Anaheim Canyon concern park makes up 63% of Anaheim'southward industrial infinite and is the largest industrial district in Orange Canton. Anaheim Canyon is likewise home to the second-largest business park in Orange County.[54] [55]

Several notable companies have corporate offices and/or headquarters inside Anaheim.

  • Anaheim Memorial Medical Center
  • AT&T
  • Banco Popular, a bank based in Puerto Rico, has its mainland American headquarters in Anaheim
  • CKE Restaurants, the parent company of the Carl's Jr., Hardee's, Greenish Burrito, and Red Burrito restaurant chains (formerly headquartered)
  • Disneyland Resort, part of Walt Disney Parks, Experiences and Consumer Products, a subsidiary of the Walt Disney Company
  • Extron Electronics, designs, articles, and services A/V electronics worldwide
  • Fisker Automotive[56]
  • Fujitsu, computer
  • General Dynamics
  • Hewlett Packard[57]
  • Isuzu[58] Due north American headquarters
  • Kaiser Foundation
  • L-3 Communications
  • Living Stream Ministry building
  • Pacific Sunwear
  • Panasonic[59]
  • Pendarvis Manufacturing[sixty]
  • Raytheon
  • Sunny Delight[61]
  • Targus, a figurer peripheral manufacturer
  • Tenet Healthcare
  • Toyota Financial Services
  • YKK,[62] world's largest zipper manufacturing firm
  • Yogurtland
  • Zyxel, maker of routers, switches and other networking products

Top employers [edit]

According to the city'south 2021 Almanac Comprehensive Financial Report,[63] the top employers in the urban center are:

# Employer # of Employees
i Disneyland Resort 19,000
2 Kaiser Foundation Hospital iv,194
3 Fifty-3 Communications 1,234
4 Anaheim Regional Medical Heart 1,200
5 Northgate González Markets 1,079
6 Hilton Anaheim i,000
vii Due west Anaheim Medical Center 865
8 Angels Baseball 824
9 Carrington Mortgage Services 800
10 St. Joseph Heritage Healthcare 800

Retail [edit]

Larger retail centers include the Downtown Disney shopping area at the Disneyland Resort, the ability centers Anaheim Plaza in western Anaheim (347,000 ft2),[64] and Anaheim Boondocks Square in E Anaheim (374,000 ftii),[65] as well as the Anaheim GardenWalk lifestyle center (440,000 ft2 of retail, dining and entertainment located in the Anaheim Resort).

Attractions [edit]

  • American Sports Centers, home of the U.Southward. men'south national volleyball squad and U.S. women's national volleyball team[66]
  • Anaheim Convention Middle
  • Anaheim GardenWalk
  • Anaheim Hills Golf game Grade
  • Anaheim Founders' Park
  • Anaheim Ice
  • Anaheim/OC Walk of Stars[67]
  • Angel Stadium of Anaheim
  • Dad Miller Golf Course
  • Disneyland Resort
    • Disneyland Park
    • Disney California Adventure Park
    • Downtown Disney
  • Flightdeck Flight Simulation Center
  • The Grove of Anaheim, formerly the Sun Theater, formerly Tinseltown Studios
  • Honda Heart, formerly the Arrowhead Swimming of Anaheim
  • La Palma Park[68]
  • MUZEO, Art Museum located in Downtown Anaheim
  • Oak Canyon Nature Centre

Sports teams [edit]

Current teams [edit]

  • NHL team: Anaheim Ducks – 2007 Stanley Cup Champions
  • MLB squad: Los Angeles Angels – 2002 Earth Series Champions nether the name Anaheim Angels

Defunct or relocated teams [edit]

  • NLL team: Anaheim Storm (Folded after 2004–2005 flavor because of low omnipresence)
  • NFL team: Los Angeles Rams played in Anaheim in Anaheim Stadium from 1980 through 1994 before moving to St. Louis, Missouri.
  • NBA squad: Los Angeles Clippers played select games in Anaheim at Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim from 1994 through 1999 before moving permanently to Staples Center in Downtown Los Angeles.
  • Globe Football League squad: The Southern California Sun played at Anaheim Stadium from 1974 to 1975.
  • Loonshit Football League squad: Anaheim Piranhas played at the Arrowhead Swimming from 1994 to 1997.
  • AFL squad: Los Angeles Kiss played at Honda Center from 2014 to 2016.
  • Roller Hockey International team: Anaheim Bullfrogs played in the RHI from 1993 to 1997 and 1999, winning the Spud Cup Championship twice.
  • American Basketball Association squad: Anaheim Amigos played at the Anaheim Convention Center during the 1967–68 Season, then moved to Los Angeles.
  • ABA2000 team: Southern California Surf played at the Anaheim Convention Center from 2001 to 2002.
  • NBADL team: Anaheim Arsenal played at the Anaheim Convention Center from 2006 to 2009. The team moved to Springfield, Massachusetts and was renamed for the 2009–2010 season.
  • Globe Team Lawn tennis: The Anaheim Oranges[69] played in 1978.
  • Continental Indoor Soccer League Team: The Anaheim Splash, played from 1994 to 1997.
  • California Surf of the now defunct Northward American Soccer League played from 1978 to 1981.

Court battle against the Angels [edit]

On January iii, 2005, Angels Baseball LP, the buying group for the Anaheim Angels, announced that it would modify the proper name of the club to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Squad spokesmen pointed out that from its inception, the Angels had been granted territorial rights by Major League Baseball game to the counties of Los Angeles, Ventura, Riverside, and San Bernardino in add-on to Orangish Canton. The new possessor, Arturo Moreno, believed the name would assist him market the team to the entire Southern California region rather than just Orange Canton. The "of Anaheim" was included in the official name to comply with a provision of the team's charter at Angel Stadium which requires that "Anaheim" be included in the team's proper noun.

Mayor Curt Pringle and other metropolis officials countered that the name change violated the spirit of the charter clause, fifty-fifty if it was in technical compliance. They argued that a name change was a major bargaining chip in negotiations between the city and Disney Baseball game Enterprises, Inc., then the buying grouping for the Angels. They further argued that the city would never have agreed to the new charter without the proper name change, because the new charter required that the city partially fund the stadium'southward renovation, but provided very little revenue for the metropolis. Anaheim sued Angels Baseball game LP in Orange Canton Superior Court, and a jury trial was completed in early February 2006, resulting in a victory for the Angels franchise.

Anaheim appealed the court decision with the California Courtroom of Entreatment in May 2006. The case was tied up in the Appeals Court for over ii years. In December 2008, the Appeals Court upheld the Feb 2006 Decision and ruled in favor of Angels Baseball. In January 2009, the Anaheim City Quango voted not to appeal the courtroom case any further, bringing an terminate to the four-year legal dispute.

Government and politics [edit]

Anaheim was, at i indicate in time, one of the most politically conservative major cities in the United States.[seventy] [71] Yet, in recent years it has been moving leftward. According to the California Secretary of State, as of October 22, 2018, Anaheim has 141,549 registered voters. Of those, 58,411 (41.27%) are registered Democrats, 39,885 (28.18%) are registered Republicans, and 37,877 (26.76%) have declined to state a political party.[72]

Anaheim city vote
by party in presidential elections
Yr Autonomous Republican Tertiary Parties
2020[73] 58.65% 77,895 39.25% 52,124 2.10% 2,794
2016[74] 57.93% 59,566 35.44% 36,438 6.63% half dozen,812
2012[75] 52.73% 47,662 44.83% 40,517 ii.44% ii,206
2008[76] 51.34% 47,433 46.46% 42,924 2.nineteen% 2,025
2004[77] 40.95% 34,598 57.89% 48,914 1.16% 982
2000[78] 43.93% 34,787 52.28% 41,401 3.80% three,006
1996[79] 40.38% 28,924 48.86% 34,999 10.75% 7,703
1992[lxxx] 32.46% 27,211 43.39% 36,375 24.16% 20,255
1988[81] 31.58% 24,881 67.21% 52,954 one.22% 959
1984[82] 24.28% xix,266 74.66% 59,238 ane.05% 836
1980[83] 23.34% 17,816 68.08% 51,960 8.58% half dozen,546
1976[84] 39.67% 26,464 58.10% 38,758 2.23% one,484

City government [edit]

Under its city lease, Anaheim operates nether a quango–director government. Legislative authority is vested in a city council of vii nonpartisan members, who hire a professional person city managing director to oversee day-to-solar day operations. The mayor serves equally the presiding officeholder of the city council in a start among equals role. Under the city's term limits, an private may serve a maximum of 2 terms every bit a city council member and two terms as the mayor.

Up until 2014, all quango seats were elected at large. Voters elected the mayor and four other members of the city council to serve four-twelvemonth staggered terms. Elections for two quango seats were held in years divisible past four while elections for the mayor and the two other council seats were elected during the intervening even-numbered years.

In response to protests and a California Voting Rights Act lawsuit by the American Ceremonious Liberties Union and several residents, the city placed two measures on the November 2014 ballot. Measure L proposed that council members be elected by commune instead of at large. Measure Grand proposed to increment the number of council seats from five to seven. Both measures passed.[85]

The electric current metropolis council consists of:[86]

  • Mayor Harry Sidhu (since 2018)
  • Jose Diaz, District 1 (since 2020)
  • Gloria Ma'ae, District two (since 2021)
  • Jose F. Moreno, District three (since 2016)
  • Avelino Valencia, District four (since 2020)
  • Stephen Faessel, Commune v (since 2016)
  • Trevor O'Neil, District 6 (since 2018)

Federal, state and county representation [edit]

In the United States Firm of Representatives, Anaheim is carve up among three Congressional districts:[6]

  • California's 39th congressional district, represented by Republican Young Kim,[three]
  • California's 45th congressional district, represented past Democrat Katie Porter,[4] and
  • California's 46th congressional district, represented by Democrat Lou Correa.[five]

In the California State Senate, Anaheim is split among three districts:[seven]

  • the 29th Senate District, represented by Democrat Josh Newman,
  • the 34th Senate District, represented by Democrat Tom Umberg, and
  • the 37th Senate District, represented by Democrat Dave Min.

In the California State Assembly, Anaheim is split up amongst 3 districts:[viii]

  • the 65th Associates District, represented by Democrat Sharon Quirk-Silva,
  • the 68th Assembly Commune, represented by Republican Steven Choi, and
  • the 69th Assembly Commune, represented by Democrat Tom Daly.

On the Orangish Canton Lath of Supervisors, Anaheim is divided between two districts, with Anaheim Hills lying in the 3rd Commune and the rest of Anaheim lying in the 4th District:

  • the 3rd supervisorial commune, represented past Republican Donald P. Wagner since 2019
  • the 4th supervisorial district, represented by Democrat Doug Chaffee since 2019

Infrastructure [edit]

Emergency services [edit]

Anaheim Police Department's MD500E helicopter, ANGEL

Fire protection is provided by the Anaheim Fire Section, Disneyland Resort has its own Fire Section, though it does rely on the Anaheim Burn Department for support, and for Paramedic Services. Constabulary enforcement is provided past the Anaheim Police Department. Ambulance service is provided by Care Ambulance Service.

Anaheim Public Utilities [edit]

Anaheim Public Utilities is the only municipal owned h2o and electrical utility in Orangish Canton, providing residential and business customers with water and electrical services. The utility is regulated and governed locally past the City Council. A Public Utilities Lath, made up of Anaheim residents, advises the Metropolis Council on major utility bug.[87]

Anaheim has decided to bury power lines along major transportation corridors, converting its electricity system for artful and reliability reasons.[88] To minimize the impact on client bills, undergrounding is taking place slowly over a period of fifty years, funded by a four% surcharge on electric bills.[89]

Crime [edit]

In 2019, Anaheim reported 8 murders; given its population, this charge per unit was lower than the boilerplate national charge per unit by 17%. Reported rapes in the urban center are relatively uncommon as well, only take been increasing, along with the national average. Robbery (396 reported incidents) and aggravated assault (575 incidents) rank amidst the most frequent violent crimes in the urban center, though robbery rates are slightly less than the national average. i,123 burglaries were reported, as well as five,904 thefts and one,231 motorcar thefts. All three types of crime were below average.[ninety]

Education [edit]

Schools [edit]

Anaheim is served by seven public schoolhouse districts:[91]

  • Anaheim Uncomplicated School District
  • Anaheim Union Loftier Schoolhouse District
  • Centralia School District
  • Magnolia School District
  • Orange Unified School District
  • Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District
  • Savanna Schoolhouse District

Anaheim is home to 74 public schools,[67] of which 47 serve elementary students, nine are inferior high schools, fourteen are high schools and three offer alternative education.

Individual schools in the city include Acaciawood Preparatory Academy, Cornelia Connelly High Schoolhouse, Fairmont Preparatory Academy, Servite High School and Zion Lutheran Schoolhouse (PS2-Class eight).

Higher pedagogy [edit]

Anaheim has two private universities: Anaheim University and Southern California Institute of Technology (SCIT).

The N Orange County Community College District and Rancho Santiago Community College District serve the community.

Libraries [edit]

Anaheim has eight public library branches.

Transportation [edit]

In the master portion of the city (non including Anaheim Hills), the major surface streets running w–eastward, starting with the northernmost, are Orangethorpe Artery, La Palma Avenue, Lincoln Artery, Ball Road and Katella Avenue. The major surface streets running south–north, starting with the westernmost, are Knott Artery, Beach Boulevard (SR 39), Magnolia Avenue, Brookhurst Street, Euclid Street, West Street/Disneyland Drive, Harbor Boulevard, Anaheim Boulevard, East Street, Land College Boulevard, Kraemer Boulevard, and Tustin Artery.

In Anaheim Hills, the major surface streets that run west–east include Orangethorpe Avenue, La Palma Avenue, Santa Ana Coulee Road, and Nohl Ranch Road. Major surface streets that run north–south include Lakeview Avenue and Fairmont Boulevard. Imperial Highway (SR xc) and Yorba Linda Boulevard/Weir Canyon Road run every bit south–n roads in the urban center of Anaheim, but northward of Anaheim, Imperial Highway and Yorba Linda Boulevard become w–east arterials.

Seven Caltrans state-maintained highways (in addition to the aforementioned surface streets SR 39 and SR 90) run through the city of Anaheim, four of which are freeways and one being a cost road. They include the Santa Ana Freeway (I-v), the Orangish Freeway (SR 57), and the Riverside Throughway (SR 91). The Costa Mesa Superhighway (SR 55), and the Eastern Transportation Corridor (SR 241 toll route) also have curt stretches within the city limits.

Anaheim is served by two major railroads, the Union Pacific Railroad and the BNSF Railway. In addition, the Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center (ARTIC), a major regional transit station near Honda Centre and Affections Stadium, serves Amtrak, Metrolink, and several bus operators, and the Anaheim Canyon Metrolink station serves Metrolink'south Inland Empire–Orange Canton Line. ARTIC is a proposed stop on the proposed California High-Speed Runway network.[92] [93]

The Orangish Canton Transportation Authority (OCTA) provides bus service for Anaheim with local and county-broad routes, and both OCTA and Los Angeles County Metro operate bus routes connecting Anaheim to Los Angeles County and Riverside Transit Agency operates ane bus road to serve Riverside and San Bernardino. Also, Anaheim Resort Transit (Fine art) provides local shuttle service in and around the Anaheim Resort area, serving local hotels, tourist attractions, and the Disneyland Resort.[94] Disney GOALS operates daily costless bus service for low-income youth in the central Anaheim expanse.[ citation needed ] A proposal for streetcar service along Harbor Boulevard was rejected in 2018.

Anaheim is equidistant from John Wayne Airport and Long Beach Airport (xv miles), but is also accessible from nearby Los Angeles International (thirty miles), and Ontario (35 miles) airports.[67]

Notable people [edit]

Sister cities [edit]

Anaheim has the post-obit sister cities:

  • Mito, Japan[95]
  • Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain[95]

Encounter also [edit]

  • History of California
  • Listing of cities and towns in California
  • List of museums in Orange County, California
  • List of U.S. cities with large Hispanic populations

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Bibliography [edit]

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Anaheim Historical Social club
  • Anaheim, California on the C-SPAN Cities Tour website

rextheack.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaheim,_California

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