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Alameda, California

Alameda (/ˌæləˈmdə/ AL-ə-MEE-də; Spanish: [alaˈmeða]; Spanish for "tree-lined path") is a city in Alameda County, California, United States, located in the East Bay region of the Bay Area. The city is built on an informal archipelago in San Francisco Bay, consisting of Alameda Island, Bay Farm Island and Coast Guard Island, along with other smaller islands. As of the 2020 census, the city's population was 78,280.

This article is about the city. For the island the city is on, see Alameda Island. For the county, see Alameda County, California. For other uses, see Alameda.

Alameda

United States

June 6, 1853
April 19, 1854

Marilyn Ezzy Ashcraft[2]

22.98 sq mi (59.52 km2)

10.45 sq mi (27.06 km2)

12.53 sq mi (32.45 km2)  53.79%

33 ft (10 m)

78,280

7,491.63/sq mi (2,892.62/km2)

Alamedan

94501–94502

Media[edit]

Alameda's first newspaper, the Encinal, appeared in the early 1850s. Following the Encinal, several other papers appeared along geographic lines, and the Daily Argus eventually rose to prominence. Around 1900, the Daily Argus began to fade in importance and east and west papers The Times and The Star combined to take the leading role as the Alameda Times-Star in the 1930s. The Times-Star was sold to the Alameda Newspaper Group in the 1970s. In 1997, the Hills Newspaper chain was bought by Knight Ridder. Between 2001 and 2023, the Alameda Sun ran a local weekly print newspaper.


The community is currently served by weekly newspaper, the Alameda Journal and a non-profit online news outlet called the Alameda Post.

buses, which range from local connections to Oakland and Berkeley to express service to San Francisco

AC Transit

Ferry services – In addition to the and the Alameda Harbor Bay Ferry routes, San Francisco Bay Ferry also provides service between Alameda Main Street Station and South San Francisco. All ferry services are operated by the Water Transit Authority.

Alameda/Oakland Ferry

The closest stations are Lake Merritt and 12th Street, near the exit to the Posey Tube, and Fruitvale, near the Fruitvale Bridge. BART's long-term plans for a second tunnel include Alameda as a candidate for the first stop on a new East Bay line.[55]

BART

Vehicle access to Alameda Island is via three bridges from Oakland (Park Street, Fruitvale Avenue, and High Street Bridges), as well as the two one-way Posey and Webster Street Tubes leading into Oakland's Chinatown. Connections from Alameda to Bay Farm Island are provided via the Bay Farm Island Bridge for vehicular traffic as well as the Bay Farm Island Bicycle Bridge (the only pedestrian/bicycle-only drawbridge in the United States[53]).[54]


California State Route 61 runs down city streets from the Posey and Webster Street Tubes, across the Bay Farm Island Bridge, and south to the Oakland Airport. The island is just minutes off Interstate 880 in Oakland. The speed limit for the city is 25 mph (40 km/h) on almost every road.


Public transportation options include:

; NRHP-listed[56]

Alameda City Hall

; NRHP-listed[57]

Alameda High School

; NRHP-listed and a California Historical Landmark[58]

Croll Building

; NRHP-listed, and part of the Park Street Historic Commercial District[15]

Masonic Temple and Lodge

; NRHP-listed and a California Historical Landmark[15]

Park Street Historic Commercial District

a mining engineer who helped develop mineral resources of the Rocky Mountains.[59]

Albert Arents

MLB catcher for San Diego Padres and Chicago Cubs, was born in Alameda.[60]

John Baker

(1838–1921), president, Pacific Coast Women's Press Association[61]

Hester A. Benedict

an offensive guard for Oakland Raiders.[62]

Mike Brisiel

Caldecott-winning children's author and illustrator.[63]

Virginia Lee Burton

television and radio personality, president and general manager of Family Stations, Inc.[64]

Harold Camping

television comedian, attended Sunday school at First Presbyterian, married and lived in Alameda at the start of her comedy act in San Francisco in the 1950s.[63]

Phyllis Diller

who received the Medal of Honor for his bombing of Japan during World War II; Doolittle was born in Alameda in 1896.[65]

General James Doolittle

landscape architect who lived in Alameda as a child, later forming the Bay Area firm of Eckbo, Royston, Williams with Robert Royston and Edward Williams.[66]

Garrett Eckbo

actor, born in Alameda in 1911.[67]

Leif Erickson

college basketball coach, born in Alameda.[68]

Larry Eustachy

founder of Mrs. Fields Cookies, attended Alameda High School, where she was a cheerleader.[69]

Debbi Fields

nuclear scientist, co-discoverer of 12 chemical elements on the periodic table; in Guinness Book of World Records for Most Elements Discovered.[70]

Albert Ghiorso

guitarist with Night Ranger, a San Francisco rock band formed in the 1980s.[71]

Brad Gillis

the late publisher of The Washington Post, lived in Alameda as a child, according to Personal History, her autobiography.[72]

Katharine Graham

a professional basketball player, was born in Alameda.[73]

Tim Hardaway Jr.

bandleader and radio personality, born in Alameda on May 21, 1901.[74]

Horace Heidt

comedian[75]

Emily Heller

actress and director[76]

Marielle Heller

author, grew up in Alameda, according to his book Hero Found: The Greatest POW Escape of the Vietnam War.[77]

Bruce Henderson

former President of the NAACP, lived in Alameda.[78]

Benjamin Jealous

congressman and Alameda native, was editor and publisher of the Oakland Tribune.[79]

Joseph R. Knowland

U.S. Senator, was student body president at Alameda High School.[80]

William Fife Knowland

theater chain owner and film producer, was an Alameda native.[81]

Robert L. Lippert

air racer and Hollywood stunt pilot, was born in Alameda in 1903.[82]

Paul Mantz

drummer and musician known as the co-founder of Con Funk Shun.[83]

Louis A. McCall Sr.

founder of Reading is Fundamental, and wife of Robert McNamara, grew up in Alameda.[84]

Margaret McNamara

a congressman from 1945 to 1973.[85]

George P. Miller

author[86]

Jack Mingo

designer of the Seal of California.[87]

Hugo Wilhelm Arthur Nahl

former President Pro Tempore of California State Senate, lives in Alameda; once taught at Saint Joseph Notre Dame High, Encinal High, and Alameda High, among other Alameda schools.[88]

Don Perata

bandleader, born in Alameda, 1910.[89]

Carl Ravazza

Major League Baseball player and manager, was born in Alameda.[90]

Bill Rigney

pitcher for 1927 New York Yankees, was born in Alameda.[91]

Dutch Ruether

actress and comedian, grew up in Alameda.[92]

Jane Sibbett

mezzo-soprano Frederica Von Stade has lived in Alameda since 1992.[93]

Operatic

actress, resident in early to late-1960s.[94]

Sharon Tate

for whom Tilden Regional Park is named, was a longtime resident of Alameda; Tilden Way at the southeast end of the city is named for him.[95]

Charles Lee Tilden

(NBA player and coach)[106] and Joe Nelson (MLB pitcher)[107] attended St. Joseph Notre Dame High School in Alameda.

Jason Kidd

Many people from naval families, including celebrities such as ,[118] Brigette Lundy-Paine,[119] Tom Hanks,[120] and Jim Morrison[121] of The Doors,[122] have lived in Alameda.

Ann Curry

Jiangyin, China

China

Arita, Japan

Japan

Yeongdong-gun, South Korea

South Korea

Lidingö, Sweden. Initiated in 1959 as part of President Eisenhower's people-to-people-movement, whose purpose was to develop better understanding among people from different countries after World War II. Both Alameda and Lidingö are islands with a bridge connecting them to a big city.

Sweden

Dumaguete, Philippines

Philippines

Varazze, Italy[125]

Italy

Alameda Island

Bay Farm Island

Coast Guard Island

List of islands of California

List of ships built in Alameda, California

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 468–469.

"Alameda" 

U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Alameda, California