Orange County is a county in California,
within the United States. Its county
seat is Santa Ana. As of the 2000 census, its population
was 2,846,293, while a July 2008 estimate placed the population at
3,010,759, making it the second most populous county in California,
behind Los Angeles County and ahead
of San Diego County.[1]
The county is famous for its tourism, as the home of such attractions
as Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm, as well as several beaches along its
more than 40 miles (64 km) of coastline. It is also known for its affluence and political conservatism. In fact, a
2005 academic study listed three Orange County cities as being among
America's 25 "most conservative," making it the only county in the
country containing more than one such city.[2]
Whereas most population centers in the United
States tend to be identified by a major city, there is no defined
urban center in Orange County. It is mostly suburban, except for some
traditionally urban areas such as those of Anaheim, Santa Ana, Orange, Huntington Beach, and Fullerton. There are also several edge
city-style developments such as South Coast Metro and Newport Center.
While Santa Ana serves as the governmental center of the county,
Anaheim is its main tourist destination, and Irvine its major business and financial hub. Four Orange
County cities have populations exceeding 200,000: Santa Ana, Anaheim,
Irvine, and Huntington Beach.[3]
Thirty-four incorporated cities
are located in Orange County; the newest is Aliso Viejo, which was incorporated in 2001. Anaheim
was the first city incorporated in Orange County, in 1870 when the
region was still part of neighboring Los Angeles County.
History
Members of the Tongva, Juane?o,
and Luise?o Native American groups long inhabited the area. After the 1769
expedition of Gaspar de Portol?, a Spanish
expedition led by Junipero Serra named the
area Valle de Santa Ana (Valley of Saint
Anne). On November 1, 1776, Mission San Juan Capistrano
became the area's first permanent European settlement. Among those who
came with Portol? were José Manuel Nieto and José Antonio Yorba.Both these men were given land
grants - Rancho Los Nietos and Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana,
respectively. The Nieto heirs were granted land in 1834. The Nieto
ranches were known as Rancho Los Alamitos, Rancho Las Bolsas, and Rancho Los Coyotes. Yorba heirs Bernardo Yorba and Teodosio Yorba were also granted Rancho Ca?ón de Santa Ana (Santa
Ana Canyon Ranch) and Rancho Lomas de Santiago,
respectively. Other ranchos in Orange County were granted by the Mexican
government during the Mexican period in Alta California.[4]
A severe drought in the 1860s devastated the prevailing industry, cattle ranching, and much land came into the possession
of Richard
O'Neill, Sr.,[5] James Irvine and other land barons. In 1887, silver was
discovered in the Santa Ana Mountains, attracting settlers via the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific
Railroads.
This growth led the California
legislature to divide Los Angeles County and create
Orange County as a separate political entity on March 11,
1889. The county is generally said to have been named for the citrus fruit (its most famous product).[6] However, in the new county there was already a town by the name of Orange, named for Orange County, Virginia, which
itself took its name from William of Orange. The fact the
county took the same name as one of its towns may have been coincidence.
Other citrus crops, avocados,
and oil extraction were also important to the early economy. Orange County
benefited from the July 4, 1904 completion of the Pacific Electric Railway, a trolley
connecting Los Angeles with Santa Ana and Newport Beach . The link made
Orange County an accessible weekend retreat for celebrities of early Hollywood. It was deemed so significant that the
city of Pacific City changed its name to Huntington Beach in honor of Henry Huntington, president of the
Pacific Electric and nephew of Collis Huntington. Transportation
further improved with the completion of the State Route and U.S. Route 101 (now mostly Interstate 5)
in the 1920s.
Agriculture, such as the boysenberry which was made famous by Buena Park native Walter
Knott, began to decline after World
War II but the county's prosperity soared. The completion of Interstate 5
in 1954 helped make Orange County a bedroom community for many who moved
to Southern California to work in aerospace and manufacturing. Orange County received a further boost in 1955 with
the opening of Disneyland.
In 1969, Yorba Linda-born Orange
County native Richard Nixon became the 37th President of the United States.
In the 1980s, the population topped two million for the first time;
Orange County had become the second-most populous county in California.
An investment fund melt-down in 1994 led to the criminal prosecution
of County of Orange treasurer Robert
Citron. The county lost at least $1.5 billion through high-risk
investments in derivatives.[7] On December 6, 1994, the County of Orange declared Chapter 9
bankruptcy,[7] from which it emerged in June 1995. The Orange County bankruptcy was
the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.[7]
In recent years land-use conflicts have arisen between established
areas in the north and less developed areas in the south. These
conflicts have regarded things such as construction of new toll roads
and the re-purposing of a decommissioned air base. For example, the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station site was designated by a voter measure in
1994 to be developed into an international airport to alleviate the
heavily used John Wayne Airport. But subsequent voter
initiatives and court actions have caused the airport plan to be
permanently shelved. Instead it will become the Orange County Great Park.[8]
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county
has a total area of 2,455 km2 (948 sq mi), making it the
smallest county in Southern California. Surface water accounts for 411 km2 (159 sq mi) of the area, 16.73% of the total; 2,044 km2
(789 sq mi) of it is land. The average annual temperature is about 68 °F
(20 °C). Despite its small size as a county, Orange County's total area
in square miles is actually just smaller than the State of Rhode
Island's land area.
Orange County is bordered on the southwest by the Pacific
Ocean, on the north by Los Angeles County, on the
northeast by San Bernardino County and Riverside County, and on the
southeast by San Diego County.
The northwestern part of the county lies on the coastal
plain of the Los Angeles Basin, while the southeastern end rises into the
foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains. Most of Orange County's population
reside in one of two shallow coastal valleys that lie in the basin, the Santa Ana Valley and the Saddleback Valley. The Santa Ana Mountains lie within the eastern boundaries of
the county and of the Cleveland National Forest. The
high point is Santiago Peak (5,689 feet (1,734 m)[9]),
about 20 mi (32 km) east of Santa Ana. Santiago Peak and nearby Modjeska
Peak, just 200 feet (60 m) shorter, form a ridge known as Saddleback, visible
from almost everywhere in the county. The Peralta
Hills extend westward from the Santa Ana Mountains through the
communities of Anaheim Hills, Orange, and ending in Olive. The Loma Ridge is
another prominent feature, running parallel to the Santa Ana Mountains
through the central part of the county, separated from the taller
mountains to the east by Santiago Canyon.
The Santa Ana River is the county's principal
watercourse, flowing through the middle of the county from northeast to
southwest. Its major tributary to the south and east is Santiago Creek. Other watercourses within the county include Aliso Creek, San Juan Creek, and Horsethief
Creek. In the North, the San Gabriel River also
briefly crosses into Orange County and exits into the Pacific on the Los
Angeles-Orange County line between the cities of Long Beach and Seal Beach. Laguna Beach is home to the county's only
natural lakes, Laguna Lakes,
which are formed by water rising up against an underground fault.
North Orange County in purple shades. South Orange County in blue
shades.
Residents sometimes figuratively divide the county into "North Orange
County" and "South County" (meaning Northwest and Southeast?following
the county's natural diagonal orientation along the local coastline).
This is more of a cultural and demographic distinction perpetuated by
the popular television shows "The OC"
and "Laguna Beach," between
the older areas closer to Los Angeles, and the more affluent and
recently developed areas to the South and East. A transition between
older and newer development may be considered to exist roughly parallel
to State Route 55 (aka the Costa Mesa Freeway). This transition
is accentuated by large flanking tracts of sparsely developed area
occupied until recent years by agriculture and military airfields.
While there is a natural topographical Northeast-to-Southwest
transition from inland elevations to the lower coastal band, there is no
formal geographical division between North and South County.
Perpendicular to that gradient, the Santa Ana River roughly divides the county between
northwestern and southeastern sectors (about 40% to 60% respectively, by
area), but does not represent any apparent economic, political or
cultural differences, nor does it significantly affect distribution of
travel, housing, commerce, industry or agriculture from one side to the
other.
Incorporated cities
As of August 2006, Orange County has 34 incorporated cities. The
oldest is Anaheim (1870) and the newest is Aliso Viejo (2001).
- Aliso Viejo, incorporated in 2001
- Anaheim, incorporated in 1870
- Brea, incorporated in 1917
- Buena Park, incorporated in 1953
- Costa Mesa, incorporated in 1953
- Cypress, incorporated in 1956
- Dana Point, incorporated in 1989
- Fountain Valley, incorporated in
1953
- Fullerton, incorporated in 1904
- Garden Grove, incorporated in 1956
- Huntington Beach, incorporated
in 1909
- Irvine, incorporated in 1971
- La Habra, incorporated in 1925
- La Palma, incorporated in 1955
- Laguna Beach, incorporated in 1927
- Laguna Hills, incorporated in 1991
- Laguna Niguel, incorporated in
1989
|
- Laguna Woods, incorporated in 1999
- Lake Forest, incorporated in 1991
- Los Alamitos, incorporated in 1960
- Mission Viejo, incorporated in
1988
- Newport Beach, incorporated in
1906
- Orange, incorporated in 1888
- Placentia, incorporated in 1926
- Rancho Santa Margarita,
incorporated in 2000
- San Clemente, incorporated in 1928
- San Juan Capistrano,
incorporated in 1961
- Santa Ana, incorporated in 1886
- Seal Beach, incorporated in 1915
- Stanton, incorporated in 1956
- Tustin, incorporated in 1927
- Villa Park, incorporated in 1962
- Westminster, incorporated in 1957
- Yorba Linda, incorporated in 1967
|
Noteworthy communities
Some of the communities that exist within city limits are listed
below:
- Anaheim Hills,
Anaheim
- Atwood, Placentia
- Balboa, Newport Beach
- Balboa Island, Newport Beach
- Capistrano Beach, Dana Point
- Carlton, Yorba Linda
- Corona del Mar, Newport Beach
- Dove Canyon, Rancho Santa Margarita
- East Lake, Yorba Linda
- El Modena,
Orange
- Floral Park, Santa Ana
- French
Park, Santa Ana
- Foothill Ranch, Lake Forest
- Las Flores, Rancho Santa Margarita
- Lido
Isle, Newport Beach
- Mesa
Verde, Costa Mesa
- Monarch Beach, Dana Point
- Newport Coast,
Newport Beach
|
- Northwood, Irvine
- Olinda Village, Brea
- Olive, Orange
- Portola
Hills, Lake Forest
- Quail Hill, Irvine
- San
Joaquin Hills, Newport Beach
- San Juan Hills, San Juan Capistrano
- Santa Ana Heights, Newport Beach
- Santiago Hills,
Orange
- South Laguna, Laguna Beach
- Sunny Hills, Fullerton
- Surfside, Seal Beach
- Talega, San Clemente
- Turtle Rock, Irvine
- Tustin Legacy, Tustin
- Tustin Ranch, Tustin
- West Garden Grove, Garden Grove
- The Village, Irvine
- Woodbury, Irvine
- Woodbridge, Irvine
|
Unincorporated
communities
These communities are outside of city limits in unincorporated county territory:
Planned communities
Orange County has a history of large planned communities. Nearly 30% of the county was created
as master planned communities[citation needed], the
most notable being the City of Irvine, Coto de Caza, Anaheim Hills, Tustin Ranch, Tustin Legacy, Ladera Ranch, Talega, Rancho Santa Margarita,
and Mission Viejo. Irvine has become the model master planned city,
encompassing many villages which were all planned under a master plan by
the Irvine Company in the mid-1960s.
Adjacent counties
National protected
areas
Transportation
infrastructure
Major highways
Surface transportation in Orange County relies heavily on three major
interstate highways: the Santa Ana Freeway (I-5), the San Diego Freeway (I-405 and I-5 south of
Irvine), and the San Gabriel River Freeway (I-605),
which only briefly enters Orange County territory in the northwest. The
other freeways in the county are state highways, and include the
perpetually congested Riverside and Artesia Freeway (SR 91) and the Garden Grove Freeway (SR 22) running east-west, and the Orange Freeway (SR 57), the Costa Mesa Freeway (SR/SR 55), the Laguna Freeway (SR 133), the San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor (SR 73), the Eastern Transportation Corridor (SR 261, SR 133, SR 241), and the Foothill Transportation Corridor (SR 241) running north-south.
Minor stub freeways include the Richard M. Nixon Freeway (SR 90), also
known as Imperial Highway, and the southern terminus of Pacific Coast
Highway (SR 1). There are no U.S. Highways in Orange
County, though two existed in the county until the mid-1960s: 91 and 101. 91 went through what is now the state route of the
same number, and 101 was replaced by Interstate 5. SR-1 was once a
bypass of US-101 (Route 101A).
Public transit
Transit in Orange County is offered primarily by the Orange County
Transportation Authority. The American Public Transportation
Association (APTA) cited OCTA as the best large property transportation
system in the United States for 2005. OCTA manages the county's bus
network and funds the construction and maintenance of local streets,
highways, and freeways; regulates taxicab
services; maintains express toll lanes through the median of California State Route 91; and
works with Southern California's Metrolink to provide commuter
rail service along three lines - the Orange County Line, the 91 Line,
and the Inland
Empire-Orange County Line.
The bus network comprises 6,542 stops on 77 lines, running along most
major streets, and accounts for 210,000 boardings a day. The fleet of
817 buses is gradually being replaced by LNG (liquified natural gas)-powered vehicles, which already represent over
40% of the total.
Starting in 1992, Metrolink has operated three
commuter rail lines through Orange County, and has also maintained
Rail-to-Rail service with parallel Amtrak
service. On a typical weekday, over 40 trains run along the Orange County
Line, the 91 Line and the Inland
Empire-Orange County Line. Along with Metrolink riders on parallel
Amtrak lines, these lines generate approximately 15,000 boardings per weekday.
Metrolink also began
offering weekend service on the Orange County Line and the Inland
Empire-Orange County line in the summer of 2006. As ridership has
steadily increased in the region, new stations have opened at Anaheim
Canyon, Buena Park, Tustin, and Laguna Niguel/Mission Viejo. Stations at Placentia and Yorba Linda are proposed for future
construction.
Orange County's first public Monorail line is undergoing Environmental impact assessment.
This line will connect the Disneyland Resort, Convention Center, and
Angel Stadium to the proposed ARTIC
transportation hub, in the city of Anaheim.[10]
A car and passenger ferry service, the Balboa Island Ferry, comprising three ferries running
every five minutes, operates between Balboa Peninsula and Balboa Island in Newport Beach.
Orange County's only major airport is John Wayne Airport. Although its abbreviation (SNA) refers
to Santa Ana, the airport is in fact located in unincorporated
territory surrounded by the cities of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, and
Irvine. Unincorporated Orange County (including the John Wayne Airport)
has mailing addresses which go through the Santa Ana Post Office. For
this reason, SNA was chosen as the IATA Code for the airport.[citation needed] The
actual Destination Moniker which appears on most Arrival/Departure
Monitors in airports throughout the United States is "Orange County,"
which is the common nickname used for the OMB Metropolitan
Designation: Santa
Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, California. Its modern Thomas F. Riley Terminal
handles over 9 million passengers annually through 14 different
airlines.
Demographics
|
| Census |
Pop. |
|
%ą |
| 1890 |
13,589 |
|
? |
| 1900 |
19,696 |
|
44.9% |
| 1910 |
34,436 |
|
74.8% |
| 1920 |
61,375 |
|
78.2% |
| 1930 |
118,674 |
|
93.4% |
| 1940 |
130,760 |
|
10.2% |
| 1950 |
216,224 |
|
65.4% |
| 1960 |
703,925 |
|
225.6% |
| 1970 |
1,420,386 |
|
101.8% |
| 1980 |
1,932,709 |
|
36.1% |
| 1990 |
2,410,556 |
|
24.7% |
| 2000 |
2,846,289 |
|
18.1% |
| Est. 2008 |
3,010,759 |
|
5.8% |
Orange County Density Map. Darker shades indicate denser areas.
According to Census Bureau's 2006 American Community Survey
the racial or ethnic makeup of the county was 64.76% White, 16.05% Asian, 0.33% Pacific
Islander, 1.72% African
American, 0.38% Native
American, 14.32% from other races, and 2.44% from two
or more races. 32.89% of the population were Hispanic of any
race. 30.49% of the population was foreign born.[11]
As of the census[12] of 2000, there were 2,846,289 people, 935,287 households, and 667,794
families residing in the county, making Orange County the second most
populous county in California. The population density was 1,392/km˛ (3,606/sq mi). There were
969,484 housing units at an average density of 474/km˛ (1,228/sq mi).
The racial makeup of the county was 64.81% White, 13.59% Asian, 1.67% African
American, 0.70% Native
American, 0.31% Pacific
Islander, 14.80% from other races,
and 4.12% from two or more races. 30.76% are Hispanic or Latino of any race.
8.9% were of German, 6.9% English and 6.0% Irish ancestry according to Census 2000. 58.6% spoke English, 25.3% Spanish, 4.7% Vietnamese, 1.9% Korean, 1.5% Chinese (Cantonese or Mandarin) and 1.2% Tagalog as their first language.
In 1990, still according to the census[12] there were 2,410,556 people residing in the county. The racial makeup
of the county was 78.60% White, 10.34% Asian or Pacific
Islander, 1.77% African
American, 0.50% Native
American, and 8.79% from other races.
23.43% were Hispanic or Latino of any race.
There were 935,287 households out of which 37.0% had children under
the age of 18 living with them, 55.9% were married
couples living together, 10.7% had a female householder with no
husband present, and 28.6% were non-families. 21.1% of all households
were made up of individuals and 7.2% had someone living alone who was 65
years of age or older. The average household size was 3.00 and the
average family size was 3.48.
The population is diverse age-wise, with 27.0% under the age of 18,
9.4% from 18 to 24, 33.2% from 25 to 44, 20.6% from 45 to 64, and 9.9%
65 years of age or older. The median age is 33 years. For every 100
females there were 99.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over,
there were 96.7 males.
The median income for a household in the county was $61,899, and the
median income for a family was $75,700 (these figures had risen to
$71,601 and $81,260 respectively as of a 2007 estimate[13]).
Males had a median income of $45,059 versus $34,026 for females. The per capita income for the county was $25,826. About 7.0% of
families and 10.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 13.2% of those under age
18 and 6.2% of those age 65 or over.
In 2010 Orange County was voted number 83 on The
Daily Caller's list of America's top 100 conservative-friendly
counties.[14]
Unincorporated communities are included if their population is
greater than 15,000. These numbers are estimates from the 2005 Census
updates for these locales. Numbers are approximate until a new Census
occurs.
- Villa Park: $203,091
- Anaheim Hills: $157,938
- Coto de Caza: $153,118
- Laguna Beach: $141,916
- Yorba Linda: $138,910
- Newport Beach: $137,226
- Tustin
Foothills: $122,685
- Laguna Niguel: $112,241
- Irvine: $111,455
- Laguna Hills: $103,419
- Ladera Ranch: $99,537
- Dana Point: $97,615
- San Clemente: $94,576
- Rossmoor: $93,972
- Rancho Santa Margarita:
$92,671
- Mission Viejo: $84,934
- Aliso Viejo: $83,002
- San Juan Capistrano: $78,638
- West Garden Grove:
$78,112
- La Palma: $77,177
|
- Cypress: $76,312
- Huntington Beach: $75,900
- Fountain Valley: $73,504
- Lake Forest: $73,293
- Los Alamitos: $71,112
- Brea: $70,009
- Costa Mesa: $69,918
- Seal Beach: $66,131
- Placentia: $66,083
- Orange: $62,760
- Fullerton: $61,462
- Anaheim: $60,881
- Tustin: $60,319
- Buena Park: $57,695
- Westminster: $57,172
- Garden Grove: $50,038
- La Habra: $49,612
- Santa Ana: $44,505
- Stanton: $37,840
- Laguna Woods: $31,212
|
Economy
Business
The developing urban core in the City of Irvine.
Orange County is the headquarters of many Fortune 500 companies
including Ingram Micro (#69) and First American Corporation (#312)
in Santa Ana, Western Digital (#439) in Lake Forest and Pacific
Life (#452) in Newport Beach. Irvine is the home of numerous
start-up companies and also is the home of Fortune 1000 headquarters for
Allergan,
Broadcom,
Edwards Lifesciences, Epicor, Standard Pacific and Sun Healthcare
Group. Other Fortune 1000 companies in Orange County include Beckman Coulter in Fullerton, Quiksilver in Huntington Beach and Apria Healthcare Group in Lake Forest. Irvine
is also the home of notable technology companies like PC-manufacturer Gateway Inc., router manufactuer Linksys,
and video/computer game creator Blizzard Entertainment. Many regional
headquarters for international businesses reside in Orange County like Mazda, Toshiba,
Toyota,
Samsung, Kia
Motors, in the City of Irvine, Mitsubishi in the City of Cypress, and Hyundai
in the City of Fountain Valley. Fashion is another important industry to
Orange County. Oakley, Inc., the renowned sunglasses company,
is headquartered in the City of Irvine. Hurley Inc. is headquartered in
Costa Mesa. The shoe company Pleaser USA, Inc. is located in Fullerton. St. John is headquartered in Irvine. Wet Seal is headquarted in Lake Forest. Restaurants such as Del Taco,
Wahoo's Fish Tacos, Taco
Bell, El Pollo Loco, In-N-Out Burger, Claim
Jumper, Marie Callender's, Wienerschnitzel, have headquarters in the
City of Irvine as well.
Shopping
Orange County contains several notable shopping malls. Among these
are the world-renowned South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa and Fashion Island in Newport Beach. Other significant
malls include the Brea Mall, The Shops at Mission Viejo, The Block at Orange, and the Irvine Spectrum Center. There is also Downtown Disney adjacent to
Disneyland.
Tourism
Tourism remains a vital aspect of Orange County's economy. Anaheim is the main tourist hub, with the Disneyland Resort's Magic Kingdom Park being the
second most visited theme park in the country. The Anaheim Convention Center receives
many major conventions throughout the year. Resorts within the Beach
Cities receive visitors throughout the year due to their close proximity
to the beach, biking paths, mountain hiking trails, golf courses,
shopping and dining.
Tallest
buildings in Orange County
| City |
Structure |
Height (feet) |
Stories |
Built |
| Santa Ana |
One Broadway Plaza |
497 |
37 |
Proposed |
| Costa Mesa |
Center Tower |
285 |
21 |
1985 |
| Costa Mesa |
Plaza Tower |
282 |
21 |
1992 |
| Santa Ana |
Macarthur Skyline Tower 1 |
278 |
25 |
2009 |
| Santa Ana |
Macarthur Skyline Tower 2 |
278 |
25 |
2009 |
| Orange |
City Tower |
269 |
21 |
1988 |
| Irvine |
Jamboree Center - 5 Park Plaza |
263 |
19 |
1990 |
| Irvine |
Jamboree Center - 4 Park Plaza |
263 |
19 |
1990 |
| Irvine |
Jamboree Center - 3 Park Plaza |
263 |
19 |
1990 |
| Irvine |
Edison International Tower |
263 |
19 |
N/A |
| Irvine |
Opus Center Irvine II |
246 |
14 |
2002 |
| Irvine |
Wells Fargo Center |
230 |
18 |
1990 |
| Orange |
Doubletree Hotel Anaheim |
N/A |
20 |
1986 |
| Newport Beach |
The Island Hotel (Formerly the Four Seasons) |
N/A |
20 |
1986 |
| Orange |
City Plaza |
N/A |
18 |
N/A |
| Newport Beach |
610 Tower |
N/A |
18 |
N/A |
| Costa Mesa |
Park Tower |
240 |
17 |
1979 |
| Irvine |
Waterfield Tower (formerly Tower 17) |
220 |
17 |
1987 |
| Newport Beach |
660 Tower |
N/A |
17 |
N/A |
| Newport Beach |
620 Tower |
N/A |
17 |
1970 |
| Irvine |
Irvine Marriott (Koll Center Irvine) |
N/A |
17 |
N/A |
| Anaheim |
Anaheim Marriot - Palms Tower |
N/A |
19 |
N/A |
| Costa Mesa |
Westin South Coast Plaza |
N/A |
17 |
N/A |
| Orange |
1100 Executive Tower |
210 |
16 |
N/A |
| Santa Ana |
Xerox Centre |
N/A |
16 |
1988 |
| Newport Beach |
Marriott Newport Beach Hotel |
N/A |
16 |
N/A |
| Irvine |
2600 Michelson |
N/A |
16 |
N/A |
| Garden Grove |
Hyatt Regency Orange County |
N/A |
16 |
1987 |
| Anaheim |
Anaheim Marriott - Oasis Tower |
N/A |
16 |
N/A |
| Costa Mesa |
DiTech.com Tower (Two Town Center) |
213 |
15 |
N/A |
| Costa Mesa |
Comerica Bank Tower (Two Town Center) |
213 |
15 |
N/A |
| Buena Park |
Supreme Scream (amusement ride) |
312 |
N/A |
N/A |
| Anaheim |
The Twilight Zone Tower of
Terror (amusement ride) |
183 |
--- |
2004 |
| Anaheim |
Anaheim Convention Center |
|
|
|
Arts and culture
Points of interest
1965 aerial photo of Anaheim
Disneyland,
Disneyland Hotel with its Monorail Station. The Disneyland
Heliport, surrounding orange groves, Santa Ana Freeway (now I-5) and the
Melodyland Theater "in the round," and part of the City of Anaheim.
The area's warm Mediterranean climate and 42 miles
(68 km) of year-round beaches attract millions of tourists annually. Huntington Beach is a hot spot
for sunbathing and surfing; nicknamed "Surf City, U.S.A.", it is home
to many surfing competitions. "The Wedge," at the tip of The Balboa Peninsula in
Newport Beach, is one of the most famous body surfing spots in the
world. Other tourist destinations include the theme parks Disneyland and Disney's
California Adventure in Anaheim and Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park. Water parks in Orange County include Wild Rivers in Irvine and Soak
City in Buena Park. The Anaheim Convention Center is the
largest such facility on the West Coast. The old town area in the City
of Orange (the traffic circle at the middle of Chapman Ave. at Glassell)
still maintains its 1950s image, and appeared in the That Thing You
Do! movie. Little Saigon is another notable tourist
destination, being home to the largest concentration of Vietnamese people outside of Vietnam. There are also sizable
Taiwanese, Chinese, and Korean communities, particularly in western
Orange County. This is evident in several Asian-influenced shopping
centers in Asian American hubs like the city of Irvine.
Some of the most exclusive (and expensive) neighborhoods in the U.S.
are located here, many along the Orange County Coast, and some in
north Orange County.
Historical points of interest include Mission San Juan Capistrano, the
renowned destination of migrating swallows, and the Richard Nixon
Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda. The Richard Nixon
Birthplace home, located on the grounds of the Presidential Library,
is a National Historic Landmark. Other
notable structures include the home of Madame Helena Modjeska, located in Modjeska Canyon on Santiago Creek; Ronald
Reagan Federal Building and Courthouse in Santa Ana, the largest building in the county; the
historic Balboa Pavilion[15] in Newport Beach; and the Huntington Beach Pier. It is also recognized
for its nationally known centers of worship, such as Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, the largest house of
worship in California; Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, one of the largest churches in the
United States; and the Calvary Chapel.
Since the premiere in fall 2003 of the hit Fox series The O.C., and the 2007 Bravo series "The Real Housewives of
Orange County" tourism has increased with travelers from across the
globe hoping to see the sights seen in the show. However, the former was
rarely filmed anywhere in Orange County.[citation needed]
Religion
Orange County is also the base for several significant religious
organizations:
There are about 1.04 million Catholics in Orange County.[16]
Literature
A number of novels by best-selling fiction and horror author Dean
Koontz, a resident of Newport Beach, are set in the area.
Several of the stories in Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon's collection, A Model World,
are set in Orange County. Chabon studied creative writing at UC Irvine.
Orange County is the place in which Kim Stanley Robinson's Three Californias Trilogy is
set. These books depict three different futures of Orange County
(survivors of a nuclear war in The Wild Shore, a developer's
dream gone mad in The Gold Coast, and an ecotopian utopia in Pacific
Edge). Philip K. Dick's novel A Scanner Darkly was also set in Orange County.
From his first novel, "Laguna Heat," to more recent books such as
"California Girl," mystery-writer T. Jefferson Parker has set many of
his novels in Orange County.
The modern fantasy novel "All the Bells on Earth" by James P. Blaylock is set in Orange.
The classic novel "Two Years Before the Mast" by Richard Henry Dana,
Jr. describes journeys along the California coast in the early 1800s and
the trading of goods for cow hides with the local residents. The south
Orange County city of Dana Point takes its name from the author, as the
cliffs around the harbor were a favorite location of his.
San Juan Capistrano is also
the home of the first Zorro novellas. It was first called Curse of
Capistrano, but was later changed to the Mask of Zorro due to the
popularity of the movie.
In popular culture
Orange County has been the setting for numerous films and television
shows:
- The opening scene of Gilligan's Island that shows the S.S.
Minnow leaving the harbor was in Newport Beach.
- The best known portrayal is as the setting of the popular 2003 Fox Network television drama The O.C. which is set in the Orange County coastal harbor town of Newport Beach.
- It is the subject and setting of the eponymous 2002 movie Orange County.
However, the film was not actually filmed in Orange County.
- It is also the setting of the 2003 sitcom Arrested Development.
Most of the series was not filmed in Orange County, but in Culver City and Marina del Rey in Los Angeles County. A running
joke in the series that pokes fun at The O.C. is that characters will frequently refer to Orange County as "The
O.C.," followed by another character's saying, "Don't call it that"
(mirroring the fact that actual Orange County residents do not use the
term "The O.C.").
- The closing scene in Rain Man with Dustin Hoffman and Tom
Cruise was shot at the Santa Ana Regional Transportation Center.
- The film Better Luck Tomorrow was shot and set in the
cities of Cypress and Anaheim
- The University of California,
Irvine, has been used in many films, most notably Ocean's Eleven (2001 film);
others include Conquest of the Planet of the
Apes and Poltergeist (film)
- The film Accepted had South Harmon Institute of
Technology shot in Chapman University in Orange.
- The film Life as a House was set in Laguna Beach, although it was filmed in Los Angeles County.
- The film Brick was shot and set in San Clemente
- MTV's Laguna Beach: The Real
Orange County was filmed in the Orange County coastal town of Laguna Beach, California.
- MTV's Newport Harbor: The Real
Orange County was filmed in the Orange County coastal town of Newport Beach, California.
- MTV's Life of Ryan is a reality[1] show following
the life of pro skateboarder Ryan Sheckler. The title of the show is a
play on Monty Python's Life of Brian,
filmed in and around the Sheckler household in San Clemente,
California.
- A key scene in the film Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make
Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan was shot and set at The Block at Orange in the city of Orange.
- The Christian Slater film Gleaming The Cube was set in
Orange County and filmed in several cities, such as Anaheim, Woodbridge
High School in Irvine, and John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana.
- A plot line in the television drama The West Wing involved a dead liberal Democrat unexpectedly
winning a Congressional seat
from an Orange County district.
- Orange County is the home of the late Republican President Teddy
Bridges on the (now canceled) ABC drama Commander in Chief.
- Sayid Jarrah from the ABC drama Lost was bound to go to Irvine, where his longtime
friend Nadia lives. John Locke, another castaway from the series, is said
to have lived most of his life in Tustin. Also Libby told Desmond that she is from Newport Beach.
- Orange County was the location of the 1994 Charlie
Sheen movie The Chase;
the movie, however, was mostly filmed in Houston.
- The Park Place, Irvine corporate mall was the location for
futuristic scenes in the 1993 film Demolition Man starring Sylvester Stallone and Wesley
Snipes.
- The 2006 film A Scanner Darkly was set in the city of Anaheim. A freeway scene was shot along the
Northbound I-5 in Tustin.
- The show The Real Housewives of
Orange County is filmed in Coto De Caza.
- Costa Mesa is the setting for the The
X-Files episode "Hungry".
- In the 2001 film The Fast and the Furious,
the scene when the Johnny Tran and his gang catch up with Vin Diesel
and Paul Walker blowing up their car was filmed in Little
Saigon, Westminster.
- In season six of the HBO drama The
Sopranos while in a coma Tony Soprano dreams he is a
businessman in Costa Mesa.
- The chase scene at the beginning of the Arnold Schwarzenegger movie Kindergarten Cop was filmed at Main Place Mall in Santa Ana.
- In "The Incredible Mr. Brisby"
episode of The Venture Bros., Hank and Dean
Venture Travel to the fictional theme park Brisby Land, a spoof on Disney Land. During the episode, radical Orange
County Natives known as the Orange County Liberation Front launch a full-scale assault
on the Brisby Land compound out of revenge for the ever increasing size
of the Park. Members of the OCLF are easily identified by their helmets
that resemble enormous oranges.
- The shuttle bay scenes for the 2009 Star Trek movie were shot in the old El Toro base
hangers.
Orange County has also been used as a shooting location for several
films and television programs. Examples of movies at least partially
shot in Orange County are Tom
Hanks's That Thing You Do,
the Coen Brothers' The Man Who Wasn't There, and
the Martin Lawrence movie Big Momma's House. All three of which were filmed
in or around the Old Towne Plaza in the City of Orange.
Sports
Huntington Beach annually plays
host to the U.S. Open of Surfing, AVP Pro Beach
Volleyball and Vans World Championship of Skateboarding.[17] It was also the shooting location for Pro Beach Hockey.[18] USA Water Polo,
Inc. has moved its headquarter offices to Huntington Beach.[19] Orange County's active outdoor culture is home to many surfers,
skateboarders, mountain bikers, cyclists, climbers, hikers, kayaking,
sailing and sand volleyball.
Sports teams
Street banners promoting the county's two major league teams, the Ducks
and the Angels.
The Major League Baseball team in Orange
County is the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim,
who won the World Series in 2002. In 2005, new owner Arte
Moreno wanted to change the name to "Los Angeles Angels" in order to
better tap into the Los Angeles media market, the second largest in the
country, which includes Orange County. However, the standing agreement
with the city of Anaheim demanded that they have "Anaheim" in the name,
so they became the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. This name change was
hotly disputed by the city of Anaheim and the Los Angeles Dodgers, who
wanted sole possession of the title "Los Angeles," but the change stood
and still stands today, which prompted a lawsuit by
the city of Anaheim against Angels owner Arte
Moreno, won by Moreno. It has been widely unpopular in Orange
County [5], although attendance
has increased.
The county's National Hockey League team, the Anaheim
Ducks, won the 2007 Stanley
Cup beating the Ottawa Senators. They also came close to winning the 2003 Stanley
Cup finals after winning three games in a seven-game series against
the New Jersey Devils.
The Orange County Flyers are a Golden Baseball League team based in Fullerton,
California. The league is not affiliated with Major League Baseball. The
Flyers were sold on March 21, 2007 to an Orange County investment
group, making them the first Golden Baseball League team to ever be
sold. Before their sale, the Flyers were called the Fullerton Flyers,
but on March 28, 2007 they became the Orange County Flyers; they kept
their team colors (blue and orange) and home games are still played at
Cal State Fullerton's Goodwin Field.
The Orange County Blue Star is a USL Premier Development League soccer club. They play at Orange Coast College. Among those who have played for
OCBS are Jürgen Klinsmann, the former German star
and Germany's 2006 World Cup coach, who played under an assumed name.
The Anaheim Arsenal are an NBA D-League expansion team for the 2006?2007
season. They play their home games at the Anaheim Convention Center.
The Orange County Gladiators are an American
Basketball Association (ABA) expansion team starting in November
2007. They will play their home games at Fieldhouse Gym at JSerra in San
Juan Capistrano.
Orange County Roller Girls [6] - an All Female Flat
Track Roller Derby League formed in 2006 and actively plays (bouts) at
various locations in Orange County. Many of the league's bouts are
played against teams from other cities throughout the United States.
Former and defunct
Orange County sports teams
The National Football League football
left the county when the Los Angeles Rams relocated to St. Louis in 1995. Anaheim city leaders are in talks with the NFL
to bring a Los Angeles-area franchise to Orange County, though they are
competing with other cities in and around Los Angeles.
The California Surf played in the North American Soccer League
from 1978 to 1981. The club called Anaheim Stadium home.
The Los Angeles Salsa played at Cal State
Fullerton's Titan Stadium in 1993?94 in the American Professional Soccer
League (APSL), at the time the top soccer league in the U.S. The
Salsa, whose general manager was former Cosmos star Ricky
Davis and its coach former Brazil star Rildo Menezes,
also played some games at East Los Angeles College in Monterey
Park, California, attempting a season in Mexico's second-tier
Primera A Division. That attempt was cancelled after several games when FIFA and CONCACAF ruled a club could not play in two leagues in separate countries. The
Salsa lost to the Colorado Foxes in the 1993 APSL final at Cal
State Fullerton.
The Orange County Zodiac,
affiliated with MLS's Los Angeles Galaxy, played soccer at Santa Ana
Stadium (also known as Santa Ana Bowl) and Orange Coast College from 1997 to 2000.
The county was the home of the Orange County Buzz basketball team
of the American
Basketball Association (ABA).
Anaheim was also the home of the prior American Basketball
Association franchise known as the Anaheim Amigos in the mid-sixties.
The Anaheim Storm was a member of the National Lacrosse League. They
folded in 2005 due to low attendance.
The Anaheim Piranhas were a Arena Football League
team in 1996-97, but folded due to team board financial problems.
The Anaheim Bullfrogs were a Roller Hockey International team
that lasted from 1993?99 and were briefly revived in 2001.
The Anaheim Splash was a soccer team that played
in the Continental Indoor Soccer
League from 1993 to 1997.
The Los Angeles Clippers played some home
games at The Arrowhead Pond, now known as the Honda
Center, from 1994 to 1999, before moving to Staples Center, which they share with the Los Angeles Lakers.
The Southern California Sun was an American football team based out of Anaheim that played in
the World Football League in 1974 and
1975. Their records were 13?7 in 1974 and 7?5 in 1975. Their home
stadium was Anaheim Stadium.
The Orange County Ramblers were a professional football team that
competed in the Continental Football League from 1967-68. The Ramblers
played their home games in Anaheim, California. The team was coached
both seasons by Homer Beatty, who had won a small college national title
at Santa Ana College in 1962.
Government
Orange County is a chartered county of California; its seat is Santa Ana. Its legislative and
executive authority is vested in a five-member Board of Supervisors.
Each Supervisor is popularly elected from a regional district, and
together the board oversees the activities of the county's agencies and
departments and sets policy on development, public improvements, and
county services. At the beginning of each year the Supervisors select a
Chairman and Vice Chairman, but the administration is headed by a
professional municipal manager, the County Executive. The current
supervisors are Janet Nguyen, John
Moorlach, Bill Campbell, and Patricia C. Bates, with a vacancy in the Fourth District,
which was previously occupied by Chris
Norby until he resigned to become a member of the California State Assembly.
Seven other public officials are elected at-large: the County
Assessor, Auditor-Controller, Clerk-Recorder, District Attorney, Sheriff-Coroner,
Treasurer-Tax Collector and Public Administrator. Since 2008, the Orange County
Sheriff's Department has been led by Sheriff-Coroner Sandra Hutchens. Her predecessor, Mike
Carona, resigned earlier in the year to defend himself against
corruption charges.
Politics
Orange County vote
by party in presidential elections
| Year |
GOP |
DEM |
Others |
| 2008 |
50.4% 578,171 |
47.8% 548,246 |
1.8% 21,530 |
| 2004 |
59.7% 641,832 |
39.0% 419,239 |
1.3% 14,328 |
| 2000 |
55.8% 541,299 |
40.4% 391,819 |
3.9% 37,787 |
| 1996 |
51.7% 446,717 |
37.9% 327,485 |
10.5% 90,374 |
| 1992 |
43.9% 426,613 |
31.6% 306,930 |
24.6% 239,006 |
| 1988 |
67.7% 586,230 |
31.1% 269,013 |
1.2% 10,064 |
| 1984 |
74.7% 635,013 |
24.3% 206,272 |
1.0% 8,792 |
| 1980 |
67.9% 529,797 |
22.6% 176,704 |
9.5% 73,711 |
| 1976 |
62.2% 408,632 |
35.3% 232,246 |
2.5% 16,555 |
| 1972 |
68.3% 448,291 |
26.9% 176,847 |
4.8% 31,515 |
| 1968 |
63.1% 314,905 |
29.9% 148,869 |
7.0% 34,933 |
| 1964 |
55.9% 224,196 |
44.0% 176,539 |
0.1% 430 |
| 1960 |
60.8% 174,891 |
38.9% 112,007 |
0.2% 701 |
Orange County has long been known as a Republican stronghold and
has consistently sent Republican representatives to the state and
federal legislatures. Republican majorities in Orange County helped
deliver California's electoral votes to Republican
presidential candidates Richard
Nixon (1960, 1968 and 1972), Gerald
Ford (1976), Ronald Reagan (1980, 1984), and George H. W. Bush (1988). Orange
County has not voted for a Democratic presidential
candidate since Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1936 landslide
re-election for a second term. Although Democrats have made inroads in
the northern end of the county since the mid-1980s, Orange County
politics are still dominated by Republicans. Five of the county's six U.S. Representatives,
four of its five State Senators and seven of its nine
State Assemblymembers are
Republicans, as are all five members of the County Board of Supervisors.
Only four Democrats have carried the county in a statewide race in the
last 50 years; Jerry Brown in his successful campaign for
Governor in 1978, March Fong Eu for Secretary of State and Kenneth Cory for State Controller, both also in 1978 and Kathleen Connell for Controller in 1998.
In Congress, representatives whose districts are completely or
partially in the county include Republicans Ed Royce (CA-40), Gary
Miller (CA-42), Ken
Calvert (CA-44), Dana Rohrabacher (CA-46), and John Campbell (CA-48), and
Democrat Loretta Sanchez (CA-47). In the
State Senate, Senators whose districts are completely or partially in
the county include Republicans Bob Huff (SD-29), Mimi
Walters (SD-33), Tom
Harman (SD-35), and Mark
Wyland (SD-38), and
Democrat Lou Correa (SD-34). In the
State Assembly, Assemblymembers whose districts are completely or
partially in the county include Republicans Curt
Hagman (AD-60), Jim
Silva (AD-67), Van Tran (AD-68), Chuck
DeVore (AD-70), Jeff Miller (AD-71), Chris
Norby (AD-72), and Diane
Harkey (AD-73), and
Democrats Tony Mendoza (AD-56) and Jose
Solorio (AD-69).
According to the Orange County Registrar of Voters, as of July 21,
2009, Orange County had 1,599,889 registered voters. Of these, 43.6%
(698,140) are registered Republicans, and 32.1% (512,853) are registered
Democrats. An additional 20.2% (324,669) declined to state a political
party.[20]
Orange County has produced such notable Republicans as President Richard
Nixon (born in Yorba Linda and lived in San Clemente), U.S. Senator John F. Seymour (previously mayor of Anaheim), and U.S. Senator Thomas
Kuchel (of Anaheim). Former Congressman Chris Cox (of Newport Beach), a White House
counsel for President Ronald
Reagan, is also a former chairman of the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission. Orange County was also home to former
Republican Congressman John G. Schmitz, a presidential candidate in 1972 from the
ultra-conservative American Independent Party and
the father of Mary Kay Letourneau. In 1996, Curt
Pringle (currently mayor of Anaheim) became the first Republican-elected Speaker of
the California State Assembly in
decades.
While the growth of the county's Hispanic and Asian populations in recent decades has significantly
influenced the culture of Orange County, its conservative reputation has
remained largely intact. Partisan voter registration patterns of
Hispanics, Asians and other ethnic minorities in the county have tended
to reflect the surrounding demographics, with resultant Republican
majorities in all but the central portion of the county. When Democrat Loretta Sanchez defeated veteran Republican Bob
Dornan in the congressional contest of 1996, she was continuing a
trend of Democratic representation of that district that had been
interrupted by Dornan's 1984 upset of former Congressman Jerry Patterson. Until 1992, Sanchez herself was a
Republican, and she is viewed as having moderate or even conservative
positions on many issues.
Republicans have responded to the influx of non-white immigrants by
making more explicit efforts to court the Hispanic and Asian vote. In
2004, George W. Bush captured 60% of the county's
vote, up from 56% in 2000, despite a higher Democratic popular vote
compared with the 2000 election. Although Barbara
Boxer won statewide, and fared better in Orange County than she did
in 1998, Republican Bill Jones defeated her
in the county, 51% to 43%. While the 39% that John
Kerry received is higher than the percentage Bill
Clinton won in both 1992 and 1996, the percentage of the vote
George W. Bush received in 2004 (59.7% of the vote) is the highest any
presidential candidate has received since 1988, showing a still-dominant
GOP presence in the county. In 2006, Senator Dianne Feinstein won 45% of the vote in the county, the
highest margin of a Democrat in a Senate race in over four decades, but
Orange was nevertheless the only Coastal California county to vote for her Republican
opponent Dick Mountjoy. In terms of voter registration,
the Democratic Party has a plurality or majority of registrations only
in the cities of Santa Ana, Stanton, and Buena Park.
The county is featured prominently in the book Suburban Warriors:
The Origins of the New American Right by Lisa McGirr. She argues
that the county's conservative political orientation in the 20th century
owed much to its settlement by Midwestern transplants, who reacted strongly to
communist sympathies, the civil rights movement, and the turmoil of the 1960s
in nearby Los Angeles ? across the "Orange Curtain."
In the 1970s and 1980s, Orange County was one of California's leading
Republican voting blocs and a sub-culture of residents to hold "Middle
American" values that emphasized a capitalist religious morality in
contrast to West coast liberalism that well existed there.
Orange County has a high portion of Republican voters from
culturally conservative Asian-American, Middle Eastern and Latino immigrants. Some of these came as refugees from wars and dictatorships, and are
strongly loyal to Republican anti-communist policies. The large Vietnamese-American communities in Garden Grove and Westminster are predominantly
Republican; Vietnamese Americans registered Republicans outnumber those
registered as Democrats by 55% to 22%. Republican Assemblyman Van Tran was elected to become the first Vietnamese-American to serve in a state
legislature and joined with Texan Hubert
Vo as the highest-ranking elected Vietnamese-American in the United
States prior to the 2008 election of Joseph
Cao in Louisiana's Second Congressional District. In the 2007
special election for the vacant county supervisor seat following
Democrat Lou Correa's election to the state senate, two
Vietnamese-American Republican candidates topped the list of 10
candidates, separated from each other by only seven votes, making the
Board of Supervisors entirely Republican.
Education
Orange County is the home of many colleges and universities,
including:
Some institutions not based in Orange County operate satellite
campuses, including the University of Southern
California and Pepperdine University.
The Orange County Department of Education oversees 28 school districts.
Media
Television stations KOCE-TV and KDOC-TV
are located in Orange County.
The county is primarily served by The Orange County Register. OC
Weekly is an alternative weekly publication and Excélsior is a Spanish-language newspaper. A few communities are served by the Los Angeles Times' publication of the Daily
Pilot, the Huntington Beach Independent and the Laguna
Beach Coastline Pilot. OC Music Magazine is also based out of Orange County,
serving local musicians and artists.
Orange County is served by radio stations from the Los
Angeles area. There are a few radio stations that are actually
located in Orange County. KJLL-FM 92.7 has an adult contemporary format. KSBR 88.5 FM
airs a jazz music format branded as "Jazz-FM" along with news
programming. KUCI 88.9FM is a free form college radio station that broadcasts from UC Irvine. KWIZ 96.7 FM,
located in Santa Ana, airs a regional Mexican
music format branded as "La Rockola 96.7". KWVE-FM
107.9 is owned by the Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa. KWVE-FM is also the primary Emergency Alert System station for
the county. The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
also own and operate a sports-only radio station from Orange, KLAA.
Notable natives
and residents
Due to Orange County's proximity to Los
Angeles, the entertainment capital of the United States, many film
and media celebrities have moved or bought second homes in the county.
Actor John Wayne, who lived in Newport Beach, is the namesake for Orange
County's John Wayne Airport. Orange County has
also produced many homegrown celebrities, including musician Jeffree
Star, golfer Tiger Woods, musician Andrew McMahon, basketball players Dennis
Rodman and Kobe Bryant, a number of professional
ballplayers, including retired slugger Mark
McGwire, WWE Wrestler, Chavo Guerrero Jr. actor, Kevin
Costner, comedian/actors Steve
Martin and Will Ferrell, actresses Michelle Pfeiffer and Diane
Keaton, and singers Chester Bennington, Bonnie
Raitt, Gwen Stefani, Jeff
Buckley, Marc Cherry, Drake
Bell and Major League Ballhawk John
Witt. Ms. America Susan Jeske is also a resident. Avenged Sevenfold and The
Offspring also call Orange County home.
The county's most famous resident was perhaps Richard
Nixon, the 37th President of the United States,
who was born in Yorba Linda and lived in San Clemente for several years following his resignation.
His presidential
library is in Yorba Linda.
See also
Notes
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ State of California, Department of Finance. "E-1 Population Estimates for
Cities, Counties and the State with Annual Percent Change ? January 1,
2007 and 2008". http://www.dof.ca.gov/HTML/DEMOGRAP/ReportsPapers/Estimates/E1/documents/E-1table.xls. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
- ^ Spanish and Mexican Ranchos of
Orange County
- ^ History of Rancho Mission Viejo in
Orange County
- ^ Sleeper, Jim. "How Orange County Got Its Name". Included in: Orange
County Historical Commission. (2004). A Hundred Years of Yesterdays: A
Centennial History of the People of Orange County and Their Communities.
pp. 23?26.
- ^ a b c "Orange County Goes Bust". Time Magazine.
December 19, 1994.
- ^ Guide to the Collection on the Development of the El Toro Airport. [3]. Online Archive of
California. Retrieved on Jan 21, 2010.
- ^ "RP 1". NGS data sheet. U.S. National Geodetic Survey. http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/cgi-bin/ds_mark.prl?PidBox=DX4296. Retrieved 2009-07-16.
- ^ [4]
- ^ 2006 American Community Survey:
Orange County, CA
- ^ a b "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. http://factfinder.census.gov. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
- ^ "Factfinder - Orange County, CA". http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ACSSAFFFacts?_event=ChangeGeoContext&geo_id=05000US06059&_geoContext=01000US%7C04000US06%7C05000US06013&_street=&_county=orange&_cityTown=orange&_state=04000US06&_zip=&_lang=en&_sse=on&ActiveGeoDiv=geoSelect&_useEV=&pctxt=fph&pgsl=010&_submenuId=factsheet_1&ds_name=ACS_2007_3YR_SAFF&_ci_nbr=null&qr_name=null®=null%3Anull&_keyword=&_industry=. Retrieved December 14, 2009.
- ^ Palko, Chris (March 19, 2010). "America?s top 20 conservative-friendly
counties". The Daily Caller. http://dailycaller.com/2010/03/19/americas-top-20-conservative-friendly-counties/2/.
Retrieved 19 March 2010
- ^ http://www.balboapavilion.com/history.html
- ^ "The History of the Diocese of
Orange County". The Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange. http://www.rcbo.org/site/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=20&Itemid=155.
- ^ Huntington Beach, CA website
- ^ http://www.spohnranch.com/html/pro_beach_hockey.htm
- ^ Inside USA Water Polo website
- ^ Orange County Registrar of Voters -
District Registration by Party
- ^ "Crime in Orange County, California
from city-data". analyzed data from numerous sources. http://www.city-data.com/county/Orange_County-CA.html. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
External links