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Meridian Capital
Mobile: (949) 500-8777
Direct: (800) 729-5111
Fax: (800) 729-1132
Info@MyMerCap.com
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San Diego County is a county located near the Pacific
Ocean in the far southwest of the U.S.
state of California. It is the southwesternmost county in
the contiguous 48 states. The population in 2000 was 2,813,835. A July
2008 estimate placed the population at 3,001,072 people, making it the
third most populous county in California, just behind its northern
neighbor Orange County.[1] The population in 2009 was 3,054,796 making it the fifth most-populous
county in the United States.[2] The county seat and largest city is San
Diego.
The county contains the American metropolitan statistical area San
Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos. In addition, San Diego County is part of
the San
Diego ? Tijuana metropolitan area, an area with over 5 million
people and the largest bi-national metropolitan area shared between the
United States and Mexico. San Diego County is also part of the Southern California Border Region, also referred
to as San Diego-Imperial, the smallest but most economically diverse
region in the state.[3]
San Diego County lies just north of the Mexican border, sharing a
border with Tijuana. It lies south of Orange County and Riverside County and west of Imperial County. It is home to
miles of beaches, a mild Mediterranean to semi-arid climate,[4] and 16 military facilities hosting the United States Navy, the United States Coast Guard and the United States Marine Corps.
History
The area which is now San Diego County has been inhabited for more
than 10,000 years by Kumeyaay (also called Diegue?o), Luise?o,
Cupe?o and Cahuilla Indians.[5]
European settlement in what is now San Diego County began with the
founding of the Mission San Diego de Alcal? by
the Spanish,
in 1769. The county was part of Alta California under the Viceroyalty of New Spain until the
Mexican revolution. From 1821 until 1848 the area was part of Mexico.
San Diego County became part of the United States
as a result of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in
1848, ending the U.S.-Mexican War. This
treaty designated the new border as terminating at a point on the Pacific
Ocean coast which would result in the border passing one Spanish
league south of the southernmost portion of San
Diego Bay, thus ensuring that the United
States received the natural harbor.
San Diego County was one of the original counties of California, and
was created at the time of statehood in 1850.[6] It was named after San Diego Bay, which had been rechristened in
1602 by Sebasti?n Vizca?no in honor of the Franciscan St. Didacus of Alcal?, known in Spanish as San Diego de Alcal? de Henares, and whose name
was borne by Vizca?no's flagship.
As originally created in 1850 San Diego County was quite large and
included most of southeastern California south and east of Los Angeles
County. As such it included major parts of what are now Inyo, San
Bernardino, Riverside, and Imperial counties.[6]
The later part of the 19th century witnessed numerous realignments of
county boundaries. The most recent changes were the creation of Riverside County, in 1893,[7] and Imperial County, in 1907.[8] Geography
"East County" communities in red. In dark red are the cities of Santee and El Cajon which mark the western edge of East
County. Unincorporated communities are in light red, including Lakeside
and Alpine. Alpine marks the eastern edge of East County.
"North County" communities. Coastal cities are in dark blue,
unincorporated coastal communities are in light blue. Inland cities are
in dark yellow, unincorporated inland communities are in light yellow. *this map does not include neighborhoods of San Diego that are
regognized as being part of North County (ex. La Jolla, Sorrento Valley,
Rancho Bernardo) *Areas in white that are in this general region would be considered part
of North County, only cities and unincorporated communities are colored
on this map.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county
has a total area of 4,526 sq mi (11,721 kmē). 4,200 sq mi (10,878 kmē) of it is land and 326 sq mi
(843 kmē) of it (7.20%) is water.
San Diego County has a varied topography. On its western side is
70 miles (110 km) of coastline. Most of San Diego between the coast and
the Laguna Mountains consists of hills, mesas, and canyons. Snow-capped (in winter)
mountains rise to the northeast, with the Sonoran Desert to the far east. Cleveland National Forest is
spread across the central portion of the county, while Anza-Borrego Desert
State Park occupies most of the northeast.
North San
Diego County is known locally as "North County"; the exact
geographic definitions of "North County" vary, but it includes the
northern suburbs and sometimes certain northern neighborhoods of the
city of San Diego.
The eastern suburbs are collectively known as "East County", though
most still lie in the western third of the county. The southern suburbs
and southern detached portion of the city of San Diego, extending to the
Mexican border, are collectively referred to as "South Bay". Largest cities in
San Diego County by population
- 1. San Diego 1,376,173
- 2. Chula Vista 237,000
- 3. Oceanside 183,095
- 4. Escondido 147,514
- 5. Carlsbad 106,804
- 6. Vista 97,513
- 7. El Cajon 95,546
- 8. San Marcos 84,391
- 9. Encinitas 65,171
- 10. National City 61,115
Cities
and towns in San Diego County
Incorporated cities
Unincorporated communities
Urban
communities of San Diego County
In San Diego County, many of the urban cities and communities are
located on the south side of Interstate 8. Indian reservations
San Diego County has 18 federally-recognized Indian reservations, more than any other county in the
United States.[9] Although they are typical in size to other Indian reservations in
California (many of which are termed "Rancher?as"),
they are relatively tiny by national standards,[citation needed] and all
together total 200.2 square miles (518.5 kmē) of area.
Adjacent
counties and municipios
Counties adjacent to San Diego County, California
National protected
areas
- Cabrillo National Monument
- Cleveland National Forest (part)
- San Diego National Wildlife Refuge Complex, which includes several
individual wildlife refuge areas:[10]
- San Diego Bay South Bay
- San Diego Bay Sweetwater Marsh
- Tijuana Slough National Wildlife Refuge
- Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge (located in Orange County)
- San Diego National Wildlife Refuge
- Vernal Pools
State parks
and protected areas
Mountains
There are 236 mountain summits and peaks in San Diego County[11] including:
Lakes
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- Natural Rock Tanks
- Little Laguna Lake
- Big Laguna Lake
- Big Lake
- Twin Lakes
- Jean, Lake
- Lost Lake
- Swan Lake
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Rivers
Transportation
infrastructure Major highways
Airports
- 33°25'60.00"N 117°32'0.00"W
- 33°17'10.00"N 117°27'31.00"W
- Lindbergh Field, (SAN) a.k.a. San Diego International Airport
- Montgomery Field, (MYF)
- McClellan-Palomar Airport, (CLD or
CRQ) a.k.a. Palomar Airport, Carlsbad Airport
- Gillespie Field, (SEE) located in El Cajon
- Agua Caliente Airport
- Borrego Valley Airport
- Fallbrook Airport
- Jacumba Airport
- Lake Wohlford (private, tiny)
- Oceanside Municipal Airport
- Ocotillo Airport
- Pauma Valley (private)
- Ramona Airport, (RNM)
- Brown Field, (SDM) (former East Field, NAAS Otay Mesa, and NAAS
Brown Field)
- Carlsbad Airport
Military facilities Navy
Marines
Coast Guard
Sites of interest
- Mount Laguna Observatory - owned
and primarily operated by San Diego State University (SDSU)
- Palomar Observatory - owned and
primarily operated by California Institute of
Technology (Caltech)
- The Ramona Valley
wine-producing region is located 28 miles (45 km) northeast of San Diego
- The San Diego Wild
Animal Park, 35 miles (56 km) north of the San
Diego Zoo and east of Escondido
- SeaWorld of San Diego is located on
Mission Bay.
- Mission Bay Recreation
Area, including Fiesta Island, is a sheltered bay popular for
watersports and known for the annual Over the line tournament.
- Mission San
Diego de Alcala, the first of California's 21 Spanish missions, is
located in the city. It is an operating Roman Catholic parish and also
is open for historical interest tours during the week. It is located
near the interchange of Interstates 8 and 15.
- Balboa Park, with several
museums and other cultural locations, is located adjacent to Downtown San Diego. This large park extends from 6th
Avenue to 28th Street west to east, and through the entire area occupied
on the west and east sides by west-east streets alphabetically named
after trees. (Ash, Beech, Cedar, etc. to Redwood, Spruce, Thorn, Upas).
- San Diego Zoo, located in Balboa Park, has the most
species of any zoo in the world. One of the few zoos in the United
States to offer pandas, the San Diego Zoo also is one of the world's
leaders in animal conservation, constantly finding ways to help save
species and breed others in captivity, as well as release animals back
into the wild.
- Old Town San Diego State
Historic Park is located at the western end of Mission Valley, north
of Downtown San Diego. It preserves and
recreates the original settlement of San Diego during its pueblo, Alta California, and early American periods, through
1872.
- Presidio Park, located on a bluff directly above Old Town, is
a city historic park on the site of the San Diego Presidio, the first European
settlement in California.
- Cabrillo National Monument is
located at the southern tip of the Point Loma Peninsula. It
has historical exhibits about Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo and World
War II as well as the Old Point Loma Lighthouse which is
open to the public. It offers striking views of the harbor and ocean,
natural areas for hiking and bird watching, and tide pools.
- San Diego Bay contains the USS Midway, an aircraft carrier restored as a
floating museum, and the eight floating museum ships of the San Diego Maritime Museum.
Harbor cruises, sailing, and sport fishing are also available.
- Legoland California is a Lego theme
park in Carlsbad. It is the only Legoland outside of Europe.
- Alta Vista Gardens is a Botanical Garden in Vista
dedicated to bringing together 'People, Nature & Art'
Politics
Presidential election results
| Year |
GOP |
DEM |
Others |
| 2008 |
44.10% 539,939 |
54.29% 664,685 |
1.67% 19,270 |
| 2004 |
52.52% 596,033 |
46.39% 526,437 |
1.09% 12,378 |
| 2000 |
49.63% 475,736 |
45.66% 437,666 |
4.71% 45,232 |
| 1996 |
45.57% 402,876 |
44.11% 389,964 |
10.33% 91,311 |
| 1992 |
35.7% 352,125 |
37.2% 367,397 |
27.08% 267,124 |
| 1988 |
60.2% 523,143 |
38.3% 333,264 |
1.47% 12,788 |
| 1984 |
65.3% 502,344 |
33.4% 257,029 |
1.29% 9,894 |
| 1980 |
60.8% 435,910 |
27.3% 195,410 |
11.93% 85,546 |
| 1976 |
55.7% 353,302 |
41.6% 263,654 |
2.66% 16,839 |
| 1972 |
61.8% 371,627 |
34.3% 206,455 |
3.84% 23,055 |
| 1968 |
56.3% 261,540 |
36.1% 167,669 |
7.67% 35,654 |
| 1964 |
50.3% 214,445 |
49.7% 211,808 |
0.01% 33 |
| 1960 |
56.4% 233,045 |
43.3% 171,259 |
0.28% 1,106 |
San Diego County has historically been a Republican stronghold:
2008 was the first time in decades that a Democratic presidential
nominee won a majority of the county's votes (though in 1992 Bill
Clinton won a plurality). The city of San
Diego itself is more Democratic than the
county's average (though fairly moderate for a large city) and has voted
for Democrats Clinton, Gore, Kerry, and Obama in the last five
presidential elections respectively. The city of San Diego, as well as La Jolla, Coronado and Imperial Beach, is part of the 53rd
congressional district which has a Cook Partisan Voting Index (CPVI)
of D +12. San Diego's northern and eastern suburbs tend to be very
conservative. Northern suburbs including Carlsbad are part of the 50th district with
a CPVI of R +5. In the 2004 presidential election, San Diego,
Encinitas, National City, Del Mar, and some other areas voted for John
Kerry; San Marcos, Escondido, Carlsbad, Oceanside, Coronado, Santee,
Poway, El Cajon, and Vista overwhelmingly backed George W. Bush. Chula Vista, La Mesa, Lemon Grove, Solana
Beach, and Imperial Beach are considered swing areas of the county ?
Chula Vista and Imperial Beach narrowly backed Al Gore
in 2000 but narrowly voted for Bush in 2004, while Solana Beach switched
from Bush in 2000 to Kerry in 2004. La Mesa narrowly voted for Bush
both times, and Lemon Grove narrowly went Democratic both times. In
2008, Barack Obama became the first Democrat to win a majority of
votes in San Diego County since World
War II. Obama captured Chula Vista, Oceanside, and Carlsbad.
One unique feature of the political scene is the use of Golden
Hall, a convention facility next to City Hall, as a central
elections center. The County Registrar of Voters rents the hall to
distribute election results. Supporters and political observers are
invited to watch the results come in, candidates give their victory and
concession speeches and host parties for campaign volunteers and donors
at the site, and television stations broadcast from the floor of the
convention center. Golden Hall was scheduled to be closed in 2004, but
was reused again for the November 2005 special election. The atmosphere
on the evening of election day is often comparable to the voting portion
of a political party national convention.[12]
In the House of Representatives,
all of California's 50th, 52nd, and 53rd districts and
parts of the 49th and 51st districts are
in the county. By district, the seats are held by Republican Darrell
Issa, Republican Brian
Bilbray, Democrat Bob Filner, Republican Duncan D. Hunter, and Democrat Susan Davis.
On Nov. 4, 2008 San Diego County voted 53.8 % for Proposition 8 which
amended the California Constitution to ban same-sex marriages, thus
restoring Proposition 22 which was
overturned by a ruling from the California Supreme
Court. However the city of San Diego, along with Del Mar, Encinitas,
and Solana Beach, voted against Proposition 8.[13]
In the State Assembly, parts of the 66th
and 73rd districts, and all of the 74th?79th districts are in the
county. Districts 76 and 79 are held by Democrats, Lori Salda?a and Mary
Salas respectively; the others are held by Republicans; by district
they are Kevin Jeffries, Mimi
Walters, Martin Garrick, George A. Plescia, Joel
Anderson, and Shirley Horton.
In the State Senate, all of the 39th
district and parts of the 36th, 38th, and 40th districts are in the
county and are held by Republicans Dennis Hollingsworth and Mark
Wyland, and Democrats Christine Kehoe and Denise Moreno Ducheny.
| District |
Location |
Cook PVI |
% for Bush, 2004 |
Median household income[14] |
Per capita income[14] |
| 49th district |
Northern San Diego and southwestern Riverside County |
R
+10 |
63% |
$46,445 |
$19,659 |
| 50th district |
Northern San Diego County, including costal communities such as Carlsbad, California but excluding La Jolla |
R
+5 |
55% |
$59,813 |
$29,877 |
| 51st district |
Southern San Diego County, including Chula Vista and National City.
Also includes all of Imperial County |
D
+7 |
46% |
$39,243 |
$14,923 |
| 52nd district |
Eastern San Diego County, including La Mesa, El Cajon and Lakeside. |
R
+9 |
61% |
$52,940 |
$24,544 |
| 53rd district |
San Diego
including La Jolla, Coronado and Imperial Beach |
D
+12 |
39% |
$36,637 |
$21,715 |
| Mean |
Districts: 49th, 50th, 51st, 52nd,
53rd |
R +5 |
52.8% |
$47,016 |
$22,144 |
Demographics
| Historical populations |
| Census |
Pop. |
|
%ą |
| 1850 |
798 |
|
? |
| 1860 |
4,324 |
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441.9% |
| 1870 |
4,951 |
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14.5% |
| 1880 |
8,018 |
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61.9% |
| 1890 |
34,987 |
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336.4% |
| 1900 |
35,090 |
|
0.3% |
| 1910 |
61,665 |
|
75.7% |
| 1920 |
112,248 |
|
82.0% |
| 1930 |
209,659 |
|
86.8% |
| 1940 |
289,348 |
|
38.0% |
| 1950 |
556,808 |
|
92.4% |
| 1960 |
1,033,011 |
|
85.5% |
| 1970 |
1,357,854 |
|
31.4% |
| 1980 |
1,861,846 |
|
37.1% |
| 1990 |
2,498,016 |
|
34.2% |
| 2000 |
2,813,833 |
|
12.6% |
| Est. 2008 |
3,001,072 |
|
6.7% |
As of 2006, there were 2,941,454 people, 1,067,846 households, and
663,449 families residing in the county. The population density was 670 people per square mile
(259/kmē). There were 1,118,410 housing units at an average density of
248 per square mile (96/kmē). The racial makeup of the county was 69.5% White American,
5.2% Black or African American,
0.7% Native American,
10.2% Asian, 0.4% Pacific Islander,
10.3% from other races,
and 3.6% from two or more races. 29.9% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of
any race. 67.0% spoke English, 21.9% Spanish, 3.1% Tagalog and 1.2% Vietnamese as their first language.
In 2000 there were 994,677 households out of which 33.9% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 50.7% were married
couples living together, 11.6% had a female householder with no
husband present, and 33.3% were non-families. 24.2% of all households
were made up of individuals and 7.9% had someone living alone who was 65
years of age or older. The average household size was 2.73 and the
average family size was 3.29.
In the county the population was spread out with 25.7% under the age
of 18, 11.30% from 18 to 24, 32.0% from 25 to 44, 19.8% from 45 to 64,
and 11.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33
years. For every 100 females there were 101.2 males. For every 100
females age 18 and over, there were 99.7 males.
The median income for a household in the county was $47,067, and the
median income for a family was $53,438. Males had a median income of
$36,952 versus $30,356 for females. The per capita income for the county was $22,926. About 8.9% of
families and 12.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 16.5% of those under age
18 and 6.8% of those age 65 or over. Current estimates
According to estimates by the San Diego Association of
Governments, the median household income of San Diego
County in 2005 was $64,273 (not adjusted for inflation).
When adjusted for inflation (1999 dollars; comparable to Census
data above), the median household income was $52,192. See also
References
External links
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Border Region
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| Counties |
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Global City 1.2 million |
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Major Cities 100k-200k |
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Cities and towns 25k-100k |
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Cities and towns under 25k |
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[show]
50 largest
metropolitan statistical areas in the United
States by population
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