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Richmond Historical Timeline for the mural project

Historic Timeline
From the Richmond Chamber of
Commerce Website
The Ohlone
Period (3000 B.C.)
The earliest inhabitants of Richmond were the Ohlone Indians,
settling here an estimated 5,000 years ago. They lived a stable and peaceful
existence, with a culture based on strong community ties, spiritualism, and
rich artistic creativity. The Ohlone were hunters and gatherers and built
extensive shell mounds along the Bay. With the coming of the Europeans the
Ohlone way of life gradually came to and end and was destroyed.
Spanish Era
(1772 - 1884)
The first Europeans to visit the city's future site were
the Spanish explorers Pedro Fages and Reverend Juan Crespi who passed through
the East Bay in 1772. After Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, large
tracts of land in California were granted to military heroes and loyalists. In
1823, Don Francisco Castro was given 17,000 acres of land in Contra Costa which
became known as Rancho San Pablo. The city of Richmond was established on a
portion of Castro's land grant about seventy years after his death.
Early
Industry (1885-1901)
In 1895 Augustin S. Macdonald visited Point Richmond and
conceived the idea of a transcontinental rail terminal and ferry service, to
provide a direct route from Richmond to San Francisco. By 1899 the Santa Fe
Railroad established its western terminus in Point Richmond and the Standard
Oil Company built its refinery there in 1901.
Industrial
Growth (1900-1940)
When Richmond incorporated as a city in 1905 it had a
population of 2,150 and was already an established industrial town. The city
charter was adopted in 1909, and by 1910 the town numbered 7,500.
As the City grew during the 1920s and the 1930s,
Richmond's Downtown emerged as the City's business and retail center. The
elegant Carquinez Hotel (later renamed Hotel Don) opened its doors in 1925 and
soon became the center of the City's social and civic life.
Construction of shipping port terminals began in this
period. Tideland filling as part of the harbor dredging in the 1920s made
possible the opening of the Ford Motor Assembly Plant and the Felice and
Perelli Cannery in 1931. The prohibition era forced the closing of Winehaven,
the World's Largest Winery, built after the 1906 earthquake. The City's
population, meanwhile, had grown from 2,150 in 1905 to 23,600 in 1940.
World War II
and the Shipyards (1940-1945)
The next chapter was by far the most dramatic and
earth-shaking in Richmond's history. World War II began and the results were
explosive growth for the Kaiser Richmond shipyards, one of the biggest wartime
shipbuilding operations; large-scale immigration of worker; a 'boomtown'
atmosphere in Richmond, and profound long-term effects on the City. Richmond's
population increased dramatically from 23,600 in 1940 to over 93,700 in 1943,
as tens of thousands of new residents, white and black, migrated from the
economically depressed South and Southwest to work in the shipyards.
Much of the new population was housed in temporary
structures. Dormitories, demountable houses, and apartment buildings were
built; more than 60,000 persons lived in public housing. Many 'temporary'
housing units remain today.
Postwar
Adjustment (1945-1960)
At war's end, the shipyards closed in 1945 and a far-reaching
readjustment began. Industrial production rapidly declined and the population
decreased steadily from 101,500 persons in 1947 (a special census count) to
71,900 in 1960.
A number of new industries moved in to occupy vacated
shipyard structures. Among them were Kaiser Aircraft, Garwood, Butler,
Southwest Welding, Pacific Vegetable Oil, United Heckathorn, and the first of
the major warehousing operations, Ford Parts Depot and International Harvester.
The Richmond Redevelopment Agency was formed in 1949 and
undertook several redevelopment projects starting in the mid-1950s. The Harbor
Gate Redevelopment Project cleared war housing in 1955, thereby providing sites
for additional major warehouses for such companies as Safeway and United
Grocers.
As new industries arrived, a number of old ones moved
out. Ford moved to Milpitas in 1955 and the Pullman Shops closed in 1959. A
strong growth in warehousing and distribution and chemical and research
facilities was evident among the post-war developments. Throughout this history
Standard Oil, now called Chevron, and its subsidiaries, Chevron Chemical and
(later) Chevron Research, have grown steadily and have remained the City's
major industry and employer, with the exception of the war-time shipbuilders.
Land annexations by the City between 1953 and 1957 to
the northeast and northwest resulted in a geographically much enlarged but
barely contiguous city.
Modern
Richmond (1960-1995)
Four major developments since 1960 -- Marina Bay,
Hilltop Mall, the Knox Freeway (I-580), and the Richmond Parkway -- have
transformed Richmond's geography as well as its economy.
Starting in the mid-1970s, the Harbour Redevelopment
Project on the city's South Shoreline led to the transformation of the old
Inner Harbor Basin (the site of the wartime shipyards) into the Marina Bay
development, a 350-acre master-planned waterfront community that will
eventually comprise 2,100 residential units, 650,000 square feet of commercial
space, several restaurants, a 1,500-berth pleasure boat marina, and a chain of
lagoons, parks, and waterfront promenades.
Opening in 1976, Hilltop Mall Regional Shopping Center
had a major impact on Richmond's economy and its old downtown area in
particular. Hilltop is a 1.3 million square foot enclosed shopping center
located in the northern corner of the City along Interstate 80. Richmond's
downtown business district began to decline in the early 1970s as its major
retailers (Macy's, J.C. Penney's, Thrifty, and Woolworth's) all either moved to
Hilltop or closed their Richmond operations entirely.
Another major event occurred in 1978 when the proposed
Hoffman Freeway (now the Knox Freeway, Interstate 580) was designated as a part
of the Interstate freeway system, thereby ensuring its construction. Funding
(90% Federal, 10% State) was attained in late 1982, crowning more than 25 years
of efforts. Construction began in 1985 and was mostly completed by the end of
1991. The new freeway passes across Richmond's South Shoreline and connects
Interstate 80 with the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. The freeway provided 7 new
interchanges along the South Shoreline, and has made it a very attractive
corridor for new high-tech industrial, business parks and commercial
development.
The fourth major development transforming Richmond has
been construction of the Richmond Parkway, which began around 1990. A 'drivable
route' along all sections of the Parkway was achieved by the end of 1994. The
Parkway is a 7 1/2-mile, four-lane, scenic and landscaped expressway providing
a speedy link between the northern edge of Richmond (Interstate 80 at Hilltop)
and the City's southwest corner (the I-580 freeway and the Richmond-San Rafael
Bridge). The Parkway is opening up a large, industrially zoned area in
northwest Richmond that been historically underdeveloped due to poor access.
Population
Changes 1960-1995.
The City's population remained within the 71,000 -
79,000 range from 1960 to 1987, with little new development until the early
1980s. Between 1987 and 1995, however, Richmond's population grew steadily from
78,900 in 1987 to 93,000 in 1995. This dramatic increase was due primarily to
the large number of new homes that were built in the El Sobrante, Hilltop,
Brickyard Cove, Marina Bay, and City Center/Downtown areas during that period.
The high rate of new housing construction, however, dropped off sharply
beginning in 1992.
Two dramatic demographic changes occurred in Richmond's
population between 1980 and 1990. First, the Asian and Pacific Islander
population increased by almost 3 times, from 3,600 persons in 1980 (4.9% of the
city's total population) to 10,300 in 1990 (12% of the city total.) Second,
persons of Hispanic Origin increased by almost 5,000 in this 10-year period --
from 7,700 persons in 1980 (10.3% of the city's total population) to 12,700
(14.5% of the total.) In the latest census (1990), Richmond's population was
44% black, 36% White, 0.5% American Indian or Eskimo, 12% Asian & Pacific
Islander, and 7.5% 'Other.'
Richmond
Today
Richmond covers 56 square miles and has a population now
estimated at over 100,000. Richmond's economy is currently undergoing a major
transition from its former heavy industrial character toward more 'high tech'
and light industrial companies, and new business parks accommodating light
industrial and 'office/flex' land uses. Bio technology, in particular, has
developed as an important new 'niche' in Richmond's growing economy. At the
same time, the City's major manufacturers, such as Chevron, have continued to
upgrade their Richmond facilities, making major investments to modernize and
expand their facilities.
Today, Richmond is a growing maritime, industrial and
residential community with a thriving and changing economy, a dynamic business
environment, and a strong potential for further growth.
Home of the Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front
National Historical Park, Richmond played a significant and nationally
recognized part in the World War II Home Front. The four Richmond shipyards,
with their combined 27 shipways, produced 747 ships, more than any other
shipyard complex in the country. Richmond was home to 56 different war
industries, more than any other city of its size in the United States. The city
grew nearly overnight from 24,000 people to 100,000 people, overwhelming the
available housing stock, roads, schools, businesses and community services.
The National Historical Park has the nation's largest
concentration of intact World War II historic structures and sites interwoven
within the city of Richmond's 1940s era historic setting which illustrate a
broad spectrum of home front stories.
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