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      • It is located on San Diego Bay, the site of major naval and military bases. Sighted by the Spanish in 1542 and named San Miguel, the area was renamed San Diego in 1602.
      www.britannica.com › summary › San-Diego-California
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  2. San Diego officially became part of the U.S. in 1848, and the town was named the county seat of San Diego County when California was granted statehood in 1850. It remained a very small town for several decades, but grew rapidly after 1880 due to development and the establishment of multiple military facilities.

  3. www.britannica.com › summary › San-Diego-CaliforniaSan Diego summary | Britannica

    San Diego, City (pop., 2020: 1,386,932) and port, southern California, U.S. It is located on San Diego Bay, the site of major naval and military bases. Sighted by the Spanish in 1542 and named San Miguel, the area was renamed San Diego in 1602.

    • Bankers Hill
    • Barrio Logan
    • Birdland
    • Normal Heights
    • City Heights
    • Clairemont
    • Gaslamp Quarter
    • Golden Hill
    • Hillcrest
    • Kearny Mesa

    Take stroll through the stately, mansion-lined streets of Bankers Hill and you’ll get a hint about how it got its name. The hilly neighborhood, which contains some of San Diego’s most beautiful historic homes, seemed so rich that early San Diegans apparently assumed a bunch of bankers lived there, and a name was born.

    Jamie Lantzy via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 4.0 Barrio Logan only recently got an old-school-style neighborhood gateway sign, but it’s been a distinct neighborhood since the 1880s. The Logan part pays tribute to Congressman John Logan, an Illinois senator who became popular in the city because of legislation he wrote that was intended to create ...

    Blame a clever city planner for Birdland’s name: Most of the neighborhood’s streets are named after bird species, like the blue jay and starling.

    Monotone via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 3.0 You may think the “normal” in “Normal Heights” refers to the neighborhood’s everyday feel, but the name actually comes from the teachers college, San Diego Normal School, that later became San Diego State University (even though, rather oddly, the school was actually located in a nearby neighborhood).

    The “Steiner, Klauber, Choate and Castle Addition” doesn’t have much of a ring to it, but such was the original name of what’s now known as City Heights, which was once unincorporated land purchased by developers named Klauber, Steiner, and Castle (a man named Daniel Choate helped them subdivide the land). In 1912, City Heights temporarily ceased t...

    Thank a pair of developers for Clairemont’s name. In the late 1940s, Lou Burgener and Carlos Tavares put down money on a bunch of cattle land and decided to turn their acres into tract housing to accommodate the postwar influx of San Diegans. Tavares’s wife, future philanthropist and legendary arts patron Claire Tavares, suggested a family-friendly...

    iStock Today, the Gaslamp is home to some of San Diego’s most vibrant nightlife. But at the beginning of the 20th century, it was called “New Town” as opposed to “Old Town” a few miles away. The neighborhood’s thriving red-light districtgot the nickname “Stingaree,” a play on “stingray” (probably in reference to the rays in San Diego Bay as well as...

    Golden Hill got its name not from the rich residents whose houses once lined its streets, but from nature. The area was originally named Indian Hill, but in 1887 a developer named Daniel Schuyler successfully petitioned city trustees to rename the area with the help of a poem that celebrated the neighborhood’s “golden light.” What that golden light...

    PDPhoto.org via Wikimedia// Public Domain Speaking of hills, the origin of Hillcrest’s name is pretty simple—it’s at the crest of a hill. A woman named Mary Kearney originally owned the land, but from the 1870s through the early 1900s it changed hands multiple times. The name was supposedly suggestedby the sister-in-law of a developer long before t...

    Remember Mary Kearney? She’s not the Kearny in Kearny Mesa. The community was named for a former military base—Camp Kearny—which was later renamed Miramar. And that camp was named after Stephen Watts Kearny, the U.S. Army Brigadier General who helped conquer California during the Mexican-American war.

  4. Aug 19, 2022 · The nickname for San Diego is America’s Finest City. This nickname is given to San Diego because of its great weather, stunning scenery, and its amazing culture. San Diego is a city in the southwestern corner of the continental United States, with San Diego Bay on one side and the Pacific Ocean on the other.

  5. www.sandiego.com › plan-your-visit › about-san-diegoAbout San Diego

    About San Diego. San Diego is a jewel. It dazzles in so many ways. Picture perfect weather, miles upon miles of sandy beaches, cool ocean breezes, dozens of fun and educational attractions, and a consummate laid-back attitude attract more than 30 million visitors annually. Part of that draw is an average temperature that varies little from 70 ...

  6. Dec 15, 2022 · Historically, modern-day San Diego was home to the Kumeyaay people, who settled in the area around 1000 CE. San Diego is often called the "birthplace of California" since it was the first site visited and colonized by Europeans in the country's west coast.

  7. San Diego Bay is a natural harbor and deepwater port located in San Diego County, California near the U.S.–Mexico border. The bay, which is 12 miles (19 km) long and 1 to 3 miles (1.6 to 4.8 km) wide, is the third largest of the three large, protected natural bays on California's 840 miles (1,350 km) of coastline, after San Francisco Bay and ...

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