Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 1562 map of the Americas, created by Spanish cartographer Diego Gutiérrez, which applied the name California for the first time.. California was the name given to a mythical island populated only by beautiful Amazon warriors, as depicted in Greek myths, using gold tools and weapons in the popular early 16th-century romance novel Las Sergas de Esplandián (The Adventures of Esplandián) by ...
The novel describes, in retrospect, the history and culture of California from its earliest days, and its influence on the rest of the United States and the world when - after an unspecified date in 1969 - the state suffers a Richter magnitude 9 earthquake and the populous coastal regions west of the San Andreas Fault sink into the Pacific Ocean.
The most commonly accepted model of migration to the New World is that people from Asia crossed the Bering land bridge to the Americas some 16,500 years ago. The remains of Arlington Springs Man on Santa Rosa Island are among the traces of a very early habitation, dated to the Wisconsin glaciation (the most recent ice age) about 13,000 years ago.
In an 1885 expulsion, the city of Eureka, Calif., put its Chinese residents on two ships and kept them out for seven decades. Now, the Eureka Chinatown Project tells the story.
Before 1768: An enlargeable territorial map of California tribal groups and languages prior to European contact within the modern day borders. Before 1768: An enlargeable map of the world showing the dividing lines for; Pope Alexander VI's Inter caetera papal bull (1493), the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494), and the Treaty of Saragossa (1529).
At the town's peak, Osborne said, "they say there were 5,000 people here on the weekends." But the rail line fell idle. Interstate 8 (two miles north of town) stole most of the passing traffic in ...
Liberty was established in 1852. [1] A post office was opened at Liberty in 1860, and remained in operation until 1874. [2] With the construction of the railroad in the late 1860s, business activity shifted to nearby Galt, and the town's population dwindled. [1]
Town council meetings were so well attended that the council moved them into a nearby church that could hold about 2,200 people. Each meeting was packed. “Those weren’t fun," Bolin said.