Oakland, California: "Our City" circa 1954 Oakland Junior Chamber of Commerce Urban Renewal 12min
more at
http://news.quickfound.net/cities/san_francisco
.html
Color film from the early to mid
1950s shows
Oakland, CA slum dwellings and discusses efforts at urban renewal.
Public domain film from the
Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Oakland,_California
Oakland, located in the
U.S. state of
California, is a major
West Coast port city and the busiest port for
San Francisco Bay and all of
Northern California. It is the third largest city in the
San Francisco Bay Area, the eighth-largest city in the state, and the 47th-largest city in the
U.S. with a population of 390,724 according to the
2010 census.
Incorporated in 1852, Oakland is the county seat of
Alameda County. It serves as a major transportation hub and trade center for the entire region and is also the principal city of the
Bay Area Region known as the
East Bay. The city is situated directly across the bay from
San Francisco.
Oakland's territory covers what was once a mosaic of coastal terrace prairie, oak woodland, and north coastal scrub. Its land served as a rich resource when its hillside oak and redwood timber were logged to build San Francisco, and Oakland's fertile flatland soils helped it become a prolific agricultural region
. In the late
1860s, Oakland was selected as the western terminal of the
Transcontinental Railroad. It continued to grow into the
20th century with its busy port, shipyards, and a thriving automobile industry.
Following the
1906 San Francisco earthquake, many
San Franciscans relocated to Oakland, increasing the city's population, housing and infrastructure.
A steady influx of immigrants during the 20th century, along with thousands of African-American war-industry workers who relocated from the
Deep South during the
1940s, have made Oakland one of the most ethnically diverse major cities in the country
...
Oakland has a
Mediterranean climate with an average of 260 sunny days per year.
Lake Merritt, a large estuary centrally located east of
Downtown, was designated the
United States' first official wildlife refuge.
Jack London Square, named for the author and former resident, is a tourist destination on the Oakland waterfront.
Progress has been made in reducing the city's high crime rate; violent crime is primarily concentrated in certain neighborhoods, although property crime remains problematic throughout the city...
The earliest known inhabitants were the Huchiun tribe, who lived there for thousands of years. The Huchiun belonged to a linguistic grouping later called the
Ohlone (a Miwok word meaning "western people")...
Conquistadors from New
Spain claimed Oakland and other Ohlone lands of the East Bay, along with the rest of California, for the king of Spain in 1772...
Continued development occurred after
1848 when, as part of the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo following the
Mexican-American War, the
Mexican government ceded 525,
000 square miles (1,
360,000 km2); 55% of its pre-war territory (excluding
Texas) to the US in exchange for $15 million...
During
World War II, the
East Bay Area was home to many war-related industries...
Soon after the war, with the disappearance of Oakland's shipbuilding industry and the decline of its automobile industry, jobs became scarce. Many of the poor blacks who had come to the city from the
South decided to stay in Oakland, and longstanding black residents complained that the new
Southern arrivals "tended towards public disorder." The segregationist attitudes that some Southern migrants brought with them disrupted the racial harmony that Oaklanders had been accustomed to before the war. Many of the city's more affluent residents, both black and white, left the city after the war, moving to neighboring
Alameda,
Berkeley,
Albany and
El Cerrito to the north; to
San Leandro,
Hayward,
Castro Valley and
Fremont in Southern Alameda County; and to the newly developing East Bay suburbs,
Orinda,
Lafayette,
Pleasant Hill,
Walnut Creek and
Concord. Between
1950 and 1960, about
100,000 white property owners moved out of Oakland—part of a nationwide phenomenon called white flight.
By the end of World War II, blacks constituted about 12% of Oakland's population, and the years following the war saw this percentage rise. There was also an increase in racial tension. Starting in the late 1940s, the
Oakland Police Department began recruiting officers from the South to deal with the expanding black population and changing racial attitudes; many were openly racist...
...Oakland, which had been racially harmonious and prosperous before the war, by the late 1950s found itself with a population that was becoming progressively more poor and racially divided...