VIA
HAIR DESIGN
Hair Salons
Huntington Beach.com
Ricky & Tami
19171 Magnolia #7
Huntington Beach, CA 92646
Click
Here for Directions
"We are Next to Home Depot
in Huntington Beach"
(714)
965-7701
Call For an Appointment!
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BEST
HAIR STYLES OF ORANGE COUNTY
We
would like to welcome new clients to one of the
best hair salons in Orange County, Via Hair Design
of Huntington Beach. Our business is devoted to
offering the best hair cutting, hair styling, and
hair coloring in Orange County. We use the finest
in hair color. Our team recognizes the value of
continued education exploring new trends in hair
design. We use techniques to enhance textured styles,
short, or sleek looks. Our hair care products work
with all lengths and hairstyles. We know that your
hair says alot about you, and we want it to speak
well.
The
hair stylist is the only real hair expert, the only
person who is able to understand what hair needs
and to plan a complete treatment. We believe that
Via Hair Design offers the finest in Orange County
hair salon services. At Via Hair Design we offer
the very best color available in the industry. Our
approach reflects the latest in great looks, and
fashion from around the world. Our color lines are
manufactured by experts in the field of Professional
Brands.
Via
Hair Design Specializes in Hair Coloring and Cutting
We
Offer:
- Color:
Highlighting, multi dimensional weaves
and foils, color correcting, permanent and
semi-permanent tinting.
- Shampoo
and blow drying.
- Women
Haircut
- Men
Haircut.
- Children
Haircut.
- Roots
Touch Up.
- Full
Color.
- Full
Highlights.
- Partial
Highlights.
- Updo.
- Perm.
- Hair
Relaxing
- Bridal
Makeovers.
- Deep
conditioning treatment both hair and scalp.
- Permanent
waving, and relaxing.
- We
do “Special Occasion Styles”
for Weddings, Black Tie events and Proms.
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Via
Hair Design of Huntington Beach offers the
very best
in hair color services in Orange County.
Nothing
can lift your looks and your sprit like a
new hair color! A sassy new hair color lets
you look at yourself in a whole new way. There
are many, many ways to add hair coloring:
Via Hiar Design offers complimentary color
consultations.
Hair
coloring can add spice and enhance many hair
styles. It's fun and rewarding when it comes
out dazzling, A good hair color should look
as natural as possible. A great hair color
can add shine, drama and fun to your hair
style. It can make some hair types easier
to style. Although the majority of women color
their hair to cover gray hair, many women
color for the fun of having a new look, and
the pizzazz, or excitement it can add to their
hair style.
If you decide to add hair color to your hair,
let a Via Hair Design color expert advise, and
educate you on what direction, and colors
work best for your eyes, skin tone, and base
color of your natural hair shade. At Via Hair Design we can save you some tears and unwanted
disastrous results you might obtain from doing
your own color.
Call us to To get more information on hair
coloring:
- Semi-permanent
hair color
- Permanent
hair color
- Hair
highlighting, streaking weaving and foiling
- Hair
bleaching
- At
home or in the Hair Salon
- Determining
your perfect hair color
- Covering
gray hair
- Fixing
a hair color mistake

Where do our local
clients come from?
Orange County
Aliso Viejo - Anaheim - Anaheim
Hills - Balboa Island - Bell Canyon - Brea -
Buena Park - Capistrano Beach - Corona Del Mar
- Costa Mesa
- Coto de Caza - Cypress - Dana Point - Dove
Canyon - El Toro - Foothill Ranch - Fountain
Valley - Fullerton - Garden Grove
- Huntington
Beach - Irvine
- La Habra - La Palma - Ladera Ranch - Laguna
Beach - Laguna Hills - Laguna Niguel - Laguna
Woods - Lake Forest - Las Flores
- Los Alamitos - Midway City - Mission
Viejo - Modjeska Canyon - Monarch
Beach - Newport Beach - Newport
Coast - Orange - Placentia - Rancho Santa Margarita
- San Clemente - San Juan Capistrano - Santa
Ana - Seal
Beach - Silverado - Stanton - Sunset
Beach - Trabuco Canyon - Tustin - Villa Park
- Westminster
- Yorba Linda |
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ABOUT
A HAIR SALON
A
hair salon (also called 'Hairdresser' and 'Hair Parlour')
is
a place where one goes to get the hair cut, as well
as styled, highlighted or coloured. There are many different
types of hair salons that one can choose to go to. There
are the traditional walk-in salons where you do not
have to make an appointment; rather, you simply walk
in and wait for the next available hairdresser. Another
option is to call a full-service hair salon and make
an appointment with the stylist of your choice. Some
hair salons specialize in certain areas of hair care,
such as coloring, up-dos for formal occasions, cutting
or styling. Which salon one chooses will determine the
level of expertise being performed for the service.
Salons are in various business forms from sole traders,
branches of salons or large franchise owned salon chains.
Some larger chains offer their own brand of salon products.
The
term spa salon refers to a salon where spa treatments
are done. Spa treatments are also offered in some beauty
salons. Treatments may include holistic theraphy or
Reiki.
A
barber (from the Latin
barba, "beard")
is someone whose occupation is to cut any type of hair,
give shaves,
and trim beards.
In previous times, barbers also performed surgery
and dentistry.
In more recent times, with the development of safety
razors and the decreasing prevalence of beards,
most barbers primarily cut hair.
Although
many barbers may still deal with facial
hair when requested, in American and Commonwealth
culture most barbers specialize in the simple cutting
of men's hair. They do not generally offer significant
styling or 'fancy' haircuts when compared to hairdressers
working in hair salons.
The
place where a barber works is generally called a barbershop,
or simply the "barber's".
Terminology
A
hairdresser is a universal term referring to
someone whose occupation is to cut or style hair
in order to change or maintain a person's image. This
is achieved using a combination of hair
colouring, haircutting
and hair
texture techniques.
Some
barbers prefer to see themselves as hairdressers or
hairstylists. There is a common misbelief that
barbers do not perform any service other than hair cutting,
and that cosmetologists
perform all coloring and perms. In fact, barbers can
cut hair, trim beards, color, perm, provide facials,
and shave. They are also licensed to work with artificial
hair replacement products (toupées,
etc). Many working stylists are legally barbers. There
is some professional rivalry between barbers and cosmetologists,
both of which are licensed and regulated. At one time,
both groups were allowed to cut hair, but only barbers
were allowed to shave or trim beards: this required
mastering the arcane technique of using a straight
razor. Today, barbers and stylists may be found
working side by side in establishments known as male
salons. Male salons have afforded the barber
the opportunity to remain traditional in all aspects
of the term, yet also progressively contemporary as
fashion and trends evolve. In male salons, hairstylists
and barbers seek to accommodate the modern male hairstyle
trends by employing traditional hair styling and straight
razor shaves with modern practices, such as texturizing
techniques and color.
In
the state of New Jersey the fields of Cosmetology and
Barbering are regulated by the State Board of Cosmetology
which is a division of Consumer Affairs of the Department
of Law & Public Safety. There is no longer a difference
in barbers and cosmetologists. They are issued the same
license and can practice both the art of straight razor
shaving, coloring , other chemical work and haircutting
if they choose.
History
Barbershop
in Bucharest
around 1842. Woodcut. As shown in this image, the
barbershop also provides an opportunity for social
contacts.
The
barber's trade is an ancient one. Razors have been found
among relics of the Bronze
Age (circa 3500 BC)
in Egypt.
Shaving,
either of the head or face, was not always a voluntary
act, for it has been enforced by law
in England
and elsewhere.[citation
needed] Cleanliness and vanity
were therefore not the sole reasons for a "clean shave";
the origins lie deeper.
Before
the Macedonian
conquest brought the custom of clean
shaving, in the Greek agora
would trim and style his patrons' beards, hair, and
fingernails,
as gossip and debate
flowed freely.
Barbering
was introduced to Rome
by the Greek
colonies in Sicily
in 296 B.C., and barber shops quickly became very popular
centres for daily news and gossip. A morning visit to
the tonsor became a part of the daily routine,
as important as the visit to the public
baths, and a young man's first shave (tonsura)
was an essential part of his coming
of age ceremony.
Interior
of a barber's shop, circa 1920.
A
few Roman tonsores became wealthy and influential,
running shops that were favorite loci publici
of high society; however, most were simple tradesmen,
owning small storefronts or setting up their stool in
the street and offering shaves for a mere quadrans.
Some had reputations as clumsy butchers who left their
patrons scarred
about the cheeks and chin; their dull bronze
or copper
(never steel)
razors must
share some of the blame. The better barbers offered
depilatories
for those customers who refused the razor.
The
barbers of former times were also surgeons and dentists.
In addition to haircutting, hairdressing, and shaving,
barbers performed surgery,
bloodletting
and leeching, fire
cupping, enemas,
and the extraction
of teeth. Thus they were called barber
surgeons, and they formed their first organization
in 1094.
The barber pole red and white in spiral indicated the
two crafts, surgery in red and barbering in white. The
barber was paid higher than the surgeon until surgeons
were entered into British war ships during its many
naval wars. Some of the duties of the barber included
neck manipulation, cleaning of ears and scalp, draining
of boils, fistula and lancing of cysts with wicks.
ABOUT
HAIR STYLES
A
haircut is an event -- Sho-ichi
Yokoi was a Japanese soldier who surrendered in
1972, decades after the end of hostilities in World
War II. This internationally published photograph
documents an unknown barber and a man's haircut which
became transformative.
A
hairstyle, hairdo, or haircut refers
to a styling of head
hair. The fashioning of hair can be considered an
aspect of personal
grooming, fashion,
and cosmetics,
although practical considerations also influence some
hairstyles. Hairstyles are also influenced by various
subcultures.
A
hairstyle's aesthetic considerations may be determined
by many factors, such as the subject's physical attributes
and desired self-image or the stylist's artistic instincts.
Physical
factors include natural hair type and growth pattern,
face and head shape from various angles, and overall body
proportions; medical considerations may also apply. Self-image
may be directed toward conforming to mainstream values
(military-style crew
cuts or current "fad" hairstyles such as the Dido
flip), identifying with distinctively-groomed subgroups
(e.g., dreadlocks
or punk
hair), or obeying religious dictates (e.g., Orthodox
Jewish payot
or the Sikh practice
of kesh),
though this is highly context-dependent and a "mainstream"
look in one setting may be limited to a "subgroup" in
another.
Hairstyling
may also include adding accessories to the hair to hold
it in place, enhance its ornamental appearance, or partially
or fully conceal it with coverings such as a kippa,
hijab, or turban.
Hairstyle
process
Hair
dressing may include cuts, weaves,
coloring,
extensions,
perms,
permanent relaxers, curling and any other form of styling
or texturing.
Length
and trimming
Hair
cutting or hair trimming is intended to create or maintain
a specific shape and form. Its extent may range from merely
trimming the uneven ends of the hair to a uniform length
to completely shaving the head.
The
overall shape of the hairstyle is usually maintained by
trimming it at regular intervals. There are ways to trim
one's own hair but usually another person is enlisted
to perform the process, as it is difficult to maintain
symmetry while cutting hair at the back of one's head.
Although trimming enhances the hair's appearance by removing
damaged or split ends, it does not promote faster growth
or remove all damage along the length of the hair.
Stylists
often wash a subject's hair first, so that the hair is
cut while still damp. Compared to dry hair, wet hair can
be easier to manage in a cut/style situation because the
added weight and surface
tension of the water cause the strands to stretch
downward and cling together along the hair's length, holding
a line and making it easier for the stylist to create
a form.
This
may cause certain problems with curly hair, which has
a greater degree of unfurling when fully wet; also, different
areas of the hair may curl in different degrees or directions.
Cutting curly hair while wet may result in unexpected
results when dry, depending how the curls coil back up.
Lorraine Massey, author of Curly Girl, specializes
in the care of curly hair types, and has designed a specific
method for trimming curly hair to avoid these problems.
Brushing
and combing
Brushes
and combs are used to organize and detangle hair, encouraging
all of the strands to lie in the same direction and removing
debris such as lint,
dandruff,
or hairs that have already shed from their follicles but
continue to cling to the other hairs.
There
are all manner of detangling tools available in a wide
variety of price ranges. Combs
come in all shapes and sizes and all manner of materials
including plastics, wood and horn. Similarly, brushes
also come in all sizes and shapes. There are also a variety
of brushes in various paddle shapes. Most benefit from
using some form of a wide tooth comb for detangling. Most
physicians advise against sharing hair care instruments
like combs and clips, to prevent spreading hair conditions
like dandruff
and head
lice.
The
historical dictum to brush hair with one hundred strokes
every day is somewhat archaic, dating from a time when
hair was washed less frequently; the brushstrokes would
spread the scalp's natural oils down through the hair,
creating a protective effect.
However,
this does not apply when the natural oils have been washed
off by frequent shampoos. Also, hairbrushes are now usually
made with rigid plastic bristles instead of the natural
boar's bristles that were once standard; the plastic bristles
increase the likelihood of actually injuring the scalp
and hair with excessively vigorous brushing.
Drying
Hair
dryers speed the drying process of hair by blowing
air, which is usually heated, over the wet hair shaft
to accelerate the rate of water evaporation.
Excessive
heat may increase the rate of shaft-splitting or other
damage to the hair. Hair dryer diffusers can be used to
widen the stream of air flow so it is weaker but covers
a larger area of the hair.
Hair
dryers can also be used as a tool to sculpt the hair to
a very slight degree. Repeated blowdrying can slowly train
hair follicles towards the desired direction. Proper technique
involves aiming the dryer such that the air does not blow
onto the face or scalp, which can cause burns.
Braiding
and “Updos”
Tight
or frequent braiding
may pull at the hair roots and cause traction
alopecia. Rubber
bands with metal
clasps or tight
clips, which bend
the hair shaft at extreme angles, can also have the same
effect.
If
hair is pinned too tightly, or the whole updo slips causing
pulling on the hair in the follicle at the hair root are
other scenarios that can cause aggravation to the hair
follicle and result in headaches.
An industry
Hair
styling is a major world industry, from the salon itself
to products, advertising, and even magazines on the subject.
Hairstyling
tools
Styling
tools may include Hair
irons (including flat, curling and crimping irons),
hair
dryers, hair
rollers. Hair dressing might also include the use
of product
to add texture, shine, curl, volume or hold to a particular
style.
Hairstyling
products
Styling
products aside from shampoo
and conditioner
are many and varied. Leave-in
conditioner, conditioning
treatments, mousse,
gels, lotions,
waxes, creams,
serums, oils, and sprays
are used to change the texture or shape of the hair, or
to hold it in place in a certain style. Applied properly,
most styling products will not damage the hair apart from
drying it out; most styling products contain alcohols,
which can dissolve oils. Many hair products contain chemicals
which can cause build-up, resulting in dull hair or a
change in perceived texture.
Wigs
Care
of human or other natural hair wigs
is similar to care of a normal head of hair in that the
wig can be brushed, styled, and kept clean using haircare
products.
Synthetic
wigs are usually made from a fine fiber that mimics human
hair. This fiber can be made in any color and hairstyle,
and it has an incredible shine that makes them so unique.
However this fiber is sensitive to extreme heat such as
flat irons and curling irons.
Human
hair wigs can be styled with heat, and they must
be brushed only when dry. Synthetic wigs should
be brushed dry before shampooing to remove tangles, then
it should be dipped into a container with water and mild
shampoo, then dipped in clear water and moved up and down
to remove excess water. The wig must then be air dried
naturally into its own hairstyle.
Functional
and decorative ornaments
There
are many options to adorn and arrange the hair. Hairpins,
clasps, barrettes, headbands, ribbons, rubber bands, scrunchies,
and combs can be used to achieve a variety of styles.
There are also many decorative ornaments that, while they
may have clasps to affix them to the hair, are used solely
for appearance and do not aid in keeping the hair in place.
Selected
hairstyles
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| Name |
Image |
Description |
| Afro |
 |
Big
hair hairstyle, featured heavily in Afro
American culture, and popular through the 1970s
in the United States of America. |
| Bangs
/ Fringe |
 |
Hair
that is combed to the front of the head and cut
at or above the eyebrows. |
| Beehive |
 |
Big
hair hairstyle. |
| Blowout |
|
Shape-up
with hair longer, spiky. Example: Gotti Boys |
| Bob
cut |
 |
A
classic short hairstyle where the ends are cut just
around chin length and aligned close to the facial
area. A bowl can also be placed on the top of the
head and the remaining part of the head can be shaved
very short. This style is most common among women.
Examples of bob haircuts: http://www.beautyriot.com/category.php?id=79 |
| Bowl
cut |
 |
A
1920s Ukrainian
recruitment poster. Moe
Howard from The
Three Stooges has this hairstyle for his trademark.
Henry_V_of_England
had a similar hairstyle. |
| Bouffant |
|
A
bouffant (pronounced /bu??f??nt/) is a type of hairstyle
characterized by hair piled high on the head and
hanging down on the sides. |
| Bun |
 |
A
women's hairstyle where the hair is pulled into
a knot at the top of the head. |
| Buzz
cut |
 |
A
haircut where the hair is cut short and sheared
off with a razor, to a point that no more than about
3/4's of an inch of hair remains on all sides. |
| Caesar
cut |
|
The
Caesar cut is a men's hairstyle with a short, horizontally
straight cut named after Julius Caesar, whose images
frequently depict him wearing his hair in such a
manner. |
| Chonmage |
 |
A
traditional Japanese haircut. |
| Comb
over |
 |
Hair
that is combed from one part of the head to another
often to cover up a bald spot. |
| Cornrows |
 |
A
hairstyle originating from Ethiopia
but popularized by African
Americans where the hair is braided into a series
of French braid like locks that appear to cling
to the head and travel down to the back of the neck.
The hairstyle can be worn by both males and females. |
| Crew
cut |
 |
A
hairstyle that is commonplace for many people (especially
men) in military
units across the world. |
| Crop |
 |
A
short hairstyle in which the hair is cut very close
to the head, with the hair left long enough to either
touch or go past the bangs. |
| Croydon
facelift |
|
A
tight ponytail worn at the top of the head, giving
the effect of a facelift. Often inappropriately
referred to as a "top knot" (though this term, in
its original context, actually refers to a chonmage). |
| Curtained
hair |
|
Curtained
hair is the term given to the hairstyle featuring
a long fringe divided in either a middle parting
or a side parting. |
| Curly
hair |
|
Hair
that is twisted or wavy. |
| Devilock |
 |
The
sides and back are kept short, while the front is
grown long and combed forward. |
| Dido
flip |
|
Hairstyle
named after the singer Dido. |
| Dreadlocks |
 |
A
long hairstyle for either men or women. The hair
is dreadlocked into individual sections using one
of several methods (usually either backcombing,
braiding, hand rolling, or allowing hair to naturally
"lock" on its own). The look of dreadlocks can be
vary in size, tidiness, and length. Dreadlocks are
associated most closely with Rastafarians. |
| Duck's
Ass or Ducktail |
|
A
short men's hairstyle where there is a small long
lock of hair at the base of the neck. |
| Emo
Hair |
|
Tends
to be dyed black and straightened with a curling
iron. Usually very long, with bangs going over the
eyes. |
| Fauxhawk |
 |
Also
known as the frohawk, this hairstyle is an approximation
of a mohawk, made without shaving or buzzing the
hair on the sides of the head, allowing an imitation
of the look of a true mohawk without having to commit
to removing most of one's hair. |
| Feathered
hair |
|
Feathered
hair was a hairstyle popular in the 1970s and the
early 1980s with men and women, the hair was grown
long on both sides (normally covering the ears,
although it could be shoulder length) unlayered
(although some men with curly hair did have it layered)
with either a side or a centre parting. |
| Feelers |
|
Often
mistaken for sideburns,
this is the hair at length from in front of the
ears, straightened down while the rest of the head's
hair is kept short. |
| Finger
wave |
 |
|
| Flattop |
 |
A
men's haircut where the hair is cut with a razor
but left longer than a buzz cut and appears to be
flat on the head. |
| Fofa |
|
|
| Fontange |
 |
A
hairdo popular in the second half of the seventeenth
century. |
| French
braid |
 |
A
French braid is a braid that appears to be braided
"into" the hair. Many describe it as making a braid
backwards. |
| French
twist |
 |
A
hairstyle where the hair is twisted behind the head
into a sort of bun style. |
| Half
Updo |
|
Popularized
in the 1960s by sex icons like Brigitte Bardot,
this woman's hairstyle requires medium-length or
longer hair. The hair is sectioned from the temples
all the way back and then fixed into bun, chignon
or ponytail to secure into place (therefore, half
the hair is in an updo). If a woman has bangs or
a fringe, that area is usually left free and not
pulled into the updo. Frequently, the hair at the
crown of the head is "teased" or backcombed first
to create volume and a bit of disorganization. |
| High
and tight |
 |
A
military variant of the buzz
cut. |
| Hime
cut |
 |
A
hairstyle that consists of long straight hair that
goes to at least below the shoulder blades with
part of it cut to about shoulder length and bangs
that go to the eyebrows. |
| Highlights |
|
The
style involves highlighting or dying various thin
strands of hair via hair
coloring. |
| Hi-top
fade |
|
|
| Horseshoe
Flattop |
|
See
High
and tight. |
| Induction
cut |
|
The
hair is tied in a pony tail and a razor is used
to shave the entire head. This cut is commonly used
when a boy turns 10 in Japan. |
| Jheri
curl |
|
Hair
that is curly and kept wet by a Jheri curl activator.
This style was popular in the 1980s especially with
African-Americans. |
| Japanese
hair straightening |
|
|
| Jewfro |
 |
A
Jewish Afro hairdo that is curly. |
| Oseledets |
 |
The
Ukrainian
name for a style consisting of an entirely shaven
head, save for one lock of hair grown on the top
or front of the head. Name comes from the Ukrainian
Cossacks, among whom the style was common. |
| Kudumi
or Sikha |
 |
The
South Indian name for a style consisting of a long
tuft, or lock of hair left on top or on the back
of the shaven head of a male Orthodox Hindu. |
| Layered
hair |
|
A
women's hairstyle where different sections of the
front hair are cut at different lengths to give
the impression of layers. |
| Liberty
spikes |
 |
Hair
that is grown out long and spiked up usually with
a gel |
| Long
hair |
 |
A
style of hair that is not cut. |
| Mohawk |
 |
Hair
that is shaved or buzzed on the sides leaving a
strip of hair in the middle. It is often spiked
up. |
| Mop-Top |
|
A
mid-length haircut that has bangs that go over the
forehead,collar length in the back, and on the side
the ears are partly covered by the hair. Was invented
and made popular by The
Beatles (John
Lennon, Paul
McCartney, George
Harrison, and Ringo
Starr) |
| Mullet |
 |
Hair
that is short in front and long in the back. |
| Odango |
 |
A
hairstyle where two buns are worn on at either side
of the head with the rest of the hair worn down
like pigtails. |
| Pageboy |
|
A
longer version of a bob, typically worn with bangs
and below chin length |
| Part |
 |
Hair
that is parted in two different directions. Either
from the left, centre or the right |
| Perm |
 |
|
| Pigtails |
 |
Hair
that is parted down the middle and made into two
pony tails on either side. |
| Pixie
cut |
 |
A
short layered women's hairstyle with a shaggy fringe. |
| Pompadour |
 |
|
| Ponytail |
 |
Hair
that is pulled to the back of the head and often
held with a hair tie or ribbon. |
| Quiff |
 |
|
| "The
Rachel" |
|
A
layered haircut |
| Razor
cut |
|
includes
choppy short layers, and thinned by the bottom.
Usually like "emo" hair. Usually has a side-sweep
fringe. |
| Recon |
|
A
radical version of the High
and tight, with the sides and back cleanly shaved
very high up the head, intentionally leaving a very
extreme contrast between the longer top hair and
the shaved sides. |
| Rattail |
 |
Hair
that is grown out long and shaved or buzzed except
for a long, thin braid at the very top of the neck. |
| Ringlet |
 |
Long
hair that is worn in elaborate and tight curls. |
| Shag |
|
A
choppy layered hairstyle, characterized by layers
to create fullness in the crown and fringes around
the edges. There are many versions including the
frat
shag and boy's shag. |
| Short
back and sides |
|
Also
known as a boy's cut, a simple hairstyle
with an overall short length. |
| Shape-Up |
|
|
| Spiky
hair |
 |
All
hair sticking up, like spikes sticking out from
the head. |
| Straight
hair |
|
Hairstyle
that is straight. |
| Tonsure |
 |
Traditionally
worn by monks in the dark-middle ages. |
| Undercut |
 |
The
undercut is a unisex haircut whereby the
top section of hair is held in place whilst the
side and back sections are cut, thus making the
top longer and the back and sides undercutting.
It is sometimes also referred to as a bowl cut,
because it looks like a bowl was placed on the top
of the head being cut, while everything outside
and below the bowl was cut short.(See also Khokhol.) |
| Updo |
|
An
updo is the hairstyle in which the hair is twisted
or pulled up. Examples of updos: http://www.beautyriot.com/category.php?id=71 |
| Waves |
|
Short
Hair Waves, shortened to just waves, is a very common
and sought after hairstyle for African American
men that create the appearance of water like waves
of the hair |
| Wings |
|
|
Hairstyle
as event
The
editor of the New York Times Magazine describes
his pages as reflecting "a place where change is not a
threat, where doubt and complexity are more TRUE than
certainty, and where most everything non-criminal is tolerated
— except a bad haircut."
For
Shoichi
Yokoi, the first haircut in 28 years became his first
ordinary contact with another person after living alone
for many years. Yokoi hid in the forested mountains of
Guam after the Imperial
Japanese Army surrendered in 1944; and he managed
to elude capture until 1972. The mere opportunity to sit
in a barber's chair became a documented step in Yokoi's
transformation from a reclusive, solitary combatant in
a war which lasted for nearly three decades longer than
for the rest of the world.
Yokoi's
haircut was literally and figuratively life-changing.
After 1972, the story of Yokoi's life became a narrative
about the process of adapting to worldwide attention and
the radically different role of a celebrity.
In
Sikh culture, the
hair of men is never cut; but some modern Sikhs are abandoning
this tradition. The act of cutting hair itself takes on
a significance unrelated to the corollary changes in appearance.
ABOUT
HAIR

Human hair |
|
Hair
is a type of protein
filament that grows
through the epidermis from follicles
deep within the dermis.
The fine, soft hair found on many nonhuman mammals is
typically called fur;
wool is the
characteristically curly hair found on sheep and goats.
Found exclusively in mammals,
hair is one of the defining characteristics of the mammalian
class.
Although other non-mammals, especially insects,
show filamentous outgrowths, these are not considered
"hair" in the scientific sense. So-called "hairs" (trichomes)
are also found on plants.
The projections on arthropods
such as insects
and spiders
are actually insect bristles,
composed of a polysaccharide
called chitin.
There are varieties of dogs,
cats, and mice
bred to have little or no visible fur. In some species,
hair is absent at certain stages of life. The main component
of hair fiber is keratin.
The
hair can be divided into three different parts length-wise:
(1) the bulb, a swelling at the base which originates
from the dermis
(most growth occurs in the bulb which contains hair stem
cells); (2) the root, which is the hair lying beneath
the skin surface inside a protective follicle; and (3)
the shaft, which is considered the part of the hair above
the skin surface though it appears first in the epidermis.
In cross-section, there are also three parts: (1) the
medulla, an area in the core which contains loose cells
and airspaces; (2) the cortex, which contains densely
packed keratin; and (3) the cuticle, which is a single
layer of cells arranged like roof shingles.
Human
"hairlessness"
Though
human skin is considered "hairless", humans actually have
the same number of hair follicles per unit area as other
primates. Human hair is barely visible as it is thinner,
shorter and more transparent than the hair of other mammals.
Historically, some ideas have been advanced to explain
the apparent hairlessness of humans, as compared to other
species.
Most
mammals have light skin that is covered by fur, and biologists
believe that human ancestors started out this way also.
Dark skin probably evolved after humans lost their body
fur, because the naked skin was vulnerable to strong African
UV radiation. Therefore, evidence of when human skin darkened
has been used to date the loss of human body hair, assuming
that the dark skin was needed after the fur was gone.
Human
hair under 200-times magnification
Dr.
Alan R. Rogers, an evolutionary geneticist at the University
of Utah, used mutations in the MC1R gene to estimate when
human skin darkened. He said humans may have gone through
several genetic "clean sweeps" with light-skinned individuals
dying off and dark-skinned individuals surviving. He estimates
the last of these clean sweeps took place 1.2 million
years ago.
Therefore, humans, in part, have been hairless at least
since that time, as body hair does still remain in human
populations.
The
savanna hypothesis suggests that nature selected humans
for shorter and thinner body hair as part of a set of
adaptations to the warm plains of the African savanna
(in addition to bipedal locomotion and an upright posture).
Some counter this argument by noting that among the most
hairless people are Northern Europeans who live in a cold
and relatively low sun environment. However, abundant
genetic and archaeological evidence indicates that the
hairlessness of those current-day modern humans whose
immediate ancestors came to occupy Northern latitudes
is attributable to the relatively recent origin of this
species in equatorial, sub-Saharan Africa approximately
200,000 years ago, followed by an even more recent departure
from Africa that was initiated approximately 60,000 years
ago. Hence it is highly likely that the ancestors of Northern
Europeans (et al. Northern groups) failed to develop fur
due to a) their relatively recent entry into the area,
and b) the fact that the high levels of intelligence that
had evolved in the human lineage while in Africa enabled
them to survive in the cold European climate by way of
the practice of wearing animal furs. Hence the development
of fur was rendered effectively unnecessary.
Nevertheless,
other species likely migrated to Africa by way of a gradual
process. This provided them with time to adjust to the
intense UV and sunlight by way of other means (such as
panting). Hominids, on the other hand, originally possessed
fur, but, due to a relatively sudden change in behavior
2.5 million years ago (due to hominid inventiveness/technological
innovation) that involved intense hunting
during the day, they developed sweat glands that enabled
them to perspire. This change necessitated the loss of
most body hair in order to facilitate sweat evaporation
(i.e. cool the body). Hence body hair would allow for
a greater surface area for sweat to evaporate from coupled
with hairs thermal conductivity allowing more heat to
be lost from more tropical regions where the water content
of the air is greater. Furthermore, balding usually occurs
at around 30 – 40 years of age. In prehistoric times,
most individuals were not as likely to live past 30. Hence
it wasn't as common a trait. Also, dark pigmentation of
the skin could have compensated for premature baldness
(although such a condition would have still been somewhat
uncomfortable relative to having hair.) Finally, there
are indeed other African mammals that have lost fur due
to equatorial heat. These include the African (and Indian)
elephant, as well as the hippopotamus. Thus it is arguable
that the Savanna Theory model provides the best explanation
for the loss of fur experienced by the human lineage given
the available evidence.
Another
theory for the thin body
hair on humans proposes that Fisherian
runaway sexual
selection played a role (as well as in the selection
of long head hair), (see types
of hair and vellus
hair), as well as a much smaller role of testosterone
in women.
The
aquatic
ape hypothesis posits that sparsity of hair is an
adaptation to an aquatic environment, but it has little
support among scientists.
Humans,
like all primates, are part of a trend toward sparser
hair in larger animals, possibly correlating to the lack
of hair on elephants of African and Indian origin as opposed
to an evolution due to the sunlight; the density
of human hair follicles on the skin is actually about
what one would expect for an animal of equivalent size.
The outstanding question is why so much of human hair
is short, underpigmented vellus
hair, rather than terminal
hair and the role of testosterone on the hair follicles
to instigate their terminalisation in both human and other
mamillian species.
Social
role of hair
Portrait
of a Woman, Alessandro Allori (1535 - 1607; Uffizi
Gallery): a plucked hairline gives a fashionably
"noble brow"
Hair
has great social significance for human
beings. It can grow on most areas of the human
body, except on the palms of the hands
and the soles of the feet
(among other areas), but hair is most noticeable in most
people in a small number of areas, which are also the
ones that are most commonly trimmed, plucked,
or shaved. These
include the face,
nose, ears,
head,
eyebrows,
eyelashes,
legs and armpits,
as well as the pubic
region. The highly visible differences between male
and female body and facial hair are a notable secondary
sex characteristic.
Hair
as indicator
Healthy
hair indicates health and youth. Hair colour and texture
can be a sign of ethnic ancestry. Facial
hair is a sign of puberty
in men. White hair is a sign of age, which can be concealed
with hair
dye. Male pattern baldness
is a sign of age, which can be concealed with a toupee,
hats or religious/cultural adornments. In modern times,
it can be reversed in some men with minoxidil
(marketed as Rogaine
or Regaine) or finasteride
(marketed as Propecia); see Baldness
treatments. Rather than these options, many men simply
shave their heads for a clean look. Males in some religious
groups, for example Sikhs
and Orthodox
Jews, may follow certain rules regarding hair as part
of their faith, e.g. never cut their hair, or shave some
or all of it. Some groups, such as women in the Muslim
and orthodox
Jewish communities, cover their hair as part of religious
observance. Hair
whorls have been discovered to be associated with
brain
development.
Hairstyle
can be an indicator of group membership:. Metalheads
can often feature long
hair for headbanging,
although long hair is commonplace for many men and women
outside of heavy metal (ex: Indian sadhus,
the hippie subculture,
etc). Beatle "mop-top" haircuts. Mohawk
haircuts, often associated with punk
rock and the punk
subculture. Skinhead
haircuts, where the head is often shaved completely bald,
or "buzzed".
Mullet
hairstyles, which have stereotypically been portrayed
as pertaining to rednecks. Deathhawk
A larger, fuller, back combed version of a mohawk - popular
in the gothic
sub-culture, and heavily featured in deathrock
and gothic
rock bands in the 1980s.
undercut
where the sides and back of the head are shaved short
or bald, and the top hair is allowed to grow long. Common
among so-called "cybergoths"
and followers of Industrial
and heavy electronic
music scenes. This is especially true of women in
these subcultures, although the undercut is accepted as
a unisex hair style. Fascinator (hair style) where the
hair is short at the back and long at the front and the
front forms itself into a point. It is similar to a mullet
in reverse (also known as a frullet)
or a devil lock. Hair that is usually short with a long
side fringe
[American: bangs] is a cut often associated with emo
music and its fan basis. It is often dyed black or vibrant
and contrasting colours such as pink
or blue. It is considered
a unisex haircut
and often appears similar to the mop-top.
Growing
and removing
During
the English
Civil War, the followers of Oliver
Cromwell decided to crop their hair close to their
head, as an act of defiance to the curls and ringlets
of the king's men. The Cromwell followers won.
The Cavaliers
and Roundheads
are another example of politically-motivated hairstyles.
Long hair on men had a resurgence in the 1960s. Some notable
hairstyles include skinheads
and mullets.
Members of the Sikh
religion don't cut their hair. Having bobbed hair was
popular among the flappers
in the 1920s as a sign of rebellion against traditional
roles for women. Female art students known as the "cropheads"
also adopted the style, notably at the Slade School in
London, England. Regional variations in hirsutism
cause practices regarding hair on the arms and legs to
differ.
Hair,
power, punishment and status
Heads
were shaved in concentration
camps, and head-shaving has been used as punishment,
especially for women with long hair. The shaven head is
common in military
haircuts, as well as with the monastic tonsure.
By contrast, among some Indian holy men, the hair is worn
extremely long.
Regular
hairdressing in some cultures is considered a sign of
wealth or status. The dreadlocks
of the Rastafari
were despised early in the movement's history. In some
cultures, having one's hair cut can symbolize a liberation
from one's past, usually after a trying time in one's
life. Cutting yhe hair can be a sign of mourning. Yoko
Ono famously cut her very long hair after the assassination
of her husband John
Lennon, saying "John loved my long hair, so I gave
it to him".
Tightly
coiled hair in its natural state can be worn in an Afro.
This hairstyle was once worn among African
Americans as a symbol of racial pride. Given that
the coiled texture is the natural state of most African
Americans' hair, this simple style is now often seen as
a sign of self-acceptance and an affirmation that the
beauty norms of dominant (northern/European) culture are
not absolute.
Flappers
in the 1920s cut their traditional long hair into short
bob cuts to
show their independence and sexual freedom. Hippies
in the 1960s grew their hair long in order to illustrate
their distance from mainstream society.
The
film Easy
Rider (1969) includes the description of a hippie
forcibly having his head shaved with a rusty razor, symbolizing
the intolerance of some conservative groups toward the
hippie movement.
At
the conclusion of the Oz
obscenity trials in the UK, the defendants had their
heads shaved by the police, causing public outcry. During
the appeal trial, they appeared in the dock wearing wigs.
Religious
practices
Women's
hair may be hidden using headscarves,
a common part of the hijab
in Islam and a
symbol of modesty required for religious rituals in Orthodox
Christianity. Orthodox
Judaism endorses the use of wigs, scarves and other
headcoverings for women for modesty reasons as in Islam.
Hassidic
Judaism, on the other hand, discourages the trimming
of head hair, and male practitioners typically wear their
hair in ringlets (peyos).
Sikhs generally
keep their hair uncut and tied in a bun on the head, which
is then covered appropriately using a turban.
Shampooing
Washing
hair is usually done with shampoo,
however there are instances where it is washed with other
materials. Washing hair is a subject of discussion with
different parties arguing for and against the practice.
The case for not washing hair has been championed by British
broadcaster and journalist Andrew
Marr.
Matthew
Parris is another who apparently does not wash his
hair.
In
his article in the Daily
Mail Marr wrote:
Former
Conservative MP and author Matthew Parris threw down the
gauntlet last week when he announced that he hadn't washed
his hair in a decade, and suffered no ill-effects, socially
or otherwise.
Hair pigment
All
natural hair colours are the result of two types of hair
pigment. Both these pigments are a type of melanin produced
inside the hair follicle: Phaeomelanin is responsible
for the yellowish-blond to red colors and Eumelanin
is responsible for the brown to black shades. Gray hair
occurs when these melanin molecules are no longer produced,
so there is no pigment.
ABOUT
HUNTINGTON BEACH
| City
of Huntington Beach |
| — City — |
|
Huntington
Beach Pier |
| Nickname(s):
Surf City USA |
|
Location
of Huntington Beach within Orange
County, California. |
| Country |
United States |
| State |
California |
| County |
Orange |
| Incorporated |
February
17, 1909 |
| Government |
| - Type |
Council-Manager |
| - City
Council |
Cathy
Green, Mayor
Keith Bohr
Joe Carchio
Gil Coerper
Don Hansen
Jill Hardy
Devin Dwyer |
| - City
Treasurer |
Shari
L. Freidenrich, CCMT,
CPFA,
CPFIM |
| - City
Clerk |
Joan
L. Flynn |
|
|
| - Total |
81.7 km2 (31.6 sq mi) |
| - Land |
68.3 km2 (26.4 sq mi) |
| -
Water |
13.4 km2 (5.2 sq mi) |
| Elevation |
12 m
(39 ft) |
| Population
(2000) |
| - Total |
189,594 |
| - Density |
2,773.9/km2 (7,184.4/sq mi) |
| Time
zone |
PST
(UTC-8) |
| - Summer (DST) |
PDT
(UTC-7) |
| ZIP
codes |
92605,
92615, 92646-92649 |
| Area
code(s) |
714 |
| FIPS
code |
06-36000 |
| GNIS
feature ID |
1652724 |
| Website |
surfcity-hb.org |
Huntington
Beach
is a seaside city in Orange
County in southern
California, United States.
According to the 2000 census, the city population was
189,594. It is bordered by the Pacific
Ocean on the southwest, by Seal
Beach on the northwest, by Costa
Mesa on the east, by Newport
Beach on the southeast, by Westminster
on the north, and by Fountain
Valley on the northeast.
It
is known for its long 8.5-mile (13.7 km) beach, mild
climate, and excellent surfing.
The waves are a unique natural effect caused by edge-diffraction
of ocean swells by the island of Catalina,
and waves from distant hurricanes.
History
Huntington
Beach, pre-incorporation, 1904.
The
area was originally occupied by the Tongva
people. European settlement can
be traced to a Spanish soldier,
Manuel Nieto, who in 1784
received a Spanish land grant of 300,000 acres (1,200 km2),
Rancho Los Nietos, as
a reward for his military service and to encourage settlement
in Alta California. Nieto's
western area was reduced in 1790 because of a dispute
with the Mission
San Gabriel, but he retained thousands of acres stretching
from the hills north of Whittier,
Fullerton and Brea,
south to the Pacific Ocean, and from today's Los
Angeles River on the west, to the Santa
Ana River on the east.
The
main thoroughfare of Huntington Beach, Beach Boulevard,
was originally a cattle route for the main industry of
the Rancho. Since its time as a parcel of the enormous
Spanish land grant, Huntington Beach has undergone many
incarnations. One time it was known Shell Beach, the town
of Smeltzer, and then Gospel Swamp for the revival meetings
that were held in the marshland where the community college
Golden West College
can currently be found. Later it became known as Fairview
and then Pacific City as it developed into a tourist destination.
In order to secure access to the Red Car lines that used
to criss-cross Los Angeles and ended in Long Beach, Pacific
City ceded enormous power to railroad magnate Henry
Huntington, and thus became a city whose name has
been written into corporate sponsorship, and like much
of the history of Southern California, boosterism.
Huntington
Beach incorporated on February 17, 1909 under its first
mayor, Ed Manning. Its original developer was the Huntington
Beach Company (formerly the West Coast Land and Water
Company), a real-estate development firm owned by Henry
Huntington. The Huntington Beach Company is still a major
land-owner in the city, and still owns most of the local
mineral rights.
An
interesting hiccup in the settlement of the district occurred
when an encyclopedia company gave away free parcels of
land, with the purchase of a whole set for $126, in the
Huntington Beach area that it had acquired cheaply. The
lucky buyers got more than they had bargained for when
oil was discovered in the area, and enormous development
of the oil reserves followed. Though many of the old wells
are empty, and the price of land for housing has pushed
many of the rigs off the landscape, oil pumps can still
be found to dot the city.
Huntington
Beach was primarily agricultural in its early years with
crops such as celery and sugar beets. Holly
Sugar was a major employer with a large processing
plant in the city that was later converted to an oil refinery.
The
city's first high school, Huntington
Beach High School was built in 1906. The school's
team, the Oilers, is named after the city's original natural
resource.
Meadowlark
Airport, a small general aviation airport, existed
in Huntington Beach from the 1950s until 1989.
Geography
Huntington
Beach at Sunset
According
to the United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
81.7 square kilometres (31.5 sq mi). 68.3 km2
(26.4 sq mi) of it is land and 13.4 km2
(5.2 sq mi) of it (16.38%) is water.
The
entire city of Huntington Beach lies in area
codes 657 and 714, except for small parts of Huntington
Harbour (along with Sunset Beach, the unincorporated community
adjacent to Huntington Harbour), which is in the 562
Area Code.
Climate
Huntington
Beach has a Mediterranean
climate (Köppen
climate classification Csb). The climate is
generally sunny, dry and cool, although evenings can be
excessively damp. In the morning and evening, there are
often strong breezes, 15 mph (24 km/h). Ocean
water temperatures average 55 °F (13 °C) to
65 °F (18 °C). In the summer, temperatures rarely
exceed 85 °F (29 °C). In the winter, temperatures
rarely fall below 40 °F (4 °C), even on clear
nights. There are about 14 inches (360 mm) of
rain, almost all in mid-winter. Frost occurs only rarely
on the coldest winter nights. The area is annually affected
by a marine layer caused
by the cool air of the Pacific Ocean meeting the warm
air over the land. This results in overcast and foggy
conditions in May and June.
Natural
resources
Bolsa
Chica Wildlife Refuge
Construction
of any kind on the beach is prohibited without a vote
of the people, allowing Huntington Beach to retain its
natural tie to the ocean rather than having the view obscured
by residential and commercial developments.
Between
Downtown Huntington Beach and Huntington Harbour lies
a large marshy wetland, much of which is protected within
the Bolsa Chica
Ecological Reserve. A $110 million restoration of
the wetlands was completed in 2006. The Reserve is popular
with bird watchers and photographers.
South
of Downtown, the Talbert and Magnolia Marshes lie on a
strip of undeveloped land parallel to Huntington State
Beach and are in the process of restoration, as well.
The
northern and southern beaches (Bolsa
Chica State Beach and Huntington
State Beach, respectively) are state parks. Only the
central beach (Huntington City Beach) is maintained by
the city. Camping and RVs are permitted here, and popular
campsites for the Fourth
of July and the Surfing Championships must be reserved
many months in advance. Bolsa Chica State Beach is actually
a sand bar fronting the Bolsa Bay and Bolsa Chica State
Ecological Reserve.
Huntington
Harbour from the air
The
Orange County run Sunset Marina Park next to Huntington
Harbour is part of Anaheim Bay. It is suitable for light
craft, and includes a marina, launching ramp, basic services,
a picnic area and a few restaurants. The park is in Seal
Beach, but is only reachable from Huntington Harbour.
The Sunset/Huntington Harbour area is patrolled by the
Orange
County Sheriff's Harbor Patrol.
The
harbor entrance for Anaheim Bay is sometimes restricted
by the United States Navy,
which loads ships with munitions at the Seal
Beach Naval Weapons Station to the north of the main
channel.
Demographics
| Historical
populations |
| Census |
Pop. |
|
%± |
| 1910 |
815 |
|
—
|
| 1920 |
1,687 |
|
107.0% |
| 1930 |
3,690 |
|
118.7% |
| 1940 |
3,738 |
|
1.3% |
| 1950 |
5,237 |
|
40.1% |
| 1960 |
11,492 |
|
119.4% |
| 1970 |
115,960 |
|
909.0% |
| 1980 |
170,505 |
|
47.0% |
| 1990 |
181,519 |
|
6.5% |
| 2000 |
189,594 |
|
4.4% |
As
of the census of 2000, there were
189,594 people, 73,657 households, and 47,729 families
residing in the city. The population
density was 2,773.9/km² (7,183.6/mi²). There were
75,662 housing units at an average density of 1,107.0/km²
(2,866.8/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 79.22%
White,
0.81% Black
or African
American, 0.65% Native
American, 9.34% Asian,
0.24% Pacific
Islander, 5.81% from other
races, and 3.94% from two or more races. 14.66% of
the population were Hispanic
or Latino
of any race.
There
were 73,657 households out of which 29.0% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 50.7% were married
couples living together, 9.6% had a female householder
with no husband present, and 35.2% were non-families.
24.3% of all households were made up of individuals and
6.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 2.56 and the
average family size was 3.08.
In
the city the population was spread out with 22.2% under
the age of 18, 8.4% from 18 to 24, 34.9% from 25 to 44,
24.0% from 45 to 64, and 10.4% who were 65 years of age
or older. The median age was 36 years. For every 100 females
there were 100.4 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 98.6 males.
According
to a 2007 estimate, the median income for a household
in the city was $81,112, and the median income for a family
was $101,023. Adult males had a median income of $52,018
versus $38,046 for adult females. The per
capita income for the city was $36,964. About 4.3%
of families and 6.6% of the population were below the
poverty line,
including 8.2% of those under age 18 and 4.4% of those
age 65 or over.
The
2009 population estimated by the California
Department of Finance was 202,480.
The
unemployment rate in Huntington Beach is one of the lowest
among large (over 100,000) cities in the United States
at 1.9%.
Economy
According
to Huntington Beach's 2008 Comprehensive Annual Financial
Report, the top employers in the city are:
| # |
Employer |
#
of Employees |
| 1 |
Boeing |
4,352 |
| 2 |
Quiksilver |
1,337 |
| 3 |
Cambro
Manufacturing |
909 |
| 4 |
Verizon |
723 |
| 5 |
Hyatt
Regency Huntington Beach |
670 |
| 6 |
C
& D Aerospace |
600 |
| 7 |
Huntington
Beach Hospital |
503 |
| 8 |
Fisher
& Paykel |
441 |
| 9 |
Rainbow
Disposal |
408 |
| 10 |
Home
Depot (including Expo) |
386 |
Huntington
Beach sits above a large natural fault structure containing
oil. Although the oil is mostly depleted, extraction continues
at a slow rate, and still provides significant local income.
There are only two off-shore extraction facilities left,
however, and the day is not far off when oil
production in the city will cease and tourism will
replace it as the primary revenue source for resident
industry.
The
city is discussing closing off Main Street to cars from
PCH through the retail shopping and restaurant areas,
making it a pedestrian zone only. Other shopping centers
include Bella Terra, built
on the former Huntington Center site, and Old World Village,
a German-themed center.
Huntington
Beach has an off-shore oil terminus for the tankers that
support the Alaska
Pipeline. The terminus pipes run inland to a refinery
in Santa Fe Springs. Huntington Beach also has the Gothard-Talbert
terminus for the Orange County portion of the pipeline
running from the Chevron El Segundo refinery.
Several
hotels have been constructed on the inland side of Pacific
Coast Highway (State Route 1) within view of the beach,
just southeast of the pier.
Huntington
Beach contains a major installation of Boeing,
formerly McDonnell-Douglas.
A number of installations on the Boeing campus were originally
constructed to service the Apollo
Program, most notably the production of the S-IVB
upper stage for the Saturn IB
and Saturn V rockets, and some
nearby telephone poles are still marked "Apollo Dedicated
Mission Control Line."
Huntington
Beach contains the administrative headquarters of Sea
Launch, a commercial space vehicle launch enterprise
whose largest stockholder is Boeing.
Huntington
Beach contains a small industrial district in its northwest
corner, near the borders with Westminster and Seal Beach.
Surf
City USA trademarks
While
Huntington Beach retains its 15-year trademark of Surf
City Huntington Beach, the Huntington Beach Conference
and Visitors Bureau filed four applications to register
the Surf City USA trademark
in November 2004. The idea was to market the city by creating
an authentic brand based on Southern California's beach
culture and active outdoor lifestyle while at the same
time creating a family of product licensees who operate
like a franchise family producing a revenue stream that
could also be dedicated to promoting the brand and city.
A ruling by the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office released on May 12, 2006
awarded three trademark registrations to the Bureau; nine
additional trademark registrations have been granted since
this time and ten other Surf City USA trademarks are now
under consideration. One of the first products the Bureau
developed to promote its brand was the Surf City USA Beach
Cruiser by Felt Bicycles in 2006. The product has sold
out every year in markets worldwide and created demand
for a second rental bicycle model that will be marketed
to resort locations across the globe starting in 2009.
The Bureau now has dozens of other licensed products on
the market from Surf City USA soft drinks to clothing
to glassware. As of April 2008, the Bureau had more than
20 licensing partners with over 50 different products
being prepared to enter the market over the next 18 months.
Four of the Bureau's registrations of the trademark are
now on the principal register
and the remaining ten trademark applications are expected
to follow. The Bureau is actively considering registration
of the Surf City USA trademark in several different countries
and anticipates a growing market for its branded products
overseas in coming years.
An
ongoing dispute between Huntington Beach and Santa
Cruz, California over the trademark garnered negative
national publicity in 2007 when a law firm representing
Huntington Beach sent a cease-and-desist letter to a Santa
Cruz t-shirt vendor. A settlement was reached in January,
2008, which allows the Huntington Beach Conference and
Visitors Bureau to retain the trademark.
Tourism
The
downtown district includes an active art center, a colorful
shopping district, and the International Surfing Museum.
This district was also once the home of the famous restaurant
and music club "The Golden Bear." In the late 1960s and
1970s it hosted many famous bands and acts. The Huntington
Beach Pier stretches from Main Street into the Pacific
Ocean. At the end of the pier
is a Ruby's Diner. The Surf Theatre, which was located
one block north of the pier, gained fame in the 1960s
and 1970s for showing independent surf films such as The
Endless Summer and Five
Summer Stories. The Surf Theatre was owned and
operated by Hugh Larry Thomas from 1961 until it was demolished
in 1989. A newer version of The Surf Theatre is now closed,
but the International Surf Museum has preserved its memory
with a permanent exhibit featuring vintage seats and screening
of surfing movies once shown at a Huntington Beach theater.
Arts and
culture
Special
events
Many
of the events at Huntington Beach are focused around the
beach during the summer. The U.S.
Open of Surfing and Beach Games are featured on the
south side of the pier. Huntington Beach is a stop on
the AVP
beach volleyball tour. A biathlon (swim/run) hosted by
the Bolsa Chica & Huntington State Beach Lifeguards
takes place in July, early at dawn. The race begins at
the Santa Ana River Jetties
and ends at Warner Avenue, Bolsa
Chica State Beach. Huntington Beach Junior Lifeguard
day camps are held which teaches
preadolescents and adolescents ocean swimming, running,
and first-aid medical knowledge.
In
addition to the beach-focused events, the Fourth
of July parade has been held since 1904. The SoCal
Independent Film Festival takes place every September.
During
the winter the annual Cruise of Lights Boat Tour is held
in the Huntington Harbour neighborhood. This is a parade
of colorful lighted boats as well as boat tours to view
the decorated homes. The annual Kite Festival is held
just north of the pier in late February.
Huntington
Beach hosts car shows such as the Beachcruiser Meet and
a Concours d'Elegance.
The Beachcruiser Meet is held in March, attracting over
250 classic cars displayed along Main Street and the Pier
parking lot. A Concours d'Elegance is held at Central
Park in June and benefits the public library.
Surf
City Nights is held during the entire year. The community-spirited
event features a farmer's market, unique entertainment,
food, kiddie rides and a carnival atmosphere, each Tuesday
evening. Surf City Nights is presented by the Huntington
Beach Downtown Business Improvement District (HBDBID)
and the City of Huntington Beach. The event takes place
in the first three blocks of Main Street from Pacific
Coast Highway to Orange Avenue.
Sports
Surfers
abound near Huntington City Pier
Huntington
Beach during the day.
Huntington
Beach is the site of the world surfing
championships, held in the summer every year. The city
is often referred to as "Surf City" because of this high
profile event, its history and culture of surfing. It
is often called the "Surfing Capital of the World", not
for the height of the waves, but rather for the consistent
quality of surf. Gordon Duane established the city's first
surf shop, Gordie's Surfboards, in 1955.
Surf and
beaches
Apart
from sponsored surf events, Huntington Beach has some
of the best surf breaks in the State of California
and that of the United States.
Huntington Beach has four different facing beaches: Northwest,
West, Southwest, and South. Northwest consists of Bolsa
Chica State Beach with a length of 3.3 miles
(5.3 km), the West consist of "The Cliffs" or "Dog
Beach", Southwest is considered everything north of the
pier which is operated by the City of Huntington Beach.
South consists in everything south of the pier which primarily
focuses on Huntington
State Beach (2.2 Miles), which almost faces true South.
Bolsa
Chica State Beach is operated by the State of California,
Dept. Parks & Recreation, and the Bolsa Chica State
Beach Lifeguards. The beach is very narrow and the sand
is very coarse. Bolsa Chica tends to have better surf
with NW/W swells during the winter season. During the
summer months the beach picks up south/southwest swells
at a very steep angle. Due to the bottom of the beach,
surf at Bolsa Chica tends
to be slowed down and refined to soft shoulders. Longboards
are the best option for surfing in the Bolsa Chica area.
"The
Cliffs" or "Dog Beach" is also another popular surf spot.
This segment of Huntington Beach obtains these names because
dogs are allowed around the cliff area. Beach is very
restricted and often is submerged with high tides. Surf
at this location tends to be even bigger than Bolsa Chica
during the winter and often better. During the summer
most of the South/Southwest swells slide right by and
often break poorly. The best option is to take out a longboard,
but shortboards will do at times. Dolphins have also been
sighted in this area.
Just
north and south of the Huntington Beach Pier are some
well defined sandbars that shift throughout the year with
the different swells. Southside of the Pier is often a
popular destination during the summer for good surf, but
the Northside can be just as well during the winter. Around
the Pier it all depends on the swell and the sandbars.
Shortboard is your best option for surfing around the
Pier.
South
Huntington Beach, also known as Huntington
State Beach, is where all the south swells impact
the coastline. Huntington State Beach is operated by the
State of California, Department of Parks & Recreation,
and Huntington State Beach Lifeguards. This beach
is very wide with plenty of sand.
Sandbars
dramatically shift during the spring, summer and fall
seasons, thus creating excellent surf conditions with
a combination South/West/Northwest swell. Due to the Santa
Ana River jetties located at the southern most end
of the beach, large sandbars extend across and upcoast,
forcing swells to break extremely fast and hollow. Best
seasons for surfing at this beach is the summer and fall.
The best option for surfing in this area is a shortboard.
Huntington
Beach is also a popular destination for kite
surfing, and this sport can be viewed on the beach
northwest of the pier.
Huntington
Beach is the host city of the National
Professional Paintball League Super 7 Paintball Championships.
The NPPL holds its first event of the year traditionally
between the dates of March 23 through March 26.
Huntington
Beach also hosts the annual Surf City USA Marathon and
Half-Marathon, which is usually held on the first Sunday
of February.
Parks
and recreation
Huntington
Beach has a very large Central Park, located between Gothard
and Edwards Streets to the east and west, and Slater and
Ellis Avenues to the north and south. The park is vegetated
with xeric (low water use)
plants, and inhabited by native wildlife. Thick forests
encircling the park are supplemented with Australian
trees, particularly eucalyptus,
a high water use plant.
The
Huntington
Beach Public Library is located in Central Park in
a notable building designed by Richard
Neutra and Dion Neutra.
It houses almost a half-million volumes, as well as a
theater, gift shop and fountains. The library was founded
as a Carnegie library
in 1914, and has been continuously supported by the city
and local activists, with new buildings and active branches
at Banning, Oak View, Main Street, and Graham. The library
has significant local historical materials and has a special
genealogical reference collection.
It is independent of the state and county library systems.
The
park is also home of Huntington Central Park Equestrian
Center, a top class boarding facility that also offers
horse rentals to the public, with guided trail rides through
the park. There is also a "mud park" available for kids.
The world's second oldest disc golf course is available
in the park, as are two small dining areas, a sports complex
for adult use, and the Shipley Nature Center.
The
Bolsa
Chica Wetlands, which are diminishing rapidly due
to development, contains numerous trails and scenic routes.
The wetlands themselves have recently been connected with
the ocean again, in effort to maintain its previous, unaltered
conditions.
Government
Local
Government
According
to the city’s most recent Comprehensive Annual Financial
Report, the city’s various funds had $295.6 million in
Revenues, $287.7 million in expenditures, $1,046.6 million
in total assets, $202.8 million in total liabilities,
and $87.1 million in cash and investments.
The
structure of the management and coordination of city services
is:
| City
Department |
Director |
| City
Manager |
Fred
Wilson |
| Deputy
City Administrator |
Paul
Emery |
| Deputy
City Administrator |
Robert
Hall |
| Community
Relations Officer |
Laurie
E. Payne |
| Director
of Library Services |
Stephanie
Beverage |
| Director
of Human Resources |
Michele
Carr |
| Director
of Building and Safety |
Ross
D. Cranmer |
| Director
of Community Services |
Jim
B. Engle |
| Director
of Planning |
Scott
Hess |
| Director
of Public Works |
Travis
Hopkins |
| Director
of Information Services |
Jack
Marshall |
| Fire
Chief |
Duane
S. Olson |
| Police
Chief |
Kenneth
W. Small |
| Director
of Economic Development |
Stanley
Smalewitz |
| Director
of Finance |
Dan
T. Vilella |
Politics
In
the state legislature
Huntington Beach is located in the 35th Senate
District, represented by Republican
Tom Harman, and in the 67th
Assembly District,
represented by Republican Jim Silva.
Federally, Huntington Beach is located in California's
46th congressional district, which has a Cook
PVI of R +6 and is represented by Republican Dana
Rohrabacher.
Education
Huntington
Beach is the home of Golden
West College, which offers two-year associates of
arts degrees and transfer programs to four year universities.
Huntington
Beach is in the Huntington
Beach Union High School District, which includes Edison
High School, Huntington
Beach High School, Marina
High School, and Ocean
View High School in the city of Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley
High School in the city of Fountain
Valley, and Westminster
High School in the city of Westminster.
The
district also has an alternative school, Valley Vista
High School, and an independent study school, Coast High
School.
Huntington
Beach High School, which is the district's flagship
school, celebrated its 100 year anniversary in 2006.
The
city has two elementary school districts: Huntington Beach
City with 9 schools and Ocean View with 15. A small part
of the city is served by the Fountain Valley School District.
Media
Huntington
Beach was selected for the 24th season of MTV's Real World
Series.
The
city was featured in the TruTV series
Ocean Force: Huntington Beach. Also, the city is
mentioned in the Beach Boys
song Surfin' Safari
and in Surfer Joe by The Surfaris.
A
live camera is set up at the Huntington
Beach Pier and shown on screens at the California-themed
Hollister apparel stores.
The
public television station KOCE-TV
operates from the Golden West College campus, in conjunction
with the Golden West College Media Arts program.
Two
weekly newspapers cover Huntington Beach: The Huntington
Beach Independent and The Wave Section of The
Orange County Register.
Ashlee
Simpson's music video for La
La was filmed in Huntington Beach.
Notable
natives and residents
Musicians
- The
metal band Avenged Sevenfold
grew up and currently reside here. Lead guitarist
Synyster Gates has
said he enjoys nothing more than cruising Huntington
Beach on his chopper.
- The
punk rock band The Offspring
was formed here in 1984.
- Dean
Torrence, from the 1960s Pop group, Jan
and Dean, who co-authored the famous song "Surf
City" (#1 in 1963) said that Huntington Beach embodies
the song's spirit of freedom and California fun.
- Christian
Jacobs, The MC Bat Commander of The
Aquabats, resides in Huntington Beach.
- Matt
Costa, the folk pop singer, was born in Huntington
Beach.
- The
Vandals, a punk rock band formed in Huntington
Beach
- David
Silveria from the rock band Korn
resides in Huntington Beach and owns two restaurants
in downtown Huntington Beach (Silvera's Steakhouse
and Tuna Town)
- Scott
Weiland, of the Stone
Temple Pilots and Velvet
Revolver, attended Edison
High School.
Sandy
West, the drummer for the 70s band The Runaways, grew
up and went to school in Huntington Beach. She attended
Edison High School.
Athletes
- Huntington
Beach is the home to pro skateboarders like: Geoff
Rowley, Arto Saari,
Tosh Townend, Mark
Appleyard, Brian Sumner,
Greg Lutzka and Ed
Templeton.
- Former
NHL hockey
player John Blue
is from Huntington Beach, as is professional soccer
player Sasha
Kljestan.
- It
is also home of MMA
fighters Tito "The Huntington
Beach Bad Boy" Ortiz, Kimo
Leopoldo, and David
"Tank" Abbott.
- New
York Yankees pitcher Ian
Kennedy was born in Huntington Beach.
- Former
Seattle Mariners
pitcher Bob Wolcott was
born in Huntington Beach.
- Roller
Derby Blonde Amazon Joan Weston.
- Tony
Gonzalez of the Atlanta
Falcons grew up in Huntington Beach and attended
Huntington Beach High School.
- Jeff
Kent, retired baseball player and recipient of
the 2000 MVP Baseball award was raised in Huntington
Beach and attended Edison
High School.
- Jessie
Godderz - A professional bodybuilder with the
World Natural Body Building Federation that was also
a contestant on Big Brother
10 and Big
Brother 11
- Hank
Conger - a professional baseball player for the
Los Angeles
Angels of Anaheim and attended Huntington
Beach High School
- Collin
Balester - a professional baseball player for
the Washington Nationals,
attended Huntington
Beach High School
- Juergen
Klinsmann - a former international professional
soccer player, former soccer team coach and a former
coach of the German
national soccer team. Has left Huntington Beach
with his family in 2008 to Munich,
Germany to become the coach
of FC Bayern Munich.
- Wayne
Carlander - a former basketball player at Southern
California (USC)
Actors
Safety
Huntington
Beach Police Department MD520N
helicopter
Fire
protection in Huntington Beach is provided by the Huntington
Beach Fire Department. Law enforcement is provided
by the Huntington Beach Police Department. Huntington
Beach Marine Safety Officers and its seasonal lifeguards
are recognized as some of the best in the world with a
top notch safety record. It has an active Community
Emergency Response Team training program, that trains
citizens as Disaster Service Workers certified by Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as a part of a
free program run by the fire department's Office of Emergency
Services.
Emergency
services are also provided at State Beach locations. Peace
Officers and lifeguards can be found at Bolsa Chica and
Huntington State Beach. Such services consist of: aquatic
rescues, boat rescues, first aid and law enforcement.
All services are provided by the State of California,
Dept. Parks & Recreation.
In
1926, the Santa Ana River
dam failed, and flash-flooded its entire delta.
The southern oceanic terminus of this delta is now a settled
area of Huntington Beach. The distant dam is still functional,
but silting up, which is expected to reduce its storage
volume, and therefore its effectiveness at flood-prevention.
The flood and dam-endangered areas are protected by a
levee, but lenders require expensive flood insurance in
the delta. There have been serious discussions to eliminate
the need for flood insurance and this requirement has
already been waived in some areas and may one day no longer
be considered a credible threat.
Since
it is a seaside city, Huntington Beach has had tsunami
warnings, storm surge (its pier
has been rebuilt three times), sewage spills, tornadoes
and waterspouts. The cold offshore current prevents hurricanes.
The Pier that was rebuilt in the 1990s was engineered
to withstand severe storms or earthquakes.
Large
fractions of the settled delta are in earthquake
liquefaction zones above known active faults. Most
of the local faults are named after city streets.
Many
residents (and even city hall) live within sight and sound
of active oil extraction and drilling operations. These
occasionally spew oil, causing expensive clean-ups. Large
parts of the developed land have been contaminated by
heavy metals from the water separated from oil.
The
local oil has such extreme mercury contamination that
metallic mercury is regularly drained from oil pipelines
and equipment. Oil operations increase when the price
of oil rises. Some oil fields have been approved for development.
The worst-polluted
areas have been reclaimed as parks. At least one Superfund
site, too contaminated to be a park, is at the junction
of Magnolia and Hamilton streets, near Edison High School.
Sister cities
Huntington
Beach has the following sister
city relationships, according to the Huntington Beach
Sister City Association:
Huntington
Beach also has youth exchange programs with both cities,
sending four teenagers on an exchange student basis for
two weeks in order to gather different cultural experiences.
ABOUT
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Fountain
Valley
is a city in Orange
County, California, United
States. The population was 58,309 according to the
2009 estimate by the California
Department of Finance. A classic bedroom
community, Fountain Valley is a middle-class residential
area.
History
The
area encompassing Fountain Valley was originally inhabited
by the Tongva people. European
settlement of the area began when Manuel
Nieto was granted the land for Rancho
Los Nietos, which encompassed over 300,000 acres
(1,200 km2), including present-day Fountain
Valley. Control of the land was subsequently transferred
to Mexico upon independence from
Spain, and then to the United
States as part of the Treaty
of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
The
city was incorporated in 1957, before which it was known
as Talbert (also as Gospel Swamps by residents). The name
of Fountain Valley refers to the very high water
table in the area at the time the name was chosen,
and the many corresponding artesian
wells in the area. Early settlers constructed drainage
canals to make the land usable for agriculture, which
remained the dominant use of land until the 1960s, when
construction of large housing tracts accelerated.
Geography
Fountain
Valley is located at
(33.708618, -117.956295). The elevation of the city is
approximately twenty feet above sea level, slightly lower
than surrounding areas. This is especially noticeable
in the southwest area of the city, where several streets
have a steep grade as they
cross into Huntington
Beach.
The
city is located southwest and northeast of the San
Diego Freeway (Interstate 405), which diagonally bisects
the city, and is surrounded by Huntington
Beach on the south and west, Westminster
and Garden Grove
on the north, Santa
Ana on the northeast, and Costa
Mesa on the southeast. Its eastern border is the Santa
Ana River.
According
to the United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
23.1 km2 (8.9 sq mi) 0.11% of
which is water.
Demographics
According
to the census of 2009, there were
58,309 people, 18,162 households, and 14,220 families
residing in the city. The population
density was 2,382.4/km² (6,167.8/mi²). There were
18,473 housing units at an average density of 800.5/km²
(2,072.4/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 64.02%
White, 1.11% Black
or African American, 0.46% American
Indian or Alaskan Native, 25.76% Asian,
0.40% Native Hawaiian
or other Pacific Islander, 3.95% from other
races, and 4.30% from two or more races. 10.68% of
the population were Hispanic
or Latino of any race.
There
were 18,162 households out of which 34.3% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 63.4% were married
couples living together, 10.5% had a female householder
with no husband present, and 21.7% were non-families.
16.0% of all households were made up of individuals and
5.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 3.00 and the
average family size was 3.35. More than 1/3 of all the
housing units in the city are those other than single-family
homes, such as condominiums
or apartments.
In
the city the population was spread out with 23.5% under
the age of 18, 7.9% from 18 to 24, 30.1% from 25 to 44,
27.2% from 45 to 64, and 11.3% who were 65 years of age
or older. The median age was 38 years. For every 100 females
there were 95.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 93.0 males.
The
median income for a household in the city was $78,729,
and the median income for a family was $90,335. Males
had a median income of $60,399 versus $43,089 for females.
The per capita income
for the city was $48,521. About 1.6% of families and 2.3%
of the population were below the poverty
line, including 3.2% of those under age 18 and 3.0%
of those age 65 or over.
Politics
In
the state legislature
Fountain Valley is located in the 35th Senate
District, represented by Republican
Tom Harman, and in the 68th
Assembly District,
represented by Republican Van Tran.
Federally, Fountain Valley is located in California's
46th congressional district, which has a Cook
PVI of R +6 and is represented by Republican Dana
Rohrabacher.
Fountain
Valley is home to Mile
Square Regional Park, a 640 acres (2.6 km2)
park containing two lakes, three 18-hole golf courses,
playing fields, picnic shelters, and a 20-acre (81,000 m2)
urban nature area planted with California
native plants, a 55-acre (220,000 m2)
recreation center with tennis courts, basketball courts,
racquetball courts, a gymnasium, and the Kingston Boys
& Girls Club; also a community center and a new senior
center that opened in June, 2005. A major redevelopment
of the recreation center and city-administered sports
fields was completed in early 2009.
Fire
protection and emergency medical services are provided
by two stations of the Fountain Valley Fire Department.
Law enforcement is provided by the Fountain Valley Police
Department. Ambulance service is provided by Care
Ambulance Service.
The
Orange County Sanitation District's primary plant is located
in Fountain Valley next to the Santa Ana River. The agency
is the third-largest sanitation district in the western
United States. This location is also home to the agency's
administrative offices, as well as the offices of the
Municipal Water District of Orange County, a member of
the Metropolitan
Water District of Southern California
Fountain
Valley has two fully accredited major medical centers:
the Fountain Valley Regional Hospital with 400 beds available,
and Orange Coast Memorial Hospital with 230 beds and a
medical clinic. Orange Coast Memorial recently announced
plans for a six-story outpatient
center to be added. The project was initially met by some
opposition due to its height and location next to residences,
but was eventually approved unanimously by the city council.
The
city also has 18 churches, one Reform
synagogue, a mosque and a public
library.
Fountain
Valley has its own newspaper, the Fountain Valley View,
operated by the Orange
County Register.
Education
There
are three high schools, three
middle schools, nine elementary
schools, one K-12 school, and two K-8 schools. However,
some students who live in the city of Fountain Valley
actually attend schools in other cities.
Fountain
Valley is also home to Coastline
Community College and a campus of the University
of Phoenix. Community colleges in the area include
Orange Coast College
or Golden West College,
located nearby in the cities of Costa Mesa and Huntington
Beach, respectively.
High
schools in Huntington
Beach Union High School District
High
schools in Garden
Grove Unified School District
Middle
schools in Fountain
Valley School District
Middle
schools in Ocean View Middle School District
Elementary
schools in Garden Grove Unified School District
- Allen
Elementary School
- Monroe
Elementary School
- Northcutt
Elementary School
Elementary
schools in Fountain Valley School District
- Courreges
Elementary School
- Cox
Elementary School
- Gisler
Elementary School
- Moiola
Elementary School (K-8)
- Plavan
Elementary School
- Tamura
Elementary School
- Newland
Elementary School
Private
schools
- Carden
School of Fountain Valley (K-8)
- First
Southern Baptist Christian School (K-12)
Business
As
a suburban city, most of Fountain
Valley's residents commute to work in other urban centers.
However in recent years, the city has seen an increase
in commercial jobs in the city, with the growth of a commercial
center near the Santa Ana
River known as the "Southpark" district.
Although
the economy of the area was once based mainly on agriculture,
the remaining production consists of several fields of
strawberries
or other small crops, which are gradually being replaced
by new office development.
Fountain
Valley is home to the national headquarters of Hyundai
Motor Company and D-Link Corporation,
the global headquarters of memory chip manufacturer Kingston
Technologies, and the corporate headquarters of Surefire,
LLC, maker of military and commercial flashlights.
The Southpark commercial area is also home to offices
for companies such as D-Link, Starbucks,
Satura and the Orange County Register. There are also
a limited number of light industrial companies in this
area. In addition, Fountain Valley is the location for
Noritz, a tankless water heater manufacturer.
The
increasing commercial growth can be evidenced by the frequent
rush-hour traffic bottlenecks on the San Diego (405) Freeway
through Fountain Valley.
Transportation
In
addition to the San Diego Freeway, which bisects the city,
Fountain Valley is served by several bus lines operated
by the Orange County
Transportation Authority. Bus routes 33, 35, 37, 70,
72, 74, and 172 cover the city's major streets.
Most
of the major roads are equipped with bicycle
lanes, especially
around Mile Square Park, which offers wide bike paths
along the major streets that mark its boundary. Dedicated
bike paths along the Santa
Ana River run from the city of Corona
to the Pacific Ocean.
ABOUT
WESTMINSTER
Westminster
is a city in Orange
County, California, United
States. It was founded in 1870 by Rev. Lemuel Webber
as a Presbyterian temperance
colony. Its name is taken from the Westminster
Assembly of 1643, which laid out the basic tenets
of the Presbyterian faith. For several years of its early
history, its farmers refused to grow grapes because they
associated grapes with alcohol.
Westminster
was incorporated in 1957, at which time it had 10,755
residents. Originally, the city was named Tri-City
because it was the amalgamation of three cities: Westminster,
Barber City, and Midway City. Midway
City ultimately turned down incorporation, leaving
Barber City to be absorbed into the newly incorporated
Westminster. The former Barber City was located in the
western portion of the current City of Westminster.
Westminster
is landlocked and bordered by Seal
Beach on the west, by Garden
Grove on the north and east, and by Huntington
Beach and Fountain
Valley on the south.
Westminster
surrounds the unincorporated area of Midway City, except
for a small portion where Midway City meets Huntington
Beach to the south.
A
large number of Vietnamese
refugees came to the city in the 1970s, settling largely
in an area now officially named Little
Saigon. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total
population of 88,207. Westminster won the All-America
City Award in 1996.
Demographics
As
of the census of 2000, there were
88,207 people, 26,406 households, and 20,411 families
residing in the city. The population
density was 3,368.6/km² (8,724.2/mi²). There were
26,940 housing units at an average density of 1,028.8/km²
(2,664.5/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 45.79%
White,
0.99% African
American, 0.61% Native
American, 38.13% Asian,
0.46% Pacific
Islander, 10.19% from other
races, and 3.84% from two or more races. Hispanic
or Latino
of any race were 21.70% of the population.
There
were 26,406 households out of which 37.8% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 58.4% were married
couples living together, 12.4% had a female householder
with no husband present, and 22.7% were non-families.
16.9% of all households were made up of individuals and
7.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 3.32 and the
average family size was 3.71.
In
the city the population was spread out with 25.9% under
the age of 18, 8.8% from 18 to 24, 32.6% from 25 to 44,
21.5% from 45 to 64, and 11.2% who were 65 years of age
or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females
there were 99.9 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 97.9 males.
The
median income for a household in the city was $49,450,
and the median income for a family was $54,399. Males
had a median income of $37,157 versus $28,392 for females.
The per capita income
for the city was $18,218. About 10.7% of families and
13.5% of the population were below the poverty
line, including 18.0% of those under age 18 and 7.9%
of those age 65 or over.
Geography
Westminster
is located at (33.752418, -117.993938). According to the
United States
Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 26.2 km²
(10.1 mi²), all land.
Government
In
the state legislature
Westminster is located in the 34th, Senate
District, represented by Democrat
Lou Correa and Republican
Tom Harman respectively, and
in the 67th and 68th Assembly
District, represented by Republicans Jim
Silva and Van Tran respectively.
Federally, Westminster is located in California's 40th
and 46th
congressional districts, which have Cook
PVIs of R +8 and R +6 respectively and are represented
by Republicans Ed Royce and Dana
Rohrabacher respectively.
Education
Four
different school districts have boundaries that overlap
parts or more of the City of Westminster:
Notable
natives and residents
- Harrod
Blank, documentary filmmaker
- Jeromy
Burnitz, MLB
player for the New York
Mets, Cleveland
Indians, Milwaukee
Brewers, Los Angeles
Dodgers, Colorado
Rockies, Chicago Cubs,
and Pittsburgh Pirates
- Mike
Burns, MLB
player for the Milwaukee
Brewers
- Mark
Eaton, former Utah Jazz
player
- Ken
Hoang, professional video gamer and contestant
on Survivor
Gabon
- Ryan
Klesko, former MLB
first baseman
- Carlos
Palomino, Boxer Former Welterweight Champion
- Vang
Pao, Hmong Former
Major General of the Royal Lao Army
- Bud
Hare,Tuner Bonneville,Drags record holder inventor
- Barry
Seevers Engine builder record holder innovator
- Michael
"Gill" Orgillon Musician for the Industrial music
band S.E.M;I
Landmarks
- A
memorial and final resting place for the victims of
the Pan Am plane involved in the Tenerife
Disaster March 27 1977 is located in Westminster.
- The
Vietnam War Memorial is located Sid Goldstein Freedom
Park, next to the Westminster Civic Center. The project
was initiated by Westminster City Councilman Frank
G. Fry in 1997 and completed in 2003.
Shopping
The
city's major shopping mall
is Westminster
Mall, which contains more than 180 stores.
ABOUT
NEWPORT BEACH
Newport
Beach,
incorporated in 1906, is a city in Orange
County, California, United States 10 miles (16 km)
south of downtown Santa
Ana. As of January 1, 2009, the population was 86,252.
The current OMB
metropolitan designation for Newport Beach lies within
the Santa
Ana-Anaheim-Irvine area. The city is currently one
of the wealthiest communities in California and consistently
places high in United States rankings.
History
In
1870 a steamer named "The Vaquero" made its first trip
to a marshy lagoon for trading. Ranch owners in the Lower
Bay decided from then on that the area should be called
"Newport."
In
1905 city development increased when Pacific
Electric Railroad established a southern terminus
in Newport connecting the beach with downtown Los
Angeles. In 1906 with a population of 206 citizens,
the scattered settlements were incorporated as the City
of Newport Beach.
Settlements
filled in on the Peninsula, West Newport, Balboa
Island and Lido
Isle. In 1923 Corona
del Mar was annexed and in 2002 Newport
Coast was annexed.
Annexations
Geography
Newport
Beach extends in elevation from sea
level to the 1161 ft (354 m.) summit of Signal Peak
in the San Joaquin Hills,
but the official elevation is 25 feet (8 m) above sea
level at a location of
(33.616671, -117.897604).
The
city is bordered to the west by Huntington
Beach at the Santa Ana
River, on the north side by Costa
Mesa, John Wayne Airport,
and Irvine (including
UC Irvine),
and on the east side by Crystal
Cove State Park.
According
to the United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
103.2 km² (39.8 mi²). 38.3 km² (14.8 mi²) of
it is land and 64.9 km² (25.1 mi²) of it (62.91%)
is water.
Areas
of Newport Beach include Corona
del Mar, Balboa
Island, Newport
Coast, San
Joaquin Hills, and Balboa
Peninsula (also known as Balboa).
Harbor
The
Upper Newport Bay was
carved out by the prehistoric flow of the Santa
Ana River. It feeds the delta
that is the Back Bay,
and eventually joins Lower Newport Bay, commonly referred
to as Newport Harbor. The Lower Bay includes Balboa
Island, Bay Island, Harbor Island, Lido
Isle and Linda Isle.
Climate
Newport
Beach has a Mediterranean
climate (Köppen
climate classification Csb). Like many coastal
cities in Orange and Los Angeles Counties, Newport Beach
exhibits weak temperature variation, both diurnally and
seasonally, compared to inland cities even a few miles
from the ocean. The Pacific Ocean greatly moderates Newport
Beach's climate by warming winter temperatures and cooling
summer temperatures.
Demographics
| Historical
populations |
| Census |
Pop. |
|
%± |
| 1910 |
445 |
|
—
|
| 1920 |
895 |
|
101.1% |
| 1930 |
2,203 |
|
146.1% |
| 1940 |
4,438 |
|
101.5% |
| 1950 |
12,120 |
|
173.1% |
| 1960 |
26,564 |
|
119.2% |
| 1970 |
49,582 |
|
86.7% |
| 1980 |
62,556 |
|
26.2% |
| 1990 |
66,643 |
|
6.5% |
| 2000 |
70,032 |
|
5.1% |
As
of the census of 2000, there were
70,032 people, 33,071 households, and 16,965 families
residing in the city. The population
density was 1,829.5/km² (4,738.8/mi²). There were
37,288 housing units at an average density of 974.1/km²
(2,523.1/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 92.22%
White,
0.53% African
American, 0.26% Native
American, 4.00% Asian,
0.12% Pacific
Islander, 1.13% from other
races, and 1.74% from two or more races. Hispanic
or Latino
of any race were 4.71% of the population.
There
were 33,071 households out of which 18.0% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 42.5% were married
couples living together, 6.1% had a female householder
with no husband present, and 48.7% were non-families.
35.3% of all households were made up of individuals and
10.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 2.09 and the
average family size was 2.71.
In
the city the population was spread out with 15.7% under
the age of 18, 6.5% from 18 to 24, 33.0% from 25 to 44,
27.2% from 45 to 64, and 17.6% who were 65 years of age
or older. The median age was 42 years. For every 100 females
there were 97.9 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 96.6 males.
According
to a 2008 US Census estimate, the median income for a
household in the city was $110,511, while the median family
income was $162,976. Males had a median income of $73,425
versus $45,409 for females. The per
capita income for the city was $63,015. About 2.1%
of families and 4.4% of the population were below the
poverty line,
including 3.0% of those under age 18 and 3.5% of those
age 65 or over.
Housing
prices in Newport Beach ranked eighth highest in the United
States in a 2009 survey.
Politics
As
of October 2008, there were 35,870 registered Republicans
and 13,850 registered Democrats.
In
the state legislature
Newport Beach is located in the 35th Senate
District, represented by Republican
Tom Harman, and in the 68th
and 70th Assembly
District, represented by Republicans Van
Tran and Chuck DeVore
respectively. Federally, Newport Beach is located in California's
48th congressional district, which has a Cook
PVI of R +8 and is represented by Republican John
Campbell.
Economy
North
Newport Beach from the air
Before
its dissolution Air California
was headquartered in Newport Beach.
The
city is also the home of the Pacific
Investment Management Company, which runs the world's
largest bond fund.
Several
semiconductor companies, including Jazz
Semiconductor, have their operations in Newport Beach.
Education
Balboa
beach one of the popular beaches of Newport.
Points
of interest
Attractions
Attractions
include beaches on the Balboa
Peninsula (featuring body-boarding hot-spot The
Wedge), Corona
del Mar State Beach and Crystal
Cove State Park, to the south.
The
Catalina Flyer, a giant
500 passenger catamaran, provides daily transportation
from the Balboa
Peninsula in Newport Beach to Avalon,
California located on Santa
Catalina Island. The historic Balboa
Pavilion, established in 1906, is Newport Beach's
most famous landmark.
The
Orange County
Museum of Art is a museum that exhibits modern and
contemporary art, with emphasis on the work of California
artists.[citation
needed].
Balboa
Island is an artificial
island in Newport Harbor that was dredged and filled
right before World War I.
The Balboa Fun Zone is
home to the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum.
The
Pelican Hill area has two golf courses, both of which
were recently reopened after extensive remodeling and
the construction of a new hotel and clubhouse.
Popular
culture
The
city has figured into several television shows and movies.
Notable
natives and/or residents
External
links
ABOUT
COSTA MESA
Costa
Mesa
is a suburban
city in Orange County,
California, United States.
The population was 116,479 as of January 1, 2009 . Since
its incorporation in 1953, the city has grown from a semi-rural
farming community of 16,840 to a suburban
city with an economy based on retail, commerce and light
manufacturing.
History
Members
of the Gabrieleño/Tongva
and Juaneño/Luiseño
nations long inhabited the area. After the 1769 expedition
of Gaspar de Portolà,
a Spanish expedition led
by Father Junípero Serra
named the area Vallejo
de Santa Ana (Valley of Saint Anne). On November 1,
1776, Mission
San Juan Capistrano became the area's first permanent
European settlement in Alta
California, New
Spain.
In
1801, the Spanish Empire
granted 62,500 acres (253 km2) to
Jose
Antonio Yorba, which he named Rancho San Antonio.
Yorba's great rancho included the lands where the cities
of Olive, Orange,
Villa Park, Santa
Ana, Tustin, Costa
Mesa and Newport
Beach stand today.
After
the Mexican-American
war, California became
part of the United States
and American settlers arrived in this area and formed
the town of Fairview in the 1880s near the modern intersection
of Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue. An 1889 flood wiped
out the railroad
serving the community, however, and it shriveled.
To
the south, meanwhile, the community of Harper had arisen
on a siding of the Santa
Ana and Newport Railroad, named after a local rancher.
This town prospered on its agricultural goods. On May
11, 1920, Harper
changed its name to Costa Mesa, which literally means
"coastal table" in Spanish.
This is a reference to the city's geography as being a
plateau by the coast.
Costa
Mesa surged in population during and after World
War II, as many thousands trained at Santa
Ana Army Air Base and returned after the war with
their families. Within three decades of incorporation,
the city's population had nearly quintupled.
Commerce
and culture
Costa
Mesa's local economy relies heavily on retail and services.
The single largest center of commercial activity is South
Coast Plaza, a shopping
center noted for its architecture and size. The volume
of sales generated by South Coast Plaza, on the strength
of 322 stores, places it among the highest volume regional
shopping centers in the nation. It generates more than
one billion dollars per year. Some manufacturing activity
also takes place in the city, mostly in the industrial,
southwestern quarter, which is home to a number of electronics,
pharmaceuticals and plastics firms.
The
commercial district surrounding South Coast Plaza, which
contains parts of northern Costa Mesa and southern Santa
Ana, is sometimes called South
Coast Metro.
The
Orange
County Performing Arts Center and South
Coast Repertory Theater are based in the city. A local
newspaper, the Daily Pilot, is owned, operated,
and printed by the Los
Angeles Times.
The
commercial district within the triangle that is formed
by Highways 405, 55 & 73 is sometimes called SoBeCa,
which stands for "South On Bristol, Entertainment, Culture
& Arts".
Costa
Mesa offers 26 parks, a municipal golf course, 26 public
schools and 2 libraries. It is also home to the Orange
County Fairgrounds, which hosts one of the largest
fairs in California, the Orange
County Fair, each July. The Fair receives more than
one million visitors each year. Adjacent to the Fairgrounds
is the Pacific
Amphitheater, which has hosted acts such as Madonna,
Bill Cosby, Jessica
Simpson, Steppenwolf,
Kelly Clarkson and many
more.
Government
Local
A
general law city, Costa Mesa has a council-manager form
of government. Voters elect a five-member City Council,
all at-large seats, who in turn select a mayor who acts
as its chairperson and head of the government. Day to
day, the city is run by a professional city manager and
staff of approximately 600 full-time employees.
Management
of the city and coordination of city services are provided
by:
| Office |
Officeholder |
| City Manager |
Allan L. Roeder |
| Assistant City Manager |
Thomas R. Hatch |
| City Attorney |
Kimberly Hall Barlow |
| Director of Administrative Services |
Steven N. Mandoki |
| Director of Development Services |
Donald D. Lamm |
| Director of Finance |
Vacant |
| Director of Public Works |
Peter Naghavi |
| Fire Chief |
Michael F. Morgan |
| Police Chief |
Christopher Shawkey |
The
9.5 acre (38,000 m²) Costa Mesa Civic Center is located
at 77 Fair Drive. City Hall is a five-story building where
the primary administrative functions of the City are conducted.
Also contained in the Civic Center complex are Council
Chambers, the Police facility, Communications building
and Fire Station No. 5.
Emergency
services
Fire
protection is provided by the Costa
Mesa Fire Department. Law enforcement is the responsibility
of the Costa Mesa Police Department. Emergency Medical
Services are provided by the Costa
Mesa Fire Department and Care Ambulance Service.
State
and federal
In
the state legislature
Costa Mesa is located in the 35th Senate
District, represented by Republican
Tom Harman, and in the 68th
Assembly District,
represented by Republican Van Tran.
Federally, Costa Mesa is located in California's
46th congressional district, which has a Cook
PVI of R +6 and is represented by Republican Dana
Rohrabacher.
Transportation
Costa
Mesa is served by several bus lines
of the Orange
County Transportation Authority (OCTA), but most transportation
is by automobile. Two freeways
terminate here, State
Route 73 and State
Route 55 (also known as the Costa Mesa Freeway). The
San Diego Freeway,
Interstate 405, also runs through the city.
Geography
Costa
Mesa is located at (33.664969, -117.912289). Located 37 miles
(60 km) southeast of Los
Angeles, 88 miles (142 km) north of San
Diego and 425 miles (684 km) south of San
Francisco, Costa Mesa encompasses a total of 16 square
miles (41 km2) with its southernmost border
only 1-mile (1.6 km) from the Pacific Ocean. According
to the United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
40.6 km² (15.7 mi²). 40.5 km² (15.6 mi²)
of it is land and 0.2 km² (0.1 mi²) of it (0.38%)
is water.
Climate
Costa
Mesa has a Mediterranean
climate (Köppen
climate classification Csb).
| Weather
data for Costa Mesa |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
Year |
| Average high °F (°C) |
64
(18) |
64
(18) |
64
(18) |
66
(19) |
66
(19) |
68
(20) |
71
(22) |
73
(23) |
73
(23) |
71
(22) |
68
(20) |
64
(18) |
68
(20) |
| Average low °F (°C) |
48
(9) |
50
(10) |
51
(11) |
54
(12) |
57
(14) |
60
(16) |
63
(17) |
64
(18) |
63
(17) |
59
(15) |
52
(11) |
48
(9) |
56
(13) |
| Precipitation
inches (mm) |
2.60
(66) |
2.54
(64.5) |
2.25
(57.2) |
.70
(17.8) |
.18
(4.6) |
.08
(2) |
.02
(0.5) |
.09
(2.3) |
.30
(7.6) |
.28
(7.1) |
1.02
(25.9) |
1.59
(40.4) |
11.65
(295.9) |
| Source:
Weather Channel 2009-03-29 |
Demographics
As
of the census of 2000, there were
108,724 people, 39,206 households, and 22,778 families
residing in the city. The population
density was 2,685.8/km² (6,956.3/mi²). There were
40,406 housing units at an average density of 998.1/km²
(2,585.2/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 69.48%
White,
1.40% Black
or African
American, 0.78% Native
American, 6.90% Asian,
0.60% Pacific
Islander, 16.57% from other
races, and 4.27% from two or more races. 31.75% of
the population were Hispanic
or Latino
of any race.
There
were 39,206 households out of which 29.2% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 42.8% were married
couples living together, 10.3% had a female householder
with no husband present, and 41.9% were non-families.
28.1% of all households were made up of individuals and
6.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 2.69 and the
average family size was 3.34.
In
the city the population was spread out with 23.2% under
the age of 18, 11.2% from 18 to 24, 39.0% from 25 to 44,
18.1% from 45 to 64, and 8.4% who were 65 years of age
or older. The median age was 32 years. For every 100 females
there were 105.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 103.9 males.
The
median income for a household in the city was $50,732,
and the median income for a family was $55,456. Males
had a median income of $38,670 versus $32,365 for females.
The per capita income
for the city was $23,342. About 8.2% of families and 12.6%
of the population were below the poverty
line, including 16.0% of those under age 18 and 6.2%
of those age 65 or over.
Education
Institutions
of higher learning located in Costa Mesa include Orange
Coast College, Vanguard
University (affiliated with the Assemblies
of God), Whittier
Law School (a satellite of Whittier
College) and National
University (a private university based in La Jolla,
California).
Costa
Mesa has two high schools, Costa
Mesa High School and Estancia
High School. Costa Mesa has two public middle schools;
Tewinkle Middle School, which was named after Costa Mesa's
first mayor, and Costa Mesa Middle School which shares
the same campus as Costa Mesa High School. Costa Mesa
also has two alternative high schools that share the same
campus, Back Bay High School and Monte Vista High School.
Costa Mesa High School's sports programs have been very
successful, and Costa Mesa graduates include 2008 Olympic
high jumper Sharon Day.
Notable
natives and residents
External
links
ABOUT
SEAL BEACH
Seal
Beach
is a city in Orange
County, California. As
of 2000, its population was 24,157. The city was incorporated
on October
25, 1915.
Seal
Beach is located in the westernmost corner of Orange County.
To the northwest, just across the border with Los
Angeles County, lies the city of Long
Beach and the adjacent San
Pedro Bay. To the southeast are Huntington Harbour,
a neighborhood of Huntington
Beach, and the unincorporated
community of Sunset
Beach. To the east lie the city of Westminster
and the neighborhood of West
Garden Grove, part of the city of Garden
Grove. To the north lie the unincorporated community
of Rossmoor and the
city of Los Alamitos.
History
Early
on, the area that is now Seal Beach was known as "Anaheim
Landing", as the boat landing and seaside recreation area
named after the nearby town of Anaheim.
By
the 20th century, it was known as Bay City, but there
was already a Bay City located in Northern California.
When the time came to incorporate on 25
October 1915, the town was named Seal Beach.
The town became a popular recreation destination in the
area, and featured a beach-side amusement park long before
Disneyland was founded inland.
The
United States Navy's
Naval
Weapons Station Seal Beach was originally constructed
during World War II for loading,
unloading, and storing of ammunition for the Pacific
Fleet, and especially those US Navy warships home-ported
in Long Beach and
San
Diego, California. With closure of the Concord
Naval Weapons Station in Northern California, it has
become the primary source of munitions for a majority
of the U.S. Pacific Fleet.
Geography
Seal
Beach is located at
(33.759283, -118.082396).
According
to the United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
34.2 km² (13.2 mi²). 29.8 km² (11.5 mi²)
of it is land and 4.5 km² (1.7 mi²) of it (13.01%)
is water.
Climate
Seal
Beach has a Mediterranean
climate
| Weather
data for Seal Beach |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
Year |
| Average high °F (°C) |
68
(20) |
68
(20) |
69
(21) |
73
(23) |
74
(23) |
78
(26) |
83
(28) |
85
(29) |
83
(28) |
79
(26) |
73
(23) |
69
(21) |
75
(24) |
| Average low °F (°C) |
46
(8) |
48
(9) |
50
(10) |
53
(12) |
58
(14) |
61
(16) |
65
(18) |
66
(19) |
64
(18) |
58
(14) |
50
(10) |
45
(7) |
55
(13) |
| Precipitation
inches (mm) |
2.95
(74.9) |
3.01
(76.5) |
2.43
(61.7) |
.60
(15.2) |
.23
(5.8) |
.08
(2) |
.02
(0.5) |
.10
(2.5) |
.24
(6.1) |
.40
(10.2) |
1.12
(28.4) |
1.76
(44.7) |
12.94
(328.7) |
| Source:
Weather Channel 2009-03-29 |
Neighborhoods
Seal
Beach encompasses the Leisure
World retirement gated
community with roughly 9,000 residents. This was the
first major planned retirement
community of its type in the U.S. The small gated community
of Surfside
Colony southwest of the Weapons Station is also part
of Seal Beach.
The
main body of Seal Beach consists of many neighborhoods.
-Old
Town is the area on the ocean side of California
State Route 1(PCH).
-"The
Hill" is the neighborhood on the north side of PCH thats
borders end at Gum Grove Park.
-College
Park West is a small neighborhood bordering Long Beach.
Its streets are named after colleges.
-College
Park East is another small neighborhood bordering Garden
Grove. Its streets are named after plants.
Demographics
Seal
Beach amusement park, 1920.
As
of the census of 2000, there were
24,157 people, 13,048 households, and 5,884 families residing
in the city. The population
density was 810.3/km² (2,099.5/mi²). There were 14,267
housing units at an average density of 478.6/km² (1,240.0/mi²).
The racial makeup of the city was 88.91% White,
1.44% African
American, 0.30% Native
American, 5.74% Asian,
0.18% Pacific
Islander, 1.28% from other
races, and 2.16% from two or more races. Hispanic
or Latino
of any race were 6.43% of the population.
There
were 13,048 households, out of which 13.8% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 38.2% were married
couples living together, 5.3% had a female householder
with no husband present, and 54.9% were non-families.
48.8% of all households were made up of individuals and
34.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 1.83 and the
average family size was 2.65.
In
the city the population was spread out with 13.3% under
the age of 18, 4.0% from 18 to 24, 21.5% from 25 to 44,
23.7% from 45 to 64, and 37.5% who were 65 years of age
or older. The median age was 54 years. For every 100 females
there were 78.3 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 75.4 males.
The
median income for a household in the city was $42,079,
and the median income for a family was $72,071. Males
had a median income of $61,654 versus $41,615 for females.
The per capita income
for the city was $34,589. About 3.2% of families and 5.5%
of the population were below the poverty
line, including 6.2% of those under age 18 and 5.3%
of those age 65 or over.
Economy
The
major employer in Seal Beach is the Boeing
Company, employing roughly 2,000 people. Their facility
was originally built to manufacture the second
stage of the Saturn V rocket
for NASA's Apollo
manned space flight missions to the Moon
and for the Skylab program. Boeing
Homeland
Security & Services (airport security, etc.) is
based in Seal Beach and Boeing Space & Intelligence
Systems (satellite systems and classified programs) is
headquartered in Seal Beach. Boeing is the world's largest
satellite manufacturer.
Arts and
culture
"Anaheim
Landing" on an 1875 map.
Anaheim
Landing (now Seal Beach), 1891.
Annual
cultural events
The
Lions Club Pancake
Breakfast in April, and their Fish Fry (started in 1943)
in July are two of the biggest events in Seal Beach. There
has been a Rough Water Swim the same weekend as the Fish
Fry since the 1960s. The Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce
sponsors many events, including: a Classic Car Show in
April, a Summer Concert series in July & August, the
Christmas Parade
in December along with Santa & the Reindeer. Also
in the fall is the Kite
Festival in September.
Other
points of interest
On
Electric Avenue where the railroad tracks used to run,
there is the Red Car Museum [1]
which features a restored Pacific
Electric Railway Red Car. The Red Car trolley tracks
once passed through Seal Beach going south to the Balboa
Peninsula in Newport
Beach. Going north into Long Beach you could then
take the Red Cars through much of Los Angeles County.
Seal
Beach is also home to the Bay
Theatre, a popular venue for independent film and
revival screenings.
The
Seal Beach National
Wildlife Refuge is located on part of the Naval
Weapons Station Seal Beach. Much of the refuge's 911 acres
(3.69 km2) is the remnant of the saltwater
marsh in the Anaheim Bay estuary
(the rest of the marsh became the bayside community of
Huntington Harbour, which is part of Huntington Beach).
Three endangered species, the light-footed Clapper
Rail, the California
Least Tern, and the Belding's Savannah
Sparrow, can be found nesting in the refuge. With
the loss and degradation of coastal wetlands in California,
the remaining habitat, including the Bolsa
Chica Ecological Reserve in Huntington Beach and Upper
Newport Bay in Newport
Beach, has become much more important for migrating
and wintering shorebirds, waterfowl, and seabirds. Although
the refuge is a great place for birdwatching, because
it is part of the weapons station, access is limited and
usually restricted to once-a-month tours.
Recreation
Seal
Beach on a crowded summer afternoon
The
second longest wooden pier in California
(the longest is in Oceanside)
is located in Seal Beach and is used for fishing
and sightseeing.
There is also a restaurant (Ruby's) at the end of the
pier. The pier has periodically suffered severe damage
due to storms and other mishaps, requiring extensive reconstruction.
A plaque at the pier's entrance memorializes Federal Emergency
Administration of Public Works, 1938, Project No. Calif.
1723-F, a rebuilding necessitated by storms in 1935. Another
plaque honors the individuals, businesses, and groups
who helped rebuild the pier after a storm on March
2, 1983, tore away several sections. Most prominent
was a "Save the Pier" group formed in response to an initial
vote by the City Council not to repair the pier. The ensuing
outcry of dismay among residents caused the City Council
to reverse its stance while claiming the city lacked the
necessary funds. Residents mobilized and eventually raised
$2.3 million from private and public donors to rebuild
the pier.
Surfing
locations in Seal Beach include the Seal Beach pier and
"Stingray Bay" (or Ray Bay—the
surfer's nickname for the mouth of the San
Gabriel River—the stingrays are attracted by the heated
water from several upstream powerplants).
Classic longboard builders in the area include Harbour
Surfboards established in 1959 in Seal Beach and Bruce
Jones Surfboards in Sunset Beach. The classic surf trunks
of Kanvas by Katin in
nearby Sunset Beach are world famous.
The
USA Water Polo National Aquatic Center, where the
men's and women's US Olympic water polo teams train, is
located on the US Military Joint Forces Training Base
in Los Alamitos, adjacent to Seal Beach. The facility
is also used for major water polo
tournaments, swim classes, and swim teams.
A
marina for recreational craft operated by the City of
Long Beach is adjacent to Seal Beach.
Government
The
city is administered under a council-manager form of government,
and is governed by a five-member city council serving
four-year alternating terms.
In
the state legislature
Seal Beach is located in the 35th Senate
District, represented by Republican
Tom Harman, and in the 67th
Assembly District,
represented by Republican Jim Silva.
Federally, Seal Beach is located in California's
46th congressional district, which has a Cook
PVI of R +6 and is represented by Republican Dana
Rohrabacher.
Education
Seal
Beach is currently under the Los Alamitos School District.
Younger students (K-5) go to McGaugh Elementary School
or Hopkinson Elementary School. Students in grades 6-8
attend either Oak Middle School or McAuliffe Middle School.
High school students go to Los
Alamitos High School. Until 2000, the Orange
County High School of the Arts was part of Los Alamitos
High School. In 2000, the school district suffered a major
blow when the community lost the Orange County High School
of the Arts to Santa Ana, where it is now located.
Media
In
the 2001 film American Pie
2, the beach town the gang drives through is Main
Street in Seal Beach. The same street was used for the
1967 motorcycle-gang film The
Born Losers which introduced the Billy
Jack character.
The
short-lived afternoon television
soap opera, "Sunset
Beach", was named after the unincorporated community
of Sunset Beach
just south of Seal Beach. All the still house shots were
of houses in Seal Beach. They also filmed almost all of
the beach scenes in Seal Beach.
Moses
parted the "Red Sea" for Cecil
B. DeMille's 1923 version of The
Ten Commandments on the flat seashore of Seal
Beach. (Cecil B. DeMille's 1956 epic color version
with Charlton Heston as
Moses has no connection to Seal
Beach.)
The
TV show "Greek" filmed its 2nd season finale at this beach,
renaming it "Myrtle Beach".
The
episode "Summer Song" from the popular television series
"The Wonder Years" used Seal Beach and the Seal Beach
Pier for the scenes on the sand and under the pier.
Local
news and events coverage is provided by the weekly
Seal Beach Sun newspaper.
Famous
natives and residents
- Robert
August, one of the two surfers in Bruce
Brown's classic surf
flick The Endless
Summer grew up in Seal Beach.
- Juliette
Brewer actor who played Marianne
in the Little
Rascals Film and many others.
- Steve
Goodman, singer-songwriter and author of "City
of New Orleans", "A Dying Cubs Fan's Last Request"
and "You Never Even Call Me By My Name" made Seal
Beach his home from 1980 until his death in 1984.
- Jack
Haley, former NBA
player
- Bill
Henderson, film director and MTV video director[citation
needed]
- Pat
McCormick, a two-time Olympic platform
and springboard gold
medal diver (1952
& 1956).
- Clayton
Snyder actor who played Ethan
Craft in the Lizzie
McGuire TV show and film.
- Randy
Stonehill Grammy nominated singer/songwriter resides
in Seal Beach with wife Sandi
- Chad
Wackerman, Rock and
Jazz drummer who has worked with
Frank Zappa, Barbra
Streisand, James Taylor
and many others
- Bill
Ward, drummer and occasional lead vocalist of
hard rock/heavy
metal band, Black Sabbath.
Bill is also a solo artist.
- The
ska and alternative
rock band RX
Bandits were formed in Seal Beach.
External
links
ABOUT
ORANGE COUNTY
Orange
County is a county in Southern California, United States.
Its county seat is Santa Ana. According to the 2000 Census,
its population was 2,846,289, making it the second most
populous county in the state of California, and the fifth
most populous in the United States. The state of California
estimates its population as of 2007 to be 3,098,121 people,
dropping its rank to third, behind San Diego County. Thirty-four
incorporated cities are located in Orange County; the
newest is Aliso Viejo.
Unlike many other large centers of population in the United
States, Orange County uses its county name as its source
of identification whereas other places in the country
are identified by the large city that is closest to them.
This is because there is no defined center to Orange County
like there is in other areas which have one distinct large
city. Five Orange County cities have populations exceeding
170,000 while no cities in the county have populations
surpassing 360,000. Seven of these cities are among the
200 largest cities in the United States.
Orange County is also famous as a tourist destination,
as the county is home to such attractions as Disneyland
and Knott's Berry Farm, as well as sandy beaches for swimming
and surfing, yacht harbors for sailing and pleasure boating,
and extensive area devoted to parks and open space for
golf, tennis, hiking, kayaking, cycling, skateboarding,
and other outdoor recreation. It is at the center of Southern
California's Tech Coast, with Irvine being the primary
business hub.
The average price of a home in Orange County is $541,000.
Orange County is the home of a vast number of major industries
and service organizations. As an integral part of the
second largest market in America, this highly diversified
region has become a Mecca for talented individuals in
virtually every field imaginable. Indeed the colorful
pageant of human history continues to unfold here; for
perhaps in no other place on earth is there an environment
more conducive to innovative thinking, creativity and
growth than this exciting, sun bathed valley stretching
between the mountains and the sea in Orange County.
Orange County was Created March 11 1889, from part of
Los Angeles County, and, according to tradition, so named
because of the flourishing orange culture. Orange, however,
was and is a commonplace name in the United States, used
originally in honor of the Prince of Orange, son-in-law
of King George II of England.
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Incorporated:
March 11, 1889
Legislative Districts:
* Congressional: 38th-40th, 42nd & 43
* California Senate: 31st-33rd, 35th & 37
* California Assembly: 58th, 64th, 67th, 69th, 72nd
& 74
County Seat: Santa Ana
County Information:
Robert E. Thomas Hall of Administration
10 Civic Center Plaza, 3rd Floor, Santa Ana 92701
Telephone: (714)834-2345 Fax: (714)834-3098
County Government Website: http://www.oc.ca.gov |
CITIES OF ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA:
City
of Aliso Viejo, 92653, 92656, 92698
City of Anaheim,
92801, 92802, 92803, 92804, 92805, 92806, 92807,
92808, 92809, 92812, 92814, 92815, 92816, 92817,
92825, 92850, 92899
City of Brea,
92821, 92822, 92823
City of Buena
Park, 90620, 90621, 90622, 90623, 90624
City of
Costa Mesa, 92626, 92627, 92628
City of Cypress,
90630
City of Dana
Point, 92624, 92629
City of
Fountain Valley, 92708, 92728
City of
Fullerton, 92831, 92832, 92833, 92834, 92835,
92836, 92837, 92838
City
of Garden Grove, 92840, 92841, 92842, 92843,
92844, 92845, 92846
City
of Huntington Beach, 92605, 92615, 92646, 92647,
92648, 92649
City of Irvine,
92602, 92603, 92604, 92606, 92612, 92614, 92616,
92618, 92619, 92620, 92623, 92650, 92697, 92709,
92710
City of
La Habra, 90631, 90632, 90633
City of
La Palma, 90623
City of
Laguna Beach, 92607, 92637, 92651, 92652, 92653,
92654, 92656, 92677, 92698
City
of Laguna Hills, 92637, 92653, 92654, 92656
City
of Laguna Niguel, 92607, 92677
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City
of Laguna Woods, 92653, 92654
City of
Lake Forest, 92609, 92630, 92610
City
of Los Alamitos, 90720, 90721
City of
Mission Viejo, 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92694
City
of Newport Beach, 92657, 92658, 92659, 92660,
92661, 92662, 92663
City of Orange,
92856, 92857, 92859, 92861, 92862, 92863, 92864,
92865, 92866, 92867, 92868, 92869
City of Placentia,
92870, 92871
City of Rancho
Santa Margarita, 92688, 92679
City of San Clemente,
92672, 92673, 92674
City
of San Juan Capistrano, 92675, 92690, 92691,
92692, 92693, 92694
City of
Santa Ana, 92701, 92702, 92703, 92704, 92705,
92706, 92707, 92708, 92711, 92712, 92725, 92728,
92735, 92799
City of
Seal Beach, 90740
City of Stanton,
90680
City of Tustin,
92780, 92781, 92782
City of Villa
Park, 92861, 92867
City
of Westminster, 92683, 92684, 92685
City
of Yorba Linda, 92885, 92886, 92887
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Noteworthy
communities Some of the communities that exist within
city limits are listed below:
* Anaheim Hills, Anaheim * Balboa Island, Newport
Beach * Corona del Mar, Newport Beach * Crystal
Cove / Pelican Hill, Newport Beach * Capistrano
Beach, Dana Point * El Modena, Orange * French Park,
Santa Ana * Floral Park, Santa Ana * Foothill Ranch,
Lake Forest * Monarch Beach, Dana Point * Nellie
Gail, Laguna Hills * Northwood, Irvine * Woodbridge,
Irvine * Newport Coast, Newport Beach * Olive, Orange
* Portola Hills, Lake Forest * San Joaquin Hills,
Laguna Niguel * San Joaquin Hills, Newport Beach
* Santa Ana Heights, Newport Beach * Tustin Ranch,
Tustin * Talega, San Clemente * West Garden Grove,
Garden Grove * Yorba Hills, Yorba Linda * Mesa Verde,
Costa Mesa
Unincorporated communities These communities
are outside of the city limits in unincorporated
county territory: * Coto de Caza * El Modena
* Ladera Ranch * Las Flores * Midway City * Orange
Park Acres * Rossmoor * Silverado Canyon * Sunset
Beach * Surfside * Trabuco Canyon * Tustin Foothills
Adjacent counties to Orange County Are: *
Los Angeles County, California - north, west * San
Bernardino County, California - northeast * Riverside
County, California - east * San Diego County, California
- southeast
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