Orange County coastal real estate in Corona del Mar, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and Newport Coast
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Orange County, California

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County of Orange, California
[[Image:{{{image_skyline}}}|250px|none|Skyline of County of Orange, California]]
Official flag of County of Orange, California
Flag
Official seal of County of Orange, California
Seal
Official website: http://www.oc.ca.gov/
Location

Location of County of Orange, California
Location of Orange County within California.

Government
Country
  State
United States
  California
Board of Supervisors

     District One
     District Two
     District Three
     District Four
     District Five


     Lou Correa
     Jim Silva
     Bill Campbell
     Chris Norby
     Thomas Wilson

Formed March 11, 1889
County seat Santa Ana
Geographical characteristics
Area 2,455 km²
Land 2,045 km²
Water 411 km²
Population {{{population_note}}}
Total (2000) 2,846,289
Density 1,392/km²
Latitude {{{latitude}}}
Longitude {{{longitude}}}
Time zone Pacific (UTC-8)
Summer (DST) Pacific (UTC-7)

Orange County is a county in the southern part of the U.S. state of California. Its county seat is Santa Ana. With a population of 3,056,865 (2005 estimate [1]), it is the second most populous county in the state of California and the fifth most populous in the United States. The county is known for its wealth and political conservatism, although it is in reality neither as uniformly wealthy nor as politically conservative as its stereotypical image suggests. It is also famous as a tourist destination, as the county is home to Disneyland, Knott's Berry Farm, and miles of sandy beaches. It is at the center of Southern California's Tech Coast.

Contents

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 2,455 km² (948 mi²), making it the smallest county in Southern California. Surface water accounts for 411 km² (159 mi²) of the area, 16.73% of the total; 2,045 km² (789 mi²) of it is land.

Orange County is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean, on the north by Los Angeles County, on the northeast by San Bernardino County, on the east by Riverside County, and on the south by San Diego County.

The northern part of the county lies on the coastal plain of the Los Angeles Basin, while the southern half lies on the foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains. Most of Orange County's population resides in one of two shallow coastal valleys that lie in the basin, the Santa Ana Valley and the Saddleback Valley. The coastal plain gently rises into the Santa Ana Mountains, which lie within the boundaries of the county and of the Cleveland National Forest. The high point is Santiago Peak (5,687 ft/1,733 m), about 20 mi (32 km) east of Santa Ana. Santiago Peak and nearby Modjeska Peak, just 200 feet shorter, form a ridge known as Saddleback, visible from almost everywhere in the county.

The Santa Ana River is the county's principal watercourse. Its major tributary running through the county is Santiago Creek. Other watercourses within the county include Aliso Creek, San Juan Creek, and Horsethief Creek. The San Gabriel River also briefly crosses into Orange County and exits into the Pacific on the Los Angeles-Orange County line between Long Beach and Seal Beach. Laguna Beach is home to the county's only natural lakes, Laguna Lakes, which are formed by water rising up against an underground fault.

The cities of Orange County are connected by a network of freeways, which residents typically call by their route number rather than their formal name (i.e., "The Fifty-five" instead of "The Costa Mesa Freeway"). One of the most important Orange County roadways is the Santa Ana Freeway, or Interstate 5, which runs North-South bisecting the length of the county. It merges with another key north-south road, the San Diego Freeway (Interstate 405) in Irvine. The 5 and 405 freeways meet at the "El Toro Y," one of the busiest interchanges in the U.S. Another notoriously busy interchange is the Orange Crush, where the 5, 22, and 57 meet.

Residents often divide the county into "North County" and "South County", as opposed to an East-West division characterized by coastal and inland cities. There is no formal geographical division of North and South County, though a North-South border may be drawn somewhere along the Tustin-Irvine and Costa Mesa-Newport Beach city boundaries, or along the boundary between the 714 and 949 area codes. Orange County is part of the five-county Greater Los Angeles area.

Adjacent Counties

History

Members of the Tongva and Juaneño/Luiseño nations long inhabited the area. After the 1769 expedition of Gaspar de Portolà, a Spanish expedition led by Junipero Serra named the area Vallejo de Santa Ana (Valley of Saint Anne). On November 1, 1776, Mission San Juan Capistrano became the first permanent European settlement.

A severe drought in the 1860s devastated the prevailing industry, cattle ranching, and much land came into the possession of Richard O'Neill, Sr., James Irvine and other land barons. In 1887, silver was discovered in the Santa Ana mountains, attracting settlers via the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific Railroads. This growth led the California legislature to divide Los Angeles County and create Orange County as a separate political entity on March 11, 1889. It was named for its most famous product, but other citrus crops, avocados, and oil extraction were also important to the early economy.

Orange County benefited from the July 4, 1904 completion of the Pacific Electric Railway, a trolley connecting Los Angeles with Newport Beach and Santa Ana. The link made Orange County an accessible weekend retreat for celebrities of early Hollywood. It was deemed so significant that the city of Pacific City changed its name to Huntington Beach in honor of Henry Huntington, president of the Pacific Electric and nephew of robber baron Collis Huntington. Transportation further improved with the completion of the State Route and U.S. Route 101 (now mostly Interstate 5) in the 1920s.

Agriculture, such as the boysenberry which was made famous by Buena Park native Walter Knott, began to decline after World War II but the county's prosperity soared. The completion of Interstate 5 in 1954 helped make Orange County a bedroom community for many who moved to Southern California to work in aerospace and manufacturing. Orange County received a further boost in 1955 with the opening of Disneyland.

In 1969, Yorba Linda-born Orange County native Richard Nixon became the 37th President of the United States.

In the 1980s, the population topped 2 million for the first time. Orange County had become the second largest county in California.

A spectacular investment fund melt-down in 1994 led to the criminal prosecution of Orange County treasurer Robert Citron. On December 6, 1994, Orange County declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy, from which it emerged in June 1995; this was the largest ever municipal bankruptcy in the U.S. The county lost about $1.6 billion through high-risk investments in derivatives.

In recent years, the county has been characterized by conflict between the older northern and newer southern cities over development, the building of new toll roads, and a recently defeated proposal to build an international airport at the former El Toro Marine Corps Air Station to supplement the crowded John Wayne Airport.

Orange County, California is a famous suburban area.
Enlarge
Orange County, California is a famous suburban area.

Demographics

Orange County
Population by year


1890 13,589
1900 19,696
1910 34,436
1920 61,375
1930 118,674
1940 130,760
1950 216,224
1960 703,925
1970 1,421,233
1980 1,932,709
1990 2,410,556
2000 2,846,289

As of the census² of 2000, there were 2,846,289 people, 935,287 households, and 667,794 families residing in the county, making Orange County the second most populous county in California. The population density was 1,392/km² (3,606/mi²). There were 969,484 housing units at an average density of 474/km² (1,228/mi²). The racial makeup of the county was 64.81% White, 1.67% African American, 13.59% Asian, 0.70% Native American, 0.31% Pacific Islander, 14.80% from other races, and 4.12% from two or more races. 30.76% are Hispanic or Latino of any race.

In 1990, still according to the census² there were 2,410,556 people residing in the county. The racial makeup of the county was 64.49% White, not of Hispanic origins, 23.43% Hispanic or Latino, 9.99% Asian, 1.62% African American, 0.36% Native American, and 0.11% of some other race.

There were 935,287 households out of which 37.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 55.9% were married couples living together, 10.7% had a female householder with no husband present, and 28.6% were non-families. 21.1% of all households were made up of individuals and 7.2% 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 3.48.

The population is diverse age-wise, with 27.0% under the age of 18, 9.4% from 18 to 24, 33.2% from 25 to 44, 20.6% from 45 to 64, and 9.9% 65 years of age or older. The median age is 33 years. For every 100 females there were 99.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 96.7 males.

The median income for a household in the county was $58,820, and the median income for a family was $64,611. Males had a median income of $45,059 versus $34,026 for females. The per capita income for the county was $25,826. About 7.0% of families and 10.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 13.2% of those under age 18 and 6.2% of those age 65 or over.

Education

Orange County is home to several colleges and universities, including:

Its county department of education also oversees 28 school districts.

Further information: List of school districts in Orange County, California

Points of interest

The area's warm Mediterranean climate and 42 miles of year-round beaches attract millions of tourists annually. Huntington Beach is a hot spot for sunbathing and surfing; nicknamed "Surf City, U.S.A.", it is home to many surfing competitions. Other tourist destinations include the theme parks Disneyland and Disney's California Adventure in Anaheim and Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park. The Anaheim Convention Center is the largest such facility on the West Coast. The old town area in the City of Orange (the traffic circle at the middle of Chapman Ave. at Glassell) still maintains its 1950's image, and appeared in "That Thing You Do!" Little Saigon is another notable tourist destination, being home to the largest concentration of Vietnamese people outside of Vietnam. There is also a sizeable Korean community, particularly in western Orange County.

Notable structures include the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, the largest house of worship in California; the historic Balboa Pavilion [2] in Newport Beach; the Huntington Beach Pier; and the restored Mission San Juan Capistrano.

Some of the most exclusive (and expensive) neighborhoods in the U.S. are located here, many along the Orange County Coast. Large shopping malls exist throughout the county, such as the Irvine Spectrum Center, South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa, Fashion Island in Newport Beach, and The Block at Orange.

Historical points of interest include Mission San Juan Capistrano (destination of migrating swallows), and the Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace (the only privately-controlled presidential library in the nation since the government began constructing these libraries in 1939) in Yorba Linda. The Nixon Home is a National Historic Landmark, as is the home of a very different character, Madam Helena Modjeska, in Modjeska Canyon on Santiago Creek.

The Anaheim Angels won the World Series in 2002. The county's National Hockey League team, the Anaheim Ducks, lost the 2003 Stanley Cup finals after winning three games in a seven-game series. NFL football left the county when the Los Angeles Rams relocated to St. Louis in 1995, but Anaheim city leaders are currently in talks with the NFL to bring a Los Angeles-area franchise to Orange County. The county is also the home of the Orange County Buzz basketball team of the American Basketball Association (ABA) In November 2006, the NBA Development League brings an L.A. Clippers-affiliated team to play the 2006-2007 season at the Arena at the Anaheim Convention Center.

Government

Orange County is a general law county of California; its seat is Santa Ana. Its legislative and executive authority is vested in a five-member Board of Supervisors. Each Supervisor is popularly elected from a regional district, and together the board oversees the activities of the county's agencies and departments and sets policy on development, public improvements, and county services. At the beginning of each year the Supervisors select a Chairman and Vice-Chairman, but the administration is headed by a professional municipal manager, the County Executive.

Seven other public officials are elected at-large: the County Assessor, Auditor-Controller, Clerk-Recorder, District Attorney, Sheriff-Coroner, Treasurer-Tax Collector and Public Administrator.

Politics

Presidential elections results
Year GOP Dems
2004 59.7% 641,832 39.0% 419,239
2000 55.8% 541,299 40.4% 391,819
1996 51.7% 446,717 37.9% 327,485
1992 43.9% 426,613 31.6% 306,930
1988 67.7% 586,230 31.1% 269,013
1984 74.7% 635,013 24.3% 206,272
1980 67.9% 529,797 22.6% 176,704
1976 62.2% 408,632 35.3% 232,246
1972 68.3% 448,291 26.9% 176,847
1968 63.1% 314,905 29.9% 148,869
1964 55.9% 224,196 44.0% 176,539
1960 60.8% 174,891 38.9% 112,007
1956 67.4% 113,510 32.6% 54,895
1952 70.4% 77,548 29.6% 32,530

Orange County has long been known as a Republican stronghold and has consistently sent Republican representatives to the state and federal legislatures. Republican majorities in Orange County helped deliver California's electoral votes to Republican presidential candidates Richard Nixon (1960 and 1968), Gerald Ford (1976), Ronald Reagan in (1980 and 1984) and George H. W. Bush in (1988). Orange County has not voted for a Democratic presidential candidate since Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1936 landslide re-election. Although Democrats have made inroads in the northern end of the county since the mid-1980s, Orange County politics are still dominated by Republicans. Five of the County's six U.S. Representatives, four of its five State Senators and seven of its nine State Assembly members are Republicans, as are four of the five members of the County Board of Supervisors.

According to the California Secretary of State, as of September 2003 Orange County had 1,349,988 registered voters. Of these registered voters, 48.59% are registered Republican, 31.18% are registered Democrat, 16.07% declined to state, and the remaining 4.16% are registered with minor political parties.

Orange County produced such notable Republicans as President Richard Nixon (born in Yorba Linda and lived in San Clemente), U.S. Senator John F. Seymour (previously mayor of Anaheim), U.S. Senator Thomas Kuchel (of Anaheim), U.S. Rep. James B. Utt (of Santa Ana), U.S. Rep. Robert Badham (of Newport Beach), U.S. Rep. William E. Dannemeyer (of Fullerton). Former U.S. Rep. Chris Cox (of Newport Beach) is currently chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The county has produced relatively few prominent Republicans in state government, although in 1996 Curt Pringle (currently mayor of Anaheim) became the first Republican-elected Speaker of the California Assembly in decades.

Since the 1990s, the growth of the Hispanic population has softened Orange County's political conservatism. In the landmark 1996 election, Democrat Loretta Sanchez defeated veteran Republican Robert K. Dornan, and has held the seat ever since. Republicans have responded by making more explicit efforts to court the Hispanic vote. As more immigrants and Democrats settle in Orange County, there are signs that the longtime Republican dominance is beginning to falter. Democrats such as U.S. senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, Governor Gray Davis, and Democratic presidential candidates, have fared better in the Orange County recently. In 2004, George W. Bush captured 60% of the county's vote, up from 56% in 2000, despite a higher Democratic popular vote compared with the 2000 election. Although Barbara Boxer won statewide, and did better in Orange County than she did in 1998, she lost to Republican Bill Jones, 43% to 51%. The 39% that John Kerry received is higher than the percentage Bill Clinton won in both 1992 and 1996, however, the percentage of the vote George W. Bush received in 2004 (60% of the vote) is higher than any presidential election since 1988, showing a still-strong GOP presence in the county. Democrats get strong showings in three cities: Santa Ana, the county seat, Laguna Woods, a retirement community, and Laguna Beach, with its large gay and lesbian population and socially liberal residents. The rest of the county still leans Republican, including Anaheim and Newport Beach.

The county features prominently in the book Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right by Lisa McGirr. She argues that the County's rightward orientation in the 20th century owed much to its settlement by Midwestern transplants, who reacted strongly to communist sympathies and the turmoil of the 1960s in nearby Los Angeles—across the "Orange Curtain."

Transportation

Transportation in Orange County is offered primarily by the Orange County Transportation Authority, or OCTA, which was named America's #1 Transportation System in 2005, by the American Public Transportation Association. OCTA not only manages the extensive bus network crisscrossing the county, but also funds the construction and maintenance of local streets, highways, and freeways, operates a coordinated taxicab system, maintains express toll lanes through the median of the notoriously congested Riverside Freeway (SR/CA-91), and works with Southern California's Metrolink to provide commuter rail service along three lines - the Orange County Line, the 91 Line, and the Inland Empire-Orange County Line.

OCTA's bus network, which maintains 6,542 stops on 77 lines running along virtually all major streets, generates 210,000 boardings a day. OCTA's 817 buses are being gradually replaced by Liquefied Natural Gas-powered vehicles, currently comprising over 40% of the fleet. OCTA also planned to initiate local light rail service along the most heavily-congested bus routes, and along former railroad rights of way. Plans for such a system, however, were scrapped in favor of increased bus and road improvements in 2005.

Starting in 1992, Metrolink has operated commuter rail lines through Orange County. as of 1998, three lines through the area, added more stops, are still planning on adding yet more stops and service, and has also maintained Rail-to-Rail service with parallel Amtrak service. Together, the Orange County Line, the 91 Line and the Inland Empire-Orange County Line, along with Metrolink riders on parallel Amtrak lines, generate over 12,000 boardings on a typical weekday. On weekdays, 40 trains run along these three lines; Metrolink does not run on weekends. New stations have recently opened at Anaheim Canyon, Tustin, and Laguna Niguel, while Yorba Linda and Buena Park stations are proposed for future construction.

The major interstate highways of Orange County, all of which are to some extent north-south arteries, include the Santa Ana Freeway (I-5), the San Diego Freeway (I-405 and I-5 south of Irvine), and the San Gabriel River Freeway (I-605), which only briefly enters Orange County territory. The other freeways in the county are state highways, and include the perpetually congested Riverside and Artesia Freeways (CA/SR-91) and Garden Grove Freeway (CA/SR-22) running east-west, and the Orange Freeway (CA/SR-57), Costa Mesa Freeway (SR/CA-55), Laguna Freeway (CA/SR-133), San Joaquin Transportation Corridor (CA/SR-73), Eastern Transportation Corridor (CA/SR-261, CA/SR-133, and CA/SR-241), and Foothill Transportation Corridor (CA/SR-241) running north-south. Minor stub freeways include the Richard M. Nixon Freeway (CA/SR-90), also known as Imperial Highway, and the southern terminus of Pacific Coast Highway (CA/SR-1).

The three transportation corridors, typically referred to as "the toll road" or by their number designations ("the 73", "the 133", "the 261", and "the 241") were constructed by a joint authority (the Transportation Corridor Agencies or TCA) in the 1990s. These toll roads were built to connect existing freeways (including the currently non-tolled portions of CA/SR-73 and CA/SR-133) to new South County developments, and to serve as alternate routes for crowded Orange County freeways. Tolls can be collected in cash or with the use of transponders for prepaid accounts. The median of the Riverside Freeway (CA/SR-91) also contains toll lanes known as the Express Lanes maintained by OCTA; users must maintain prepaid accounts to drive on these lanes.

Orange County's only major airport, John Wayne-Orange County Airport (SNA), is located in unincorporated territory surrounded by the cities of Santa Ana, Costa Mesa, Irvine, and Newport Beach. Its modern Thomas F. Riley Terminal handles over 8 million passengers annually through 14 different airlines.

Orange County in literature and popular culture

Film and television

Orange County has been the setting for numerous films and television shows:

Orange County has also often been used as a shooting location for films and television programs. Examples of movies at least partially shot in Orange County are Tom Hanks's That Thing You Do the Coen Brothers's The Man Who Wasn't There and the Martin Lawrence movie Big Momma's House. All three of which were filmed in or around the historic Orange Circle in the City of Orange.

Music

Popular Ska and punk rock bands such as Avenged Sevenfold, The Dear and the Dearted, Bullets and Octane, Bleeding Through, Eighteen Visions, Atreyu, Throwdown, xRAINx, The Adolescents, Thrice, Social Distortion, D.I., Agent Orange, The Offspring, Fear, Rising Dissent, and the bands No Doubt, Stryper, Lit, O.C.Supertones, Sugar Ray, Throwdown, Rage Against the Machine, The Aquabats, Reel Big Fish, Suburban Legends, Save Ferris, Circle Jerks, Youth Brigade, Cadillac Tramps, Black Flag, Supernova, Bad Religion, The Germs, The Crowd, The Screamers, The Skulls, The Vandals, The Descendents, The Dickies, MIA, Slayer, T.S.O.L. (True Sounds of Liberty), The Weirdos and Jeffries Fan Club all hail from Orange County, as does the alt-rock band Something Corporate. Notable punk label Geykido Comet Records is also based in Orange County.

The punk scene in Orange County remains strongly influential.

Bobby Hatfield of The Righteous Brothers, The Chantays of "Pipeline" fame, Berlin, also hail from Orange County.

Literature

A number of novels by best-selling fiction and horror author Dean Koontz, a resident of Newport Beach, is set in the area.

Several of the stories in Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon's collection, A Model World, are set in Orange County. Chabon studied creative writing at UC Irvine.

Orange County is the place in which Kim Stanley Robinson's Three Californias Trilogy is set. These books depict three different futures of the Orange County (survivors of a nuclear war in The Wild Shore, a developer's dream gone mad in The Gold Coast, and an ecotopian utopia in Pacific Edge). Philip K. Dick's novel A Scanner Darkly was also set in Orange County.

The modern fantasy novel "All the Bells on Earth" by James P. Blaylock is set in Orange, a city in northern Orange County.

Sports

Orange County is home to the MLB Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and NHL Anaheim Ducks.

Orange County annually plays host to the U.S. Open of Surfing, AVP Pro Beach Volleyball and Van's World Championship of Skateboarding; all held in Huntington Beach[3].

Religion

Orange County is also the base for several significant religious organizations:

Notable residents

Main article: Notable Orange County residents

Because of Orange County's proximity to Los Angeles, the entertainment capital of the United States, many film and media celebrities have moved or bought second houses there. Actor John Wayne, who lived in Newport Beach, is the namesake for Orange County's biggest airport. Orange County has also produced many homegrown celebrities, including golfer Tiger Woods, actor Kevin Costner, comedian/actors Steve Martin and Will Ferrell, actresses Michelle Pfeiffer and Diane Keaton, and singers Bonnie Raitt, Gwen Stefani and Jeff Buckley.

The county's most famous resident was perhaps Richard Nixon, the 37th President of the United States, who was born in Yorba Linda and lived in San Clemente following his resignation.

Constituent cities and communities of OC

Incorporated cities

As of June 2006, Orange County has 34 incorporated cities. The oldest is Anaheim (1870) and the youngest is Aliso Viejo (2001). Many of the cities have notable neighborhoods, some of which are listed below.


Unincorporated communities

These communities are outside of city limits in unincorporated county territory:

See also

External links

Government

Media

Others


Orange County, California
Cities

Population over 100,000:    Santa Ana (County seat) • AnaheimCosta MesaFullertonGarden GroveHuntington BeachIrvineOrange
Population 50,000 – 100,000:    Buena ParkFountain ValleyLa HabraLaguna NiguelLake ForestMission ViejoNewport BeachTustinWestminsterYorba Linda
Population under 50,000:    Aliso ViejoBreaCypressDana PointLa PalmaLaguna BeachLaguna HillsLaguna WoodsLos AlamitosPlacentiaRancho Santa MargaritaSan ClementeSan Juan CapistranoSeal BeachStantonVilla Park

Census-designated places
Coto de CazaLas FloresRossmoorTustin Foothills

Unincorporated communities
Dove CanyonLadera RanchMidway CitySanta Ana HeightsSunset BeachTrabuco Canyon

Other neighborhoods and communities
Anaheim HillsAtwoodEl ModenaMonarch BeachOlinda

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