El Cerrito was founded byrefugees from the1906 San Francisco earthquake. They settled in what was then DonVíctor Castro'sRancho San Pablo, adjacent to the ranch owned by the family ofLuís María Peralta, theRancho San Antonio.[9] A post office opened at the settlement in 1909 and the refugee camp became known as Rust, after Wilhelm F. Rust, its first postmaster.[10][11] The village's residents did not care for the name and changed it to El Cerrito (meaning "little hill" or "knoll") in 1916, in reference to nearbyAlbany Hill.[10][12][13] A year later, El Cerrito was incorporated as a village with 1,500 residents.[9]
El Cerrito was incorporated in August 1917. The communities of Stege Junction, Rust, Schmidtville, and Schindler were all included in the new city.[14][15][16][17] The 1920 census shows that the Schmidtville community had many Italian immigrants.[18] A post office operated at Schmidtville from 1900 to 1901.[10]
According to theUnited States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 3.7 square miles (9.6 km2), all of it land. The city ranges in elevation from 20 to 934 feet, with an average elevation of 69 feet (21 m).[11]
El Cerrito is located on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay in the extreme southwest corner of Contra Costa County. The hilly areas of El Cerrito provide views ofSan Francisco and of theGolden Gate Bridge. El Cerrito is located along Interstate 80 and is near Interstate 580. It is bordered byAlbany andKensington to the south, theRichmond annex to the west,East Richmond Heights to the north, andWildcat Canyon Regional Park to the east.
The namesake of El Cerrito ("the little hill" in Spanish), local landmarkAlbany Hill, is not located in El Cerrito itself but just across the border in the municipality of Albany.[12][13] TheHayward Fault runs through El Cerrito. El Cerrito is within 490 feet (150 meters) ofBerkeley to the southeast, and is approximately 5 miles (8.0 km) from theUniversity of CaliforniaBerkeleycampus.
The census reported that 99.5% of the population lived in households, 0.4% lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 0.1% were institutionalized.
There were 10,483 households, out of which 29.0% included children under the age of 18, 50.1% were married-couple households, 6.9% werecohabiting couple households, 26.3% had a female householder with no partner present, and 16.8% had a male householder with no partner present. 25.3% of households were one person, and 13.2% were one person aged 65 or older. The average household size was 2.47. There were 6,798families (64.8% of all households).
The age distribution was 17.9% under the age of 18, 5.8% aged 18 to 24, 29.7% aged 25 to 44, 26.3% aged 45 to 64, and 20.4% who were 65years of age or older. The median age was 42.6years. For every 100 females, there were 94.5 males.
There were 10,996 housing units at an average density of 2,994.6 units per square mile (1,156.2 units/km2), of which 10,483 (95.3%) were occupied. Of these, 58.4% were owner-occupied, and 41.6% were occupied by renters.[20][21]
English was the sole home language of 70.47% of the population; other languages spoken by residents were Spanish (6.26%), Chinese (not specified, 5.96%), Japanese (2.70%), Mandarin (1.80%), Cantonese (1.57%),Persian (1.43%), Tagalog (1.30%), Korean (1.08%), French (0.90%), German (0.83%), Formosan (0.73%), Italian (0.66%), Vietnamese (0.57%), Urdu (0.50%), and 3.23% of people spoke other home languages.[22]
In 2023, the US Census Bureau estimated the median household income was $127,475, and theper capita income was $72,937. About 4.8% of families and 7.5% of the population were below the poverty line.[23]
San Pablo Avenue stretches the length of El Cerrito and is the primary commercial and retail corridor of the city, though there is a segment in which the businesses on the west side of the avenue are actually inRichmond Annex but have an El Cerrito postal address.
El Cerrito is home toEl Cerrito Plaza, a large,regional mall, served by public transit at the adjacentEl Cerrito Plaza station. The shopping center is surrounded by other commercial and retail businesses along San Pablo Avenue and Fairmount Avenue, including theCerrito Theater, a restored two-screen movie theater.
As of the last quarter of 2023, the top 25 sales tax producers in El Cerrito are: Barnes & Noble, Chevron, CVS Pharmacy, El Cerrito Honda, Exxon, Harbor Freight Tools, Ifshin Violins, Jack in the Box, JoAnn Fabrics & Crafts, Lucky Supermarket, Marshalls, McDonald’s, Nug, O’Reilly Auto Parts, Pastime Hardware, Pet Food Express, Petco, Petvet Petfood, Ross, Safeway, STIIIZY El Cerrito, T Mobile, Trader Joe’s, Verizon Wireless, and Walgreens.[24]
El Cerrito city parks include both recreation/sports parks as well as undeveloped nature areas. Most notable are the 80-acre (320,000 m2) Hillside Natural Area open space, Huber Park (Terrace Drive), Cerrito Vista Park (Moeser Lane and Pomona Avenue), Arlington Park (Arlington Boulevard), Tassajara Park (Tassajara Avenue and Barrett Avenue), Poinsett Park (Poinsett Avenue), and the Canyon Trail Park and Art Center (Gatto Avenue).
The city is home to a 2.6-mile (4.2 km) segment of theOhlone Greenway (named after the Native AmericanOhlone people), a trail that runs the length of the City along a former railroad grade underneath the BART right-of-way that is popular with walkers, runners, and bicyclists, as well as the blind, deaf, and mute population.[citation needed]
The City of El Cerrito is a Charter City that incorporated as a General Law City on August 23, 1917, and just over one hundred years later became a Charter City. The city is organized as a Council-Manager form of local municipal government, and its City Charter was adopted by the voters in November 2018. The City Council consists of five members elected at large for four-year, overlapping terms. The Council selects the Mayor for a one-year term from among its members. The Mayor and City Council provide community leadership, develop policies to guide the City in delivering services and achieving community goals, and encourage citizen understanding and involvement. The Council Members also serve as the governing body of the El Cerrito Employees’ Pension Board and the El Cerrito Public Financing Authority.
The City provides police and fire services as well as recreation, streets and roads, recycling, economic development, public improvements, building, planning and zoning, and general administrative services. Residents are provided water by East Bay Municipal Utility District and sewer services through Stege Sanitary District. PG&E provides gas and electricity services, and in addition the city is a member of MCE, a public, not-for-profit electricity provider that gives all PG&E electric customers the choice of having 60% to 100% of their electricity supplied from clean, renewable sources. Library services are provided by the County of Contra Costa. The City contracts with East Bay Sanitary for garbage and green waste collection service through a franchise agreement. Comcast, AT&T, and a host of smaller companies provide telecommunication services.
El Cerrito is in theWest Contra Costa Unified School District, a multi-city district that operates three elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school in the city:
Fairmont Elementary School
Harding Elementary School
Madera Elementary School
Fred T. Korematsu Middle School (opened in 2015 at the site of the former Castro Elementary School, replacing Portola Middle School which was deemed seismically unsafe)
TheOhlone Greenway is part of a regional north–south active transportation route, and is a popular path for bike commuters and recreational cyclists and pedestrians.
El Cerrito is mentioned in the bookttfn byLauren Myracle. Character Angela finds out the family is moving to El Cerrito.[26]
El Cerrito, referred to as "Old El Cerrito", is mentioned in the bookStar Trek: The Kobayashi Maru by author Julia Ecklar. While attending Star Fleet Academy in San Francisco, Cadet James T. Kirk, on failing theKobayashi Maru test for the second time, travels to the World Library annex in Old El Cerrito in hopes of finding a solution to the test.
El Cerrito is mentioned in the song "Golden Gate Fields" byRancid.
Metallica wroteRide the Lightning andMaster of Puppets in a small house in El Cerrito where the band lived for a while. Cliff Burton joined the band only if Metallica would agree to move to El Cerrito.
Game Theory's 1988 song "You Drive" mentions El Cerrito in the first line.
^abcDurham, David L. (1998).California's Geographic Names: A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State. Clovis, California: Word Dancer Press. p. 628.ISBN1-884995-14-4.