Walnut Grove | |
---|---|
![]() Walnut Grove Japanese-American Historic Commercial District | |
![]() Location inSacramento County and the state ofCalifornia | |
Coordinates:38°14′37″N121°30′44″W / 38.24361°N 121.51222°W /38.24361; -121.51222 | |
Country | ![]() |
State | ![]() |
County | Sacramento |
Area | |
• Total | 10.928 sq mi (28.30 km2) |
• Land | 10.201 sq mi (26.42 km2) |
• Water | 0.727 sq mi (1.88 km2) 6.65% |
Elevation | 10 ft (3 m) |
Population (2020) | |
• Total | 1,452[1] |
Time zone | UTC-8 (PST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-7 (PDT) |
ZIP code | 95690 |
Area code | 916, 279 |
FIPS code | 06-83374 |
GNIS feature ID | 1660121 |
Walnut Grove is acensus-designated place (CDP) inSacramento County, California, United States. Founded in 1851 by Chinese immigrants, it served as an important port between Sacramento and San Francisco.[3] It is part of theSacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville Statistical Area. The population was 1,452 at the 2020 census,[1] down from 1,542 at the 2010 census.
As one of the only remaining Chinese-American built cities in theUnited States, Walnut Grove is considered ahistorical district andNational Historic Landmark. About 40 of the original buildings still stand.[4]
Later, Japanese immigrants settled here to work on asparagus farms. The first known Japanese owned business was a noodle shop, which opened in 1896.
Walnut Grove is located at38°14′37″N121°30′44″W / 38.24361°N 121.51222°W /38.24361; -121.51222 (38.243490, −121.512100).[5]
According to theUnited States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 10.9 square miles (28 km2), of which, 10.2 square miles (26 km2) of it is land and 0.7 square miles (1.8 km2) of it (6.65%) is water.
The2010 United States Census[6] reported that Walnut Grove had a population of 1,542. The population density was 141.2 inhabitants per square mile (54.5/km2). The racial makeup of Walnut Grove was 943 (61.2%)White, 15 (1.0%)African American, 24 (1.6%)Native American, 110 (7.1%)Asian, 0 (0.0%)Pacific Islander, 402 (26.1%) fromother races, and 48 (3.1%) from two or more races.Hispanic orLatino of any race were 673 persons (43.6%).
The Census reported that 1,533 people (99.4% of the population) lived in households, 9 (0.6%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 0 (0%) were institutionalized.
As of thecensus[7] of 2000, there were 669 people, 245 households, and 159 families residing in the CDP. The population density was 214.8 inhabitants per square mile (82.9/km2). There were 282 housing units at an average density of 90.5 per square mile (34.9/km2). The racial makeup of the CDP was 49.78%White, 1.49%African American, 3.14%Native American, 21.23%Asian, 0.15%Pacific Islander, 19.13% fromother races, and 5.08% from two or more races.Hispanic orLatino of any race were 46.79% of the population.
The median income for a household in the CDP was $40,179, and the median income for a family was $39,667. Males had a median income of $41,563 versus $23,417 for females. Theper capita income for the CDP was $14,939. About 14.0% of families and 11.3% of the population were below thepoverty line, including 12.9% of those under age 18 and 3.0% of those age 65 or over.
Established in 1851 by John W. Sharp, Walnut Grove is one of the earliest Chinese American settlements along theSacramento River. Many of the original settlers were forced to Walnut Grove, after their previous homes and towns were burnt down. The city was rented to the Chinese by John Wesley Sharp.
After Sharp’s death in 1880, his heirs sold Walnut Grove to Alex Brown and his mother Agnes. Brown was a highly successful entrepreneur and a staunch supporter of the Chinese and Japanese communities in Walnut Grove. He provided financial backing to several Asian businessmen and rented land to others at reasonable rates.[8] The Brown family subsequently became heavily involved in the commercial life of the community, operating a general store, hotel, and asparagus packing house, as well as the Bank of Alex Brown.[9]
Exhausted from their previous experiences witharson, the Chinese built simple, large, and inexpensive buildings. Estimated to have cost about $800 USD each at the time.
The community was made up of residents from two different areas of Guangdong Province in southern China - Heungshan County (modern day Zhongshan) on the east side of the Pearl River and Sze Yup made up of four districts - Xinhui, Taishan, Kaiping and Enping – on the west side of the Pearl River. Besides being from different areas in China the residents also spoke different dialects and could not communicate easily with one another. Walnut Grove’s Chinese community was primarily from Heungshan and outnumbered those from Sze Yup by almost ten to one. As was common in Chinese immigrant communities in the U.S., the community in Walnut Grove organizedtongs (voluntary associations) formed around shared interests such as a home district in China, family names, and native dialects. The varioustongs provided support and protection to newly arriving Chinese immigrants and were in constant competition for influence within Walnut Grove’s Chinatown.
During the 1880 and 1890s, Chinese businessmen in Walnut Grove developed a thriving commercial and social center for the hundreds of Chinese, Japanese, and Filipino agricultural laborers who worked throughout the Delta region. Businesses operating in Chinatown included dry goods and grocery stores, restaurants, laundries, shoe stores, fish and meat markets, saloons, gambling halls, boarding houses, herbal shops, temples, and baths. Of particular importance to the Chinese communities throughout the region was Walnut Grove's Bing Kong Tong Society, a branch of the San Francisco Bing Kong Tong Society. The Society established the branch in Walnut Grove before World War I to manage labor relationships, regulate gambling, provide mail and bank services, and help laborers find work. It also sent the bones of the deceased back to China for burial and helped Chinese immigrants return to their native land. At its height, the Bing Kong Tong Society branch in Walnut Grove was the most important social organization in the region’s Chinese community with over 400 active members from throughout the Delta.[8]
Early Japanese immigrants described travel through the Sacramento Delta area as going "down river," leading the Issei to call the area around Walnut Grove, "Kawashimo." Chinese immigrants had harnessed the delta’s fertility in the 1870-80s by creating a network of levees and inland islands that controlled flooding in what had been a marshy swamp. White landowners reaped the primary benefits from this major project of land "reclamation" and dominated the local economy, along with the multiethnic population of immigrants who arrived in succession from China, Japan, East India, the Philippines and Mexico to work the fields around Walnut Grove.
Unlike other Japanese agricultural settlements, where some immigrants were able to purchase land and establish independent farms, Kawashimo remained wholly owned by a few white landholders. Issei farmers arrived in Walnut Grove after 1892 and established themselves in fruit, tomatoes, beans and asparagus production, first as itinerant contract laborers and then through tenant farming. Walnut Grove emerged as a hub for Japanese in the delta area and by the 1930s, over 100 Nikkei families farmed around Walnut Grove. Kawashimo’s Japantown had a bustling commercial area to serve their recreational and material needs, as well as community institutions such as the Buddhist and Methodist Churches, a Japanese language school, Kenjinkai (prefectural associations) and Japanese Association.
In 1915, a catastrophic fire consumed Walnut Grove's Chinatown and a portion of the smaller Japantown. Tensions between these communities led the Japanese immigrants to rebuild on adjacent blocks owned by Alex Brown, a farmer, banker and major landholder who helped amend the Alien Land Laws to maintain his profitable relationship with Japanese immigrants. Brown installed water and sewage lines and constructed seven commercial buildings offered for rent, along with additional parcels on which he encouraged Nikkei to build. Families drew numbers out of a hat to determine on which lot they would build their homes and businesses. Japanese builders and carpenters came from as far as San Francisco to lend their expertise and labor to the task of rebuilding Kawashimo's Japantown. The neighborhood still features the narrow streets lined by two-story wooden structures with overhanging balconies that the Issei created in 1915. Even the underlying property arrangements, in which Nikkei owned the house but not the underlying land, were not changed until the late 1990s.
As a rare example of a Japanese enclave designed and built by immigrants themselves, the commercial core of Walnut Grove's Japantown was designated a National Register historic district in 1990 (as was the neighboring Chinatown). The Preserving California's Japantowns volunteer survey team of Barbara Takei, Janet Sakata and Louie Watanabe made an important contribution to the existing National Register information by documenting the "backtown" area of Walnut Grove's Japantown. Just to the east across the Southern Pacific railroad tracks, "backtown's" larger blocks held many Nikkei residences, as well as a hotel, auto garages and the Buddhist Church and Japanese School building.[10]
In 1961, documentary photographerPirkle Jones did a photo essay on Walnut Grove.[11]
TheWalnut Grove Buddhist Church in theJapanese district was founded in 1926 to serve the spiritual needs of the community, with over 100 members prior to WWII. It also served as a temporary hostel to house families who had lost their homes following theirincarceration during the war.[12]
Through the 80s and 90s, church membership fell as many of the older generation died, although many local residents as well as the children and grandchildren of the original members continue to support the church through the popular annual summer Bazaar andObon, providing much needed income to the church coffers.[12]
Chan Tin-San is commonly credited as the earliest resident ofLocke, California. He was the first Chinese person to construct a building on the Locke brothers' property, where he realized the business potential of the Southern Pacific wharf and warehouse. After the October 1915 fire which destroyed the Walnut Grove Chinatown, a number of Chung-San District people moved to the area and Locke was officially established.[13]
Lee Bing, the leader of the group, financed nine of the buildings. Locke is one of the few towns in the United States built entirely by Chinese. Known as the city "built by the Chinese, for the Chinese." It was built in 1915 and burned down twice. Locke was a bustling place with gambling houses, merchant stores and a movie house all owned by the Chinese. Some of the original buildings are still standing.
Walnut Grove's location has made it the site of a rare collection of very tall radio and television transmission towers. The first major tower here was theKXTV/KOVR/KCRA Tower built in 1962, which dominated the skyline for over twenty years with its 1,548-foot height. In 1985 the old tower was joined by taller structures. The guyedKXTV/KOVR Tower is, with a height of 2,048 feet, one of the tallest constructions in the world. Two other guyed towers of similar height are the 1,996-foot-high Channel 40 Tower (KTXL), and the 2,000-foot-highHearst-Argyle Tower. Towers sited here at the natural corner of theCalifornia Central Valley haveline of sight coverage of flat valley floor for over 60 miles (100 kilometers) to the north and to the south-southeast, and quite good coverage into theSierra foothills and mountains across the valley to the northeast and east. However, these towers and their guy-wires are a significant hazard to aircraft, which can otherwise freely cross most of the Central Valley at 656 feet of altitude.[citation needed]
In theCalifornia State Legislature, Walnut Grove is inthe 3rd senatorial district, represented byDemocrat Christopher Cabaldon, and inthe 9th Assembly district, represented byRepublican Heath Flora.[20]
In theUnited States House of Representatives, Walnut Grove is inCalifornia's 7th congressional district, represented byDemocrat Doris Matsui.[21]
InSons of Anarchy, season 4/episode 10, "Hands",Jax Teller andTara Knowles' family outing at Walnut Grove Park with their sons is cut short, and Tara's plan to attend a surgical conference in Providence, Oregon, at a hospital she plans to transfer to, is foiled whenhit men hired byClay Morrow abduct Tara from the park and severely wound her.[22]