'San Mateo' is a city in
San Mateo County,
California, in the
San Francisco Bay Area. It is one of the larger suburbs on the
San Francisco Peninsula, located between
Burlingame to the north,
Foster City to the East, and
Belmont to the south.
History
Possibly the earliest recorded history of San Mateo is in the archives of
Mission Dolores, indicating the Spaniards in 1789 had named a
Native American village along Laurel Creek ''Los Laureles'' or the
Laurels (Mission Delores, 1789). The
Pulgas Ranch sketch map of 1835 refers to the creek as ''arroyo de los Laureles'', but by now most of the Laurels have vanished.
As noted above Coyote Point was an early recorded feature of San Mateo in 1810. Beginning in the
1850s some wealthy San Franciscans began looking for summer or permanent homes in the milder mid-peninsula. While most of this early settlement occurred in adjacent Hillsborough and Burlingame, a number of historically important mansions and buildings trickled over into San Mateo.

Hillsdale Inn, Honeymoon Suite (demolished 5 April 2001)
A.P. Giannini, founder of the
Bank of Italy (that became
Bank of America), lived here most of his life. His mansion, Seven Oaks, currently in disrepair and listed in the National Register of Historic Places (No.99001181), is located at 20 El Cerrito Drive.
The Howard Estate was built in 1859 on the hill accessed by Crystal Springs Road. The Parrott Estate was erected in 1860 in the same area, giving rise to two conflicting names for the hill, Howard Hill and Parrott Hill! After substantial use of the automobile by about 1935, neither name was commonly applied to that hill (Brown, 1975}. The Borel estate was developed near Borel Creek in 1874, with present uses being modern offices and shops; the property is still managed and owned by the Borel Estate Company.
Scholars Cottage, at 37 E. Santa Inez Avenue, was built by Ernest Coxhead in 1875 in the
Tudor Revival style. The Eugene J. De Sabla Teahouse and Tea Garden was established in 1900 at 70 De Sabla Avenue, designed by Makota hagiwara. It exists today as a garden of a later home, and it features rock art and other sculpture. San Mateo was incorporated in 1894.
"Hayward Park," the extraordinary 1880
American Queen Anne style residence of silver and banking millionaire
Alvinza Hayward (often said to be "California's first millionaire"), was built on an 800-acre estate in San Mateo. The property, which included a deer park and racetrack, was converted into a hotel after Hayward's death in 1904. It burned in a spectacular 1920 fire.
Geography

View of the San Francisco Bay from Shoreline Park
Perhaps the best-known natural area is
Coyote Point Park, a rock outcropped peninsula that juts out into
San Francisco Bay. The early Spanish navigators named it ''la punta de San Mateo'' (Brown, 1975), but cargo ships carrying grain in the bay renamed it ''Big Coyote'' (BLM, 1853). In any case sailors had a penchant for naming promontories at the edge of San Francisco Bay after the
coyote, since across the bay in Hayward are the
Coyote Hills. By the 1890s the shore area was a popular beach called San Mateo Beach, originally named by the Spanish in 1842 as ''playa de San Mateo''. Today Coyote Point is home to the
Coyote Point Museum, one of the best
natural history museums and wildlife centers in California. The
Peninsula Humane Society is also situated at Coyote Point.
San Mateo enjoys a mild
Mediterranean climate, shielded from the
Pacific Ocean by the Montara Mountain block of the
Santa Cruz Mountains. There are a variety of natural habitats present, including mixed
oak woodland,
riparian zones and bayland marshes. One
endangered species, the
California clapper rail, was sighted feeding on mudflats by the Third Avenue bridge in San Mateo (Pfeifle, 1980). The marsh areas are also likely habitat for the endangered
Salt Marsh Harvest Mouse, who enjoys the middle and high zones of salt and
brackish marshes, as well as for the endangered marsh plant,
Point Reyes bird's beak.
Sugarloaf Mountain, whose name derives from at least 1870, is a prominent landform between the forks of Laurel Creek (Brown, 1975). In recent years, this mixed oak woodland and chaparral habitat, has been a site of controversy involving proposals to develop a portion of the mountain for residential use.
San Mateo is located at (37.554286, -122.313044). According to the
United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 41.3
km² (16.0
mi²). 31.6 km² (12.2 mi²) of it is land and 9.7 km² (3.7 mi²) of it (23.43%) is water.
Demographics
As of the
census of 2000, there were 92,482 people, 37,338 households, and 22,328 families residing in the city. The
population density was 2,922.1/km² (7,569.5/mi²). There were 38,249 housing units at an average density of 1,208.5/km² (3,130.6/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 66.23%
White, 2.59%
African American, 0.48%
Native American, 15.10%
Asian, 1.64%
Pacific Islander, 8.93% from
other races, and 5.03% from two or more races. 20.52% of the population were
Hispanic.
There are 37,338 households of which 25.9% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 46.9% were
married couples living together, 9.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 40.2% were non-families. 31.6% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.44 and the average family size was 3.09. The age distribution is: 20.4% under the age of 18, 7.2% from 18 to 24, 35.1% from 25 to 44, 22.2% from 45 to 64, and 15.1% who are 65 or older. The median age is 38 years. For every 100 females there were 95.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 93.5 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $64,757, and the median income for a family was $76,223. Males had a median income of $51,280 versus $41,231 for females. The
per capita income for the city was $36,176. About 3.6% of families and 6.1% of the population were below the
poverty line, including 6.8% of those under age 18 and 5.9% of those age 65 or over.
Education
Residents are zoned for schools in the
San Mateo Union High School District.
Actress
Alicia Silverstone attended
San Mateo High School while living in nearby
Hillsborough. Other prominent students of San Mateo High School include Merv Griffin, Barry Bostwick, Kris Kristofferson and Dennis Haysbert of "
24" fame.
San Mateo is also home to
Junípero Serra High School, a private high school, whose graduates have included
Barry Bonds,
Tom Brady,
Lynn Swann,
Gregg Jefferies and
Dan Serafini.
Prominent places
The San Mateo Performing Arts Center, located on
San Mateo High School, is one of the largest theatres on the peninsula outside of San Francisco. The
College of San Mateo is also located here and is home to radio station
KCSM. A heavily attended attraction has been the
Bay Meadows horse-racing track. The
San Mateo Arboretum in is of interest.
U.S. Route 101,
Interstate 280, and
California State Highway 92 pass through San Mateo. The Japanese garden in Central Park was made in order to commemorate this event.
Prominent companies based in San Mateo
★
Fisher Investments
★
Franklin Templeton Investments
★
Keynote Systems
★
NetSuite
★
Sling Media, Inc.
★
Webcor Builders
★
Wikia, Inc.
★
Con-way
Notable People Who Are From San Mateo
★
Lina Basquette, actress
★
Barry Bostwick, American actor
★
Tom Brady, Quarterback of the
New England Patriots in the
NFL
★
Barry Bonds,
San Francisco Giants Left Fielder,
MLB, High School
★
Keith Carradine, American actor
★
Sam Francis, modern artist
★
Merv Griffin, actor, producer, and game show creator.
★
Greg Gutfeld, blogger and host of the late night talk show,
Red Eye with Greg Gutfeld
★
Matt Hader,
screenwriter
★
Dennis Haysbert
★
Patty Hearst
★
Kris Kristofferson, Songwriter, musician, actor
★
Yul Kwon, winner of
Survivor: Cook Islands.
★
Zoe Lofgren
★
Marc McClure
★
Helen J. Myers
★
Sean Payton, Head Coach of the
New Orleans Saints in the
NFL
★
Darick Robertson, comic book artist
★
Barbara Roles, figure skater
★
Neal Schon, musician (guitarist for
Santana and
Journey)
★
Lindsey Shaw, niece of
John Cale and actress (from "
Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide")
★
Paul Terry, animated film producer
★
Michael Trucco, actor
★
Diane Varsi, actress
★
John Wetteland, baseball player

Central Park, San Mateo
Sister cities
San Mateo has three
sister cities, as designated by the Sister Cities International, Inc.:
[1]
★
Varde,
Denmark
★
Toyonaka,
Japan
★
San Pablo City,
Philippines
See also
★
Aragon High School
★
The Carey School
★
Pier 1 Imports - founded 1962, in San Mateo
★
Hillsdale High School (San Mateo)
References
1. Sister Cities information obtained from the Sister Cities International, Inc. (SCI)." Retrieved on July 25, 2007.
Further reading
★ Alan K. Brown, ''Place names of San Mateo County'', San Mateo County Historical Association, published by Glen Luck, San Mateo, Ca. (1975)
★ Mission Dolores, San Francisco, ''Registers of Baptisms and Deaths'', (1789)
★ "San Mateo: A Centennial History", By Mitchell P. Postel; Scottwall Associates, Publisher, San Francisco; 1994.
ISBN 0-942087-08-9 (HBK)
★ U.S.
Bureau of Land Management BLM, FN 254-21 (1853)
External links
★
City of San Mateo website
★
San Mateo CERT (Community Emergency Response Team)
★
San Mateo Public Library
★
College of San Mateo website
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San Mateo Arboretum Society
★
San Mateo High School