San Jose
For the last scheduled local sightseeing day of 2017, I ventured beyond San Francisco to San Jose. Day trips, you see, were the future of my local sightseeing adventures. Local sightseeing in 2018 was all about visits to places in the San Francisco Bay Area. But we’ll get to that later. For today, it’s San Jose. Did you know that with a population of over 1 million, San Jose is the 10th largest city in the United States? It’s actually the largest city in the Bay Area, with 140,000 more people than San Francisco. Of course it also has almost 4 times as much land area as San Francisco, so it’s not quite as urban.
Do you know the way to San Jose? (You had to know that was coming.) I do. Or I did in 2017. If I was driving, I’d head south (well southeast actually) directly to San Jose. But to get there by public transportation, on a weekend, it’s a little more roundabout. From Downtown San Francisco, I took BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit, a regional subway) under San Francisco Bay to Oakland. From Oakland, I took a train south to Santa Clara. From there, I took a bus to south to San Jose. Well, I actually took the bus to the western outskirts of San Jose to get to my 1st destination of the day.
Winchester Mystery House
The Winchester Mystery House was built in 1886 by Sarah Winchester, widow of the son of the well known Winchester firearms company. It’s a Queen Anne style mansion. I’d maybe call it Queen Anne Deluxe. The house was built in a haphazard style, with stairs that go nowhere, steps with odd and inconsistent heights, and a 2nd-floor door that opens to the outside with nothing but a drop to the ground. 3 stories of the house were damaged beyond repair in the 1906 earthquake.
Sarah Winchester believed in spirits. Rumor has it that she believed that she would have bad luck if construction on the mansion was completed. So workmen kept adding additions till she died in 1922. She was also said to have slept in a different room every night. It’s not surprising that some consider the house to be haunted.
Winchester Mystery House is pretty much a tourist trap. But it was fun to go there nonetheless, especially after having heard about it for decades. From there, I caught a bus across San Jose to my next stop.
History Park
I was curious about San Jose’s History Park, a collection of historical buildings arranged in a small-setting. It’s mostly comprised of buildings around San Jose that were set to be demolished but were moved to this location instead. I though a lot more could have been done with the collection to make it a more interesting visit. And some of the exhibits were closed when I was there. But as always, I got some good pictures nonetheless.
As I learned on the very 1st day of San Francisco sightseeing, Bank of Italy was created in 1904 to serve Italian immigrants in North Beach and eventually grew so big that it became Bank of America. Bank of Italy pioneered branch banking when it opened the San Jose branch in 1909.
After spending some time at History Park, I was ready to move on. (I mean, even the name, History Park, is dull. They need some German museum consultants to come in and make the whole place more interesting. It definitely has potential.)
Downtown San Jose
From History Park, it was another bus ride to Downtown San Jose. I didn’t have anything specific on the itinerary. I figured I’d just bum around and take some pictures. (So unlike me!)
St. Joseph’s Cathedral
The Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph (aka San José) is the 5th incarnation of San Jose oldest church congregation. Construction was completed in 1885.
Fairmont San Jose
I was excited to see the Fairmont San Jose. It was like seeing an old friend after 13 years. I used to work for a luxury hotel company that owned, among other properties, the Fairmont San Jose as well as the original Fairmont on Nob Hill in San Francisco.
San Jose Museum of Art
The Tech Museum of Innovation
The Tech Museum of Innovation, known as The Tech, is an appropriate cultural institution for the world’s tech capital, Silicon Valley. (Apparently the Tech was renamed The Tech Interactive in 2019.) I saw some IMAX movies there when I used to come to San Jose for work. I decided to visit History Park because I had been to The Tech previously and I didn’t have time to see both on Day 7. I came to wish I had gone to The Tech again anyway because seeing it again would have been more interesting that seeing History Park. But hey, I got some good pictures, right? And that’s what matters!
I have to say, I enjoyed my unstructured time in Downtown San Jose more than my time at History Park. But I shouldn’t dwell on that.
Do You Know the Way Back to San Francisco?
From Downtown San Jose, I first caught the bus to the Fremont BART station. At the time, the Fremont station was as far south as BART went. Now you can go as far as North San Jose. Eventually, you’ll be able to take BART all the way to Downtown San Jose. (It still seems funny though that you have to go around San Francisco Bay to get to San Jose by BART instead of just heading down the San Francisco Peninsula. But whatever works.)
When I got back to San Francisco, I promptly had dessert. I had one more San Francisco ice cream place left to check out. (That made 14 ice cream trips over 2 years of San Francisco sightseeing.) It closed early, so I head to go there before dinner. As a matter of fact, that’s why I had to leave San Jose without having dinner there. My itinerary in San Jose was too tight to schedule in any dining while I was there.
[Factual information is primarily gathered from Wikipedia, so you know it must be true.]
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