Oakland
Less than 3 weeks after I got back from East Asia, it was time to start up my local sightseeing again. I had wrapped up my 1st 2 years of sightseeing around San Francisco by leaving city limits to explore San Jose. My 2nd 2 years of local exploration were exactly the opposite. During 2018 and 2019, I toured all around the San Francisco Bay Area. I only spent 1 of those sightseeing days in San Francisco. The rest of the time, I visited places in an area known as the East Bay and places north of the Golden Gate Bridge in Marin County.
Things kicked off across the bay in Oakland, California’s 8th largest city. Oakland has a bit of a reputation for being a rough place. But as I learned when I first visited Oakland in the ’80s, there’s much more to Oakland than what you might think. Okay, I’ve got a LOT of pictures in this post. But Oakland is so much more than you realize.
Oakland Museum of California
My friend John joined me in the morning at the somewhat oddly named Oakland Museum of California. It’s a museum focusing on 3 areas of interest in California–natural sciences, history and art–1 on each floor of the museum.
California Natural Sciences
California History
The history of California begins with the culture of Native Americans.
Everything changed when the Europeans came.
In 1863, a large number of the Maidu people were forced by the U.S. government to move to a reservation. After they arrived, American settlers attacked them and killed 45 of the native people. The survivors fled to their original home, but they were forced to return to the reservation. This painting depicts the forced return to the reservation. Dozens died or were left sick along the way.
California Art
The Oakland Museum of California has a collection of work from the Gold Rush era.
As you might expect, the Oakland Museum of California features art from a lot of California artists depicting local scenes.
The museum holds the personal archives of famed Depression-era photographer Dorothea Lange. She was born a Jersey girl, but she settled in San Francisco and also had a home in Berkeley.
The museum has a significant collection of work by the Society of Six, a group of 6 Oakland artists who created works of modern art in the early 20th century.
Lake Merritt
Just steps from the Oakland Museum of California, Lake Merritt is probably the prettiest area in the flatlands of Oakland. Technically it’s a tidal lagoon as there’s a narrow channel to San Francisco Bay.
The Cathedral of Christ the Light
The Cathedral of Christ the Light is the Catholic cathedral for the East Bay region, built in 2005-2008 to replace the former cathedral that was destroyed by the 1989 earthquake.
The 58-foot image of Christ is a digitized copy of a sculpted figure at the Chartres Cathedral in France. 94,000 pixels were transferred to form perforations in aluminum panels that light shines through, creating the image.
Oakland California Temple
After spending several hours in the area around Lake Merritt, I took 2 buses to get way up into the Oakland Hills. (The Oakland Hills are really just the section of the Berkeley Hills located in Oakland.) Being in the Oakland Hills reminded me of the devastating Oakland Hills fire of 1991. 25 people were killed and thousands of homes were destroyed. Many of the homes belonged to wealthy individuals. I, along with much of the country, was surprised at the time to learn that so many wealthy individuals lived in Oakland. Such is the power of Oakland’s reputation.
I stopped in the visitors’ center at the Oakland California Temple. I was a little nervous I was going to get proselytized, but they were relatively hands-off when I said I was visiting from across the bay in San Francisco and I just wanted to take pictures.
Old Oakland
From the Oakland Hills, it was 2 buses back down to the flatlands. This time to Downtown Oakland–specifically, Old Oakland. Oakland’s original downtown developed after the Central Pacific Railroad built a terminal nearby. From this point, travelers could take the train east to Sacramento, the initial western terminus of the transcontinental railway. Going in the other direction, travelers could take a ferry to San Francisco. After falling into decline throughout the 20th century, the area now known as Old Oakland was rehabilitated in the 1970s and ’80s.
Oakland Chinatown
Oakland Chinatown is virtually unknown, compared with its world-famous cousin across the bay. But at over 40 blocks, it’s quite large. It’s also a very busy, booming place.
Jack London Square
Jack London Square is located on Oakland’s historic waterfront. It’s named, of course, for the famous adventure writer. Jack was born in San Francisco, but he grew up and spent much of his life in Oakland.
Heinold’s has been servin’ ’em up since 1884. Jack London himself was a regular. Stories he heard at the bar ended up in his novels.
San Francisco Ferry
In the morning, I had taken BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) across San Francisco Bay, like thousands of people do every day. But I returned to San Francisco in the evening the way Jack London would have–by ferry.
[Factual information is primarily gathered from Wikipedia, so you know it must be true.]
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