Gilroy, California, United States

History | Mexican era | American era | Geography | Economy | Annual events | Parks and recreation | Education | Print and online | Media : Television : Radio | Transport : Road : Public

🇺🇸 Gilroy is a city in Northern California's Santa Clara County, south of Morgan Hill and north of San Benito County. Gilroy is the southernmost city in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Gilroy's origins lie in the village of San Ysidro that grew in the early 19th century out of Rancho San Ysidro, granted to Californio ranchero Ygnacio Ortega in 1809. Following Ygnacio's death in 1833, his daughter Clara Ortega de Gilroy and son-in-law John Gilroy inherited the largest portion of the rancho and began developing the settlement. When the town was incorporated in 1868, it was renamed in honor of John Gilroy, a Scotsman who had emigrated to California in 1814, naturalized as a Mexican citizen, adopted the Spanish language, and converted to Catholicism, taking the name of Juan Bautista Gilroy.

Gilroy is known for its garlic crop and the annual Gilroy Garlic Festival, featuring various garlicky foods such as garlic ice cream, leading to the city's nickname, the Garlic Capital of the World. It is also known for boutique wine production, as part of the Santa Clara Valley AVA, mostly consisting of family vineyards around the base of the Santa Cruz Mountains to the west.

History Spanish explorers led by Juan Bautista de Anza first passed through the Santa Clara Valley area in 1776, and in 1797 Mission San Juan Bautista was established near the Pajaro River. In 1809, Ygnacio Ortega was granted the 13,066-acre (5,288 ha) Spanish land concession Rancho San Ysidro. The village of San Ysidro grew nearby, at the foot of Pacheco Pass which linked the El Camino Real and the Santa Clara Valley with the San Joaquin Valley. California's main exports at this time were hides and tallow, of which thousands of barrels were produced and shipped to the rest of New Spain. Trade and diplomatic intercourse with foreigners was strictly forbidden by the royal government but was quietly carried on by Californians desperate for luxury goods.

Mexican era During the War of 1812, the armed merchantman Isaac Todd was sent by the North West Company to seize Fort Astoria, an American trading post at the mouth of the Columbia River. The ship, with a Royal Navy escort, departed from Portsmouth, England, made its way around Cape Horn and proceeded up the Pacific coast of the Americas, stopping at Spanish ports for supplies along the way. In January 1814, having fallen behind its escort, the Isaac Todd arrived at Monterey, California, the Spanish colonial capital of Alta California. During the visit, ordinary seaman John Gilroy (a Scotsman who had changed his name from John Cameron when he went to sea to avoid recognition) either (depending on the historical source) jumped ship or was left ashore to recover from scurvy.

John Gilroy (1794–1869), also known as Juan Bautista Gilroy, spent the next few years moving around among the missions, pueblos and ranchos, plying his trade as a cooper (barrel maker). At first, by his own account in an 1856 letter to Thomas O. Larkin, Gilroy was one of only two English-speakers resident in Alta California. Eventually, he found his way to Rancho San Ysidro, converted to Roman Catholicism and became the first naturalized English-speaking settler in Alta California. In 1821, the same year Mexico won its independence from Spain, Gilroy married a daughter of his employer, ranchero Ygnacio Ortega. Upon Ygnacio's death in 1833, the rancho was divided among his three children—including Gilroy's wife Maria Clara. In 1867, under U.S. property law, the Rancho San Ysidro (Gilroy) was patented to John Gilroy.

The settlement now known as "Old Gilroy" grew up around Gilroy's rancho complex and, after the end of the Mexican–American War in 1848, Gilroy served as alcalde of the village. It served as a stagecoach station of the Butterfield Overland Mail and other stage lines in the late 19th century.

American era Following the U.S. Conquest of California and the discovery of gold in the Sierra Nevada in 1848, the trickle of immigrants from the eastern states and abroad became a flood. As many of the earlier Mexican and Californio landowners sold off their land, lost it to squatters, or were dispossessed through title hearings, the area around San Ysidro became known as Pleasant Valley. On March 12, 1870, it was officially incorporated by the state legislature as the town of Gilroy (John Gilroy had died in 1869). By then the town centre had been relocated west of the El Camino Real (Old Gilroy is today a sparsely populated agricultural area).

Cattle ranching and timber from the nearby Santa Cruz Mountains were important to the economy for some time but, as in the rest of the valley, agriculture was the town's greatest source of income. During the 1920s, Kiyoshi “Jimmy” Hirasaki began growing garlic commercially in the Gilroy area. Referred to as the "Garlic King", Hirasaki continued to farm garlic into the 1950s. In 1979, the Gilroy Garlic Festival was launched. Farming remains significant, but in the 1970s the city began evolving into a bedroom community for Silicon Valley to the north.

There are a number of extant historical buildings dating from the mid-19th century. Built in 1857, the Christian Church at 160 Fifth Street is the oldest wood-framed church in continuous use in Santa Clara County. Blacksmith George Eustice's house at 213 Fifth Street was constructed in 1869; Eustice was an American Civil War veteran who fought at Gettysburg. Samuel Moore was a long-time Gilroy postmaster, whose home was built in the 1870s at 7151 Church Street.

Nearby in the foothills of the Diablo Range to the north-east is the historic resort site Gilroy Yamato Hot Springs, first developed in the 1870s (and now closed to the public). In 1905, the Old City Hall was built in downtown Gilroy; in 1975, it was designated on the list of National Register of Historic Places.

Geography Gilroy is approximately 16 miles (26 km) south of San Jose, California (Bailey Avenue (37.206770, -121.729150) to Monterey/Day Road (37.038210, -121.584480)) on U.S. Route 101 and 19 miles (31 km) inland from the Pacific Coast. Despite its apparent close proximity to San Jose, it is important to note that Gilroy City Hall lies at a distance of 33.3 miles (53.6 km) from San Jose City Hall. Lying in a southern extension of the Santa Clara Valley at an elevation of about 200 feet (61 m) above MSL, it is bounded by the Santa Cruz Mountains to the west and the Diablo Range to the east. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 16.2 square miles (42 k m²), of which 16.1 square miles (42 k m²) is land and 0.06% is water.

Primary contributors to environmental noise include U.S. Route 101, El Camino Real, Leavesley Road and other major arterials. The number of people exposed to sound levels above 60 CNEL is approximately 4,000.

Economy The top five employers in Gilroy are: Gilroy Unified School District, Christopher Ranch LLC, Saint Louise Regional Hospital, Wal-Mart, and Olam International.

Annual events • Gilroy Rodeo

Gilroy also has over 20 wineries and tasting rooms located along the Santa Clara Valley Wine Trail.

Parks and recreation • Coyote Lake-Harvey Bear Ranch County Park, immediately east of Gilroy • Gilroy Gardens, amusement park on the west side of Gilroy on State Route 152 (AKA Hecker Pass). • Henry W. Coe State Park

Education Gilroy Unified School District operates the city's public schools, seven elementary schools, three middle schools and three high schools, Gilroy High School, Christopher High School, and Gilroy Early College Academy (GECA).

Mt. Madonna Continuation High School is the continuation high school in Gilroy. It is operated by the Gilroy Unified School District.

Gavilan College's campus is located at the southern edge of Gilroy.

Gilroy Prep School is a K-8 charter school operated by Navigator Schools.

Private schools in Gilroy are primarily run by religious groups. There are currently two private religious schools: St. Mary's School and Pacific Point Christian School.

Santa Clara County Library operates the Gilroy Library.

Print and online • Gilroy Dispatch

Media: Television • CMAP TV - Community Media Access Partnership, with studio and facilities located in downtown Gilroy, operates Channels 17, 18, 19 & 20 on Charter/Spectrum Cable as well as streaming online.

Media: Radio • KBAY, 94.5 FM (licensed to Gilroy, studio in San Jose) • KAZA, 1290 AM (no longer transmitting from Gilroy) • KFAT: From 1975 until January 16, 1983, Gilroy was home to an eclectic freeform country/rock station known as KFAT. This station (now KBAY) was the focus of much of the Central Coast counterculture. spiritual successor, KPIG, broadcasts out of Freedom, California initially with many of the same personnel who were at KFAT.

Transport: Road • U.S. Route 101 • State Route 152

Transport: Public • The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority provides local buses and express buses to San Jose and Sunnyvale. • Gilroy is the southern terminus of Caltrain, which operates three northbound and three southbound rush-hour commute trains each weekday between the Gilroy station and the Santa Clara Valley, San Francisco Peninsula and San Francisco. • Amtrak California's Capitol Corridor line runs a San Jose–Santa Barbara Thruway Motorcoach connection with a stop in Gilroy. • Monterey-Salinas Transit's Line 55, which stops in Gilroy, is a rush-hour San Jose–Monterey express bus that also serves as an Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach connection. • San Benito County Express provides intercounty bus service to Hollister and San Juan Bautista.

California - Palm Springs 
California - Palm Springs
Image: Adobe Stock photogolfer #400172415

Gilroy has a population of over 59,520 people. Gilroy also forms one of the centres of the wider Santa Clara County which has a population of over 1,936,259 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Gilroy see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Gilroy has links with:

🇵🇹 Angra do Heroísmo, Portugal 🇵🇼 Koror, Palau 🇵🇼 Koror City, Palau 🇮🇹 Monticelli d'Ongina, Italy 🇫🇷 Saint-Clar, France 🇯🇵 Takko, Japan 🇲🇽 Tecate, Mexico
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

East of: -121.567

🇺🇸 Oroville -121.55

🇺🇸 West Sacramento -121.517

🇺🇸 Sacramento -121.495

🇺🇸 Tracy -121.421

🇺🇸 Elk Grove -121.365

🇺🇸 Lodi -121.335

🇺🇸 Carmichael -121.322

🇺🇸 Bend -121.315

🇺🇸 Stockton -121.301

🇺🇸 Rancho Cordova -121.3

West of: -121.567

🇺🇸 Marysville -121.583

🇺🇸 Yuba City -121.605

🇺🇸 Salinas -121.643

🇺🇸 Brentwood -121.693

🇺🇸 Davis -121.733

🇺🇸 Watsonville -121.755

🇺🇸 Livermore -121.757

🇺🇸 Woodland -121.767

🇺🇸 Antioch -121.797

🇺🇸 Chico -121.836

Antipodal to Gilroy is: 58.433,-37

Locations Near: Gilroy -121.567,37

🇺🇸 Watsonville -121.755,36.909 d: 19.5  

🇺🇸 Salinas -121.643,36.676 d: 36.7  

🇺🇸 Santa Cruz -122.017,36.967 d: 40.1  

🇺🇸 San José -121.883,37.333 d: 46.4  

🇺🇸 Monterey -121.883,36.6 d: 52.6  

🇺🇸 Santa Clara -121.967,37.35 d: 52.6  

🇺🇸 Milpitas -121.899,37.432 d: 56.4  

🇺🇸 Cupertino -122.017,37.317 d: 53.2  

🇺🇸 Sunnyvale -122.039,37.371 d: 58.8  

🇺🇸 Mountain View -122.067,37.383 d: 61.5  

Antipodal to: Gilroy 58.433,-37

🇫🇷 Saint-Pierre 55.478,-21.342 d: 18250.8  

🇫🇷 Le Tampon 55.515,-21.278 d: 18244.4  

🇫🇷 Réunion 55.532,-21.133 d: 18228.7  

🇫🇷 Saint-Benoît 55.713,-21.034 d: 18220.4  

🇫🇷 Saint-Paul 55.27,-21.01 d: 18211  

🇫🇷 Saint-Paul 55.279,-21 d: 18210  

🇫🇷 Saint-Denis 55.457,-20.867 d: 18198.3  

🇲🇺 Mahébourg 57.7,-20.407 d: 18168.7  

🇲🇺 Curepipe 57.517,-20.317 d: 18157.9  

🇲🇺 Vacoas-Phoenix 57.493,-20.3 d: 18155.9  

Bing Map

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