| Abraham
Lincoln |
Named
for President Abraham Lincoln, it is the third district building
to bear the late president’s name.
The first Lincoln School, built before the turn of the
century, was burned down and replaced in the 1920’s. The
building was later used as an administration building and the site
at 4th and Q Streets today is named Lincoln Plaza. |
| Alice
Birney |
Co-founder
of the Parent Teacher movement, later PTA, along with Phoebe
Hearst. |
| A.M.
Winn |
General
A.M. Winn was president of the City Council under Sacramento’s
first city charter, elected 1849. He was founder of Sons of the
Golden West. |
| Bowling
Green |
Named
for subdivision. |
| Bret
Harte |
American
writer who came to California in 1854. Served as US Consul to
Prussia and Scotland, wrote “The Luck of Roaring Camp and other
Sketches” and “Tales of Argonauts.” |
| Cesar
E. Chavez |
Labor
leader who formed the United Farm Workers Union to improve working
conditions for agricultural laborers. |
| Camellia
Basic |
Named
for City of Sacramento official flower.
Basic was added to the name in 1982. |
| Clayton
B. Wire |
Annexed
in 1958. Named after board of education member of the Pacific
Elementary School District who served for thirty years. |
| Collis.P.
Huntington |
One
of the “big four” in promoting the railroad from Sacramento to
Salt Lake City. Co-owner
of hardware store in Sacramento with Mark Hopkins. |
| Crocker/Riverside |
The
first Riverside School was annexed in 1911. The original Crocker
was torn down and attendance area combined when Crocker/Riverside
was built in 1975 on the Riverside site. Crocker was a dry goods
dealer in charge of construction of the Central Pacific Railroad. |
| David
Lubin |
A
dry goods businessman, He was instrumental in forming an
international institute of agriculture in 1910. |
| Earl
Warren |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for former governor of California and former Chief
Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. |
| Edward
Kemble |
Editor
of Sacramento’s first newspaper. In 1849 he published The
Placer Times in Sacramento.
In 1859, was associate editor of The
Sacramento Union. |
| Elder
Creek |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for the creek which runs in the area. |
| Ethel
I. Baker |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for superintendent of the Fruit Ridge District who
served for 37 years. |
| Ethel
Phillips |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for
20-year teacher, principal and superintendent of the district. |
| Fr.
Keith B. Kenny |
Named
for Catholic Priest who was pastor of Our Lady of Guadalupe
Church. He was an
advocate for Spanish-speaking people, a strong supporter of United
Farm Workers, and a confidant of Cesar Chavez. |
| Freeport |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for nearby town. |
| Fruit
Ridge |
Annexed
in 1958. Named after
area because of various fruit trees, which grew on a ridge. |
| Golden
Empire |
Named
for California, the Golden Empire, for its rich gold deposits. |
| H.W.
Harkness |
Dr.
Harvey Wilson Harkness was the first superintendent of Sacramento
City Schools, and served from 1854 to 1855. |
| Hollywood
Park |
Annexed
in 1958. Named after subdivision. |
| Hubert
Bancroft |
Historian
and writer, his finished work on the history of the Pacific coast
consisted of 39 volumes and covered Alaska to Panama. His
collection of research is the basis for UC Berkeley Bancroft
Library, one of the greatest research centers in the West. |
| Isador
Cohen |
A
wealthy tobacco merchant who came to Sacramento in the 1860’s.
He was very devoted to helping orphans and was an honorary
member on the Sacramento Children’s Home Board of Directors. |
| James
Marshall |
Marshall
worked for John Sutter. He
discovered gold at Sutter’s Mill in Coloma on January 24, 1848. |
| Jedediah Smith |
Head
of company of 15 who were first Americans to enter California by
overland route from the East. His trail to California became a
great transcontinental route. |
| John
Bidwell |
Worked
for Captain John Sutter. A
leading agriculturist, donated land to churches, forest service,
and site of Northern School of Northern California, now
California State University, Chico. |
| John
Cabrillo |
Portuguese
navigator who sailed under the flag of Spain. Cabrillo discovered
San Diego Bay in 1542. The
school was originally named Sutter Union.
It was annexed into the district July 1, 1958. |
| John
Sloat |
Before
Mexican War, Commodore Sloat was placed in command of the American
Fleet in the Pacific. Under his direction, Monterey was taken, the
Mexican flag hauled down and the Stars & Stripes raised. |
| Joseph
Bonnheim |
Son
of Albert and Fannie Weinstock Bonnheim, died at age 16. Parents
established the Joseph Bonnheim Memorial Scholarship Fund at
University of California. By 1951, 800 students had been helped by
this fund. |
| Lisbon |
Named
for Upper Lisbon and Lower Lisbon Schools that were located in the
pocket area from the 1800’s which served the principally
Portuguese community in the area. |
| Maple |
Annexed
in 1958. Students of
the South Sacramento School District chose name while school was
in the planning stage. After
construction, students raised money and planted maple trees. |
| Marian
Anderson |
Named
for African-American opera singer Marian Anderson who made history
in 1939 when she was barred from the stage at Constitution Hall.
She proudly sang from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. |
| Mark
Hopkins |
One
of the “Big Four” in establishing the first railroad from Salt
Lake City. Co-owner
of hardware store with Collis.P. Huntington. |
| Mark
Twain |
American
humorist Samuel Langhorned Clemens, born 1835. Wrote “Jumping
Frog of Calaveras County,” along with “Tom Sawyer” and
“Huckleberry Finn.” Newspaper reporter while living in West. |
| Matsuyama |
Named
for “Sister City” in Japan.
Delegates from Matsuyama, including the Mayor, were present
for dedication ceremonies when the school opened in 1993. |
| Nicholas |
Annexed
in 1958. The Nicholas family owned large acreage in the area for
many years and the school was built on a portion of this property.
C.B. Wire married a daughter of the Nicholas family. |
| Oak
Ridge |
Annexed
in 1958. At the time,
this school was built there was a lone oak tree on the property.
The use of the word “ridge” made the name conform with
the Fruit Ridge School. |
| O.W.
Erlewine |
Superintendent
of the Sacramento City Schools 1894-1913. |
| Pacific |
Annexed
in 1958. Pacific School District was one of the oldest school
districts in California and named after the ocean.
This is the second school to carry the name. |
| Parker
Avenue |
School
for the homeless, named for the street.
Is behind the South Sacramento Emergency Housing Shelter on
Parker Ave. |
| Parkway |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for
the subdivision. |
| Peter
Burnett |
American
pioneer in California and first governor of the state from
1849-51. In 1863, Peter Burnett, Sam Brannan and Joseph Winans
organized the first chartered commercial bank in state. He was elected Associate Justice of the Supreme Court and
advanced to Chief Justice. |
| Phoebe
Hearst |
Co-founder
of the parent-teacher movement, later called PTA, with Alice
Birney. |
| Pony
Express |
The
Pony Express unique system of delivery mail. Trail of
“express” ran between St. Joseph, Missouri and Sacramento.
(Plaque in Old Sacramento on 2nd Street marks end of trail.) |
| Sequoia |
Named
for Cherokee Indian Sequoyah who developed the first American
Indian alphabet in an attempt to establish a written Indian
language. His name
was given to the giant California coniferous tree, which reaches a
height of 320 feet and diameter of 35 feet. |
| Susan
B. Anthony |
Activist
for the women’s movement, especially in seeking women’s right
to vote. |
| Sutterville |
Named
for township and site of early trading post. |
| Tahoe |
Named
for Lake Tahoe. Tahoe
is an Indian name signifying “big water.” |
| Theodore Judah |
Known
as the engineering wizard of the West. Employed by Sacramento
Valley Railroad, sent to Washington, DC to see president regarding
transcontinental railroad, but could generate no interest.
On return to Sacramento met “big four” Crocker,
Hopkins, Stanford and Huntington, and Central Pacific Railroad
became reality. |
| Thomas
Jefferson |
Third
president of the United States, author of Declaration of
Independence. |
| Washington |
General
George Washington, first president of the United States of
America. |
| William
Land |
Came
to California in 1860. Worked as messenger boy for Eastern Hotel.
In 1875, purchased hotel, and State House. Owned many real estate
interests, several ranches, orchards and residential properties.
Served as mayor in 1898, deeded William Land Park to City. |
| Woodbine |
Annexed
in 1958. Named for
the avenue on which it was built. |