Willow Glen, California
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Willow Glen is a neighborhood of San Jose, California, in Santa Clara County. Geographically speaking, the Willow Glen neighborhood is centered around Lincoln Avenue, which was re-named from its previous name of "Willow Glen Road" in 1865 shortly after President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.[1]
By 1863 the small unincorporated community needed its first school. Willow Glen Elementary School was founded in 1863. Willow Glen continued as an unincorporated community until the 1920's, when the City of San Jose ordered the Southern Pacific Railroad to re-route the Southern Pacific Railroad trunk line which at that time was going down Fourth Street. The Southern Pacific then proposed to re-route down Lincoln Avenue. In order to forestall that attempt, Willow Glen was incorporated as a city in 1927 [2]. The railroad was instead re-routed to its current route through a then-unincorporated area now known as North Willow Glen[3], where its principal user is now Caltrain.
Being a city, however, required thinking about issues such as sewage. Willow Glen had no sewer system -- individual homes had their own cesspool or septic system. Because the area was marshy before being drained for Willow Glen[4], the high water table resulted in raw sewage often spilling above-ground from flooded cesspools. Rather than build their own very expensive sewage treatment system, Willow Glen's residents took a vote to be annexed to San Jose and be linked to San Jose's sewage system. This occurred in 1936 by a vote of 978 to 871.[5]
Today Willow Glen's historic downtown on Lincoln Avenue between Willow Street and Minnesota Avenue is a well-known "walkable" downtown community, with a variety of restaurants and shops[6]. The surrounding homes, largely built in the first half of the 20th century, have largely been restored, and as of April 17 2007, they have an average sale price of over a million dollars, according to a real estate tracking site.[7]
[edit] References
- ^ [1], willow-glen.com
- ^ [2], willow-glen.com
- ^ [3], mysite4now.com
- ^ [4], downtownwillowglen.org
- ^ [5], willow-glen.com
- ^ [6], downtownwillowglen.org
- ^ [7], trulia.com
[edit] External links
- Willow Glen History
- Downtown Willow Glen
- The Willow Glen Neighborhood Association
- Willow Glen branch of the San Jose Public Library system (under reconstruction from January to July 2008)
- Willow Glen Resident
- Willow Glen Times
- Shop Willow Glen
- Willow Glen Extra
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