Tour Overview
Temescal Neighborhood
Temescal has seen huge ecological and social transformations. Once a Huichin Ohlone village site of great beauty along a wide and flowing Temescal Creek, it became the homestead of European settler Luis Peralta's youngest son, Vicente, who built his home along the creek only to be supplanted by a Connecticut settler, Solomon Alden, a descendent from a Mayflower pilgrim.
Over time, Temescal progressed from an unincorporated village largely inhabited by Italians (the Chinese laborers who worked there were not allowed to live there) into a flourishing neighborhood of Oakland. In this section of the tour you'll see how the creek was transformed from a state of beauty, well-used by humans, to becoming completely invisible, the creek and it's ecosystem buried underground.
Stops
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Stop 1: Grove/Shafter Freeway (Highway 24)
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Stop 2: House of Vicente Peralta
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Stop 3: Idora Park
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Stop 4: Sweat Lodge
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Stop 5: Gulf Fritillary
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Stop 6: Dark-eyed Junco
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Stop 7: Fire Station 8 — Temescal History Walkway
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Stop 8: Burying of Temescal Creek
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Stop 9: Humboldt Park Hotel
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Stop 10: Historic Temescal Library
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Stop 11: The Telegraph
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Stop 12: Utility Box Mural
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Stop 13: Trolleys at Temescal Bridge
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Stop 14: The Key System Railway
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Stop 15: Permeable Pavers
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Stop 16: Vestiges of the creek
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Stop 17: PG&E Substation Murals
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Stop 18: PG&E Substation
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Stop 19: Love Letter to Oakland #2
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Stop 20: The Black Panther Party
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Stop 21: "PostMark Temescal" Interpretive Site
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Stop 22: PostMark Temescal
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Stop 23: Trains Over Temescal
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Stop 24: Chestnut-backed Chickadee
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Stop 25: Fennel
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Stop 26: "Temescal Flows" Mural
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Stop 27: Children's Hospital