California Highways - California Travel Information
On The Road - AARoads Blog. Contact Us

California Highways @ WestCoastRoads

This index is the site map to all pages covering the state of California. Unless otherwise noted, all photographs taken by Alex Nitzman and Andy Field. Many thanks to Casey Cooper, Pete Sison, Joel Windmiller, Kevin Trinkle, Mike Ballard, Mark Furqueron, Russ Connelly, Trevor Carrier, and Steve Hanudel for participating in taking trips with us and submitting photos from California.

Population Statistics

State Population
33,871,648
Top County Populations
Los Angeles 9,519,338 Orange 2,846,289 San Diego 2,813,833
San Bernardino 1,709,434 Santa Clara 1,682,585 Riverside 1,545,387
Alameda 1,443,741 Sacramento 1,223,499 Contra Costa 948,816
Fresno 799,407 San Francisco 776,733 Ventura 753,197
Top City Populations
Los Angeles 3,694,820 San Diego 1,223,400 San Jose 894,943
San Francisco 776,733 Long Beach 461,522 Fresno 427,652
Sacramento 407,018 Oakland 399,484 Santa Ana 337,977
Anaheim 328,014 Riverside 255,166 Bakersfield 247,057
Stockton 243,771 Fremont 203,413 Glendale 194,973
Source: 2000 U.S. Census Data

Site Navigation

Other Statistics

  • Capital: Sacramento
  • Nickname: Golden State
  • If it were its own country, California would rank sixth among the world's richest nations based on the value of goods and services the state produces (as of 2000).
  • California decommissioned (eliminated) most of its U.S. routes in 1964: U.S. 40, U.S. 60, U.S. 66, U.S. 70, U.S. 80, U.S. 91, U.S. 99, U.S. 299, U.S. 399, and U.S. 466. Other routes that were truncated or reduced in length include U.S. 6, U.S. 50, U.S. 101, and U.S. 395. Only U.S. 95, U.S. 97, and U.S. 199 were left alone.
  • California 49, the Gold Country Highway, is so numbered because gold was discovered in the Sierra Nevada Mountain foothills in 1848, with a plethora of treasure seekers traversing the foothills in the Gold Rush of 1849.
  • Area: 163,695.57 square miles or 411,049 square kilometers, 3rd largest
  • Statehood: 31st state; admitted September 9, 1850
  • Total Interstate Mileage: 2,457.34 miles
  • Highest Point: Mount Whitney (east of Lone Pine partially in Sequoia National Park and Inyo National Forest in the Sierra Nevada Mountains), 14,494 feet above sea level. This is the highest point in the 48 contiguous states.
  • Lowest Point: Death Valley National Park at Badwater Basin, -282 feet below sea level. This is the lowest point in the 48 contiguous states.
  • The San Gabriel Mountains north of the Los Angeles Basin run east-west, unlike the north-south alignment of the state's other mountain chains: Sierra Nevada, Coast Range, and Cascades.
  • The Central Valley (formed by the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers) is the chief agricultural area of the state, followed by the irrigated Imperial Valley in the southern desert.

Click here for California Highways Updates

California Highway Guides

Page Updated September 24, 2007.