territory at the time of the arrival of the Spanish|alt= Archaeological evidence indicates the presence of Native American settlements dating back thousands of years. Upon Spanish arrival, present-day Bakersfield was inhabited by the
Yowlumne, a Yokuts people. Yowlumne accounts indicate that the village of Woilu was situated in the bounds of the present city. The
Yokuts of the region lived in
lodges along the branches of the Kern River delta and hunted antelope, tule elk, deer, bear, fish, and game birds. arrived in the Bakersfield area in 1776. In 1776, Spanish missionary
Francisco Garcés became the first European to explore the area. Recording his May 1 arrival to a Yokuts village along the Kern River, immediately northeast of present Bakersfield, Garcés wrote, The Bakersfield area, once a
tule reed-covered marshland, was first known as Kern Island to the handful of
pioneers, who built log cabins there in 1860. The area was subject to periodic flooding from the Kern River, which occupied what is now the downtown area, and experienced outbreaks of
malaria. Bakersfield is
the fifth-largest majority-Hispanic city in the United States, with 53% of its population being Hispanic in 2020.
Founding In 1861,
disastrous floods swept away the original settlement founded in 1860 by the
German-born Christian Bohna. Baker moved to the banks of the Kern River in 1863, By 1870, with a population of 600, what is now known as Bakersfield was becoming the principal town in Kern County. Businessmen and others began to resent Mills, who was cantankerous and high-handed in his treatment of them. Wanting to fire him but fearing reprisals, they devised a scheme to disincorporate, effectively leaving him without an employer. According to local historian Gilbert Gia the city was also failing to collect the taxes it needed for services. In 1876, The city voted to disincorporate. For the next 22 years, a citizen's council managed the community. By 1880, Bakersfield had a population of 801, with 250 of Chinese descent. By 1890, it had a population of 2,626. Migration from
Texas,
Louisiana,
Oklahoma, and
Southern California brought new residents, who were mostly employed by the oil industry. The city reincorporated on January 11, 1898.
Establishment of rail connection In 1874, the
Southern Pacific Railroad first arrived in Kern County. However, the train depot was placed nearly three miles east of Bakersfield due to a land dispute between the railroad and the town. Desperate to get their own station, Bakersfield residents, sugar magnate Clause Spreckels, and small investors from all over the state ended up raising around $3,500,000 by January 17, 1895, to fund a second railroad to Bakersfield. By January 29, 1895, the
San Francisco and San Joaquin Valley Railroad was born. Dubbed the "People's Railroad," the project was completed and warmly welcomed by the town with a parade attended by thousands on May 27, 1898, amidst the Spanish-American War and over 20 years after the completion of Southern Pacific's line. Competition from the new railroad caused Southern Pacific to lower its fares from $9.10 ($347.22 in 2023) to $6.90 ($263.27 in 2023) to match the new railroad's fare. Eventually, a
streetcar line would connect the Santa Fe station to the Southern Pacific station in Sumner (now
East Bakersfield). It was replaced with the present day
Bakersfield Station built in 2000, near Truxtun Avenue and S Street.
1952 earthquake , built in 1931 in a
Spanish Colonial Revival style is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. On July 21, 1952, an
earthquake struck at 4:52 am Pacific Daylight Time. The earthquake, which measured 7.5 on the
moment magnitude scale and was felt from
San Francisco to the
Mexican border, destroyed the nearby communities of
Tehachapi and
Arvin. The earthquake's destructive force bent cotton fields into U shapes, slid a shoulder of the
Tehachapi Mountains across all four lanes of the
Ridge Route, collapsed a water tower, creating a flash flood, and destroyed the railroad tunnels in the mountain chain. Bakersfield was somewhat spared, experiencing minor architectural damage without loss of life. A large
aftershock occurred on July 29, causing minor architectural damage but raising fears that the flow of the
Friant-Kern Canal could be dangerously altered, potentially flooding the city and surrounding areas. , built in 1930 Aftershocks continued for the next month, and on August 22 at 3:42 pm, another earthquake, measured at 5.8, struck directly under the city's center in the most densely populated area of the southern
San Joaquin Valley. Four people died in the aftershock, and many of the town's historic structures sustained heavy damage.
1970 to 2010 Between 1970 and 2010, Bakersfield grew 400% (from 70,000 to 347,483), making it one of the fastest-growing cities in California. Bakersfield's close proximity to
mountain passes, primarily the Tejon Pass on Interstate 5 between the
Greater Los Angeles Area and the San Joaquin Valley, has made the city a regional transportation hub. In 1990, Bakersfield was one of 10 U.S. communities to receive the
All-America City Award from the
National Civic League. In 2010, the Bakersfield
MSA had a gross metropolitan product of $29.466 billion, making it the 73rd-largest metropolitan economy in the United States.
Historic architecture and preservation Bakersfield has several buildings and locations designated as historic sites at the national, state, and city levels. Five buildings have been listed on the
National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), including the
First Baptist Church (NRHP 1/2/79);
Baker Street Library (NRHP 4/1/81) and
Bakersfield Californian Building (NRHP 3/10/83). Four sites have been designated as
California Historical Landmarks, including
Garces Memorial Circle (designated in 1937) and the
Colonel Thomas Baker Memorial (designated in 1944). In addition, 16 sites have been locally designated on the
Bakersfield Register of Historic Places, including the
Fox Theater (designated 8/24/94) and
Kern County Chamber of Commerce Building (designated 3/12/08). With only 16 sites on its local register (compared to more than 300 sites designated by the City of
Fresno), Bakersfield has been criticized for its lack of focus on historic preservation. ==Geography==