San Angelo, Texas "San Angelo"

City of San Angelo Official seal of City of San Angelo San Angelo town/city street map, Texas San Angelo town/city street map, Texas Website The City of San Angelo, Texas San Angelo /s n nd lo / is a town/city in and the governmental center of county of Tom Green County, Texas, United States. Its locale is in the Concho Valley, a region of West Texas between the Permian Basin to the northwest, Chihuahuan Desert to the southwest, Osage Plains to the northeast, and Central Texas to the southeast.

According to a 2014 Enumeration estimate, San Angelo has a total populace of 100,450. The town/city is the principal town/city and center of the San Angelo urbane area, which has a populace of 118,182. San Angelo is home to Angelo State University, historic Fort Concho, and Goodfellow Air Force Base.

Common nicknames of the town/city include Angelo, the River City, the Concho City, the Pearl of the Conchos, and the Oasis of West Texas. 5.1 San Angelo Museum of Art 5.2.1 San Angelo Symphony 5.2.3 Ballet San Angelo 6.2 San Angelo State Park 6.3 San Angelo Nature Center 6.5 San Angelo Stock Show and Rodeo Prior to the arrival of Europeans, San Angelo was the center of the Jumano citizens .

During the colonization of the region, San Angelo was at the edge of the region called Texas, successively claimed in the 1800s by the nations of Spain, Mexico, the Republic of Texas, and finally the United States, in 1846.

The current town/city of San Angelo was established in 1867, when the United States assembled Fort Concho, one of a series of new forts designed to protect the frontier.

The name would change again to San Angelo in 1883 on the insistence of the United States Postal Service, as San Angela was grammatically incorrect in Spanish.

The Santa Fe Railroad appeared in 1888 and the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway in 1909. After a tuberculosis (TB) outbreak hit the United States in the early 1900s, many patients moved to San Angelo.

TB sufferers went to San Angelo for treatment.

In 1928, the town/city founded San Angelo College, one of the region's first institutes of higher education.

San Angelo College, one of the first municipal colleges, has grown to turn into Angelo State University.

The military returned to San Angelo amid World War II with the beginning of Goodfellow Air Force Base, which was assigned to train pilots at the time.

San Angelo interval exponentially amid the petroleum boom of the 1900s, when vast amounts of petroleum were found in the area, and the town/city became a county-wide core of the petroleum and gas industry. The San Angelo Independent School District became one of the first in Texas to integrate, doing so voluntarily in 1955. San Angelo City Hall Tom Green County Courthouse, San Angelo San Angelo is positioned at 31 26 34 N 100 27 1 W (31.442628, -100.450145). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 58.2 square miles (150.9 km ), of which, 55.9 square miles (144.8 km ) of it is territory and 2.3 square miles (6.1 km ) of it (4.03%) is veiled by water.

San Angelo falls on the southwestern edge of the Edwards Plateau and the northeastern edge of the Chihuahuan Desert at the junction of the North and South Concho Rivers.

San Angelo is about 225 miles (362 km) west of Austin. Temperatures reach 100 F about 18 times in an average year. However, in 2011, San Angelo recorded 100 days of 100 F or higher. The average year has 50 days with lows below freezing. Although the region does experience snow and sleet, they occur only a several times a year.

San Angelo averages 251 days of sunlight a year, and the average temperature is 65.4 F.

Climate data for San Angelo, Texas San Angelo has persistently been ranked by many publications and rankings as one of the best small metros/cities for company and employment.

In 2013, it ranked fourth in the country in Forbes magazine's "Best Small Cities For Jobs" rankings. In 2010, Kiplinger's Personal Finance titled San Angelo as one of the "Best Cities of the Next Decade". In 2009, CNN Money ranked San Angelo as one of the best metros/cities to launch a small business. San Angelo has a very diverse economy for a town/city of its size. Although most petroleum fields lay to the west, many oil-field service companies based in the town/city employ a large number of small-town residents.

The agricultural trade in San Angelo remains strong.

Although most agricultural work is done outside the city, thousands of employees work in the cattle and lamb meat-processing industries, and many more work in agriculture supporting part s inside the city. Two agricultural research and development offices are positioned in San Angelo: the Angelo State University Management Instruction and Research Center and the Texas A&M Texas Agri - Life Research and Extension Center at San Angelo. The telecommunication trade is a strong employer in San Angelo.

San Angelo serves as the county-wide medical center for West-central Texas.

The a several large institutional employers in the town/city include Shannon Medical Center, Angelo State University, and Goodfellow Air Force Base.

San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts San Angelo Museum of Art The San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts opened in 1999 in downtown San Angelo on the banks of the Concho River, assembled with small-town limestone and end-grain Texas mesquite.

Downtown San Angelo is home to various art arcades.

The San Angelo Art Walk, held every third Thursday, includes a viewing of the various downtown art arcades.

San Angelo Symphony The San Angelo Symphony, established in 1949, plays a several affairs a year, with its feature event being on July 3.

To this day, Angelo Civic Theatre continues to serve the improve of San Angelo and produce six in-house plays a year. Ballet San Angelo was established in 1983.

The San Angelo City Park fitness was created in 1903.

San Angelo State Park San Angelo is home to San Angelo State Park.

San Angelo Nature Center The San Angelo Nature Center, positioned at Lake Nasworthy, is an educational center open to the public.

Historic Fort Concho, a National Historic Landmark, maintained by the town/city of San Angelo, was established in 1867 by the United States Army to protect pioneer and maintain vital trade routes.

San Angelo Stock Show and Rodeo The annual San Angelo Stock Show and Rodeo is held every year.

San Angelo is home to Angelo State University.

San Angelo has a branch of Howard College, which is based in Big Spring, Texas.

San Angelo is home to a branch of Park University.

San Angelo is also the home to a branch of American Commercial College, a private for-profit longterm position college.

Almost all of San Angelo is in the San Angelo Independent School District.

Small parts are served by the Wall Independent School District (southeast San Angelo) and the Grape Creek Independent School District (northwest San Angelo).

The two chief high schools are Central (CHS) with Central Freshmen Campus (CFC), and Lake View (LVH); three middle schools, and 21 elementary schools are inside San Angelo town/city limits.

Seven private schools operate in the city, certified through the 12th grade, which include Ambleside School of San Angelo, a member of Ambleside Schools International, the Angelo Catholic School, Cornerstone Christian School, Gateway Christian Academy, Trinity Lutheran School, Potter's Hand Christian School, and TLCA, which is a charter school. San Angelo LIVE (digital) San Angelo Standard-Times (print) San Angelo Regional Airport San Angelo is served by the San Angelo Regional Airport, which offers daily flights through Envoy Air.

Frank "Bring'em Back Alive" Buck lived in San Angelo in the 1940s and 1950s.

Gary Lee Conner, former Screaming Trees guitarist, resides in San Angelo.

Paula De - Anda was born in San Angelo.

Colby Donaldson, former survivor candidate and actor was born just outside San Angelo and lived in the city.

Patrick Dearen, Western author, lived in San Angelo while he was a staff writer for the Standard-Times newspaper.

Jeff Drost, former NFL player was born in San Angelo.

Joe Feagin, Texas A&M University professor, was born in San Angelo.

Crawford Goldsby (also known as "Cherokee Bill") was born in Fort Concho (across the Concho River from San Angelo) on February 8, 1876.

Hardeman (1902-1992) was the mayor of San Angelo from 1936 to 1938, and after that served a total of 26 years in both homes of the Texas State Legislature.

Pierce Holt, College Football Hall of Fame member attended Angelo State University, and was a member of the San Francisco 49ers and Atlanta Falcons in the 1990s.

David Hulse, former Major Leaguer attended San Angelo Central High School, and went on to play for the Texas Rangers and Milwaukee Brewers in the 1990s.

Jackson (1850 1900), an African American businessman and rancher from San Angelo, was considered the "wealthiest black in Texas" in the second half of the 19th century.

Elmer Kelton (1926 2009) an award-winning writer, journalist, and novelist lived in San Angelo.

Steve Kemp, former Major League Baseball outfielder, was born in San Angelo.

Los Lonely Boys is an American Grammy-winning musical group from San Angelo that plays Tex-Mex modern with elements of blues, soul, nation and Tejano.

Greg Maddux, four-time Cy Young Award-winning baseball pitcher and Hall of Fame inductee was born in San Angelo.

Shea Morenz, graduate of San Angelo Central and former Texas Longhorns quarterback, was drafted by the New York Yankees.

Fess Parker, actor, interval up on a ranch near San Angelo.

Born in San Angelo and presently resides there.

Born in San Angelo and presently resides there.

Grant Speed Western sculptor, resides in Utah, but was born in San Angelo in 1930.

Snyder Bram Stoker Award-winner and novelist, interval up in San Angelo and has used a fictional version of the town/city as a setting in some of her work.

Steve Trash, illusionist, was born in San Angelo.

Ernest Tubb, musician, a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, worked for a several years in San Angelo, and had a daily live music show on a small-town airways broadcast before to going to Nashville.

"San Angelo, Texas".

"San Angelo: United States".

"San Angelo (city) 2014 Population Estimates".

"San Angelo, Texas".

"SAN ANGELO, TX".

"About San Angelo: Our History".

"San Angelo, Texas :: Boundary Map of San Angelo, Texas".

"San Angelo 100 Degree Stats".

National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office, San Angelo, TX.

National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office, San Angelo, TX.

"San Angelo 32 Degree Stats".

National Weather Service, San Angelo.

"San Angelo Normal Monthly Rainfall (1981-2010)".

National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office, San Angelo, TX.

National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office, San Angelo, TX.

"2005-2009 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates; San Angelo city, Texas".

"Precis Metro: San Angelo Economic Outlook".

"San Angelo, Texas".

"Sitel to Hire 250 in San Angelo, Texas Customer Experience Center - See more at: https://sitel.com/news/sitel-hire-250-san-angelo-texas-customer-experience-center/#sthash.hb112 - C6j.dpuf".

Downtown San Angelo Inc.

"San Angelo Performing arts Coalition".

San Angelo Civic Ballet.

"San Angelo State Park".

San Angelo Standard-Times.

"Park at San Angelo, TX".

Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Angelo, Texas.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for San Angelo.

Wikisource has the text of the 1921 Collier's Encyclopedia article San Angelo.

San Angelo Free Internet News and Events Listings City of San Angelo, Texas San Angelo Independent School District Concho Valley Homepage - Powered by KLST-TV and KSAN-TV in San Angelo San Angelo Standard-Times Handbook of Texas: San Angelo Page San Angelo Youth Basketball Club "Printable vector map of San Angelo, Texas, USA".

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