Menlo Park is a beautiful and culturally rich area of San Francisco. Menlo Park is located on eastern edge of San Mateo County, in the San Francisco Bay Area. On the north and east, it is bordered by San Francisco Bay. East Palo Alto, Palo Alto, and Stanford border Menlo Park to the south and Atherton, North Fair Oaks, and Redwood City border the city to the west. It has exceptional arts, entertainment, and cultural activities. A strong job market and a strong commercial and financial core It is one of the most interesting and fun places to live in this country.
Below are three interesting facts you never knew about Menlo Park, California.
1. The inhabitants of Menlo Park are rich and highly …show more content…
Facebook is the largest employer of Menlo Park residents. This might explain why this is one of the most educated cities in the United States. Menlo Park city council approved a deal that allows Facebook to employ about 6,600 workers. Facebook agreed to pay Menlo park on average of $850,000 a year over 10 years to compensate for the additional load on the city. Additionally, it made a one-time payment of more than $1 million for capital improvements and set up community services such as high school internship and job training programs. Facebook is making these payments because Menlo Park cannot collect sales tax from Facebook. As of 2012, Facebook employs 7,185 people.
3. Menlo Park was founded by two Irish immigrants. In the nineteenth century, Dennis J. Oliver and his brother-in-law D.C. McGlynn, purchased 1,700-acres of a tract of land on the former Rancho de las Pulgas. In the 1850’s, named the tract of land "Menlo Park" and placed a wooden arch bearing the name at the entrance to their property. This is now the intersection of Middle Ave and El Camino Real. The word "Menlo" derived from the owner's' former home of Menlo in County Galway, Ireland, meaning "middle lake". In 1863, the San Francisco and San Jose Railroad named a nearby train station "Menlo Park" after the sign. Consequently, the town grew around the station and became a popular home for San Francisco businessmen. The original arch survived until 1922 when it was destroyed in an automobile