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Fremont
September 30, 2025

Tri-City History A-Z in Photographs #21, part 2: Towns

A look at the towns that became the cities in the Tri-City area

Town: (noun) a compactly settled area usually larger than a village but smaller than a city.

Today we know them as districts, sections or areas of our larger cities—Fremont, Newark and Union City, but they were once individual towns. Independent of each other in many respects, the towns and the people who inhabited them also came together as one place, known as Washington Township. Now commonly referred to as the Tri-City Area, the southern portion of the East Bay, and the lowest geographic section of Alameda County, these eight towns still have much history left standing.

Newark, 1956.
Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Newark, 1956. Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Niles (now part of Fremont), 1946. 
Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Niles (now part of Fremont), 1946. Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Mission San Jose (now part of Fremont), 1950. 
Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Mission San Jose (now part of Fremont), 1950. Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Warm Springs (now part of Fremont), 1955. 
Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History
Warm Springs (now part of Fremont), 1955. Courtesy of Washington Township Museum of Local History

Look back to Aug. 26 for the first half of this column. 

Let’s explore local history through themes and photographs! Have a topic or idea you’d like us to explore? Email us at in**@******************ry.org.

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