Has a large US city ever just disappeared?

Fixed link. You needed an end-tag at the end.

Thanks Chronos

Good article, thanks.

I suspect that many geographically challenged folks in the U.S. along with the majority of folks outside the U.S. simply are unaware of the actual sizes and relationships of the various cities. SF is older, more “romantic,” has lots of well-publicized history, and anchors one end of the Golden Gate bridge as well as sharing its name with the bay, itself. San Jose, (1,007,000 or 948,000, depending on who you believe), is still only a bit larger than SF, (808,000), although it is spread out over more land and was significantly smaller not that many years ago, (204,000 in 1960 and 460,000 in 1970). Oakland, with around 420,000 people, is quite a bit smaller. With only the single strand of the Bay bridges linking it to San Francisco, I can see the local folks recognizing it as separate, but to an outsider, it is going to look like just part of the region.

The point about cities forgetting to keep the downtown vibrant is interesting. Whenever I have driven through Detroit one thing I always remember was how dead the downtown area was. Empty buildings, no stores, no condos. It’s really sad. Here in Toronto the downtown for the past several years has undergone a complete facelift. Building that were closed have turned into condo’s and more malls are being built downtown in the city core. The city made another interesting rule that when developers come in to build they must build a certain amount of green space. We’ve done nothing but grow but we still complain. The other side of that is that the traffic gets very busy. We have about 3 million now and within 50 miles there are probably 10 million.

By the way the world does not just centre around the USA there are other places than the USA.

Daniel … Toronto, Canada

So the person who posts the OP doesn’t have the right to specify that he is talking about a specific country?

[quote]
morbo: ::wondering if people really think that::

[quote]

I’m a little old lady who has never been to California. I don’t think that I knew about the relationship of San Francisco and Oakland until the earthquake that happened during the World Series. Lots of people in S.F. were on their way to Oakland via the Bay Bridge. I can still remember a collapsed tier of the bridge with a car pointed nose down on the collapsed part. That was freaky!

Where does the Golden Gate Bridge go to if not Oakland?

Superhal, that is an amazing statistic!**. Have you ever seen the film Hawaii?

Superhal, that is an amazing statistic!. Have you ever seen the film Hawaii?

Marin county - Sausalito, Mill Valley, Tiburon, San Rafael, etc.

Washington-on-the-Brazos in Texas. Once a thriving town, now a Texas state park.

The “old down” section of Gary, Indiana has been abandoned for about three decades.

W/r/t the San Jose hijack, how big is the downtown in SJ? I live in Palm Bay which is adjacent to the similarly sized Melbourne, FL, and I always think of it as a suburb of Melbourne because Melbourne was there first, and more importantly, has a real downtown (albeit not any bigger than that of many large villages/small cities in upstate NY.)

So if the part of SJ that is considered ‘downtown’ is a lot smaller than Sf’s downtown, then that might be a reason it is considered part of SF.

Indianola was the second largest port in Texas (after Galveston). Population was 5,000 in 1875, when it was almost destroyed by a hurricane. They rebuilt–but a hurricane in 1886 convinced everybody to give up. Most of the site is under water now.

Yeah, 5,000 isn’t that “large”–but, for Texas in the 19th century it was pretty sizeable.

Nowhere. Absolutely nowhere.

Really? So what happens to the 40,000 or so cars that cross it every day?

What percentage of Hiroshima and Nagasaki disappeared with the bombings?

About 25% of the population at Hiroshima. Slightly less than the percentage of prisoners of war that died in Japan’s Bataan Death March.

Or as my uncle, who suffered as a Japanese POW said, “not nearly enough”.

But that wasn’t a US city, like the OP asked for.

Sierra Blanca is also filled with ghost subdivisions.

Memphis, TN, went away for a few years: