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US 50 near Folsom. East end. 38°41′03″N 121°10′45″W / 38.6841°N 121.1792°W / 38.6841; -121.1792. Folsom Boulevard is a major east–west arterial in Sacramento County, California, United States. Its western terminus is at Alhambra Boulevard in the East Sacramento section of Sacramento and its eastern terminus is at ...
The Gold Line is a light rail transit line in the Sacramento Regional Transit District (SacRT) light rail system. Operating between Sacramento Valley and Historic Folsom stations, the line runs primarily east-west in Sacramento (including downtown, Midtown, East Sacramento), portions of unincorporated Sacramento County, Rancho Cordova, Gold River and Folsom.
Line 34 also operated along Folsom Blvd and Capitol Avenue from Downtown Sacramento to University/65th Street until September 1992, and was called 34 Folsom – McKinley. After September 1992, former line 36 took over bus service along the Folsom/Capitol segment, and the lber 2019, line 34 was renumbered line 134 as part of SacRT forward ...
January 26, 2023 at 6:28 PM. House of Mules, a spin-off of the West Sacramento sports bar, Kick N Mule, will soon open at 13385 Folsom Blvd., Suite 900. An opening date has not yet been determined ...
A man was killedSaturday night after he was struck by a vehicle in Sacramento’s College/Glen neighborhood, police said. About 9:20 p.m., officers were called to Folsom Boulevard near Julliard ...
The Sacramento Regional Transit District, commonly known as SacRT, operates a light rail system, serving portions of greater Sacramento, California, United States. The network consists of three lines, the Blue and Gold lines that both opened in 1987 and the Green Line that opened in 2012. [1][2][3] The 43-mile (69 km) network serves over 56,800 ...
Rancho Cordova Library, 9845 Folsom Blvd., Sacramento Sacramento County Service Center South, 8239 East Stockton Blvd., Suite A, Sacramento Safeway, 8377 Elk Grove Florin Road, Sacramento
The history of Sacramento, California, began with its founding by Samuel Brannan and John Augustus Sutter, Jr. in 1848 around an embarcadero that his father, John Sutter, Sr. constructed at the confluence of the American and Sacramento Rivers a few years prior. Sacramento was named after the Sacramento River, which forms its western border.