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Late
in 1958, the officials of the city and Port
of Shimizu, Japan proposed to the officials
of the Port of Stockton who were visiting
in Japan, that the two cities become affiliated.
This proposal was relayed to the City Council
of Stockton by Port Director Elmo Ferrari,
following which almost a year was consumed
in study and investigation. By agreement,
October 16, 1959 was established as the
beginning of the week as "Sister City
Week," and in Shimizu by special ceremonies
attended by Mayor and Mrs. Dean DeCarli
and Mel Bennett, City Editor of the Stockton
Record, and Mrs. Bennett representing the
City.
At
the time of the establishment of the first
Sister City in 1959, a Mayor's Sister City
Committee was named by Mayor Dean DeCarli
to provide guidance and suggestions with
respect to the Sister City program. Stockton's
first sister city relationship was established
in 1959 with the Japanese port city of Shimizu.
Located on the eastern coast of Japan, approximately
100 miles southwest of Tokyo, Shimizu is
an economically diversified city of 242,000
persons. It is one of Japan's important
ports, with widely recognized shipbuilding
and ship repair facilities. Agriculturally,
it is a center of green tea culture and
mandarin oranges production. Scenically,
it boasts one of the most breathtaking views
of Mt. Fuji to be found in Japan, and to
the south, Nihon Daira plateau, which overlooks
the Pacific Ocean.
Symbolic
of the sister city relationship, Shimizu
has named a four-lane highway traffic bridge
the "Stockton Bridge." In turn,
Stockton has named the levee road on the
south bank of Smith's Canal, Shimizu Drive. |