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  1. William then became the road commissioner for Alameda County. He used his authority to influence the construction of roads in his own favor. In 1876, the town was chartered under the name of "Haywards". However, it was not legal to name a post office after a living person, so the official name was "Haywood".

  2. William Hayward eventually became the road commissioner for Alameda County. He used his authority to influence the construction of roads in his own favor. He was also an Alameda County supervisor.

  3. William Dutton Hayward, the first white settler and the founder of the town bearing his name in Eden township, Alameda county, was born in Hopkinton, Middlesex county, Mass., August 31, 1815, and gained his first business experience in a shoe store in Georgetown, Essex, county, the same state, to which he proceeded in 1836.

    • With a population of 162,954 as of 2020, Hayward is the sixth largest city in the Bay Area and the third largest in Alameda County.
    • Hayward was ranked as the 34th most populous municipality in California.
    • It is included in the San Francisco–Oakland–San Jose Metropolitan Statistical Area by the US Census.
    • It is located primarily between Castro Valley, San Leandro and Union City, and lies at the eastern terminus of the San Mateo–Hayward Bridge.
  4. Mar 16, 2017 · Opened by William Hayward in 1852 after his stint as a prospector failed, the inn was a famous stop on the route between the cities. When the town was incorporated in 1876, the name Haywards...

  5. William Hayward eventually became the road commissioner for Alameda County. He used his authority to influence the construction of roads in his own favor. He was also an Alameda County supervisor. In 1876, a town was chartered by the State of California under the name of "Haywards".

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  7. the Alameda Sun was told off the record that they were likely from the shell mound. The Alameda County Coroner’s Office retrieved the remains and turned them over to the Native Americans. The coroner would not disclose what happened to the remains, but suggested that the proper authorities reinterred them in the Ohlone Indian Cemetery in Fremont.

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