Nusun Global Empire: Your Solar Energy Experts in Fresno, CA
Nusun Global Empire Provides Fresno Homes with Solar Panel Installation
Several factors influence a home’s suitability for solar, including location, roof orientation, shading, and age. Our solar advisors can assess your home’s suitability in Fresno and provide expert guidance.
By choosing Nusun Global Empire, you’re investing in a sustainable future and reducing reliance on traditional energy sources. Nusun Global Empire offers solar panel installation for homes in Clovis, and Kingsburg and covers the area of Hanford with solar expert designs. Our company offers free solar panel designs for the cities of Sanger, Reedley, and Lemoore and energy savings in Selma. Contact us today for a free consultation in Madera and learn how our solar solutions can benefit you and your community in Fresno.
Things to Do in Fresno
Explore the Fresno Chaffee Zoo, where you can pet stingrays, feed giraffes, and encounter animals like lions, elephants, and rhinos in naturalistic enclosures. Located in Roeding Park, the zoo also offers special behind-the-scenes encounters and animal training sessions. Visit the Forestiere Underground Gardens to explore 10 acres of hand-dug tunnels and grottoes, featuring fruit trees and grapevines in this remarkable underground landmark. In spring, experience the vibrant Fresno County Blossom Trail, where apple, stone fruit, and nut trees burst into bloom. At Simonian Farms, a fifth-generation operation, you’ll find fresh seasonal produce, antiques, and local goods inside a charming red barn. For dining, enjoy The Annex Kitchen, a contemporary restaurant highlighting local ingredients in rustic Italian dishes like handcrafted pastas and wood-fired pizzas, perfect for a night out in Fresno.
Fresno: Historical Factoid
In 1900, the city of Fresno, which had incorporated fifteen years earlier, was the county metropolis, a true Victorian city with its horse-car lines, dirt streets, and wood sidewalks. C. J. Craycroft was finishing the unexpired term of Joseph Spinney as mayor. Spinney, elected in 1895, served for only ten minutes, just long enough to make a brief speech resigning the post and nominating his political ally, Craycroft a drama that proved Fresno still had something to learn about civic government.
Fresno County’s second city was Selma, with a population of more than 2,000. Selma had a raisin packing house, a flour mill, and several churches and fraternal organizations. The Selma Irrigator newspaper and its publisher, Mayor John Jay Vanderburgh, opposed Prohibition, but Selma became the Valley’s first “dry” city in 1904.
Unincorporated communities in the county included Clovis, Centerville, Millerton, Pollasky, Reedley and Sanger. The birthplace of Fresno County, Millerton, was not much more than a memory by 1900. The old courthouse and businesses had been abandoned in 1872 when residents voted in favor of moving the county seat to Fresno Station. By 1900 all the land that had comprised the town and nearby Fort Miller was in the hands of the first county judge, Charles Hart, who remained a lifelong Millerton resident.
Site: https://www.valleyhistory.org/history-of-fresno-county
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