HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992/03/31 - Agenda PacketC.,~C A ~0
RANCHO CUCA~
1977
TUESDAY MARCH 31 1992 3:30 P.M.
OLD ALTA LOMA TOUR WORKSHOP
ALTA LOMA HEIGHTS CITRUS PACKING HOUSE
(AMERICAN NATIONAL CAN SITE)
7125 AMETHYST STREET
RANCHO CUCAMONGA, CALIFORNIA
I. Roll Call
Commissioner Chitiea Commissioner Tolstoy
Commissioner McNiel Commissioner Vallette
Commissioner Melcher
II. OLD ALTA LOMA TOUR - Walking tour and background session
on the historic community of Alta Loma in order to
provide the Commission data on the develo'3ment of the Old
Alta Loma Neighborhood Plan
III. Adjournment
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; OLD ALTA LOMA COMMERCIALCENTER, c. 1948-1955
~salas Hellman in 1870 purchased the Cucamonga Rancho, part of which
became Alta Loma. By 1887, Hellman's Iowa tract had combined with the
Hermosa tract developed by Adolph Petsch to the east to form the colony of
loamosa. The coming of the Santa Fe line from San Bernardino to Los
Angeles, which passed through Cucamonga in 1887, started a land boom,
bring4ng entrepreneurs eager to profit from the fledgling dtrus industry.
Citrus early on became the primary, industry of Ioamosa colony, which would
become Alta Loma. The relative abundance of water and auspicious soil
conditions of the area led to the predominance of this money-making crop. '
The importance of the citrus industr7 led to other developments. In order to
increase the profitability of their venture, citrus growers lead by Peter
Demens, in 1912 began lobbying for a Padtic Electric line which would come
through ioarnosa. This was successful, and by 1914 the line was completed
through newly-named Alta Loma. The planning area grew up around this
line as the main business district of the community.
The business of agriculture occupied most of the citizens of the new Gowth
town. Grapes, apricots, peaches and almonds were all grown in the Alta
Loma area. But it was the combination of the dtrus growers concentrated in
the region and the building of several citrus packing houses in Old Alta Loma
that formed the main industry, of the community.
The combination of low prices, high expenses, and a destructive freeze
signalled the start of the decline of the dtrus industry, in Alta Loma. As local
packing houses consolidated then dosed in the mid- to late-1950s, ranchers
became discouraged and sold out, many times to city dwellers moving away
from the high prices and bad air quality of Los Angeles to the rural
atmosphere of Alta Loma.
The influx of people spurred and accelerated growth in Alta Loma. As more
and more people moved in, groves were taken out to make room. Today the
Old AIm Loma planning area has lost much of its rural atmosphere with only
scattered fragments of the historical citrus landscape remaining.
Nevertheless, much of the historic architectural fabric remains. New
construction has encroached upon, although not taken over, the
"downtown" area.