2000- California Historical Landmark No. 20 located in Riverside (RXSQ)

Riverside’s navel orange

From a recent edition of the Los Angeles Times:

The bronze plaque tells the tale: “The most valuable fruit introduction yet made by the United States Department of Agriculture.”

And there, at Magnolia and Arlington avenues in Riverside, stands the last of California’s original Washington navel orange trees, enclosed by an iron fence, looming over the plaque in the summer sun.

It is the tree that launched the storied citrus industry in the Riverside area, an industry that helped shape the world’s view of Southern California as a tropical paradise in the early 20th century.

Los Angeles Times – August 5, 2004

For those who don’t know, from this very navel orange tree (and a second sibling tree that died long ago) descended every Washington Navel orange tree in California, spawning California’s highly-successful — and very lucrative — navel orange industry. Some historians have referred to it as the second “gold rush” for California.

Related


02b-riv-2008c-parentnavel-008-2ac-800.jpg

Image 3 of 60

"One of the two original trees from which all Washington Navel oranges in California have descended. Propagated from trees imported from Bahia, Brazil in 1870 by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture and sent to Riverside, Cal. in 1873."

Sources: Los Angeles Times (LAT-20040805), California Citrus State Historic Park; NOTE: Published dates for some online versions of newspaper articles cited may not match their archival source date.

2024 PAGE UPDATE: Added additional info/context; added link to June 2019 news article; removed outdated link to photo gallery and added 2011 photo slideshow.

Similar Posts

  • 951

    Another layer of separation has descended upon Inland Southern California. Today, the era of 951 begins. The 909 shrinks today as Riverside and San Bernardino counties begin a slow separation that will give each its own numeric identity (with western Riverside County becoming 951). … San Bernardino County residents and businesses will keep their familiar…

  • | |

    Gallery: Riverside — Main Street Pedestrian Mall

    Following the 1956-57 opening of the Riverside Plaza mall, downtown shopping began a slow but steady decline. In response, city leaders quickly began working at remaking the city’s civic center. Discussions took place regarding additional parking, modernized storefronts, and streetscape improvements. In June 1958, Los Angeles architectural firm Welton Beckett & Associates presented a downtown…

  • |

    Inside the Fox Performing Arts Center

    2010Main lobby 2010Balcony Flash: Fox: May 2007 – Jan. 2010 Crowds flocked to the new Fox Performing Arts Center in downtown Riverside this past weekend to catch an inside look at the newly-renovated facility following a 3-year, $32 million renovation. Friday night was the grand opening, fund-raising gala while Saturday and Sunday were open house…

  • Sales tax wars

    Interesting article recently in The Press-Enterprise regarding what is commonly referred to as “the fiscalization of land” by city and/or county jurisdictions. Since the passage of Proposition 13 in 1978, California cities and counties have scrambled to fill revenue holes created by the proposition’s “property tax cap.” As a result, one revenue source that has…

  • Preview: Center for Social Justice & Civil Liberties

    In late June, we attended the “preview opening” for Riverside Community College District’s “Center for Social Justice & Civil Liberties” museum, which is located inside the newly-restored Riverside Finance Company / Citrus Belt Savings & Loan building. Built in 1926, the building’s Spanish Baroque (Churrigueresque) facade has been painstakingly restored following an 18-month, $6 million…

  • Office, retail picks up

    Three recently released reports by commercial real estate brokerage CB Richard Ellis Inc. says that, although housing remains big within Inland Southern California, both the commercial and industrial sectors are doing brisk business as well. All together, the reports indicate 34 million square feet of on-going construction activity in retail, office, and industrial projects within…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.