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


11a-riv-2008c-hom-dt-026-800.jpg

Image 47 of 60

As the navel orange industry prospered, so too did Riverside, as wealthy easterners began flocking to Southern California seeking mild winters and wide-open opportunities. Pictured at left is the Fred H. Speich house, former executive with fruit companies in Chicago, Riverside and Los Angeles.

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2024 PAGE UPDATE: Added additional info/context; added link to June 2019 news article; removed outdated link to photo gallery and added 2011 photo slideshow.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

  • |

    Postcard: Beautiful Riverside, California

    Here’s an aerial view from approximately 1960 over downtown Riverside. The view is looking north from Fourteenth Street, with the intersection of Fourteenth and Market/Magnolia at bottom-left. At top-right is the then relatively new Riverside Freeway (Highway 91), with southbound off-ramp at Seventh Street (now Mission Inn Avenue) and southbound on-ramp at Ninth Street (currently…

  • |

    Out & About – Historic walking tours of downtown Riverside

    From the eclectic Mission Inn and magnificent County Courthouse to the modern City Hall and mid-century public library, downtown Riverside is rich in architectural history and variety. Fortunately, many of these gems are within walking distance down a few adjoining streets. As such, we’ve created a few short circular, self-guided tours — Mission Inn Avenue,…

  • |

    Expansion for Museum of Riverside set to begin

    A ceremonial groundbreaking was held June 27th for the long-awaited and oft-delayed expansion for the Museum of Riverside, which has been shuttered for nearly eight years. Between 150-200 members from the community joined city leaders to mark the event in front of the museum’s historic 1912 building. Speakers included Mayor Patricia Lock Dawson, Ward 1…

  • LNR closer to redeveloping Carousel Mall

    Plans for redeveloping a struggling mall in downtown San Bernardino moved a step closer this week as Miami-based LNR Property Corporation submitted draft environmental documents for replacing the 35-year-old, Victor Gruen-designed mall with a mixture of residential and commercial uses. Tentatively called “Court Street West,” plans are for up to 750 residential units, mostly condos,…

  • Local non-profit alliance wins Mount Rubidoux cross auction

    The historic Serra Cross atop Mount Rubidoux in Riverside is set to remain in perpetuity following the winning bid by a local non-profit alliance. Totally Mt. Rubidoux (TMR) — an alliance comprising Friends of Mt. Rubidoux, Mission Inn Foundation and Riverside Land Conservancy — won the April 11th public auction held in front of Riverside…

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.