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The
Native American cultures of southern California had stabilized
some three thousand years ago, thriving until almost eliminated
by European invasion. Over twenty linguistic families with close
to one hundred thirty-five different languages characterized this
culture. By about 1200 A.D. the Kucamongan Native Americans established
a village-like clustering around the land mass we know as Red
Hill. The Kucamongan people were part of the Gabrielino culture,
and anthropologists believe that, at their peak, the Gabrielinos
existed as one of the largest concentrations of indigenous peoples
on the North American continent.
Eager to expand its
empire, Spain set out to explore North America in the eighteenth
century. In 1769, Captain Gaspar de Portola led a group of soldiers
and Franciscan monks, supervised by Father Junipera Serra, to
Baja California in a colonization effort. The Mission System established
by Serra supported a loosely-constructed social system of ranchos,
primarily cattle producing, ordered by a feudal and kinship way
of life.
The
nineteenth century brought with it profound change and expansion.
By 1833, the amount of control held by Spain diminished and as
Mexico won its independence from the Crown, all land in southern
and Baja California was opened up for granting from the new governor
of Mexico. A dedicated soldier, smuggler and politician, Tubercio
Tapia was granted 13,000 acres of land around the area called
Cucamonga by governor Juan Bautista Alvarado on March 3, 1839.
Using Indian labor, Tapia constructed a well-fortified adobe home
on Red Hill and raised great herds of cattle. Unlike many who
had gone before him, Tapia began a successful winery, portions
of which stand today known to us as the Thomas
Winery.
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American forces invaded
California in 1846, annexed it in 1848, and made it a state in
1850. Unlike the northern portion of our state during that era,
southern California, and specifically Los Angeles, was described
as a "random collection of adobes rimmed by sandy wastes,
wild mustard, and willow trees."
This
mid-nineteenth-century mixture of cultures and lives is well represented
in the estate developed by Alabama-born John
Rains and his wife Maria Merced Williams de Rains. Dona
Merced was the great-granddaughter of Francisco Lugo and granddaughter
of Antonio Lugo, and daughter of Isaac Williams of the famous
Rancho Santa Ana del Chino. The Rains purchased the Rancho de
Cucamonga from Tapia's daughter and her husband Leon Victor Prudhomme
in 1858. Before his murder in 1862, Rains greatly expanded the
vineyards Tapia had planted and imported brick masons from Ohio,
via Los Angeles, to construct the family home, now listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
The Rancho period came
to a close and changing land ownership and debates over water
rights determined the American settlement of this region. When
combined with transportation, the availability of water shaped
the nature of development. The wagon trail over Cajon Pass to
the Mission San Gabriel in 1826, the Butterfield Stagecoach line
in 1858, the Union Pacific Railroad in 1887, and the Pacific Electric
Railway Line in 1913 all brought supplies men, women, hopes and
dreams to this area while men like George Day captured the water
as it emerged on its path from the San Bernardino Mountains above
us.
Cucamonga's
history stretches back further than most of the other regional
communities. President Abraham Lincoln signed into existence a
post office located at the base of Red Hill in 1864 the first
in the western portion of San Bernardino County. After John Rains'
death and Dona Merced's departure, the Rancho went into foreclosure,
and in 1870 it was sold to Isaias Hellman and other San Francisco
businessmen who later formed the Cucamonga Company. In 1887, both
water and access were provided to the Cucamonga colony, as irrigation
tunnels were dug into Cucamonga canyon and the Santa Fe Railroad
extended through the area. Although early settlers planted and
cultivated citrus, olive, peach, and other crops, vineyards and
wine making characterized the Cucamonga community.
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Alta
Loma was carved from the original Rancho de Cucamonga. The banker,
Hellman, formed the Cucamonga Homestead Association, but could
not get water to the subdivision, and the town's development was
curtailed until Adolph Petsch and four other investors opened
up the Hermosa tract in 1881 just outside of the Rancho lands.
Spurred on by the competition, Hellman established the Iowa tract
in 1882 and brought needed water to the tract via Cucamonga Canyon.
Dug by Chinese laborers, some of these water ways are still in
use. The two colonies combined to form Ioamosa in 1887 and when
in 1913 the Pacific Electric Railway came through, supported by
Captain
Peter Demens, a Russian nobleman, and other citrus growers
looking to improve crop transportation, the town became Alta Loma.
The
City's eastern community of Etiwanda has the distinction of being
the first town planned by George
and William Chaffey who purchased the land in 1881 from Joseph
Garcia, a retired Portuguese sea captain. The innovations
in city planning, subdividing, promotion, beautification, and
most significantly irrigation for which the Chaffeys would become
famous, were first tested in the Etiwanda colony. George Chaffey,
an experienced engineer, created a mutual water company and pipe
system of irrigation that became the standard for water system
management in southern California. Not set on just bringing water
to the arid chaparral, Chaffey also harnessed hydro-electric power
and on December 4, 1882, the first electric light glowed from
Etiwanda; and four months earlier the first long distance call
in southern California was completed between San Bernardino and
Etiwanda. By 1913, the community boasted of paved streets, rock
curbs, and streetlights quite a list of accomplishments for a
small town.
Men
and women from many cultures have shaped Rancho Cucamonga's history.
Many Mexican families labored in the vineyards and groves, often
living in small, quickly constructed camps, located away from
the other centers of settlement. Later, they created a thriving
community of their own, known as North Town, in which a dance
hall, theater, markets, restaurants, and a church, Our Lady of
Mt. Carmel, was founded and bound them together. Much of the heritage
and built environment of North Town exists today. Likewise, Italian
immigrants like the Nosenzos, Guideras, DiCarlos, and Campanellas
established a community out along Foothill Boulevard in southern
Etiwanda, consisting of homes, wineries of all sizes, and Sacred
Heart church.
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