Murrieta's history

Some scenes of old Murrieta

 

 
     

spacerIt was magnificent land blessed with verdant open spaces dotted with towering oak trees, sycamores, a valley of rich grasses and natural hot springs. It reminded Esequial Murrieta of his native Spain, so he bought 52,000 acres, fully intending to move his sheep ranching operation here from central California.

 

spacerBut he never did, going back to the Santurtzi area of Spain to marry and turning his holdings over to younger brother Juan, who brought a flock of some 100,000 sheep to the valley. The year was 1873.

 

spacerAnd that was the start of something that would grow to be very big.

 

spacerIn 1882, the Southern California Railroad laid tracks linking the valley to its southern transcontinental route. By 1890, Murrieta had experienced its first boom, the population reaching 800, big for those days.

 

spacerThe natural springs that watered  Juan´s flock later were instrumental in bringing international renown to the community as the Murrieta Hot Springs Resort flourished during the first half of the 1900s.

 

spacerIn 1935, the trains stopped running and the boom Murrieta had been enjoying went bust. The calm lasted for 50 years until a new community sprouted almost overnight and began a period of phenomenal growth. Extending Interstate 15 through the valley was the impetus for building what was at that time extremely affordable housing.

 

spacerWhen Murrieta officially became a city on July 1, 1991, it was already home to more than 24,000 residents. Compare that to the 2,200 estimated to have been living here in 1980.

spacerBy 2005, more than 85,000 people had moved to the community, making it one of the five largest in new cities Riverside County.

spacerThe natural scenic beauty of the area and what is still by California standards reasonably priced housing, especially since the recession period from 2006, continues to attract significant numbers of residents and businesses who are finding Murrieta a great place to grow.

spacerThose living in the community find distinguished schools, abundant recreation, excellent medical facilities expanding employment opportunities and one of the lowest crime rates in Southern California.

spacerAnd entrepreneurs find a market growing larger by the day, above average household incomes, a skilled labor force and a business-friendly city hall.

spacerIt´s a community with a past and vision for its future. One that welcomes challenges, takes risks, embraces opportunity.

 

spacerMore and more people are discovering what the Murrieta brothers envisioned more than a century ago: Murrieta is, indeed, a great place to grow.




                        Murrieta's timelines

1873 Basque sheep rancher Juan Murrieta buys 52,000 acres of ranch land for $52,000.

1882 California Southern Railroad Company builds tracks through the valley. The tracks eventually become part of the southern transcontinental route.

1884 Temecula Land and Water Company establishes and subdivides town sites, naming it Murrieta.

1885 Murrieta's train depot is built, and a town site begins to grow around the nucleus of the depot. Pioneer families are drawn by advertisements of land for as little as $5 an acre. In that year, a 50'x 140' lot in the town site sold from $20 to $75.

1890 Town with population of 800 is growing up around the railroad. The Fountain House Hotel, across from the depot, is a social hub.

1916 Murrieta's grammar school has 62 pupils. The area produces fruits and grains.

1920s The Guenther Family's Murrieta Hot Springs resort has become renowned in Southern California.

1935 Last train departs from Murrieta, ending local boom. That same year, the Fountain House Hotel is destroyed by fire.

1947 Town has population of 1,200. Residents from Murrieta Fire Protection District donate $1,400 for a truck. Ten volunteers use the Methodist Church bell to sound a total of six calls in the first year.

1956 Murrieta Valley Town Hall Association forms. In 1981, members dedicate a 7,200 square-foot town hall built with community development block funds.

 


   

1960s Murrieta is known for breeding racehorses. It was home to "Flying Pastor" a thoroughbred who won two legs of the prestigious Triple Crown for thoroughbred race horses.

1980s Freeways widened. Murrieta becomes easily accessible from larger metropolitan areas. The Interstate 15 Freeway is completed linking the Los Angeles area to San Diego.

 

1991 Murrieta officially becomes a city. Jack Smith is chosen as the first city manager. Murrieta employees move into a city hall on Beckman Court.

 

1992 Murrieta starts its own police department. City leaders say they like the local control that their own police force provides compared to contracting with the county sheriff's department.

 

1993 Murrieta takes over control of the 46-year-old fire protection district.

 

1994 The city approves a general plan, a guide for future development of the town. About 50 general plan meetings over two years result in the city agreeing to a target population of about 104,000. Also, Old Town Murrieta is flooded again, resulting in more than $210,000 in damages. Work starts on two flood channels intended to remedy the persistent flooding.

 

1998 City of Murrieta establishes its own public library.