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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location of Lake Elsinore in Riverside County, California
City of Lake Elsinore (the United States)


^ http://www.lake-elsinore.org/

^ "City of Lake Elsinore, California Website" . City of Lake Elsinore, California Website . Retrieved September 14, 2012 .

^ "California Cities by Incorporation Date" . California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions . Archived from the original (Word) on November 3, 2014 . Retrieved August 25, 2014 .

^ "City Treasurer" . City of Lake Elsinore. Archived from the original on August 10, 2014 . Retrieved September 22, 2014 .

^ "2019 U.S. Gazetteer Files" . United States Census Bureau . Retrieved July 1, 2020 .

^ "Lake Elsinore" . Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey . Retrieved November 3, 2014 .

^ "Lake Elsinore (city) QuickFacts" . United States Census Bureau . Archived from the original on April 26, 2015 . Retrieved May 18, 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Population and Housing Unit Estimates" . United States Census Bureau. May 24, 2020 . Retrieved May 27, 2020 .

^ "Water-supply Paper" . U.S. Government Printing Office. March 13, 1919 . Retrieved March 13, 2019 – via Google Books.

^ "American Memory from the Library of Congress" . memory.loc.gov . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ Historic Spots in California, Third Edition . Stanford University Press. ISBN   9780804740203 . Retrieved March 13, 2019 – via Google Books.

^ "Historical Topographic Map, Elsinore, Edition Date: 1901, Scale 1/125000" . Archived from the original on December 19, 2002 . Retrieved June 19, 2011 .

^ Water-supply paper, Volumes 425–429 By Geological Survey (U.S.), History of Elsinore Lake, p. 255]

^ Jump up to: a b c Water-supply paper, Volumes 425–429 By Geological Survey (U.S.), History of Elsinore Lake, p. 255

^ Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States . Govt. Print. Off. p.  118 .

^ Staff, “Elsinore Valley And Its Ranching Possibilities,” Riverside Daily Press , Riverside, California, Saturday evening 13 December 1919, Volume XXXIV, Number 269, part 2, page 1.

^ Tom Hudson, Lake Elsinore Valley, its story 1776–1977 , 2nd Ed., Published by author, 1988. ISBN   0-931700-01-9

^ Lake Elsinore Historical Society, Lake Elsinore , Arcadia Publishing, 2008, p. 10 ISBN   978-0738555881 OCLC   176900939

^ "Pacific Standard Magazine" . Retrieved April 27, 2012 .

^ "State & County QuickFacts" . 2010 U.S. Census . United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015 . Retrieved April 15, 2012 .

^ http://www.swrcb.ca.gov/board_info/agendas/2002/july/0718-12.doc State Water Resources Control Board

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived April 15, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Revised 2011-12-13

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ Lake Elsinore . 2008. ISBN   9780738555881 .

^ https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/sdut-lake-elsinore-lampposts-restored-2007may04-story.html

^ https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/sdut-lake-elsinore-aimees-castle-is-on-the-market-2010mar21-story.html

^ https://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-home-20100509-story.html

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ New Country Club Is Rising at Elsinore, San Bernardino County Sun, Wednesday 05 May 1926, Page 11

^ https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/sdut-fire-investigators-officially-list-arson-as-cause-2001feb15-story.html

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ Beach Resort, Source: May 14, 1925, Lake Elsinore Valley Press

^ http://www.lake-elsinore.org/home/showdocument?id=718

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ Rancho La Laguna

^ https://www.pe.com/2017/09/07/another-lake-elsinore-historical-structure-lost-to-fire/

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ City of Lake Elsinore General Plan Archived September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Adopted 2011-12-13

^ "Lake Elsinore, California Köppen Climate Classification (Weatherbase)" . Weatherbase . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "Lake Elsinore historic weather averages" . Western Regional Climate Center . Retrieved December 24, 2012 .

^ "Census of Population and Housing" . Census.gov . Retrieved June 4, 2015 .

^ "2010 Census Interactive Population Search: CA - Lake Elsinore city" . U.S. Census Bureau . Retrieved July 12, 2014 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Lake Elsinore (city) QuickFacts" . United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015 . Retrieved April 15, 2012 .

^ "Outlets at Lake Elsinore" . Outlets at Lake Elsinore . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "City of Lake Elsinore, California Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for Fiscal Year ended June 30, 2019" . Retrieved February 6, 2020 .

^ "Statewide Database" . UC Regents. Archived from the original on February 1, 2015 . Retrieved December 16, 2014 .

^ "California's 42nd Congressional District - Representatives & District Map" . Civic Impulse, LLC.

^ "Service Area" . rvcfire.org . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "Lake Elsinore Unified School District School District in Lake Elsinore, CA. | GreatSchools" . www.greatschools.org . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "Lake Elsinore Unified School District" . www.leusd.k12.ca.us . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "Lake Elsinore Schools | CA - Ratings and Map of Public and Private Schools" . www.localschooldirectory.com . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "Mountainside Ministries, Lake Elsinore, Christian Church" . www.go2mountainside.com . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "California Association of Public Cemeteries" . capc.info . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ "USGS Geographic Names Information System (GNIS)" . geonames.usgs.gov . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ Shirley Brooks, "History of Elsinore Valley Cemetery", Lake Elsinore Genealogical Society accessdate=September 30, 2011

^ "Lake Elsinore: Riverside County" . International Jewish Cemetery Project . International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies.

^ "After voters keep gas tax, plans for 15 Freeway toll lanes from Corona to Lake Elsinore move ahead" . Press Enterprise . Retrieved February 10, 2020 .

^ "Funding Received for Extension of I-15 Express Lanes, Cajalco Road to State Route 74" . Riverside County Transportation Commission . Retrieved February 10, 2020 .

^ https://www.pe.com/2018/01/23/input-sought-on-ethanac-expressway-that-would-link-hemet-to-lake-elisnore/

^ https://riversidetransit.com/index.php/riding-the-bus/maps-schedules

^ "Lake Elsinore: Cross will remain on veterans memorial" . The Press-Enterprise . November 13, 2012.

^ "Lake Elsinore: Humanist group sues over cross on planned monument" . The Press-Enterprise . June 3, 2013.

^ Jump up to: a b Sheridan, Tom (February 27, 2014). "LAKE ELSINORE: Judge halts memorial planned for The Diamond" . The Press-Enterprise . Retrieved March 30, 2015 .

^ American Humanist Association v. City of Lake Elsinore , Case No. 5:13-cv-00989 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 25, 2014).

^ Williams, Michael (April 29, 2014). "LAKE ELSINORE: Vets memorial dispute costs city $200,000" . The Press-Enterprise . Retrieved March 31, 2015 .

^ Williams, Michael (June 12, 2014). "LAKE ELSINORE: Veterans memorial plan gets council approval" . The Press-Enterprise . Retrieved March 31, 2015 .

^ Williams, Michael (November 4, 2014). "LAKE ELSINORE: Legal battles over, veterans memorial finally built" . The Press-Enterprise . Retrieved March 31, 2015 .

^ "Preparations Underway, Veterans Memorial to be Unveiled" . City of Lake Elsinore . October 8, 2014 . Retrieved March 31, 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b Richard Backus (March–April 2007). "Lake Elsinore, Calif., via the Ortega Highway" . Motorcycle Classics . Retrieved August 12, 2009 .

^ "1973 CR250M by Honda - Bike Museum at Bob Logue Motorsports" . Archived from the original on October 31, 2010 . Retrieved March 18, 2019 .

^ "LAKE ELSINORE: Skateboard park a hit" . July 5, 2015 . Retrieved March 13, 2019 .

^ George, Jacob. "Celebration of Art" . Studio 395 .


Places adjacent to Lake Elsinore, California
Municipalities and communities of Riverside County, California , United States
Lake Elsinore is a city in western Riverside County, California , United States. Established as a city in 1888, it is on the shore of Lake Elsinore , a natural freshwater lake about 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) in size. The city has grown from a small resort town in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to a population of well above 60,000 as of 2017.

Native Americans have long lived in the Elsinore Valley . The Luiseño people were the earliest known inhabitants. Their pictographs can be found on rocks on the Santa Ana Mountains and in Temescal Valley , and artifacts have been found all around Lake Elsinore and in the local canyons and hills. [ citation needed ]

Overlooked by the expedition of Juan Bautista de Anza , the largest natural lake in Southern California was first seen by the Spanish Franciscan padre Juan Santiago , exploring eastward from the Mission San Juan Capistrano in 1797. In 1810, the water level of the Laguna Grande was first described by a traveler as being little more than a swamp about a mile long. [9] Later in the early 19th century, the lake grew larger, providing a spot to camp and water their animals for Mexican rancheros, American trappers, the expedition of John C. Frémont , and the immigrants during the California Gold Rush as they traveled along the southern shore of the lake on what later became the Southern Emigrant Trail and the route of the Butterfield Overland Mail .

On January 7, 1844, Julian Manriquez acquired the land grant to Rancho La Laguna , a tract of almost 20,000 acres (8,100 ha) which included the lake and an adobe being built near the lake on its south shore at its western corner that was described by Benjamin Ignatius Hayes , who stayed there overnight January 27, 1850. [10]

In 1851, Abel Stearns acquired the rancho and sold it in 1858 to Augustin Machado . Augustin Machado built a seven-room adobe ranch house and an outbuilding on the southwest side of the lake. Soon after, Rancho La Laguna became a regular stop on the Butterfield Overland Mail route between Temecula 20 mi (32 km) to the southeast and the Temescal station 10 mi (16 km) to the northwest. The old Manriquez adobe was used as the station house. Over the years, a framed addition and a second story were added, and it was used as a post office for the small settlement of Willard from 1898 until September 30, 1902. The building stood until it was razed in 1964, at what is now 32912 Macy Street. Today, three palm trees still grow in front of the site along Macy Street in front of the property. [11] [12]

As a result of the Great Flood of 1862 , the level of the lake was very high, so the Union Army created a post at the lake to graze and water their horses. In the great 1862–65 drought, most of the cattle in Southern California died and the lake level fell, especially during 1866 and 1867, when practically no rain fell. However, the lake was full again in 1872, when it overflowed down its outlet through Temescal Canyon. [13]

While most of the old Californio families lost their ranchos during the great drought, the La Laguna Rancho remained in the hands of the Machado family until 1873, when most of it was sold to Englishman Charles A. Sumner. Juan Machado retained 500 acres (200 ha) on the northwest corner of the lake, where his adobe still stands near the lake at 15410 Grand Avenue.

After 1872, the lake again evaporated to a very low level, but the great rains in the winter of 1883–84 filled it to overflowing in three weeks. Descriptions of the lake at this time say that large willow trees surrounding the former low-water shore line stood 20 ft (6.1 m) or more below the high-water level and were of such size that they must have been 30 or more years old. This indicated the high water of the 1860s and 1870s must have been of a very short duration. [14]

On October 5, 1883, Franklin H. Heald and his partners Donald Graham and William Collier bought the remaining rancho, intending to start a new town. In 1884, the California Southern Railroad built a line from Colton through the Cañon de Rio San Jacinto (now Railroad Canyon) to link with San Diego , and a rail station La Laguna appeared near the corner of what is now Mission Trail Road and Diamond Drive. On April 9, 1888, Elsinore became the 73rd city to be incorporated in California, just 38 years after California became a state. Originally, Elsinore was in San Diego County , but the city became part of Riverside County upon its creation in 1893. It was named Elsinore after the Danish city in Shakespeare's "Hamlet", which is now its sister city ( Helsingør ). Another source maintains Elsinore is a corruption of "el señor", Spanish for "the gentleman", because the city site had been owned by a don. [15]

The rainfall until 1893 was greater than normal, and the lake remained high and overflowed naturally on three or four occasions during that time. The lake water was purchased by the Temescal Water Company for the irrigation of land in Corona . Its outlet channel was deepened, permitting gravity flow down the natural channel of Temescal Canyon to Corona for a year or more after the water level sank below the natural elevation of its outlet. As the lake surface continued to recede, a pumping plant was installed and pumping was continued a few seasons, but the concentration of salts in the lake, due to the evaporation and lack of rainfall, soon made the water unfit for irrigation and the project was abandoned by the company. [14]

From the beginning, the mineral springs near the lake attracted visitors seeking therapeutic treatments. In 1887, the Crescent Bath House, now known as "The Chimes", was built; it still stands in historic downtown and is a registered national historic site. By 1888, the economy was supported by coal and clay mining at what became the town of Terra Cotta , gold mining in the Pinacate Mining District , ranching , and the agriculture of fruit and nuts. After 1893, the lake's water level sank almost continuously for nearly 10 years, with a slight rise every winter. Heavier precipitation, beginning in 1903, gradually filled the lake to about half the depth above its minimum level since 1883. Then, in January 1916, a flood rapidly raised the level to overflowing.

Lake Elsinore was a popular destination in the first half of the 1900s for celebrities to escape the urban Hollywood scene. Many of their homes still stand on the hills surrounding the lake, including Aimee's Castle, a unique Moorish-style house built by Aimee Semple McPherson . Also, actor Bela Lugosi , known for his lead role in Universal Pictures ' film, Dracula , built a home that still exists in the city's Country Club Heights district.

The Riverside Daily Press published this description in December 1919:

The lake also hosted teams for Olympic training and high-speed boat racing in the 1920s. The lake went dry in the mid-1930s, but refilled by 1938. [14]

During World War II , the lake was used to test seaplanes , and a Douglas Aircraft plant making wing assemblies for Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers was located in the city. [17]

The lake ran dry during most of the 1950s and was refilled in the early 1960s. Despite its relatively small African American population, it has the distinction of electing the first black mayor in California. Tom Yarborough was elected in 1966, three years before Douglas Dollarhide became the mayor of Compton .

In 1972, citizens of the city voted to rename it Lake Elsinore. [18] More than a week of heavy rains in 1980 flooded the lake, destroying surrounding homes and businesses. Since then, a multimillion-dollar project has been put into place to maintain the water supply at a consistent level, allowing for homes to be built close to the lake. Overflow water in the Lake spills out via Alberhill Creek, a tributary of Temescal Creek . In 2007, an aeration system was added to help with the lake's ecosystem.

Rapid population growth in the mid-2000s altered the appearance and image of Lake Elsinore from a small lakeside town of 3,800 people in 1976 to a bedroom community of upper middle-class professionals. [ citation needed ] The city was ranked as the 12th fastest growing city in California between 2000 and 2008. [19] Now, over 51,821 residents as of the 2010 census live there, and formerly open hillsides have been converted into housing tracts. [20]

According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 41.7 sq mi (108.0 km 2 ) of which 36.2 sq mi (93.8 km 2 ) of it is land and 5.5 sq mi (14.2 km 2 ), or 13.14%, is covered by water.

Lake Elsinore , originally Laguna Grande , is the largest natural freshwater lake in Southern California and is situated at the lowest point within the 750-square-mile (1,900 km 2 ) San Jacinto River watershed at the terminus of the San Jacinto River, where its headwaters are found on the western slopes of San Jacinto Peak with its North Fork, and Lake Hemet with its South Fork. Lake levels are healthy at 1,244 feet (379 m) above sea level with a volume of 30,000 acre⋅ft (37  Gl ) [21] that often fluctuate, although much has been done recently to prevent the lake from drying up, flooding, or becoming stagnant. At 1,255 feet (383 m), the lake would spill into the outflow channel on its northeastern shore, known properly as Temescal Wash, flowing northwest along I-15, which feeds Temescal Creek, which dumps into the Santa Ana River just northwest of the City of Corona. It then flows to Orange County , out to the Pacific Ocean just south of Huntington State Beach .

Lake Elsinore is bordered by the Elsinore Mountains to the west, which are a part of the larger Santa Ana Mountain Range , and receive a few inches of snowfall a few days each year. Included in the Santa Ana Mountains is the Cleveland National Forest and the community of El Cariso . Lake Elsinore is northwest of Wildomar and the northern portion is part of the Temescal Canyon . To the east of the lake are the much older and more eroded slopes of the Temescal Mountains .

Lake Elsinore is a city which encompasses a large geographical area. To better distinguish the wide range of neighborhoods, the city is organized into 1
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