Lake Elsinore
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and energy of the settlers shall have made it a valley of fruit and flowers in the midst of which the lake shall lie like a priceless gem. Named after the castle in Shakespeare s Hamlet, the lake and city proved to be a stopover spot for hunters and ranchers, eventually vacationers, and then water and motor sports aficionados. Today Lake Elsinore has a thriving population of about 30,000 year-round residents in the southwestern corner of Riverside County.
Edythe J. Greene
To portray this area�s unique formative years, coauthors Edythe J. Greene, Elizabeth Hepler, and Mary Louise Rowden drew on the collections of the Historical Museum of Lake Elsinore, the City of Lake Elsinore, and its library. Photographs from the private albums of local residents help to illustrate the more recent decades of this enduring priceless gem.
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Lake Elsinore - Edythe J. Greene
Jackson.
INTRODUCTION
For centuries, the Luiseno Indians called Lake Elsinore and its environs home, before the arrival of the Spanish and other explorers into the California region. One such explorer was Franklin Heald. In 1888, he founded the City of Lake Elsinore, the first city in what was to become Riverside County. Heald’s dream began in 1880, when he sighted a lake from the summit of Mount Wilson and culminated eight years later with the founding of the community of Lake Elsinore.
The dreams have continued to this day, as people have gravitated to Lake Elsinore and made their dreams realities by building and inhabiting a Moorish castle with catacombs and gold doorknobs, or a Ponderosa-style ranch house, or a cabin-style home on nearby man-made Lake Whitney. They come to Elsinore for the skydiving, Glen Ivy Spa, Tom’s Farms, Glen Eden Sun Club, or to operate a family business, such as a local hardware store that has lasted 100 years. Within a stone’s throw of Lake Elsinore, the largest gold nugget ever discovered in California was unearthed. Over time, many events have helped to shape the community into what we see today, including the building of the railroad, the wars, and the Great Depression.
The 3,000-acre Lake Elsinore, one of Southern California’s largest lakes, is a natural jewel set in the beautiful Elsinore valley next to the impressive Ortega Mountains and the Cleveland National Forest. Once this area was a playground for the rich and famous, including many Hollywood celebrities and United States presidents, as well as people from other states and countries who have either visited or moved here. Some came to soak in the healing waters of the hot sulfur mineral springs. The lake itself offers such sports as boating, fishing, water and jet skiing, and windsurfing. The area is also well-known for its thermal winds, making it ideal for skydiving, hang gliding, and for sailplanes.
Midway between two of California’s largest cities, Los Angeles and San Diego, Lake Elsinore is an hour’s drive from Pacific Ocean beaches. It’s situated in southwestern Riverside County on the edge of Cleveland National Forest. Grown into a modern and up-to-date city in every way, Lake Elsinore registers an average daily temperature of 78.5 degrees, with blue skies and clean air.
One
EARLY SETTLERS
Lake Elsinore has the distinction of being the only natural lake in Southern California. The Luiseno Indians called it Entengvo Wumoma, meaning hot springs by the little sea.
The early Spaniards named it Laguna Grande, or big lagoon.
In 1884, Heald officially named it Lake Elsinore, the name of the castle in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet. (Courtesy Dr. Timothy Kimble, D.C.)
Bears were held in high regard in the Luiseno culture. The peace-loving Luiseno Indians created a world of plenty that lasted for hundreds of years. Their ancestors found a peaceful way of dealing with the changes brought about by the repeated incursions into their homelands. (Courtesy Edythe J. Greene.)
Long before Europeans came to what is now California, Native Americans enjoyed the blend of warm and cool waters flowing naturally from Coldwater Canyon. What we now know as Glen Ivy Hot Springs Spa was to them a sacred site and the only man-made structures were domeshaped mud saunas built around the artesian hot springs. This area was home to the tribe the Spaniards later called Lusienos, who named the valley Temescal.
This was an Aztec word meaning sweat lodge,
a reference to the adobe saunas the Native Americans constructed. Tradition held that conflict was not allowed at a hot springs; it was a deeply safe and peaceful place. (Courtesy Joe Dwaileebe.)
The Luiseno Indians roamed widely through what is now Riverside, Orange, and San Diego Counties. Pictured here is Ghala, a Luiseno Indian in full dress. (Courtesy Edythe J. Greene.)
Grinding corn and acorns for food took many hours of labor for the American Indian women. Here we see the many holes in the rocks that resulted from their strenuous grinding work. (Courtesy Edythe J. Greene.)
A Luiseno Indian maiden gathered clay and colored rock to celebrate her new life