Sunday, December 20, 2009

Old Town Irvine


DID YOU KNOW THAT, until the fifties, "Irvine" was Irvine Village, located on Sand Canyon? It was founded as a "hub" by the Irvine Ranch in 1887—when the Santa Fe Railroad came through—and soon included a lima bean warehouse (1895), general store (1911), hotel (1913), blacksmith's shop (1916), and post office. By the mid-60s, the focus had shifted to the new development surrounding UCI, and "Irvine village" became "East Irvine." The new-fangled fools with their planned city to the southwest took the name "Irvine."

"East Irvine" didn't stick, I guess. Today, I dropped by what is now called "Old Town Irvine," the neat product of redevelopment (and some bulldozing) by the city in 1984.
Here's a photo of the warehouse as it appeared in the 40s or 50s:



I took the shot below—of the northeast part of the building, now occupied by Tia Juana's Long Bar—maybe a year or two ago. (See history.)



I'm not sure when this one (below) was taken. It is a shot from the east, about where the 5 meets the toll road nowadays. Observe that we see two long buildings. I suspect that they were joined after the 1984 redevelopment.


You can see that western warehouse(?) below, too:


I'm told—by a friend who once worked in the building—that much of the original (processing?) machinery is preserved and visible inside the west end (at right), now offices. I'll check that out one of these days.
Below: judging by the hairstyles, this pic is, what, from the 1930s?


This shot (below) is from an earlier era, I think. Circa 1910-1920?


The general store, hotel, etc. were restored and moved closer to the warehouse decades ago. The Knowlwood restaurant occupies the old blacksmith's shop.






This appears to be from circa 1920-25. The general store?



The hotel? Circa 1913?


Compare these images with the restorations depicted above.


The east end, about a year ago.



According to La Quinta, the hotel includes "unique rooms built in a lima bean silo."



Pepper tree, across Sand Canyon, near the spot where, I believe, the general store once stood.

For information about the "Old Town" redevelopment project (1984), see city document. "Old town" was first designated "Myford," after James Irvine's son, since the name "Irvine" had already been taken. That was in the 1880s. By 1914, the other Irvine must've dissolved, cuz the name became available; they took it. Hence: "Irvine Village." Then, in 1964, the Irvine Co. needed the name for their UC-centric development to the southwest. "Irvine" or "Irvine Village" became "East Irvine," or "Old Town Irvine." Now, it's pretty much forgotten, except by customers of Tia Juana's Long Bar.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Love the ladies' bobs and how they smile for the camera.

Anonymous said...

Seeing these kind of posts reminds me of just how technology truly is something we cannot live without in this day and age, and I am 99% certain that we have passed the point of no return in our relationship with technology.


I don't mean this in a bad way, of course! Societal concerns aside... I just hope that as memory becomes cheaper, the possibility of copying our memories onto a digital medium becomes a true reality. It's one of the things I really wish I could encounter in my lifetime.


(Posted on Nintendo DS running [url=http://kwstar88.zoomshare.com/2.shtml]R4i Card[/url] DS SysBro)

alanahaft.com said...

Great post! We can see how technology really help us to keep the memories alive.

old farmer said...

The old warehouses were not "joined." The front one was built around 1880 back one in 1895. Front one torn down in late 1940's for construction of concrete silo building in front where La Quinta is located. Equipment pretty much gone from all buildings. Check out the hardwood floors in the old 1895 warehouse. Ladies are from picking room upstairs all part of the processing of lima beans. Store, old Irvine Hotel and one tenant house all moved from other side of Sand Canyon to be saved and preserved. Great history here.

Anonymous said...

Who are you, "old farmer"? Please tell us more--much more--if you wouldn't mind. It's great to find someone with these memories, or at least this historical knowledge.

MAH

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