.
.
|
At the time the El Cajon Valley
Land Company began to promote Lakeside as a town site in 1886, there were
few inhabitants in the area. It was 1859 when the Ames family
moved into the Los Coches area. There was the Pedrorena Rancho
near what is now the center of town. In 1869, the Ferry Ranch
house was constructed in Lakeside Farms and the Ben Hill house was built
on what is now Willow Road and Wildcat Canyon Road. Other ranchers
moved into the area -- the Kuhners in 1881, the Philbrooks in the
early 1880's. Although construction of the Flume was in progress
in 1883, it wasn't completed until 1889 and the only means for watering
gardens and small orchards was windmills.
Small businesses began to spring
up -- Beamer's
Stable and Blacksmith's Shop, a boarding house that later became the
general store, a butcher shop, a school was started, and to take care of
the spiritual needs of the new town, in 1895 a church
was built on Maine Street. San Diego's population grew from 7,500
in 1886 to 25,000 by November 1, 1887. With the
building of the Inn in 1887
and the construction of the railroad,
Lakeside became a resort town. Twenty-six miles of this railroad
line became the most traveled in San Diego County. Governor
Waterman became its sole owner in 1890. Before the railroad, there
was a daily stage between Lakeside and San Diego which took four hours
for the trip.
.
|

1882
|
|

1900

1910
|
In the July 9, 1937, issue of the Lakeside
Farmer, Dick Henderson made these observations: "My first
recollection of the Lakeside Hotel is finding shelter there from a heavy
shower, which caught my mother and a lady friend and I up in El Monte
and got us well soaked before we reached shelter. Mother was
taking up a 'pre-emption claim' on Boulder Creek, above the diverting
dam, and she and I spent a winter there. Six months residence was
required to get title. That was 50 years ago. Lakeside was
the center of activity of this region. It is much different from
Lakeside in 1898, with its paved highway and autos standing on both
sides; but as Otto Marcks remarked a few days ago, there was lots of
business in the old days."
Outlying areas formed their own personality.
Foster was a small town, completer with post office and depot.
There was Dexter Valley, El Monte, Riverview, Wintergardens, Lakeside
Farms, Eucalyptus Hills, and Lakeview. There were no boundaries to
guide you, but you knew when you were there.
|

|