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$25,000 View on Map
JJG2489
1456 E Philadelphia St Spc 96
Ontario, CA (in city)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Mobile or Manufactured
1100 sq.ft.
$65,000 View on Map
PCW6038
3734 Oak Creek Dr., Unit B
Ontario, CA (in city)
1 Bed, 1 Bath Condominium
507 sq.ft.
Beautiful Complex in the Ontario Area This Creekside/Country Oaks location is a park-like setting …more»
$175,000 View on Map
PJJ9289
1028 N Turner Ave Apt 150
Ontario, CA (in city)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Condominium
1400 sq.ft.
$339,750 View on Map
MMW5618 6 Photos
131 Plaza Serena
Ontario, CA (in city)
4 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1604 sq.ft.
Spanish home has been tastefully remodeled with many upgrades: EXTERIOR: New roof, …more»
$739,000 View on Map
DAG3293 21 Photos
12019 Eastend Ave
Chino, CA (in city)
6 Bed, 3 Bath Home
3300 sq.ft.
$169,900 View on Map
AMD6212
1074 E Arrow Hwy
Upland, CA (3.7 miles)
2 Bed, 1 Bath Home
840 sq.ft.
$105,000 View on Map
GDD5764
10151 Arrow Rte
Rancho Cucamonga, CA (4.5 miles)
1 Bed, 1 Bath Condominium
708 sq.ft.
$333,000 View on Map
WJW9703
555 W Foothill Blvd
Claremont, CA (4.7 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
2500 sq.ft.
$310,000 View on Map
MMM8213
9795 Mills Ave
Montclair, CA (5.2 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
2700 sq.ft.
$44,900 View on Map
DGT5342
9800 Baseline Rd Spc 121
Alta Loma, CA (5.7 miles)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Mobile or Manufactured
1280 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Ontario, CA

Ontario is a city located in San Bernardino County, California, United States. As of the 2000 Census, the city had a total population of 170,373. It is the home of LA/Ontario International Airport and the Ontario Mills. It is also the former home of the Ontario Motor Speedway. It takes its name from the Ontario Model Colony development established in 1882 by Canadian engineers George Chaffey and William Chaffey and their brothers Charles and Elswood, who named the settlement after their home province of Ontario, Canada.

The area that is now Ontario was part of the lands used for hunting and foraging by the semi-nomadic Tongva (Gabrieleño) Indians, who were known to roam as far south as the western San Bernardino Mountains. At the time of Mexican and later of North American occupation, active Native American settlements were scattered across the entire valley. Remains of a Serrano village were discovered in the neighboring foothills of the present-day city of Claremont. Juan Bautista de Anza is said to have passed through the area on his 1774 expedition, and to this day a city park and a middle school bear his name. Following the 1819 establishment of San Bernardino Asistencia, which may have served as an outpost of the San Gabriel mission, it became part of a large, vaguely identified area called "San Antonio".
In 1826, Jedediah Smith passed through what is now Upland on the first overland journey to the West coast of North America via the National Old Trails Highway (present-day Foothill Blvd).

The 1834 secularization of California land holdings resulted in the land's transferral to private hands. In 1881, the Chaffey brothers purchased the land (which at that time also included the present-day city of Upland) and the water rights to it. They engineered a drainage system channeling water from the foothills of Mount Baldy down to the flatter lands below that performed the dual functions of allowing farmers to water their crops and preventing the floods that periodically afflict them. They also created the main thoroughfare of Euclid Avenue (California Highway 83), with its distinctive wide lanes and grassy median. The new "Model Colony" (called so because it offered the perfect balance between agriculture and the urban comforts of schools, churches, and commerce) was originally conceived as a dry town, early deeds containing clauses forbidding the manufacture or sale of alcoholic beverages within the town.

Ontario attracted farmers (primarily citrus) and ailing Easterners seeking a drier climate. To impress visitors and potential settlers with the "abundance" of water in Ontario, a fountain was placed at the Southern Pacific railway station. It was turned on when passenger trains were approaching and frugally turned off again after their departure. The original "Chaffey fountain," a simple spigot surrounded by a ring of white stones, was later replaced by the more ornate "Frankish Fountain," an Art Nouveau creation now located outside the Ontario Museum of History and Art.

Agriculture was vital to the early economy, and many street names recall this legacy. The Sunkist plant also remains as a living vestige of the citrus era. The Chaffey brothers left to found the settlements of Mildura, Australia and Renmark, Australia which met with varying success. Charles Frankish continued their work at Ontario.

Mining engineer John Tays refined the design of the novel "mule car," used from 1887 for public transportation on Euclid Avenue to 24th Street. At that point, the two mules were loaded onto a platform at the rear of the car and allowed to ride, as gravity propelled the trolley back down the avenue to the downtown Ontario terminus. Soon replaced by an electric streetcar, the mule car is commemorated by a replica in an enclosure south of C Street on the Euclid Avenue median.

Ontario was incorporated as a city in 1891, and North Ontario broke away in 1906, calling itself Upland. Ontario grew at an astronomical rate, increasing 10 times in the next half a century. The population of 20,000 in the 1960s again grew 10 times more by the year 2007. Ontario was viewed as an "Iowa under Palm trees," with a solid Midwestern/Mid-American foundation, but it had a large German and Swiss community. Tens of thousands of European immigrants came to work in agriculture, and in the early 1900s the first Filipinos and Japanese farm laborers arrived, later to display nursery ownership skills.

Ontario has over two centuries of Hispanic residents from the Californio period of Spanish colonial and Mexican rule in the 1840s, but the first wave of Mexican settlers was in the 1880s brought as workers in the railroad industry (see traquero) and another wave from the Mexican Revolution of the 1910s. The first youth gangs formed in Ontario in the 1940s from the vestiges of the farmworking Mexican American community that came to work in Ontario's citrus and olive groves. By the 1950s, the gang Onterio Varrio Sur (the South Side or Mission Boulevard) had established themselves, and by the 1980s, some of its members rose to prominent positions in the Mexican Mafia. Mexican Americans resided in the city's poorer southern side facing State Route 60 and Chino, the city's high number of Hispanic/Latin American immigrants arrived in the 1980s and '90s than national per capita gave Ontario a distinction as a "Little Mexico" except the city isn't exclusively Latino.

The sentence before this badly needs to be rewritten. Grammatically, it makes no sense what so ever.

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