Native Americans came to the area 2,000 years ago. The local tribe in Rancho Mirage is the
Agua Caliente Indian tribe of
Cahuilla Indians. The tribe was almost annihilated by
smallpox in 1862–63 but survived, today establishing a resort and casino within the modern city limits. An ancient Native-American trade route, the
Halchidhoma trade route, follows the water holes and water springs along the foothills of the
Santa Rosa Mountains. A segment of this trail is now part of
California State Route 111 in Rancho Mirage. The trade route originally reached from the Pacific Ocean in the west to central Arizona, and was used for centuries for trading, food, and for religious purposes. About 1,000 years ago, the local Cahuilla tribes were introduced to pottery from Native American tribes by the Colorado River. The Spaniards also knew of the Coco-Mariposa Trail in the 1820s when they would send letters by Cahuilla runners along the trail to the mission in
Tucson, Arizona. The natural environment in Rancho Mirage has supplied the Cahuilla people with various water sources. Although rare in such
arid desert environments, the Cahuilla had access to Magnesia Spring in Magnesia Spring Canyon, which is from
Whitewater River. In addition, a variety of natural
springs are situated along the
San Andreas Fault line near
Indio Hills. Throughout the 1920s, the area was open desert dotted with
date and
grape ranches. In 1928, here were purchased by the Southland Land and Realty Company. Access was planned by camel on roads given North-African names, including Tunis Road, Tangier Road, and Sahara Road. The
1929 Depression put an end to the plans. A few years later, a Los Angeles realtor, Lawrence Macomber, purchased hundreds of acres here. Along with Don Cameron, the two began offering property here advertised as "fifteen minutes from Palm Springs, CA." They were able to attract actor
Frank Morgan, among others, until the onset of World War II brought development to an end once again. In 1944, hundreds of acres were bought by Major
A. Ronald Button. He described it as "the most wind free area I could find in the desert." Two years later, in 1946,
Henry L. Gogerty established an airstrip here and later launched the Desert Air Hotel and Airpark. The Annenberg Estate or '
Sunnylands', owned by philanthropists
Walter and
Leonore Annenberg, was popular with the wealthy and powerful, including
Frank Sinatra,
Bob Hope,
Fred Astaire,
Ginger Rogers,
Patrick Macnee,
Zeppo Marx and
Mary Martin. Several
U.S. Presidents vacationed at the Annenberg estate, including
Richard Nixon,
Ronald Reagan,
Gerald Ford, and
Barack Obama. President Ford later purchased a house in Rancho Mirage and was living there at the time of his death in 2006. The
Betty Ford Center, an addiction rehabilitation center, is located in Rancho Mirage at the
Eisenhower Medical Center. President Obama also used Sunnylands for summit meetings with world leaders during his administration. Some of the first places of accommodation to be established were the White Sun Guest Ranch and Wonder Palms Ranch, and later Desert Air Hotel and Thunderbird Ranch in the 1940s. The Desert Air Hotel was purchased by the
Rancho Las Palmas Country Club in the 1970s. Rancho Las Palmas has Spanish architecture consisting of wood walls,
Saltillo tiles, and high ceilings. The resort, which is the city's third-largest employer, is located on a property in the center of Rancho Mirage, across Bob Hope Drive from The River, an outdoor shopping center. It has a 27-hole golf course. Thunderbird Ranch, which opened in 1946, was purchased by
Johnny Dawson, who established
Coachella Valley's first 18-hole golf course.
Thunderbird Country Club was established in 1950, and the
golf cart or electric golf cart is rumored to have been invented at Thunderbird.
Ford Thunderbird is also named for the country club.
Tamarisk Country Club soon followed in the 1950s, and later an array of country clubs were established in the city: Desert Island Golf and Country Club in 1971, Sunrise Country Club in 1974,
Mission Hills Country Club in 1979, the Club at Morningside (1982), Rancho Mirage Country Club (1985), and
Westin Mission Hills Resort and Spa (1987). Rancho Mirage was incorporated in 1973 from a merger of five unincorporated areas known as the "Cove communities" (Rancho Mirage, Desert, Palmas, Tamarisk, and Thunderbird), and had 3,000 permanent residents at the time. is the only skyscraper in the Coachella Valley. In 2001, the
Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians established the
Agua Caliente Casino on the intersection of Bob Hope Drive and Ramon Road off
Interstate 10. It was the second casino to be built in the Coachella Valley. The casino is a popular destination for locals, tourists, and gambling enthusiasts. In 2008 the tribal board completed the expansion of the Agua Caliente resort, which includes a 16-story hotel and spa, as well as remodeling the casino and expanding the parking structures. A theater for top-name entertainers opened in 2009. Though the Agua Caliente Resort and Casino was just outside the border of Rancho Mirage in an unincorporated area, the City of Rancho Mirage included the property as part of the city in an agreement with the tribe so they would have access to police and firefighting services. A new residential development for
senior citizens by
Pulte Homes, Inc., known as Del Webb Rancho Mirage, will open in the year 2020. It is the third local development by the company after Sun City Palm Desert and Sun City Shadow Hills in
Indio. In March 2021, it was announced that Rancho Mirage would be the site of first US neighborhood composed completely of 3D-printed, zero net energy homes. The project is a joint effort from companies Palari and Mighty Buildings. It will comprise 15 homes, and are expected to be completed by 2022. In February 2022,
The Walt Disney Company announced that Rancho Mirage will be the location of its first
Storyliving by Disney community. Named Cotino, the community will be developed in collaboration with DMB Development of
Scottsdale, Arizona.
Etymology The name is both
Spanish ("Rancho") and
French ("Mirage"). One story of the name's origin relates to a woman of the name Ruth Wheeler who visited Magnesia Falls Canyon and named the ranch she saw in a distance a
mirage. The area adopted the name Rancho Mirage in 1934. The City of Rancho Mirage was incorporated under the same name on August 3, 1973.
Presidential history greeting the media in Rancho Mirage with President
Gerald Ford and
Betty Ford at the 2016 US-
ASEAN Summit in Rancho Mirage at the
Annenberg Estate Rancho Mirage has been nicknamed the "Playground of the Presidents" due to its extensive history of U.S. presidents residing in and visiting the city. For example, President
Harry Truman regularly visited the
Tamarisk Country Club, while President
Dwight D. Eisenhower lived nearby. President
Gerald Ford and First Lady
Betty Ford were residents of Rancho Mirage for thirty years. The Fords moved to
Thunderbird Country Club after leaving office. Walter and Leonore Annenberg's estate,
Sunnylands, became known as the western White House during the
Richard Nixon administration in the 1960s. At the time, the estate also became the biggest single-family home in the county. President
Dwight D. Eisenhower also stayed here and President Richard Nixon wrote his last
State of the Union here. President
Ronald Reagan was also a regular visitor at Sunnylands and Presidents Gerald Ford,
Jimmy Carter,
Bill Clinton, and
George W. Bush have all been visitors here. While President
George H. W. Bush had an official summit here with Japanese Prime Minister
Toshiki Kaifu in 1990,
Queen Elizabeth II of Britain visited in 1980. President
Barack Obama spent two days here in 2013 where he visited with
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping. President Obama then became the eighth U.S. president to visit Sunnylands. President Ronald Reagan attended eighteen New Year's Eve celebrations in Rancho Mirage, including every year during the
Reagan Administration. President
George H. W. Bush played golf with
Bill Clinton in Rancho Mirage throughout the 1990s. President Richard Nixon went to Rancho Mirage a month prior to announcing his resignation from office. Nixon signed the Sunnylands' guestbook on the day he was issued a full pardon from President Ford. He hosted the first-ever U.S. summit with the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Rancho Mirage on February 15–16, 2016. He also hosted
King Abdullah II of Jordan here in 2014. President
Donald Trump visited a fundraising event at Porcupine Creek in Rancho Mirage in February 2020. President
Gerald Ford died on December 26, 2006, at his home in Rancho Mirage. His first
funeral service took place in the city days before those first in Washington, D.C., on January 2, 2007, and then in Grand Rapids on January 4 that same year. First Lady
Betty Ford died on July 8, 2011, in Rancho Mirage. ==Geography==