Pre-1800 The area was inhabited by the Temecula Indians for hundreds of years before their contact with the Spanish
missionaries (the people are now generally known as the
Luiseños, after the nearby
Mission San Luis Rey de Francia). Seven bands of Luiseño Indians inhabited the Temecula valley pre-contact: the
Pechanga,
La Jolla,
Soboba,
Pala,
Rincon,
Pauma, and San Luis Rey bands (presently, all of the bands except the San Luis Rey are
federally recognized tribes). The
Pechanga Band of Luiseño believe their ancestors have lived in the Temecula area for more than 10,000 years, though ethnologists think they arrived at a more recent date. In Pechanga history, life on Earth began in the Temecula Valley. They call it "'Éxva Temeéku", the place of the union of Sky-father, and Earth-mother ("Tuukumit'pi Tamaayowit"). The Temecula Indians ("Temeekuyam") lived at "Temeekunga", or "the place of the sun". Other popular interpretations of the name include "The sun that shines through the mist" or "Where the sun breaks through the mist". The first recorded Spanish visit occurred in October 1797, with a
Franciscan padre, Father Juan Norberto de Santiago, and Captain Pedro Lisalde. Father Santiago kept a journal in which he noted seeing "Temecula ... an Indian village". The trip included the
Lake Elsinore area and the Temecula Valley.
1800–1900 Little is known about the early 1800s because Temecula records were destroyed in the fire that followed the
1906 San Francisco earthquake. In 1798, Spanish missionaries established the
Mission of San Luis Rey de Francia and designated the Indians living in the region as "Sanluiseños", shortened to "Luiseños". In the 1820s, the nearby
Mission San Antonio de Pala was built. In mid-1839,
Pío Pico petitioned the governor of
Mexican California to give him the lands of Temecula, as he had been put in control of secularizing nearby
Mission San Luis Rey de Francia and wanted the fertile land to himself. This upset the
Luiseños living there, but the Governor gave Pico temporary control over Temecula nonetheless. As Pico was removed from his position for his severe mistreatment of the
Luiseños, he still insisted on his owning Temecula, which only inflamed the
Luiseños more. In November of 1840, the
Luiseños of Temecula armed themselves and warned that they'd cause a massive uprising if Pico did not remove his grazing cattle, forcing Pico out of the area. A fourth grant, known as
Rancho Santa Rosa, was made to Juan Moreno in 1846, and was in the hills to the west of Temecula. On December 6, 1846, which became known as the
Temecula Massacre, at the
Battle of San Pasqual,
Andrés Pico led
Californios to kill over twenty of U.S. General
Stephen W. Kearny's men. Subsequently, in January 1847, José Lugo with
Cahuilla Indians came to the
Temecula Valley in pursuit of the
Luiseño Indians and killed an unknown number, about 40–100 of them, reportedly, in the canyon just west of the current
Vail Lake Dam. As American settlers moved into the area after the war, conflict with the native tribes increased. A
treaty was signed in the Magee Store in Temecula in 1852, but was never ratified by the
United States Senate. In addition, the Luiseños challenged the Mexican land grant claims, as, under Mexican law, the land was held in trust to be distributed to the local Indian tribes after becoming subjects. They challenged the Apis claim to the Little Temecula Rancho by taking the case to the
1851 California Land Commission. On November 15, 1853, the commission rejected the Luiseño claim; an appeal in 1856 to the district court was found to be in favor of the heirs of Pablo Apis (he had died in late 1853 or early 1854). The Luiseño of Temecula village remained on the south side of Temecula Creek when the Apis grant was acquired by Louis Wolf in 1872; they were evicted in 1875. A
stagecoach line started a local route from Warner Ranch to
Colton in 1857 that passed through the Temecula Valley. Within a year, the
Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach line, with a route between
St. Louis, Missouri, and San Francisco, stopped at Temecula's Magee Store. On April 22, 1859, the first inland Southern California post office was established in Temecula in the Magee Store. This was the second post office in the state, the first being located in San Francisco. The Temecula post office was moved in the ensuing years; its present locations are the seventh and eighth sites occupied. The
American Civil War put an end to the Butterfield Overland Stage Service, but stage service continued on the route under other stage companies until the railroad reached Fort Yuma in 1877. In 1862, Louis Wolf, a Temecula merchant and postmaster, married Ramona Place, who was mixed-race and half Indian. Author
Helen Hunt Jackson spent time with Louis and Ramona Wolf in 1882 and again in 1883. Wolf's store became an inspiration for Jackson's fictional "Hartsel's store" in her 1884 novel,
Ramona. In 1882, the United States government established the Pechanga Indian Reservation of approximately some from downtown Temecula. Also in 1882, the
California Southern Railroad, a subsidiary of the
Santa Fe Railroad, completed construction of the section from
National City to Temecula. In 1883, the line was extended to
San Bernardino. In the late 1880s, a series of floods washed out the tracks and the section of the railroad through the canyon was finally abandoned. The old Temecula station was used as a barn and later demolished. In the 1890s, with the operation of
granite stone quarries, Temecula granite was shaped into fence and hitching posts, curbstones, courthouse steps, and building blocks. At the turn of the 20th century, Temecula became an important shipping point for grain and cattle.
1900–1989 In 1904,
Walter Vail, who had come to the United States with his parents from
Nova Scotia, migrated to California. Along with various partners, he began buying land in Southern California. Vail bought ranchland in the Temecula Valley, buying of Rancho Temecula and Rancho Pauba, along with the northern half of Rancho Little Temecula. Vail was killed by a streetcar in Los Angeles in 1906; his son, Mahlon Vail, took over the family ranch. In 1914, financed by Mahlon Vail and local ranchers, the First National Bank of Temecula opened on Front Street. In 1915, the first paved, two-lane county road was built through Temecula. By 1947, the Vail Ranch contained over . In 1948, the Vail family built a dam to catch the
Temecula Creek water and created
Vail Lake. Through the mid-1960s, the economy of the Temecula Valley centered around the Vail Ranch; the cattle business and agriculture were the stimuli for most business ventures. In 1964, the Vail Ranch was sold to the
Kaiser—
Aetna partnership. A later purchase by the group brought the total area to , and the area became known as Rancho California. In the 1970 census, the
United States Census Bureau enumerated the population of the entire Murrieta-Rancho California-Temecula area at 2,769. In 1970, the Temecula Town Association, a non-profit, charitable organization, incorporated. In 1977, the present-day Rancho California Water District was formed. On November 5, 1979,
KRTM 88.9 FM went on the air in Temecula. In the 1980 census, 10,215 people were enumerated in the area, a 269 percent increase from the prior census. In 1984, the Temecula American Viticultural Area (AVA), the official designation for the local wine country (renamed the
Temecula Valley AVA in 2004), was established. In 1985, the completion of
Interstate 15 between the
Greater Los Angeles area and San Diego began a
subdivision land boom, making it possible to own a new home in Temecula and have a manageable work
commute to
San Diego County.
1990–present In 1990, the first United States Census Bureau count of Temecula as a city enumerated 27,099 people. On October 27, 1999, the
Promenade Mall opened in Temecula. In 2005, Temecula annexed the master-planned community of Redhawk, bringing the population to 90,000. After a period of rapid population growth and home construction, the
2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis and the resultant
United States housing market correction caused a sharp rise in home
foreclosures in the Temecula-Murrieta region. In 2012, the city and the Pechanga tribe successfully blocked a proposal by
Granite Construction to construct a rock quarry south of the city. The Pechanga tribe purchased the site for $3 million, now known as Pu'eska Mountain. In 2013, the 140-bed Temecula Valley Hospital opened, providing the city with a full range of hospital services. In 2016, the Vail Headquarters historic district opened in the Redhawk Towne Center shopping center, repurposing several historic buildings such as the Wolf Store for retail, dining, and entertainment uses. ==Geography==