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  2. Mira Loma (Spanish for "Look Hill"), now officially part of Jurupa Valley, was a census-designated place (CDP) in Riverside County, California, United States. Its population was 21,930 in the 2010 census, up from 17,617 in the 2000 census. Mira Loma was known as Wineville prior to 1930.

  3. Historic events. Between 1926 and 1928 the Wineville Chicken Coop Murders, a series of abductions and murders of young boys, took place within Jurupa Valley city limits. At the time the community of Wineville was unincorporated. Today it is the Jurupa Valley neighborhood of Mira Loma.

  4. May 30, 2011 · MORE ON MIRA LOMA. INCORPORATED: Mira Loma will become part of the new city of Jurupa Valley on July 1, along with the communities of Pedley, Glen Avon, Indian Hills, Sunnyslope, Jurupa Hills, Rubidoux and Belltown. POPULATION: 21,930. ECONOMY: Dating to the 1850s, the Mira Loma area was known for agriculture, particularly grape growing for ...

    • Kurt Snibbe
  5. Mira Loma was a census-designated place in Riverside County, California. It had a population of 21,930 in the 2010 census. Mira Loma was known as "Wineville" prior to 1930, and its name was changed that year to disassociate the community from the Wineville Chicken Coop murders.

  6. The people of Jurupa valley have been carving their place in the world even before the earliest settlers from Europe arrived in the 1870s. Over time, small towns arose as development occurred, including West Riverside (later Rubidoux), Glen Avon, and Wineville (later Mira Loma).

  7. Mira Loma is a neighborhood in Jurupa Valley, the city immediately west of Riverside. Once a farming community called Wineville, its name changed to Mira Loma in 1930. A popular winery from that era is still in operation. In 2011, the Mira Loma community was incorporated as a neighborhood in the newly created city of Jurupa Valley.

  8. May 11, 2022 · News & Public Affairs. Slow Violence of the Supply Chain: A History of Logistics in Mira Loma. Redwood military warehouses from 1942 are demolished to make way for the future of logistics. | Aaron Glascock. From Californias citrus heyday in the 1800s to Cold War military expansion, the Inland Empire has been a center of shipping and distribution.

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