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Riverside County, California

33°44′N 115°59′W / 33.73°N 115.98°W / 33.73; -115.98

Riverside County
County of Riverside
Interactive map of Riverside County
Location in the state of California
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionInland Empire
IncorporatedMay 9, 1893
Named forThe City of Riverside, and the city's location beside the Santa Ana River
County seatRiverside
Largest city (population)Riverside
Largest city (area)Palm Springs
Government
 • TypeCouncil–CEO
 • ChairChuck Washington
 • Vice ChairV. Manuel Perez
 • Board of Supervisors
Supervisors[1]
 • Chief executive officerJeff Van Wagenen
Area
 • Total7,303 sq mi (18,910 km2)
 • Land7,206 sq mi (18,660 km2)
 • Water97 sq mi (250 km2)
Highest elevation10,843 ft (3,305 m)
Lowest elevation
−234 ft (−71 m)
Population
 • Total2,418,185
 • Density336/sq mi (130/km2)
GDP
 • Total$95.159 billion (2022)
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific Time Zone)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (Pacific Daylight Time)
FIPS code06-065
Congressional districts25th, 35th, 39th, 40th, 41st, 48th
Websitewww.CountyOfRiverside.us

Riverside County is a county located in the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 2,418,185,[3][5] making it the fourth-most populous county in California and the 10th-most populous in the United States. The name was derived from the city of Riverside, which is the county seat.[6]

Riverside County is included in the Riverside–San BernardinoOntario Metropolitan Statistical Area, also known as the Inland Empire. The county is also included in the Los AngelesLong Beach Combined Statistical Area.

Roughly rectangular, Riverside County covers 7,208 square miles (18,670 km2) in Southern California, spanning from the greater Los Angeles area to the Arizona border. Geographically, the western region of the county is chaparral with a Mediterranean climate, while the central and eastern regions of the county are predominantly desert or mountainous. Most of Joshua Tree National Park is located in the county. The desert resort cities of Indio, Coachella, Palm Springs, Palm Desert, Indian Wells, La Quinta, Rancho Mirage, Cathedral City and Desert Hot Springs are located in the Coachella Valley region of central-eastern Riverside County.

Between 2007 and 2011, large numbers of Los Angeles-area workers moved to the county to take advantage of more affordable housing.[7] Along with neighboring San Bernardino County, it was one of the fastest-growing regions in the state prior to the recent changes in the regional economy. In addition, smaller, but significant, numbers of people have been moving into southwest Riverside County from the San Diego metropolitan area.[8][9] The cities of Temecula and Murrieta accounted for 20% of the increase in population of the county between 2000 and 2007.[citation needed]

Etymology edit

When Riverside County was formed in 1893, it was named for the city of Riverside, the county seat. That city, founded in 1870, was so named because of its location near the Santa Ana River.[10][11]

History edit

Indigenous edit

 
The homelands of the Cahuilla include a large area of Riverside County.

The Indigenous peoples of the valleys, mountains and deserts of what is now Riverside County are the Serrano, the Payómkawichum, the Mohave, the Cupeno, the Chemehuevi, the Cahuilla, and the Tongva.[12][13] The Aguanga and Temecula Basins, Elsinore Trough and eastern Santa Ana Mountains are the traditional homelands of the Payómkawichum. The inland valleys in the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains and the desert of the Salton Sink are the traditional homelands of the Cahuilla.

Spanish era edit

The first European settlement in the county was a Mission San Luis Rey de Francia estancia or farm at the Luiseño village of Temescal. In 1819, the Mission granted Leandro Serrano permission to occupy the land for the purpose of grazing and farming, and Serrano established Rancho Temescal. Serrano was mayordomo of San Antonio de Pala Asistencia for the Mission of San Luis Rey.

Mexican era edit

With the signing of the Treaty of Cordoba in 1821, Mexico gained its independence from Spain, but the San Gabriel Mission near what is now Los Angeles, California, continued to expand, and established Rancho San Gorgonio in 1824. The ranch was to be one of the Mission's principal rancherias, and the most distant, and it occupied most of today's San Gorgonio Pass area.[14][15]

Following the Mexican secularization act of 1833 by the First Mexican Republic, a series of rancho land grants were made throughout the state. In the Riverside County this included; Rancho Jurupa in 1838, El Rincon in 1839, Rancho San Jacinto Viejo in 1842, Rancho San Jacinto y San Gorgonio in 1843, Ranchos La Laguna, Pauba, Temecula in 1844, Ranchos Little Temecula, Potreros de San Juan Capistrano in 1845, Ranchos San Jacinto Sobrante, La Sierra (Sepulveda), La Sierra (Yorba), Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Nuevo y Potrero in 1846.

New Mexican colonists founded the town of La Placita on the east side of the Santa Ana River at the northern extremity of what is now the city of Riverside in 1843.

American era edit

When the initial 27 California counties were established in 1850, the area today known as Riverside County was divided between Los Angeles County and San Diego County. In 1853, the eastern part of Los Angeles County was used to create San Bernardino County. Between 1891 and 1893, several proposals and legislative attempts were put forth to form new counties in Southern California. These proposals included one for a Pomona County and one for a San Jacinto County. None of the proposals were adopted until a measure to create Riverside County was signed by Governor Henry H. Markham on March 11, 1893.[16]

County formation edit

The new county was created from parts of San Bernardino County and San Diego County. On May 2, 1893, seventy percent of voters approved the formation of Riverside County. Voters chose the city of Riverside as the county seat, also by a large margin. Riverside County was officially formed on May 9, 1893, when the Board of Commissioners filed the final canvass of the votes.[16]

The county is also the location of the March Air Reserve Base, one of the oldest airfields continuously operated by the United States military. Established as the Alessandro Flying Training Field in February 1918, it was one of thirty-two U.S. Army Air Service training camps established after the United States entry into World War I in April 1917. The airfield was renamed March Field the following month for 2d Lieutenant Peyton C. March Jr., the recently deceased son of the then-Army Chief of Staff, General Peyton C. March, who was killed in an air crash in Texas just fifteen days after being commissioned. March Field remained an active Army Air Service, then U.S. Army Air Corps installation throughout the interwar period, later becoming a major installation of the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. Renamed March Air Force Base in 1947 following the establishment of the U.S. Air Force, it was a major Strategic Air Command (SAC) installation throughout the Cold War. In 1996, it was transferred to the Air Force Reserve Command and gained its current name as a major base for the Air Force Reserve and the California Air National Guard.[citation needed]

Riverside county was a major focal point of the Civil Rights Movements in the US, especially the African-American sections of Riverside and heavily Mexican-American communities of the Coachella Valley visited by Cesar Chavez of the farm labor union struggle.

Riverside county has also been a focus of modern Native American Gaming enterprises. In the early 1980s, the county government attempted to shut down small bingo halls operated by the Morongo Band of Cahuilla Mission Indians and the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians. The tribes joined forces and fought the county all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled in the tribes' favor on February 25, 1987.[17] In turn, Congress enacted the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act in 1988 to establish a legal framework for the relationship between Indian gaming and state governments. Naturally, both tribes now operate large casinos in the county: the Morongo Casino, Resort & Spa and the Fantasy Springs Resort Casino adjacent to Spotlight 29 Casino.

The county's population surpassed one million people in 1990 (year-round, would be 1980 with seasonal residents) when the current trend of high population growth as a major real estate destination began in the 1970s. Once strictly a place for long-distance commuters to L.A. and later Orange County, the county and city of Riverside started becoming more of a place to establish new or relocated offices, corporations and finance centers in the late 1990s and 2000s. More light industry, manufacturing and truck distribution centers became major regional employers in the county.[citation needed]

Geography edit

 
El Paseo in Palm Desert, California

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 7,303 square miles (18,910 km2), of which 7,206 square miles (18,660 km2) is land and 97 square miles (250 km2) (1.3%) is water.[18] It is the fourth-largest county in California by area. At roughly 180 miles (290 km) wide in the east–west dimension, the area of the county is massive. Riverside County, California is roughly the size of the State of New Jersey in total area. County government documents frequently cite the Colorado River town of Blythe as being a "three-hour drive" from the county seat, Riverside. Some view the areas west of San Gorgonio Pass as the Inland Empire portion of the county and the eastern part as either the Mojave Desert or Colorado Desert portion. There are probably at least three geomorphic provinces: the Inland Empire western portion, the Santa Rosa Mountains communities such as Reinhardt Canyon, and the desert region. Other possible subdivisions include tribal lands, the Colorado River communities, and the Salton Sea.

Flora and fauna edit

 
Yucca pines near Ryan Mountain Trail in Joshua Tree National Park
 
Southerly view of the San Jacinto Mountains from State Route 62

There is a diversity of flora and fauna within Riverside County. Vegetative plant associations feature many desert flora, but there are also forested areas within the county. The California endemic Blue oak, Quercus douglasii is at the southernmost part of its range in Riverside County.[19]

National protected areas edit

There are 19 official wilderness areas in Riverside County that are part of the National Wilderness Preservation System. Some are integral parts of the above protected areas, most (11 of the 19) are managed solely by the Bureau of Land Management, and some share management between the BLM and the relevant other agencies. Some extend into neighboring counties:

State parks edit

County parks and trails edit

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
190017,897[24]
191034,696[24]93.9%
192050,297[24]45.0%
193081,024[24]61.1%
1940105,524[24]30.2%
1950170,046[24]61.1%
1960306,191[24]80.1%
1970459,074[24]49.9%
1980663,166[24]44.5%
19901,170,413[25][24]76.5%
20001,545,387[25]32.0%
20102,189,641[26]41.7%
20202,418,185[27]10.4%
2022 (est.)2,473,902[28]2.3%
U.S. Decennial Census[29][failed verification]
1790–1960[30]

2020 census edit

Riverside County, California - Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[26] Pop 2020[27] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 869,068 788,235 39.69% 32.60%
Black or African American alone (NH) 130,823 146,762 5.97% 6.07%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 10,931 11,960 0.50% 0.49%
Asian alone (NH) 125,921 164,889 5.75% 6.82%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 5,849 6,767 0.27% 0.28%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 3,682 12,365 0.17% 0.51%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 48,110 84,912 2.20% 3.51%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 995,257 1,202,295 45.45% 49.72%
Total 2,189,641 2,418,185 100.00% 100.00%

Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

 
Ethnic origins in Riverside County

2011 edit

Places by population, race, and income edit

2010 edit

The 2010 United States Census reported that Riverside County had a population of 2,189,641. The racial makeup of Riverside County was 1,335,147 (61.0%) White (40.7% Non-Hispanic White), 140,543 (6.4%) African American, 23,710 (1.1%) Native American, 130,468 (6.0%) Asian (2.3% Filipino, 0.8% Chinese, 0.7% Vietnamese, 0.6% Korean, 0.5% Indian, 0.2% Japanese, 0.1% Cambodian, 0.1% Laotian, 0.1% Pakistani), 6,874 (0.3%) Pacific Islander, 448,235 (20.5%) from other races, and 104,664 (4.8%) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 995,257 persons (45.5%); 39.5% of Riverside County is Mexican, 0.8% Salvadoran, 0.7% Honduran, 0.6% Puerto Rican, 0.3% Cuban, and 0.2% Nicaraguan.[38]

2000 edit

As of the census[39] of 2000, there were 1,545,387 people, 506,218 households, and 372,576 families residing in the county. The population density was 214 inhabitants per square mile (83/km2). There were 584,674 housing units at an average density of 81 per square mile (31/km2). The racial makeup of the county was 65.6% White, 6.2% Black or African American, 1.2% Native American, 3.7% Asian, 0.3% Pacific Islander, 18.7% from other races, and 4.4% from two or more races. 36.2% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. 9.2% were of German, 6.9% English, 6.1% Irish and 5.0% American ancestry according to Census 2000. 67.2% spoke English and 27.7% Spanish as their first language.

In 2006 the county had a population of 2,026,803, up 31.2% since 2000. In 2005 45.8% of the population was non-Hispanic whites. The percentages of African Americans, Asians and Native Americans remained relatively similar to their 2000 figures. The percentage of Pacific Islanders had majorly risen to 0.4. Hispanics now constituted 41% of the population.

There were 506,218 households, out of which 38.90% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 56.5% were married couples living together, 12.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 26.4% were non-families. 20.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 9.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.0 and the average family size was 3.5.

In the county, the population was spread out, with 30.3% under the age of 18, 9.2% from 18 to 24, 28.9% from 25 to 44, 18.9% from 45 to 64, and 12.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33 years. For every 100 females, there were 99.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 96.8 males.

The median income for a household in the county was $42,887, and the median income for a family was $48,409. Males had a median income of $38,639 versus $28,032 for females. The per capita income for the county was $18,689. About 10.7% of families and 14.2% of the population were below the poverty line, including 18.5% of those under age 18 and 7.6% of those age 65 or over.

Government and law enforcement edit

Government edit

Riverside County is organized as a General Law County under the provision of the California Government Code. The county has five supervisorial districts, and one supervisor is elected from each district every four years.[40]

 
Riverside County Historic Courthouse

In 1999, the County Board of Supervisors approved a multimillion-dollar planning effort to create the Riverside County Integrated Plan (RCIP) which was to encompass a completely new General Plan, regional transportation plan (CETAP) and Habitat Conservation Plan. The resultant General Plan adopted in 2003 was considered groundbreaking for its multidisciplinary approach to land use and conservation planning.[41][42]

Courts edit

The Riverside Superior Court is the state trial court for Riverside County with 14 courthouses: Riverside Historic Courthouse, Riverside Hall of Justice, Riverside Family Law Court, Riverside Juvenile Court, Southwest Justice Center – Murrieta, Moreno Valley Court, Banning Court, Hemet Court, Corona Court, Temecula Court, Larson Justice Center – Indio, Indio Juvenile Court, Palm Springs Court and Blythe Court.[43]

The main courthouse is the Riverside Historic Courthouse. This landmark, erected in 1903, was modeled after the Grand and Petit Palais in Paris, France. The courthouse, designed by Los Angeles architects Burnham and Bliesner, has a classical design – including a great hall that connects all the departments (courtrooms).[44] In 1994, the courthouse was closed for seismic retrofits due to the 1992 Landers and 1994 Northridge earthquakes. The courthouse was reopened and rededicated in September 1998.[45]

Riverside County hands down 1 in 6 death sentences in the US, in spite of it having less than 1% of the population.[46]

Law enforcement edit

Sheriff edit

The Riverside County Sheriff provides court protection, jail administration, and coroner services for all of Riverside County. It provides patrol, detective, and other police services for the unincorporated areas of the county plus by contract to the cities and towns of Coachella, Eastvale, Indian Wells, Jurupa Valley, La Quinta, Lake Elsinore, Moreno Valley, Norco, Palm Desert, Perris, Rancho Mirage, San Jacinto, Temecula and Wildomar. The Morongo Indian Reservation also contracts with the Sheriff's Office to provide police services to the reservation.[47]

Municipal Police edit

Municipal departments within the county are Banning, Beaumont, Blythe, Calimesa, Cathedral City, Corona, Desert Hot Springs, Hemet, Indio, Menifee, Murrieta, Palm Springs, Riverside, Riverside Community College.

Politics edit

Voter registration edit

Chart of voter registration

  Democratic (40.49%)
  Republican (31.31%)
  Independent (20.49%)
  Other parties (7.71%)

Overview edit

Prior to 2008, Riverside County was historically a Republican stronghold in presidential and congressional elections. Between its creation in 1893[51] and 2004, it voted for the Democratic presidential nominee only three times:[52] Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936 (by a margin of 337 votes, or 0.99%), Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 (by a margin of 19,363 votes, or 13.65%) and Bill Clinton in 1992 (by a margin of 6,784 votes, or 1.58%). In 1932, it was one of only two counties on the entire West Coast to vote for Republican president Herbert Hoover over Roosevelt.[53]

However, in 2008, consistent with a trend in California and nationwide suburbs towards the Democratic Party,[54] Barack Obama narrowly carried the county with 14,976 votes, a 2.32% margin over Republican John McCain. Mitt Romney lost the county in 2012 in a plurality. Hillary Clinton continued the Democratic win streak in the 2016 election, and became the first and only losing Democratic nominee to win the county. Former Democratic Vice President Joe Biden won the county outright in 2020 with a 79,196 lead over President Donald Trump, the largest ever raw vote margin for a Democrat.

Despite the federal trend towards Democrats, Republicans have continued to win Riverside County at the state level. During the 2018 gubernatorial election, Republican John H. Cox (50.2%) narrowly defeated Democrat Gavin Newsom (49.8%) in the county despite losing in a landslide statewide.[55] During the gubernatorial recall against Newsom held three years later, Riverside County narrowly voted in favor of recalling Newsom despite the recall failing in another landslide.[56]

United States presidential election results for Riverside County, California[57]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 449,144 45.04% 528,340 52.98% 19,672 1.97%
2016 333,243 44.35% 373,695 49.73% 44,453 5.92%
2012 318,127 47.97% 329,063 49.62% 15,926 2.40%
2008 310,041 47.90% 325,017 50.21% 12,241 1.89%
2004 322,473 57.83% 228,806 41.04% 6,300 1.13%
2000 231,955 51.42% 202,576 44.90% 16,596 3.68%
1996 178,611 45.61% 168,579 43.05% 44,423 11.34%
1992 159,457 37.06% 166,241 38.64% 104,577 24.30%
1988 199,979 59.46% 133,122 39.58% 3,247 0.97%
1984 182,324 63.48% 102,043 35.53% 2,835 0.99%
1980 145,642 59.87% 76,650 31.51% 20,986 8.63%
1976 97,774 49.24% 96,228 48.46% 4,556 2.29%
1972 108,120 58.00% 71,591 38.41% 6,693 3.59%
1968 83,414 52.90% 61,146 38.78% 13,110 8.31%
1964 61,165 43.14% 80,528 56.79% 95 0.07%
1960 65,855 56.15% 50,877 43.38% 544 0.46%
1956 56,766 62.16% 34,098 37.34% 465 0.51%
1952 51,692 65.08% 26,948 33.93% 788 0.99%
1948 32,209 55.66% 23,305 40.28% 2,350 4.06%
1944 23,168 53.94% 19,439 45.26% 346 0.81%
1940 21,779 51.39% 20,003 47.20% 598 1.41%
1936 16,674 48.89% 17,011 49.88% 422 1.24%
1932 14,112 50.20% 12,755 45.37% 1,245 4.43%
1928 17,600 77.94% 4,769 21.12% 212 0.94%
1924 9,619 61.99% 1,318 8.49% 4,579 29.51%
1920 9,124 69.55% 2,798 21.33% 1,196 9.12%
1916 7,452 54.64% 4,561 33.44% 1,626 11.92%
1912 124 1.23% 2,963 29.33% 7,016 69.44%
1908 3,229 57.24% 1,374 24.36% 1,038 18.40%
1904 2,638 65.23% 678 16.77% 728 18.00%
1900 2,329 61.14% 1,134 29.77% 346 9.08%
1896 2,063 53.06% 1,684 43.31% 141 3.63%

In the United States House of Representatives, Riverside County is split between 6 congressional districts:[58]

In the California State Senate, the county is split between 4 legislative districts:[59]

In the California State Assembly, the county is split between 6 legislative districts:[60]

Riverside County voted 64.8% in favor of Proposition 8 which amended the California Constitution to ban same-sex marriages. Only the city of Palm Springs voted against the measure.[citation needed]

Crime edit

The following table includes the number of incidents reported and the rate per 1,000 persons for each type of offense.

Cities by population and crime rates edit

Education edit

Universities and colleges edit

 
The 161-foot, 48-bell carillon tower at the University of California, Riverside, designed by A. Quincy Jones.

K-12 schools edit

Public school districts[79]

K-12 unified:

Secondary:

Elementary:

State-operated schools
Bureau of Indian Education-operated schools

Transportation edit

Major highways edit

Public transportation edit

Amtrak trains stop in Riverside and Palm Springs, and Amtrak California provides bus connections to the San Joaquins in Riverside–Downtown, Beaumont, Palm Springs, Thousand Palms, Indio, Moreno Valley, Perris, Sun City, and Hemet.

Metrolink trains serve nine stations in Riverside County: Riverside–Downtown, Riverside–La Sierra, Corona–North Main, Corona–West, Jurupa Valley/Pedley, Riverside–Hunter Park/UCR, Moreno Valley/March Field, Perris–Downtown, and Perris–South.[80] These trains provide service to Orange, San Bernardino and Los Angeles counties seven days a week, with a primarily commuter-oriented schedule.

Airports edit

Military air bases edit

Commercial airports edit

General aviation airports edit

Military installations edit

Points of interest edit

Communities edit

Cities edit

City Year
incorporated
Population,
2020[85]
Median household income,
2019[86]
Banning 1913 29,505 $42,274
Beaumont 1912 53,036 $84,105
Blythe 1916 18,317 $45,385
Calimesa 1990 10,026 $56,903
Canyon Lake 1990 11,082 $100,682
Cathedral City 1981 51,493 $46,521
Coachella 1946 41,941 $34,224
Corona 1896 157,136 $86,790
Desert Hot Springs 1963 32,512 $33,046
Eastvale 2010 69,757 $119,213
Hemet 1910 89,833 $39,653
Indian Wells 1967 4,757 $107,500
Indio 1930 89,137 $74,774
Jurupa Valley 2011 105,053 $76,090
Lake Elsinore 1888 70,265 $77,090
La Quinta 1982 37,558 $77,839
Menifee 2008 102,527 $77,033
Moreno Valley 1984 208,634 $65,449
Murrieta 1991 110,949 $100,080
Norco 1964 26,316 $102,817
Palm Desert 1973 51,163 $59,977
Palm Springs 1938 44,575 $53,441
Perris 1911 78,700 $70,714
Rancho Mirage 1973 16,999 $78,682
Riverside 1883 314,998 $71,967
San Jacinto 1888 53,898 $52,009
Temecula 1989 110,003 $95,918
Wildomar 2008 36,875 $74,991

Unincorporated communities edit

Ghost towns edit

Indian reservations edit

Riverside County has 12 federally recognized Indian reservations, which ties it with Sandoval County, New Mexico, for second most of any county in the United States. (Sandoval County, however, has two additional joint-use areas, shared between reservations. San Diego County, California has the most, with 18 reservations.)

Population ranking edit

The population ranking of the following table is based on the 2020 census of Riverside County.[87]

county seat

Rank City/Town/etc. Municipal type Population (2020 Census)
1 Riverside City 314,998
2 Moreno Valley City 208,634
3 Corona City 157,136
4 Murrieta City 110,949
5 Temecula City 110,003
6 Jurupa Valley City 105,053
7 Menifee City 102,527
8 Hemet City 89,833
9 Indio City 89,137
10 Perris City 78,700
11 Lake Elsinore City 70,265
12 Eastvale City 69,757
13 San Jacinto City 53,898
14 Beaumont City 53,036
15 Cathedral City City 51,493
16 Palm Desert City 51,163
17 Palm Springs City 44,575
18 Coachella City 41,941
19 La Quinta City 37,558
20 Wildomar City 36,875
21 French Valley CDP 35,280
22 Desert Hot Springs City 32,512
23 Banning City 29,505
24 Agua Caliente Indian Reservation[88] AIAN 27,090
25 Norco City 26,316
26 Temescal Valley CDP 26,232
27 Mead Valley CDP 19,819
28 East Hemet CDP 19,432
29 Blythe City 18,317
30 Rancho Mirage City 16,999
31 Valle Vista CDP 16,194
32 Woodcrest CDP 15,378
33 El Sobrante CDP 14,039
34 Lakeland Village CDP 12,364
35 Home Gardens CDP 11,203
36 Canyon Lake City 11,082
37 Calimesa City 10,026
38 Good Hope CDP 9,468
39 Bermuda Dunes CDP 8,244
40 Mecca CDP 8,219
41 Thousand Palms CDP 7,967
42 Highgrove CDP 7,515
43 Garnet CDP 7,118
44 Homeland CDP 6,772
45 Nuevo CDP 6,733
46 Desert Palms CDP 6,686
47 Cherry Valley CDP 6,509
48 Lake Mathews CDP 5,972
49 El Cerrito CDP 5,058
50 Indian Wells City 4,757
51 Oasis CDP 4,468
52 Desert Edge CDP 4,180
53 Idyllwild-Pine Cove CDP 4,163
54 North Shore CDP 3,585
55 Torres-Martinez Reservation[89] AIAN 3,454
56 Sage CDP 3,370
57 Meadowbrook CDP 3,142
58 Anza CDP 3,075
59 Winchester CDP 3,068
60 Green Acres CDP 2,918
61 Thermal CDP 2,676
62 Coronita CDP 2,639
63 Cabazon CDP 2,629
64 Vista Santa Rosa CDP 2,607
65 Sky Valley CDP 2,411
66 Romoland CDP 2,005
67 Lakeview CDP 1,977
68 Warm Springs CDP 1,586
69 Colorado River Indian Reservation[90] AIAN 1,395
70 Lake Riverside CDP 1,375
71 Morongo Reservation[91] AIAN 1,243
72 Indio Hills CDP 1,048
73 Aguanga CDP 989
74 Whitewater CDP 984
75 March ARB CDP 809
76 Mesa Verde CDP 766
77 Pechanga Reservation[92] AIAN 582
78 Soboba Reservation[93] AIAN 567
79 Ripley CDP 538
80 Desert Center CDP 256
81 Cahuilla Reservation[94] AIAN 229
82 Cabazon Reservation[95] AIAN 192
83 Santa Rosa Reservation[96] AIAN 131
84 Mountain Center CDP 66
85 Twenty-Nine Reservation[97] AIAN 5
86 Augustine Reservation[98] AIAN 0
87 Ramona Village[99] AIAN 0

Climate edit

Riverside County
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
8
 
 
20
7
 
 
12
 
 
24
9
 
 
4
 
 
31
13
 
 
3
 
 
37
17
 
 
1
 
 
45
21
 
 
1
 
 
44
27
 
 
16
 
 
46
28
 
 
19
 
 
44
27
 
 
8
 
 
45
25
 
 
2
 
 
36
20
 
 
6
 
 
28
11
 
 
15
 
 
20
6
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: [100]
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
0.3
 
 
68
45
 
 
0.5
 
 
75
48
 
 
0.2
 
 
88
55
 
 
0.1
 
 
99
63
 
 
0
 
 
113
70
 
 
0
 
 
111
81
 
 
0.6
 
 
115
82
 
 
0.7
 
 
111
81
 
 
0.3
 
 
113
77
 
 
0.1
 
 
97
68
 
 
0.2
 
 
82
52
 
 
0.6
 
 
68
43
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Other = Some other race + Two or more races
  2. ^ Native American = Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander + American Indian or Alaska Native
  3. ^ a b Percentage of registered voters with respect to total population. Percentages of party members with respect to registered voters follow.
  4. ^ Population for this city obtained by summing the populations of Glen Avon, Mira Loma, Pedley, Rubidoux and Sunnyslope; see Jurupa Valley
  5. ^ Only larceny-theft cases involving property over $400 in value are reported as property crimes.

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Fitch, Robert J. (1993). Profile of a Century: Riverside County, California, 1893–1993. Riverside County Historical Commission Press. pp. 300. OCLC 28661359
  • Gunther, Jane Davies. Riverside County, California, Place Names; Their Origins and Their Stories, Riverside, CA, 1984. LOC catalog number: 84–72920.
  • Holmes, Elmer Wallace (1912). History of Riverside County, California: With Biographical Sketches of the Leading Men and Women of the County Who Have Been Identified with Its Growth. Los Angeles, CA: Historic Record Company. pp. 783 (840 in 2010 republishing). ISBN 978-1174620966. OCLC 7951260.
  • Lech, Steve (2004). Along the Old Roads: A History of the Portion of Southern California that became Riverside County: 1772–1893. Steve Lech. p. 902. OCLC 56035822.
    • Lech, Steve (2012). Pioneers of Riverside County: The Spanish, Mexican and Early American Periods. Charleston, SC: The History Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-1609498313. OCLC 814373331. (a reprint of the first three chapters of Along the Old Roads.)

Further reading edit

  • Brown, James B. (1985). Harvest of the Sun: An Illustrated History of Riverside County. Northridge, CA: Windsor Publications. p. 244. ISBN 0-89781-145-3. OCLC 11916170.
  • Gunther, Jane Davies (1984). Riverside County, California, Place Names. Their Origins and Their Stories: Rubidoux Printing Co. 1984. LCCN 84-72920
  • History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, Volume 1.
  • History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, Volume 2.
  • History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties Volume 3.
  • Justitia Rei Publicae Fundamentum: Justice is the Foundation of the Republic. Riverside, CA: Riverside Museum Press. 1998. p. 34. ISBN 0-935661-28-X. OCLC 40695255.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Official Riverside County, Department of Information Technology website
  • Official Riverside County Sheriff website
  • Official Riverside County Fire Dept. website
  • Official Riverside County District Attorney's Office website
  • Official Riverside County Regional Parks District website
  • Riverside County, California at Curlie

riverside, county, california, riverside, countycountycounty, riversideimages, from, down, left, right, riverside, mission, festival, lights, north, face, jacinto, mountains, santa, rosa, jacinto, mountains, national, monument, coachella, valley, music, arts, . 33 44 N 115 59 W 33 73 N 115 98 W 33 73 115 98 Riverside CountyCountyCounty of RiversideImages from top down left to right Riverside s Mission Inn Festival of Lights North face of the San Jacinto Mountains in the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival Temecula Valley Balloon and Wine Festival Palm Springs aerial tramway Joshua Tree National Park Riverside National Cemetery Medal of Honor memorialFlagSealInteractive map of Riverside CountyLocation in the state of CaliforniaCountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaRegionInland EmpireIncorporatedMay 9 1893Named forThe City of Riverside and the city s location beside the Santa Ana RiverCounty seatRiversideLargest city population RiversideLargest city area Palm SpringsGovernment TypeCouncil CEO ChairChuck Washington Vice ChairV Manuel Perez Board of SupervisorsSupervisors 1 Kevin JeffriesKaren SpiegelChuck WashingtonV Manuel PerezYxstian Gutierrez Chief executive officerJeff Van WagenenArea Total7 303 sq mi 18 910 km2 Land7 206 sq mi 18 660 km2 Water97 sq mi 250 km2 Highest elevation 2 10 843 ft 3 305 m Lowest elevation 234 ft 71 m Population 2020 3 Total2 418 185 Density336 sq mi 130 km2 GDP 4 Total 95 159 billion 2022 Time zoneUTC 8 Pacific Time Zone Summer DST UTC 7 Pacific Daylight Time FIPS code06 065Congressional districts25th 35th 39th 40th 41st 48thWebsitewww CountyOfRiverside usRiverside County is a county located in the southern portion of the U S state of California As of the 2020 census the population was 2 418 185 3 5 making it the fourth most populous county in California and the 10th most populous in the United States The name was derived from the city of Riverside which is the county seat 6 Riverside County is included in the Riverside San Bernardino Ontario Metropolitan Statistical Area also known as the Inland Empire The county is also included in the Los Angeles Long Beach Combined Statistical Area Roughly rectangular Riverside County covers 7 208 square miles 18 670 km2 in Southern California spanning from the greater Los Angeles area to the Arizona border Geographically the western region of the county is chaparral with a Mediterranean climate while the central and eastern regions of the county are predominantly desert or mountainous Most of Joshua Tree National Park is located in the county The desert resort cities of Indio Coachella Palm Springs Palm Desert Indian Wells La Quinta Rancho Mirage Cathedral City and Desert Hot Springs are located in the Coachella Valley region of central eastern Riverside County Between 2007 and 2011 large numbers of Los Angeles area workers moved to the county to take advantage of more affordable housing 7 Along with neighboring San Bernardino County it was one of the fastest growing regions in the state prior to the recent changes in the regional economy In addition smaller but significant numbers of people have been moving into southwest Riverside County from the San Diego metropolitan area 8 9 The cities of Temecula and Murrieta accounted for 20 of the increase in population of the county between 2000 and 2007 citation needed Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Indigenous 2 2 Spanish era 2 3 Mexican era 2 4 American era 2 4 1 County formation 3 Geography 3 1 Flora and fauna 3 2 National protected areas 3 3 State parks 3 4 County parks and trails 4 Demographics 4 1 2020 census 4 2 2011 4 2 1 Places by population race and income 4 3 2010 4 4 2000 5 Government and law enforcement 5 1 Government 5 2 Courts 5 3 Law enforcement 5 3 1 Sheriff 5 3 2 Municipal Police 6 Politics 6 1 Voter registration 6 2 Overview 7 Crime 7 1 Cities by population and crime rates 8 Education 8 1 Universities and colleges 8 2 K 12 schools 9 Transportation 9 1 Major highways 9 2 Public transportation 9 3 Airports 9 3 1 Military air bases 9 3 2 Commercial airports 9 3 3 General aviation airports 10 Military installations 11 Points of interest 12 Communities 12 1 Cities 12 2 Unincorporated communities 12 3 Ghost towns 12 4 Indian reservations 12 5 Population ranking 13 Climate 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 16 1 Bibliography 17 Further reading 18 External linksEtymology editMain article List of Riverside County California placename etymologies When Riverside County was formed in 1893 it was named for the city of Riverside the county seat That city founded in 1870 was so named because of its location near the Santa Ana River 10 11 History editIndigenous edit nbsp The homelands of the Cahuilla include a large area of Riverside County The Indigenous peoples of the valleys mountains and deserts of what is now Riverside County are the Serrano the Payomkawichum the Mohave the Cupeno the Chemehuevi the Cahuilla and the Tongva 12 13 The Aguanga and Temecula Basins Elsinore Trough and eastern Santa Ana Mountains are the traditional homelands of the Payomkawichum The inland valleys in the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains and the desert of the Salton Sink are the traditional homelands of the Cahuilla Spanish era edit The first European settlement in the county was a Mission San Luis Rey de Francia estancia or farm at the Luiseno village of Temescal In 1819 the Mission granted Leandro Serrano permission to occupy the land for the purpose of grazing and farming and Serrano established Rancho Temescal Serrano was mayordomo of San Antonio de Pala Asistencia for the Mission of San Luis Rey Mexican era edit With the signing of the Treaty of Cordoba in 1821 Mexico gained its independence from Spain but the San Gabriel Mission near what is now Los Angeles California continued to expand and established Rancho San Gorgonio in 1824 The ranch was to be one of the Mission s principal rancherias and the most distant and it occupied most of today s San Gorgonio Pass area 14 15 Following the Mexican secularization act of 1833 by the First Mexican Republic a series of rancho land grants were made throughout the state In the Riverside County this included Rancho Jurupa in 1838 El Rincon in 1839 Rancho San Jacinto Viejo in 1842 Rancho San Jacinto y San Gorgonio in 1843 Ranchos La Laguna Pauba Temecula in 1844 Ranchos Little Temecula Potreros de San Juan Capistrano in 1845 Ranchos San Jacinto Sobrante La Sierra Sepulveda La Sierra Yorba Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Nuevo y Potrero in 1846 New Mexican colonists founded the town of La Placita on the east side of the Santa Ana River at the northern extremity of what is now the city of Riverside in 1843 American era edit When the initial 27 California counties were established in 1850 the area today known as Riverside County was divided between Los Angeles County and San Diego County In 1853 the eastern part of Los Angeles County was used to create San Bernardino County Between 1891 and 1893 several proposals and legislative attempts were put forth to form new counties in Southern California These proposals included one for a Pomona County and one for a San Jacinto County None of the proposals were adopted until a measure to create Riverside County was signed by Governor Henry H Markham on March 11 1893 16 County formation edit The new county was created from parts of San Bernardino County and San Diego County On May 2 1893 seventy percent of voters approved the formation of Riverside County Voters chose the city of Riverside as the county seat also by a large margin Riverside County was officially formed on May 9 1893 when the Board of Commissioners filed the final canvass of the votes 16 The county is also the location of the March Air Reserve Base one of the oldest airfields continuously operated by the United States military Established as the Alessandro Flying Training Field in February 1918 it was one of thirty two U S Army Air Service training camps established after the United States entry into World War I in April 1917 The airfield was renamed March Field the following month for 2d Lieutenant Peyton C March Jr the recently deceased son of the then Army Chief of Staff General Peyton C March who was killed in an air crash in Texas just fifteen days after being commissioned March Field remained an active Army Air Service then U S Army Air Corps installation throughout the interwar period later becoming a major installation of the U S Army Air Forces during World War II Renamed March Air Force Base in 1947 following the establishment of the U S Air Force it was a major Strategic Air Command SAC installation throughout the Cold War In 1996 it was transferred to the Air Force Reserve Command and gained its current name as a major base for the Air Force Reserve and the California Air National Guard citation needed Riverside county was a major focal point of the Civil Rights Movements in the US especially the African American sections of Riverside and heavily Mexican American communities of the Coachella Valley visited by Cesar Chavez of the farm labor union struggle Riverside county has also been a focus of modern Native American Gaming enterprises In the early 1980s the county government attempted to shut down small bingo halls operated by the Morongo Band of Cahuilla Mission Indians and the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians The tribes joined forces and fought the county all the way to the U S Supreme Court which ruled in the tribes favor on February 25 1987 17 In turn Congress enacted the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act in 1988 to establish a legal framework for the relationship between Indian gaming and state governments Naturally both tribes now operate large casinos in the county the Morongo Casino Resort amp Spa and the Fantasy Springs Resort Casino adjacent to Spotlight 29 Casino The county s population surpassed one million people in 1990 year round would be 1980 with seasonal residents when the current trend of high population growth as a major real estate destination began in the 1970s Once strictly a place for long distance commuters to L A and later Orange County the county and city of Riverside started becoming more of a place to establish new or relocated offices corporations and finance centers in the late 1990s and 2000s More light industry manufacturing and truck distribution centers became major regional employers in the county citation needed Geography edit nbsp El Paseo in Palm Desert CaliforniaAccording to the U S Census Bureau the county has a total area of 7 303 square miles 18 910 km2 of which 7 206 square miles 18 660 km2 is land and 97 square miles 250 km2 1 3 is water 18 It is the fourth largest county in California by area At roughly 180 miles 290 km wide in the east west dimension the area of the county is massive Riverside County California is roughly the size of the State of New Jersey in total area County government documents frequently cite the Colorado River town of Blythe as being a three hour drive from the county seat Riverside Some view the areas west of San Gorgonio Pass as the Inland Empire portion of the county and the eastern part as either the Mojave Desert or Colorado Desert portion There are probably at least three geomorphic provinces the Inland Empire western portion the Santa Rosa Mountains communities such as Reinhardt Canyon and the desert region Other possible subdivisions include tribal lands the Colorado River communities and the Salton Sea Flora and fauna edit nbsp Yucca pines near Ryan Mountain Trail in Joshua Tree National Park nbsp Southerly view of the San Jacinto Mountains from State Route 62There is a diversity of flora and fauna within Riverside County Vegetative plant associations feature many desert flora but there are also forested areas within the county The California endemic Blue oak Quercus douglasii is at the southernmost part of its range in Riverside County 19 National protected areas edit Cleveland National Forest part Coachella Valley National Wildlife Refuge Dos Palmas Preserve Joshua Tree National Park part San Bernardino National Forest part Sand to Snow National Monument part Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National MonumentThere are 19 official wilderness areas in Riverside County that are part of the National Wilderness Preservation System Some are integral parts of the above protected areas most 11 of the 19 are managed solely by the Bureau of Land Management and some share management between the BLM and the relevant other agencies Some extend into neighboring counties Agua Tibia Wilderness part Beauty Mountain Wilderness Big Maria Mountains Wilderness Cahuilla Mountain Wilderness Chuckwalla Mountains Wilderness Joshua Tree Wilderness part Little Chuckwalla Mountains Wilderness part Mecca Hills Wilderness Orocopia Mountains Wilderness Palen McCoy Wilderness Palo Verde Mountains Wilderness part Pinto Mountains Wilderness Rice Valley Wilderness Riverside Mountains Wilderness San Gorgonio Wilderness part San Jacinto Wilderness San Mateo Canyon Wilderness part Santa Rosa Wilderness South Fork San Jacinto Wilderness State parks edit California Citrus State Historic Park Lake Perris State Recreation Area Mount San Jacinto State ParkCounty parks and trails edit Hurkey Creek Park 20 Idyllwild Park 21 Indio Hills Palms Jensen Alvarado Ranch Lake Cahuilla Recreation Area 22 Lake Skinner Recreation Area McCall Memorial Equestrian Park 23 Santa Rosa PlateauDemographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 190017 897 24 191034 696 24 93 9 192050 297 24 45 0 193081 024 24 61 1 1940105 524 24 30 2 1950170 046 24 61 1 1960306 191 24 80 1 1970459 074 24 49 9 1980663 166 24 44 5 19901 170 413 25 24 76 5 20001 545 387 25 32 0 20102 189 641 26 41 7 20202 418 185 27 10 4 2022 est 2 473 902 28 2 3 U S Decennial Census 29 failed verification 1790 1960 30 2020 census edit Riverside County California Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 26 Pop 2020 27 2010 2020White alone NH 869 068 788 235 39 69 32 60 Black or African American alone NH 130 823 146 762 5 97 6 07 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 10 931 11 960 0 50 0 49 Asian alone NH 125 921 164 889 5 75 6 82 Pacific Islander alone NH 5 849 6 767 0 27 0 28 Some Other Race alone NH 3 682 12 365 0 17 0 51 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 48 110 84 912 2 20 3 51 Hispanic or Latino any race 995 257 1 202 295 45 45 49 72 Total 2 189 641 2 418 185 100 00 100 00 Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race nbsp Ethnic origins in Riverside County2011 edit Population race and incomeTotal population 31 2 154 844 White 31 1 422 604 66 0 Black or African American 31 135 859 6 3 American Indian or Alaska Native 31 21 493 1 0 Asian 31 127 522 5 9 Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander 31 6 955 0 3 Some other race 31 359 512 16 7 Two or more races 31 80 899 3 8 Hispanic or Latino of any race 32 968 700 45 0 Per capita income 33 24 516Median household income 34 58 365Median family income 35 65 457Places by population race and income edit Places by population and racePlace Type 36 Population 31 White 31 Other 31 note 1 Asian 31 Black or AfricanAmerican 31 Native American 31 note 2 Hispanic or Latino of any race 32 Aguanga CDP 1 540 91 2 6 1 0 0 2 7 0 0 8 7 Anza CDP 3 111 82 9 12 6 0 0 0 4 4 2 31 7 Banning City 29 414 76 9 8 8 6 8 6 7 0 7 37 0 Beaumont City 34 737 72 5 12 0 10 1 4 6 0 8 37 6 Bermuda Dunes CDP 7 047 88 5 4 1 1 1 6 3 0 0 25 4 Blythe City 21 102 62 4 18 8 2 0 15 9 0 9 48 5 Cabazon CDP 1 729 87 9 7 6 0 0 3 5 0 9 40 8 Calimesa City 7 923 91 0 7 6 1 0 0 5 0 0 19 5 Canyon Lake City 10 663 92 9 4 8 1 1 0 9 0 3 9 7 Cathedral City City 51 130 80 7 13 0 3 8 1 8 0 8 59 8 Cherry Valley CDP 5 477 91 4 4 7 3 0 0 7 0 3 15 2 Coachella City 39 442 63 5 34 8 0 1 1 3 0 4 96 6 Corona City 152 111 65 8 17 4 9 2 5 7 1 9 42 8 Coronita CDP 3 117 58 9 35 6 3 1 2 4 0 0 54 5 Crestmore Heights CDP 665 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 82 1 Desert Center CDP 150 83 3 16 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 26 7 Desert Edge CDP 4 223 87 7 11 4 0 8 0 0 0 0 17 5 Desert Hot Springs City 25 793 54 1 33 3 1 6 8 2 2 8 51 4 Desert Palms CDP 6 592 95 7 1 4 2 2 0 2 0 5 3 1 East Hemet CDP 18 334 74 4 18 7 2 2 2 8 1 8 36 4 Eastvale City 53 437 48 8 17 4 21 9 10 9 1 1 40 1 El Cerrito CDP 5 059 75 0 23 2 0 8 1 0 0 0 52 5 El Sobrante CDP 12 617 57 9 16 4 17 2 8 6 0 0 21 3 French Valley CDP 23 097 66 7 11 6 17 2 2 7 1 7 24 2 Garnet CDP 5 701 66 0 28 2 1 8 3 7 0 2 69 4 Glen Avon CDP 20 393 56 8 35 9 2 3 4 4 0 7 69 0 Good Hope CDP 9 194 40 9 48 1 1 1 8 4 1 5 75 2 Green Acres CDP 1 832 78 7 12 6 0 7 3 8 4 2 25 2 Hemet City 77 752 73 5 16 6 2 7 5 2 2 0 34 1 Highgrove CDP 4 155 72 8 15 0 5 9 4 1 2 2 67 3 Home Gardens CDP 11 179 61 9 25 6 8 4 3 5 0 6 70 4 Homeland CDP 6 441 68 1 30 0 0 5 0 0 1 5 55 7 Idyllwild Pine Cove CDP 2 309 95 5 1 0 3 5 0 0 0 0 16 5 Indian Wells City 4 937 93 0 2 5 2 9 1 6 0 0 6 0 Indio City 74 402 62 6 33 0 1 7 1 8 0 8 68 4 Indio Hills CDP 876 60 7 36 2 0 0 3 1 0 0 69 5 Lake Elsinore City 50 405 61 3 26 1 5 1 6 0 1 6 47 9 Lakeland Village CDP 11 558 67 7 22 8 4 0 2 8 2 5 39 6 Lake Mathews CDP 5 651 58 3 28 5 1 6 10 1 1 5 35 4 Lake Riverside CDP 1 384 95 2 2 5 0 0 1 4 0 9 26 9 Lakeview CDP 1 337 67 1 31 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 79 9 La Quinta City 36 600 82 4 11 8 2 8 1 7 1 3 30 1 March ARB CDP 791 91 7 0 1 3 0 5 1 0 1 11 4 Meadowbrook CDP 2 995 40 8 49 5 5 0 4 4 0 3 66 7 Mead Valley CDP 17 498 50 0 37 5 1 8 9 9 0 8 69 3 Mecca CDP 8 233 55 3 43 2 0 4 0 0 1 1 96 2 Menifee City 75 023 72 7 13 0 7 1 6 0 1 2 31 1 Mesa Verde CDP 1 102 59 2 38 3 0 0 2 5 0 0 74 6 Mira Loma CDP 20 923 58 6 36 2 1 7 3 2 0 3 67 5 Moreno Valley City 190 977 50 4 25 6 5 4 17 6 1 0 54 4 Mountain Center CDP 66 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Murrieta City 99 476 68 2 15 1 8 9 6 5 1 3 27 2 Norco City 27 131 72 9 14 8 4 4 6 6 1 2 28 0 North Shore CDP 2 600 56 3 38 5 0 0 1 2 3 9 93 2 Nuevo CDP 5 582 76 4 19 2 1 2 1 7 1 5 49 0 Oasis CDP 6 160 53 7 42 9 1 3 1 2 0 8 96 8 Palm Desert City 48 769 86 7 7 1 4 2 1 0 1 0 22 2 Palm Springs City 45 045 82 0 8 1 4 5 4 5 0 8 23 8 Pedley CDP 11 229 72 3 18 9 4 1 3 9 0 8 47 9 Perris City 65 993 43 8 38 8 3 6 12 4 1 4 70 7 Rancho Mirage City 17 022 91 2 4 1 1 3 2 4 1 0 11 2 Ripley CDP 706 45 6 45 2 0 0 9 2 0 0 87 1 Riverside City 303 569 65 1 20 2 6 9 6 6 1 2 49 4 Romoland CDP 1 604 78 1 9 9 0 0 12 0 0 0 21 9 Rubidoux CDP 37 874 46 9 42 0 3 5 5 8 1 8 68 7 San Jacinto City 42 722 61 4 26 4 5 1 4 7 2 5 53 4 Sky Valley CDP 2 021 75 0 23 8 1 1 0 0 0 0 40 3 Sunnyslope CDP 4 919 51 7 40 8 6 6 0 9 0 0 65 1 Temecula City 98 189 72 2 12 2 9 5 3 7 2 4 25 2 Temescal Valley CDP 23 288 74 6 10 0 9 9 4 4 1 1 30 4 Thermal CDP 3 372 57 1 39 7 0 0 3 2 0 0 94 7 Thousand Palms CDP 7 578 65 5 30 8 0 7 1 6 1 3 60 9 Valle Vista CDP 14 579 77 0 13 8 2 3 3 5 3 4 26 2 Vista Santa Rosa CDP 2 973 60 1 34 2 0 5 0 0 5 2 78 5 Warm Springs CDP 2 196 55 8 35 5 7 3 1 0 0 3 40 1 Whitewater CDP 533 55 5 34 0 10 5 0 0 0 0 31 7 Wildomar City 31 452 68 0 23 4 3 6 3 9 1 1 37 7 Winchester CDP 2 955 63 8 30 7 5 5 0 0 0 0 33 4 Woodcrest CDP 14 519 78 0 13 6 4 1 3 8 0 4 33 0 Places by population and incomePlace Type 36 Population 37 Per capita income 33 Median household income 34 Median family income 35 Aguanga CDP 1 540 22 716 47 754 49 275Anza CDP 3 111 19 101 46 890 49 563Banning City 29 414 21 150 37 373 47 243Beaumont City 34 737 26 458 66 132 79 800Bermuda Dunes CDP 7 047 35 634 64 171 69 375Blythe City 21 102 15 853 46 235 50 254Cabazon CDP 1 729 14 081 30 288 26 395Calimesa City 7 923 24 429 44 911 61 357Canyon Lake City 10 663 35 332 80 145 87 250Cathedral City City 51 130 21 734 45 088 47 834Cherry Valley CDP 5 477 30 877 53 245 56 523Coachella City 39 442 12 219 43 357 41 009Corona City 152 111 27 825 79 877 86 106Coronita CDP 3 117 26 448 75 378 89 028Crestmore Heights CDP 665 9 579 49 395 42 218Desert Center CDP 150 27 083 57 083 63 750Desert Edge CDP 4 223 22 937 35 394 43 750Desert Hot Springs City 25 793 15 671 34 606 37 780Desert Palms CDP 6 592 46 995 61 572 77 802East Hemet CDP 18 334 20 947 53 780 60 034Eastvale City 53 437 32 263 115 025 117 549El Cerrito CDP 5 059 26 328 69 301 76 344El Sobrante Riverside County CDP 12 617 31 251 103 100 102 409French Valley CDP 23 097 26 302 85 732 86 250Garnet CDP 5 701 14 344 37 956 43 171Glen Avon CDP 20 393 16 850 45 616 52 750Good Hope CDP 9 194 12 596 38 163 41 004Green Acres CDP 1 832 18 329 35 774 35 455Hemet City 77 752 19 236 34 273 42 951Highgrove CDP 4 155 16 888 41 545 43 495Home Gardens CDP 11 179 17 354 61 133 57 923Homeland CDP 6 441 14 997 38 624 41 820Idyllwild Pine Cove CDP 2 309 32 868 55 495 63 491Indian Wells City 4 937 100 330 111 078 145 714Indio City 74 402 21 293 52 199 56 843Indio Hills CDP 876 27 488 81 831 80 959Lake Elsinore City 50 405 21 642 63 771 67 654Lakeland Village CDP 11 558 18 930 43 454 51 230Lake Mathews CDP 5 651 28 851 69 271 67 149Lake Riverside CDP 1 384 27 224 75 313 68 250Lakeview CDP 1 337 16 613 55 833 50 347La Quinta City 36 600 45 172 77 790 90 406March ARB CDP 791 38 084 69 438 95 357Meadowbrook CDP 2 995 11 904 31 397 30 550Mead Valley CDP 17 498 13 784 42 261 44 057Mecca CDP 8 233 7 980 26 176 22 383Menifee City 75 023 24 159 54 068 63 068Mesa Verde CDP 1 102 10 685 33 750 31 016Mira Loma CDP 20 923 18 652 66 635 68 810Moreno Valley City 190 977 18 246 56 768 58 446Mountain Center CDP 66 68 673 104 167Murrieta City 99 476 29 198 80 792 89 683Norco City 27 131 27 361 84 812 93 156North Shore CDP 2 600 10 327 27 197 26 979Nuevo CDP 5 582 23 116 64 453 69 958Oasis CDP 6 160 7 372 27 340 25 194Palm Desert City 48 769 42 179 53 940 76 174Palm Springs City 45 045 38 054 45 989 54 642Pedley CDP 11 229 22 289 65 012 65 361Perris City 65 993 14 333 49 812 47 364Rancho Mirage City 17 022 66 770 76 261 99 250Ripley CDP 706 11 610 16 859 17 276Riverside City 303 569 22 806 57 555 64 618Romoland CDP 1 604 27 123 108 594 101 546Rubidoux CDP 37 874 17 432 52 108 53 082San Jacinto City 42 722 17 692 47 645 52 928Sky Valley CDP 2 021 22 201 35 473 44 506Sunnyslope CDP 4 919 22 121 68 313 71 468Temecula City 98 189 28 274 76 276 83 539Temescal Valley CDP 23 288 34 281 91 394 94 816Thermal CDP 3 372 8 801 33 311 27 675Thousand Palms CDP 7 578 19 881 43 435 41 550Valle Vista CDP 14 579 24 464 43 855 55 335Vista Santa Rosa CDP 2 973 16 345 52 026 54 375Warm Springs CDP 2 196 17 378 54 286 54 434Whitewater CDP 533 19 160 36 531 57 024Wildomar City 31 452 24 255 63 519 67 786Winchester CDP 2 955 22 236 69 798 81 063Woodcrest CDP 14 519 32 650 91 864 103 0442010 edit The 2010 United States Census reported that Riverside County had a population of 2 189 641 The racial makeup of Riverside County was 1 335 147 61 0 White 40 7 Non Hispanic White 140 543 6 4 African American 23 710 1 1 Native American 130 468 6 0 Asian 2 3 Filipino 0 8 Chinese 0 7 Vietnamese 0 6 Korean 0 5 Indian 0 2 Japanese 0 1 Cambodian 0 1 Laotian 0 1 Pakistani 6 874 0 3 Pacific Islander 448 235 20 5 from other races and 104 664 4 8 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 995 257 persons 45 5 39 5 of Riverside County is Mexican 0 8 Salvadoran 0 7 Honduran 0 6 Puerto Rican 0 3 Cuban and 0 2 Nicaraguan 38 Population reported at 2010 United States CensusThe County TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race Riverside County 2 189 641 1 335 147 140 543 23 710 130 468 6 874 448 235 104 664 995 257Incorporatedcities TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race Banning 29 603 19 164 2 165 641 1 549 39 4 604 1 441 12 181Beaumont 36 877 23 163 2 276 544 2 845 83 6 058 1 908 14 864Blythe 20 817 12 396 3 126 243 319 32 4 045 656 11 068Calimesa 7 879 6 777 88 99 100 10 565 240 1 762Canyon Lake 10 561 9 495 128 61 190 36 316 335 1 303Cathedral City 51 200 32 537 1 344 540 2 562 55 12 008 2 154 30 085Coachella 40 704 19 576 320 290 266 34 19 154 1 064 39 254Corona 152 374 90 925 8 934 1 153 15 048 552 28 003 7 759 66 447Desert Hot Springs 25 938 15 053 2 133 357 675 84 6 343 1 293 13 646Eastvale 53 668 22 998 5 190 290 13 003 198 9 172 2 817 21 445Hemet 78 657 53 259 5 049 1 223 2 352 284 12 371 4 119 28 150Indian Wells 4 958 4 721 29 20 83 2 52 51 209Indio 76 036 46 735 1 805 741 1 693 55 22 394 2 613 51 540La Quinta 37 467 29 489 713 230 1 176 41 4 595 1 223 11 339Lake Elsinore 51 821 31 067 2 738 483 2 996 174 11 174 3 189 25 073Menifee 77 519 55 444 3 858 655 3 788 295 9 642 3 837 25 551Moreno Valley 193 365 80 969 34 889 1 721 11 867 1 117 51 741 11 061 105 169Murrieta 103 466 72 137 5 601 741 9 556 391 8 695 6 345 26 792Norco 27 063 20 641 1 893 248 844 59 2 514 864 8 405Palm Desert 48 445 39 957 875 249 1 647 55 4 427 1 235 11 038Palm Springs 44 552 33 720 1 982 467 1 971 71 4 949 1 392 11 286Perris 68 386 28 937 8 307 589 2 461 286 24 345 3 461 49 079Rancho Mirage 17 218 15 267 256 94 651 14 598 338 1 964Riverside 303 871 171 669 21 421 3 467 22 566 1 219 68 111 15 418 148 953San Jacinto 44 199 25 272 2 928 812 1 341 124 11 208 2 514 23 109Temecula 100 097 70 880 4 132 1 079 9 765 368 7 928 5 945 24 727Wildomar 32 176 22 372 1 065 376 1 454 69 5 124 1 716 11 363Census designatedplaces TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race Aguanga 1 128 929 11 20 24 0 109 35 274Anza 3 014 2 411 34 57 36 3 347 126 791Bermuda Dunes 7 282 5 433 180 63 241 11 1 126 228 2 371Cabazon 2 535 1 751 135 90 38 14 358 149 1 135Cherry Valley 6 362 5 450 63 102 87 4 451 205 1 347Coronita 2 608 1 649 38 31 108 12 688 82 1 349Crestmore Heights 384 229 2 2 6 0 133 12 263Desert Center 204 164 1 3 2 0 25 9 38Desert Edge 3 822 3 051 14 34 28 1 624 70 1 220Desert Palms 6 957 6 728 59 16 95 5 15 39 177East Hemet 17 418 12 257 679 323 275 29 2 997 858 6 778El Cerrito 5 100 3 542 91 54 95 11 1 122 185 2 657El Sobrante 12 723 7 435 1 010 73 2 240 36 1 312 617 3 626French Valley 23 067 14 827 1 828 229 2 672 134 1 889 1 488 6 318Garnet 7 543 4 247 203 96 62 10 2 636 289 5 580Glen Avon 20 199 10 272 805 216 462 34 7 567 843 13 766Good Hope 9 192 4 156 669 98 64 4 3 885 316 7 319Green Acres 1 805 1 192 34 41 25 2 396 115 856Highgrove 3 988 2 104 162 41 113 13 1 388 167 2 604Home Gardens 11 570 5 275 364 126 667 51 4 500 587 8 524Homeland 5 969 3 727 130 85 49 15 1 673 290 3 110Idyllwild Pine Cove 3 874 3 434 32 30 135 6 88 149 479Indio Hills 972 542 6 15 5 1 391 12 657Lake Mathews 5 890 4 239 253 59 193 3 891 252 1 808Lake Riverside 1 173 1 042 21 16 2 8 46 38 186Lakeland Village 11 541 7 764 285 131 168 21 2 575 597 5 114Lakeview 2 104 1 117 15 48 7 2 842 73 1 350March ARB 1 159 811 171 10 35 2 93 37 172Mead Valley 18 510 8 383 1 515 179 259 17 7 484 673 13 395Meadowbrook 3 185 2 034 130 19 51 4 798 149 1 765Mecca 8 577 2 686 40 47 17 7 5 543 237 8 462Mesa Verde 1 023 589 8 9 4 1 373 39 715Mira Loma 21 930 12 577 383 240 465 43 7 250 972 14 846Mountain Center 63 60 0 1 1 0 0 1 15North Shore 3 477 1 394 33 26 18 5 1 884 117 3 313Nuevo 6 447 4 011 113 91 82 16 1 810 324 3 514Oasis 6 890 1 693 22 96 42 0 4 927 110 6 731Pedley 12 672 7 509 381 119 554 48 3 520 541 6 773Ripley 692 393 103 2 1 4 165 24 537Romoland 1 684 958 65 8 35 12 514 92 865Rubidoux 34 280 16 935 1 850 391 855 136 12 469 1 644 23 322Sky Valley 2 406 1 961 35 34 21 3 282 70 682Sunnyslope 5 153 3 017 96 55 76 10 1 696 203 3 630Temescal Valley 22 535 14 785 1 507 131 2 157 74 2 565 1 316 6 753Thermal 2 865 1 034 28 30 32 1 1 685 55 2 730Thousand Palms 7 715 5 763 105 75 129 10 1 422 211 4 051Valle Vista 14 578 11 542 440 252 283 41 1 351 669 4 027Vista Santa Rosa 2 926 1 699 8 140 6 0 942 131 2 487Warm Springs 2 676 1 673 119 24 102 14 606 138 1 232Whitewater 859 636 37 31 21 0 97 37 267Winchester 2 534 1 577 38 17 46 2 728 126 1 233Woodcrest 14 347 10 418 716 69 715 41 1 716 672 4 113Otherunincorporated areas TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race All others not CDPs combined 73 117 51 422 2 231 2 102 3 794 206 10 105 3 257 24 1282000 edit As of the census 39 of 2000 there were 1 545 387 people 506 218 households and 372 576 families residing in the county The population density was 214 inhabitants per square mile 83 km2 There were 584 674 housing units at an average density of 81 per square mile 31 km2 The racial makeup of the county was 65 6 White 6 2 Black or African American 1 2 Native American 3 7 Asian 0 3 Pacific Islander 18 7 from other races and 4 4 from two or more races 36 2 of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race 9 2 were of German 6 9 English 6 1 Irish and 5 0 American ancestry according to Census 2000 67 2 spoke English and 27 7 Spanish as their first language In 2006 the county had a population of 2 026 803 up 31 2 since 2000 In 2005 45 8 of the population was non Hispanic whites The percentages of African Americans Asians and Native Americans remained relatively similar to their 2000 figures The percentage of Pacific Islanders had majorly risen to 0 4 Hispanics now constituted 41 of the population There were 506 218 households out of which 38 90 had children under the age of 18 living with them 56 5 were married couples living together 12 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 26 4 were non families 20 7 of all households were made up of individuals and 9 3 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 3 0 and the average family size was 3 5 In the county the population was spread out with 30 3 under the age of 18 9 2 from 18 to 24 28 9 from 25 to 44 18 9 from 45 to 64 and 12 7 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 33 years For every 100 females there were 99 1 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 96 8 males The median income for a household in the county was 42 887 and the median income for a family was 48 409 Males had a median income of 38 639 versus 28 032 for females The per capita income for the county was 18 689 About 10 7 of families and 14 2 of the population were below the poverty line including 18 5 of those under age 18 and 7 6 of those age 65 or over Government and law enforcement editGovernment edit Riverside County is organized as a General Law County under the provision of the California Government Code The county has five supervisorial districts and one supervisor is elected from each district every four years 40 nbsp Riverside County Historic CourthouseIn 1999 the County Board of Supervisors approved a multimillion dollar planning effort to create the Riverside County Integrated Plan RCIP which was to encompass a completely new General Plan regional transportation plan CETAP and Habitat Conservation Plan The resultant General Plan adopted in 2003 was considered groundbreaking for its multidisciplinary approach to land use and conservation planning 41 42 Courts edit The Riverside Superior Court is the state trial court for Riverside County with 14 courthouses Riverside Historic Courthouse Riverside Hall of Justice Riverside Family Law Court Riverside Juvenile Court Southwest Justice Center Murrieta Moreno Valley Court Banning Court Hemet Court Corona Court Temecula Court Larson Justice Center Indio Indio Juvenile Court Palm Springs Court and Blythe Court 43 The main courthouse is the Riverside Historic Courthouse This landmark erected in 1903 was modeled after the Grand and Petit Palais in Paris France The courthouse designed by Los Angeles architects Burnham and Bliesner has a classical design including a great hall that connects all the departments courtrooms 44 In 1994 the courthouse was closed for seismic retrofits due to the 1992 Landers and 1994 Northridge earthquakes The courthouse was reopened and rededicated in September 1998 45 Riverside County hands down 1 in 6 death sentences in the US in spite of it having less than 1 of the population 46 Law enforcement edit Sheriff edit The Riverside County Sheriff provides court protection jail administration and coroner services for all of Riverside County It provides patrol detective and other police services for the unincorporated areas of the county plus by contract to the cities and towns of Coachella Eastvale Indian Wells Jurupa Valley La Quinta Lake Elsinore Moreno Valley Norco Palm Desert Perris Rancho Mirage San Jacinto Temecula and Wildomar The Morongo Indian Reservation also contracts with the Sheriff s Office to provide police services to the reservation 47 Municipal Police edit Municipal departments within the county are Banning Beaumont Blythe Calimesa Cathedral City Corona Desert Hot Springs Hemet Indio Menifee Murrieta Palm Springs Riverside Riverside Community College Politics editVoter registration edit Population and registered votersTotal population 48 2 473 902 Registered voters 49 note 3 1 309 356 52 92 Democratic 49 530 176 40 49 Republican 49 409 898 31 31 Democratic Republican spread 49 120 278 9 18 American Independent 49 57 393 4 38 Green 49 4 656 0 36 Libertarian 49 15 283 1 17 Peace and Freedom 49 8 192 0 63 Unknown 49 3 954 0 30 Other 49 11 569 0 88 No party preference 49 268 235 20 49 Cities by population and voter registration City Population 31 Registered voters 50 note 3 Democratic 50 Republican 50 D R spread 50 Other 50 No party preference 50 Banning 29 414 42 9 38 9 40 8 1 9 8 2 15 4 Beaumont 34 737 46 4 33 6 40 8 7 2 10 3 19 4 Blythe 21 102 23 1 40 3 36 0 4 3 9 2 18 3 Calimesa 7 923 53 7 29 0 48 8 19 8 10 1 16 2 Canyon Lake 10 663 57 3 19 9 57 5 37 6 9 7 16 8 Cathedral City 51 130 37 6 46 9 31 8 15 1 6 2 17 5 Coachella 39 442 25 0 72 1 13 1 59 0 2 9 12 8 Corona 158 391 43 0 32 9 43 3 10 4 7 2 19 2 Desert Hot Springs 25 793 35 5 44 0 32 7 11 3 8 3 18 0 Eastvale 53 437 40 6 38 0 34 2 3 8 6 9 23 6 Hemet 77 752 44 8 34 0 42 4 8 4 9 3 18 1 Indian Wells 4 937 59 8 19 0 62 7 43 7 6 5 14 4 Indio 74 402 39 7 47 9 33 0 14 9 6 0 15 4 Jurupa Valley note 4 57 464 58 4 40 1 37 1 3 0 7 1 18 3 La Quinta 36 600 52 8 30 6 47 4 16 8 8 1 17 2 Lake Elsinore 50 405 38 1 33 8 36 8 3 0 9 7 23 4 Menifee 75 023 52 0 31 1 44 2 13 1 9 6 19 0 Moreno Valley 190 977 43 5 48 1 33 5 14 6 5 6 14 8 Murrieta 99 476 48 8 25 3 48 2 22 9 9 2 20 8 Norco 27 131 45 0 25 2 52 5 27 3 8 2 17 2 Palm Desert 48 769 50 7 31 5 45 8 14 3 7 6 18 1 Palm Springs 45 045 53 7 50 9 26 7 24 2 7 3 17 9 Perris 65 993 36 3 54 2 27 8 26 4 5 1 14 6 Rancho Mirage 17 022 58 8 33 2 45 3 12 1 5 8 18 0 Riverside 303 569 44 0 38 5 39 0 0 5 7 5 17 6 San Jacinto 42 722 38 0 36 5 38 6 2 1 9 3 19 1 Temecula 98 189 48 0 25 2 47 6 22 4 9 7 21 4 Wildomar 31 452 47 4 26 8 45 4 18 6 10 3 21 4 Chart of voter registration Democratic 40 49 Republican 31 31 Independent 20 49 Other parties 7 71 Overview edit Prior to 2008 Riverside County was historically a Republican stronghold in presidential and congressional elections Between its creation in 1893 51 and 2004 it voted for the Democratic presidential nominee only three times 52 Franklin D Roosevelt in 1936 by a margin of 337 votes or 0 99 Lyndon B Johnson in 1964 by a margin of 19 363 votes or 13 65 and Bill Clinton in 1992 by a margin of 6 784 votes or 1 58 In 1932 it was one of only two counties on the entire West Coast to vote for Republican president Herbert Hoover over Roosevelt 53 However in 2008 consistent with a trend in California and nationwide suburbs towards the Democratic Party 54 Barack Obama narrowly carried the county with 14 976 votes a 2 32 margin over Republican John McCain Mitt Romney lost the county in 2012 in a plurality Hillary Clinton continued the Democratic win streak in the 2016 election and became the first and only losing Democratic nominee to win the county Former Democratic Vice President Joe Biden won the county outright in 2020 with a 79 196 lead over President Donald Trump the largest ever raw vote margin for a Democrat Despite the federal trend towards Democrats Republicans have continued to win Riverside County at the state level During the 2018 gubernatorial election Republican John H Cox 50 2 narrowly defeated Democrat Gavin Newsom 49 8 in the county despite losing in a landslide statewide 55 During the gubernatorial recall against Newsom held three years later Riverside County narrowly voted in favor of recalling Newsom despite the recall failing in another landslide 56 United States presidential election results for Riverside County California 57 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 449 144 45 04 528 340 52 98 19 672 1 97 2016 333 243 44 35 373 695 49 73 44 453 5 92 2012 318 127 47 97 329 063 49 62 15 926 2 40 2008 310 041 47 90 325 017 50 21 12 241 1 89 2004 322 473 57 83 228 806 41 04 6 300 1 13 2000 231 955 51 42 202 576 44 90 16 596 3 68 1996 178 611 45 61 168 579 43 05 44 423 11 34 1992 159 457 37 06 166 241 38 64 104 577 24 30 1988 199 979 59 46 133 122 39 58 3 247 0 97 1984 182 324 63 48 102 043 35 53 2 835 0 99 1980 145 642 59 87 76 650 31 51 20 986 8 63 1976 97 774 49 24 96 228 48 46 4 556 2 29 1972 108 120 58 00 71 591 38 41 6 693 3 59 1968 83 414 52 90 61 146 38 78 13 110 8 31 1964 61 165 43 14 80 528 56 79 95 0 07 1960 65 855 56 15 50 877 43 38 544 0 46 1956 56 766 62 16 34 098 37 34 465 0 51 1952 51 692 65 08 26 948 33 93 788 0 99 1948 32 209 55 66 23 305 40 28 2 350 4 06 1944 23 168 53 94 19 439 45 26 346 0 81 1940 21 779 51 39 20 003 47 20 598 1 41 1936 16 674 48 89 17 011 49 88 422 1 24 1932 14 112 50 20 12 755 45 37 1 245 4 43 1928 17 600 77 94 4 769 21 12 212 0 94 1924 9 619 61 99 1 318 8 49 4 579 29 51 1920 9 124 69 55 2 798 21 33 1 196 9 12 1916 7 452 54 64 4 561 33 44 1 626 11 92 1912 124 1 23 2 963 29 33 7 016 69 44 1908 3 229 57 24 1 374 24 36 1 038 18 40 1904 2 638 65 23 678 16 77 728 18 00 1900 2 329 61 14 1 134 29 77 346 9 08 1896 2 063 53 06 1 684 43 31 141 3 63 In the United States House of Representatives Riverside County is split between 6 congressional districts 58 California s 25th congressional district represented by Democrat Raul Ruiz California s 35th congressional district represented by Democrat Norma Torres California s 39th congressional district represented by Democrat Mark Takano California s 40th congressional district represented by Republican Young Kim California s 41st congressional district represented by Republican Ken Calvert and California s 48th congressional district represented by Republican Darrell Issa In the California State Senate the county is split between 4 legislative districts 59 the 18th Senate District represented by Democrat Steve Padilla the 19th Senate District represented by Democrat Monique Limon the 31st Senate District represented by Democrat Richard Roth and the 32nd Senate District represented by Republican Kelly Seyarto In the California State Assembly the county is split between 6 legislative districts 60 the 36th Assembly District represented by Democrat Eduardo Garcia the 47th Assembly District represented by Republican Greg Wallis the 58th Assembly District represented by Democrat Sabrina Cervantes the 60th Assembly District represented by Democrat Corey Jackson the 63rd Assembly District represented by Republican Bill Essayli and the 60th Assembly District represented by Democrat Corey Jackson Riverside County voted 64 8 in favor of Proposition 8 which amended the California Constitution to ban same sex marriages Only the city of Palm Springs voted against the measure citation needed Crime editThe following table includes the number of incidents reported and the rate per 1 000 persons for each type of offense Population and crime ratesPopulation 31 2 154 844Violent crime 61 7 284 3 38 Homicide 61 91 0 04 Forcible rape 61 424 0 20 Robbery 61 2 602 1 21 Aggravated assault 61 4 167 1 93Property crime 61 37 803 17 54 Burglary 61 17 308 8 03 Larceny theft 61 note 5 35 135 16 31 Motor vehicle theft 61 8 641 4 01Arson 61 283 0 13Cities by population and crime rates edit Cities by population and crime ratesCity Population 62 Violent crimes 62 Violent crime rateper 1 000 persons Property crimes 62 Property crime rateper 1 000 personsBanning 30 541 148 4 85 708 23 18Beaumont 38 072 103 2 71 1 342 35 25Blythe 21 323 73 3 42 759 35 60Calimesa 8 136 13 1 60 202 24 83Canyon Lake 10 905 11 1 01 209 19 17Cathedral City 52 867 204 3 86 1 576 29 81Coachella 42 034 265 6 30 1 547 36 80Corona 157 342 210 1 33 4 143 26 33Desert Hot Springs 27 929 344 12 32 1 157 41 43Eastvale 55 439 41 0 74 1 007 18 16Hemet 81 213 406 5 00 3 486 42 92Indian Wells 5 120 2 0 39 203 39 65Indio 78 501 450 5 73 2 791 35 55Jurupa Valley 97 577 312 3 20 3 174 32 53Lake Elsinore 53 912 130 2 41 1 932 35 84La Quinta 38 690 150 3 88 1 669 43 14Menifee 80 047 87 1 09 1 942 24 26Moreno Valley 199 673 706 3 54 6 371 31 91Murrieta 106 839 70 0 66 1 715 16 05Norco 27 850 56 2 01 580 20 83Palm Desert 50 021 104 2 08 2 322 46 42Palm Springs 45 996 302 6 57 2 232 48 53Perris 70 616 240 3 40 2 081 29 47Rancho Mirage 17 778 23 1 29 726 40 84Riverside 313 532 1 389 4 43 10 818 34 50San Jacinto 45 637 137 3 00 1 479 32 41Temecula 103 414 97 0 94 2 440 23 59Wildomar 33 227 53 1 60 707 21 28Education editUniversities and colleges edit nbsp The 161 foot 48 bell carillon tower at the University of California Riverside designed by A Quincy Jones Azusa Pacific University 63 Murrieta Brandman University Archived October 21 2017 at the Wayback Machine part of the Chapman University System 64 Moreno Valley Palm Desert Riverside and Temecula California Baptist University 65 Riverside California Southern Law School 66 Riverside California State University San Bernardino Palm Desert Campus 67 Palm Desert California State University San Marcos Temecula Satellite Campus 68 Temecula College of the Desert 69 Palm Desert and Indio La Sierra University 70 Riverside Mayfield College 71 Cathedral City Mt San Jacinto College 72 Banning Menifee San Jacinto Temecula Olivet University Anza 73 Palo Verde College 74 Blythe Riverside Community College District 75 Riverside City College Moreno Valley College Norco College Santa Barbara Business College 76 Palm Desert University of California Riverside 77 Palm Desert and Riverside University of Phoenix 78 Murrieta and Palm DesertK 12 schools edit Public school districts 79 K 12 unified Alvord Unified School District Banning Unified School District Beaumont Unified School District Coachella Valley Unified School District Colton Joint Unified School District Corona Norco Unified School District Desert Center Unified School District Desert Sands Unified School District Hemet Unified School District Jurupa Unified School District Lake Elsinore Unified School District Moreno Valley Unified School District Murrieta Valley Unified School District Palm Springs Unified School District Palo Verde Unified School District Riverside Unified School District San Jacinto Unified School District Temecula Valley Unified School District Val Verde Unified School District Yucaipa Calimesa Joint Unified School DistrictSecondary Perris Union High School DistrictElementary Menifee Union School District Nuview Union Elementary School District Perris Elementary School District Romoland Elementary School DistrictState operated schoolsCalifornia School for the Deaf RiversideBureau of Indian Education operated schoolsSherman Indian High SchoolTransportation editMajor highways edit See also Mid County Parkway nbsp I 10 nbsp I 10 BL nbsp I 15 nbsp I 215 nbsp U S Route 95 nbsp Historic U S Route 99 nbsp Historic U S Route 395 nbsp State Route 60 nbsp State Route 62 nbsp State Route 71 nbsp State Route 74 nbsp State Route 78 nbsp State Route 79 nbsp State Route 86 nbsp State Route 91 nbsp State Route 111 nbsp State Route 177 nbsp State Route 243 nbsp State Route 371 nbsp County Route R3 Public transportation edit Riverside Transit Agency serves the western third of Riverside County as far east as Banning SunLine Transit Agency serves Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley area Palo Verde Valley Transit Agency provides service in Blythe near the Arizona border Pass Transit serves the San Gorgonio Pass communities Corona Cruiser serves the city of Corona Riverside County is also served by Greyhound buses Amtrak trains stop in Riverside and Palm Springs and Amtrak California provides bus connections to the San Joaquins in Riverside Downtown Beaumont Palm Springs Thousand Palms Indio Moreno Valley Perris Sun City and Hemet Metrolink trains serve nine stations in Riverside County Riverside Downtown Riverside La Sierra Corona North Main Corona West Jurupa Valley Pedley Riverside Hunter Park UCR Moreno Valley March Field Perris Downtown and Perris South 80 These trains provide service to Orange San Bernardino and Los Angeles counties seven days a week with a primarily commuter oriented schedule Airports edit Military air bases edit March Air Reserve Base former March Air Force Base Commercial airports edit Palm Springs International AirportGeneral aviation airports edit Banning Municipal Airport Bermuda Dunes Airport Blythe Airport Corona Municipal Airport Flabob Airport Riverside French Valley Airport Temecula Valley Hemet Ryan Airport San Jacinto Valley Jacqueline Cochran Regional Airport Thermal Coachella Valley Perris Valley Airport Riverside Municipal AirportMilitary installations editActive Chocolate Mountain Aerial Gunnery Range March Air Reserve Base Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach Detachment Norco Naval Surface Warfare Center Corona Division Historical Desert Training Center Blythe Army Airfield Desert Center Army Airfield Palm Springs Army Airfield Rice Army Airfield Shaver s Summit Army Airfield 81 Thermal Army Airfield Also named Naval Air Facility Thermal historical 82 Hemet Army AirfieldPoints of interest editSee also National Register of Historic Places listings in Riverside County California and List of museums in the Inland Empire California Empire Polo Club location of the Coachella and Stagecoach music festivals Gold Base international headquarters of the Church of Scientology and Golden Era Productions 83 84 Indian Wells Tennis Garden Joshua Tree National Park Living Desert Zoo and Gardens March Field Air Museum Mission Inn Hotel amp Spa Orange Empire Railway Museum Orocopia Mountains Wilderness Palm Springs Aerial Tramway and Mount San Jacinto State Park Palm Springs Desert Museum Ramona Bowl Home of The Ramona Pageant Riverside County fair grounds location of the Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival Riverside National Cemetery including the Medal of Honor Memorial Salton Sea State Recreation Area Santa Rosa Plateau Sunnylands Center amp Gardens Temecula Valley AVA Wine Region Western Science CenterCommunities editCities edit City Year incorporated Population 2020 85 Median household income 2019 86 Banning 1913 29 505 42 274Beaumont 1912 53 036 84 105Blythe 1916 18 317 45 385Calimesa 1990 10 026 56 903Canyon Lake 1990 11 082 100 682Cathedral City 1981 51 493 46 521Coachella 1946 41 941 34 224Corona 1896 157 136 86 790Desert Hot Springs 1963 32 512 33 046Eastvale 2010 69 757 119 213Hemet 1910 89 833 39 653Indian Wells 1967 4 757 107 500Indio 1930 89 137 74 774Jurupa Valley 2011 105 053 76 090Lake Elsinore 1888 70 265 77 090La Quinta 1982 37 558 77 839Menifee 2008 102 527 77 033Moreno Valley 1984 208 634 65 449Murrieta 1991 110 949 100 080Norco 1964 26 316 102 817Palm Desert 1973 51 163 59 977Palm Springs 1938 44 575 53 441Perris 1911 78 700 70 714Rancho Mirage 1973 16 999 78 682Riverside 1883 314 998 71 967San Jacinto 1888 53 898 52 009Temecula 1989 110 003 95 918Wildomar 2008 36 875 74 991Unincorporated communities edit Aguanga Alberhill Alessandro Anza Arnold Heights Bermuda Dunes Bonnie Bell Box Springs Cabazon Cactus City Cahuilla Cahuilla Hills Cherry Valley Chiriaco Summit Coronita Desert Beach Desert Center Desert Edge Desert Palms East Hemet Edgemont El Cariso El Cerrito El Sobrante Fern Valley French Valley Garnet Gilman Hot Springs Good Hope Green Acres Highgrove Home Gardens Homeland Idyllwild Indio Hills La Cresta Lake Mathews Lake Riverside Lake Tamarisk Lakeland Village Lakeview March ARB Mead Valley Meadowbrook Mecca Mesa Verde Mountain Center North Palm Springs North Shore Nuevo Oasis Pine Cove Pinyon Pines Radec Rancho Capistrano Ripley Romoland Sage Sky Valley Snow Creek Temescal Valley Thermal Thomas Mountain Thousand Palms Valle Vista Vista Santa Rosa Warm Springs Whitewater Winchester Woodcrest Ghost towns edit Dos Palmas Eagle Mountain Fertilla Hell La Placita Leon Midland Pinacate Saahatpa Temescal Terra Cotta Willow Springs Station Indian reservations edit Riverside County has 12 federally recognized Indian reservations which ties it with Sandoval County New Mexico for second most of any county in the United States Sandoval County however has two additional joint use areas shared between reservations San Diego County California has the most with 18 reservations Agua Caliente Indian Reservation Augustine Indian Reservation Cabazon Indian Reservation Cahuilla Indian Reservation Colorado River Indian Reservation partly in La Paz County Arizona and San Bernardino County California Morongo Indian Reservation Pechanga Indian Reservation Ramona Village Santa Rosa Indian Reservation Soboba Band of Mission Indians Torres Martinez Indian Reservation partly in Imperial County California Twenty Nine Palms Indian Reservation partly in San Bernardino County California Population ranking edit The population ranking of the following table is based on the 2020 census of Riverside County 87 county seat Rank City Town etc Municipal type Population 2020 Census 1 Riverside City 314 9982 Moreno Valley City 208 6343 Corona City 157 1364 Murrieta City 110 9495 Temecula City 110 0036 Jurupa Valley City 105 0537 Menifee City 102 5278 Hemet City 89 8339 Indio City 89 13710 Perris City 78 70011 Lake Elsinore City 70 26512 Eastvale City 69 75713 San Jacinto City 53 89814 Beaumont City 53 03615 Cathedral City City 51 49316 Palm Desert City 51 16317 Palm Springs City 44 57518 Coachella City 41 94119 La Quinta City 37 55820 Wildomar City 36 87521 French Valley CDP 35 28022 Desert Hot Springs City 32 51223 Banning City 29 50524 Agua Caliente Indian Reservation 88 AIAN 27 09025 Norco City 26 31626 Temescal Valley CDP 26 23227 Mead Valley CDP 19 81928 East Hemet CDP 19 43229 Blythe City 18 31730 Rancho Mirage City 16 99931 Valle Vista CDP 16 19432 Woodcrest CDP 15 37833 El Sobrante CDP 14 03934 Lakeland Village CDP 12 36435 Home Gardens CDP 11 20336 Canyon Lake City 11 08237 Calimesa City 10 02638 Good Hope CDP 9 46839 Bermuda Dunes CDP 8 24440 Mecca CDP 8 21941 Thousand Palms CDP 7 96742 Highgrove CDP 7 51543 Garnet CDP 7 11844 Homeland CDP 6 77245 Nuevo CDP 6 73346 Desert Palms CDP 6 68647 Cherry Valley CDP 6 50948 Lake Mathews CDP 5 97249 El Cerrito CDP 5 05850 Indian Wells City 4 75751 Oasis CDP 4 46852 Desert Edge CDP 4 18053 Idyllwild Pine Cove CDP 4 16354 North Shore CDP 3 58555 Torres Martinez Reservation 89 AIAN 3 45456 Sage CDP 3 37057 Meadowbrook CDP 3 14258 Anza CDP 3 07559 Winchester CDP 3 06860 Green Acres CDP 2 91861 Thermal CDP 2 67662 Coronita CDP 2 63963 Cabazon CDP 2 62964 Vista Santa Rosa CDP 2 60765 Sky Valley CDP 2 41166 Romoland CDP 2 00567 Lakeview CDP 1 97768 Warm Springs CDP 1 58669 Colorado River Indian Reservation 90 AIAN 1 39570 Lake Riverside CDP 1 37571 Morongo Reservation 91 AIAN 1 24372 Indio Hills CDP 1 04873 Aguanga CDP 98974 Whitewater CDP 98475 March ARB CDP 80976 Mesa Verde CDP 76677 Pechanga Reservation 92 AIAN 58278 Soboba Reservation 93 AIAN 56779 Ripley CDP 53880 Desert Center CDP 25681 Cahuilla Reservation 94 AIAN 22982 Cabazon Reservation 95 AIAN 19283 Santa Rosa Reservation 96 AIAN 13184 Mountain Center CDP 6685 Twenty Nine Reservation 97 AIAN 586 Augustine Reservation 98 AIAN 087 Ramona Village 99 AIAN 0Climate editRiverside CountyClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 8 20 7 12 24 9 4 31 13 3 37 17 1 45 21 1 44 27 16 46 28 19 44 27 8 45 25 2 36 20 6 28 11 15 20 6 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource 100 Imperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 0 3 68 45 0 5 75 48 0 2 88 55 0 1 99 63 0 113 70 0 111 81 0 6 115 82 0 7 111 81 0 3 113 77 0 1 97 68 0 2 82 52 0 6 68 43 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesSee also edit nbsp Greater Los Angeles portalUSS Riverside APA 102 a World War II attack transport List of cemeteries in Riverside County California National Register of Historic Places listings in Riverside County California KPRO California a radio station that served the countyNotes edit Other Some other race Two or more races Native American Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander American Indian or Alaska Native a b Percentage of registered voters with respect to total population Percentages of party members with respect to registered voters follow Population for this city obtained by summing the populations of Glen Avon Mira Loma Pedley Rubidoux and Sunnyslope see Jurupa Valley Only larceny theft cases involving property over 400 in value are reported as property crimes References edit Board of Supervisors County of Riverside California Retrieved November 10 2017 San Jacinto Peak Peakbagger com Retrieved February 8 2015 a b U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Riverside County California United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 7 2021 Gross Domestic Product by County and Metropolitan Area 2022 PDF www bea gov Bureau of Economic Analysis Riverside County California United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 30 2022 Find a County National Association of Counties Retrieved June 7 2011 Barragan Bianca February 6 2014 Why Are People Fleeing Los Angeles For San Bernardino La curbed com Robert E Lang Jennifer B LeFurgy October 1 2007 Boomburbs The Rise of America s Accidental Cities Brookings Institution Press pp 169 ISBN 978 0 8157 5112 0 OCLC 1005941809 Downey Dave March 8 2011 REGION Riverside County s population jumps by 42 percent in last decade San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved November 4 2021 2000 Temecula s growth hailed decried Press Enterprise Riverside March 8 2011 Retrieved November 4 2021 Capace Nancy 1999 Encyclopedia of California North American Book Dist LLC Page 392 ISBN 9780403093182 Gunther pgs 427 429 Trafzer Clifford E 2006 Native Americans of Riverside County Jeffrey A Smith Charleston SC Arcadia Pub p 7 ISBN 978 0 7385 4685 8 OCLC 80766874 Riverside County History County of Riverside CA rivco org October 11 2019 Retrieved January 6 2023 Gunther Jane Davies 1984 Riverside County California Place Names Their Origins and Their Stories Riverside California pp 456 461 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gudde Erwin G 1949 California Place Names 1st ed Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 305 a b Fitch pages v viii California v Cabazon Band 480 U S 202 1987 2010 Census Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau August 22 2012 Retrieved October 3 2015 C Michael Hogan 2008 Blue Oak Quercus douglasii GlobalTwitcher com ed N Stromberg Archived February 28 2012 at the Wayback Machine Hurkey Creek Home Riverside County Regional Park amp Open Space District Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Idyllwild Park Home Riverside County Regional Park amp Open Space District Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Lake Cahuilla Brochure PDF Riverside County Regional Park and Open Space District September 2013 Archived from the original PDF on May 17 2017 Retrieved January 11 2019 McCall Equestrian Campground Riverside County Regional Park amp Open Space District Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b c d e f g h i j Forstall Richard L ed March 27 1995 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 3 2015 dead link a b Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau April 2 2001 Retrieved October 3 2015 a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2010 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Riverside County California United States Census Bureau a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Riverside County California United States Census Bureau County Population Totals and Components of Change 2020 2022 County Population Totals 2020 2022 U S Census Bureau March 30 2023 Retrieved March 30 2023 Census of Population and Housing from 1790 2000 US Census Bureau Retrieved January 24 2022 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved October 3 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B02001 U S Census website Retrieved October 26 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B03003 U S Census website Retrieved October 26 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B19301 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B19013 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B19113 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B01003 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 2010 Census P L 94 171 Summary File Data United States Census Bureau U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 14 2011 Fitch page 1 Riverside County RCIP General Plan 2003 The Planning Center Riverside County Integrated Project An innovative model for integrating land use transportation and conservation planning 2007 Edward J Blakely Center for Sustainable Suburban Development Locations Archived from the original on December 21 2010 Retrieved August 31 2017 Rededication of the Historic Riverside County Courthouse Archived from the original on March 22 2007 Retrieved August 31 2017 California Courts Online The most comprehensive resource on California court information Courtinfo ca gov August 17 2018 Retrieved August 17 2018 Barford Vanessa December 23 2015 Why is one county handing down one in six US death sentences BBC News Retrieved December 25 2015 Riverside County Sheriff s web site U S Census Bureau Population Estimates July 1 2022 U S Census Bureau Retrieved May 15 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k February 10 2023 Report of Registration PDF California Secretary of State Archived from the original PDF on April 18 2023 Retrieved May 15 2023 a b c d e f February 10 2013 Report of Registration PDF California Secretary of State Archived from the original PDF on November 3 2013 Retrieved October 31 2013 Lech Steve February 7 2019 In 1893 Riverside County s first few laws targeted alcohol infectious bee disease Press Enterprise Retrieved January 26 2021 Kestenbaum Lawrence The Political Graveyard Riverside County Calif The Political Graveyard Retrieved January 26 2021 Presidential election of 1932 Map by counties Matsumoto Ryan January 2 2021 Why Democratic gains in the suburbs will outlast Trump The Hill Retrieved January 27 2021 Governor Statewide Results PDF PDF California Secretary of State Retrieved January 15 2022 Weber Shirley October 22 2021 STATEMENT OF VOTE SEPTEMBER 14 2021 CALIFORNIA GUBERNATORIAL RECALL ELECTION PDF Office of the California Secretary of State Retrieved January 15 2022 Leip David Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Uslelctionatlas org Counties by County and by District California Citizens Redistricting Commission Archived from the original on September 30 2013 Retrieved September 24 2014 Communities of Interest Counties California Citizens Redistricting Commission Archived from the original on October 23 2015 Retrieved September 24 2014 Communities of Interest Counties California Citizens Redistricting Commission Archived from the original on October 23 2015 Retrieved September 24 2014 a b c d e f g h i j Office of the Attorney General Department of Justice State of California Table 11 Crimes 2009 Archived December 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 14 2013 a b c United States Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation Crime in the United States 2012 Table 8 California Retrieved November 14 2013 Murrieta Regional Campus Azusa Pacific University Retrieved September 5 2021 About Brandman University Archived from the original on October 13 2010 California Baptist University Calbaptist edu California Southern Law School Cslawschool com Palm Desert Campus Pdc csusb edu California State University San Marcos at Temecula Csusm edu About College of the Desert Collegeofthedesert edu Archived from the original on December 29 2011 Retrieved August 31 2017 About La Sierra University Lasierra edu Mayfield Colleges Mayfieldcollege edu Welcome to Mt San Jacinto College Msjc edu Archived from the original on March 4 2017 Retrieved October 8 2010 Our Sites Olivet University Retrieved May 17 2022 Palo Verde College Paloverde edu Riverside Community College District Archived from the original on September 29 2010 Retrieved August 31 2017 Why SBBCollege In California Sbbcollege edu Archived from the original on December 5 2010 Retrieved October 8 2010 About UCR Ucr edu Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved October 8 2010 Campus Locations Phoenix edu 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Riverside County CA PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved July 20 2022 Text list Pages Project Details Compassblueprint org Retrieved on July 29 2013 Shaver s Summit Army Air Field historical Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Naval Air Facility Thermal historical Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Rural Studio is Scientology Headquarters San Jose Mercury News August 13 1991 6B California News Retrieved on October 21 2009 subscription required Kelly David Scientology foes blast new Riverside County law Los Angeles Times January 10 2009 1 Retrieved on October 21 2009 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Riverside County California United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 7 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year and 5 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 22 2022 Explore Census Data United States Census Bureau Retrieved September 18 2021 US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov US Census Bureau 2010 Census Interactive Population Map census gov NASA Earth Observations Data Set Index NASA Retrieved January 30 2016 Bibliography edit Fitch Robert J 1993 Profile of a Century Riverside County California 1893 1993 Riverside County Historical Commission Press pp 300 OCLC 28661359 Gunther Jane Davies Riverside County California Place Names Their Origins and Their Stories Riverside CA 1984 LOC catalog number 84 72920 Holmes Elmer Wallace 1912 History of Riverside County California With Biographical Sketches of the Leading Men and Women of the County Who Have Been Identified with Its Growth Los Angeles CA Historic Record Company pp 783 840 in 2010 republishing ISBN 978 1174620966 OCLC 7951260 Lech Steve 2004 Along the Old Roads A History of the Portion of Southern California that became Riverside County 1772 1893 Steve Lech p 902 OCLC 56035822 Lech Steve 2012 Pioneers of Riverside County The Spanish Mexican and Early American Periods Charleston SC The History Press p 173 ISBN 978 1609498313 OCLC 814373331 a reprint of the first three chapters of Along the Old Roads Further reading editBrown James B 1985 Harvest of the Sun An Illustrated History of Riverside County Northridge CA Windsor Publications p 244 ISBN 0 89781 145 3 OCLC 11916170 Gunther Jane Davies 1984 Riverside County California Place Names Their Origins and Their Stories Rubidoux Printing Co 1984 LCCN 84 72920 History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties Volume 1 History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties Volume 2 History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties Volume 3 Justitia Rei Publicae Fundamentum Justice is the Foundation of the Republic Riverside CA Riverside Museum Press 1998 p 34 ISBN 0 935661 28 X OCLC 40695255 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Riverside County California nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Riverside County Official website nbsp Official Riverside County Department of Information Technology website Official Riverside County Sheriff website Official Riverside County Fire Dept website Official Riverside County District Attorney s Office website Official Riverside County Regional Parks District website Riverside County California at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Riverside County California amp oldid 1197314731, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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