CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Corning's olive story started with a railroad town and a stubborn tree

Corning began with the railroad in 1882, then grew into the Olive City through Warren Woodson, Sevillano olives, table olives, prunes, walnuts, and almonds.

CorningOlive CityTehama County

Corning began the way many California towns did: the railroad arrived, and a town grew around it. The first development came in 1882, when the railroad reached this part of Tehama County. The name Corning came from John Corning, a railroad official.

Then olives gave the town its lasting identity. Warren Woodson arrived in 1892 and helped guide local development. After trouble getting other fruit trees to grow, Woodson and Foster planted olive trees they could find. The Sevillano variety handled the winters and local pests better, and the olive industry grew from there.

That is why Corning became known as the Olive City and Home of the Queen Olive. The local farm economy also includes olive oil, dried plums, walnuts, and almonds. Bell-Carter Foods, a major table-olive processor, gives that history a present-day business layer.

The story works because it is both simple and specific. Railroad first, then a crop that fit the place, then a town identity strong enough to support museums, festivals, labels, and a nickname people still use.

Where to see it

Solano Street, the Corning Museum, olive groves, and Olive Festival events.

Official sources

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Reviewed July 2, 2026

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