CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Grand Terrace carries its Blue Mountain story into city life

Grand Terrace grew from terrace land, irrigation, citrus labels, and Blue Mountain into a small San Bernardino County city with a clear local identity.

Grand TerraceBlue MountainSan Bernardino County

Grand Terrace has a name that tells you something about the land. Early residents called the area “The Terrace” because it sat higher than the surrounding valley. Blue Mountain, rising above town, became the local landmark people could point to.

Water helped turn that terrace land into a farming place. The Colton-Terrace Water Company began moving water from artesian wells in 1877, and later the Gage Canal helped bring irrigation water from the Santa Ana River area. With water, citrus grew well here.

That citrus memory still shows up in town. Gwen Karger Park has community-painted murals tied to the city’s citrus and honey heritage. One mural is based on the old “Blue Mountain” orange-crate label, the kind of small image that can carry a whole farm-town identity.

Grand Terrace incorporated in 1978 after years of local organizing. It is now a small city between larger neighbors, but the older story is still easy to read: high ground, mountain views, water, citrus, and residents who wanted the place to keep its own name.

Where to see it

Blue Mountain views, Barton Road, and Gwen Karger Park in Grand Terrace.

Official sources

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Reviewed July 2, 2026

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