Eastside

Eastside Riverside packinghouse icon
Arrow pointing to the right icon
Railroad tracks icon

Citrus Historic District

Commerce St. between 5th & 6th St., Riverside

These dilapidated 19th-century warehouses, loading dock, and abandoned railroad tracks are all that remain of the once-booming citrus packinghouse district, the predecessor to today’s logistics. A few blocks away, the historically multiracial community that grew around the industry has endured.

Eastside’s tight-knit community was part of the labor force that did the picking, sorting, and packing of citrus. Though the neighborhood was (and still is) segregated and under-invested in, it was always people powered. No one went hungry. Fruit from packinghouses and places like Tony’s Market, Zacatecas Cafe, and the Community Settlement Association made sure of it. Neighbors supported each other, offering truck rides to citrus groves for work and organizing for better wages and schools.

When citrus and military jobs faded, decades of rezoning and redevelopment hindered neighborhood growth. Seeing Riverside’s citrus distribution networks in ruins and thinking about how this commercial corridor was a forerunner to our current logistics economy raises questions: what happens to today’s generation of warehouses and distribution centers, which have disrupted neighborhoods across the region, when another economic shift empties them too? 

From the Archives

by A People’s History of the I.E.

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