Chino Valley was once part of the immense Rancho Santa Ana del Chino
grant conferred in 1841 to Don Antonio Lugo, the former alcalde of Los
Angeles. Forty years later, a portion of the rancho was sold to Richard
Gird, an American entrepreneur and prospector from Tombstone, Arizona.
With characteristic Yankee ingenuity, Gird increased his holdings to
nearly 50,000 acres in a short period of time, planned and developed the
present-day city of Chino, and transformed the valley into an
agricultural empire based on sugar beet production. Chino later emerged
as the center for the California dairy industry, evolved into a suburban
weekend refuge for pleasure-seeking Los Angelenos, and continues today
as a desirable community for growing businesses and comfortable living.