Once upon a time, the countryside of the entire Loomis Basin was covered in orchards. The Loomis Legacy Loop Mural Project pays tribute to our rich agricultural heritage. A self-guided tour gives residents and visitors to Loomis a close-up look at the fruit crate label murals.
Guide by Cell
is a free service for Loomis Legacy Loop murals.
Simply dial on your cell phone
(916) 512-1206.
Enter the mural number followed by the # sign
to hear a message about the history behind the
fruit crate label.
Text #loomis to 56512 for a mobile map.
1. BLUE ANCHOR PARK KIOSK
Birthplace of the California Fruit Industry
The first car load of fresh fruit shipped out of California for the eastern markets was shipped from Newcastle to Chicago in about 1879. (It arrived a total loss.) By 1889, fruit shipping houses were operating in Newcastle, Penryn and Loomis. The countryside soon was covered with orchards. “Mountain Grown” became known throughout the trade as a slogan for Placer County peaches, plums and pears, with their exceptionally high quality of flavor. In the 1940s, the Loomis fruit district shipped 4,500 train cars of plums every summer.
2. GATEWAY BRAND
L.J. Kinney
Illinois native Lindsley J. Kinney came to San Francisco in 1881 where he worked for five years as a wholesale grocery clerk. Returning to Illinois, he worked in the grocery department of Sears-Roebuck Company until 1905. He came back to California and took up farming on a 50 acre ranch on King Road, 2.5 miles east of Loomis. He named his ranch “The Falls Orchard” after the 25 foot fall in the ditch on his property.
3. VALLEY OF THE GODS
Scribner & Mayden
In 1919, Butler Noles Scribner, an insurance agent from Rocklin, and John Lincoln Mayden, a candy merchant from Sacramento, became partners in a pear orchard located at the corner of Citrus Colony Road and Del Mar Avenue, northwest of Loomis. Packed under the Valley of the Gods label, the fruit was marketed through the Pioneer Fruit Company.
4. HOLLY GLEN ORCHARDS
John A. Ferguson
California native John A. Ferguson came to this area at age six and grew up working in his father’s orchards on Miner’s Ravine, southeast of Loomis. In 1896, he purchased 20 acres on Wells Avenue. He cleared the land, planted it to orchard, and named it Holly Glen. His holdings eventually grew to 200 acres. He shipped fruit with the Loomis Fruit Growers Association for which he served as president in 1919.
5. HIGH-HAND
Loomis Fruit Growers Association
Loomis Fuit Growers Association incorporated April 29, 1901, with 18 charter members. It was the first member association of the California Fruit Exchange. The High-Hand label was in use by 1923 and was registered as a trademark in 1926. Within the trade, it was often referred to as the “Four Aces” brand. Early versions of the label had a white background, then a yellow background, and later a blue background. The last operating fruit shed in Placer County, Loomis Fruit Growers closed in 2001.
6. MOTHER'S TREAT BRAND
Heggblade-Marguleas Co.
In 1944, Ernest S. Beckett formed the Beckett Fruit Company, a fruit packing and shipping operation located in Penryn. Fruit was packed under the Mother’s Treat Brand label and marketed through Heggblade-Marguleas Company, a San Francisco based firm founded in 1934 by Frank Heggblade and Joseph Marguleas. Heggblade-Marguleas Company revolutionized the produce shipping business by selling direct to retailers, rather than through auction markets.
7. MOONSHINE ORCHARD
P.L. Taylor
Porter Lee Taylor, a native a Slick Rock, Kentucky, came to Loomis in 1901 at the age of 18. His home ranch, Moonshine Orchard, was located on Moonshine Lane, northeast of Loomis. He owned several ranches, managed various fruit houses including the American Fruit Growers (Blue Goose), and started the Canning Pear Association. He also owned the Herbert and Taylor label.
8. MAGNOLIA ORCHARD
H.N. Hansen
Son of Danish immigrants, Hans Nicholas “Nick” Hansen was born in Benicia, California, and came to Loomis in 1892 at age eight. He grew up on his father’s ranch on Dane Colony Lane, now Leak Lane, east of town. He purchased a nearby ranch on Horseshoe Bar Road at Hansen Road and named it Magnolia Orchard. He was president of the Loomis Fruit Growers Association from 1937 to 1950.
9. VALLEY VISTA ORCHARD
Chris Larsen
A native of Denmark, Christian Larsen came to Loomis in 1901, purchasing a 40-acre ranch along Horseshoe Bar Road, 3.5 miles east of town. He grew plums, peaches, pears, cherries and nectarines. His Valley Vista label was printed by the Schmidt Lithograph Company, San Francisco. The Valley Vista name and the scene on the label were inspired by the view from his front porch.
10. CALIFORNIA FRUIT EXCHANGE
The California Fruit Exchange incorporated May 1, 1901, with member associations from Loomis, Newcastle and Penryn. It grew to be the largest fruit growers cooperative organization on the Pacific coast. The Loomis Agency was established as a direct unit of the company in 1928 after the Loomis Fruit Growers Association left the cooperative. A large shipping and packing house, built in 1931, was in use until the Loomis Agency closed in 1994.
11. “OUR PICK”
Loomis Fruit Growers Association
In 1923, Loomis Fruit Growers Association developed a quality-control system for inspecting packing operations on the ranches. Three years later, they built a modern, highly mechanized Central Packing House and began offering fruit packing services, in addition to marketing and shipping. The facility was the first of its kind in Placer County. While the High-Hand label designated the company’s highest-quality fruit, the “Our Pick” label was used on crates of slightly lower grade product.
12. H•P•L BRAND
Harold P. Leak
Harold P. Leak began making boxes in the Penryn fruit sheds at age ten. From 1920 to 1924, he managed the Loomis Agency of the American Fruit Growers (Blue Goose). He purchased 40 acres on Leak Lane, east of Loomis, in 1909 and 240 acres on the American River in 1921. He grew peaches, plums, pears, cherries and grapes. His H•P•L Brand label was used on fruit crates packed in sheds at both ranch locations.
13. BLUE ANCHOR
California Fruit Exchange
George H. Cutter, one of the founders of the California Fruit Exchange, suggested the “Anchor” as a symbol as early as 1903. It was first used in 1904 and gradually came to be accepted as the company logo. In 1923, it was registered as a trademark designating the company’s highest quality fruit. The California Fruit Exchange was renamed Blue Anchor, Inc. in 1969.
14. BLUE GOOSE
American Fruit Growers, Inc.
American Fruit Growers, Inc., also known as American National Growers Corporation, was a fruit and vegetable packer and marketing organization that operated nation-wide under the Blue Goose brand. The Loomis Agency occupied various fruit sheds before building a new shipping and central packing house in 1931. The company officially changed its name to Blue Goose Growers, Inc., in 1961.
WESTSIDE BRAND
Penryn Fruit Company
Westside Orchard, owned by Penryn Fruit Co. and managed by Harry Butler, was located on English Colony Way at Humphrey Road. In 1930, a new packing house was built from which fruit was packed under the Westside Brand label. In the 1940s & '50s, Westside was operated by Wm. Bethell & Lorne Johnston. The Suzuki Brothers--Edwin, Frank, George and Budd--purchased Westside in 1959 and operated the packing house through the 1960s.
WIL-MAR ORCHARD
Ambert Pogetto
Ambert and Anna Pogetto named their 80-acre orchard Wil-Mar after their children, William and Marian. Located at the corner of Barton and Rocklin roads, Elberta peaches and more than a dozen varieties of plums were packed onsite and marketed through Blue Goose Growers, Inc. After making their home in Oakland, the Pogettos employed resident managers to operate the ranch. Managers were Yosh Hatano (1930s), Nicholas Corral (1941-1969) and Angel Bettencourt (1970-early 1980s).
SIDEWALK TILES
Placer County Fruit Labels
The following Placer County fruit crate labels are on sidewalk tiles along the Loomis Legacy Loop:
WESTSIDE, Penryn Fruit Co.
BLUE GOOSE, Loomis
COVERED WAGON, Newcastle Fruit Growers Assn.
KEYSTONE RANCH, Auburn
PLACER
AUBURN PERSIMMONS
WOODPECKER, Whitney Estate Co., Rocklin
PET, F.W. Barkhaus & Sons, Newcastle
LINCOLN, Lincoln Fruit Gowers Assn.
More local fruit crate labels are on display at the Loomis Library & Community Learning Center.