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Buena Park, CA Real Estate
Buena Park Homes
for Sale
Buena Park Real Estate prices range from $350,000
up to over 4 Million. Buena Park property types include Single
Family, Residential, Commercial, Town Homes & Condominiums,
Lots & Land, and Investment Properties.
The Community of
Buena Park, CA
Buena Park is in Orange County and is the most
strategically located community in Southern California. It sits
between the region's busiest freeways - Santa Ana (I-5) and Riverside
(91) and Beach Boulevard (Super Highway 39.) It is within 20 minutes
driving time of Los Angeles, Orange County and Long Beach Airports,
as well as the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Buena Park
today is best known as the home of several world-famous tourist
attractions, but the town originally was put on the map in the
late 1800s by a Chicago businessman and the Santa Fe Railway.
In 1887, James A. Whitaker, a wholesale grocer
from Chicago, bought 690 acres of the Stearns Rancho, part of what
was once the sprawling
Rancho Los Coyotes. Whitaker intended to create a cattle ranch,
but Santa Fe Railway officials convinced him to use the land
for a new town, according to "The Picture Story of Buena Park," compiled
by H.A. "Hub" Chamberlain. Whitaker filed his township
papers in Los Angeles County (Orange County had not yet been formed)
to create the town
of Buena Park.
The city was not incorporated until 1953.
Buena Park first
became known as a dairy center, and both the Santa Fe and Southern
Pacific railroads built there. The Lily
Creamery
started operations in Buena Park in 1889. With the exception
of a few wineries, the creamery was the first industry in
the city,
according to Chamberlain's 1971 book.
Today, the city's main claim to fame is as the
home of Knott's Berry Farm, Medieval Times (where knights joust
before crowds
of diners) and Movieland Wax Museum. The city has grown
from about
1,000 people in 1900 to more than 77,000 people today and
covers about 10 square miles.
Buena Park's five-member City Council recently
has embarked on ambitious redevelopment plans to help revitalize
its
economic base with more retail and commercial businesses
while also
updating
the city's entertainment and tourist corridor along Beach
Boulevard.
City officials attribute much of the Buena Park's physical
and financial growth to the Knott family. Tourism generated
by the
Knott' amusement park is the single larges source of
revenue for the city. Walter Knott and his family arrived
in Buena
Park in
1920 and began farming on 10 acres of rented land. Eight
years later, the family built a permanent road-side stand
where berries
and plants were sold. In 1934, Cordelia Knott, using
her own wedding china, served customers her first chicken
dinners
at
65 cents each.
In 1940, Walter Knott began assembling his Ghost Town
attraction as a diversion for hungry patrons waiting
for their chicken
dinners.
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