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Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Pomona, California" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Pomona City Stables, also known as the Pomona City Yards Brick Building, is a stables building completed in 1909 to house horses owned by the City of Pomona, California. Built at a cost of $6,000, the Pomona City Stables building was designed by Pomona architect Ferdinand Davis from the firm of Davis and Higgs. [ 2 ]
The Adobe de Palomares, built in 1855 by Ygnacio Palomares, is the oldest building in Pomona. View to the west-southwest down San Jose Creek from Pomona Park (now Ganesha Park) in 1904. Elephant Hill is in the center distance. The Tongva were the first inhabitants of the area. [9] [10] The city is named after Pomona, the ancient Roman goddess ...
Opening in June 2011, Clover Stadium in Pomona is the home of the Frontier League's Eastern Division New York Boulders. Clover Stadium has a natural grass field and can hold up to 6,362 spectators ...
The city of Pomona is the latest to implement a guaranteed income program, providing $500 a month to families with children younger than 4. This L.A. County city is the latest to offer ...
The Ygnacio Palomares Adobe, also known as Adobe de Palomares, is a one-story adobe brick structure in Pomona, California, built between 1850 and 1855 as a residence for Don Ygnacio Palomares. It was abandoned in the 1880s and was left to the elements until it was acquired by the City of Pomona in the 1930s.
The police commissioner at the time the first police station was established in Pomona (1927) was William H. Ryan (January 1925 to May 1934), and he appears to have also pushed for the building of the 1934 Police Station and court house. During the building of the latter in late 1934, Cecil James Carroll was Commissioner (May 1934 to July 1949).
Nichols, who had moved to Pomona from New York, became the President of the Pomona Land and Water Company. [2] In 1947, Roscoe Hart purchased the property and remained the owner until 1972. [2] In 1972, Hart sold the Casa Primera at a public auction. He told the Los Angeles Times that "the work of keeping it up became too much."