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A 1938 fire burnt down this second resort. The group spent $1.5 million and built the current resort. The Arrowhead Springs Hotel opened in 1939 as a resort hotel in the San Bernardino Mountains. The resort was designed by African American architects Paul R. Williams and Gordon Kaufmann in the art deco [citation needed] style. The main building ...
Arrowhead Springs is a highly mountainous neighborhood in the 81-square-mile (210 km 2) municipality of San Bernardino, California, officially annexed to the city on November 19, 2009. [1] The neighborhood lies below the Arrowhead geological monument, which is California Historical Landmark #977.
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad yard, San Bernardino, California, 1943. World War II brought an Army Air Corps base, San Bernardino Army Air Field, later named after Leland Francis Norton, a San Bernardino native, killed in the crash of his A-20 Havoc over Amiens, France, in 1944 after saving his crew. Camp Ono was an Army base to the ...
Frank Redford built this complex for himself in 1947–49 and not as a franchise. The address of the motel is Rialto, California, but the motel is physically located in San Bernardino. It is on the boundary between the two cities on historic Route 66, with an address of 2728 East Foothill Boulevard, Rialto, California. [20]
In 2021, the facility was renamed Yaamava' Resort and Casino at San Manuel, in conjunction with opening a 432-room, 17-story hotel tower. [6] Yaamava is the Serrano word for "spring" and the tribe has stated it is a metaphor for rebirth of the casino. [ 7 ]
Together, the partnership of Step Up and Shangri-La became one of the top recipients of Homekey, receiving more than $114 million for seven projects in San Bernardino, Monterey and Ventura counties.