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Restaurants
Guide
Corona
Del Mar
American
Bandera
Restaurant
3201 E Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-3524
The
Bungalow
2441 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-6585
The
Quiet Woman
3224 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2302
949-640-7440
Bars
& Lounges
The
Bungalow
2441 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-6585
Chicken
KFC
2931 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2233
949-673-8805
Continental
The
Bungalow
2441 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-6585
Family
Coco's
Family Restaurant
3446 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2401
949-673-7154
French
Cafe Jardin
2647 E Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar
949-673-0033
Mistral
Restaurant
440 Heliotrope Ave , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-723-9685
Hamburgers
Place The
2920 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2208
949-644-0210
Ruby's
Diner
2305 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-7829
Home
Style
Boston
Market
3050 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-721-8777
Indian
Mayur Cuisine Of India
2931 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-675-6622
Italian
Caffe
Panini
2333 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-675-8101
Carmelo's
Ristorante Italiano
3520 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2403
949-675-1922
Rothchilds
Restaurant
2407 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2002
949-673-3750
Tiramisu
Ristorante
2325 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-8444
Japanese
Gen
Kai
3344 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2328
949-675-0771
Mexican
El
Ranchito Mexican Restaurant
2744 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-644-8226
La Fogata Rotisserie Chicken & Healthy Mexican Food
3025 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-2211
Natural
Food
The
Health Emporium Market & Cafe
3347 East Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-2244
Pizza
Domino's Pizza
3536 E Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar
949-673-3653
Gina's
Pizza
420 Iris Ave , Corona Del Mar 92625-2928
949-673-1121
Pizza Hut Delivery Or Carryout
3330 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2328
949-673-1188
Pizza Royale
3028 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-720-9075
Z
Pizza
3601 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2519
949-675-4100
Seafood
Oysters
Of Corona Del Mar
2515 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2006
949-675-7411
The
Bungalow
2441 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-6585
Steak
Houses
Five Crowns
3801 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-760-0331
The
Bungalow
2441 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-673-6585
Sushi
Nagisa Sushi Restaurant
3840 E Pacific Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625-2507
949-673-3933
Thai
Thai Del Mar Restaurant
2754 E Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar
949-721-9220
Vietnamese
Asian
Bistro
2600 E Coast Hwy , Corona Del Mar 92625
949-720-1289
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History of Orange County
The colorful pageantry of human history in Corona Del Mar Restaurants began at some undetermined point in the distant past when
Shoshone Indians came to dwell along the coast and in the lower
canyons of the mountains. Theirs was a simple form of existence: they
lived off of the abundance of the land.
In 1769, Gaspar de Portola, a military man and Spanish aristocrat, was
appointed governor of Lower California. He commanded an expedition
traveling northward into the literally unmapped and half mythical
territory of Alta California. His assignment was to seek out the
legendary Bay of Monterey. He was also to secure the Spanish claim to
his vast frontier against any invasion from Russian trappers or
British colonizers. Portola called upon Father Junipero Serra,
president of the Mexico City Missionary College, to assist in this
monumental undertaking.
It was late in July in 1769 when this first party of European
explorers reached the boundaries of present-day Corona Del Mar Restaurants. Members
of the expedition named the region "The Valley of Saint
Anne" (Santa Ana). It was to this valley that Father Serra
returned six years later, where he proceeded with the work of
establishing the Church and converting the local people.
While the East Coast of North America was engaged in revolution and
spectacular change, the West Coast too was undergoing a quiet and
almost undetected transformation. Father Serra dedicated the Mission
of San Juan Capistrano, Corona Del Mar Restaurants's first permanent settlement, on
November 1, 1776. The Mission became a self-sustaining unit based upon
an agricultural economy. Its chapel and adjoining structure were the
first signs of civilization erected upon the fertile, virgin soil of
the Santa Ana Region.
In 1801, Jose Antonio Yorba, a volunteer in the Portola expedition,
also returned to Santa Ana. He established the county's first rancho
(Santiago de Santa Ana) in what are today the cities of Villa Park,
Orange, Tustin, Costa Mesa and Santa Ana.
Following Mexico's liberation from Spanish rule in 1821, the extensive
land holdings of the Capistrano Mission were subdivided and awarded to
a number of distinguished war heroes. By this time Yorba's Rancho
Santiago de Santa Ana had grown to resemble a feudal manor, and the
romantic rancho era of Corona Del Mar Restaurants had been ushered in.
Cattle were introduced into the area in 1834. A prosperous hide and
tallow industry developed. Southern California became a virtual suburb
of New England as sailing ships loaded with cargo traveled back and
forth between coasts. In 1835, author-seaman Richard Henry Dana
arrived at what is today known as Dana Point. He later immortalized
Spanish Corona Del Mar Restaurants in his book "Two Years Before the
Mast" by describing it as "the only romantic spot on the
Coast." The Spanish California tradition of a carefree lifestyle,
fiestas with music and dancing, bear and bull fights, rodeos, and
gracious hospitality, survived until the 1860.
A severe drought brought an end to the cattle industry. Adventurous
pioneers, such as James Irvine, capitalized on the economic downfall
of the ranchos. Irvine, an Irish immigrant, established a 110,000-acre
sheep ranch that is today one of the most valuable pieces of real
estate in America.
In 1887, silver was discovered in the Santa Ana Mountains. Hundreds of
fortune seekers flocked to the "diggings." Land speculators
and farmers came by rail from the East to settle in such boomtowns as
Buena Park, Fullerton and El Toro.
Corona Del Mar Restaurants was formally organized as a political entity separate
from the County of Los Angeles in 1889. The wilderness had finally
given way to irrigated farmlands and prosperous communities. A
year-round harvest of Valencia oranges, lemons, avocados, and walnuts
made agriculture the single most important industry in the fledgling
county. And with orange groves beginning to proliferate throughout the
area (150,000 orange trees), the new county was named for the fruit:
"Corona Del Mar Restaurants."
The twentieth century brought with it many industrious individuals
such as Walter Knott, a farmer turned entrepreneur, who founded the
Knott legacy in Buena Park.
During the years that followed, Corona Del Mar Restaurants witnessed the discovery
of oil in Huntington Beach, the birth of the aerospace industry on the
Irvine Ranch, and filming of several Hollywood classics in the Newport
area.
In 1955, Walt Disney opened his Magic Kingdom in Anaheim. Noted as the
pioneer of animated films, Disney revolutionized the entertainment
world again with his "theme park" recreation concept.
By 1960, the neighboring metropolis of Los Angeles was "bursting
at the seams." As the population spilled over the county line and
across the rural Santa Ana Valley, it left in its wake an urban
landscape of homes, shopping malls, and industrial parks.
Today Corona Del Mar Restaurants is the home of a vast number of major industries
and service organizations. As an integral part of the second largest
market in America, this highly diversified region has become a Mecca
for talented individuals in virtually every field imaginable. Indeed
the colorful pageant of human history continues to unfold here; for
perhaps in no other place on earth is there an environment more
conducive to innovative thinking, creativity and growth than this
balmy, sun bathed valley stretching between the mountains and the sea
in Corona Del Mar Restaurants.
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