Inland Empire (California) - Incorporated Cities

Incorporated Cities

See also: List of unincorporated communities in the Inland Empire
Riverside County
cities
Year
incorporated
Population,
2007
Median income,
2009
Banning 1913 28,272 $40,073
Beaumont 1912 28,250 $46,703
Blythe 1916 22,178 $36,883
Calimesa 1990 7,415 $56,531
Canyon Lake 1990 10,939 $84,324
Cathedral City 1981 51,081 $43,792
Corona 1896 144,661 $145,497
Coachella 1946 35,207 $35,797
Desert Hot Springs 1963 22,011 $36,397
Eastvale 2010 N/A N/A
Hemet 1910 69,544 $33,924
Jurupa Valley 2011 N/A N/A
Indian Wells 1967 5,115 $116,718
Indio 1930 71,654 $47,708
Lake Elsinore 1888 40,985 $55,179
La Quinta 1982 38,340 $74,452
Menifee 2008 77,984 N/A
Moreno Valley 1984 174,565 $55,604
Murrieta 1991 92,933 $74,775
Norco 1964 27,262 $81,182
Palm Desert 1973 49,539 $51,999
Palm Springs 1938 46,437 $43,615
Perris 1911 47,139 $49,675
Rancho Mirage 1973 16,672 $76,642
Riverside 1883 287,820 $54,099
San Jacinto 1888 31,066 $42,772
Temecula 1989 93,923 $75,335
Wildomar 2008 N/A N/A
San Bernardino County
cities
Year
incorporated
Population,
2007
Median income,
2006
Adelanto 1970 27,139 $42,210
Apple Valley 1988 70,297 $48,946
Barstow 1947 23,943 $39,564
Big Bear Lake 1981 6,207 $42,512
Chino 1910 81,224 $70,283
Chino Hills 1991 78,668 $103,404
Colton 1887 51,797 $42,665
Fontana 1952 181,640 $61,752
Grand Terrace 1978 12,380 $68,098
Hesperia 1988 85,876 $48,244
Highland 1987 52,186 $54,153
Loma Linda 1970 22,451 $52,272
Montclair 1956 36,622 $56,147
Needles 1913 5,759 $32,431
Ontario 1891 172,701 $55,781
Rancho Cucamonga 1977 172,331 $78,452
Redlands 1888 71,375 $63,463
Rialto 1911 99,064 $40,659
San Bernardino 1854 205,010 $31,405
Twentynine Palms 1987 24,830 $36,471
Upland 1906 75,169 $61,044
Victorville 1962 102,538 $50,531
Yucaipa 1989 51,784 $50,529
Yucca Valley 1991 21,044 $38,092

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Famous quotes containing the words incorporated and/or cities:

    Look not to legislatures and churches for your guidance, nor to any soulless incorporated bodies, but to inspirited or inspired ones.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Books may be burned and cities sacked, but truth like the yearning for freedom, lives in the hearts of humble men and women. The ultimate victory, the ultimate victory of tomorrow is with democracy; and true democracy with education, for no people in all the world can be kept eternally ignorant or eternally enslaved.
    Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945)