
Our Anaheim logo carries California's bear and star over "1850," the year of statehood and the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics California place. The bear and the lone star are the state in shorthand — independence, the Republic, the frontier — printed black-and-white with the worn look of an old crate label, a WPA poster, a piece of farm signage. What makes this one Anaheim is the place behind it: the German wine colony, the willow gates, the Valencia groves, the home by the river. On a tee or a cap it reads like a piece of orange-grove California — Est. 1850 on the emblem, with an 1857 colony story underneath.
For a generation it worked beautifully. Anaheim's vineyards became the largest in California and its wine shipped across the country — for nearly twenty-five years this was the state's leading wine district. Then, in the 1880s, a mysterious blight now known as Pierce's Disease moved through the vines and killed them by the hundreds of thousands. By the late 1880s the vineyards were beyond saving. It could have been the end of the colony. Instead the growers pulled out the dead vines and planted citrus — and Anaheim reinvented itself as the Valencia Orange capital of the nation, its crate labels carrying the town's name to fruit stands all over the country.
Why People Visit Anaheim California
Most people come to Anaheim for the modern attractions — but the city rewards anyone who looks for the older layer underneath: a planned German wine colony that became an orange-grove capital, with a 19th-century museum house, a heritage park, and a downtown still shaped by a willow fence planted in 1857. It's bright, warm, and welcoming, and its real history sits quietly right alongside the famous stuff.