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Almanac note · History and culture

Loomis kept its fruit-shed heart when it became a town

Loomis grew around the railroad, fruit packing sheds, and a local vote to protect its small-town character from being swallowed by nearby growth.

Loomisfruit shedsHigh Hand

Loomis is a small Placer County town with a railroad story hiding in plain sight. Before the town settled on the name Loomis, the stop went through other names, including Placer, Smithville, and Pino. The railroad and post office finally landed on Loomis in 1890, partly because Pino was too easy to confuse with Reno.

The name honors James Loomis, an early local figure who wore several hats at once. He served as saloon keeper, railroad agent, express agent, and postmaster. In a young rail town, those jobs meant he stood close to the daily flow of mail, freight, travelers, and local news.

Fruit became the town’s big early calling card. In the early 1900s, Loomis was the second largest fruit-shipping station in Placer County. Packing sheds along the tracks handled peaches, pears, plums, cherries, grapes, and other orchard crops from the surrounding basin. The High-Hand label became part of that local fruit trade, and the Loomis Fruit Growers Association operated until 2001.

That history matters because Loomis did not become a city by accident. It stayed unincorporated for many years, then voted to incorporate in 1984 when residents worried about being annexed by Rocklin. The goal was local control and a chance to protect the town’s older character, including the fruit shed buildings near Taylor Road and the railroad.

That gives Loomis a clear story beyond its quiet streets. Its downtown, tracks, and fruit sheds show a farm-and-rail town that chose to keep enough of its own shape for people to still read it today.

Where to see it

Taylor Road, the Union Pacific rail corridor, the High Hand and Blue Goose fruit shed area, and downtown Loomis.

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Reviewed July 2, 2026

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