The canyon is said to be named for a 49er named Anthony Reche, who initially settled in Fallbrook and moved to the canyon in 1875.[6] Reche had 160 acres on which he farmed and "raised bees."[6]
In the 1890s, a settler named John Console built a one-room schoolhouse in the canyon for the use of his own children; other students began attending around 1910. The building was later moved and renamed Ferndale School. The school held classes until at least 1951, when the building was condemned by Riverside County.[7]
Canyon residents got electricity for the first time in the 1940s.[6]
In 1976, Console's son described the canyon as having been habitat for many wild creatures including bobcats, coyotes, quail, and rabbits.[8] In 1912 two of the Console girls killed a 6-foot (1.8 m)-long rattlesnake with 14 rattles.[9]