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Ranchos of California

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The Ranchos or Alta California land grants established land use patterns that are still recognizable in the California of today. The tradition of making land grants was continued by the early State of California. These are the "ranchos" of Californian toponymy.

Under Spanish rule, individual land grants were scarce. Three of the largest original ranchos first granted in 1784 by the Spanish King Carlos III were;

  • Rancho Los Nietos, granted to Manuel Nieto, stretching from the LA river on the west to the Santa Ana river on the east, from Whittier / Harbour blvds north, south to the Pacific Ocean.

In 1830, only fifty private ranches existed in all of Alta California.

When California came under control of the Mexican government, the governors gained the power to grant state lands. With the new régime most lands were turned into large Mexican-owned rancherias. The missions were secularized and their land and property also redistributed by local administrators.

Few ranchos remained as they were, depending on the fortunes of the owners they were expanded, parceled out or even sold outright. Some of the more noted ranchos with their descendent communities are listed below.

Grant Granted Grantor Grantee Area(s)
Rancho San Rafael 1798 Charles IV of Spain José María Verdugo Atwater Village, Eagle Rock, Glassell Park, Glendale, Highland Park
Rancho San Antonio 1810 Ferdinand VII of Spain Antonio María Lugo Bell, Bell Gardens, Commerce, Cudahy, East Los Angeles, Lynwood, Montebello, South Gate, Vernon 119 km² (29,513 acres)
Rancho San Antonio 1820 Pablo Vicente de Solá Don Luís María Peralta Albany, Alameda, Berkeley, Emeryville, Oakland, Piedmont, San Leandro 181 km² (44,800 acres)
Rancho San Miguel 1834 Dona Juana Sanchez de Pacheco Walnut Creek, Alamo, Danville, Mt. Diablo State Park 73 km² (18,000 acres)
Rancho Rinconada de Los Gatos 1839 Jose Maria Hernandez and Sebastian Fabian Peralta Los Gatos, Monte Sereno (27 km² )
Rancho San Lorenzo 1841 Juan Alvarado Guillermo Castro Castro Valley, Hayward (108 km² )
Rancho San Lorenzo Baja Rancho 1842 Juan Alvarado Francisco Soto San Lorenzo
Rancho San Vicente y Santa Monica Francisco Sepulveda Brentwood, Santa Monica 134 km² (33,000 acres)
Rancho Soscol 1844 Pío Pico Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo Petaluma, Vallejo
Rancho Milpitas 1835 José Castro José María Alviso Milpitas
Rancho Rosa Castilla 1850s Juan Batista Batz family University Hills (Cal State LA)
Rancho la Ballona Machado and Talamantes families Inglewood, Marina del Rey, Playa del Rey, Santa Monica (Ocean Park Dist), Venice
Rancho Boca de Santa Monica Francisco Marquez and Ysidro Reyes Santa Monica 27 km² (6,656 acres)
Rancho de las Pulgas Luis Antonio Argüello San Carlos 142 km² (35,000 acres)
Rancho La Cañada Eagle Rock, La Cañada Flintridge
Rancho Santa Maria de Los Peñasquitos 1823 Francisco María Ruiz Rancho Penasquitos, San Diego
Rancho La Cañada de San Bernardo 1842 Juan Alvarado Don Jose Francisco Snook Rancho Bernardo, San Diego
Rancho Rincon del Diablo 1843 Juan Alvarado Escondido
Rancho Vallecitos de San Marcos 1840 Juan Alvarado Jose María Alvarado San Marcos

See also

  1. The Atrisco Land Grant in New Mexico is one of the few surviving Mexican land grants.
  2. Fink, 1972, page 64: "Land grants were scarce; In 1830 only 50 private ranches were held in Alta California, of which 7 were in the Monterey region."
  3. "José Maria Alviso Adobe/Rancho Milpitas". milpitashistory.org. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
  4. Marquez, Ernest (2004). Santa Monica Beach: A Collector's Pictorial History. Angel City Press.
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