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The Hathaway Ranch & Oil Museum in Santa Fe Springs, California is a museum of five generations of Hathaway family and Southern California history. The five-acre facility includes hundreds of artifacts and buildings showing the initial usage of the land in farming and ranching, as well as the major transition when oil was discovered in the area.
Location of Santa Fe County in New Mexico. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Santa Fe County, New Mexico. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
Santa Fe is a Spanish municipality in the province of Granada, situated in the Vega de Granada, irrigated by the river Genil. The town was originally built by the Catholic armies besieging Granada ( c. 1490-1492) after a fire destroyed much of their encampment.
Jun. 19—The property that houses nearly quarter-century-old Maria's New Mexican Kitchen, a Santa Fe institution known for its local cuisine and vast selection of margaritas, was listed Tuesday ...
Aug. 12—The Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce will hold a number of events in the next couple of weeks. Feria Southside, or the Southside Fair, is the chamber's preeminent event for promoting and ...
Between Algeciras and Tarifa, Andalusia: 1730: 1810, by the English during the Napoleonic invasion period: Ruins survives Fort of San García: Algeciras, Andalusia: 1730s: 1811, by the English during the Napoleonic invasion period: Large ruins survives Fort of Santiago: Algeciras, Andalusia: 1716: 2001, during the modern government and ...
The Santa Fe Springs Swap Meet is a flea market and music venue in Santa Fe Springs, California. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It predominantly caters to Mexican Americans and Chicano culture, [ 4 ] selling food and beverages, art, clothing, household goods, and more unusual products.
The Clarke Estate is a historic mansion in Santa Fe Springs, California, U.S.. It was built from 1919 to 1921 for Chauncey Clarke and his wife, Marie Rankin Clarke. [2] It was designed by architect Irving Gill. [3] It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since January 4, 1990. [4]