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Rudecinda Sepúlveda de Dodson, pioneer of San Pedro, California and a founder of the San Pedro Woman's Club. Ygnacio Sepúlveda was born in 1842 in Los Angeles, to José Andrés Sepúlveda and María Francisca Paula Ávila y Ruíz. [20] In 1863, he was admitted to the California State Bar. [21]
Rudecinda Sepúlveda de Dodson, a Californio heiress and one of the club's founders, donated the land to build the first clubhouse. The club was founded as a literary association in 1905, but re-organized in 1906 under the leadership of Fanny Hogaboom to respond to moves by the city of Los Angeles to annex San Pedro.
Rudecinda Sepúlveda de Dodson, pioneer of San Pedro and a founder of the San Pedro Woman's Club. European settlement began in 1769 as part of an effort to populate California, although trade restrictions encouraged more smuggling than regular business.
View of the J. H. Dodson Residence in San Pedro (ca.1895). The Victorian Stick-Eastlake style wooden house was built in 1881 by the Sepúlveda family as a wedding present for their daughter Rudecinda and her husband, James Dodson. It was originally located at the corner of 7th and Beacon Streets in San Pedro.
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Rudecinda Sepulveda Dodson Middle School (Los Angeles) (Dolphins) Charles R. Drew Middle School, Florence-Firestone (Cougars) Thomas A. Edison Middle School, Florence-Firestone (Eagles) El Sereno Middle School (Los Angeles) (Jaguars) Emerson Community Charter School (Los Angeles) (Panthers) Alexander Fleming Middle School (Falcons)
At the time, detectives looked into her ex-boyfriend, Ralph Sepulveda, and her coworker, Brian Travers, as possible persons of interest. No arrests have been made, however, in this nearly 22-year ...
He was born in Villa de Sinaloa, Mexico, the son of Juan José Sepúlveda (born 1720) and Ana María Josefa García (born 1720). He married María Candelaria de Redondo in 1762. [1] In 1781, the couple and their 6 children accompanied the José de Züñiga Expedition into upper Las Californias. [2]