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  2. East Harlem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Harlem

    East Harlem, also known as Spanish Harlem, or El Barrio, is a neighborhood of Upper Manhattan in New York City, north of the Upper East Side and bounded by 96th Street to the south, Fifth Avenue to the west, and the East and Harlem Rivers to the east and north.

  3. Olvera Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olvera_Street

    Olvera Street, commonly known by its Spanish name Calle Olvera, is a historic pedestrian street in El Pueblo de Los Ángeles, the historic center of Los Angeles.The street is located off of the Plaza de Los Ángeles, the oldest plaza in California, which served as the center of the city life through the Spanish and Mexican eras into the early American era, following the Conquest of California.

  4. Barrio Sésamo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrio_Sésamo

    Barrio Sésamo (Sesame Neighborhood in English) is the Spanish co-production of the popular U.S. children's television series Sesame Street produced by Televisión Española and Sesame Workshop (formerly Children's Television Workshop) from 1979 to 2000, the equivalent of Plaza Sésamo in Mexico and Hispanic America.

  5. El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Pueblo_de_Los_Ángeles...

    Here, the Coronel Adobe blocked the path north one block to the Plaza, but just slightly to the right (east) of the path of Los Angeles Street was Calle de los Negros (Spanish-language name; marked on post-1847 maps as Negro Alley or Nigger Alley), a narrow, one-block north–south street likely named after darker-skinned Mexican afromestizo ...

  6. List of place names of Spanish origin in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_place_names_of...

    Post-colonial: Spanish place names that have no history of being used during the colonial period for the place in question or for nearby related places. (Ex: Lake Buena Vista, Florida, named in 1969 after a street in Burbank, California) Non-Spanish: Place names originating from non-Spaniards or in non-historically Spanish areas.

  7. Ávila Adobe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ávila_Adobe

    The Avila Adobe was one of the settlement's first houses to share street frontage in the Pueblo de Los Angeles of Spanish colonial Alta California. The walls of the Avila Adobe are 2.5–3 feet (0.76–0.91 m) thick and are built from sun-baked adobe bricks. The original ceilings were 15 feet (4.6 m) high and supported by beams of cottonwood ...

  8. Figueroa Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figueroa_Street

    The street is named for General José Figueroa (1792 – September 29, 1835), the Mexican governor of Alta California from 1833 to 1835, who oversaw the secularization of the Spanish missions in California. Figueroa Street was originally called Calle de los Chapules, which translates to "Street of the Grasshoppers".

  9. List of streets in San Jose, California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_streets_in_San...

    Trinidad Street — Spanish for Trinity. Tully Road — named after John Tully, who owned several thousand acres in Evergreen Valley. University Street — named for the street that was the main entrance to the University of the Pacific before it moved to Stockton, California and the facility became Bellarmine College Prep High School.