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Ranchos: Los Alamitos, Las Bolsas, Los Cerritos, Los Coyotes, Santa Gertrudes, Rancho Palo Alto Santiago de Santa Ana: 1810 Spanish King Ferdinand VII-Governor José Joaquín de Arrillaga: José Antonio Yorba: Santa Ana, Costa Mesa, Orange, Tustin, El Modena, Olive: Cañón de Santa Ana: 1834 Mexican Governor José Figueroa: Bernardo Yorba
Susanna Bixby Bryant. Susanna Bixby Bryant (April 11, 1880 – October 2, 1946) was an American horticulturalist, rancher, botanical collector and the founder of the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden in Claremont, California, the largest botanic garden in the state that houses California native plants.
Santiago de Santa Ana: 1810 José Joaquín de Arrillaga: José Antonio Yorba and Juan Pablo Peralta: 63,414 acres (25,663 ha) 346 SD Santa Ana, Irvine: Orange: Temescal [2] [3] 1819 [note 11] NA Leandro Serrano and wife, Josefa Montalva de Serrano NA 374 SD Corona, Temescal Valley: Riverside: San Antonio: 1820 Pablo Vicente de Solá: Luís ...
Rancho Santa Ana was a 21,522-acre (87.10 km 2) Mexican land grant in present day Ventura County, California given in 1837 by Governor Juan Alvarado to Crisogono Ayala and Cosme Vanegas. [1] Rancho Santa Ana was located inland in the Ventura River Valley on the west side of the Ventura River across from Rancho Ojai which was granted in the same ...
The California Botanic Garden (formerly the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden) is a botanical garden in Claremont, California, in the United States, just south of the San Gabriel foothills. The garden, at 86 acres (35 ha ), is the largest botanic garden in the state dedicated to California native plants . [ 1 ]
Cornelio was a Spanish soldier who served in Alta California, then stayed to settle in the two-year-old Pueblo de Nuestra Señora Reina de los Ángeles sobre el Río Porciúncula in 1783 with his wife María Ysabel Urquídez (1750–1801) and 6 children: José de Santa Ana Ávila y Urquídez (1770–1806), Francisco José Ávila (1772–1832 ...
José Andrés Sepúlveda, a famed Californio vaquero, purchased most Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana, but lost his land claim after the U.S. Conquest of California.. After the 1769 expedition of Gaspar de Portolá out of Mexico City, then capital of New Spain, Friar Junípero Serra named the area Vallejo de Santa Ana (Valley of Saint Anne, or Santa Ana Valley).
Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana was a 63,414-acre (256.63 km 2) Spanish land concession in present-day Orange County, California, given by Spanish Alta California Governor José Joaquín de Arrillaga in 1810 to Jose Antonio Yorba and his nephew Pablo Peralta.