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Giant California Bay Laurel near Permanente Creek in Rancho San Antonio County Park. The State's tallest and third largest California bay laurel tree (Umbellularia californica), estimated to be over 200 years old, grows in Rancho San Antonio County Park. The tree was protected in 2004 with the addition of fencing and by the removal of a nearby ...
Succeeding maps reflect the slow completion of I-35 and I-35W over the stretch of US 81 between Laredo and Fort Worth, with the 1978-79 Texas Official Highway Travel Map showing only a 14-mile (23 km) section from Encinal north to 3 miles (4.8 km) south of Artesia Wells as incomplete, and the 1980 Texas Official Highway Travel Map shows that ...
Rancho Cucamonga: San Bernardino: El Rincon: 1839 Juan Alvarado: Juan Bandini: 4,431 acres (1,793 ha) 297 SD Prado Regional Park: San Bernardino, Riverside: San Pedro: 1839 Juan Alvarado: Francisco Sanchez: 8,926 acres (3,612 ha) 82 ND Pacifica: San Mateo: San Gregorio: 1839 Juan Alvarado: Antonio Buelna 17,783 acres (7,197 ha) 88 ND, 89 ND San ...
The district's tax and voter base consists of about 550 square miles (1,400 km 2) and 741,000 people, mostly in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties. District revenues for fiscal year 2012-2013 were $33 million, with $30.3 million coming directly from a portion of property taxes.
Anza completed the first overland route to San Francisco Bay when he and Father Pedro Font sighted the bay from a prominent knoll near the entry of Rancho San Antonio County Park. In Anza's diary on March 25, 1776, he states that he "arrived at the "Arroyo San José de Cupertino", which is useful only for travelers.
Rancho San Antonio may refer to: Rancho San Antonio (Lugo), a Spanish land grant in present-day Los Angeles County, California; Rancho San Antonio (Peralta), a Spanish land grant in present-day Alameda County, California; Yorba Hacienda or Rancho San Antonio, the adobe house of Bernardo Yorba on his Rancho Cañón de Santa Ana
The 20-acre site is closest to the Madera and Sendera Ranch communities of high-end new homes, at the corner of Sendera Ranch Boulevard and Rancho Canyon Way, near the Wise-Denton county line.
Rancho San Antonio, also known as the Peralta Grant, was a 44,800-acre (181 km 2) land grant by Governor Pablo Vicente de Solá, the last Spanish governor of California, to Don Luís María Peralta, a sergeant in the Spanish Army and later, commissioner of the Pueblo of San José, in recognition of his forty years of service.