Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Santa Lucia Preserve (/ ˈ s æ n. t ə l u ˈ s iː ə /) or The Preserve (formerly Rancho San Carlos) is a private, 20,000 acres (8,100 ha) gated development permitting 297 homesites. It is located in the foothills of the Santa Lucia Range between Palo Corona Regional Park and Carmel Valley, California .
San Diego: Rancho San Antonio de Padua: 1839 Juan Alvarado: Juan Prado Mesa: 3,542 acres (1,433 ha) 275 ND, 354 ND, 366 ND, 368 ND, 378 ND, 383 ND Los Altos: Santa Clara: Refugio: 1839 Juan Alvarado: María Candida, Jacinta, and María de los Angeles Castro 12,147 acres (4,916 ha) 275 SD, 286 SD Santa Cruz: Santa Cruz: San Francisco: 1839 Juan ...
San Clemente is a stalwart Republican stronghold in presidential elections with no Democratic nominee winning the city in over four decades. San Clemente voted in favor of Proposition 8 by 55.5% and for Proposition 4 by 52.2%. [44] Gene James, elected by to the City Council in 2019, was appointed Mayor in 2021. [45]
The Carmel River Reroute and San Clemente Dam Removal Project (CRRDR) was completed at the end of 2015, rerouting the Carmel River channel through a bedrock divide to join San Clemente Creek approximately 2,625 feet (800 m) upstream from the natural San Clemente Creek–Carmel River confluence. [23]
[1] [2] It reaches the Carmel River at the historic Rancho Potrero de San Carlos given in 1837 by Governor Juan B. Alvarado to Fructuoso del Real, a Native American from the Mission San Carlos. [8] In 1851 it was acquired by Bradley Varnum Sargent and his brothers. In 1920, New Yorker George Gordon Moore acquired it, and renamed it the 20,000 ...
CJ Smith had just taken a video of his rainy view along the San Clemente coast Wednesday morning when there was an ominous rumbling sound. “I heard a noise and felt the building kind of shake a ...
About 380,000 cu yd (290,000 m 3) of sediment will also have to be excavated from San Clemente Creek to the permanent holding area on the Carmel River. Once the sediment is secure, the San Clemente Dam and Old Carmel River Dam will be completely removed. [5] Construction began in 2013 and the Carmel River was diverted by December 2014. [6]
Further back in history, California lands were organized into Spanish land grants or "Ranchos". In the case of Orange County, there is record of José Antonio Yorba and Juan Pablo Peralta (nephew) being granted Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana in 1810, year of the commencement of the war of Mexican Independence.