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The Sebastiani Vineyard and Winery is California Historical Landmark No. 739, listed on June 6, 1960. [1] The location was founded by the Franciscan Fathers at the Mission San Francisco Solano. The wine produced was used for Holy communion in worship church services and Holy mass.
Sebastiani soon returned to Sonoma to run his family's wine business, Sebastiani Vineyards, where he took production from little more than 200,000 cases to nearly eight million in 15 years. Also, in 1986, along with brother-in-law Roy Cecchetti, Sebastiani began a negociant-style winery, Cecchetti Sebastiani Cellar (CSC). CSC developed the ...
Sebastiani is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Amedeo Sebastiani, best known as Amadeus, Italian television and radio presenter; Don Sebastiani (born 1953), American politician and Sebastiani Vineyards and Winery; Franca Sebastiani (1949–2015), known early under the pseudonym Franchina, Italian singer
Sonoma County wine refers to the viticulture and winemaking in Sonoma County, California, United States. County names in the United States automatically qualify as legal appellations of origin for wine produced from grapes grown in that county and do not require registration with the United States Department of the Treasury, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
Sebastiani Vineyards and Winery; Simi Winery; T. Terra de Promissio; W. Windsor Vineyards This page was last edited on 21 May 2024, at 20:13 (UTC). Text is available ...
Sebastiani Vineyards and Winery 394 4th St E 38°17′36″N 122°26′58″W / 38.293367°N 122.449483°W / 38.293367; -122.449483 ( Sebastiani Vineyards and
California's first wineries were established here, including Buena Vista Winery (1857) and Gundlach Bundschu (1858). The other communities in the valley, such as Kenwood , Glen Ellen , Schellville , and Boyes Hot Springs , were founded later in the 19th century, some as resorts centered on the geothermic hot springs that still well up from deep ...
Viviani worked at a local quarry and managed a distillery at Sebastiani Vineyards. When Prohibition began, the Sebastiani Vineyards stopped producing wine and Viviani started to make cheese at the now defunct Sonoma Mission Creamery. [2] The Sonoma Mission Creamery was founded by Joseph Vella and John Iacono in 1915. [3]