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"California in 1846" map shows geographic distribution of Spanish and Mexican land grants Mexican land grants of Tehama County, California (Bureau of Land Management map, 1997) These California land grants were made by Spanish (1784–1821) and Mexican (1822–1846) authorities of Las Californias and Alta California to private individuals ...
April 23, 1990 (4 Lazy F Ranch Rd. Grand Teton National Park: Summer home and purpose-built dude ranch established in 1927, with 18 contributing properties, representing the later stage of the industry building from the ground up rather than adapting working ranches.
Excellent hiking from the Piers Lane parking area on Alpine Road crosses over San Franciscquito Creek and Los Trancos Creek just above their confluence and proceeds to the Stanford Dish. It is open from sunrise to sunset and no bicycles or dogs are allowed. [12] The Coal Mine Ridge of Portola Valley Ranch has many walking (closed to biking) trails.
Rancho geography remains readily visible in this L.A. County map created the year before the establishment of neighboring Orange County (1888) Federal Writers' Project map of the ranchos of Los Angeles County (1937); appears to be in the same style as many American Guide Series maps so possibly produced but not used for Los Angeles: A Guide to the City and Its Environs
Rancho Trabuco was a Mexican land grant that covered most of the upper Arroyo Trabuco watershed. Created in 1841, its boundaries were changed in both 1843 and 1846. In 1880, the land was sold to F.L.S. Pioche and the final owners were James L. Flood and Jerome O'Neill, who created the O'Neill Ranch out of the Rancho Trabuco.
Map of southeastern Henry Coe State Park in the Diablo Range of California, showing North Fork Pacheco Creek and the "Hole in the Rock" barrier to upstream steelhead trout runs below the Brem Horse Camp. North Fork Pacheco Creek is a 19 miles (31 km) tributary stream of Pacheco Creek, in Santa Clara County, California.
In May 1990, the company agreed to sell a 6,700-acre Riverside County parcel for $275 million. [6] In June 1990, the offer was withdrawn. [7] In 1991, the company agreed to sell its assets for $739 million. [8] [9] The deal fell through that year and the company filed for bankruptcy protection. Its savings and loan was seized by regulators. [10]
Tejon Ranch Company (NYSE: TRC), based in Lebec, California, is one of the largest private landowners in California. [1] [2] The company was incorporated in 1936 to organize the ownership of a large tract of land that was consolidated from four Mexican land grants acquired in the 1850s and 1860s by ranch founder Edward Fitzgerald Beale.
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