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In 1912 they sold Rancho El Escorpión, still 1,110 acres (4.5 km 2), to George Platt. He established a dairy operation on renamed Platt Ranch variously called Ferndale, ‘escorpion’, or Cloverdale Dairy. [25] The land was not incorporated into the city of Los Angeles until 1958, and Rancho El Escorpión remained open and undeveloped until 1960.
Espíritu Chijulla around 1900. Leonis died in 1889, after falling from a wagon. [10] Having amassed a worth of over $300,000, he left the majority of his assets to his Basque relatives and only allocated $10,000 to Espíritu who he referred to as his "faithful housekeeper," despite her having been his common-law wife; he further stated that he wanted "to prevent her from being reduced to ...
Spanish; el portezuelo is a pass Los Angeles Rancho Potrero Chico 1843 Antonio Valenzuela Mexico Ramon Valenzuela, et al. 83.46 acres (33.78 ha) April 4, 1923: 444 Spanish; el potrero is a paddock, or pasturage for horses; chico as an adjective means little: Rancho Potrero de la Misíon Vieja de San Gabriel Los Angeles Rancho Potrero de Felipe ...
Juan José Esparragoza Moreno was born in Huixiopa, Badiraguato, Sinaloa, Mexico on 3 February 1949. [2] [3] [A 1] He has an alternative date of birth on 2 March 1949 listed on the United States government databases. [6]
This property he also called Rancho Encino (also recorded as El Encino and Los Encinos). [15] Mission San Fernando Rey de España was founded at Reyes's original rancho site on September 8, 1797, by Father Fermín Lasuén. The mission's grazing lands extended over the flatlands of the valley, and it also claimed jurisdiction over several ...
In 1845 a Mexican land grant established Rancho El Escorpión here, one of the few granted to Native Americans. The former adobe rancho buildings were located within the current park (adobes existed 1840s-1960s). [10] [11] [12] The rancho was purchased by George Platt in 1912, becoming the Platt Ranch in 1912. [13] [14]
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The four sisters known as Las Poquianchis. María Delfina González Valenzuela (1912 – 17 October 1968), María del Carmen González Valenzuela (1918–1969), María Luisa González Valenzuela (1920 – 19 November 1984) and María de Jesús González Valenzuela (1924–1990), known as Las Poquianchis, were four sisters from the central Mexican state of Guanajuato.