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Rancho San Francisco

Coordinates:34°26′02″N118°36′28″W / 34.43389°N 118.60778°W /34.43389; -118.60778
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Mexican land grant in present-day Los Angeles and Ventura counties, California

Rancho San Francisco
1843 map of Rancho San Francisco
Map
Interactive map of Rancho San Francisco
LocationNorthwesternLos Angeles County and easternVentura County,California
Coordinates34°26′02″N118°36′28″W / 34.43389°N 118.60778°W /34.43389; -118.60778
Area48,612 acres (19,673 ha)
EstablishedJanuary 22, 1839
Official nameRancho San Francisco[1]
Reference no.556
Official nameOak of the Golden Dream[1]
Reference no.168

Rancho San Francisco was aland grant in present-day northwesternLos Angeles County and easternVentura County, California. It was a grant of 48,612 acres (19,673 ha) by GovernorJuan B. Alvarado to Antonio del Valle, aMexican army officer, in recognition for his service toAlta California.[2][3] It is not related to the city ofSan Francisco.

Therancho is the location of the first popularly known finding ofgold in the Southern California area in 1842, inPlacerita Canyon.[4] Much of the present day city ofSanta Clarita lies within the boundary of what was Rancho San Francisco. Theadobe headquarters of the rancho, and the site of the gold find (known today as the "Oak of the Golden Dream"), are designatedCalifornia Historical Landmarks.[1] The rancho included portions of theSan Gabriel,Santa Susana,Topatopa, andSierra PelonaMountain ranges.

Early history

[edit]

AfterMission San Fernando Rey de España was established in 1797, the administrators there realized they would need more land for agriculture and livestock, and they looked north to theSanta Clarita Valley to establish theirestancia, or mission rancho. Subsequently, theTataviam who had been living there were relocated to the Mission, where they werebaptized and conscripted for work. The Estancia de San Francisco Xavier was built in 1804 at the confluence ofCastaic Creek and theSanta Clara River in what is now the unincorporated community ofCastaic Junction.[5]

Head of a branding iron bearing Rancho San Francisco's mark.

Following theMexican War of Independence, themissions were secularized and the land taken by the Mexican government. In 1834, Lieutenant Antonio del Valle was assigned to inventory the property of Mission San Fernando. The rancho was supposed to be returned to the Tataviam, but Governor Alvarado deeded it to his friend Del Valle instead on January 22, 1839. The Del Valle family moved into the formerestancia buildings (near what is nowCastaic).[5]

Del Valle died in 1841. On his deathbed, he attempted to reconcile with his estranged sonYgnacio by writing him a letter and offering the entire rancho to him as his inheritance. Del Valle died before his son received the letter.[2] Ygnacio did return and took possession of the land, but after a lawsuit the property was split with his stepmother.

Discovery of gold

[edit]
Oak of the Golden Dream
Oak of the Golden Dream, 2021
Oak of the Golden Dream is located in Santa Clarita
Oak of the Golden Dream
Oak of the Golden Dream
Location in theSanta Clarita Valley
Show map of Santa Clarita
Oak of the Golden Dream is located in California
Oak of the Golden Dream
Oak of the Golden Dream
Location inCalifornia
Show map of California
Native nameRoble del Sueño Dorado (Spanish)
SpeciesCoast live oak
LocationPlacerita Canyon State Park,California,United States
Coordinates34°22′37″N118°28′17″W / 34.37694°N 118.47139°W /34.37694; -118.47139

According to a local legend, Francisco López, the uncle of Antonio's second wife, Jacoba Feliz, took a rest under an oak tree inPlacerita Canyon on March 9, 1842, and had a dream that he was floating on a pool of gold. When he awoke, he pulled a few wildonions from the ground finding flakes of gold in the roots.[6] Contrary to this portrait of him as a farmer who stumbled upon his discovery, López had studiedmineralogy at theUniversity of Mexico and had been actively searching for gold.[7] Evidence suggests that gold had previously been found in the area about thirty years prior, but the López gold find was the first popularly documented incident in the area.[8] This sparked agold rush on a much smaller scale than the 1849California Gold Rush. About 2,000 people, mostly from the Mexican state ofSonora, came to Rancho San Francisco to mine the gold.[6]

Knowledge of the gold find seems to have remained largely within Mexican territory.John Sutter and his "right-hand man"John Bidwell, both of whom sided with GovernorManuel Micheltorena during his power struggle with former governorJuan Bautista Alvarado, were imprisoned after the latter's side won the bloodlessBattle of Providencia in 1845.[9] After their release, Bidwell headed north through Placerita Canyon, saw the mining operations, and was determined to search for gold on his way toSutter's Fort.[6][a]

During theMexican–American War, Del Valle destroyed the mine to prevent the United States from gaining its control.[12] The tree where López took his nap is now known as the "Oak of the Golden Dream" and is registered as California Historic Landmark #168.[1]

Later history

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With thecession of California to the United States following theMexican-American War, the 1848Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that the land grants would be honored. As required by the Land Act of 1851, Jacoba Feliz filed a claim for Rancho San Francisco in 1852.[13][14] She received apatent for 48,611.88 acres in 1875. Ygnacio Del Valle received the westernmost portion of 13,599 acres (55.03 km2), Feliz (now Salazár) took 21,307 acres (86.23 km2), and her six children received 4,684 acres (18.96 km2) each.[15][16]

Unfortunately, at this time Southern California experienced a great deal offlooding, and ranchers were forced tomortgage their properties in order to sustain their needs during the interruption in producing their food and needs and other damages to the land and buildings. Feliz mortgaged her portion of the land toWilliam Wolfskill, who returned a portion of it back to Del Valle in exchange for him settling her debts. Floods were followed bydroughts, which again exacerbated the ranchers' problems.[15] Finally, in 1862 Del Valle was forced to sell off most of his land to oil speculators (the Philadelphia and California Petroleum Company headed byThomas A. Scott), keeping only hisRancho Camulos.[17] The oilmen were unable to find any oil, and Rancho San Francisco eventually landed in the hands ofHenry Newhall, whose name is now closely associated with the Santa Clarita Valley area.[18]

Newhall granted right-of-way toSouthern Pacific Railroad to build a rail line toLos Angeles and sold them a portion of the land, upon which sprang a new town that the company named after him,Newhall.[19] Another town grew around thetrain station and Newhall named it after his hometown,Saugus.

After Newhall's death in 1882, his heirs formed theNewhall Land and Farming Company, which managed the lands. In 1936, Atholl McBean, Newhall's grandson-in-law, found oil on the property and changed the name to Newhall Ranch.[18]

Historic designations

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Topographical map of Rancho San Francisco by the US Geological Survey, surveyed 1893–1904. (Tap to enlarge.)
CHL No. 556 Rancho San Francisco is located about 0.5 mi (0.80 km) NNE of the ruins of the San Francisco Xavier Estancia

California Historical Landmark No. 556 Rancho San Francisco Adobemarker reads:

NO. 556 RANCHO SAN FRANCISCO – Approximately one-half mile south of the point was the adobe headquarters of Rancho San Francisco, originally built about 1804 as a granary of Mission San Fernando. The rancho was granted to Antonio de Valle in 1839. Here, in January 1850, William Lewis Manly and John Rogers obtained supplies and animals to rescue their comrades in a California-bound gold-seeking emigrant party that was stranded and starving in Death Valley, some 250 miles to the northeast.[1]

Placerita Canyon State Park – California Historical Landmark No. 168 Oak of the Golden Dream: where Francisco López found gold. The marker reads:

NO. 168 OAK OF THE GOLDEN DREAM – Francisco López made California's first authenticated gold discovery on March 9, 1842. While gathering wild onions near an oak tree in Placerita Canyon he found gold particles clinging to the roots of the bulbs. The San Fernando placers and nearby San Feliciano Canyon were worked by Sonoran miners using panning, sluicing and dry washing methods. Lopez's find predated James Marshall strike at Sutter's Mill by six years.[1]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^In his own recollections, Bidwell states that he visited the mines of one Baptiste Ruelle,[10] but he like many others had only heard rumors of the discovery and was mistaken about both when it took place and who had done it.[11]

References

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  1. ^abcdef"Los Angeles".California Historical Landmarks. Office of Historic Preservation. RetrievedApril 16, 2007.
  2. ^abWormser, Marci (September 1, 1999)."Del Valle descendant pursues her roots".The Signal. RetrievedApril 9, 2007.
  3. ^"The Del Valle Family".Rancho Camulos Museum: The Home of Ramona. 2009. RetrievedSeptember 3, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^Rawls, James; Orsi, Richard J., eds. (1999).A golden state: mining and economic development in Gold Rush California. California History Sesquicentennial, 2. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 3.ISBN 0-520-21771-3.
  5. ^abWorden, Leon (August 28, 1996)."Latins Invade, Conquer Western SCV".The Signal. RetrievedMarch 8, 2011.
  6. ^abcWorden, Leon (October 2005)."California's REAL First Gold".COINage magazine. RetrievedApril 16, 2007.
  7. ^Worden, Leon (January 24, 1996)."The real story of California's first gold discovery".The Signal. RetrievedApril 16, 2007.
  8. ^Worden, Leon (August 14, 1996)."New Study Will Nag SCV Historians".The Signal. RetrievedApril 16, 2007.
  9. ^Boyle, C. C. (1906).Addresses, Reminiscences, Etc. of General John Bidwell. p. 42.
  10. ^Bidwell, John (December 1890)."Life in California Before the Gold Discovery".The Century Magazine. Vol. 51, no. 2 – via Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco.
  11. ^Bowman, J. N. (September 1949)."The First Authentic Placer Mine in California".The Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly.XXXI (3). Historical Society of Southern California.
  12. ^Rasmussen, Cecilia (November 11, 2001)."Del Valle Family Played a Starring Role in Early California".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedApril 9, 2007 – via Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society.
  13. ^United States. District Court (California : Southern District) Land Case 303 SD
  14. ^Finding Aid to the Documents Pertaining to the Adjudication of Private Land Claims in California, circa 1852-1892
  15. ^ab"Ygnacio del Valle, Landowner". Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society. RetrievedApril 9, 2007.
  16. ^"Plat of the Rancho San Francisco finally confirmed to JACOBA FELIZ, et al."Archived January 2, 2014, at theWayback Machine 1 AMR 1.Ventura County Recorder Retrieved January 2, 2014 fromCountyView GISArchived September 25, 2014, at theWayback Machine (original research).
  17. ^Worden, Leon."SCV Chronology: A Timeline of Historical Events". Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society. RetrievedMarch 8, 2011.
  18. ^abWorden, Leon (June 7, 1995)."Prime Valencia Real Estate, $2 an Acre".The Signal. RetrievedApril 20, 2007.
  19. ^Newhall, Ruth Waldo (1992).A California Legend: The Newhall Land and Farming Company. Newhall Land and Farming Company.

External links

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Asistencias
Estancias
Military districts
Related
Tributaries
Communities
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