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California State
Historical Landmarks
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San Diego County
State Historical Landmarks in San Diego County
of historical importance in California are currently designated
as significant resources in three state registration programs: State Historical
Landmarks, Points of Historical Interest, and the California Register of Historic
Places. Below is a list of the State Historical Landmarks for San
Diego County. This data is
provided by the Office of Historic Preservation - California Department
of Parks and Recreation and is also available in the California Historical
Landmarks Book.
NO. 1020 LEO CARRILLO RANCH (RANCHO DE LOS KIOTES) - Between
1937 and 1940, these adobe and wood buildings were built by actor Leo Carrillo as a retreat, working ranch, and tribute to old California
culture and architecture. The Leo Carrillo Ranch, with its Flying 'LC'
brand, originally covered
2,538 acres and was frequented by Carrillo and his friends until 1960.
Leo Carrillo was a strong, positive, and well-loved role model who sought
to celebrate California's early Spanish heritage, through a life of good deeds and
charitable causes.
Location: 4758 Palomar Airport Rd, Carlsbad
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: CAMPO
NO. 242 MISSION SAN DIEGO DE ALCALA - On Sunday, July 16,
1769, Fathers Junípero Serra, Juan Vizcaino, and Fernando Parrón
raised and blessed a cross to establish Alta California's first mission. Relocated
from Presidio Hill to this site in August 1774, the mission was the Mother
of those founded in
California by the Franciscan Order. The present buildings, first completed
in 1813, were rebuilt in stages from 1915 to 1931 after many years of deterioration.
They
have been in use as a parish church since February 1941.
Location: Mission San Diego de Alcala, 10818 San Diego Mission
Rd, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 243 ASISTENCIA DE SAN ANTONIO DE PALA - Notable for
its bell tower, or campanile, the chapel vas built by Father Peyrí
in 1816. Almost destroyed by earthquake and storm, it was later restored.
Location: Mission on Pala Mission Rd, plaque on State Hwy 76
(P.M. 23.6), Pala
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: PALA
NO. 244 DERBY DIKE - Until 1853 the erratic San Diego River
dumped tons of debris into the harbor or poured into False Bay, now Mission
Bay. At times it
threatened to destroy Old Town San Diego. Lieutenant George Horatio
Derby, U.S. Topographical Corps, built a dike that diverted the waters
into False Bay. This
was the first effort to tame the river, and one of the first U.S. Government
projects in California. The river was not fully harnessed until the 1950s.
Location: Presidio Park, SE corner of Taylor St and Presidio
Dr, San Diego
NO. 304 VALLECITO STAGE DEPOT (STATION) - A reconstruction
(1934) of Vallecito Stage Station built in 1852 at the edge of the Great
Colorado Desert. It was an important stop on the first official transcontinental
route, serving the San Diego-San Antonio ('Jackass') mail line (1857-1859),
the Butterfield
Overland Stage Line, and the southern emigrant caravans.
Location: Vallecito Stage Station County Park, on County Rd S2
(P.M. 34.7), 3.7 mi NW of Agua Caliente Springs
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: AQUA CALIENTE SPRING
NO. 311 WARNER'S RANCH - In 1844, Governor Manuel Micheltorena
granted 44,322 acres to Juan José Warner, who built this house.
General Kearny passed here in 1846, and the Mormon Battalion in 1847. The first Butterfield
Stage stopped at this ranch on October 6, 1858, on its 2,600-mile, 24-day
trip from
Tipton, Missouri to San Francisco, the southern overland route into
California.
Location: On County Hwy S2 (P.M. 0.7), 0.7 mi E of junc of State
Hwy 79, 4 mi SE of Warner Springs
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: WARNER SPRINGS
NO. 369 CHAPEL OF SANTA YSABEL (SITE OF) - The first mass
at a site nearby was celebrated September 20, 1818 by Father Fernando Martin.
By 1822, Santa Ysabel was an asistencia, or mission outpost, that had
a chapel, a granary, several houses, a cemetery, and about 450 neophytes.
After secularization in the 1830s, priestly visits became rare. When the roof caved in, after
1850, ramadas were erected against one wall and services were held there.
Tradition asserts
this site has been used for religious services since 1818. The present
chapel was constructed in 1924.
Location: On State Hwy 79 (P.M. 21.8), 1.4 mi N of Santa Ysabel
NO. 411 CAMPO STONE STORE - The pioneer Gaskill brothers
of 1868 built a frame store which was raided on December 4, 1875 by border
bandits. This fort-like replacement of summer 1855 was bought in 1896 by E.
T. Aiken, resold to Klauber Wangenheim, 1889, and operated by Henry Marcus
Johnson as the Mountain Commercial Company until 1925. In disrepair, it was bought
after 1938 by E. M. Statler, given to San Diego County, and restored, 1943-48,
as a
museum.
Location: State Hwy 94 (P.M. 50.6), at Campo Cr, Campo
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: CAMPO
NO. 412 JULIAN - Following the discovery of gold nearby
during the winter of 1869-70, this valley became the commercial and social
center of a thriving
mining district. Ex-Confederate soldier Drury D. Batley laid out the
town on his farmland and named it for his cousin and fellow native of Georgia,
Michael S. Julian.
By 1906 most mines were unprofitable. Since then the area has become
more famous for the variety and quality of its apple crop.
Location: Private plaque: Julian Memorial Park, Washington and
Fourth Sts, Julian State plaque: In front of Town Hall, Julian
NO. 425 LA CAÑADA DE LOS COCHES RANCHO - Commemorating
Cañada de Los Coches Rancho, smallest Mexican grant in California,
granted in 1843 to Apolinaria Lorenzana by Governor Manuel Micheltorena. This
is the site of the old grist mill.
Location: 13468 Old Hwy 80, Lakeside
NO. 452 MULE HILL - On December 7, 1846, the day following
the Battle of San Pasqual fought five miles east of here, General Stephen
Kearny's command, on its way to San Diego, was again attacked by Californians.
The Americans counterattacked and occupied this hill until December 11.
Short of food,
they ate mule meat and named the place 'Mule Hill.'
Location: On Pomerado Rd, 0.1 mi E of I-15, 5 mi SE of Escondido
NO. 472 BOX CANYON - The old road, known as the Sonora,
Colorado River, or Southern Emigrant Trail and later as the Butterfield
Overland Mail Route,
traversed Box Canyon just east of here. On January 19, 1847, the Mormon
Battalion under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Philip St. G. Cooke,
using hand
tools, hewed a passage through the rocky walls of the narrow gorge
for their wagons and opened the first road into Southern California.
Location: On County Rd S2 (P.M. 25.7), 8.6 mi S of State Hwy
78, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
NO. 482 CAMP WRIGHT - Camp Wright, named for Brigadier
General George Wright, United States Army, who commanded the Pacific Department
and
California District from 1861 to 1865, was first established October
18, 1861 on Warner's Ranch to guard the line of communication between California
and
Arizona. The camp was moved to this site by Major Edwin A. Rigg, First
California Volunteers, about November 23, 1861 and was abandoned December
1866.
Location: State Hwy 79 (P.M. 49.3), Oak Grove
NO. 49 ADOBE CHAPEL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION - Originally
built as the home of San Diego's John Brown. In 1850, the house was
converted to a church by Don José Aguirre in 1858. Father Antonio
D. Ubach, formerly a missionary among the Indians, was parish priest here
from 1866 to 1907. It is said that he was the model for 'Father Gaspara' in Helen Hunt
Jackson's Ramona. In 1937 the WPA rebuilt the adobe chapel close to its
original site.
Location: 3950 Conde St, between Congress St and San Diego Ave,
Old Town, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 491 THE EXCHANGE HOTEL - This tablet marks the site
of the Exchange Hotel. Here, on June 29,1851, Masons met for the first
time in San Diego
and organized the lodge which became San Diego Lodge No. 35, F. &
A.M., the oldest lodge of Masons in Southern California.
Location: 2729 San Diego Ave, Old Town San Diego State Historic
Park
NO. 50 BALLAST POINT WHALING STATION SITE - Late in 1857,
the three Johnson brothers and the twin Packard brothers came to this site
to
survey possibilities for a station to 'try out' or extract whale oil.
Their operations began the next year. In 1869 the U.S. Government acquired
the property for Fort
Rosecrans and in 1873 whaling operations at Ballast Point ended.
Location: Base of Ballast Point, S end of Rosecrans St, where
historic markers are on a half circle, U.S. Naval Submarine Base, San Diego
NO. 502 OAK GROVE STAGE STATION - Oak Grove is one of the
few remaining stations on the Butterfield Overland Mail route, which operated
between
San Francisco and two eastern terminals-St. Louis, Missouri and Memphis,
Tennessee-from September 15, 1858 to March 2, 1861. During the Civil War
the
station was used as a hospital for nearby Camp Wright.
Location: State Hwy 79 (P.M. 49.4), Oak Grove
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: WARNER SPRINGS
NO. 51 OLD POINT LOMA LIGHTHOUSE - This lighthouse, built
in 1854, was one of the first eight lighthouses on the Pacific Coast. It
continued in use
until 1891, when the new Pelican Point Lighthouse began operating.
The Point Loma Lighthouse became the site of the Cabrillo National Monument
in 1913. During World War II, the Navy used it as a signal tower. Today the lighthouse
remains the central feature of the Point Loma Preserve.
Location: Cabrillo National Monument, Point Loma, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 52 MISSION DAM AND FLUME - After many attempts dated
back to 1774 to provide a reliable source of water for crops and livestock
for Mission
San Diego de Alcala, a dam and flume system was finished between 1813
and 1816 by Indian laborers and Franciscan Missionaries to divert waters
of the San
Diego River for a distance of 6 miles. The aqueduct system continued
in existence until 1831 when constant flooding caused the dam and flume
to fall into disrepair.
They were not repaired due to secularization of the missions.
Location: In parking lot on N side of Fr. Junipero Serra Trail
in Mission Trails Regional Park near NE entrance, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 523 SAN DIEGO BARRACKS - New San Diego was established
as a quartermaster depot by Captain Nathaniel Lyon, 2nd U.S. Infantry,
in 1850-51
to supply military establishments in Southern California. The name
of the post was changed from New San Diego to San Diego Barracks by General
Orders No. 2,
Military Division of the Pacific, San Francisco, April 5, 1879. San
Diego Barracks continued to operate as a subpost of Fort Rosecrans until
abandoned December
15, 1921.
Location: 700 block of Harbor-Market Sts, San Francisco
NO. 53 CASA DE ESTUDILLO - Three generations of Don José
María Estudillo's family made their home in Casa de Estudillo. Rich
in historical background, the casa is often pointed out, erroneously, as Ramona's marriage place.
Location: SE corner of San Diego Ave and Mason St, Old Town San
Diego State Historic Park
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 533 SAN PASQUAL BATTLEFIELD STATE HISTORIC PARK - While
marching to the conquest and occupation of California during the Mexican War, a detachment of 1st U.S. Dragoons under the command of Brigadier
General Stephen W. Kearny was met on this site by native California lancers
under the
command of General Andrés Pico. In this battle, fought on December
6, 1846, severe losses were incurred by the American forces. The native
Californians withdrew after Kearny had rallied his men on the field. Gallant action
on the part of both forces characterized the Battle of San Pasqual, one
of the significant actions
during the Mexican War of 1846-1848.
Location: San Pasqual Battlefield State Historic Park, State
Hwy 78 (P.M. 25.1) at Old Pasqual Rd, 7 mi SE of Escondido
NO. 538 FIRST PUBLICLY OWNED SCHOOL BUILDING - The first
public schoolhouse in this county, the Mason Street School-District No.
1, was
erected at this site in 1865, when San Diego County covered an area
larger than three New England states. It was restored by popular subscription
in 1955.
Location: 3966 Mason St, Old Town San Diego State Historic Park
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 54 FORT STOCKTON - Fortified briefly by Carlos Carrillo
in 1828, this site became Fort Dupont (July-November 1846) after American
forces took Old Town during the Mexican War. Retaken and held briefly by the Californios,
it fell once more to the Americans, who renamed it Fort Stockton and used
it as
campaign headquarters for ending the Californio revolt in early 1847.
The Mormon Battalion stayed here later that year. The post was abandoned
on September 25,
1848.
Location: Top of hill W of Presidio Dr in Presidio Park, Old
Town, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 55 FORT ROSECRANS NATIONAL CEMETERY - A burial ground
before 1847, this graveyard became an Army post cemetery in the 1860s.
It is the final resting place for most who fell at San Pasqual in 1846, and
for the USS Bennington victims of 1905. It became Fort Rosecrans National
Cemetery in 1934
and was placed under the Veterans Administration National Cemetery
System in 1973. Over 50,000 who served the U.S. honorably in war and peace
lie here.
Location: Cabrillo Memorial Dr Point Loma, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 56 CABRILLO LANDING SITE - Seeking the mythical Strait
of Anián (the Northwest Passage) for Spain, on September 28, 1542,
Iberian navigator Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo brought his three ships to Ballast Point,
the first European landing on the coast of Alta California.
Location: Base of Ballast Point, S end of Rosecrans St, where
historic markers are on a half circle, U.S. Naval Submarine Base, San Diego
NO. 563 CHARLES KRUG WINERY - Founded in 1861 by Charles
Krug (1825-1892), this is the oldest operating winery in Napa Valley. The
pioneer
winemaker of this world-famous region, Krug made the first commercial
wine in Napa County at Napa in 1858.
Location: Krug Ranch, 2800 Main St, St. Helena
NO. 57 LA PUNTA DE LOS MUERTOS - Sailors and marines were
buried here in 1782, when San Diego Bay was surveyed and charted by Don
Juan Pantoja y Arriaga, pilot, and Don José Továr, mate, of
the royal frigates La Princesa and La Favorita under command of Don Augustín
de Echeverria.
Location: SE corner of Market St and Pacific Hwy (State Hwy 163),
San Diego
NO. 59 SAN DIEGO PRESIDIO SITE - Soldiers, sailors, Indians,
and Franciscan missionaries from New Spain occupied the land at Presidio
Hill on May
17, 1769 as a military outpost. Two months later, Fr. Junípero
Serra established the first San Diego Mission on Presidio Hill. Officially
proclaimed a Spanish Presidio on January 1, 1774, the fortress was later occupied by a succession
of Mexican forces. The Presidio was abandoned in 1837 after San Diego became
a
pueblo.
Location: Next to parking lot across Presidio Dr from Serra Museum,
Presidio Park, Old Town, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 60 CASA DE LOPEZ - Built about 1835 by Juan Francisco
Lopez, one of San Diego's early Spanish settlers, the Casa Larga, or Long
House, was among the first substantial houses built in the Pueblo of San Diego. In 1846
it was the home of Juan Matias Moreno, secretary to Pío Pico, California's
last Mexican
governor.
Location: 3890 Twiggs St, Old Town, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 616 LAS FLORES ASISTENCIA - From 1823 to the 1840s,
the tile-roofed adobe chapel and hostel at Las Flores, built by Father
Antonio Peyrí, served as the asistencia to Mission San Luís Rey and provided
comfort to travelers on El Camino Real. The adobe structure and adjacent
corral were the site of the
April 1838 battle between Juan Bautista Alvarado and Carlos Antonio
Carrillo contesting the provincial governorship of Alta California.
Location: Camp Pendleton Marine Base, plaque located on hill
1,000 ft W of Orange Co Boy Scouts Adobe, 0.6 mi SE of Las Pulgas gate,
0.9 mi SW of I-15
(P.M. 62.0) at Las Pulgas Rd, 10 mi S of San Clemente
NO. 62 FORT ROSECRANS - President Millard Fillmore's executive
order of 1852 created a U.S. Preserve on Point Loma. From 1870 to 1873
the coast artillery corpsmen evicted whalers from the site in order to begin
the military installation. In 1899 it was named for William S. Rosecrans,
Civil War general and
California congressman. Major fortifications were constructed in 1891-1903
and 1941-1943. Transferred to the U.S. Navy in 1957, it became a submarine
support
facility.
Location: Base of Ballast Point, S end of Rosecrans St, where
historic markers are on a half circle, U.S. Naval Submarine Base, San Diego
NO. 626 BANCROFT RANCH HOUSE - Adobe built about 1863 by
A. S. Ensworth. Home of Capt. Rufus K. Porter and family. Curved timbers
brought from the Clarissa Andrews, famed coaling hulk formerly of the Pacific
Mail Steamship Co. Historian Hubert Howe Bancroft later owned this estate
and here wrote a
part of his monumental History of California.
Location: One block E of Memory and Bancroft Dr, Spring Valley
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA MESA
NO. 63 PLAZA, SAN DIEGO VIEJO (WASHINGTON SQUARE) - This
plaza was established as the center of the Mexican Pueblo of San Diego
which
elected its first ajuntamiento in 1834. On July 29, 1846, at 4 p.m.,
Lieutenant Stephen C. Rowan, U.S.N., from the U.S. Sloop-of-War Cyane,
raised the American
flag over the plaza.
Location: Old Town Plaza (Washington Square), Old Town San Diego
State Historic Park
NO. 634 EL VADO - This route was opened by Captain Juan
Bautista de Anza and Father Francisco Garcés in 1774. Anza's expedition
of 1775, a group of 240 soldiers and settlers coming from Sonora to found San Francisco,
encamped near El Vado (The Ford) for three days and two nights, December
20-22, 1775.
Location: 6 mi NW of Borrego Springs on Borrego Springs Rd (dirt),
Anza -Borrego Desert State Park, ask at Visitor Center
NO. 635 LOS PUERTECITOS - Juan Bautista de Anza's expedition
marched through this little pass December 19, 1775 on its way to strengthen
Spanish colonization in California. Many of the 240 members of the party were
recruited from Mexico to be the first residents of San Francisco. They
had camped the
preceding night somewhere in the wide flats just east of this monument.
Location: On State Hwy 78 (P.M. 93.8), 1.6 mi E of Ocotillo Wells
NO. 639 PALM SPRINGS - Here Mexican pioneers coming to
California between 1862 and 1866 rested among the palms, here, too, came
mountain men,
the Army of the West, the Mormon Battalion, a boundary commission,
'49ers, a railway survey team, the Butterfield Overland Mail stages, and
the California
Legion. This was the site of the Butterfield stage station built in
1858 by Warren F. Hall.
Location: On Vallecito Creek Rd, 1.6 mi E of County Rd S2 (P.M.
43.1), 6.3 mi SE of Agua Caliente Springs, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
NO. 64 OLD LANDING, SITE OF EL DESEMBARCADERO - El Desembarcadero
was one of the first landmarks designated during the first year of the landmark program. The site was recognized as the landing place for
small boats carrying freight and passengers to Old San Diego. It was also
believed to be the
place visited in 1769 by the crews of the San Antonio and San Carlos
in their search for fresh water.
Location: Base of Ballast Point, S end of Rosecrans St, where
historic markers are on a half circle, U.S. Naval Submarine Base, San Diego
NO. 647 BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE - This pass, Puerta,
between the desert and the cooler valleys to the north, was used by the Mormon Battalion, Kearny's Army of the West, the Butterfield Overland
Mail stages, and emigrants who eventually settled the West. The eroded
scar on the left
was the route of the Butterfield stages, 1858-1861. The road on the
right served as a county road until recent years.
Location: Blair Valley, 0.5 mi E of County Rd S2 (P.M. 23.0),
5.8 mi S of State Hwy 78, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
NO. 65 THE WHALEY HOUSE - This house, in which the San
Diego County Court met for about 20 years, was the first brick building
to be erected in San
Diego County. The bricks were made at Thomas Whaley's own kiln in Old
Town in 1856, and the walls were finished with plaster made from ground
seashells. Five
generations of the Whaley family have occupied the old home.
Location: 2482 San Diego Ave, Old Town, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 66 CONGRESS HALL SITE - This building was originally
a two-story public house built by George Dewitt Clinton Washington Robinson
about 1867.
From this building one of the last survivors of the pony express rode
north.
Location: Vacant lot, S side of 2734 Calhoun St, Old Town San
Diego State Historic Park
NO. 67 SERRA PALM (SITE) - Site of the palm planted in
1769 by Padre Junípero Serra when he arrived at San Diego. Here
the four divisions of the Portolá Expedition met on July 1, 1769. The famous 'El Camino
Real,' most celebrated trail in California, begins here.
Location: Presidio Park, SE corner of Taylor St and Presidio
Dr, San Diego
NO. 673 SAN GREGORIO - Somewhere in this narrow valley,
perhaps on this very spot, the Anza Expeditions of 1774 and 1775 made their
camps. Water
for the 240 people and over 800 head of stock on the 1775 march was
obtained from a series of wells, deeper than the height of a man, dug into
the sandy bottom of the wash.
Location: Borrego Sink, 3 mi SE of Palm Canyon and Peg Leg Rds,
Anza -Borrego Desert State Park, ask at Visitor Center
NO. 68 El CAMPO SANTO - El Campo Santo once included the
adobe chapel on Conde Street, in which were buried José Antonio
Aguirre, María Victoria Domínguez Estudillo and Cave Johnson Couts, distinguished early
San Diegans. Between 1849 and 1897, 477 persons were buried in these grounds.
Antonio Garra
was the most eminent of many Native Americans interred here. A number
of graves were relocated after 1874. A street railway bisected the cemetery
in 1894. The
wall around this portion was built in 1933. Restoration has continued
to the present (1994).
Location: On San Diego Ave between Arista and Conde Sts, San
Diego, plaque currently in storage
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 69 SITE OF FORT GUIJARROS - An outpost of Spain's far-flung
empire at its greatest extent, this fort was completed before 1800 from
plans drawn by Alberto de Córdoba in 1795. Its major action came under Corporal
José Velásquez on March 22, 1803, in the 'Battle of San Diego
Bay' with the American Brig
Lelia Byrd, which was smuggling sea otter pelts.
Location: Base of Ballast Point, S end of Rosecrans St, where
historic markers are on a half circle, U.S. Naval Submarine Base, San Diego
NO. 70 CASA DE PEDRORENA - This was the home of Miguel
de Pedrorena, who arrived in San Diego Viejo in 1838. Don Miguel was a
member of the Constitutional Convention at Monterey in 1849.
Location: 2616 San Diego Ave, Old Town San Diego State Historic
Park
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 71 CASA DE MACHADO - This adobe house, constructed
about 1832 by José Manuel Machado, pioneer leatherjacket soldier
of the Spanish Army
who arrived at San Diego Presidio about 1782, is now used as a community
church.
Location: Park visitor center Old Town San Diego State Historic
Park
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 711 MONTGOMERY MEMORIAL - At Otay Mesa, in 1883, John
Joseph Montgomery made the first flight in a heavier-than-air craft 20
years before
the Wrights. Montgomery made many more glider flights before accepting
a professorship at Santa Clara College, where he continued his interest
in aviation.
Location: Montgomery-Walker Park, NE corner of Coronado Ave and
Beyer Blvd, South San Diego
NO. 72 CASA DE BANDINI - This adobe house was constructed
about 1827 by José and Juan Bandini. As headquarters of Commodore
Robert F. Stockton in 1846, it was the place where Kit Carson and Edward Beale delivered
their urgent message of December 9, 1846, calling for reinforcements to
be rushed to the
aid of General Kearny.
Location: On NE corner of Mason and Calhoun Sts, Old Town San
Diego State Historic Park
NO. 73 CASA DE STEWART - Adobe house constructed by José
Manuel Machado in 1830s for his daughter Rosa, wife of John C. Stewart.
Stewart was a
shipmate of Richard Henry Dana, Jr. who describes his 1859 visit to
this house in Two Years Before the Mast.
Location: NW corner of Congress and Mason Sts, Old Town San Diego
State Historic Park
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: LA JOLLA
NO. 74 CASA DE CARRILLO - Presidio Comandante Francisco
María Ruiz built this house next to his 1808 pear garden lake in
1821 for his close relative and fellow soldier, Joaquín Carrillo, and his large family.
From this adobe dwelling, in April 1829, daughter Josefa Carrillo eloped
to Chile with Henry Delano Fitch.
When Ruiz died in 1839 and Joaquín soon afterwards, son Ramon
Carrillo sold this property to Lorenzo Soto. It was transferred several
times before 1932, deteriorating gradually, until George Marston and associates restored
the house and grounds and deeded them to the City of San Diego as a golf
course.
Location: About 100 ft NE of Juan St on Wallace St, Presidio
Golf Course, San Diego
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: CAMPO
NO. 75 SITE OF CASA DE COTA - This adobe is said to have
been built about 1835 by Juan or Ramon Cota.
Location: NW corner of Twiggs and Congress Sts, Old Town, San
Diego
NO. 750 PEG LEG SMITH MONUMENT - Thomas L. Smith, better
known as 'Peg Leg,' 1801-1866, was a mountain man, prospector, and spinner
of tall
tales. Legends regarding his lost gold mine have grown through the
years, and countless people have searched the desert for its fabulous wealth.
The mine could be
within a few miles of this monument.
Location: Henderson Canyon Rd, 1,000 ft N of Pegleg Rd, Anza-Borrego
Desert State Park
NO. 764 SITE OF THE KATE O. SESSIONS NURSERY - This plaque
commemorates the life and influence of a woman who envisioned a beautiful
San
Diego. On this site she operated a nursery and gained world renown
as a horticulturist, she was the first woman to receive the International
Meyer Medal in genetics.
Location: NW corner of Garnet Ave and Pico St, San Diego
NO. 784 EL CAMINO REAL (AS FATHER SERRA KNEW IT AND HELPED
BLAZE IT) - This plaque was placed on the 250th anniversary of the birth of California's apostle, Padre Junípero Serra, OFM, to
mark El Camino Real as he knew it and helped blaze it.
Location: Mission San Diego de Alcala, 10818 San Diego Mission
Rd, San Diego to Mission San Francisco de Asis, San Francisco.
NO. 785 SANTA CATARINA - This spring was named by Captain
Juan Bautista de Anza when his overland exploration party camped here on
March 14, 1774, on the journey that opened the Anza Trail from Sonora into Alta
California. Anza's colonizing expedition of 1775, consisting of 240 persons
and over 800
head of livestock, camped here the night of December 23.
Location: Santa Catarina Springs, 10 mi NW of Borrego Springs
(4-wheel drive dirt rd), Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, ask at Visitor
Center
NO. 793 SAN FELIPE VALLEY AND STAGE STATION - Here the
southern trail of explorers, trappers, soldiers, and emigrants crossed
ancient trade routes of Kamia, Cahuilla, Diegueno, and Luiseño Indians. On
the flat southwest across the creek, Warren F. Hall built and operated
the San Felipe home station of the Butterfield Mail, which operated from 1858 to 1861. Later the station
was used by Banning Stages and by the military during the Civil War.
Location: On County Hwy S2 (P.M. 15.9), 0.9 mi NW of intersection
of State Hwy 78, near Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
NO. 798 SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE, SITE OF FIRST DOCTORATE
DEGREE GRANTED BY THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGE
SYSTEM - Under the Master Plan for Higher Education adopted in 1960,
the colleges in the newly establishedCalifornia College System were given
degrees with the University of California, and independent degrees to individuals
who have made unusual contributions toward learning and civilization. San
Diego State College
was the first of the California State Colleges to do so when, on June
7, 1963 it conferred an honorary doctorate upon the late President of the
United States, John
Fitzgerald Kennedy.
Location: San Diego State University, N end of Aztec Bowl, across
from parking lot 'W,' at intersection of Scripps Terrace and Canyon Crest
Dr, San Diego
NO. 818 FIRST MILITARY FLYING SCHOOL IN AMERICA - The flat
lands beyond have been a part of aviation history since Glenn Curtiss founded the first military flying school in America here on January 17, 1911.
The Army operated Rockwell Field until January 31, 1939, the Navy commissioned
the present
air station on November 8, 1917.
Location: Sunset Park, 200 block of Ocean Blvd, at entrance to
Gate 5, Naval Air Station, North Island, Coronado
NO. 830 OLD TOWN SAN DIEGO STATE HISTORIC PARK - Settled
by pensioned soldiers from the presidio and their families, Old Town grew
into a
cluster of adobe houses and garden plots in the early 1800s. By 1835,
'it was composed of about 40 dark brown looking huts.' The Stars and Stripes
was first
raised over the plaza in 1846 by Marines from the U.S.S. Cyane.
Location: Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, plaque located
W side of plaza at 4016 Wallace St, San Diego
NO. 844 HOTEL DEL CORONADO - This Victorian hotel, built
in 1887, is one of America's largest wooden buildings. Few seaside resort
hotels of this
significant architectural style remain in America. The hotel has hosted
several Presidents and other national figures.
Location: Hotel Garden Patio, 1500 Orange Ave, Coronado
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: POINT LOMA
NO. 858 PEDRO FAGES TRAIL - On October 29, 1772, headed
east from San Diego in search of army deserters, Colonel Pedro Fages made
the first entry by a European into Oriflamme Canyon. From there, Fages and his men
traveled on through Cajón Pass and around the Mojave and the Central
Valley to eventually reach Mission San Luís Obispo, discovering the Colorado desert
and the San Joaquin Valley.
Location: 1.7 mi SE on Sunrise Hwy (County Rd S1, P.M. 36) from
intersection with Hwy 79 (P.M. 14.5), 8 mi SE of Julian
NO. 891 SPANISH LANDING - Near this point, sea and land
parties of the Portolá-Serra expedition met in 1769. Two ships,
the San Antonio and San Carlos, anchored on May 4-5 and the scurvy-weakened survivors of the
voyage established a camp, where on May 14 and July 1 they greeted the
parties coming
overland from Baja California. Together, they began the Spanish occupation
of Alta California.
Location: Spanish Landing Park, Harbor Dr San Diego
NO. 940 RANCHO GUAJOME - Formerly attached to Mission San
Luís Rey, this 2,219-acre ranch was briefly owned by two mission
Indians and then came into the hands of Don Abel Stearns, Ysidora Bandini acquired it on
her marriage to Col. Cave Johnson Couts. The adobe ranch house, built in
1852-53, is one of the finest extant examples of the traditional Spanish-Mexican one-story
hacienda with an inner-outer courtyard plan. San Diego County acquired
it in 1973 for the Guajome Regional Park.
Location: Rancho Guajome Regional Park, 2210 N Santa Fe Ave,
4 mi E of Mission San Luis Rey, 3.3 mi N of Vista
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: SAN MARCOS
NO. 982 HISTORIC PLANNED COMMUNITY OF RANCHO SANTA FE -
Rancho Santa Fe began as Rancho San Dieguito, a land grant of nearly 9,000 acres made to Juan María Osuna in 1845. The Santa Fe Railway
Company later used the land to plant thousands of eucalyptus trees for
use as railroad ties. In the 1920s Rancho Santa Fe became one of the state's first planned
communities unified by a single architectural theme, the Spanish Colonial
Revival. Lilian Rice, one of California's first successful women architects, supervised the
development and designed many of the buildings.
Location: Village Green in front of The Inn, Rancho Santa Fe
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