La Casa de Carrión

La Casa de Carrión is an Adobe home built in 1868 by Saturnino Carrión (27 Nov 1831 - 25 Jun 1868).[1] It is currently located in La Verne, California. The La Casa de Carrión was designated a California Historic Landmark (No. 386) on Dec. 14 1945. When La Casa de Carrión was built it was on the Rancho San Jose land. The Casa de Carrion the land was owned by Carrion's uncle Ygnacio Palomares and his business partner Ricardo Vejar. Ygnacio Palomares had built his own home, Ygnacio Palomares Adobe, near by in what is now Pomona, California in 1855. The land of Casa de Carrion was gifted to Saturnino Carrión by Ygnacio_Palomares. The adobe home was built in a "L" shape with the front of the house facing north. Saturnino Carrión, his wife, Dolores (b.11 Aug 1843 in Santa Barbara), and their three sons moved into La Casa de Carrión at completion. The three sons were: Ramon del Refugio (b.4 Jul 1865), Julian (b. 5 Nov 1866) and Frank. Saturnino and Dolores married on 15 May 1865 at the Plaza Church in Pueblo Los Angeles. Born at La Casa de Carrión to Saturnino and Dolores were daughters: Josefa, Agatha and Louise. Saturnino Carrión raise livestock on his ranch at La Casa de Carrión. Saturnino Carrión grew up in the City of Los Angeles, the only child of Casiano Carrión and Josefa (Lopez) Carrión. Julian continued to run the ranch after his father died.[2][3][4]

La Casa de Carrión
La Casa de Carrión is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
La Casa de Carrión
Location of La Casa de Carrión in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
LocationLa Verne, California
Coordinates34°05′47″N 117°47′19″W
Built1839
DesignatedDec. 14 1945
Reference no.386

Carrion's uncle Ygnacio Palomares was elected the last Mexican California mayor of Los Angeles in 1848, but held the position briefly due to Colonel Jonathan Stevenson considering him intolerable and anti-American, following the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo on February 2, 1848.[5]

The Rancho San Jose consisted of land taken from the Mission San Gabriel in 1834 as part of the Mexican government's secularization decree of 1833.[6] In 1837, Mexican Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado granted the land to Ygnacio Palomares and Ricardo Vejar, both Californio sons of New Spain natives. The Rancho San Jose operated by Dons Palomares and Vejar covered land that now forms the communities of Pomona, LaVerne, San Dimas, Diamond Bar, Azusa, Covina, Walnut, Glendora, and Claremont.[7]

In 1887 La Casa de Carrión became part of the new town call Lordsburg, named after the new owner, Isaac W. Lord, of the land around the ranch.[8] The house is still a private residence in La Verne, California. Paul E. Traweek restored the old home in 1951.[9]

Marker

The state marker reads:[10]

  • This house, built in 1868 by Saturnio Carrion, was restored in 1951 by Paul E. Traweek.

See also

References

  1. Family: completed on 25 Jun 1868
  2. Family: CARRION, Saturnino / NAVARRO, Maria "Dolores" Adelayda (F8149) m. 15 May 1865
  3. LA CASA DE CARRION, by Florence Traweek, The Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly, Vol. 43, No. 4 (December, 1961), pp. 440-445
  4. Historical and Biographical Record of Southern California, By James Miller Guinn, page 918
  5. Guillow, Lawrence E. (1995). "Pandemonium in the Plaza: The First Los Angeles Riot, July 22, 1856". Southern California Quarterly. no. 3: 188 via JSTOR.
  6. "Adobe de Palomares". Historical Society of Pomona Valley.
  7. lavernehistoricalsociety.org, La Verne Historical Society
  8. landmarkadventures Saturnio Carrion
  9. Marker database, 386
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.