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Rancho Los Vallecitos de San Marcos

Historical San Marcos:


Westerners first discovered the area now known as San Marcos in the late 1700’s.  Historical documents show that a small band of Indians routinely raided the flocks of the San Luis Rey Mission, prompting a call for assistance from Spanish troops.  Fleeing from the Spanish soldiers, the Indians disappeared into the eastern hills.  While pursuing them, the Spaniards discovered a lovely, fertile valley they named Los Vallecitos de San Marcos (Little Valleys of St. Mark) on April 25, 1797.  

In 1840, Los Vallecitos de San Marcos was given as a land grant to Sgt. Jose Mario Alvarado, a relative of the Spanish Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado.  In 1846, Don Jose fought in the Battle of San Pasqual.  Captured, he was tortured and then killed by the Indians.  With his son’s permission, his widow, Lugarda, sold the 8,877.5-acre parcel to Larenzo Soto, who was given a patent to the land. The land changed hands a number of times.  In the late 1850s, Maj. Gustavus F. Merriam from Topeka, Kansas, made the first permanent settlement, homesteading 160 acres in the north Twin Oaks Valley, where he began wine and honey production.

In early 1875, as Maj. Merriam’s settlement thrived, German and Dutch immigrants began moving into the area.  In 1883, John H. Barham founded the first town a few miles to the south, calling it Barham.  Within one year, his town had a post office, a blacksmith, a feed store and a weekly newspaper, called Our Paper.  The first school opened in Barham in 1880 and was moved to San Marcos in 1889.

In 1887, the San Marcos Land Company bought almost the entire former Los Vallecitos de San Marcos land grant.  The company divided the land into tracts, sold them, and soon the beautiful hills began attracting settlers.  Originally, the town of San Marcos rested at the intersection of what is now Grand Avenue and Rancho Santa Fe Road.  In that same year, the Santa Fe Railroad announced that it would lay tracks through the valley, but, to the disappointment of the local citizens, the tracks were laid one mile away from the town.

By 1903, many people of San Marcos had built up businesses near the railroad tracks at what is now the junction of Mission Road and Pico Avenue.  By 1905, the town had rural mail delivery and telephone service.  The general store and the post office were the most popular buildings for casual gatherings on market day.  Farming became the main commerce in San Marcos in the late 1800s and first half of the 1900s.  Dairy and poultry production also became a big part of the economy.  In 1950, the Barn, the first true community center for San Marcos, was built at Mission and San Marcos Boulevard.  Today the structure resides at Walnut Grove Park, still being used as a gathering place for people of all ages.

The city began to grow more rapidly and in 1956 the first water from the Colorado River arrived to supply the area.  The population quickly increased to 2,500, and small businesses opened all over town.  In 1960, the construction of Highway 78 began, and San Marcos High School was built. 

Today, San Marcos is one of the fastest-growing cities in San Diego County. Because of its location as an important crossroad in the east-west corridor between the inland valley and the coast, it is often called "The Hub of North County."

 

José María Alvarado

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

José María Alvarado (18131846) was the son of Juan Bautista Alvarado (a soldier and cousin to the governor by the same name) and María Raimunda Yorba. José's grandfather, the elder Juan Bautista Alvarado, accompanied Gaspar de Portolà as an enlisted man in the Spanish Army in 1769. He married Lugarda Dionisia Osuna, daughter of Juan María Osuna.

In 1840, Sgt. Alvarado was given a land grant to 8878-acre (36 km²) Rancho Los Vallecitos de San Marcos by his cousin, Governor Alvarado. The ranch was located in present San Marcos, California. In 1842, Alvarado was Suplente (Substitute Justice of the Peace) of San Diego.[1]

During the Mexican-American War, Alvarado fought in the Battle of San Pasqual. He later was one of 11 men captured by an Indian band in the home of José Antonio Serrano, owner of Rancho Pauma. They were taken to an Indian ranchería at Agua Caliente, on Rancho San José, tortured, and killed. This was known as the Pauma Massacre. His widow then sold their ranch with the permission of her sons and later remarried. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Los Vallecitos de San Marcos Rancho", Historic Ranchos of San Diego (1969)
  2. ^ "The Bloody Lances", The Silver Dons (1963) by Richard F. Pourade details the Indian massacre. Also the chapter "Pauma Rancho and Cuca Rancho" in Historic Ranchos of San Diego
 
 
 

 

 
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