



The descendants of Mariano Cordero owned (or partly owned) several ranchos in California. In addition, some of the families whose children married into the Cordero family owned ranchos in southern California.
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Rancho Las Cruces
In about 1833 Miguel Cordero settled in the area of Las Cruces,
California and eventually was granted a land grant for the area
stretching from Gaviota in the south to Rancho Santa Rosa in the
north (near Nojoqui Road).
Rancho Las Virgenes
In about 1810
Bartholome
Miguel de Ortega
was granted a rancho of about 17,000 acres in the extreme
western portion of Los Angeles County near present-day Agoura
Hills. Highway 101 cross-cuts the center of the Rancho Las
Virgenes.
Rancho Cañada de Salsipuedes
In 1844 Rancho Cañada de Salsipuedes was officially granted to
Pedro Cordero. John C. Keyes purchased the rancho from Pedro in
1850, and some time later Hollister purchased Rancho Salsipuedes
and established a dairy on the property.
Rancho Bolsa de Chamisal
The 14,355 acre Rancho Bolsa de Chamisal was granted to
Francisco Quijada in 1837. The land was described as an enclosed
space of chaparral, a dense brush land just south of present-day
Oceano. Pedro Cordero had married Maria Dolores Claudia Quijada
in 1808, and therefore owned a share by marriage. On September
4, 1846 Pedro Cordero sold his share of Rancho Bolsa de Chamisal
to Luis Burton. Manuela, Nasario, and Francisco Quijada also
sold their interests at various times to Burton. By 1868 Francis
Z. Branch owned the rancho. The rancho is listed in the
Carpenters Index on the
San Luis Obispo County Genealogical Society
website.
Click
here
to view the Land Case Map of Bolsa de Chamisal.
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