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Excavations of a Pleistocene stone tool workshop and quarry sites Calico Ghost Town: Calico: San Bernardino: Open air: Ghost silver mining town park with Lane House & Museum of local & mining history, one-room school, blacksmith shop, several original structures California Citrus State Historic Park: Riverside: Riverside: Industry
Stone and Andrew Kelsey moved to the area and used Pomo and Wappo slave labor to build them a home, the first adobe house in the area. Pomo tribesmen were also forced by Ben Kelsey to work in gold mines in the Sierra foothills. The Indians killed both Stone and Kelsey in the fall of 1849, due to the resentment of forced labor and other cruel acts.
Montebello (Italian for "Beautiful Mountain") is a city in Los Angeles County, California, United States, located just east of East Los Angeles and southwest of San ...
The Armenian Genocide Martyrs Monument, better known as Montebello Genocide Memorial, is a monument in Montebello, California in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, ...
The Stone House was built of local stone in 1853–54 by Robert Sterling. His wife was the first non-Indian woman to enter the Coyote Valley. In 1861, when Lake County was split off from Napa County, John Cobb was hired to manage the Rancho Guenoc and Rancho Collayomi of the Ritchie estate. He moved with his wife and younger children into the ...
The 7th G7 summit was held at Château Montebello in 1981. The resort remained a private retreat, owned by the CPR, and leased to the exclusive Seigniory Club until 1970, when it was converted into a public resort by Canadian Pacific Hotels, the hotel division of CPR. During this time the resort was renamed the Château Montebello. [12]
Saviour Montebello (1762–1809), Maltese theologian, academic and leader in resistance against the French Mark Montebello (b. 1964), Maltese philosopher and author Other uses
The Gaskill Brothers Stone Store (also known as the Campo Stone Store) is a historical building in Campo, California, built in 1868 by the Gaskill brothers as a general store. It is a California Historical Landmark No. 411, listed on November 15, 1948.