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By the early 1900s, the Janes family owned the 10,200-acre Val Verde Ranch (4,100 ha) where the modern settlement is located. Laura C. Janes, a wealthy white woman from Pasadena, opened her ranch to African Americans in the 1910s in response to the discrimination they faced which excluded them from public recreational facilities and prevented ...
Location of Val Verde County in Texas. This is a list of the National Register Historic Places in Val Verde County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Val Verde County, Texas. There are seven districts and four individual properties listed on the ...
Val Verde may refer to: Val Verde, California, a community in Los Angeles County; Val Verde (Montecito, California), estate in Santa Barbara County, listed on National Register of Historic Places; Val Verde, Texas; Val Verde Park, Texas; Val Verde County, Texas; Val Verde, New Mexico. Battle of Valverde or Val Verde, an American Civil War ...
These are tracts. The Santa Clarita Valley is made up of several communities (Valencia, Stevenson Ranch, Saugus, Newhall, Castaic, Val Verde and Canyon Country). Each of these areas have hundreds of tracts with various floorplans.
Pumpville is a ghost town in Val Verde County, Texas, United States. [1] [2] History. ... Pumpville lies on the Ranch to Market Road 1865, ...
The Santa Clarita Valley is bordered by the Lake Piru area, including the community of Val Verde, Los Padres National Forest, and Castaic Lake to the northwest, Sierra Pelona Mountains and Angeles National Forest to the north and northeast, San Gabriel Mountains to the east and southeast, and Santa Susana Mountains to the south and southwest, and Ventura County and the Santa Clara River Valley ...
Val Verde County is a county located on the southern Edwards Plateau in the U.S. state of Texas. The 2020 population is 47,586. [1] Its county seat is Del Rio. [2] The Del Rio micropolitan statistical area includes all of Val Verde County. Val Verde, which means "green valley", [3] was named for a battle of the Civil War.
Juno was a small unincorporated community in Val Verde County, Texas, United States, in the southwestern part of the state. Its last business closed in 1984, and the only remnant of Juno now is a lone ranch. What remains of the village was, by 2013, situated on private ranch land.