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The Woodlands" is a 956-acre master planned community with single- and multi-family homes, a resort hotel, retail and office space, located adjacent to Nipomo, California. [4] Woodlands sits at an elevation of 282 feet (86 m). [2] The 2010 United States census reported Woodlands's population was 576.
Jacobus Demarest may have built these two sections after his second marriage in 1720. The house was expanded by John Demarest in 1765, as documented by a datestone. It was expanded again around 1920. [4] Jacobus Demarest (1681–1763) was the grandson of David des Marest, an early French settler in the county. [5] HABS image from 1936
The area was inhabited for around 8,000 years by Native Americans of the Fernandeño-Tataviam and Chumash-Venturaño tribes, who lived in the Santa Monica Mountains and Simi Hills and close to the Arroyo Calabasas (Calabasas Creek) tributary of the Los Angeles River in present-day Woodland Hills.
The Gable brothers, Amos W. and Harvey C. Gable, had the home designed and built for them at 659 First Street by Edward Carlton "Carl" Gilbert, the owner of the Woodland firm Gilbert & Sons, for $16,000. [2]
The California interior chaparral and woodlands ecoregion covers 24,900 square miles (64,000 km 2) in an elliptical ring around the California Central Valley. It occurs on hills and mountains ranging from 300 feet (91 m) to 3,000 feet (910 m).
Joseph M. Demarest, Jr. is an associate executive assistant director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and was formerly the assistant director in charge of the FBI's cyber division. He is responsible for the FBI's operations to protect the United States from cyber-based national security threats.
The Demarest–Hopper House is located at 21 Breakneck Road in the borough of Oakland in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States.The historic stone house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983, for its significance in architecture.
The Demarest House is located at 213 Ramapo Valley Road in the borough of Oakland in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States.The historic stone house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983, for its significance in architecture.