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Pío Pico Adobe in 1910. Pío Pico State Historic Park is the site of El Ranchito, also known as the Pío Pico Adobe or Pío Pico Mansion, the final home of Pío Pico, the last governor of Alta California under Mexican rule and a pivotal figure in early California history.
Olompali State Historic Park; Petaluma Adobe State Historic Park; Pigeon Point Light Station State Historic Park; Pío Pico State Historic Park; Point Sur State Historic Park; Railtown 1897 State Historic Park; Robert Louis Stevenson State Park; San Juan Bautista State Historic Park; San Pasqual Battlefield State Historic Park; Santa Cruz ...
The 300-megawatt Pio Pico Energy Center has natural gas-fired combustion turbine generators in Otay Mesa, San Diego, starting in 2016. [94] [95] Pío Pico State Historic Park is the historic site of Governor Pico's Rancho Paso de Bartolo, made up of his adobe mansion and ranching estate.
Pio Pico State Historic Park.Pío Pico lived at "El Ranchito" from 1852 to 1892. An adobe home was destroyed by the floods of 1883-1884. His second adobe casa, now known as Pío Pico Mansion, represents a compromise between Mexican and American cultures.
Rómulo Pico Adobe: 362: Rómulo Pico Adobe: 10940 N Sepulveda Blvd. Mission Hills: Also on the NRHP list as NPS-66000211 St. Francis Dam Disaster Site: 919: St. Francis Dam Disaster Site: San Francisquito Canyon
Pico Rivera Historical Museum Pico Rivera: San Gabriel Valley: Local history: information, housed in an 1887 train depot, operated by the Pico Rivera History and Heritage Society Pio Pico State Historic Park: Whittier: San Gabriel Valley: Historic house: Adobe home of Pío Pico, the last Governor of Alta California under Mexican Rule
Carrillo Ranch Historic Park; Rancho Los Encinos; Rancho Petaluma Adobe; Rancho Santa Maria de Los Peñasquitos; Rios-Caledonia Adobe; Roberto-Suñol Adobe; Rómulo Pico Adobe; Ryan House and Lost Horse Well
In 1962, the City of Los Angeles included the Pico Adobe and the Leonis Adobe in its first group of Cultural-Historic Monuments. As of 2007, there were over 850 such monuments, and the Pico Adobe is designated as Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #7. [7] In 1966, the adobe was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [2]