The two square league Rancho Cañada de San Miguelito (which included Cañada del Diablo) was granted to Ramón Rodríguez. Rodríguez married Juana Tico. Rodríguez was killed in 1848 while part of a posse looking for bandits who had been terrorizing ranches in the region. A bandit was mortally wounded by Rodríguez, who was, in turn, killed by a bullet from that bandit's gun. The surviving bandits, Joseph Lynch, Peter Remer and Peter Quin were executed by firing squad in Santa Barbara on December 28, 1848.[3]
With the cession of California to the United States following the Mexican-American War, the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that the land grants would be honored. As required by the Land Act of 1851, a claim for Rancho Cañada de San Miguelito was filed with the Public Land Commission in 1853,[4][5] and the grant was patented to Juana Tico de Rodríguez heirs of Ramón Rodríguez in 1871.[6]
Taylor Ranch
Green B. Taylor, born 1819 in Alabama, married Nancy A. Donohoo in Tennessee in 1846. Taylor came to California by sea in 1852, and engaged in farming and stock-raising in northern and southern California. In 1870, he bought Rancho Cañada de San Miguelito, and the property became known as the Taylor Ranch. Taylor ran sheep on the land until his death near the turn of the century.[7] On the death in 1911 of Taylor's widow, her will stipulated that her assets be sold and one-third of the proceeds be used to found a university in Ventura County. Taylor’s three surviving children successfully contested their mother’s will and the property reverted to Edward Taylor, Charles Taylor and Alice Taylor Grubb.
In 1931, oil was discovered on the ranch, commencing development of the San Miguelito Oil Field. This field became one of the most prolific oil fields in the region.
Alice Taylor Grubb was the principal owner until she died at age 81 in 1935.[8] Her children assumed control around 1936. Son Percy Grubb died soon after, leaving the 30,000-acre Taylor Ranch to daughter Emma Grubb Wood and her rancher/philanthropist husband Adrian "Buddy" Wood.[9] When Emma Wood died in 1944 at age 63, Buddy Wood became the sole owner. He donated coastal land in her memory for Emma Wood State Beach. When Buddy Wood died in 1971, the estate was divided between second wife Ailene Barnes Wood and her daughter Cynthia Wood.[9] It is now owned by the Wood-Claeyssens Foundation.[8]
References
^Ogden Hoffman, 1862, Reports of Land Cases Determined in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, Numa Hubert, San Francisco
^The Life And Adventures In California Of Don Agustin Janssens 1834 1856, edited by William H. Ellison and Francis Price, The Huntington Library, San Marino, California, 1953 The Murders in the Old Mission by Wally Ohles William B. Secrest, 2000,California Desperadoes : Stories of Early California Outlaws in Their Own Words, Word Dancer Press, ISBN978-1-884995-19-4
^Report of the Surveyor General 1844 - 1886Archived 2013-03-20 at the Wayback Machine "Plat of the Rancho Cañada de San Miguelito", Book A, Homestead Patents, page 311 as transferred to Book 1A of Miscellaneous Records at page 21 (1A MR 21). Ventura County Recorder. Retrieved November 17, 2014, from CountyView GIS Record Maps:Miscellaneous Records.
^Mason, Jesse D., 1961, Reproduction of Thompson and West's History of Santa Barbara & Ventura Counties California, Howell North Books, Berkeley, California, page 409.