Peralta Rancho detail 1857
Description:
Map (detail) of Vicente and Domingo Peralta's rancho, showing property boundaries in parts of Temescal, Oakland, Emeryville, Berkeley and Piedmont, including the 700 acres of the Vicente Peralta Reserve. Also shown is Temescal Creek, Glen Echo Creek, Indian Gulch, San Antonio Slough, San Pablo Road, and Telegraph Road.
Date of Document:
1857
Document Author:
Julius Kellersberger
Geographic Location:
Vicente Way and 55th Street, Oakland, Calif.
Context:
For his years of military service in Alta California, Luis Maria Peralta in 1820 received from the Spanish crown a land grant of nearly 45,000 acres in Contra Costa the east side of the bay. His Rancho de San Antonio encompassed the present-day cities of Oakland, Alameda, Piedmont, Emeryville, Berkeley and Albany. The next year, Antonio Peralta, one of Luis Peralta s sons, erected an adobe in what is today Oakland s Fruitvale district and began to graze cattle on the rancho. In 1834, Jose Vicente Peralta (1801-1871), Luis Maria Peralta s youngest son, and Domingo Peralta, joined their brother on the rancho. In 1836, Vicente became the first person of European descent to reside in what is now North Oakland when he built a modest adobe near Temescal Creek on what is today the block bounded by Vicente Street, 55th Street, Telegraph Avenue and Highway 24. Over the next several years, Vicente and his wife, Maria Encarnación (neé Galindo), established orchards, gardens, an extensive herd of cattle, and a thriving hide and tallow trade. In 1847, Vicente built a second adobe, which he expanded in the 1850s to one that measured approximately forty feet on a side and with a central courtyard. It sat at the rear of what is now 5527 Vicente Street. The discovery of gold in the Sierra foothills, brought an influx of settlers to the East Bay, including those who squatted on Vicente s land and stole his cattle. Recognizing that the tide of illegal squatters was irreversible, and to cover taxes and the cost of both his legal battles to retain title to his land and corrupt dealings by his lawyers, Vicente sold off all but 700 acres of his Rancho Encinal de Temescal (his portion of the original land grant that he had inherited from his father). His home and the other adobe structures he had built, including a small chapel, were all removed by the 1880s. A two-story frame house built in 1867 for the Vicente and Encarnación spanned the current addresses of 5511 to 5521 Vicente Street.