Volume
XVII – No. 2
June
23, 1939, pages 9, 12
With
the development during the next 90 days of the extensive acreage lying south of
Pico and west of Robertson, another landmark – the old ranch house of Don Jose
de Arnaz – will pass away, and with it the last vestige in this area of
Gaunt
among its palm trees on the hill, the decaying mansion has long aroused the
curiosity of passersby. It seems to shrink
back from the boulevard, its windows staring blankly to repell the inquisitive,
its high front porch without steps for visitors, its front door barred all the
way across by a balustrade.
While
passersby are curious, persons living near the sagging brown structure say it
has become a part of their lives. They
have seen it dismal in the rain, sagging in the sun; they have observed its
felicity against the sunset sky, its mysterious air at night. Day after day they have studied it through
their windows, wondering about its origin, weaving stories about its history
–but no one has been able to tell them.
This,
then, is the story of the old house and of the ranch on which it stands, a
story which not even the present occupants know.
For
the past 14 years the C. Minorini family bas occupied the ‘‘palace,” as Mrs.
Minorini terms it. When they moved in
the bats and spiders moved out. They
spent $700 making the lower floor habitable by covering the walls with
plasterboard, putting in window glass, and installing plumbing, electric lights
and gas.
The
six bedrooms on the second floor are empty except for a massive bedstead. Mrs. Minorini said Abraham Lincoln was
supposed to have slept in the bed – but
A
gold moulding, as bright as the day it was put into place, runs around the
ceiling of the front bedroom. This room
with its many-shuttered bay window was occupied by Senora Maria Camarillo y
Arnaz herself.
She
used to say that from her window she could see every light in
Farms
Ranch
Mr.
Minorini has made his living farming the rolling 330-acre tract. Grapes occupy 20 acres, the vines being at
least 70 years old, perhaps much older.
Before prohibition the vineyard was larger by 25 acres. The rest of the tract is planted in lima
beans. The Minorinis have an expensive
new car, a latest model radio, overstuffed furniture, and in the kitchen a
green-tinted sink. When the land is
sub-divided they expect to move somewhere else in the neighborhood, so that
their daughter can finish at
Boundaries
of the original 3100-acre rancho included land on which the homes of Monte Mar
Vista and Cheviot Hills now stand, as well as the Rancho, Hillcrest and
Petition
While
extensive by modern standards, the rancho was not considered large in Spanish
days. Situated off the main highway of travel,
it was not settled until 1821, the last year of Spanish rule, when
“To
the Senor Captain:
“Bernardo
Higuera and Cornelio Lopez, citizens of the Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina
de Los Angeles, and under the command of your honor, with the greatest respect
and submission before your Excellency, appear and say that, possessing at the
time a number of cattle and not having any place so as properly to he able to
keep than with grazing land of sufficient extent, therefore ask and beseech
your extreme clemency to be pleased to grant to them the tract within this
vicinity called Corral Viejo del Rincon, so that they may be able to place a
corral for herding the said cattle unless it does some injury to the
neighboring residents – a favor they expect from your extreme goodness and for
which they will recognize themselves very grateful. May God preserve you many years.”
Two
days later, on the margin of the petition, Captain Noriega wrote:
“Pueblo
de Nuestra Senora de
The
“Corner”
From
that day onward, the ranch became known as Rincon de los Bueyes – “Corner of
the Cattle.” The “corner” was a ravine
at the southernmost tip of the rancho which served as a natural corral. The “57” sign today is just east of that
ravine.
Lopez
soon quarreled with Higuera, leaving the latter in possession. Higuera built two houses 1822, living on the
ranch with his family for 12 years. In
1834 he moved to
In
1848, asserting that his brother had abandoned the ranch, Policarpio formally
claimed the rancho for himself, for another brother Mariano, for Higuera’s son
Francisco, and for Pedro Mendez. When Policarpio died, Mendez sold his share of
the rancho to Policarpio’s widow for four tame cows valued at six dollars
each. From then on, while the ownership
was divided among the family, the masters of the rancho were Francisco and
Secundino, sons of the official grantee.
Trophy
Of War
Francisco
fought against the Americans in the engagement of San Pasqual, wounding Captain
Gillespie, commander of the
In
another adobe house on high ground at the west end of the rancho lived his brother,
Secundino. This brother in 1849 sold his portion to Don Jose de Arnaz, who
also, in 1867, bought most of Francisco’s portion except the triangular part
south of what is now
The
sales, however, could not be considered as final until the Higueras had proved
their claims before the United States Land Commission. From 1852 until 1869 they, aided by the influential
Arnaz, fought to hold the rancho. The
litigation was complicated by the fact that squatters had moved in on parts of
the land. Descendents of these squatters
became social and business leaders of
Widely
Known
In
Don Jose de Arnaz the rancho had an owner known throughout the state, who as a
young man had sold Mexican saddles to the rancheros and Chinese shawls to their
wives, and who in the prime of life owned the 48,882 acres of Ventura Mission
and before he died had given his name to 18 children.
Arnaz
was born in the town of
Job
of the supercargo was to dispose of fancy serapes, gold-embroidered suits with
silver buttons, hats, boots, saddles, shawls, sugar and brandy in exchange for
hides and tallow. Arnaz visited all the
important families of
Opens
Store
As
supercargo on the Clarita and later on the frigate Joven Guipuzcoana he soon
made enough money to open a store of his own in
With
the profits from his store, Don Jose branched out into ranching. Five years after being penniless in
Shortly
after Arnaz acquired the mission the American occupation occurred. Several years previous, Arnaz having been
aboard Ship in San Francisco harbor, was taken prisoner by Commodore Jones in
the later’s premature “capture” of San Francisco, which then consisted of six
buildings. At the mission ranch, early
in 1847, he was again taken prisoner, this time by Colonel Fremont, but won his
release by furnishing
Founds
Following
the war Arnaz founded the town of
From
Wines
Famous
Wines
produced on the rancho became famous throughout the valley. His daughter recalls that three immense wooden
vats stood in back of the house in which the grapes were stamped by men in
hip-boots. The wine was then made in the
large cellar, eight dozen beaten eggs going into every 50-gallon cank to
produce a clear sparkling vintage. At all hours of the day and night, ranchers
from miles around knocked at the kitchen door to buy jugs of wine from Arnaz’s
majordomo.
Arnaz
also raised cattle, pasturing them in the area bounded by
Divides
Ranch
Before
his death at the age of 74, on February 1, 1895, Don Jose had drawn a will
dividing his rancho into two parts. He
drew a line bisecting the rancho approximately north and south, along the
eastern boundaries of what today is the Hillcrest Country Club. All west of this line went directly to
surviving children by his first wife; all lying east of the line went to his
widow to be held in trust for herself and her surviving children.
Children
by his first wife were Elvira Arnaz and Ventura Arnaz Wagner, both living in
Ventura; McIvio Arnaz, of Salinas; Amanda Arnaz Sepulveda, of Los Angeles;
Virginia de Anguisola, Adella, Camilla, Mercedes, Jose Maria, and Luis, all
deceased. They received shares varying
from 80 acres to 200 acres, depending upon the value of the land, whether it
was level or hilly, watered or dry.
These shares, totaling over 1000 acres, they disposed of at different
times to different parties.
Enter
Mrs. Ringe
The
other half of the rancho was kept intact by the widow, for 10 years. She continued raising cattle, making wine,
and growing grain, aided by a trusted foreman named Olvera. In 1904, with court approval, she sold the
property to Mrs. Ringe for $125,000, of which the court awarded her $40,000,
the remaining $85,000 being divided among her children in proportion to the
value of the tracts Don Jose had set aside for them.
However,
81 acres intended for Eliberto Arnaz, the youngest, was not included in the
transaction – because he was still a minor and the property had to be held
until he came of age. Land values began
soaring about that time, and in 1911 Eliberto, having attained his majority,
was offered $700 an acre or $56,700 for his share, which lay between Robertson
and La Cienega boulevards. He sold – to
his regret in 1918 when the same property was selling for $6000 an acre. At that rate his 81 acres would have been
worth $486,000.
Fights
Progress
For
35 years Mrs. Ringe held the land she purchased, successfully fighting every
effort to extend Beverly, Reeves, Rexford, Glenville, Doheny, Oakhurst and
other streets through the property to Culver City. On part of the property the Ringe interests
built the Adohr plant (Adohr is Mrs. Ringe’s first name spelled
backwards). The remainder lay unimproved
while surrounding areas developed into fine residential areas.
Then,
during the depression years, Mrs. Ringe’s empire began to collapse under its
burden of taxes. Her holding company,
the Marblehead Land Company, ran into serious financial difficulties. But the
old Arnaz rancho Mrs. Ringe held onto stubbornly. Several years ago the company saw a prospect
of developing the land as an oil field.
Surrounding residents raised such a storm of protest, however, that the
city council and planning commission of
As
hopes vanished for replenishing the seriously depleted Ringe coffers with money
derived from oil, and as back taxes mounted staggeringly, the Marblehead Land
Company was reorganized.
Consents
To
Long
coveted by realty developers, the 330 remaining acres of the old rancho
constituted the last important unsubdivided area in western
Taking
advantage of this opportunity and working closely with the
Deal
A Loss
Because
both actual and tax valuation of the property was much higher than the sale
price, the
The
Beverly-Arnaz Land Company put the Walter H. Leimert Company in charge of
development of the property. Leirmert
engaged George Gibbs, Eastern landscape architect, to lay the tract. Gibbs made nearly 30 studies of the land: finally
drafting a plan which is expected to be final.
It calls for extensive tree-platting, impressive entrance gates at
several points, and a landscaped strip 15 to 25 feet wide along the entire
frontage on Robertson boulevard. No lots
will face on Robertson. Streets will
follow natural contours to avoid scarifying the hills. Restrictions will provide for moderately
priced homes.
For
valuable assistance in preparing this first comprehensive study of the Rancho
Rincon de los Bueyes, thanks are due to Prexcedes Arnaz de Lavigne, whose
memory and whose research into old archives provided many facts; to W. W.
Robinson, of the Title Guarantee and Trust Company, whose booklet “Culver City” was of much help; to Nellie Van
de Grift Sanchez, whose translation of a document by Don Jose de Arnaz appeared
in “Touring Topics” in 1928, and to other sources.