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Table of Contents Preface |
Indians were still in evidence when the Mexican government carved up the land into grants and later when the early American settlers arrived on the scene. Candelario Valencia, who in 1834 was granted the Rancho Acalanes which forms part of modern Lafayette, wrote: "This place (about a quarter of a mile up Happy Valley Road) was occupied by my family and myself during a period of five years. When it (sic) had been harried by the Indians up to a point where my life and the lives of my family were endangered, I abandoned it for a time." Valencia's first dwelling was burned by the Indians a few years after its construction in the mid-1830's.
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The area around Hough Avenue and Oakland Street, near the banks of Lafayette Creek, has yielded many relics of Indian occupation. These arrowheads were found by Bill Wakeman of Lafayette. | |||
Dick Francis discovered the Indian pestle on the left near the Pleasant Hill interchange and the one on the right in Happy Valley. Early farmers in Lafayette are said to have complained they spent half their time getting rid of the many Indian artifacts turned up during plowing. |
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The Widow Bernal's adobe, a one and a half story structure measuring 50 x 18 feet, was located half a mile up Happy Vallry Road. Surrounded by a porch on all sides, the building stood until 1906 when it was razed after being severly damaged in the San Francisco earthquake. |
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© 2007, Lafayette Historical Society