lafayette Historical Society

Lafayette: A Pictorial History

AMERICAN SPECULATORS...

Gradually almost all of the vast Mexican ranchos were lost by the grantees through occupation by squatters and through sale.

Valencia had to give up the Rancho Acalanes when he fell into debt and was forced to sell his acreage. The buyer was William Alexander Leidesdorff, a successful Yerba Buena (San Francisco) financier and politician whose father was Danish and whose mother was a black from the West Indies.

Fleeing a broken romance in New Orleans, Leidesdorff arrived in San Francisco in 1841 and soon was named American Vice-Counsel. He was later elected the first American alcalde (mayor) of the new town.

Table of Contents

Preface
Indian Country
Mexican Ranchos
American Speculators
Yankee Settlers
Early Days
The Farmers
Village Life
From Wagon Roads to City Highways
School Days
House of Worship
The Leisure Life
Historic Houses
The Changing Pace
The Town
The City
References

William Alexander Leidesdorff
William Alexander Leidesdorff, second owner of the Rancho Acalanes, probably never lived on his property, and it's possible he never actually saw the land. He died in 1848 at the age of 39.

The Moraga family's loss of the Rancho Laguna de los Palos Colorados cultimated a long series of legal and sometimes physical fights with encroaching Americans. Confusion over land titles added to the break-up of the rancho.

History has thrown most of the blame for the loss of the rancho on the shoulders of Horace W. Carpentier, a real estate speculator. He obtained the Bernal half of the land by buying up various mortgages and by 1886 was owner of the entire rancho.

Accused of the break-up of the Rancho Laguna de los Palos Colorados, Horace W. Carpentier also grabbed Peralta family land and, with his two partners, laid out the beginnings of Oakland. His methods of acquiring property ranged from outright squatting to physical harassment of the Mexican grantees.
Horace W. Carpenter  

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