Rancho Agua Caliente was a 9,564-acre (38.70 km2) Mexican land grant in present day Alameda County, California given in 1836 by Governor Nicolás Gutiérrez to Antonio Suñol and Fulgencio Higuera, and confirmed in 1839 by Governor Juan Alvarado to Fulgencio Higuera.[1] The name means "warm water" and refers to the warm springs located in the foothills a short distance south of Mission San José. The grant is just south of present-day Fremont.[2][3]
Fulgencio Higuera (1799–1878), was the son of Jose Loreto Higuera (1778–1845), grantee of Rancho Los Tularcitos, and grandson of Ygnacio Anastacio Higuera, who came to California with the De Anza Expedition. His brother Valentin Higuera was the grantee of Rancho Pescadero. In 1820, Fulgencio Higuera married Maria Clara Saturnina Pacheco. In 1836 Fulgencio Higuera was granted the two square league Rancho Agua Caliente, formerly Mission San José land.[4] In 1845, Higuera married Maria Celia Feliz.
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 Agua Caliente was filed with the Public Land Commission in 1852,[5] and the grant was patented to Fulgencio Higuera in 1858.[6]
Higuera gradually sold off his holdings in the 1850s. An attorney, Abram Harris, purchased the southern portion of this land in 1858 and established what briefly became known as Harrisburg. In 1850, Clement Columbet bought 640 acres (2.6 km2), and developed a resort and one of the state’s first wineries. However, the resort did not survive the 1868 Hayward earthquake. Leland Stanford bought the property in 1869, and entrusted the land to his brother, Josiah Stanford, to start Stanford Winery, at the corner of Stanford Ave and Vinyard Ave, in what is now Fremont.[7] Thomas W. Millard, who had come from New York to California in 1853, bought a large portion of the Rancho in 1855.[8]
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