Californio to American: A Study in Cultural Change
Californio to American: A Study in Cultural Change

![[Cover photo] Rancho Los Alamitos. [Cover photo] Rancho Los Alamitos.](http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/8californio/8images/8cover1.jpg)
(Photo by Beth Boland)
![[Cover photo] Rancho Los Alamitos garden. [Cover photo] Rancho Los Alamitos garden.](http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/8californio/8images/8cover2.jpg)
(Photo by Beth Boland)
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S urrounded today by all the bustle of a metropolitan area, Rancho Los Alamitos (Ranch of the Little Cottonwoods) began as an outpost shelter for vaqueros (cowhands) away from the main ranch property. The rudimentary structure was situated on a small hill overlooking thousands of acres of open space. The land, with its natural spring, was once part of the Indian village area of Puvungna. Later, Californios, Spanish settlers in what is now the state of California, erected several small adobe dwellings in the midst of their cattle ranges. Successive owners made changes to one of these adobes until it was transformed into an elegant 18-room ranch house. Today, Rancho Los Alamitos provides a tangible example of the physical and cultural change that took place in the region from the Spanish colonial days through the Mexican territorial era to the modern American period.
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