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Vargas Plateau Regional Park

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bruin2 (talk | contribs) at 07:05, 25 July 2017 (Added infobox). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


Vargas Plateau Regional Park
Map
LocationAlameda County, California
Nearest cityFremont, California
Area1,249 acres (505 ha)
Created2010
Operated byEast Bay Regional Park District

User:Bruin2/Vargas Plateau (California) new article content ...Vargas Plateau Regional Park sits on a plateau in the Fremont Hills of Alameda County, California that overlooks the San Francisco Bay, Niles Canyon, and the cities of Fremont, Union City and Newark. The elevation of the park is about 1,000 feet (300 m).[1]

History

The Vargas Plateau once was part of the homeland of two Ohlone-speaking tribes, the Tuibun and Causen, who used the area for hunting and farming. After the Spanish took control of California, the two tribes began living and working at Mission San Jose in 1797. After the mission was secularized, the land was granted to Juan Bautista Alvarado and Andres Pico in 1846.[a] The native people essentially became serfs under this arrangement, losing any claim to the Vargas Plateau.[1]

After California became an American state in 1850, many of the old land grants were declared void by American courts. Such was the case with the Alvarado and Pico properties, and the land eventually became part of a horse breeding ranch, which was subdivided about 1900. In 1909, Antonio Francisco Vargas bought 444 acres (180 ha) of the "lower ranch" and by 1912, Antonio's brother Manuel and nephew Edward bought 550 acres (220 ha) of the "upper ranch". Manuel and Edward used their land for sheep and cattle ranching, as well as for dryland farming. The Tavares family inherited the upper ranch after Edward Vargas died in 1978. Antonio's direct descendants continued raising cattle on the lower ranch until the land was sold to the East Bay Regional Park District (EBRPD) bought it in 1993. EBRPD bought the Tavares' property in 1996. The District acquired what were known as the Rose and Comcast properties in 2010, so that the total area of the newly designated Vargas Plateau Regional Park came to 1,249 acres (505 ha).[1]


Notes

  1. ^ Secularization of mission properties occurred after the Mexican Revolution.


References

[[Category:Parks in Alameda County, California