Manuel Nieto

Jose Manuel Nieto (1734–1804) was a soldier from the Presidio of San Diego who was assigned to the Mission San Gabriel at the time his land was granted by the Spanish Empire in 1784.

Spanish soldier

Nieto was a mulatto, born in Sinaloa, Mexico in 1734. He came to Alta California with the Gaspar de Portolà expedition of 1769. He served in the Royal Army in the province of Alta California. Jose Manuel Perez-Nieto was first mentioned as a soldier of the Presidio of Monterey, in 1773.

Rancho Los Nietos

Presidio soldiers were permitted to raise cattle for food and make a small profit. As his cattle numbers increased, the need for more grazing land was required. In 1784, he was granted a provisional grant of the land that would become Rancho Los Nietos by Pedro Fages, the governor of Alta California.[1]

The original grant was 300,000 acres (1,200 km2), but in 1785 Father Sanchez from the San Gabriel Mission contested the Nietos grant on the grounds that it encroached upon the southern portion of their property. A decision in favor of the mission was reached and Rancho Los Nietos was reduced to nearly half of its original size, but still leaving Corporal Nieto with 167,000 acres (680 km2). Nieto retired from duty and settled down on his rancho with his family. A small community called Los Nietos gradually built up around the Nietos adobe home, which was near the Indian village of Sejat on the San Jose Creek. Today, the area of West Whittier-Los Nietos, California is located near the original rancho home site.[2]

Upon Manuel's death, his rancho was inherited by his widow and four children.[1]

Descendants

He married Maria Teresa Morillo.

The children of Jose Manuel Nieto and María Teresa Morillo (1756-1816)[3]
Name Birth/Death Married Notes
Juan Jose Nieto1781 -Maria Tomasa Tapiareceived Rancho Los Alamitos, Rancho Los Coyotes, Rancho Palos Alto
Jose Antonio Nieto1785 -Maria Catarina Ruizreceived Rancho Las Bolsas
Maria Manuela Nieto1791 -Guillermo Cotareceived Rancho Los Cerritos
Antonio Maria Nieto1796 -Maria Josefa Alvina Cotareceived Rancho Santa Gertrudes
gollark: @Terrariola#0000 you are rude.
gollark: It would require getting up.
gollark: NO.
gollark: I MEAN I THEORETICALLY COULD REMOTE WIPE ALL POTATOS MACHINES
gollark: You are destroying everything over digital signage.

References

  1. Jensen, Marilyn (1991). Santa Fe Springs : a pictorial history. Donning Company.
  2. The Story of Cerritos: A History in Progress, by Marilyn Cenovich, 1995
  3. Marie Northrop Spanish-Mexican Families of Early California: 1769-1850, Vol. I
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