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Featuring fine homes in the Mission Viejo area, I am Simone Moore. You'll find some of the most beautiful homes
in the world in some of the most beautiful neighborhoods in this part of Southern California.
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here to see all Mission Viejo real
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home or are thinking about selling your home in the Mission Viejo area,
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History of Mission Viejo
The land upon which Mission Viejo is
developed was part of the 52,000-acre Rancho Mission Viejo. The chain of
title to the land dates back to July 27, 1769, when a Spaniard named
Gaspar de Portola led an expeditionary force from Mexico across the
southern border of the ranch and claimed the land for Spain.
Seven years later, the ranch witnessed the
first attempt to found Mission San Juan Capistrano. Although lack of
water forced the friars to relocate and the whereabouts of this old
mission remain a mystery, the name Mission Viejo bears testimony to this
structure's sojourn in San Juan Canyon more than two hundred years ago.
After Mexico won its independence from Spain
in 1821, a new flag flew over California and a new spirit filled the
air. The missions, which had been established to further the spread of
the Christian faith, became secularized, and their vast landholdings
were granted as ranches to prominent citizens.
One man who happened to be standing in the
right place at the right time was an English trader named John Forster.
John or Juan, as the name reads on the old land grant, married the
Mexican governor's sister and acquired the three ranchos historically
known as El Trabuco, Mission Viejo, and Los Potreros. But fate frowned
on Don Juan Forster. Fencing 205,000 acres drained his capital, droughts
destroyed his cattle, and futile efforts to attract settlers dried up
his last remaining credit. When Forster died, his estate was in
shambles, and his sons were forced to sell.
In 1907, an Irish cattleman named Richard
O'Neill acquired an undivided interest in Rancho El Trabuco and Rancho
Mission Viejo. When a 1963 study indicated that urbanization was
spreading south from the Los Angeles area, his grandchildren, Richard
O'Neill and Alice O'Neill Avery, decided to sell 10,000 acres. Donald
Bren, Philip J. Reilly, and James Toepfer purchased the property and
organized the Mission Viejo Company.
In 1965, a master plan for Mission Viejo was
approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. One year later,
Forster's dream of attracting settlers became a reality as families
stood in line to pay $21,000 for homes on his former cattle range. In
April 1966, these pioneering residents moved into the new neighborhoods
near the intersection of La Paz Road and Chrisanta Drive.
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