Rancho Cienega de los Paicines


Rancho Cienega de los Paicines was a Mexican land grant in present day San Benito County, California given in 1842 by Governor Juan B. Alvarado to Angel María Castro and José Antonio Rodriguez. The name means "marsh lands of the Paicines" in Spanish. The grant extended along the San Benito River with Tres Pinos Creek on the east and the Cienega Valley on the west, and encompassed present day Paicines.

History

The two square league Rancho Cienega de los Paicines grant was given to Angel María Castro and his son-in-law José Antonio Rodriguez. Angel María Dolores Castro, son of Josef Macario Castro, was a soldier at San Jose and Branciforte and married María Ysabel Butron in 1812. José Antonio Rodriguez, son of Sebastian Rodriguez and Maria Pacheco, was a guard at Mission San Miguel and married Hilaria Castro, the daughter of Angel Delores Castro and Maria Ysabel Butron 1835.
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 Cienega de los Paicines was filed with the Public Land Commission in 1853, and the grant was patented to Angel María Castro and José Antonio Rodriguez in 1869.
In 1867 Francisco Villegas sold the rancho to Alexander B. Grogan, a San Francisco land speculator and financier. Grogan had been Faxon Atherton's California business agent and later the executor of Atherton's estate. At one time nearby Paicines was named Groganville. In 1906, the ranch was purchased by A. Kingsley Macomber.