The present day communities of
Malibu and western
Topanga are located on parts of the former rancho.
History
José Bartolomé Tapia was the eldest of nine children of Felipe Santiago Tapia, a soldier in the
De Anza Expedition of 1775. In 1800, José Bartolomé Tapia applied, as a reward for his own Army service, for a grant of the land he saw as a youth. The grant was made in 1804, and Tapia settled on the land, to graze his cattle and raise his family.[2]
In 1848 Tapia's widow (Maria Francisca Mauricia Villalobo) sold the rancho to her grandson-in-law, Leon Victor Prudhomme who had married a daughter of Tiburcio Tapia, grantee of
Rancho Cucamonga.
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, Prudhomme filed a claim for Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit but could not document the Tapia title and the claim was rejected.[3][4] In 1857 he sold his undefined interest in the land to Irishman Matthew (Mateo) Keller (1811–1881).[5] Keller was able to perfect his claim to the land, and receive a
patent in 1872.[6]
Eleven years after Keller's death, the rancho was sold to Boston and Los Angeles businessman and philanthropist
Frederick Hastings Rindge in 1891.[7]
Historic sites of the Rancho
Adamson House. A home designed by
Stiles O. Clements, and completed in 1929 for Rindge's daughter, Rhoda Agatha Rindge, and her husband, Merritt Huntley Adamson.[8]
Tapia family
Felipe Santiago Tapia (1745–1811), soldier in the
de Anza Expedition.[9][10] Tapia Drive in San Francisco's
Parkmerced is named for him. The nearby Cardenas Avenue is named for his wife. [11]
Jose Bartolome Tapia (1766–1824), son of Felipe Santiago Tapia, eldest of nine children, grantee of Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit.
^Ogden Hoffman, 1862, Reports of Land Cases Determined in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, Numa Hubert, San Francisco