
CALIFORNIA’S ORIGINAL PEOPLE
The earliest indications of people living in San Diego date back 9,000 years. They called
themselves Kumeyaay. When the Spaniards arrived, they used the word Diegueño to
identify the Indians associated with the Mission. In 1542 explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo
reported that the native indians, “were good natured and an attractive people.” With the
arrival of the Spanish settlements in 1769, many Kumeyaay retreated to the hills.
The FOUNDING of CALIFORNIA
Old Town San Diego is considered the "birthplace" of California. San Diego is the site of the first permanent Spanish settlement in California. It was here in 1769, that Father Junipero Serra
came to establish the very first mission in a chain of 21 missions that were to be the cornerstone
of California’s colonization. Father Serra’s mission and Presidio were built on a hillside
overlooking what is currently known as Old Town San Diego. At the base of the hill in 1820’s, a
small Mexican community of adobe buildings was formed and by 1835 had attained the status of
El Pueblo de San Diego. In 1846, a U.S. Navy Lieutenant and a Marine Lieutenant, raised the
American flag in the Old Town San Diego Plaza.
In 1968, the State of California Department of Parks and Recreation established Old Town State
Historic Park to preserve the rich heritage that characterized San Diego during the 1821 to 1872
period. The park includes a main plaza, exhibits, museums and living history demonstrations.
Historic buildings include La Casa de Estudillo, La Casa de Bandini, La Casa de Altamirno
Pedrorena and the Mason Street School, San Diego’s first one room schoolhouse. Just up the
hill from Old Town San Diego Historic State Park, you’ll find Heritage Park where several of San
Diego’s most notable Victorian homes have been relocated and authentically restored to their
original splendor. Just a short walk down San Diego Avenue is the Whaley House, an officially
designated haunted house, the Little Adobe Chapel on Conde Street, the first Church in Old
Town San Diego and El Campo Santo on San Diego Avenue, a 1850 Catholic Cemetery.
Come visit the original and reconstructed buildings and furnishings that illustrate the ambiance of
1800’s San Diego . . . where California Began!
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