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THE AVILA ADOBE 1818
The Avila Adobe was constructed in 1818 by a prominent ranchero,
Francisco José Avila, a native of Sinaloa, who was alcalde,
or mayor of Los Angeles in 1810. Following Francisco Avila's
death in 1832, his second wife, Encarnación Avila continued
to live in the house with her two daughters. The Los Angeles
Census of 1844 lists Encarnación Avila, age 40, as a widow
living in the house with one daughter. For a brief time, from
January 10-19, 1847, the adobe was commandeered as a military
headquarters by the invading North American army under Robert
Stockton. After Encarnación Avila died in 1855, the home
passed to her two daughters, Luisa and Francisca and their husbands,
Manuel Garfias and Theodore Rimpau. Francisca and Theodore Rimpau
and their nine children continued to live in the adobe from 1855
to 1868 until they moved to Anaheim, California where Theodore
served as the first mayor. From 1868 to the early 1920s, the
adobe was rented and used as a restaurant, rooming house for
transients, or was frequently vacant. The condition of the building
deteriorated and was finally condemned in 1926 by the City Health
Department, which caught the attention of Christine Sterling,
who began a public campaign to save the adobe. Today, the Avila
Adobe is open to the public as a museum and is furnished as it
might have appeared in the late 1840s.
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