I’ve always been fascinated by the tale of the Spanish and Mexican land grants and ranchos in California and the Southwest, this thin overlay of pre-US culture over the landscape, as well as by the development history of the state after the gold rush, which isn’t well known, even to Californians.
Rancho Del Paso is a good way to tell this story, especially since there is a lot online on this place. Most of what you see here was cribbed from various online historical & contemporary sources.
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The rancho was one of the last Mexican land grants, and like a number of the Central Valley grants went to an American. The grant was made in 1844, just a few years before the Mexican War.

James Ben Ali Haggin & Rancho Del Paso
The Ben Ali part was a reference to his grandfather on his mothers side, who was a Turk, and apparently he did look a bit Turkish according to contemporary accounts.
I don’t know if Haggin participated in bonanza farming of post gold-rush era, large scale quasi-industrial dry-land farming specializing in wheat. The Rancho might have been just a bit cattle operation, or not operated at all and held in speculation.
Historical accounts do say Haggin ran Rancho Del Paso as a big horse farm starting the 1880s, with paddocks along the American River bottoms, and horse barns and shipping facilities at “the arcade”, next to a Southern Pacific station (the transcontinental railroad bisected the property). This was a fairly successful operation, siring some winning horses. One wonders if the “Molly” in the Molly & Tinbrooks song came from here as she was a California horse.
Maybe not if the song predates horses on the Rancho.
Anyway....
...Haggin eventually moved operations back to his native Kentucky, acquiring the famous Elmendorf Farm near Lexington (still a horse farm today), and liquidated his California horse breeding activities in 1905. After returning to Kentucky Haggin apparently invested in Lexington real estate, opening the Ben Ali theatre in 1913 on Main Street, later torn down for a parking lot.
Haggin did keep Del Paso for a few more years, with the last days of the rancho as a conventional cattle operation
This 1901 map shows the souther part of the rancho across the American River from Sacramento, which had just started to expand beyond the original grid plat ("Oak Park"). Neighboring ranches were Rio de Los Americanos, and San Juan, which saw an early “sunset colony” at Fair Oaks, and Sutter's old rancho of New Helvetia, by this time subdivided into smaller holdings.


It should be noted that Haggin never lived on the property. He had a mansion in San Franciscos’ Nob Hill, a villa in Newport RI, and a townhouse in Manhattan.
From Rancho to Ranchette
In 1910 the Rancho was sold and subdivided, pitched as a property suitable for irrigation colonies and small holdings

By 1916 the area had been subdivided even further, with holdings by the “Antelope Land Company”, “California Citrus Lands”, and subdivision into irrigation/citrus colonies, such as “Arcade Park, the Pasedena of Northern California”, the “Cream of the Haggin Grant”.

The Pasadena reference is worth noting as the Sacramento area developed very similar to Los Angeles, little LA, really, even though it is closer to San Francisco. Large ranches subdivided and sold-off to Midwesterners, intensive agriculture like produce and orchard crops, and settlements linked by interurban rail and the new automobile technology and wired for electric power (Sacramento was a pioneer in long distance power transmission and hydroelectric generation). Housing was in the modern (for that time) bungalow style.
The obligatory orange grove image:

A close up of the land development activity, showing an early suburban plat (Del Paso Heights) along the interurban line, and a large lot ranchette developments, as well as speculative holdings like ‘Interurban Acres” (of course one could say it was all speculative).

The Northern Electric was built through here in 1907, predating the end of the rancho by a few years. This line drove subdivision activity through the rancho (one plat, Rio Linda, was made famous by Rush Limbaugh), and had plans to extend eastward to similar citrus colony development in adjacent Rancho San Juan.
Only a small branch was built though (which later became the route of the new light rail line)
The combines here permitted quick shipments of small parcels, but the line did develop a solid freight business shipping fruits and vegetables (incidentally these cars were built in Niles, Ohio, neary Youngstown). Passenger service ended late, in 1940.



Areas outline in red on the small map and in the pix were subdivisions from the early days of platting activity. In the foreground is early large lot development (the large squares), and one can see how the initial large long lots in some of these areas drove development patterns as late as the postwar era.

The image in the lower right of the bungalow is from the Natomas reclamation area to the west of Del Paso, but this was a popular style throughout this area for the first settlers One can also see the iconic California tank tower in the background, too.
Del Paso Boulevard
During the 1920s, the southern reaches of the rancho developed into early suburbs, at first along the interurban, later along Del Paso Boulevard, which developed into an early suburban strip, somewhat akin to the "boulevards" of Southern California.

As an early auto-strip this area also picked up its share of honky-tonk neon and gaudy signs and googie coffeehouse architecture. Example being Lil’Joes, a Sacramento landmark, but you can see more of the strip at this excellent pix tour by a Sacto blogger


And a pretty good web presence, too.
What’s interesting here is that this is happening on what would be a nondesrcript area, like in Fairborn or North Dixie here, which shows what hot commodidites “old” urban environments are in Sacramento, or other sunbelt boomburbs, or at least an appreciation of things beyond the usual Victoriana.
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