southern california real estate club
loomis california ca real estate homes for sale
california real estate loan
california department estate real
san francisco california real estate
ontario california real estate
investors real estate investment opportunity in california
visalia california real estate
california real estate auction
oceanside real estate california
newport beach california real estate
eureka california real estate
santa cruz california real estate
foreclosure real estate southern california
berkeley california real estate
real estate in northern california
real estate in visalia ca california
california real estate appraisal
california estate real sales
real estate south bay california
roseville california ca real estate
twentynine palms california real estate
california estate law real tax
real estate riverside county california
california real estate school
california commercial real estate
commercial real estate southern california
long beach california real estate
california real estate listings ray and peggy pierce
california real estate license requirement
real estate in fresno california
online real estate course california
real estate school california
coldwell banker real estate california
california commercial real estate broker
california real estate agency
san diego california real estate listing
torrance california real estate
appraiser california estate license real
santa clara california real estate
| Rancho El Encino | |
|---|---|
| (U.S. National Register of Historic Places) | |
![]() | |
| Location: | Encino, California |
| Coordinates: | 34°9′35.97″N, 118°28′22″W |
| Built/Founded: | 1845 |
| Architectural style(s): | No Style Listed |
| Added to NRHP: | February 24, 1971 |
| NRHP Reference#: | 71000142 |
| Governing body: | State |
Rancho Los Encinos (also Rancho El Encino and Rancho Encino) was a Spanish grazing concession, cattle and sheep ranch, stagecoach stop, wheat farm, and real estate subdivision in the San Fernando Valley of California near Los Angeles. The heart of the property, where the 19th century adobe and limestone farmhouses still stand near a perennial warm spring just off Ventura Boulevard (the former El Camino Real), is now the Los Encinos State Historic Park in Encino.