Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Santa Barbara County, California

view all

Profiles

  • Chloedine "Chloe" Atchison (c.1857 - 1921)
    Chloe was Joseph Craig's second wife. She was killed in a car wreck while traveling for Eastern Star Prior to Joseph, she was married to Wesley Dodd and Willis Routzahn
  • Sir Tobias Clarke, 6th Baronet (1939 - 2019)
    Sir Charles Mansfield Tobias Clarke, 6th Baronet Sir Tobias Clarke was a British businessman. Clarke was the son of Sir Humphrey Clarke, 5th Baronet and was educated at Eton, Christ Church, ...
  • Josiah Dwight Whitney, Jr. (1919 - 2001)
    Curator's Note : See his obituary, under Sources , for a list of publications he wrote for. -- Jessica Marie German -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------...
  • Beverly Jean Taylor (1931 - 2012)
    GREEN-ORANGE Pocahontas is Beverly's 10th great-grandmother. Member of The Powhatan Tribe of Virginia. Beverly Jean Taylor → Joseph Avon Bushnell her father → Martha Hannah Lees Bushnell his mother ...
  • Delbert Clothier Taylor (1929 - 2017)
    BROWN-BLACK Delbert "Clothier" Taylor 29 June 1929 ~ 18 May 2017 Delbert C. Taylor was born in Los Angeles, California on June 29, 1929 to Edwin Taylor and Florence Clothier and passed through the ve...

The Santa Barbara County area, including the Northern Channel Islands, was first settled by Native Americans at least 13,000 years ago. Evidence for a Paleoindian presence has been found in the form of a fluted Clovis-like point found in the 1980s along the western Santa Barbara Coast, as well as the remains of Arlington Springs Man found on Santa Rosa Island in the 1960s. For thousands of years, the area was home to the Chumash tribe of Native Americans, complex hunter-gatherers who lived along the coast and in interior valleys leaving rock art in many locations, including Painted Cave.

Europeans first contacted the Chumash in AD 1542, when three Spanish ships under the command of Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo explored the area. The Santa Barbara Channel received its name from Spanish explorer Sebastián Vizcaíno when he sailed along the California coast in 1602; his ships entered the channel on December 4, the day of the feast of Santa Barbara. Spanish ships associated with the Manila Galleon trade probably made emergency stops along the coast during the next 167 years, but no permanent settlements were established.

The first land expedition to explore California, led by Gaspar de Portolà explored the coastal area in 1769, on its way to Monterey Bay. The party traveled the same route on the return to San Diego in January 1770. That same year, a second expedition to Monterey again passed through the area. The DeAnza expeditions of 1774-76 followed Portola's trail.

The Presidio of Santa Barbara was established in 1782 (4th of 5 in California), followed by Mission Santa Barbara in 1786 – both in what is now the city of Santa Barbara. The presidio and mission kept Vizcaino's denomination, as did the later city and county – a common practice which has preserved the names of many of the 21 California Missions. Other missions in Santa Barbara County are located in Santa Ynez and Lompoc.

European contacts had devastating effects on the Chumash people, including a series of disease epidemics that drastically reduced Chumash population. The Chumash survived, however, and thousands of Chumash descendants still live in the Santa Barbara area or surrounding counties. A tribal homeland was established in 1901, the Santa Ynez Reservation.

Following the Mexican secularization of the missions in the 1830s, the mission pasture lands were mostly broken up into large ranchos and granted mainly to prominent local citizens who already lived in the area. 604 of these land grants were later confirmed by the state of California, with 36 in Santa Barbara County.

Santa Barbara County was one of the 27 original counties of California, formed in 1850 at the time of statehood. The county's territory was later divided to create Ventura County in 1873.

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of California

Links

Wikipedia