Agustin Olvera
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Agustin Olvera (died 1876) was a pioneer of Los Angeles, California.
[edit] Biography
Olvera arrived from Mexico in 1834 where he had been a Juez de Paz (Justice of the Peace). Olvera held various offices in the Mexican administration. Agustin Olvera was granted Rancho Mission Viejo in 1842 and the 35,501-acre (143.67 km2) Rancho Cuyamaca in 1845.
Olvera helped to bridge the gap between the governance of California by Mexico and the United States. As a commissioner he signed the Treaty of Cahuenga ending the war in California. U.S. Military Governor Bennet Riley appointed Olvera to be Judge of the First Instance in 1849. Augustin Olvera was subsequently elected the first county judge of the newly formed County of Los Angeles in 1850. He relied upon a bilingual Sheriff to translate the proceedings from Spanish because he did not speak English when he first took the bench. Along with his legal duties, Olvera was responsible, with his two associate justices, for administering county business until the establishment of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors two years later. When his term expired in 1853, he entered the private practice of law. He was a Los Angeles County Supervisor in 1855.[1]
In 1877, the Los Angeles City Council changed the name of Wine Street to Olvera Street in his honor. He held the first county trials in his home near the historic Olvera Street marketplace and plaza.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Supervisor Agustin Olvera
- ^ Edward Robbins, Rodolphe El-Khoury (2004). Shaping the City: Studies in History, Theory and Urban Design . Routledge. p. 132. ISBN 0415261880. http://books.google.com/books?id=Dbv-zU6M9WIC&pg=PA132&ots=0X7j7PjCLX&dq=%22Agustin+Olvera%22&as_brr=3&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html&sig=93aybaiPdsKGZ2lkjf1toj4gMSg.

