Wedding & Special Events at Rancho
Camulos
Rancho Camulos offers a unique and idyllic setting for special events. The
historic buildings are surrounded by beautiful landscape features that include
orange orchards, extensive rose gardens, and views of the Santa Clara
mountains. Areas of the museum available for events include the expansive
south lawn, the main adobe courtyard lawn and school house lawn; the chapel
porch for wedding ceremonies; and the school house for business meetings and
smaller functions.
The charm of Camulos is also due in part to its
remoteness from the frenetic activity of urban life and the drama of the Santa
Clara River Valley's rugged mountains. Nowhere else can one experience a
rancho of this type in its historic context, yet the museum's location halfway
between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara (a 50 minute drive from either city),
makes it easily accessible to guests from the tri-county area in Los Angeles,
Ventura, and Santa Barbara.
Rancho Camulos Museum is a National Historic
Landmark that stands as a vibrant reminder of California's Spanish and Mexican
heritage. Set within an 1800 acre working ranch in the scenic Santa Clara
River Valley, Rancho Camulos is the only Mexican land grant rancho still
preserved in its original rural environment that is open to the public.
Rancho Camulos is most famous for its place in
literary history as the inspiration for Helen Hunt Jackson's novel Ramona,
first published in 1884 and still in print today. The love story, set in early
California, offers poetic descriptions of Southern California's landscape and
a romanticized vision of the Hispanic mission and rancho period. This image
sparked both tourism and migration to the state in huge numbers from the late
1880s until the beginning of WWII. Camulos quickly became known as "The Home
of Ramona" attracting hordes of tourists hoping to seek a glimpse of a the
novel's fictional heroine. The story also served as the inspiration of four
feature films, the first of which - a 1910 silent version starring Mary
Pickford - was filmed at Camulos.
Site-use guidelines and an event application can
be downloaded as a (1 Mb) Acrobat file.
Click here
Please refer to the
February 2007 Newsletter
(966 Kb).
Or
contact us by email:
ranchocamulos@earthlink.net
