Rancho Huerta de Cuati

Rancho Huerta de Cuati was a 127 acre Mexican land grant in the San Rafael Hills area of present-day Los Angeles County, California given in 1838 by governor Juan Alvarado to Victoria Reid. The name means "Cuati Garden" in Spanish. The rancho included present-day Alhambra, San Marino, South Pasadena, and Pasadena—and Lake Wilson (now San Marino's Lacy Park).

History
Rancho Huerta de Cuati had been part of the lands of Mission San Gabriel Arcángel before the Mexican government secularized the missions in 1834. It was one of the few Mexican grants given to a Native American. With the assistance of influential Eulalia Pérez de Guillén Mariné, keeper of the keys at the mission, Victoria Reid (Tongva) received the rancho for her past service to the mission. Her husband, Hugo Reid was not listed on the title because he was not yet a Mexican citizen. He was naturalized in 1839.

When Mexico ceded California to the United States following the Mexican-American War, the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that its historic land grants would be honored. But, the United States required by the Land Act of 1851 that Mexican citizens had to file claims for their land holdings. Reid filed a claim for Rancho Huerta de Cuati with the Public Land Commission in 1852. The grant was patented to Victoria Reid in 1859.
 * United States

Hugo Reid died in 1852. The American court appointed a conservator, Benjamin Davis Wilson, purportedly to protect the widow Victoria Reid, as an indigenous woman was not believed to be competent. But in 1854 she sold Rancho Huerta de Cuati for a nominal cost to Wilson. Although literate, she reportedly signed the deed with a cross. Having gotten control, Wilson renamed the property as "Lake Vineyard Ranch". The ranch had a 40 acre shallow pond fed by streams of Old Mill El Molino Viejo Canyon and Wilson Canyon (Wilson-Woodbury Creek of Washington Park).

Later, Wilson deeded the main portion of the rancho to his son-in-law, James de Barth Shorb. He named his rancho after his grandfather's plantation in Maryland. That property had been named for the Republic of San Marino, in Italy.