Ávila family of California
The Ávila family was a prominent Californio family of Spanish origins from Southern California, founded by Cornelio Ávila in the 1780s. Numerous members of the family held important rancho grants and political positions, including two Alcaldes of Los Angeles.
Cornelio Ávila
Cornelio Ávila was born at El Fuerte del Marqués de Montesclaros in New Navarre, New Spain. When Antonio Cornelio Ávila was born about 1745, his father, Wilibardo Avila, was 55 and his mother, Olga Lidia Ruíz Maldonado, was 20.Cornelio was a Spanish soldier who served in Alta California, then stayed to settle in the two-year-old Pueblo de Nuestra Señora Reina de los Ángeles sobre el Río Porciúncula in 1783 with his wife María Ysabel Urquídez and 6 children: José de Santa Ana Ávila y Urquídez, Francisco José Ávila, Agustina Ávila , Anastasio Ávila, Antonio Ignacio Ávila, Ildefonsa Ávila.
After settling in Los Angeles, three Californio children were born: Bruno Ygnacio Ávila, María Hilaria Ávila, and José María Ávila. Cornelio Ávila died while visiting Santa Barbara in 1800, and was buried at the Presidio Cemetery.
José de Santa Ana Ávila
José de Santa Ana Ávila y Urquídez, was born in Pueblo De Baca, in the Viceroyalty of New Spain, one of several sons of Cornelio Ávila. José de Santa Ana married María Josefa Osuna y Alvarado in 1792. He was also a Spanish soldier at Santa Barbara 1801–1806.Miguel Ávila
Miguel Ávila was a Californio son of José de Santa Ana Ávila, born in Los Angeles. In 1816 he enlisted in the Presidio Real de Monterey company, and in 1824 was corporal of the guard at [Mission San Luis Obispo|La Misión de San Luis Obispo de Tolosa]. In 1826 he married María Innocenta Pico, daughter of José Dolores Pico. Miguel Ávila was the grantee of Rancho San Miguelito in 1842, and alcalde of San Luis Obispo in 1849.María Ignacia Marcia Ávila
María Ignacia Marcia Ávila was a daughter of José de Santa Ana Ávila y Urquídez and María Josefa Osuna y Alvarado. She married José Dolores Sepúlveda of Rancho de los Palos Verdes in 1813. After his death she married José Antonio Machado of Rancho La Ballona.Francisco Ávila
Francisco Ávila was a wealthy ranchero and alcalde of the pueblo of Los Angeles 1810–1811. Ávila was a Spaniard native of El Fuerte, New Spain, which at the time was part of Spain. He was one of several sons of Cornelio Ávila and his wife. Francisco came to Los Angeles sometime after 1794. In 1810, Francisco Ávila became alcalde of the pueblo of Los Angeles. The pueblo's population at the time grew to 415 inhabitants.In 1823, the Mexican government granted him of land Rancho Las Ciénegas, near the La Brea Pits, approximately seven miles west of the pueblo. Ávila grazed cattle here and turned it into a profitable venture. The Ávila land grant was bordered on three sides by four other ranchos. In later years Ávila and the other owners had many boundary disputes. The Avila Adobe built in 1818 by Francisco Ávila, still stands today in the heart of historic Olvera Street.
In November 1826, Ávila was one of the local notables invited to La Misión del Santo Príncipe El Arcángel, San Gabriel de Los Temblores by Father José Bernardo Sánchez to meet American explorer Jedediah Smith, the first to travel overland to California from the United States.
Francisco Ávila married María del Rosario Verdugo in 1810; she was the daughter of Mariano Verdugo and María Gregoria Espinosa. After María del Rosario Ávila died in 1822, Francisco married María Encarnación Sepúlveda, the daughter of Francisco Sepúlveda, owner of Rancho San Vicente y Santa Mónica, and his wife.
Francisco Ávila died on April 5, 1832. His four children were granted the patent to Rancho Las Ciénegas in 1871.