Santa Clarita Valley History In Pictures
> RANCHO CAMULOS
Original Wooden Cross
Rancho Camulos Museum


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Three artifacts (or sets of artifacts) from the Rancho Camulos Museum collection were professionally packed up Feb. 17, 2017, and shipped to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C, for inclusion in the "Many Voices, One Nation" exhibit at the National Museum of American History.

The new permanent exhibit, which opens June 28, 2017, "presents the five-hundred-year journey of how many distinct peoples and cultures met, mingled and created the culture of the United States." The artifacts from Rancho Camulos are expected to be on display three years or more.

The artifacts include the late 18th-century red sacred heart from the 1860s Camulos chapel; the original wooden cross from the Del Valle family's chapel garden at Camulos; and a mortar and pestle attributed to the Tataviam people who lived in the Piru area and maintained a village on the (later) Rancho Camulos property until 1803 when they were removed to the San Fernando Mission.

This original wooden cross had been in protective storage at Rancho Camulos Museum. Visitors can see a replica of the cross in the garden area next to the chapel. It is painted white, as the original seems to have been at one time.



TV1702: 9600 dpi jpegs from digital images by Jessica Boyer. Photographed Feb. 17, 2017.
CAMULOS ARTIFACTS
AT SMITHSONIAN

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SCVTV Video &
Élite Magazine

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Sacred Heart

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Wooden Cross 2017

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Wooden Cross 1955

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Mortar & Pestle

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