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ADDRESS: Branciforte Drive
HOURS OF OPERATION:
Park Hours - 7 am to sunset
Ballfields open to 11 pm during games
Archery Range - Noon to 4 pm Saturday and Sunday
DeLaveaga
Disc Golf Parking Permits effective February 23, 2009
MAP
OF DELAVEAGA PARK AVAILABLE FACILITIES: Picnic
Areas - reservable and non-reservable
Ballfields - reservable and non-reservable
Playground equipment Golf
Course Restroom, drinking fountain and phone Archery Range - link
to Santa Cruz Archers
web site. TRAILS: Trails are open to hikers and bicyclists.
Please stay on designated trails. DOG REGULATIONS: Dogs
must be on a leash at all times. Dogs prohibited on athletic fields. A designated
area within DeLaveaga Park allows off-leash dog use. Please call 420-6160 for
more information. PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES: Fires,
camping, littering, wood gathering, collection of plants or animals, hunting,
archery except within the designated archery range No amplified
music. Excessive noise prohibited. No alcohol, except in reservable
picnic areas designated and approved by the Director of the Parks and Recreation
Department PARKING/ENTRANCES: Parking available on-site
at the lower park facility and George Washington Grove, both located off of Branciforte
Drive. Speed limit 15 MPH within park boundaries. Trail entrances
Lower park facility (near restrooms) - On-site parking available
Branciforte Drive (just north of Goss Avenue) - Limited parking in unimproved
parking lot Park Way - Limited residential street parking
Brookwood Drive - Limited residential street parking DELAVEAGA
PANORAMAS Click
on images below to see 360* panoramas. DeLaveaga
Park Photo Gallery Page DeLaveaga Park History José Vincente DeLaveaga
was a successful businessman and financier from San Francisco. Born in Mexico
in 1844, DeLaveaga moved with his family to San Francisco in 1868. In 1887 he
bought his first piece of land in Santa Cruz and continued acquiring more parcels
for the next several years. The land which is now DeLaveaga Park was a vacation
spot, or hacienda, for the DeLaveagas.
Horses were a central
part of hacienda culture, so the land was criss-crossed with bridal trails leading
to La Corona, the highest peak of the estate. The picturesque location also included
many interesting plants imported from Spain and Mexico and even a zoo with deer,
fox, bears and buffalo. When he died in 1894, José DeLaveaga
left more than three quarters of his nearly one million dollar estate to a variety
of charities ranging from orphanages to the SPCA to Golden Gate Park. In addition
to his 565 acres in Santa Cruz county he left 50 acres to a proposed asylum for
the hearing, speech and vision impaired and the remainder to the City and County
of Santa Cruz for a public park. Unfortunately, a state law prohibited leaving
more than one third of the total value of an estate to charity if there were surviving
heirs, and though he was unmarried he did have next of kin including a brother,
two sisters and nieces and nephews. The will was contested and a San Francisco
judge entered a ruling that radically modified the will, reducing many bequests,
eliminating the asylum while fortunately retaining the park. The land was officially
turned over to the City and County in 1900. Over the years, the
park has provided space for many activities--an archery range, a National Guard
Armory, a Boy Scout camp, the SPCA animal shelter, a stage for outdoor entertainment,
trails for hiking and picnic grounds for sunny afternoons. Today, though the Boy
Scout camp, the animal shelter and the zoo are long gone, DeLaveaga Park remains
a park full of natural beauty and fine facilities for public use.
DeLaveaga's dream for his hacienda is a reality: a place for the public to enjoy
for years to come. Back
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