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New Book: Legendary Locals Of Yosemite NP & Mariposa

Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2015 8:48 am
by ERIC
Legendary Locals Of Yosemite National Park & Mariposa

03/05/2015 6:00 am PST
Mark Truppner, MML Reporter


In his fifth of a series of books that date back to the 1990’s, author and photographer Leroy Radanovich has finished his latest installment called “Legendary Locals of Yosemite National Park and Mariposa County”.

Radanovich was Thursday’s KVML “Newsmaker of the Day”.

The lifelong resident of Mariposa county is a direct cousin of former Congressman George Radanovich, who represented Tuolumne, Mariposa counties and areas further south to Fresno.

The new book will be released to the general public on Monday, March 9th.

According to Radanovich, “In 1846, Thomas Larkin, American council general to the Mexican government in California, purchased a Mexican land grant, Las Mariposas, for Col. John C. Fremont. The grant consisted of 10 square leagues of grazing land located near the Merced River and west of the Sierra.

In 1848, when California became the possession of the United States, the treaty called for the recognition of preexisting grants. Gold was discovered in the foothills of the Sierra that same year. Fremont floated his questionable Mexican grant into the gold discovery region. With the formation of the State of California in 1850, one of the original counties was named Mariposa, Spanish for “butterflies.” Located within the county was the Fremont grant and much of the yet undiscovered Yosemite region of the Sierra.

Encounters with Native Americans near the mining camps lead to the formation of the Mariposa Battalion, and a search for the...

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