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==History== [[Junípero Serra]] had started some missions in this area, especially the San Gabriel mission. By 1806, the natives, now called [[Gabrieleño]]s than Sejats, were forced into labor to build the mission. Corporal [[Manuel Nieto (soldier)|José Manuel Nieto]], then 65 year old, petitioned [[Pedro Fages]] as the Governor for a little land. In 1789, Fagas received official permission for the grant. Nieto's was one of the largest at {{convert|300000|acre|km2}} , from the Pacific Ocean to the Puente Hills. This became known as the "Rancho La Zanja", to which he moved with his wife Teresa and his son, Juan José. This area soon became a large cattle empire, and later would be the Santa Fe Springs' area.<ref name=SFSPRINGS>{{cite book|title=Santa Fe Springs : a pictorial history |author=Jenseon, Marilyn|publisher=Donning Company|date=1991|pages=10–11}}</ref> Dr. James E. Fulton came to the area as an agent for the San Gertrudes Land Company in 1871. He found a [[Mineral spring|sulfur spring]] when drilling a well and developed it by 1874 into a health spa with a 2-story sanitarium-hotel called Fulton's Sulfur Wells<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hammon |first1=Margaret |title=Volume 8: Los Angeles Recovers With a Little Help from a Big Railroad |url=https://www.santafesprings.org/library/local_history/history/volume_8.asp |website=Santa Fe Springs City Library |publisher=Santa Fe Springs Cultural Arts |access-date=May 13, 2022 |quote=Fulton Wells -- A Place to Cure What Ails You}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=McNutt |first1=William Fletcher |title=Mineral and Thermal Springs of California |date=1888 |publisher=Press of Wm. F. Fell & Company |location=San Francisco, California |page=2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z4U9AQAAMAAJ&q=Fulton%27s+Sulphur+Wells}}</ref> in the area around what today would be Heritage Park. It included a windmill to draw water into the pool for bathers. In the beginning he had about 400 patients there annually.<ref>Jenseon, p. 45–46</ref> Later, in 1886, the [[Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway]] purchased land from Fulton to run the train line from Los Angeles to San Diego, changing the town since now there was rail transportation.<ref>Jenseon p. 46</ref> In 1907, the [[Union Oil Company]] of California began drilling near the intersection of Norwalk Blvd. and Telegraph Road, locally known as "Four Corners," with the spudding in of the Meyer No. 1 well. That well, and a subsequent one, failed. In 1921 the Union-Bell well blew in as a 2,500-barrel gusher and set off an oil rush by major oil companies and fly-by-night producers. Within a year the Santa Fe Springs oil field was considered one of the richest pools in petroleum history. Santa Fe Springs became a promoters' paradise. Prospective investors were bused into the field, served a free lunch in circus tents, and told stories about the fortunes made in oil. In 1923 the state legislature limited the amount of stock that could be sold in a well. In the 1920s the field produced as much as 345,000 barrels daily, exceeding production at [[Signal Hill, California|Signal Hill]] and [[Huntington Beach]]. Production slowed as the decade went on, and by 1928 the Wilshire Oil Company was drilling in deep sand levels. Production levels dropped each year from then on, but by 1938 the field had yielded a total of more than 440,000,000 barrels of oil.<ref>Work Project Administration, "Los Angeles". Hastings House, 1941, pp. 337–338.</ref> Santa Fe Springs is the birthplace of the [[Shelby Cobra]]. In 1962 [[Carroll Shelby]] set up shop in [[Dean Moon]]'s speed shop in Santa Fe Springs. Shelby had AC Cars of [[Surrey]], England ship cars without a motor or drive train to the Santa Fe shop. Shelby shoe-horned a 260-cubic-inch V8 into the tiny, lightweight British roadster and the Cobra was born: a British sports car with American hot rod power.<ref name="Shelby">{{cite book |last1=Shelby |first1=Carroll |title=The Carroll Shelby Story |date=1965 |publisher=Graymalkin Media LLC |isbn=9781631682872 |pages=172–183}}</ref>
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