Antonio F. Coronel | |
Birth Date: | October 21, 1817 |
Birth Place: | Mexico City, Viceroyalty of New Spain |
Death Place: | Los Angeles, California |
Order1: | 8th |
Office1: | California State Treasurer |
Term Start1: | 1867 |
Term End1: | 1871 |
Governor1: | Henry H. Haight |
Preceded1: | Romualdo Pacheco |
Succeeded1: | Ferdinand Baehr |
Order2: | 4th |
Office2: | Mayor of Los Angeles |
Term Start2: | May 3, 1853 |
Term End2: | May 4, 1854 |
Predecessor2: | John G. Nichols |
Successor2: | Stephen Clark Foster |
Order3: | 1st |
Office3: | Los Angeles County Assessor |
Term Start3: | 1850 |
Term End3: | 1856 |
Successor3: | Juan María Sepúlveda |
Spouse: | Mariana W. de Coronel |
Don Antonio Francisco Coronel (October 21, 1817 – April 17, 1894) was a Californio politician and ranchero who was Mayor of Los Angeles and California State Treasurer. Coronel was considered one of the first preservationists in Los Angeles,[1] and his private collection formed the basis of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.[2]
Antonio Francisco Coronel was the son of Ygnacio Coronel, born in Mexico City in the last years of colonial New Spain. Coronel was 17 years of age when he came to Alta California with his parents in 1834, as a part of the Híjar-Padrés Colony.[3]
In 1838, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of Tribunals for the Pueblo de Los Ángeles. In 1843, he became Justice of the Peace (Juez de Paz, the equivalent of Mayor at that time). During the Mexican–American War in 1846–47, Antonio was a captain and sergeant-at-arms in the Mexican artillery and took part in military operations against the United States.
Once the war had ended, Antonio Coronel was the first Los Angeles County Assessor from 1850 to 1856. In 1853, Coronel became Mayor of Los Angeles. Coronel was a ward councilman on the Los Angeles Common Council (1854–1867)[4]
He was the California State Treasurer from 1867 to 1871. In 1873, Coronel married Mariana Williamson.[5]
Coronel collected indigenous artifacts from California and Mexico, and mission-era relics. After his death his widow donated them to the Chamber of Commerce which put them on display in an exhibit of Californiana in their downtown headquarters.[6] Coronel's donated collection made the basis for the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.[7] Antonio Coronel became the owner of Rancho Los Feliz.[8]
He was married to Mariana W. de Coronel.
His brother, Manuel F. Coronel, was the first Zanjero of Los Angeles. He had a sister, Maria Antonio Coronel, who married Alexis Godey in 1863.[9]