A folkloric dancers voluminous skirt is part of the show in Old Town San Diego State Historic Park. For a brief but influential period from the early 1820s to the late 1840s California was Mexican. One of those early settlements lives on as San Diegos Old Town district. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
Two modern-day visitors stroll past the Pacific House Museum in Monterey State Historic Park, which features painted figures on its second-floor veranda. Exhibits inside tell the fascinating history of when Monterey was the capital of Spanish and Mexican California. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
Papel picado banners, or traditional Mexican paper cutouts, decorate a walkway at Old Town San Diego State Historic Park. Dancers, guitarists, margaritas and merchandise all move fast at the historic park, which is surrounded by a neighborhood full of more food, drink and goods. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
Visitors with good imaginations can wander around San Juan Bautista State Historic Park and put themselves back in the days when the Plaza Hotel was newly constructed and teeming with customers. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
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Fourth-grader Vincent Xiong is dressed in character for a reenactment at Sutters Fort State Historic Park in Sacramento. To help make Californias past come to life, Vincent and his classmates each had a historic personage to portray. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
A low sun throws rays across the 1827 Custom House in Monterey State Historic Park. In Old California, the Monterey waterfront was key to everything, and the Custom House is where California met the world. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
An old bell hangs on the grounds of Sutters Fort, which has been outfitted with 1846 in mind just a few short years before gold was discovered in nearby Colona and the Gold Rush was on. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
Quaint shops line 3rd Street in San Juan Bautista, Calif. The community is also home to a mission that gave San Juan Bautista its name. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
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With its beautiful roses and statue, the garden at Mission San Juan Bautista is a peaceful place to contemplate the states colorful past. The mission near Monterey was founded in 1797. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
Take a break from exploring the states Mexican past with a visit to downtown Sonoma. The old plaza is lined with upscale restaurants and shops. Its also where, in 1823, Spanish Franciscans founded San Francisco Solano, their last California mission. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
Key points in 19th century state history are told in tile work at Monterey State Historic Park. Many of the towns old adobes have survived, and the state runs nearly a dozen of them as the historic park. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)
A gaggle of fourth-graders learns a thing or two about the California Gold Rush by dressing the part at Sutters Fort State Historic Park in Sacramento. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)