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Dallidet Family
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Pierre Hypolite Dallidet (1823-1909)The Dallidet Adobe was acquired by the San Luis Obispo County Historical Society in 1953 from Paul Dallidet, youngest son of Pierre Hypolite Dallidet and Ascención Salazar, feeling that he wanted to preserve what his parents had founded, Paul deeded the property to the then newly formed Historical Society exactly 100 years after his father arrived in San Luis Obispo. Paul resided there until he passed away on February 23, 1958, just months before his 87th birthday.

Pierre Hypolite Dallidet (1823-1909) -
AscenciónSalazar (1840-died in 1873 while giving birth)

 

Their Children

Pierre Hypolite Dallidet was born in France near Melle (Dept. of Deux-Sevres), east of La Rochelle. He was a carpenter by trade. Because of the depressed economic conditions of the 1830's he enlisted in the French Army and left his native land. After serving in Tahiti for a long term he was discharged in 1851 at the age of 28.

  Dallidet Children

He sailed from Tahiti to California on a schooner and went to the gold fields near Hangtown (Placerville). After two years of mining in the rough and tumble Mother Lode he became discouraged and joined a group of French miners who were going to Western Mexico as "filibusterers" or "soldiers of fortune." As he was passing through San Luis Obispo he received word that the Mexican government had captured and executed the leader of his party. He prudently decided to settle here. 

Pierre took lodgings with the family of Gabriel Salazar, a Spanish/Mexican soldier from New Mexico, who owned the land surrounding the Dallidet Adobe as well as farmland in the Chorro Valley (what now is Cuesta College and Camp San Luis). A romance that led to marriage developed between Pierre and Ascención, Gabriel's young daughter.

 

Pierre became a carpenter, farmer and vintner.  He purchased the property surrounding the present Dallidet Adobe in 1859 and constructed a three-room adobe dwelling shortly thereafter. The boys slept in a garret above the three rooms until, in the late 1860's, an addition to the adobe was built out of wood. This addition included the dining room, bedrooms and what are now the caretaker's quarters.

 

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