After suffering harassment from organized criminal gangs and being subjected to a special tax imposed on foreign miners, he and Sampson changed their plans, joined with two French immigrants, Theodore Sicard and Charles Covillaud, and acquired most of the Rancho Cordua in
Yuba County, at the confluence of the
Yuba and
Feather Rivers. Sampson died shortly after, at the age of only thirty-one. This was a strategic point for steamboats travelling from San Francisco to the goldfields and soon after became part of the city of
Marysville. After that, Ramírez was primarily engaged in agricultural pursuits and imported some of California's first wine grape vines from Chile. In 1853, the writer
Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna reported that Ramírez' farm produced some of the best watermelons in the state. With wood from Chile, he built a manorial residence which is still standing in the center of Marysville and is known as the "
Ramírez Castle/Ellis House". A small
unincorporated town just outside Marysville is named after him. s with a
Faun. Despite these successes, he suffered from the racist attitudes prevalent at the time. In 1854, under the pretext of searching for stagecoach robbers, a
vigilante group entered his home, confiscated his weapons, and shot him, leaving him seriously injured. == References ==