Richard S. Den
Richard Somerset Den (1821–1895), a native of
County Kilkenny, Ireland, had followed his brother Nicolas, to Santa Barbara in 1843. Richard Den practiced medicine in
Los Angeles with the exception of a brief sojourn in 1848–1850 prospecting for gold in Calaveras County, and a decade's absence (1854–1866) to administer Rancho San Marcos, until 1895. Den also aroused a certain awe in his later days as he made his rounds astride a black charger, dressed in black and wearing a black felt hat atop "a clustered mass of wavy hair as white as snow". A participant in the
Mexican–American War, Richard S. Den served as the chief physician and surgeon for the Mexican forces. He treated
Californios and the American prisoners, including
Benjamin D. Wilson and his party captured at the
Battle of Chino in 1846. ==Later owners==