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You are here: Welcome to Historic Monterey!Historic Monterey BuildingsLara-Soto Adobe

Lara-Soto Adobe


Historic Buildings
Alvarado Adobe
Boston Store
California's First Theatre
Casa Amesti
Casa Gutierrez
Casa Serrano
Casa Soberanes
Casa de la Torre
Colton Hall
Cooper-Molera Adobe
Custom House
Doud House
Duarte's Store
First Brick House
First French Consulate
Fisherman's Wharf
Fremont Adobe
House of Four Winds
Lara-Soto Adobe
Larkin House
Mayo Hayes O'Donnell Library
Merritt House
Mission Carmel
Old Jail
Old Whaling Station
Osio Adobe
Pacific House
Perry-Downer House
Royal Presidio Chapel
Simoneau House
Stevenson House
Thomas Cole House
Vasquez Adobe

LARA - SOTO ADOBE
        The Lara-Soto Adobe's early history bears an atmosphere of mystery. While legal records show that the property was first granted to Dona Feliciana Lara in 1849 (one of the few lots granted directly to a woman), legend says that the huge Monterey cypress in the front yard was planted as a seedling over the grave of a child who died in infancy in a house that stood there in the 1830s. The property disappeared from the tax rolls in the 1860s, but it reappears in the 1890s, occupied by Manuel Soto and his Indian wife, Felicidad.
         In any case, the adobe was still registered to Dona Lara until 1905 when her estate sold it for back-taxes. Josephine Blanch, an artist, purchased the adobe in 1919, restored it, and lived there until October, 1944, when she sold it to John Steinbeck.
         Steinbeck, his second wife, Gwyn, and their infant son, Thom, lived there for just one eventful year. In January, 1945, his novel Cannery Row was published; in April, the Steinbecks left for Mexico, where Emilio Fernandez was filming The Pearl, never to return. Still, Steinbeck loved it, calling it "a house I have wanted since I was a little kid."
         After Steinbeck sold the house, it was used as a doctor's office before being given to the Monterey Institute of International Studies. The building was extensively remodeled by MIIS in 1987, maintaining the original style of the façade.

Lara-Soto Adobe
460 Pierce Street
Monterey, CA 93940
Latitude: 36.599358
Longitude: -121.896694

Ownership: Private ownership
Open: The building serves as the Monterey Institute for International Studies Admissions Office, and is not generally open to the public.



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