José MarÃÂa Verdugo (1751 – 1831) was a Californio soldier from the Presidio of San Diego who was assigned to the Mission San Gabriel Arcángel at the time his land was granted by the Spanish Empire in 1784.
José MarÃÂa Verdugo (Carrillo) was born about 1751 in Presidio de Loreto, Baja California, New Spain to Juan Diego Verdugo and MarÃÂa Ygnacia de la Concepción Carrillo. José MarÃÂa Verdugo came to California with his brother, Mariano Verdugo, in the 1769 Rivera expedition. Verdugo married MarÃÂa de la Encarnación López in 1779, and they had 11 children.
In 1784, Verdugo requested and received a grant from his army commander Governor Pedro Fages to settle and graze his cattle on what became Rancho San Rafael, also known as La Zanja. Corporal Verdugo's grant consisted of eight square leagues () of land stretching roughly from the Arroyo Seco in present-day Pasadena to the Mission San Fernando. In 1798 he retired from the army to become a full-time rancher, and title to his property was established by Spanish Governor Diego de Borica.
After a long illness, Verdugo died on 13 April 1831, at Mission San Gabriel, leaving his property to his son Julio Antonio Verdugo and daughter MarÃÂa Catalina Verdugo. He was buried at the cemetery at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel.
Julio Antonio Verdugo (1789 - 1876), son of José MarÃÂa Verdugo, married MarÃÂa de Jesus Romero, and had the following children: Teodoro, Chrisóstimo, Fernando, Pedro, José MarÃÂa, Querino/Quirino, Rafael, Guillermo, Vittorio, Rafaela (first married to Fernando Sepúlveda then to Tomás ÃÂvila Sánchez), and Maria Antonia (married Chabolla).
Catalina Verdugo (1792–1871), the blind unmarried daughter of José MarÃÂa Verdugo, lived at the Catalina Adobe with Julio Verdugo's son, Teodoro's family.