CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Moraga's name reaches back to a Californio rancho

Moraga's name connects the town to Joaquin Moraga, Juan Bernal, Rancho Laguna de los Palos Colorados, and Contra Costa's older ranch landscape.

MoragaRancho Laguna de los Palos ColoradosContra Costa County

Moraga’s name carries an older California story. The town is named for Jose Joaquin de la Santissima Trinidad Moraga, a rancher whose family ties reached back to early Spanish expeditions and settlement in Alta California.

In the 1830s, Joaquin Moraga and his cousin Juan Bernal asked for a land grant from Mexican Alta California. The grant became Rancho Laguna de los Palos Colorados, a large ranch of more than 13,000 acres. That rancho name still gives the area a sense of age and place, even though today’s Moraga is better known for schools, homes, trails, and quiet hills.

That older layer gives Moraga some of its tucked-away feeling. The town sits beyond the Oakland hills, where travel once took more effort and ranch land lasted longer. Roads, subdivisions, and modern town services came later.

For a first look, notice the hills and the town’s slower pace. Moraga is part of the East Bay, but its older layer is rancho land, family names, and a valley that kept a quieter shape than the cities closer to the bay.

Where to see it

Moraga near Rheem Boulevard, Moraga Road, and the hills east of Oakland.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 2, 2026

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