The 'Treaty of Cahuenga' ended the fighting of the
Mexican-American War in
California.
The treaty was approved by Lieutenant-Colonel
John C. Fremont and General
Andrés Pico on
January 13,
1847 on the kitchen table of
Tomás Feliz's six-room
adobe house at
Campo de Cahuenga in what is now
North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. The treaty allowed the
Californios who fought under the
Mexican Flag to return home after giving up their artillery, and provided that all prisoners from both sides be immediately freed. Under the later
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848),
Mexico formally ceded
Alta California and other territories to the
United States and the disputed border of
Texas was fixed at the
Rio Grande / Río Bravo del Norte.
Signed by
★ Lt. Col
John C. Frémont,
US Army
★
General Andrés Pico,
Californio Forces
★
Jose Antonio Carrillo,
Californio Commandante de Esquadron
★
Agustin Olvera,
Californio Diputado
★ P. B. Reading, Major California Battalion
★ William H. Russell, Ordnance Officer of California Battalion
★ Louis McLane, Jr., Commanding Artillery California Battalion