An expediente was submitted on August 29, 1835.[1] The rancho was owned and occupied by Juan María Marrón in 1836.
The rancho was already established in 1836 when it was attacked by the Kumeyaay people at the beginning of their hostilities against the ranchos of the San Diego region. Its defenders managed to kill several of the attackers and repelled the raid.[2] The grant, being wholly in Mexican territory, was never presented before the Land Commission of the State of California.[3]
Rancho Curero de Venedo is noted as still being in existence in a report of settlements and ranchos in Baja California Norte in 1906, indicating that the grant was confirmed by the Mexican government like the Rancho Tía Juana in the 1880s.[4]
The rancho's region in the southeast of Tijuana Municipality still bears the name "Cueros de Venedo".[5]
^Hubert Howe Bancroft, Henry Lebbeus Oak, Frances Fuller Victor, William Nemos, History of California, Volume 20: History of California (1825-1840), History Company, San Francisco, 1886, p.611, note 7