Rancho Las Palmas

[2] Today, the historic mansion is located in a gated residential community named Las Palmas Ranch and was renamed Chateau Coralini, which is open to the public as a boutique inn.

The Hiram Corey mansion is a three-story, wood-frame, single-family residence built in a Queen Anne style.

It has redwood siding, banded with fish-scale shingles halfway into the second story, with a hipped roof and tower with a brass eagle finial detail.

[2] After Corey died in 1913, his second wife, Frances, inherited the deed of conveyance on the real and personal property that was worth approximately $200,000 (equivalent to $6,165,657 in 2023).

The Violini family ran the ranch as a self-contained dairy farm where they also had hundreds of chickens, cured their own bacon, and ham from the hogs they raised, milked the cows, canned the fruit, and baled the hay.

In 1979, the Violini family sold the property to the Las Palmas Ranch Venture which began the process to subdivide the land for future development.

[7][9] In May 2003, the historic Corey House mansion was bought by Samuel and Linda Persall and converted to a bed and breakfast inn.

A children's dollhouse, built by the Las Palmas Development Company, was purchased by the Persalls and brought to the estate.

Chateau Coralini (also known as Rancho Las Palmas or Hiram Corey house)