The Salvador Vallejo Adobe is a historic building located in Sonoma, California in the United States.
The home was originally built by "Indian laborers" for Salvador and María de Carrillo Vallejo.
[1][2] Carrillo Vallejo decorated interior with imported furniture, embroidery (made by Indian servants[2]), engravings, and Catholic art.
Edwin Bryant described the parlor as being decorated with "handsome chairs, sofas, mirrors and tables of mahogany frame work and a fine piano , the first I have seen in the country."
The balcony, which remains today, extends from the north to south side of the building facing the Sonoma Plaza.
[1] They also installed window shelving, tile flooring, fluorescent lights, and redwood siding on the walls.