I think only one.
Isabella & Marina Vasquez De Coronado.
His Parents were People named Jaun Vasquez And Isabel Luijan
Colorado was discovered by a Spanish explorer named Francisco Vasquez De Coronado.
Coronado has two main things he did for modern life. First, Coronado island (which is actually a peninsula), near San Diego, is named after him. Also, Coronado is mentioned in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. At the beginning Indy is fighting for a silver cross called Coronado's cross. The ship he goes on to fight for the cross is also called The Coronado.
Yes, Coronado Island in California, Coronado National Forest in Arizona, and Coronado National Memorial in Arizona have been named after Francisco de Coronado, a Spanish explorer known for his expedition in search of the Seven Cities of Gold in the 16th century.
one place is walt disney world coronado springs
Coronado National Memorial near Sierra Vista, Arizona. Coronado Bridge, San Diego. Coronado Heights, Lindsborg, Kansas, Coronado High Schools in Lubbock, Texas, El Paso, Texas, and in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Coronado Road in Phoenix, Arizona.
He found the Grand Canyon, which is now a historical land mark.The above answer is a common misconception.Francisco Vasquez de Coronado did not discover/find the Grand Canyon. A scouting party led by Captain Garcia Lopez de Cardenas, along with Hopi guides and a small group of Spanish soldiers did. The main expedition led by de Coronado did not come within 150 miles of the Grand Canyon.
San Francisco, California, comes to mind.
The bush! is where he found a bear named bunny. him and bunny were the best of friends. So francisco went up s looong hill where there was bunnys and natives and grass dirt and a giant rock. which bunny hit and broke his toe and so he leand on because he broke his toe. what he didnt know is that it was not stable so it rolled in a village and crushed everyone in the way.and so francisco killed the chef of the natives so he got captured and never been seen again.the end tada
Juan Ponce de Leon set out from Puerto Rico and landed in Florida in 1513 near Melbourne Beach on Florida's east coast in search of gold, not the Fountain of Youth as many believe. Francisco Vasquez de Coronado set out from Compostela, in Northern Mexico, in 1640 in order to find a legendary city of gold called Cibola that a priest named Friar Marcos had said that he'd been to with his slave, Estevanico. Coronado travelled through Mexico, Arizona, New Mexico, the panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma, and went as far as central Kansas before returning to Mexico.
There are over thirty places named Independence in the US. The one in Missouri is a little over 1800 miles from San Francisco.