Qass. BookA .^.cg^ ~y ^^^^^^£;££ INGERSOLUS CENTURY HISTORY SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES [BEING BOOK NUMBER TWO OF INGERSOLL S CENTURY SERIES OF CALIFORNIA \ LOCAL HISTORY ANNALS] PREFACED WITH A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA A CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 1542 TO 1908 SUPPLEMENTED WITH AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LOCAL BIOGRAPHY ^ EMBELLISHED WITH VIEWS OF HISTORIC LANDMARKS AND PORTRAITS OF REPRESENTATIVE PEOPLE LUTHER A. INGERSOLL 'I LOS ANGELES 1908 p^^ r1^ To the memory of the late WILLIAMSON D. VAWTER Foremost pioneer citizen in promoting the civic, industrial and moral welfare of Santa Monica, and whose life was an inspiration to noble deeds, this vol- ume of local history is dedicated by The Author. PREFACE THE publication of this book is in no degree an accident, but rather the partial fulfillment of a long-cherished plan to sometime put in permanent and fitting form the annals of some of the more historic and romantic cities and towns of Southern California. This ambition dates back to the winter season of 1888-9, when the writer arrived in the " Golden State ". became im- pressed with the transcendent richness of its past history and its abundant promise of future growth and history-making. What might have been regarded, at the time, a fancy, or inspiration, has. with the rapid passing of two decades, devel- oped into a vivid reality. Obscure hamlets have become prosperous cities; where then were open stock ranges and broad fields of grain, have sprung up marts of trade and commerce, environed by progressive and prosperous com- munities. Enough time has elapsed for these cities and communities to have acquired a historv, still not enough for any considerable portion of that history to be lost. A few vears hence, conditions in this latter respect will have entirely changed. The region of country of which this story treats lies within the original confines of four Spanish-Mexican land grants bordering the bay of Santa ^lonica and has hitherto received scant attention from historical writers. When the good works of Hubert Howe Bancroft and Judge Theodore H. Hittell were written the wonderful developments of the past tw^enty years had not transpired and the work of m.ore recent writers has been of so superficial a nature as not to be of special historical value. The writing of history is not the thought or work of a day, but rather the diligent pursuance of a fixed and determined purpose. The writer of fiction may work from an inspiration based upon fertile imagination; the newspaper writer is the chronicler of current events ; the descriptive writer of travel pictures that which he then and there observes ; but the historian makes a truthful record of the past, stating only that which has actually transpired. He indulges in no ideals, must be keen in discrimination, never self-opinionated or self-assertive, must be untiring in research, a faithful, patient, plodding gleaner of facts and an inherent lover of the truth. Lacking these virtues he is without his calling. The brief historv of California and Los Angeles county is herewith given as a preface to the local history in order that the reader may have a connected storv from the date of the discovery of the country. The state chaj^ers are, with the exception of some changes and additions, reprinted from my '" Century Annals of San Bern-rdino County, California (1904.)" The sketches of each of the twenty-one Franciscan missions of Alta California are adaptetl from PREFACE ■' Missions and Landmarks ", a meritorious booklet written and in 1903 ixil)Iished by Mrs. Armitage S. C. Forbes, a zealous student and authoritative writer upon California missions and kindred subjects. The information utilized in the production of the history of Los Angeles count\- and the Santa Monica Ba}' Cities has been gleaned from numerous sources, prolific of which have been the works of Hubert Howe Uancroft, Theodore H. Hittell, History of Los Angeles County, Lewis Publishing Co., Chicago, 1890, Resources of California, by the lamented Charles Nordhofif ; Reminiscences of A. Ranger, by Major Horace Bell ; California Blue Books, old maps and numerous old legal documents. Acknowledgments are due Editor D. G. Holt for the loan of complete files of his Saiifa Monica Outlook. Old files of the Los .lin^clcs Times, the Los Angeles FJcvaJd and the Ei'ciiiiig E.vprcss have all reflected light upon scenes and events of earlier days. Archives of the city of Santa Monica, of the city and the county of Los Angeles, have been freely drawn u])on. Files of old legal documents and old court records have been a great aid in shaping and verifying the histories of land grants. Uniform courtesv and kindness have been accorded me bv manv people in my quest for historical data, for which I am under special and lasting obligations to Judge J. J. Carrillo, E. J. Vawter, Hon. John P. Jones, W. S. A^awter, R. R. Tanner. Esq., Judge Geo. H. Hutton. Abbot Kinney. Robert F. Jones, L. T. Fisher, Miss Jennie C. Vawter, Miss Emma Vawter, Dr. John A. Stanwood, Miss Elfie Mosse, Col. G. Wiley Wells, Mrs. E. K. Chapin. Rev. J. D. H. Browme, Mrs. Laura E. Hubbell, W. L Hull, Mrs. May K. Rindge, J. B. Procter, S. W\ Odell. Rev. Stephen H. Taft. Mrs. Sarah L. Shively and W. B. B. Taylor. It afifords me pleasure to here make dre acknowdedgment of the valuable literary service rendered me almost from the inception of this work by Miss Rose L. Ellerbe. Her mental training and already wide experience in the field of letters have eminently qualified her for historical labors and I deem it fortunate that, in this w^ork, T have been able to command her splendid abilities. The biographical matter with which the general historical chapters are su])- plemented will prove a valuable feature of this work. It permanently records so much of the jx-rsonal experience of those wdio have contributed to the devel- opment of this country and have borne an honorable part in the direction of its public affairs as to constitute a fairly comprehensive encyclopedia of local bio- graphical reference. Much careful labor has been bestowed upon the com- piling of these sketches. The information has been gathered from published books, magazines and newspapers, by personal interviews with the subjects thereof, and relatives of those who have passed away. A somewhat rigid system of submitting these articles to persons from wdiom original information was obtained, has been jiursued, for the purpose of assuring accuracy. In doing this, use was made of the \J. S. mail. In some instances these sketches have not been returned to me corrected and in such cases errors may appear, for which I must disclaim responsibility. The printing of these PREFACE sketches has not in anv instance been made contingent upon the payment of money or in any other form, the support of my enterprise. Neither have they been written for the purpose of gratifying a desire of any person to appear con- spicuously in print. ] have stu(hously refrained from writing eulogies upon the lives of living people. Such form of alleged biography invades the field of commercialism to such an extent as to render it worthless as history. The histories of churches and frattrnal organizations is bv no means as complete as I desire, because the necessary data was not obtainable. It would have been impossible to illustrate this volume so liberally only for the public spirit of people who have in manv instances shared with me the burden of expense. The labor and money expended in the production of this book has been a secondary con- sideration, and to place in the hands of a reading public a reliable and dignified historical storv has been paramount in the author's mind. Luther A. Ingersoll, Santa Monica, California, Dec. ist, 1908. IngersoU's Century Series of California LOCAL HISTORY ANNALS PREHISTORIC. ABORIGINAL. SPANISH. MEXICAN, AMERICAN Century Annals of San Bernardino Co.. Calif. Century History of Santa Monica Bay Cities. Calif. Century Annals City of Monrovia and its Environs. L. A. INGE RSOLL Los Angeles "No community can claim to be highly en- lightened which is content to remain ignorant of its antecedents, or, in other words, ignorant of the prime causes that have made it what it is." — • H. D. Barrows. Contents. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. CHAPTER. PAGE. I. Discovery 3"7 II. Colonization. Presidios and Pueblos 8-13 III. The Mission Establishments 14-45 IV. From Monarchy to Republicanism 46-49 V. Revolutions and Secularization of Missions. . . ; 49-54 VI. Free State of Alta California 54-57 VII. Closing Years of Mexican Era 58-66 VIII. 'Conquest of California 66-77 IX. Transition from Territory to State 77-82 X. Vigilance Committees, Growth and Prosperity 82-90 Governors of Cahfornia 9^ Land Grants in Los Angeles County 9^-93 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY. I. Organization 95-99 II. Stock Raising and Agriculture 101-104 III. Mining and Manufacturing 104-107 IV. Transportation and Commerce 107-1 1 1 V. The Day of the Trolley 1 12-114 VI. Cities and Towns 1 14-1 19 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES. I. Santa Monica Bay Region 121-13^ II. Laying the Foundations. 1870-1880 141-165 III. From Town to City. 1880-1890 167-183 IV. Growth. 1890-1900 185-209 V. Expansion. 1900-1908 211-243 VI. South Santa Monica and Ocean Park 244-263 VII. Public Institutions 265-287 VIII. Churches and Societies 288-303 IX. Miscellaneous 305-3 ^ 5 X. The City of Ocean Park 317-325 XI. Venice of America and Its Founder. . . .' 3-7-337 XII. Pacific Branch National Home for Disabled Veterans 33^-343 XIII. Sawtelle. Palms 345-355 General Index. Academy of the Holy Names 219 Admission of California 81, 82 Alarcon, Hernando de 4 Alfalfa 104 Alvarado. Pedro de 5 Alvarado. Juan R 53, 55. 56, 57 Anaheim, settled 102 Anzn's route to California 10, 11 Arcadia Hotel 168 Arguello, Luis A., governor 46 Artesian Water Co 226, 228 Artesian well, first 103 A. & P. Ry 89. no, 187. 223 Atlantic squadron 243 Annual Assessments Santa IMonica... 243. Baliona Junction 310 Ballona Port 168 Baliona Harbor Co 335, 336 Ballona & S. M. Ry 171 Baker. Robert S 142 Bandini. Juan loi Bank, First National of S. M..173, 175, i&S Banning, Phineas 107, 109, 118 Baptist Church 297 Barrett Villa 347 Battle, of Plains, 74 ; of Dominguez rancho, 69; San Juan, 71; San Pas- qual, 72 ; El Paso de Bartola 73 Beach front dispute 152 Beach Land Co 336, T,;i7 Bean culture 233 "Bear Flag" 64, 66 Board of Trade 175, 202. 283 Boca de Santa Monica, grant 136. 170 Boom 1 10, III, 169, 246 Bouchard, privateer 13 Brentwood Park 240 Bulletin. S. F 83 Cable line 112 Cabrillo, Juan Roderigucz 5. 6, 7, 122 Cahuenga, treaty of 61, 75 California, name 4 Capitals, state 86, 87 Carrillo. A. Carlos 55, 56, 18: Carrillo, Jose A 54. 61. 62 Carrillo. Juan J 174. 180, 186, igi Carrillo, Pedro C iSi Carriage, first in California 106 Casino 306 Castro, General. .54. 56. 59. 61. 62. 65. 67, 68 Cataliua Island 5, 7 Catholic Church 292 Cattle Raising, in California, 88; in Los Angeles County loi Chamber of Commerce, Palms, 355 ; Santa Monica, 283 ; Venice 334 Census. Los Angeles County. 98, 99; Santa Monica 287 Chapman, Joseph 13, 47 Charter, Santa Monica. ...216, 220, 238, 239 Chico, Mariano, governor 52, 53 Chinese massacre 99 City hall. Santa Monica.. 215. 217, 219. 22^ City Officials 286. 287 City Water Co 251 Civil War, in California 87 Clay products. Los Angeles County. T05. 106 Colton Hall 79 Constitutional Convention 79. 80 Coronado 4. 5 Coronel, Antonio 96. gS Cortes 3, 4 Court house, Los Angeles 98 Crespi, Father Juan 18 Cricket Club 307 Discovery and Exploration, Santa Monica region 122 Division of town, Santa Monica 213. 227. 255 Dolgeville 107 Downey, John G 96, loi, i t8 Downey, settled loi Drake, Sir Francis 6 Drought, '57. IGI ; '62-3 loi Dudley. T. H 253. 257 Earthquake, 1812 29. ^t, Echandia, J. M.. governor 49. 50, 132 Eckert, (Bob.) 216 Education, in California, 89; in Los Angeles County 98 Election, first state, 80; first county.. 96 Electric lines 113, 114 El Monte, settled lor Episcopal Church, Santa Monica 295 Expedition, first to California 8. 9 Ferrelo. Bartolome 6. 7 Filibustering 85 Figueroa. Jose. 50 ; death 52 First Baptist Church. Sawtelle 352 First N. Y. Infantry ^76 Fisher. L. T 169, 201, 281. 315 GENERAL INDEX. Floral Festival 291 Flour mills lOJ Foreigners, arrival, 47- 48; fighting. 54 ; exiled, 56 ; residents 62 Franciscan order 7 Freighting 109 Fremont, John C, entry into Califor- nia, 62, 63; dispatches, 63; at So- noma, 64, 65; raises flag, 66; major, 67; lieutenant-colonel, 71; in south, 74. 75 ; governor 76 Galvez, Jose 8 Garev. T. A 103. 116 Gillispie, Captain 68, 69 Gilrov, John 47 Gold, discovery 11 • 78. 97 Good Government League 216, 220 Government, territorial l'^. 79 Governors, list of, 94: from Southern California 97 Grand Armv of Repuhlic 302 Gulf of California 4. 5. S Gwin, Wm. M 79. 80 Harbor question 190. 20T Hartnell. W. E. P 48, 79 Hawe, Father Patrick 292 Herald, S. F 83 Hiiar and Padres party 50, 5^ Holt, D. G 282 "Hook" franchise 223, 224 Horse Racing 134- I35 Horticultural production. Los Angeles Countv 104 Hotchkiss, A. B 245 Hull, W. 1 225 Incorporated towns ^^ '5- 1^9 Incorporation, Ocean Park, 318; Santa Monica, 169 ; Sawtelle 35° Indians 122, 123, 125 Irrigation systems, Los Angeles County 102 Investment Co.. Santa Monica 232 Jayme, Father Luis 16 Jimenez Fortuna 3- I Jesuits " xy Tones, J. P 144- 152, 157- "^ll- ^75 Juez de Campo 96 Kearnev, Stephen W 12, -JZ. 75. 1^ Keller, Mathew T02, 128 Kinney, A '.170, 173. 197. 248. 257. 259, 2-ji, 127 King, James 83 La Ballona, grant i37. I39 Land grants, list of 92. 93 Land grants, Los Angeles County 96 Larkin, Thomas 7 1 Lasuen, Father Francisco 19 Lawn Tennis Club 3^5 Library 186, 271 Library Site Fund, Contributors to... 276 Long Beach 116 Los Angeles County, created, 96; boundaries 96 Los Angeles, pueblo, 11, 12; the cap- ital, 61 ; capture 68 L. A. Co. Ry 174. 175. 187. 307 Los Angeles & Independence Ry.. or- ganized, 144; built, 151; sold, 153; historv 308 L. A.-P. Ry TT3. 114, 192. 193. 194- 197. 221, 255 Lucas, Nancy A 244, 248 Machado, Augustin. 137; Ygnacio, 137, 138 ; Antonio 138, I39 Mails, in Los Angeles County loS Malibu rancho 124, 129. 130 Manufactured products, Los Angeles County 107 Marquez, Francisco 132. 136, 137 Martinez, Father Luis 27 Mason, Gov 78 Mendocino, Cape 6 Methodist Church, Santa Monica 28S Militia Company, Santa Monica 196 Militarv camps, Ballona, 139; Wilming- ton '. ' T18 Mining, in California. 88; in Los An- geles County 104 Mission establishments, description .. 14. 6t Moncada. Rivera y 9. 10 Monrovia 1 17 Monterey Bay 5, 6. 7, 9 Monterey, capture of 57 Mormon Battalion /b Mooney [Mansion 244 Neve, Felipe de 10, 11. 12 Newspapers 279 North Beach Bath house 190. 210 Ocean Park Ocean Park District, 1898, 2-:,2\ 1890. 253; 1900. 254; 1901, 255; 1902. 21- \ 1903 Ocean Park 22"], 236. 249, 250. 252, Ocean Park, incorporation, 318; census, 318; election, 319; Improvement Co., 319; growth, 321; sewage, 321; li- censes, 322; values, 323; bonds. 324; postoffice, 324 ; City hall Oiled Streets Orange County Orange growing Ostrich Farm, Santa Monica Outdoor pastimes Outlook, Santa Monica I47. 254 259 317 240 96 103 246 305 283 Pacific Branch National Home for Disabled Veterans 338 Pacific Electric 113. i M GENERAL IXDEX. ii6 3T.S 198 108 Pacific Land Co 347 Palisades tract 231 Palms 171, 352 Pasadena ' ^5 Pentecostal Church of Nazarciie 299 Peyri. Father 4^. 43 Petroleum, in Los Angeles County. .. 104-S Petroleum production 105 Philippines, trade with 5. 7 Pico, Andres 7-^- 75' K^5 Pico. Pio, governor 60. 61, 67, 68. 117 Pious Fund 5' Playa del Rcy 334 Police department ^93 Point Dtmie '-i Polo Club 307 Pomona 101. 103, Population, state, 82. 83; Los Anodes County. T12. 1 14: city, 115; Santa Monica, 167. 1S5, 220. 287; Ocean Park Port Los Angeles Port, of San Pedro I07- Portala, Caspar de, first governor of California 9. 10, 123 Postoffice. i85: Ocean Park 263, 282 Presbyterian Church. Santa Monica... 290 Presidio, description 10 Prudhomme. Leon V 126, 127 Pueblo. Spanish to, i r Purisima Concepcion. mission 34 Quivera 5 Railroads, in California 88. 8-) Rate war no, 168. 169, 170 Raymond Hotel i t.t Reminiscences 312 Redondo ii9 Reyes. Ysidro 132. 1.36, I37 Rindge. F. 11 128, 211. 216, 231 Rowland. Col. J. 34' Rose. L. J 102. 103. 115 Russians, in California 4" Ryan, Francis G 24S, 253 Salt Lake line in Saloon question 195. 211, 216 San Antonio de Padua 19 San Bernardino County, 96; settle- ment TIG San Buenaventura, mission 31 San Carlos, mission 9, 17 Sanchez, Padre Jose P> 24 San Diego Bay 5. 7. 9 San Diego. Mission 9. 15 San Fernando Rev de l^spana 40 San Francisco Bay 9 San Francisco de Asis 27 San Francisco de Solano 45 San Francisco, presidio n San Gabriel Arcangel 20 San Jose, mission 36 San Jose, pueb'o 11 San Juan Bautista " San Juan Capistrano 28 San Miguel Arcangel 39 San Luis Obispo de Tolosn 26 San Luis Rev de Francia 42 San Pedro, bay. 5, 7; port, 107, 108; town n8 San Rafael, mission 45 San Vicente y Santa .Monica, grant. 132; sale 142 Santa Barbara, presidio and mission.. Ti. 12. 32 Santa Clara, mission 29 Santa Cruz, mission. 34; town 35 Santa Fe Ry....iTO. 168, 187, 22^,. 248. 309 Santa Monica Bay 1 2 r Santa Monica Canyon 141, 143 Santa Monica Fire Dept.. 278 Santa Monica. History. 1885. 167; 1886, 168; 1887. 169; 1888. 173: 1889. 175; 1890. 185; 1891. 187; 1892, 187; 1893, 188; 1894, 189; 1895, 190; 1896, 193; 1897. 194; 1838, 195; 1899, 197; 1900, 211; 1901, 216; 1902. 230; 1903, 224; 1904. 226; 1905, 229; 1906. 246; 1907 241 Santa Monica Hotel 175 Santa Monica Incorporation 169 Santa Monica Lodge No. 906, B. P. O. E .303 Santa Monica, name. 123; legend. 123; settlement 124 Santa Monica, street cars 171, 176, 185, 194, 197. 309 Santa Monica, townsite, 145 ; first sale. 145. 146; first building, 146; first train 149 Santa Monica Water Co 194 Santa Monica Wharf & Ry. Terminal Co 179. 180 Santa Ynez. Virgin y ^Martyr 44 Saw'telle. historv 345 Sawtelle, W. E 349 School, first in state. 90 ; in Los Ange- les County 98 Schools, Ocean Park, 322; Sawtelle, 346, 348; South Santa Monica 247 Schools, Santa Monica, bonds, 2:^7 ; enrollment. 270; history, 265; prin- cipals. 270 ; trustees 265 Seal, state 8d Sewer bonds 189, 192, 195, 196. 221. 235, 235. 241 Secularization, decree. 51; plan. 51. 52; result 61 Sepulveda, Francisco, 132; Jose, 133; Fernando '35 Serra, Junipero 8. 15 Serra Vista 23 1 Serria, Father Vicente de 47 Sisters of Holy Name 198. 210 Slaverv in California 8i. 79, 80 INDEX TO VIEWS. Sloat. John D.. raises flag 65, 66 Smuggling 127 Sola, Governor -j6 Soldiers in Los Angeles County 99 Soldiers' Home 171 Sutton, Florence 306 Soledad, mission 36 South Santa Monica 219. 245 South Santa Monica, history, 1874, 244; 187s, 245; 1876, 245; 1887-8, 246; 1889, 247; 1890. 248; 1892, 248; 1893, 249; 1895, 250; 1896, 250; 1897, 251 ; 1904-7 261 So. Pac. Ry ...88, 89, 109, 144, 154, 187, 197. 203. 309 Stage routes 108. 109 State division 97 State Forestry Station 311 Steamer, first 107 Stearns, Abel 9^ Street car line, first in Los Angeles... 112 Stockton, R. F., arrives, 67; at San Pe- dro, 70; San Diego, 70; Battle of Plains, 74 ; superseded 75 Sugar beets 104 Sutter, John A 60, 61 Taft, Rev. S. H 34.S Tapia, Jose B., 126: Tiburcio 126-7, 12S Tell's Lookout 331 Tennis Tournaments 306 Territorial government 78. 79 Terry, David S 84. 85 Topanga Malibu 125 Topography, Santa Monica region.... I2[ Trade, with Boston, 48; Philippines. . .5, 7 Traction Co 223 Transportation 308 Treaty, Cahuenga, 61, 75; Guadalupe Hidalgo 76 Treichel, Col. Charles 339 Truxton "scheme" 143 Ulloa, Francisco de 4 U. S. Senators 07 Upham, Major F. K 342 Vallejo, M. G.... 58 Values, Santa Monica, 1880, 167; 1890, 185, 228, 234, 239, 258 Vawter family 146, 159, 245 Vawter, Edwin James 164, 250, 254 Vawter. Williamson Dunn... 159. 188, 292 Vawter, William S 162, 188, 221, 250 Venice 229 Venice of America, 330; plans, 331; growth, 332; Assembly, 332; break- water, 332; Chamber of Commerce.. 334 Victoria, Manuel, governor 49 Viglantes, Los Angeles, 53 ; San Fran- cisco 82, 83, 84, 85 Viscaino, Sebastian 7, 123 Warner, J. J 96, 97 Water Co., Sawtelle 349 Wells Fargo 108 Westgate 229 Wharf, first, 145: abandoned, 155; Bernard, 156 ; fight 177, 196, 248 Wheat raising, Los Angeles County. . . 102 Whittier 117 Wilson, B. D 96, 102. 103, 115, 118. 119 Wilmington 107. 118 Wine making 102, 128 Wolfskin, William 103 W. C. T. U t86, 243, 272, 299 Woman's Club, Santa Monica 301 Y. M. C. A. of Southern California.. 249 Zalvidea, Father Jose M 2t INDEX TO VIEWS. Admission of California into Union. ... 82 Arch Rock 122 Brentwood 232 Brentwood Park 240 Brice, J. L., Residence 320 Church of Our Lady of the Angels. ... 95 City Hall, Ocean Park 323 City Hall, Santa Monica 217 Creating Venice 330 Colton Hall, Monterey, First State Capitol 79 Court House, Los Angeles Co 94 First Methodist Church 288 Fire House, Dept. No. i 278 Hotel, Santa Monica 176 La Purisima Concepcion, Mission of... 34 La Soledad, Mission of 36 Library', Carnegie Public 271 Mexican Custom House 53 North Third Street, Santa [Monica 188 "Old" Court House, Los Angeles County 98 Port Los Angeles 207 Saddle, military, Don Andres Pico.... 108 San Antonio de Padua, Mission of . . . 19 San Buenaventura, Mission of 31 San Carlos Borromeo de Monterey, [Mission of 18 San Die.go de Alcala, Mission of 16 San Fernando Rey de Espana. Mis- sion of 41 San Francisco de Asis, Mission of.... 28 San Francisco de Solano, Mission of.. 45 INDEX TO PORTRAITS. San (lal)ricl Arcaiigcl, .Mission of 21 San Jose, Mission of 36 San Jnan Rantista. Mission of ?,7 San Jnan Capistrano, Mission of 29 San Lnis Obispo de Toloso, Mission of 27 San Luis Rev de Francia, Mission of.. 43 San Miguel Arcangel. Mission of 40 San Rafael. Mission of 45 San Vicente Ranch House 133 Santa [Barbara, Mission of 2>2 Santa Clara. Mission of 30 Santa Cruz. .Mission of 35 Santa .Monica Reach, 1878 143 Santa Monica, First Church 151 Santa Monica, First House 136 Santa Ynez, Mission of 44 Sawtelle, First House 346 Sawtelle Public School 348 Si.xth Street School 268 Soldiers' Home 342 State Capitol, Renicia 86 State Capitol, Sacramento 87 Timm's Landing 118 Topanga Canyon 126 Venice Lake ^lii INDEX TO PORTRAITS. .\rmstrong, R. W 210 .A.rcher, A. N 399 Rane, Ralph 238 Ranning, Gen. Phineas 107 Rarrows, Henry D 391 Rlanchard, J. D 264 Rrowne. J. D. H 296 Rurnett, Peter H 81 Carpenter, Stephen 477 Carrillo. Jose Antonio 54 Carrillo, J. J 166 Chapman, W. R 472 Clark. J. H 274 Coffman, H . L 210 Corey. G. W., M.D 465 Coronel, Antonio F 99 Council. Citv S. M 210 Crum, Rev. J. D 148 Dales, E. V 264 Davis, Orin 395 Dike, E. \W 356 Dobbings, J . 1! 452 Dollard, Robert 302 Dow, Roscoe H 210 Downey, John G 97 Eakins,' H. R 316 Engelbrecht, H. J 264 Foster, G. W 316 l-'remont, John C 2 and 62 Gillis, W. T 234 Gird, E. C 420 Goctz, H. X 225 Griffith, Hester T 423 Griffith, E 316 Gwin, Wm. M 80 Hamilton, N. H., M.D 218 T 1 awe. Rev. Patrick 294 I [emingwav, J. C 222 Holt, 1). G' 264 and 280 Hull, W. T 172 I I utton. (k"o. II 214 Ingersoll, L. .A Frontispiece Jewelt. C). W 354 Johnston, A. F 242 Jones, Hon. John P 120 Keller, Don Mateo 128 Kimball, Myron H 371 Kinney, Abbot 326 Larkin, Thomas 71 Lawton, Frank D 304 Machado, J. D 494 Mackinnon, T. D 316 Mayer, H. C 316 Miles, J. Euclid 210 Mil'er, R. M 264 Mitchell, H. L 488 Morris^ Alf 210 Nellis, Clarence J 431 Odell, S. W 381 Palmer, W. M 447 Petsch, Adolph 457 Pico, Andres 75 Pico, Pio 100 Pierce, Grace Adele 439 Putnam, R. G 482 Quinn, Bernard 407 Rebok, H. M 264 Reel, Abe S 210 Rile, H. F 443 Rindge, Frederick H 129 Sepulveda. Jose Dolores 132 Serra, Junipero 15 Shive'y. Daniel 414 Shively, Sarah L 415 Sloat, John D 65 Smith, N. R.. D.D.S 433 Smith, P. H 495 Snvder, Geo. D 210 Snyder, W. P 264 Stearn.s, Don Abel 106 J^tockton, Robert F 67 Taft, Fred H 376 Taft, Stephen H 344 Tanner, R. R 230 Taylor. Rev. and Mrs. George 411 Taylor, W. I*. R 404 INDEX TO BIOGRAPHIES. Towner, Charles E i54 Trustees, City of Ocean Park 316 Tullis, O. G 385 Turner, Daniel 492 Vallejo. Gen. M. G 58 Vawter. E. J 160 Vawter, E. J., Jr 262 Vawter, W. D 140 Vawter. W. S 184 Wells, G. Wiley I34 Wvant. A. H 35i INDEX TO BIOGRAPHIES. Alton, Daniel 397 Archer. A. N 399 Armstrong, R. W 481 Badillo. P. M 509 Baida, N. G 462 Baker, Robert S 142 Baker, E. H 481 Bandini, Juan 463 Bane, Ralph 44i Barrows, H. D 39i Berkley, S. L 4o8 Bishop. B. R 481 Blanchard, J. D 412 Boehme, Geo. C 455 Boehme, Geo 402 Bonttv, E. F 441 Bouck. C. A 432 Brice, J. L 4-^8 Brickner. John 462 Brooks, F. W 442 Browne, J. D. H 434 Bundy, F. E 383 Bundv. Nathan 43i Busier. A 382 Calkins, A. H 4^9 Carrillo, J. J 180 Carpenter, Stephen 477 Case. L. H., M.D 437 Chapin, E. K 495 Chapman, W. R 472 Chenev, C. C 512 Clark, Joseph H 359 Collins, Mrs. Catharine 461 Connelly, T. J 454 Corey, Geo. W.. M.D 465 Crane, H. isl 489 Dales, C. S 453 Dales, E. V 47o Dales, John B 454 Davis, J. J 450 Davis, Orin, M.D 395 Devore, W. E 47i Dike. E. W r:^7 Dobbings, J. H 453 Dobson. R. C 460 Dollard. Robert 417 Dow, R. H 4-^9 Dudlev, T. H 427 Eakins, H. B 430 Edinger, C. L 49i Finch, F. J 492 Foster, G. W 448 French. J. G 509 Gillis, W. T 381 Gird. E. C 421 Griffith. Eliiah 423 Griffith, Hester T 423 Grigsbv. Tas. H 475 Grimes. R. R 4i3 Goodrich, L. B 493 Goetz, H. X 40T Guidinger, A. M 47i Guntrup. John 455 Hamilton. N. H.. M.D 369 Hammond, "H. N 421 Hancock. A. K 473 Hawe, Rev. P 362 Hemingway. J. C 394 Hodgson, j. 418 HoUwedel. H. C 490 Holt, D. G 479 Hudson. M. L 425 Hull. W. 1 367 Hunt, J. S.. M.D 476 Hunter, Benj. S 4io Houston, H. E 467 Hutton, George H 361 Ingersoll. L. G 468 Ingersoll, L. A 44^ Jackson, Arthur E 459 Jackson, William 365 Jewett, O. W 385 Jones. John Percival ^57 Tohnston. A. F 360 keener. J. P 487 Kendall. W. M. ^I.D 5io Kennedy, J. W 5io Kimball, Mvron H i7^ Kinnev. Abbott ^-7 Kirkelie. O. A 490 Langdon, F. C 3^9 Lawton. Frank 435 Le Bas. Charles 375 Lindt, J 478 Loudon, J. A 48^) Lowe, Thomas R 435 Machado. J. D 494 ^Liver, H. C 4^9 McCIellan, R. F 409 Me'ov, Daniel 400 INDEX TO BIOGRArHIES. )*Iel(iv. H. T 461 Mctcalf. Joliii 403 .Aliles. Klani C 438 Milos. J. Kuclid 374 Mitchell. II. L 4^S Mont«oniei-\ . A. M 384 ]\ron-is. Alt" 451 I\runclcll, Walter 449 Xellis, C. J 431 O'Calladian. Rev. J. A 456 Odell. S. W 381 Palmer, W. M 447 Parrish. I. E 413 Parrisli. W. F 410 Petsch. .\(lo'pli 457 Peveler, I. J 511 Phillips. R. A 511 Pierce, Grace A 439 Procter, J. B 483 Pruess, E. A 443 Putnam, R. G 482 Quiiin. Bernard 407 Rile. H. F 443 Rindge, Frederick Plastings 128 Rogers. C. W 445 Sav.telle, W. E 364 Sepnlveda. Jose Dolores 512 Seymour, J. J 387 Schohcld. Tom 440 Schultz, Henry 488 Schutte. G. W 464 Sible}', Mrs. Geo 474 Simpson, J. D 458 Shive'ev, Daniel 414 Smale, 'j. B. E 456 Smith. W. S., M.D 511 Smith, J. L 466 Smith. N. R.. D.D.S 4.33 Smith. P. H 495 Snyder, W. P 467 Snyder, Geo. D 366 Sonnesyn, P. 11 485 Stanwood. John A ^77 Summerfield, K. R 390 Taft. Fred H 376 Taft, S. H 496 Talkington, S. N 438 Talkington. J. S 406 Tanner, R. R 373 Taylor, W. B. B 405 Taylor. Rev. George 411 Todd, J. W 388 Towner, C. C 493 Towner, C. E 363 Tullis, O. G 385 Turner, Daniel 492 Vache, A 475 Valenzuela, Jose 478 Van Tress, B. F 422 Vawter, Aramatha Charlotte. 162; Charles Knowlton, 165 ; Edwin James, 164; Edwin James. Jr., 165; Emma Knowlton. 164; Jane Cra- ven, 162: May, 162; Mary Ellen. 161; Williamson Dunn, 169; Wil- liam S 162 Watkevs, L. C 482 Wells, G. Wiley 378 Westover, O. S 484 Wilber, H. P 485 Woodruff, W. W 476 Wyant, A. H 426 GLOSSARY. Abadesa. Abbess. Abajenos. Inhabitants of Southern Cali- fornia. Aceqiiia. Ditcli. canal. A.'Dois. Good bye, (God be with you). Adobe. Black adhesive soil. Adobes. Sundried bricks of adobe. Agua. Water. Aguardiente. Brandy. Alameda. Walk under trees. Alabado. Hymn in praise of the .sacrament. Alcalde ma\'Gr. Magistrate of a district. Aliso. Alder tree. Alta. Upper, above. Amo. Master, owner. Arroyo. A small stream. Ayuntamiento. Municipal council. Bahia. Bay. Bando. Edict. Baja. Below, lower. Bidarka. Skin boat. Bicnes. Property. Blanco. White. Boca. Mouth. Bonita. Pretty. Brazo de mar. Arm of the sea. Brea. Pitch. Bronco. Unbroken horse. Bueno. Good. Buenos dias. Good morning. Caba'lo. Horse. Cabo. Cape. Caion. Box. chest. Calle. Street. Camino. Way. Campana. Bell. Campanula. Small bell. Campo. Field. Canada. Glen or dale between mountains. Campo santo. Graveyard. Canon. A tube, deep ra\'ine. Capilla. Chapel. Carreta. Cart. Carta. Letter, chart. Casa Grande. Large house. Castillo. Castle, fort. Catalina. Catherine. Cienega. A marsh. Cigarritos. Cigarets. Ciudad. City. Comandante. Commander. Compadre. Friend, comrade, godfather. Comisario. Commisary, a treasury official. Concepcion. Conception. Coyote. A small California wolf. Corbata. Cravat. Corral. A pen for live stock, or for poultry. Cuero. Hide of cattle or horses. Dehesas. Pasture lands. Dias. Days. Diablo. Devil. Dinero. Money. Diego. James. Diputacion. Deputy, committee. Dolores. Sorrows. Don. Mr. Dona. Mistress. Embarcadero. Place of embarkation. Enchiladas. Cornmeal cakes in chile sauce. Enfermo. Sick. Encino. Oak. Engano. Deceit, mistake, fraud. Ensenada. Creek, small bay. E.spanol. Spanish. Entrada. Entrance, invasion, incursion. Escoltas. Mission guard. Escondido. Hidden. Escrito. Writing or written. Estado. State. Fandango. Dance. Fierro. Branding iron. Fiesta. Feast Day. Erev. Father of a religious order. Erijoles. Beans. Fueeo. Fire. Fimios. Smoky. Galeria. Galley. Canado. Live stock, cattle. Gefepolitico. Political chief. Gente de Razon. Spaniards and Mexicans- distinguished from Indians. Gobenador. Governor. Gracias. Favors, thanks, graces. Hacienda. Country home. Hambre. Hunger. Hermano. Brother. Hermoso. Handsome. Herrar. To brand. Hidalgo. One of gentle birth. Hija. Daughter. Hijos del pais. Native sons. Sons of the country. Honil)re. Man Isla. Isle. Juez del campo. Judge of the plains. Tugador. Gamlilcr. Junta. Assembly. GLOSSARY. Jnraniciito. Oath. Las^iina. Small lake. Le.Liiia. T.cai>uc. I.ihros. Rdoks. Llano. Plain. Llavcro. Keeper of the keys. Tn the mis- sions, the store keeper. Lomrras. Ridges of hills, or mountains. Madre. Mother. Maestro, blaster. Mai. Evil, complaint. Mafiana. Morning, tomorrow. Manteca. Tallow. Mantilla. Head cover for women. Mariposa. Butterfly. Maromeros. Rope dancers. Matanza. Slaughter-yard. Major-domo. Steward, overseer. Mecate. Mexican for rope. Medio real. Half a real, or 6^4 cents. Memorias. Memoranda. Metatc. A curved grinding stone. Mejicano. Mexican. Mezcal. A liquor made from the maguey plant. Molino. Mi'l. Morro. Steep cliff. Mesa. Tahle land. Milpas. Indian corn-fields. Muchacho. Boy. Negro. Black. Neofita. A converted Indian. Noche. Night. Nuestra Scnor. Our Lord. Nuestra Seiidra. Our Lady. Nuestra Senora d" Los Angeles. Our Lady of the Angels. Nuevo. New. Ojo. Eye. Olco. The sacred oil. Olla. A round earthen pot. Orden. Order, command. Ordenanza. Ordinances. Orejano. Wild. Res orejano de fierro. Cattle marked on the ears. Oso. Bear. Oro. Gold. Padre. Father. Pais. Country. Palacio. Palace. Pasajes. Valleys. Patio. Court. Peon. A game at dice. Pinole. Drink of cornmeal, water and sugar. Pinos. Pine. Playa. Sea beach. Plaza. Square, market place. Pobladores. Settlers, founders of a town. Poco. Little. Pozole. Beans boiled with corn or wheat. Potrero. Pasture. Pozo. Spring. Presidio. Garrison. Primo. First. Pronunciamento. Proclamation. Propriedad. Proprietorship, etc. Pueb'o. City. Publica. Public. Puerto. Port, harbor. Ramada. A hush house, or shed. Rancheria. An Indian village. R^nchita. Small ranch. Rancho. Farm, range. Realistas. Royalists. Real. Spanish coin worth 12!/) cents. Reata. A rope of rawhide for lassoing cattle. Rebosa. Shawl. Worn o\'er the head. Reglemento. Regulation. Realengo. Royal, kingly. Regidor. Alderman, director. Revolucionario. Revolutionist. Roble. Oak tree. Rio. River. Rodeo. Rounding up of cattle. Salinas. Salt marshes. Seco. Dry. Seguridad. Safety, securely. Sierra Nevada. Ridge of mountains covered with snow. Sierra. Ridge of mountains. Silla. Chair, or saddle. Silla vaquera. Saddle used by vaquero. Sitio. Small stock range. Soberano. Sovereign, supreme. Sobrante. Residue, left over. Soldado. Soldier. Sombrero. Hat. Suertes. Fields. Sureiios. Southerners. Tamale. Indian meal dumpling stuffed with minced meat, chicken, etc. Tasajo. Jerked beef. Tecolero. Master of ceremonies at a ball. Tecolote. Species of owl. Temblor. Shake. Temblor de tierra. Earthquake. Terreno. Ground. Testigo. Witness. Tonto. Stupid, foolish. Tortillas. Little cakes, pancakes. Trabaj adores. Laborers. Tule. Reed, native grown. Tuna. Cactus plant. Vaquero. Cow herder. Vara. Rod, staff, yard measure. Venta. Sale mark of cattle. Violincito. A small fiddle. Vitiero. One who cares for vines Vocal. Voting member of a corporation. Vino. Wine. Visitador. Visiter. sur\e\or. Yerba. Herb. Zanja. Irrigating ditch. Zanjero. One in charge of a zanja. JOHN C. FREMONT Brief History of California. CHAPTER I. DiscoviiRV. R OMANCE enters into the story of California with its very beginning. When Gondalez de Sandoval, in 1524, gave to Cortes an account of a wonderful island ten days to the westward from the Pacific Coast of Mexico, inhabited by women only and exceedingly rich in pearls and gold, he no doubt derived his information from Montalvo's romance, " Sergas de Esplandian." Cortes seems to have given credence to his lieutenant's story and to have kept in view the discovery of this wonderful island, Cali- fornia. The discovery of what is now known as the peninsula of Lower California, but which was then supposed to be an island, by Fortuna Jiminez, in 1534, no doubt confirmed in Cortes' mind the truth of Sandoval's story, told him a decade before. For did not the island of Jiminez, like the island of Montalvo's fiction, lie on the right hand of the Indies, or where the Indies were then supposed to be? Pearls were found on it and gold and the Amazons must be there, too. Fortuna fiminez, the discoverer of Lower California, was chief pilot on one of the ships which Cortes, in 1533. fitted out to explore the northwest coast of Mexico. A mutiny broke out on the ship commanded by Becerro de Men- doza. He was killed and his friends forced to go on shore at Jalisco. The muti- neers, commanded by Jiminez, sailed westerly away from the coast of the main- land. After several days of sailing out of sight of the main land, they discov- ered what they supposed to be an island and landed at what is now known as La Paz, in Lower California. There Jiminez and twenty of his followers were killed by the Indians ; the few survivors of the ill-fated crew managed to navi- gate the vessel back to Jalisco, where they reported the discovery of an island rich in pearls. 4 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA Cortes, hearing the report and probably beheving the island to be the Cali- fornia of the story, fitted out an expedition to colonize it. With three ships and a number of soldiers and settlers, he landed in May, 1535, at the place where Jiminez was killed, which he named Santa Cruz ; but instead of an island peo- pled with women who lived after the manner of Amazons and whose arms and trappings were made of gold, he found a sterile country inhabited by the most abject and degraded of beings. Disaster after disaster fell upon the unfortu- nate colony. Some of the ships sent to bring supplies were wrecked and others driven out of their course. Some of the colonists died from starvation before I he supplies reached them and others from over-eating afterwards. After two vears of struggling against misfortune, Cortes abandoned the attempt and the wretched colonists were brought back to Mexico. Thus ended the first effort to colonize California. Some time between 1535 and 1537 the name California was applied to the land still supposed to be an island ; but whether Cortes applied it in the hope of encouraging his colonists or whether the country was so named in derision, is not known. The name was subsequently applied to all the land along the Pa- cific Coast northward to 42 degrees, the limit of the Spanish possessions. The vast unexplored regions to the northward of that portion of Mexico which he had conquered had a fascination for Cortes. He dreamed of finding in them empires vaster and richer than those he had already subdued. For years he fitted out expeditions by sea and by land to explore this terra incognita ; but failure after failure wrecked his hopes and impoverished his purse. The last of the parties was the one commanded by Francisco de Ulloa, who in 1539 sailed up the Gulf of California on the Sonora side to its head, and then down the inner coast of Lower California to the cape at its extremity, which he doubled ?nd sailed thence northward to Cabo de Engano (Cape of Deceit.) Here the two vessels of the expedition, after being tossed and bufTeted by head winds, parted company in a storm. The smaller returned to Santiago. Of the other which was directly under Ulloa's command, nothing is definitely known — nor of Ulloa's fate. The only thing accomplished by this voyage was to demon- strate that California was a peninsula, although even this fact was not fully accepted for two centuries after this. Cortes returned to Spain in 1540, where after vainly trying to obtain from the King some recognition of his services and some recompense for his outlay, he died — a disappointed and impoverished man. The next voyage which had anything to do with the discovery and explora- tion of California was that of Hernando de Alarcon. With two ships he sailed from Acapulco, May 9, 1540, up the Gulf of California. His object was to co- operate with Coronado. The latter, with an army of 400 men, had marched from Culiscan, April 22, 1540, to discover and conquer the "Seven Cities of Cibola," which the romancing friar, Marcos de Niza, "led l)y the Holy Ghost" BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 5 and blessed with a fertile imagination, claimed to have seen somewhere in the wilds of what is now Arizona. Alarcon, at the head of the gulf, discovered the mouth of a great river. Up this stream, which he named Buena Guia — now the Colorado — he claimed to have sailed eighty-five leagues. He was probably the first white man to set foot in the territory now included in the State of California. While Coronado was still absent in search of the Seven Cities, and of Quivera, a country rich in gold, lying somewhere in the interior of the continent, the successor of Cortes entered into a compact with Pedro de Alvarado, Gov- ernor of Guatemala, who had a fleet of ships lying at anchor in the harbor of Natividad, Mexico, to unite their forces in an extensive scheme of exploration and conquest. An insurrection broke out among the Indians of Jalisco and in trying to suppress it Alvarado was killed. The return of Coronado dispelled the myths of Cibola and Quivera and put an end, for the time, to further ex- ploration of the interior regions to the north of Mexico. On the death of Alvarado, his successor, Mendoza, placed five ships under the command of Ruy Lopez de Villalobas and sent them to the Islas de Poniente (Isles of the Setting Sun — now Philippines) to establish trade. Two ships of the fleet, under the command of Juan Roderiguez Cabrillo, were sent to explore the northwest coast of the Pacific. He sailed from Natividad June 27, 1542; on August 30th they reached Cabo de Engano, the most northern point of Ulloa's exploration. Continuing his voyage along the coast, he discovered a number of bays and islands. On Sept. 23, 1542, Cabrillo entered a fine bay called by him San Miguel, now San Diego Bay. After three days further sailing he sighted the islands which he named San Salvador and V'itoria, after his vessels, now Catalina and San Clemente. From these islands he crossed to the main- land on Oct. 8th and entered a bay Vvhich he named Bahia de los Fumos (Bay of Smokes), now San Pedro Bay. After entering a bight, supposed to have been Santa Monica, he continued northwestward, passed through the Santa Bar- bara channel and discovered the islands of Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa and San Miguel. Going on up the coast, he found a long narrow point of land extend- ing into the sea, which from its resemblance to a galley boat, he called Cabo de la Galeria, now Point Conception. November 17th he doubled Point of Pines and entered ^Monterey Bay, which he called Bahia de los Pinos (Bay of Pines.) Finding it impossible to land on account of the heavy seas, he proceeded north- ward until he reached 40 degrees, north latitude, as he estimated. On account of cold weather and storms he turned back and ran down to San Miguel, where he decided to winter. Here, from the effects of a fall, he died Jan. 3, 1543, and was buried on the island. His companions renamed the island Juan Roderiguez, after their brave commander; but he did not retain even this small honor. The discoverer of California sleeps in an unknown grave. 6 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA The command devolved on the chief pilot, Bartolome Ferrelo, who prose- cuted the voyage with a courage and daring equal to that shown by Cabrillo. On Feb. 28th he discovered a point of land which he named Cape Mendocino in honor of the Viceroy. Passing this cape, he encountered a furious storm, which drove him violently to the northeast and greatly endangered his ships. On March ist the fogs lifted and he saw Cape Blanco in the southern part of what is now Oregon. The weather continuing stormy and the cold increasing, Ferrelo was compelled to turn back. Off the coast of San Clemente the ships were driven apart and did not come together again until they reached the Cerros Islands. In sore distress for provisions they arrived at Natividad, April 18, 1543. The next navigator who visited California was Sir Francis Drake, an Eng- lishman. He was not so much seeking new lands as trying to find a wav of escape from capture by the Spanish. Francis Drake, the sea-king of Devon and one of the bravest of men, sailed from Plymouth Dec. 13, 1577, in com- mand of a fleet of five small vessels on a privateering expedition against the Spanish settlements of the Pacific Coast. When he sailed out of the Straits of Magellan into the South Sea, he had but one ship left, all the others had been lost or had turned back. With this small vessel he began a career of plunder- ing among the Spanish settlements that for boldness, daring and success has had no equal in the world's history. The quaint chronicler of the voyage sums up the proceeds of his raids at "eight hundred and sixty-five thousand pesos of silver, a hundred thousand pounds of gold and other things of great worth." Plundering as he moved, he reached the port of Guatulco on the coast of Oaxaca. Surfeited with spoils and with his ship laden to her fullest capacity, it became a necessity for him to find a new way home. In the language of the chronicler, "He thought it was not good to return by the straits, lest the Span- iards should attend for him in great numbers." So he sailed away to the north- ward to find the Straits of Anian, which were supposed to connect the North Pacific with the Atlantic. For two hundred years after the discovery of Amer- ica, navigators searched for that mythical passage. Drake, keeping well out to sea, sailed northward for two months. The cold, the head winds and the leaky condition of his craft compelled him to turn back and he sailed down the coast until he found a safe harbor under the lee of a promontory, now Point Reyes. Here he repaired his ship, took formal possession of the country in the name of his sovereign. Queen Elizabeth, and named it New Albion, from a fancied re- semblance to his homeland. He had his chaplain, Parson Fletcher, preach a sermon to the natives ; this did not greatly impress them, we are told, but they took delight in the psalm singing. After a stay of thirty-six days, on July 23(1, 1579, Drake sailed for England and after nearly three years of absence, during which he had circumnavigated the globe, he reached home safely and was knighted bv Elizabeth. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 7 Sixty years passed after Cabrillo's voyage before another Spanish explorer visited CaHfornia. The chief object of Sebastian Viscaino's voyage was to find a harbor of refuge for the Philippine galleons. These vessels on their return voy- age sailed northward until they struck the Japan current, which they followed across the ocean until they reached the vicinity of Cape Mendocino, then sailed along the coast to Acapulco. Viscaino started from Acapulco May 5, 1602, with three ships and 160 men. Following substantially the course that Cabrillo had taken, he anchored in Cabrillo's Bay of San Miguel, which he called San Diego, in honor of his flagship. He remained there ten days, then proceeded up the coast and on the 26th anchored in a bay which he called Ensenada de San Andreas, now San Pedro. He visited Cabrillo's San Salvador, to which he gave the present name of Santa Catalina and changed the name of Vitoria to San Clemente. He gave the name of Santa Barbara to that channel and visited the channel islands. He saw many towns on the mainland and the natives came off in their canoes and visited the vessels. On Dec. i6th Viscaino entered Monterey Bay, as he named it in honor of the Viceroy who had fitted out the expedition. The scurvy had broken out on ship and sixteen men were already dead. The San Tomas was sent back to Acapulco with the sick ; with his two remaining vessels Viscaino continued his voyage northward, reaching Cape Blanco. But at this point he, too, was compelled to turn backward. The scurvy had made fearful inroads on his crews and after eleven months' absence, Vis- caino reached Mazlatan, having lost nearly half of his crew. He wrote the King a glowing account of the Bay of Monterey and the surrounding country, which he pictured as almost a terrestrial paradise. His object was to induce the King to establish a settlement on Monterey Bay. In this he was doomed to disap- pointment; delay followed delay until hope vanished. Finally, in 1606, orders came from Philip III to the Viceroy to fit out immediately an expedition for the occupation and settlement of Monterey, of which Viscaino was to be the com- mander. In the midst of his preparations for carrying out the dearest object of his life, Viscaino died and the expedition was abandoned. Had it not been for the untimely death of this explorer, a colonv would have been planted upon the Pacific coast of California, a year before the first settlement was made on the Atlantic coast of North America. Two hundred and twenty-seven years had passed since the ships of Cabrillo had first cut the waters that lap the shores of Alta California and yet through all these years the interior of the vast country whose seacoast he had visited remained unknown. For more than two centuries the Alanila galleons had sailed down the coast on their return voyage from the islands ; yet after the death of A^iscaino no other attempt had been made to find a refuge on the Cali- fornia coast for the storm tossed and scurvy afflicted mariners of the Philippine trade. CHAPTER II. Colonization. THE Jesuits began their work among the degraded inhabitants of Lower CaUfornia in 1697. Under their devoted leaders, Salvatierra, Kino, Ugarte, Piccolo, and their successors, they had founded sixteen missions upon the peninsula. Father Kino, besides his missionary labors, had made, be- tween 1697 and 1702, explorations around the head of the Gulf of California and up the Colorado to the mouth of the Gila, which had clearly demonstrated that the peninsula was a part of the mainland instead of an island as at first believed. Father Kino formed the design of establishing a chain of missions around the heaa of the gulf and down the inner coast to Cape San Lucas ; but did not live to complete his ambitious project. The Jesuit missions of Baja California never grew rich in flocks and herds. The country was barren and the few fertile val- leys around the missions gave the padres and neophytes, at best, but a frugal return for their labors. For years there had been growing up in Spain a strong hostility to the Jesuits which finally resulted in the issuance of a decree by Carlos III, in 1767, banishing the order from that country and from its American possessions. With- out previous warning, the monks in Lower California were compelled to aban- don their missions and were hurried from the country. At the head of the Fran- ciscan order, to wdiom the abandoned missions were turned over, came Father Junipero Serra, a man of indomitable will and energy. Don Jose Galvez, vis- itador-general of New Spain, had been sent to the peninsula to regulate afifairs — both secular and ecclesiastical, which had been thrown into disorder by the sud- den expulsion of the Jesuits. He also received orders to advance the scheme for the occupation of San Diego and Monterey harbors and the colonization of "Nueva California." Galvez, as soon as he had somewhat systematized matters on the peninsula, set vigorously to work to further the project of occupying the northern territory. Father Serra entered heartily into his plans and church and state worked together harmoniously. Galvez decided to fit out four expeditions — two by sea and two by land. These were to start at dift'erent dates, but were all to unite at San Diego Bay and after occupying that territory, pass on to the harbor of Monterey. On Jan. 9, 1769, the San Carlos sailed from La Paz. with sixty-five persons on board, twenty- five of whom were soldiers under Lieutenant Fages. She carried supplies for eight months. On the 15th of February, the San Antonio sailed from Cape S. Lucas, with two friars and a few mechanics on board. The first land expedition BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 9 started from \'elicata, the most northern settlement in Lower Cahfornia, March 24th. It was commanded by Rivera y Moncada and consisted of twenty-five sol- diers, forty-two natives, with Padres Crespi and Cahizar'^s. The last expedi- tion, which was under the immediate command of Caspar cie Portala, Covernor of the Calif ornias, left Velicata May 15th. It consisted of ten soldiers, with a band of Lower Californians, and was accompanied by Father Serra. The San Antonio, although the last to sail, was the first to arrive at its des- tination, casting anchor in San Diego Bay, April 11, 1769. The San Carlos, after a most disastrous voyage, drifted into the bay on April 29th. The crew were prostrated with scurvy and it was with difficulty that a boat was manned to go ashore. The sick were landed, but when the scourge had run its course, few were left. Moncada's land expedition, after an uneventful march, reached San Diego May 14th. On the first day of July Portala's command arrived and the four divisions, aggregating 126 persons who were expected to remain in the countrv, were united. The ravages of scurvy had so depleted the crews of the two vessels that onlv enough men remained to man one vessel. The San Antonio was sent back to San Bias for supplies and another crew for the San Carlos. A third vessel, the San Jose, had been fitted out by Galvez and loaded with supplies for the missionaries ; but she was never heard from after the day of sailing. On July 1 6th, Father Serra formally founded the first mission in Nueva California, which was dedicated to San Diego de Alcala — St. James of Alcala — a Franciscan friar who died in 1463 and was canonized in 1588. On July 14th Governor Portala, with Padres Crespi and Gomez and a force made up of sol- diers and Indians of Lower California, numbering in all sixty-five persons, set out from San Diego to go overland to Monterey Bay and there found the intended mission and settlement. The route of the expedition was mainly along the coast, with afi occasional divergence inland. On August 2nd they camped on the future site of Los Angeles. Along the coast of Santa Barbara channel they found pop- ulous Indian villages and were everywhere welcomed by the natives of the coun- try. The explorers passed by Monterey Bay without recognizing it from the description of Viscaino, and traveled along the coast to the north. On Nov. 2nd some of the hunters of the party climbed a hill and saw an "arm of the sea." This was the body of water we now know as San Francisco Bay. Their pro- visions were exhausted and many were sick. In consequence it was decided to turn back and the party reached San Diego again in January, 1770. Portala's expedition had failed in its object to found a mission on the bay of Monterey, but it had accomplished a far greater feat — it had discovered San Francisco Bay. In April. 1770, Portala again set out for Monterey, with a force of twenty- five soldiers and natives. At the same time Father Serra sailed on the San An- tonio for the bay. On June 3. 1770, the mission of San Carlos Borremeo de Monterey was formally established on the beach, with solemn ceremonies, ac- 10 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA companied by the ringing of bells and the crack of musketry and roar of cannon. Father Serra conducted the services and Governor Portala took possession of the country in the name of the King of Spain, Carlos III. A presidio or fort of palisades was erected and a few huts built. Portala, having formed the nucleus of a settlement, turned over the command of the territory to Fages and sailed to Lower California on the San Antonio. This was the end of his term as Gov- ernor. Presidios and Pueblos. For the protection of the missions and to prevent foreigners from entering California, military posts, called presidios, were established at San Diego, Monte- rey, Santa Barbara and San Francisco. These enclosures were in the form of a square and were surrounded by adobe walls ten or twelve feet high. Within were the officers' quarters, the barracks for the soldiers, a guard house, chapel, granaries, and storehouses. A military force, usually consisting of one coi"' pany, was stationed at each post under the command of a colonel or lieutenant. The largest force was kept at Monterey, the capital of the territory. The Gov- ernor, or commandante-general who, under Spanish rule was always an army officer, was commander-in-chief of the troops in the territory. The principal service of the soldiers was to keep in check the neophytes, to protect the mis- sions from the incursions of the "gentiles," as the wild Indians were known, and to capture neophytes who had escaped to their unconverted relatives. The mission fathers were opposed to the colonization of the countrv by white people. They well knew that the bringing of a superior race of people into contact with the lower would result in the demoralization of the inferior race. As rapidly as they could found missions, they arrogated to themselves all th' choice lands within the vicinity of each establishment. A settler could not ob- tain a grant of land from the public domain if the padres of the nearest mission opposed the action. The difficulty of obtaining supplies from Mexico for the soldiers of the presidios, necessitated the founding of agricultural colonies. Pre- vious to 1776 the Governor of "Las Californias" as the country TFrom Cape San Lucas to the most northern point of the Spanish possessions was known, re- sided at Loreto, in Lower California. In that year the territory was divided into two districts and a governor appointed for each. Felipe de Neve was made Governor of Nueva California, of which Monterey was designated as the capital, and Rivera y Moncada was appointed Governor of Lower California to reside at Loreto. Hitherto all expeditions to Nueva California had come either by the coast route, up the peninsula, or by sea. In 1774 Captain Juan Bautista de Anza, commander of the Tubac presidio of Sonora, was ordered to explore a route by wa}' of the Gila and Colorado rivers overland to Monterey. With a party of BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 11 thirty-four men, he made the Jornada, crossing the desert, entering the San Ber- nardino Vallev through the San Gorgonio Pass and reaching San Gabriel. On his return to Sonora, he recruited a second expedition composed of soldiers, set- tlers and their families— in all over three hundred persons, who were designed to found a mission and a presidio on San Francisco Bay. After a long and toil- some journey this party reached California in 1776. On the 17th of Septembe 1776, the presidio of San Francisco was formally established and on October 9th the mission, christened for the founder of the Franciscan order, was founded. Governor de Neve, on his journey overland in 1777 from Loreto to Monte- rey, was instructed to examine the country from San Diego northward and se- lect locations for agricultural settlements. He chose two colony sites, one on the Rio de Porciuncula, where Portala's expedition had camped in 1769 and to which he had given the name of "Nuestra Sehora de Los Angeles," and the other on the Rio de Guadalupe in the northern section of the territory. Here, Nov. 29. 1777, Governor de Neve founded the Pueblo de San Jose. The col- onists were nine soldiers from the presidios of Monterey and San Francisco and five settlers of Anza's expedition. These, with their families, made a total of sixty-six. The site of the pueblo was about a mile north of the present city of San Jose. Each settler was given a tract of irrigable land, a soldier's rations and ten dollars per month. Each head of a family received a yoke of oxen, two horses, two cows, a mule, two sheep and two goats, a few farming implements and seed for the first sowing. The colonists were to reimburse the royal treas- ury for all the articles furnished them except their rations and monthly pay, the payments to be made in installments from the products of their industry. The Spanish government had an elaborate code of laws governing the es- tablishment and management of pueblos. These were applied with small mod- ification to all new pueblos, whatever their location and conditions. Each pueblo must contain four square leagues of land, which was divided into planting fields, allotted to the colonists ; lands retained by the municipality for renting ; a com- mon pasture for the use of all, and a portion of land reserved for the state, used for raising revenues. Wood and water were communal property. The pueblo was governed by a semi-civil, semi-military official known as the comisionado. There was also an alcalde, who was a mayor and petty judge. A guard of sol- diers were kept at the guard house, partly for protection against the Indians and partly to preserve the peace in the pueblo. In 1779 Rivera y Moncada, the Governor of Lower California, was instructed to recruit in Sonora and Sinaloa settlers for the founding of a pueblo on the Rio Porciuncula and soldiers for the founding of a presidio and mission on the Santa Barbara channel. The settlers were to receive each $106.50 for two years and $60 for the next three years, the payment to be in clothing and other neces- sary articles at cost price ; also live stock, farming implements and seeds. These 12 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA liberal offers secured but few recruits and those of poor quality. . After a year Rivera had obtained but fourteen settlers. Two of these deserted before the company left Sonora and one was left behind at Loreto when, in April, 1781, the expedition began to march up the peninsula. The colonists under command of Lieut. Zuniga arrived at San Gabriel, August i8th, where they remained until Sept. 4th. The eleven settlers and their families — forty-four persons in all, es- corted bv Gov. de Neve and a small guard of soldiers and accompanied by the priests of San Gabriel Mission, on Sept. 4, 1781, proceeded to the site previously selected for the pueblo. This was on the right bank of the Rio Porciuncula near the spot where Portala's explorers had celebrated the feast of Nuesta Sehora de Los Angeles de Porciuncula, from which circumstances was derived the name of the pueblo and the river. A plaza, seventy-five by one hundred varas was laid off on the mesa above the river as the center of the settlement. A mass was said by the priests of the mission, a procession was formed and marched around the plaza, the soldiers bearing the imperial standard of Spain and the women the image of "Our Lady of the Angels." The priests blessed the plaza and the house lots. The services over, the Governor and his escort took their departure and the colonists were left to work out their destiny. Another pueblo called Branciforte was founded in 1797 near Santa Cruz, but never prospered. The settlers were discharged soldiers, unused to labor and averse to acquiring indus- trious habits. A few grants of land were made to private citizens, but substantially, during the Spanish era, all the land outside of the pueblos used for grazing or for culti- vation was held by the missions. The commerce of California at this period was limited to the ships of the missions which usually came twice a year from San Bias with supplies for the missions and presidios and took away the few commer- cial products of the country, such as otter skins, hides and tallow of cattle. About 1800 the American smugglers began to come to the coast. The vessels engaged in this trade were principally from Boston and were fast sailing craft. They exchanged Yankee notions for otter skins. The authorities tried to suppress this illicit traffic, but were not often successful, as the vessels were heavily armed and when not able to escape the revenue officers, by speed or strategem, were not averse to fighting their way out. Of the long and bloody struggle for Mexican independence, beginning with the insurrection led by the patriot priest, Hidalgo, in 18 10, and continuing under various leaders for eleven years, but little was known in California. The men who filled the office of territorial governor during the years of the fratricidal struggle — Arrilliga, Argiiella and Sola, were royalists and so were the mission padres, nearly all of whom were Spanish born. The soldiers and the common people knew but little about what was going on in the world beyond and cared less. The one event that disturbed the placidity of life during the closing years BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 13 of the Spanish rule was the appearance on the coast of Bouchard, the privateer, with two frigates heavily armed. Bouchard was a Frenchman cruising under letters of Marque from the insurgent government of Buenos Ayres, against the Spanish. He entered the harbor of Monterey, Nov. 21, 181 8, probably to ob- tain supplies, but being coldly received, he fired upon the fort. The Californians made a brave resistance, but were finally overpowered. Bouchard sacked and burned the town. He next appeared at Ortega's Rancho, where he burned the buildings. Here the Californians captured three prisoners, who were exchanged next day when Bouchard anchored ofif Santa Barbara for one Californian whom the insurgents had captured at Monterey. Bouchard next visited San Juan Cap- istrano, where his "pirates" drank the padres' wine, then he took his departure from California. Four of Bouchard's men were left and became permanent resi- dents — Joseph Chapman, an American, and Fisher, a negro, who were captured at Monterey ; and John Ross, a Scotchman, and Jose Pascual, a negro, who de- serted at San Juan. Chapman was the first American resident of Southern Cali- fornia. He married Guadalupe Ortega, a daughter of the owner of the Refugio Rancho which was plundered by the insurgents, and settled at the mission San Gabriel. He built there the first flour mill erected in California. The war of Mexican Independence caused hard times in California. The soldiers received no pay and the mission supply ships came at long intervals. Money was almost an unknown quantity. There were products to sell, but no one to sell them to except an occasional smuggler, or a tallow ship from Peru. CHAPTER III. The Mission Establishments. IT WAS not the intention of the vSpanish g-overnment that the mission estabhshments should continue permanently as missions. According to the law, at the end of ten years from its founding each mission was to be converted into a municipal organization, known as a pueblo, or town ; and the property of the mission, both personal and real, was to be sub-divided among the neophytes of the establishment. But the training which the natives received did not fit them for self-government. They were forced to labor and were instructed in many branches of industry, as well as in the religious ceremonials ; but they received no intellectual training and they made little progress toward self-control. The padres persistently urged that the neophytes were incompetent to use and manage property, and during the time that Cali- fornia was subject to Spain no attempt was made to carry out the law and secularize the missions. In form, the different missions resembled one another. Col. J. J. Warner, thus describes the general form: "A large pile of buildings in the form of a quadrangle, composed partly of burnt brick, but chiefly of sun-dried ones, was erected around a spacious court. A large and capacious church, usually occupying one corner of the quadrangle, was a conspicuous part of the pile. In these buildings, which were covered with red tile, was the habitation of the friars, rooms for guests and for the major-domos and their families, hospital wards, storehouses and granaries." A guard of four or five soldiers was kept at each mission to control the neophytes. Each establishment held possession of large tracts of land, con- tiguous to its buildings. These were divided into ranches, over which roamed large herds and flocks under the charge of Indian vaqueros. The neophytes for the most part were docile and easily managed, and some of the brighter ones were taught mechanical trades and became fairly good blacksmiths, weavers, tanners, shoemakers, saddlers, brick-makers, etc. They certainly accomplished a large amount of labor under the padres and proved themselves capable, with proper supervision, of supporting themselves — and producing a large surplus for the benefit of the church. The history and present condition of each mission is here presented. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 15 JUNIPERO SERRA. " The first Apostle of California," Father Junipero Serra, was a humble friar of the Franciscan order when, in 1767, he was appointed presidente general of the missions of the Californias, in charge of the missions of Lower California, and with orders to establish new missions in L'pper California. Filled with zeal for the salvation of souls, he prepared with great rejoicing and with excellent good sense, as well, to enter new territory. For sixteen years he labored inces- santl}-, travelling up and down the coast and visiting the City of Mexico, although he was afiiicted with an incurable disease and so lame that he could not move without suffering. He founded nine missions before his death, at which five thousand natives had been baptized. Less than a year before he died, he made his last journey from San Diego to Monterey, visiting each of the missions, journeying on foot, sleeping on the ground, although he was so ill that no one believed he would live to complete the trip. Fie was most ascetic in his habits, never eating meat ; sleeping upon rough boards, and spending most of the night in prayer ; Palou relates that four days before his death an old Indian woman came to visit the holy father and with his own hand he gave her a blanket. After his death thev found that it was half of his own blanket that he had given. Father Serra was born on the Island of Majorca in 1713: he died at San Carlos Mission, August 29, 1784, and was buried in the church to which he had given so much of his love and thought. To Junipero Serra and his noble band of assistants California owes the existence of her mission ruins ; but she also owes to these simple, hard-working friars, the beginnings of her industries, the nomenclature of her geography, the distinctiveness of her architecture and the civilization of her savages. SAN DIEGO DE ALCALA. JUNIPERO SERRA. The Mission San Diego de Alcala (Saint James of Alcala), was founded July 16, 1769, by Father Junipero Serra, on an eminence overlooking the Bay of San Diego. A temporary altar was erected beneath the branches of a tree from which bells were swung and loudly rung. Water was blessed, the cross raised, high mass was sung by Father Junipero. The services were attended by the officers and soldiers from the ships and the land forces ; the royal standard was unfurled and the country was formally occupied in the name of Carlos III. 16 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA Several huts were erected, one of which was used as a chapel. The Indians at no time very friendly, became hostile, and on August 15, 1769, made an attack upon the mission, but were repulsed, and a stockade was immediately erected around the camp. In 1 77 1 Fathers Luis Jayme and Francisco Dumetz came from Mexico and were placed in charge of the mission. In 1774 the location was changed to a point about seven miles up the Valley of the San Diego river. A wooden church was constructed, 18x57 feet in size, roofed with tules, three small adobe buildings used for a store, a blacksmith shop and a dwelling. In 1775 new buildings were erected and a well dug. A ferocious attack was made upon the settlement by the Indians on the night of November 4th, 1775, all the buildings being destroyed and Father Jayme murdered. His body was found naked with twenty arrow wounds in the breast. Jose Manuel Arroyo, the black- smith, and the carpenter Ursulino were also killed. All three were buried in the chapel at the Presidio. Fathers de la Pena and Fuster resumed the mission work, h o 1 d i n g services at the store-house; a house for sick SAN DIEGO DB ALCALA. women ; a house for sick men ; sheds for wood and oxen ; two horses for the fathers ; a larder ; a guests' room and a kitchen." All were of adobe and with the soldiers" barracks these buildings formed three sides of a quadrangle of 165 feet. The fourth side consisted of an adobe wall fifteen feet high. There was a vat for use in tanning hides, two adobe corrals for sheep and one for cows. These were outside the regular mission enclosure. The cabins of the neophytes were of wood and grass. At this time there were seven hundred and forty neoi:)hytes, under missionary care. In 1793, a substantial granary of adobe, 96x24 feet, was built, and in 1795. the vineyard was surrounded with an adobe wall five hundred yards in length. This year saw also the commencement of an extensive system of irrigating ditches, remains of which can still be seen and constitute a valuable object lesson in ditch construction. About three miles of San Diego river was dammed back with a solid stone dam thirteen feet in thickness and coated with cement that BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 17 became as solid as rock and remains so to this day. In the center of this dam was a gateway from which a stream of water, 12x24 inches, was carried through an aqueduct of tile and resting on a base of cobblestones and cement. This aqueduct for the major portion of the way was laid along the sides of a precipitous gorge and frequently crossed gulches from 15 to 20 feet wide, and as many feet deep. On May 25th, 1803, an earthquake occurred which damaged the church. In 1804, a new church was begun. It was completed and dedicated November 1 2th, 181 3. It is the ruins of this building that we see today. The remains of Fathers Jayme, Figuer and Mariner were transferred from their old resting place and buried in one grave, though in separate coffins, between the altars of the church, Father Jayme resting nearest the altar of the Blessed Virgin. From the time of the establishment of San Diego in 1769 to 1834, the date of its secularization, there were 6638 persons baptized, 1879 marriages performed, and 4428 burials. In 183 1, the mission owned 8822 head of cattle, 1 192 horses and 16,661 head of sheep. There were 1506 Indians on the roll of the mission January 6th, 1846, when an inventory of the mission property was taken. In June of the same year the mission lands were sold to Santiago Argiiello for past services to the United States government. His title was not, however, sustained and in accordance with a decision of the United States Land Commissioners, in 1856, based on the old Spanish law, that divided church property into two classes, sacred and ecclesiastical, and whereby sacred property could not be sold, San Diego Mission was returned to the church. " Sacred property" is defined as that which has been formally consecrated to God, such as churches, church buildings, vessels and vestments. The priests' houses and their gardens were thus included. According to this decision all church property that had been sold by Governor Pio Pico reverted to the church, while the ecclesiastic or mission lands were government propertv. San Diego Mission has been in part restored by the Auxiliary to the Land- marks Club. The ruins of the old dam, the irrigating system and garden walls are to be seen. Many of the original trees of the olive orchard are still standing and productive. The old olive press is also there. Down at the old towai of San Diego may be seen the ruins of the first Presidio buildings, relics of the century past. Two old mission bells hung suspended from a beam outside of one of the original buildings. SAN CARLOS BORREMEO DE MONTEREY. Mission San Carlos Borremeo de Monterey was founded June 3rd, 1770, on the inner shore of Monterey Bay, w^here the city of Monterey now stands, 2 A^ -o ^'iff-r- 18 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA the exact location being marked with the statue of Junipero Serra, erected by the late Mrs. Jane Lathrop Stanford. Near the bay shore stands a cross, indicating the landing place of Fathers Serra and Crespi and near by is the old oak tree upon a branch of which they hung the bell, and under which the christening services were held. The Indians of that locality were more timorous than those of the South, and progress in gaining their confidence was somewhat slow, but within about three years, one hundred and seventy-five had been gathered into the church. The situation and surroundings were not satisfactory, however, and a few months later the mission was removed about five miles to the mouth of El Carmel river, on the beautiful Bay of Carmel, and while the mission was thereafter known as San Carlos el Carmello, it officially retained its original title. At this new mission Fathers Serra and Crespi began the study of the SAN CARLOS BORREMEO DE MONTEREY j^^^jj^^^ lauguagc. Rev. Father Juan Crespi was a native of Spain, being sixty-one years of age at the time of his decease, January ist, 1783. He was buried near the main altar. It was here that Serra two years later passed away after a lingering illness, and his remains were laid beside those of Father Crespi. It was not until July 7th, 1793, that the first stone of the new church was laid. It was built of soft, straw-colored stone, quarried near by, laid in lime made from sea-shells, gathered along the sea-beach, the roof being of red tiles. The church was dedicated in 1797, and the remains of this building, restored through the efforts of the Rev. Father Cassanova, pastor of Monterey, are to be seen today. On July 3rd, 1882, Father Cassanova opened the tombs. This was evidently done to reassure the world of the recorded fact that the sacred remains of those true disciples of Christ and pioneers of California, founders of the Missions, were there. At the services, the following entries from the parish records were read : " Rev. Fr. Juan Crespi; born in Spain; died Jany. ist, A. D. 1782, 61 years old, buried near the main altar, gospel side." "Rev. Fr. Junipero Serra, D. D., President of all the Missions ; born in Majorca, Spain ; died on the 28th of August, A. D. 1784, at the age of 71 years, buried in the Sanctuary, fronting the altar of Our Lady of Seven Dolores, on the gospel side." " Rev. Fr. Julian Lopez, born in Spain; died here on the 15th of July, A. D. 1797, aged 35 years; buried in the Sanctuary, on the gospel side, in the tomb near the wall on the BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 19 left." "Rev. Fr. Francisco Lasuen, Vic. for Second President of the Missions, born in Spain, died here, and is buried in the Sanctuary, on the gospel side, in a stone tomb, near the main altar, June 28th, 1803." The heavy stone slabs having been removed before the ceremony began, the coffin in each tomb was left visible. The lids of each was then raised and the people then viewed the remains of which only the clothing and the skeletons were seen. The tombs were then covered as before with the stone slabs. The coffins were of unplaned redwood boards, and all but that of Father Lasuen in a good state of preservation. When the restoration of the old mission church was commenced in 1882, the tile roof had fallen in, the walls were crumbled, and grass had grown upon the tiled floor. The resting place of the founder of the California missions was completely obliterated. Through the untiring efforts of Father Cassanova, and his band of sympathizers, the tomb of Serra and his beloved co-worker. Father Crespi, are in fairly good repair. Services are held here once a month by the resident priest of Monterey, and upon each occasion the old mission bell is rung. SAN ANTONIO DE PADUA. The Mission San Antonio de Padua (Saint Anthony of Padua), now a mass of ruins, was founded by Father Junipero Serra, July 14, 1771, under most auspicious circumstances. The ringing of bells attracted an Indian, and instead of hiding in fear, he remained to witness the ceremony of dedication, and later brought his companions in large numbers to meet the missionaries. This mission is located in a beauti- fully oak-studded glen, in the Santa Lucia Mountains, and near the Sa- linas River, in Monterey County. Father Serra named the valley Los Robles. The present ruins are those of the second church, which was built in the year 1809 or 1810, and was extended by adobe structures several times. The Indians assisted Fathers Buenaventura, Sit jar and Miguel Pieras in erecting the first temporary structure, which was unusual. San Antonio became famous for its piety, prosperity and its splendid horses. In 1805 it had a population of 1261 neophytes. An inventory of property made in 1835, when the mission was secularized, showed the valuation of buildings and vineyards to be $90,000.00, but in 1845 it was invoiced at only SAN ANTONIO DE PADUA. 20 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA $8,000.00. and the membership had declined to ten men and five women. Mrs. Forbes writes in 1904 that, "At present the roof of the mission building has fallen in and the last room is ready to collapse. The relics have all been stolen or removed to other places, with the exception of one iron kettle used by the Fathers in cooking soup for the Indians. ( )nly one family of the original Indians of the Valley remain, and they live many miles from the mission. The tree upon which Father Serra hung the bell when the first chapel was founded still stands beside the road, leading up to the mission. Near by the mission flows Mission creek, a branch of the San Antonio river. In mission davs the Padres constructed a dam across the river, and its water was diverted to irrigate the mission lands. At one time San Antonio rivalled San Juan Capistrano, San I^iis Rey and Santa Barbara in prosperity and importance. The buildings were extensive. Long cloisters, arches and broken walls and tiled roofs now remain to tell the story of architectural grandeur." SAN GABRIEL ARCANGEL. The Mission San Gabriel Archangel was founded September 8th, 1771, by Fathers Angel Somera and Pedro Benito Cambon. The first mission site was located about five miles south of the present mission on the bank of the San Gabriel (then San Miguel) river. The first chapel was of logs cut to length, the desired height of the building, then split in two and set upright in a trench or ditch. The roof was made of tules and adobe mud. The dwellings of the priests and attendants were enclosed with a stockade of similar construction which, however, was soon replaced with an adobe wall. Not a vestige of this first mission of San Gabriel remains, and it is even quite uncertain as to its exact location. By reason of danger from floods, from the river's overflow, low-land frosts and poor drainage, the mission was moved to its present site, then as now, a most charming location, in the midst of a belt of live oak, on warm and responsive soil. The date of removal to the new site is unknown, but it must have been about 1775, since Junipero Serra in his second annual report of 1774 indicates his intention to move San Gabriel Mission a short distance and states that for that reason no permanent improvements had been made on the old site. The stone church which is now the admiration of visitors was half finished in 1704, and had not been completed in 1800. It was first built with an arched roof, in which cracks soon appeared. When these were repaired an earthquake reojiened them. The arched roof was then removed and a new roof of timbers and tiles substituted in 1804. The valley was fertile and Indians were numerous btit were seemingly slow to embrace the religion of the Friars, since BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 21 only seventy-three baptisms were recorded the first two years. Up to the year 1800, there were, however, 1078 neophytes attached to the mission. There had been 1953 baptisms, 869 burials and 396 marriages performed. Once e.stablished on the new mission site affairs seemed to take on new life and enterprise and set the pace for those missions already established and those to be. In 1806 Jose Marie Zalvidea, a man of great energy and executive ability, was transferred from San Fernando to San Gabriel. According to Hugo Reid : " He it was, who planted the large vineyards, intersected with fine walks, shaded fruit trees of every description, and rendered still more lovely by shrubs interspersed between ; who laid out the orange garden, fruit and olive orchards ; built the mill and dam; made fences of tunas (cactus) round the fields; made hedges of rose bushes ; planted trees in the mission square, with a flower garden and hour-dial in the center ; brought water from long distances, etc. He also remodeled the existent system of government. Every article must henceforth be in place, and every man at his station. Everything under him was that organization lash ! The people vided into class- Tliese included makers, tanners, penters, black- cooks, general fishermen, agri- and tile makers, ers, tallow melt- carters, cart- organized and kept up with a were now di- es and vocatioii.--. vaqueros, soap- shoemakers, car- smiths, bakers, servants, pages, culturists. brick musicians, sing- ers, vigherons, san gabriel arcangel makers, shepherds, poultry-keepers, pigeon-tenders, weavers, spinners, saddle- makers, store and key-keepers, deer hunters, deer and sheep-skin dressers, masons, plasterers, people of all work— everything but coopers, these were foreign ; all the rest were native Indians. " Large soap works were erected, tanning yards established, tallow works, bakery, cooper, blacksmith, carpenter and other shops. Large spinning rooms, where might be seen fifty or sixty women turning their spindles merrily, and looms for weaving wool, flax and cotton. Then large store rooms were allotted to the various articles, which were kept separate. For instance, wheat, barley, peas, beans, lentels, chick, peas, butter and cheese, soap, candles, wool, leather, flour, lime, salt, horse-hair, wine and spirits, fruit stores, etc., etc. Sugar-cane, flax and hemp were added to the other articles cultivated, but cotton wool was imported. " At an early period in the history of San Gabriel, a water-power mill, for grinding wheat, was constructed and put in operation in front of and near the 22 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA mission building. At a later period, a new grist mill was built by the mission, and placed about two miles west of the mission proper. This was also operated by water-power. The building in which was placed the mill is still standing and is known as El Molino, the Spanish words for " The Mill." It is now the property of H. E. Huntington. A water-power saw-mill was also built by this mission, and was located near the last-mentioned grist-mill. These were the only mills made or used in California, either for grinding or sawing, in which water was the motive power, or in which a wheel was used, for more than half a century after the founding of the first mission. In these two grist- mills the revolving mill stone was upon the upper end of the vertical shaft, and the water-wheel upon the lower end, so that the revolution of the stone was no more frequent than that of the water-wheel. They did no grading or separating of the flour in these mills. This process, if done at all, was done with hand sieves." " The principal ranchos belonging at that time to San Gabriel were San Pasqual, Santa Anita, Azusa, San Francisquito, Cucamonga, San Antonio, San Gorgonio, Yucaipa, Jurupa, Guapa, Rincon, Chino, San Jose, Ybarras, Puente, Mission Vieja, Serranos, Rosa Castillo, Coyotes, Jaboneria, Las Bolsas, Alamitos and Serritos. "The principal head (Major-domo) commanded and superintended over all. Claudio Lopez was the famed one during Padre Zalvidea's administration, and although only executing the priest's plans, in the minds of the people he is the real hero Ask any one who made this, or who did that, and the answer on all sides is the same: ' El difunto Claudio!' Great credit is due him for carrying out without flogging the numerous works intrusted to him. There were a great many other major-domos under him for all kinds of work, from tending of horses down to those of superintending crops, and in charge of vineyards and gardens. " Indian alcaldes were appointed annually by the padre, and chosen from among the very laziest in the community, he being of the opinion that they took more pleasure in making the others work than would industrious ones, and from my own observation this is correct. They carried a wand to denote their authority, and an immense scourge of rawhide about ten feet in length, plaited to the size of an ordinary man's wrist. They did a great deal of chastisement. " The unmarried women and girls were kept as nuns, imder the supervision of an abbess, who slept with them in a large room. Their occupations: some- times they served, at others they cleaned weeds from out of the gardens with hoes, worked at the ditches or gathered in the crops. The best looking youths were kept as pages to attend at the tables and those of most musical talent were reserved for church service. "The number of hogs was great. They were principally used for making soap. (The Indians, with a few exceptions, refused to eat pork.) Near the BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 23 mission at San Francisquito (San Fernando Mission) were kept the turkeys of which they had large numbers. The dove-cote was alongside of the soap works, in an upper story, affording plenty of dung to cure leather and skins with. " The padre had an idea that finery led Indians to run away, for which reason he never gave either men or women any other clothing (including skirts and petticoats) than coarse frieze (xerga) made by themselves, which kept the poor wretches all the time diseased with the itch. If any handkerchiefs or cotton goods were discovered among them the same were immediately committed to the flames. He was an inveterate enemy to drunkenness, and did all in his power to prevent it, but to no purpose. He never flogged, however, while the influence of liquor lasted, but put them into stocks, under the care of a guard until sober. Finding the lash, alone, was of no avail, he added warm water and salt to the dose, which was given as a drink until it ran out of the mouth again. It was no use. The disease was as incurable as consumption. " Having found out the game practiced in regard to destroying the children borne by Indian women to white men, he put down all miscarriages to the same cause. Therefore, when a woman had the misfortune to bring forth a still-born child, she was punished. The penalty inflicted was shaving the head, flogging for fifteen subsequent days, iron on the feet for three months, and having to appear every Sunday in church on the steps leading up to the altar, with a hideous painted wooden child in her arms. He had no predilections for wizards, and generally (as some one or other was always reporting evil of them) kept them chained together in couples and well flogged. There were, at that period, no small number of old men rejoicing in the fame of witchcraft, so he made sawyers of them all, keeping them like hounds in couples and so they worked, two above and two below in the sawpit. On a breach occurring between man and wife, they were fastened together by the leg until they agreed to live in harmony. He was not only severe, but he was in his chastisements most cruel. So as not to make a revolting picture, I shall bury acts of barbarity, known to me through good authority, by merely saying that he must assuredly have considered whipping as meat and drink to them, for they had it morning, noon and night. Although so severe to the Indians, he was kind, in the extreme, to travelers and others. There being so much beef, mutton, pork and poultry, with fruits, vegetables and wine, a splendid public table was spread daily, at which he presided." J. J. Warner, in 1889, furnished the writer the following, as setting forth the usual dinner served daily at San Gabriel Mission during the years of its prosperity: First course: Caldo (plain broth in which meat and vegetables had been boiled). Second course: La Olla (meat boiled with vegetables and served separately). Third course: El Bondigas (forced meat balls in gravy). Fourth course: Guisados (stews, generally two). Fifth course: Azado (roasts — beef. 24 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA mutton, game, fowls). Sixth course: Fruit and sweetmeat. Seventh course: Tea, coffee, cigarritos. Pork was also eaten sparingl)^ at every meal. Wine was served ad libitum. On Friday, fish followed the caldo, and the meats were dispensed with. Horses to ride were ever at their service, and a good bed to sleep on at night. Whenever ready to start, either up or down the coast, horses and a servant were ever at their command to go as far as the next mission." Having brought the establishment and everything connected with it to the climax of perfection, Zalvidea had still calculated on doing more. He purchased large quantities of iron, with the intention of railing in all vineyards and gardens. But, alas ! even Catholic societies are not proof against the " capital sins " they so strongly condemn. Envy and jealousy stepped in and prevailed. He was ordered by his superior to the mission of San Juan Capistrano. The loss of his favorite hobby capsized his reason, and after lingering for many years in a disturbed religious state of mind he at length expired, regretted by all who knew his worth and gigantic intellect. During his pastorate, Zalvidea also mastered the Indian language, and reduced it to grammatical rules, being the first padre in this section having either the ability or energy necessary for such a task. He translated the church service, and preached each Sabbath in the native tongue. His translation of the Lord's Prayer, commencing " Ayoinac," "Our Father," is said by Mr. Reid to be a " a grand specimen of his eloquence and ability." He thus gave the natives an insight into the Catholic faith, but did not alter their own one iota. Those who came after him were too indolent to keep up the reforms he had inaugurated. For a time sermons were translated sentence by sentence, to the congregation ; but this was soon discontinued, probably to the great relief of the unfortunate listeners. Zalvidea was succeeded by Padre Jose Bernardo Sanchez, his former colleague and assistant, who is described as having been " of a cheeerful disposi- tion, and a frank and generous nature." He was also a great sportsman and capital shot. " In ecclesiastical affairs, solemn ; in trade, formal ; in government of the mission, active, lively, and strict ; in social intercourse, friendly, full of anecdote, and fond of jokes; even to those of a practical nature." "The regulations enforced by his predecessor were still observed under Sanchez, but while the lash was still ready, other modes of punishment Avere adopted for minor offenses. Nor was such leniency barren of good results, for many Indians who had formerly proven insubordinate from mere vindictiveness of spirit, now refrained because of the love and good will which all bore toward their spiritual and temporal ruler. " Supplies for the mission were purchased in large quantities, frequently amounting to $30,000 at one time. These purchases consisted of domestics BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 25 (brown, bleached and printed), flannels, cloths, ribbons, silks, hosiery, sugar, panoche, rice, etc., etc. These articles were distributed in two stores, from whence they were dealt out to the natives, or sold to the public. The people were now better dressed than formerly. The coarse frieze (xerga) of the women was used only as sweat-cloths for horses ; and all the native ladies appeared at church in full-blown glory of fancy petticoats, clean white chemises, variegated kerchiefs on their head, and rebosos around their shoulders. The men had pants, jackets, hats, and fancy silk sashes. Even the children plumed themselves in gay colors, and sported shirts and kerchiefs. Married people were provided with sheets for their beds, and even curtains. The major-domo visited each house weekly to see that all was kept clean, and the priest made a similar round in person once a month. Rations, with wine and spirits (and occasionally a few dollars in money) were distributed once a week; but in addition to this, daily food was provided ready cooked, for the laborers. We quote further from Mr. Reid's letters : " The mission bell, on being rung, aroused the alcaldes from their slumbers, and these with loud voices soon set all the world agog. Alass was now heard, and again the bell rang to work. At eleven its notes proclaimed dinner, when in all flocked, basket in hand, to receive posale and a piece of beef. (Posale consisted of beans boiled with corn or wheat.) At twelve o'clock they were again warned to their labors, which concluded a little before sundown, to afford them time to receive supper, which consisted of ' atolc ' or mush. If a gang were at a distance, a copper kettle and attendant accompanied them and provided food on the spot. " After twelve o'clock on Saturdays soap was distributed, and all the world went a washing of clothes and persons, to make a decent appearance at church on Sunday. Saturday night was devoted to playing pco)i, and, with few excep- tions, none slept; for whites and Indians, men, women and children, were all generally present. " After service on Sunday, foot-ball and races took place, and in the after- noon a game called ' Shindy ' by the Scotch, and ' Bandy ' by the English, was played, with men and women on opposite sides. People flocked in from all parts to see the sport and heavy bets were made. The priest took great interest in the game and, as the women seldom had less than half a dozen quarrels among them, in which hair flew by the handfuls, he was the more pleased. The game being concluded, all went to prayers and so ended the Sabbath." The general statistics of the Mission of San Gabriel for the whole period of its existence of sixty-three years (from 1771 to 1834) are thus given by Bancroft : Total number of baptisms. 7,854, of which 4.355 were Indian adults, 2,459 Indian children, and i adult and 1.039 children of " gente de razon," 26 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA which may mean the Spaniards and their mixed-blooded descendants. Total marriages, 1,955; o^ which 241 were " gente de razon." Total deaths, 5,656; of which 2,896 were Indian adults, 2,363 Indian children, 211 adults and 186 children " de razon." Annual average, 88 ; annual average death rate, 7.61 per cent, of population. Largest population, 1,701, in 1817. There was a slight excess of males down to 1803, and a greater excess later. The proportion of children varied from one-eighth per cent, at first to one-tenth per cent, at the last. Largest number of cattle, 26,300, in 1828; horses, 2,400, in 1827; mules, 205, in 1814; asses, 6 in 1794; sheep, 15,000, in 1829; goats, 1,380 in 1785; swine, 300, in 1802, 1803 and 1822; all kinds, 40,360 animals, in 1830. Total product of wheat, 225,942 bushels; yield, 16 fold. Barley (for only eleven years), 1,250 bushels; yield, 10 fold. Maize, 154,820 bushels; yield, 145 fold. Beans, 14,467 bushels ; yield, 28 fold. In the year 1834, at the time of seculariza- tion, there were 163,579 vines in four vineyards, and 2,333 fi'wit trees. All statistics stop with the attempted secularization of the mission in 1834. In 1832, Governor Echandia sent an envoy to San Gabriel Mission, demand- ing a loan, which was refused. The store house was broken open and the money in gold coin forcibly taken and never returned. Secularization soon followed, and the mission, with upwards of 42,000 head of live stock and gold in sacks passed into the control of the Mexican government, and like all the other missions suffered temporal and spiritual destruction. In June, 1846, the mission estate was sold by Governor Pico to Reid and Workman. The title was not, however, confirmed, and the property returned to the church. In 1847 Father Bias Ordaz took charge of the mission and ministered to the few Indians then remaining, until his death, 1850. It is since secularization, a parish church only, and is now presided over by a parish priest, who holds regular services. SAN LUIS OBISPO DE TOLOSO. On the first of September, 1772, Fathers Junipero Serra and Cavalier founded San Luis Obispo, the fifth mission in California, in honor of St. Louis, Bishop of Toulouse. The history of this mission is a remarkable evidence of the energy and religious zeal of these men of God. Father Serra departed the second day, leaving Father Cavalier, two Lower California Indians, and five soldiers, to commence the work of establishing a mission. Their supplies con- sisted of fifty pounds of flour, three pecks of wheat and a barrel of brown sugar — the sugar to be used in bartering with the native Indians for further supplies. The Indians proved friendly, supplied the missionary with venison, seeds and wild berries, and in many ways helped the Padres. A little chapel and dwelling were soon erected. But Father Cavalier remained alone at his post BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 27 for one year. Then four immigrant families and a few unmarried Christians came to San Luis Obispo to make it their home. In November, 1776, the buildings, except the chapel and granary, were destroyed by fire, the Indians having thrown burning arrows upon the tule roofs. Twice again in ten years the buildings were on fire from the same cause. For this reason tiles were adopted for rool^ng, at all the missions, instead of the dangerous but economical tules. The adobe church was finished in 1793 ; other spacious buildings such as barracks, a missionary's house, work- house, guardhouse, granary, etc., were added the following year. Huts for the natives were comfortable and well l)uilt. A trained blacksmith, a carpen- ter and a millwright were sent to San Luis Obispo to instruct the Indians. Father Luis Martinez labored long and earnestly for the welfare of this SAX LUIS OBISPO DE TOLOSO. mission. He learned the Indian language and gave assistance, both to the troops and to other missions. Squirrels and locusts were extremely troublesome, and one crop was entirely eaten up by mice. In the inventory taken 1836, an item is made of the library and musical instruments, $519, and the total valuation was given at $70,779. On September loth, 1842, Governor Alvarado ordered the lands divided among the neophytes; and two years later the mission was formed into a pueblo. It was sold the following year (1845) to Scott. Wilson & McKierey for $510. However, Governor Mason ordered the property returned to the Catholic church. The mission church is located near the business center of San Luis Obispo, county of the same name, and it is in a good state of repair, being used, as it is, as the parish church. SAN FRANCISCO DE ASIS. Mission San Francisco de Asis, better known as Mission Dolores, is the sixth mission founded in Alta California, and was formally dedicated October 9th, 1776, by Fathers Palou, Cambon, Nocedal and Pena. Officers and soldiers of the Presidio were present. High mass was sung by Father Palou, the image St. Francis was exhibited, bells were rung, volleys of musketry rent the air, cannons and rockets from the good ship San Carlos, lying in the bay. were fired. The building was a comfortable house of wood, roofed with tules and plastered with clay. It measured about 54x30x15 feet. The first chapel blessed was at the presidio, on the 17th of September, on the Feast of Stigmata of St. Francis. 28 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA the patron saint of the port and missions, while the mission was named for the patron saint of the Franciscan order. 'i'he name Dolores (sorrow) in this instance signifies the name of a stream or lagoon, a jjlace known as " the willows "' l)y those who came in 1849. This swamp was later filled in and graded, forming the tract that lies between Seventeenth, Nineteenth, \'alencia and Howard streets. The corner-stone for the present chnrch was laid 1782, and by 1795 adobe bnildings with tile roofs, forming two sides of a square were completed ; also a ditch protecting the potrero or cattle farm and fields, had been dug. Weaving looms were constructed by the Indians and a substantial though coarse kind of blanketing, was woven as clothing" for the SAX FRANCISCO DE ASIS. i - a- 1 M •<- neophytes. \ ancouver describes it as " cloth not to be despised, had it received the advantage of fulling." The ])roducts made and produced at Dolores Mission were soap, salt, wool, hides, wine, tallow and butter. The garden was not notable for its produce, the reason given being high winds and weather unfavorable to horti- culture. The climate proved detrimental to the Indians, and after a fierce epidemic of measles, a new mission known as the " hospital mission " was founded at San Rafael, across the bay, and 590 of the Indians were transferred to this place for a change of climate. Later 322 neophytes were sent to Solano. and it was thought best at one time to discontinue the mission at San Francisco altogether ; but the idea met stout opposition from Father President Sarria. Consef|uently a new mission, known as New San Francisco or Solano, was founded, and the old San Francisco, known as Dolores, was not abandoned. Dolores was not a prosperous mission, and rapidly declined after secularization. The Fathers baptized 6883 persons and buried 2089. The little church-yard at the side of the mission is small and sad. Few monuments mark the resting places of any of the 2000 and over, who lie sleeping in that small space. A tall shaft marks the grave of the first Mexican governor, Don Luis Antonio Arguello. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO. The founding of the Mission San Juan Capistrano was accomplished under many discouragements. The first attempt was made by Fathers Lasuen and Amurrio on the 19th or the 30th of October, 1775. Dates given by Palou and Ortega diflfer. The first service was held in a hut of branches. A laree cross BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 29 SAN JL'AN CAPlSTliANiJ. was erected and blessed, but nothing further was done at that time. The bells of Capistrano were taken down from the tree and buried. On November ist, 1776, a second attempt was made by Father Serra. A new altar was erected, mass was celebrated, and the seventh mission of California was founded, upon the site known by the Indians as Sajirit. Capistrano became prosperous, but did not excel either in number of converts or in wealth. In February, 1797, work was begun on the stone chapel, the ruins of which are standing today. It proved to be one of the grandest church buildings in California. It measured 159x30 feet, was surmounted by a lofty tower, and all was of stone and mortar. The stones were not hewn, but were fitted together in the rough. The church was built with nave and transept with thick walls, and an arched, dome-like roof. Here and there remain evidence of decoration. Ten vears ago there still were wooden figures to be seen in many small niches and the carving showing ability and taste. It is to be regretted that these relics were carried away and not placed in the room used as the chapel. The stone church of San Juan Capistrano was dedicated September 7th, 1806. The cere- monv lasted three days, and visiting Padres and Indians came long distances, even as far as from Santa Barbara, to witness the ceremony. But the magnificent building was doomed to short service, for on the morning of December 8th, 1812, a terrible earthquake shook it to its very foundation, causing the lofty tower to crash down upon the vaulted roof, precipitating the mass of stone and mortar down upon the worshipping congregation — for it was on Sunday morning. About fifty persons were present, and only ten escaped. Excavation for the recovery of the crushed and mangled bodies began at once, but nothing has ever been done toward restoring the building to its former grandeur. Capistrano was secularized in 1833, and even after the loss of the mission church the inventory placed the valuation of the mission at about $55,000; with debts of only $1410. In December, 1845, the mission buildings were sold to McKinley and Forster for $710.00. Juan Forster was in possession for twenty years, but after extended litigation, the Catholic church regained possession of the property. SANTA CLARA. The Mission of Santa Clara was founded January 12th. 1777. by Father Tomas de la Pena. O. S. F. The site was the present Laurel Wood Farm of 30 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA CI.ARA. by Don Ignacio Alviso, as foreman. Peter J. Donahue. The floods of 1778-9, however, obHged the Fathers to look for higher and safer grounds. They selected the " \'alley of the Oaks," a location some 150 yards to the southwest of the present Union depot of the town of Santa Clara. At the ceremony of the removal of the Santa Clara Mission to the second location, Father Serra was himself present, and officiated. The structures there were begun November 19th, 1781, and the second church and buildings were blessed and dedicated on May 15th, 1784. The earthquake of 181 2 cracked the walls of the church and the more severe " temblores " of 1818 completed the destruction. A third church was erected upon the present site of the mission church, and was dedicated on August nth, 1822, the eve of Santa Clara. This third church was the work of Father Jose Viader, assisted The original adobe walls of this church were replaced in 1885 by wooden ones. The single belfry, and the facade was replaced in 1862 by the present towers, and the present facades. But the interior, the ornamentations and furnishings are almost intact. These latter include the life-size crucifix, the original holy-water fonts, the pulpits of those early days, the copy of the miraculous and historic painting of " Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe," the identical reredos or background of the main altar, the tabernacle and candelabra-shelves, the wings of the latter itself ; the accompany- ing statues in wood of Saints Joachin and Ann, parents of Our Lady ; and like statues of Saints Juan Capistran and Colette. The reredos contain other statues and medallions. The church has the identical frescoed ceiling of the chancel. The paintings of the walls and ceilings of the interior are reproductions ; also the statue in wood of St. Francis of Asisi, with sacred stigmata on the hands and feet ; also that of St. Anthony of Padua, with the Infant Jesus in his arms. In the right hand belfry are the three old bells donated to the Santa Clara Mission by the King of Spain. Two bear the original dates, 1798 and 1799, and the third, which was recast in 1864, bears the double dates 1805-64. In the college library may be seen the historic paintings of " Alameda," the "Beautiful Way," "Santa Clara Mission in 1851 " and the grand old choral of those early days, with cover in bronze and wood. At the time of Vancouver's visit to Santa Clara, many of the Indians were engaged in building adobe houses for themselves. In 1794, twenty-three of these dwellings with thatched roofs were completed, and in 1798, nearlv all of BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 31 the married neophytes were thus accommodated. Today not a mission Indian is to be found in or about Santa Clara. Here as at all other missions, seculari- zation with one blow ruined fifty years of faithful and patient work of the Padres. SAN BUENAVENTURA. The Mission of San Buenaventura Doctor Sarafico (Saint Bonaventura, Serafic Doctor) was founded Easter Sunday, March 30th, 1783, by Father Serra. It was the last mission that Father Serra founded, and he had intended it to be one of the first. The delay was a trial to the good man, but he com- forted himself with the saying, " the more slowly the more solemnly." The place chosen was the head of the Santa Barbara channel and the home of a large tribe of Indians. The Indians were friendly and even assisted in building a chapel, a house for Father Cambon, who was left in charge, and barracks for the soldiers. The group of buildings was, for greater safety, surrounded by a palisade. Within ten years San Buenaventura had become one of the most flourishing settlements in California. Van- -— couver, who vis- ited the mission ^^ in 1793, speaks of the wonderful ..^a^Vill " g'ardens, the fruits and vege- ...^g^tt^ ■ ' * tables. He men- pomegranates, r^^j|^^^^p|pppp,^„„,-^, cocoanut, sugar- cane, bananas, . plantain and even indigo; besides allof the ordinarv . "" . SAN BUENAVENTURA. , , , kitchen vege- tables, roots and herbs. A disastrous fire compelled the missionaries to erect all new buildings. The new church was built of stone and brick, and it is the one standing today. But the tile roof is gone. The earthquake of 1812 damaged the church and many buildings. The tower and much of the facade were rebuilt. The whole site of Buenaventura settled, and the fear of all sinking into the sea frightened the inhabitants away. They fled to San Joaquin y Santa Ana, where they remained for a year. Here the Priests erected a cajal, or Indian hut, to be used as a chapel. Upon their return to Ventura, the neophytes, under the direction of the Fathers, restored the buildings to a better condition than they were originally. In 1820 the government of Mexico owed to San Buenaventura $35' 1 70- There is no record that it was ever paid. They had purchased sup- plies from the mission, a cargo of hemp, and were in arrears in stipends to the Fathers for $6,200. In 1822 the Indians had individual gardens along the banks of the river, where they raised vegetables for sale. They labored and might 32 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA have become self-supporting, for the mission establishments sold great quantities of produce and supplies to the home government as well as supplying their own demands at the missions. Secularization came in 1837. The mission estate was first rented for $1,630.00 per aniuim, and then sold to Jose Arnaz for $12,000, in June, 1846. His title was not recognized by the United States government. The records of San Buenaventura are interesting old documents. They show 3,857 baptisms, 1,086 marriages, 3,098 deaths. In 1831 there were 7,240 hcatl of live stock. Today the old mission is the parish church of Ventura. SANTA BARBARA. Santa Barbara, (Mrgin and ^Martyr) was founded December 4th. 1786. by Father Fermin Francisco de Lasuen, who had been made IVesident of the Missions the previous year to succeed the lamented Junipero Serra. The site selected was called Taynayam by the natives, and El Pedragoso by the Spaniards. It was about one mile distant from the presido, which had been established in 1782 by Father Serra. The location of Santa Barbara is the most beautiful of all the missions. Back from the water's edge nearly two miles, it is situated in the foothills of the Santa Ynez mountains. It was from the hills of San Marcos that the great oak beams were carried by oxen (or more likely by faithful Indian neophytes) and used in the construction of the mission buildings. Chief Yanonalit, ruler of the thirteen neighboring rancherias, proved friendly and contributed Indians io assist in work, their labor to be paid for in articles of clothing and food. This was especially the arrangement for work on the presidio. The first chapel con- structed was of boughs. In the following year, 1787, a church building 15x42 feet, was made of adobe and thatched with straw. Six other Iniildings of the same kind were erected, and in 1788 tiles were manu- factured and all the buildings were covered with them. In 1789 the chapel had become too -small, and another was built. Again in 1793 a larger one was constructed, a fact which is evidence of prosperity. As the Indian population was gradually increasing, it became necessary to form a village and bnild a separate house for each family ; in consequence, nineteen houses were built of adobe in 1798. Also a piece of land was enclosed by an adobe wall nine feet high, and 3600 feet in extent ; to be used SANTA BAPJIAUA. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 33 as a garden, orchard and vineyard. The wall was capped with tiles to protect it from the rain. In 1800 the village was laid out in streets and cross- streets, and there were over fifty houses. The neophytes were taught to weave blankets, to make soap, clothing, implements and many other necessary articles. By 1807 the town of Santa Barbara had 252 dwellings besides the store houses, and other necessary buildings, all enclosed on three sides by a high wall. In this year Santa Barbara dedicated a mission church at the station of Sagshpileel, a large rancheria near a laguna. This was known as San Miguel. Again in 1804 Santa Inez was formed because of the great number of susceptible Indians in this district. The number thus withdrawn from Santa Barbara Mission was over one hundred. The earthquake of 1812 badly damaged the mission building at Santa Barbara, so much so that the chapel building was torn down and replaced by a new stone edifice — the present structure. This new edifice was dedicated on September loth, 1820. The walls of the church, which is still used by the Fathers, are six feet in thickness and were made of hewn stone, strengthened by solid stone buttresses. The building is the most substantial of any of the missions in California. In June, 1846, the mission was sold to Richard S. Den for $7500, but the title was invalid. In 1852, a petition to establish a Franciscan convent or college, with a novitiate for the education of young men, was sent to Rome and was granted by the authorities. Santa Barbara Mission was selected for the purpose. Bishop Thaddeus Amat removed from the mission to the parish church, thus leaving the Fathers in possession. By this arrangement they will have perpetual use of the buildings, gardens, vineyard and two orchards. The inner garden of the Mission is the private park or retreat for the priests, and is closed to the public. With two notable exceptions, woman has never entered this garden. They were Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, wife of the then President of the United States, and Princess Louise Marchioness of Lome. The East garden, comprizing about one acre of land, is a part of the old burying ground and contains over four hundred bodies, one buried upon another. It is a beautiful spot, covered with roses, geraniums, rare plants and trees. The most valued treasure of Santa Barbara is a portion of the true cross brought from the Holy Land. The Mission archives are of inestimable value to California history. The library contains massive books of parch- ment, illuminated, and rare old manuscripts, descriptive of life and scenes of early days in this country. When the missions secularized, books, manu- scripts and most valuable records were sent to Santa Barbara Mission for safe keeping and many still remain there. Huge chests are filled with gorgeous robes and vestments, many of them made of richest brocades. 3 34 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA LA PURISIMA CONCEPCION. December 8th, 1787, Father Lasuen founded the Mission of La Purisima Concepcion in honor of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin. It is situated on the Santa Ynez river. The first church building was replaced by a new one of adobe with tile roof in 1795. Father Payeras, with the aid of interpreters, completed in 1810, a catechism and manual of confession in the Indian language. This was of greatest advantage to the neophytes in the study of religion. However, there remained at this time no more Indians nearer than twenty- LA PURISIMA CONCEPCION. fl^c Or thirty leagues away, to be converted. In 181 5 Father Payeras became president of the California missions, but he continued to reside at Purisima, instead of repairing to San Carlos del Carmelo. Early on the morning of December 12th, 181 2, a violent earthquake shook the church walls out of plumb, a second shock about 11 o'clock destroyed the chapel completely, and nearly all of the mission buildings, besides about 100 of the neophyte houses. Rents in the earth from which black sand and water oozed, added to the peril. Huts of wood and grass were erected for tem- porary use. Later the mission was moved to a position farther up the river, The first church building erected here was destroyed by fire and another one erected and dedicated October 4th, 1825, the remains of which are to be seen today. It is a long, low structure, and had twenty-one rooms. There were twelve smaller buildings about it. The church ornaments were valued in 1834 at nearly $5000 ; the library at $655 ; there were five bells, worth $1000. In fact, the mission property, live-stock and ranchos were valued at over $60,000. In 1845 it was sold by the Governor to John Temple for $1,110; and La Purisima was abandoned by its rightful owners, the Indians, and the Padres. The location is about three miles from the town of Lompoc, in Santa Barbara county. SANTA CRUZ. Santa Cruz, the Mission of the Holy Cross, was formally established by Don Hermenegildo Sal, on Sunday, September 25, 1791. The site had been selected and blessed by Father Lasuen, August 28, on the day of San Augustin. Near BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 35 by was a fine stream in the Arroyo de Pedro Regalado, which is now known as Rio San Lorenzo. Huts were built by the Indians, land was prepared, and wheat sown. The founding of the mission was most favorable, as many of the Indians came and ofifered to help with the work, while their chief, Sugert, presented him- self, with a few of his followers, and promised to become the first Christian of his tribe, and Sal agreed to be godfather. In the history of the founding of the mis- sion, it is an interesting fact that frequently everything wherewith to establish a new mission was contributed as a loan by the other missions. In this instance Santa Clara contributed 64 head of cattle, 22 horses, -j-j fanegas of grain, and 26 loaves of bread. San Francisco gave five yoke of oxen, 70 sheep and two bushels of barley. San Carlos gave eight horses and seven mules. The vestments and sacred vessels w^ere loaned by other missions, also tools and implements, until those intended for Santa Cruz should arrive from Mexico. The mission was beautifully situated, near the waters of the Bay of Monterey, and as a background there was a dense forest. Although the founding was auspicious, the mission never became an important or even flourishing establishment, because of the close proximity tion of Branci- became the town At the present all of the un- tions of the con- appeared as whol- old mission build- Santa Cruz of to- fornia's charm- SANTA CRUZ. of the penal sta- forte, which later of Santa Cruz, date, however, pleasant associa- vict life have dis- ly as have the ings, and the day is one of Cal- ine resorts. The corner-stone of the mission church was laid February 27, 1793. The building was 120x30 feet. The walls were of stone to the height of three feet, the front was of masonry, and the rest of adobe. In 181 2 Father Andres Ouintana was brutally murdered by nine or ten of the Mission Indians. Though sick himself, he left his room at night to call upon a man said to be dying. On the way home he was murdered. It was two years before the murderers were apprehended and pun- ished. Their defense was that of cruelty on the part of the father; but the fact that he had left his sick bed to minister to a dying man belied the accusation, and the murderers were condemned to work in chains from two to ten years. Only one survived the punishment. When Santa Cruz was secularized, in 1835, ten thousand dollars of the church money was divided among the neophytes. In 1839 Hartnell found but seventy of the Indians remaining, and all of the money gone. Of the mission itself there is now hardly a trace. The portion of a tile-covered shed in the rear of the present church is all that remains. A few relics, among them two mission books used bv the Indians, may be seen in the church. 36 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA LA SOLEDAD. The Mission of "Our Lady of Solitude" ("Soledad"), was founded October 9th. 1791, by Father Lasuen. The sites for Soledad and Santa Cruz were selected upon the same trip. Governor Portola named this lonely spot Soledad in 1769. but it was not until 1797 that the adobe structure with its roof of straw, which was known as the chapel of Soledad, was com- pleted. Later a tiled roof and corri- dors were added. Soledail became a flourishing Christian settlement, but after the secularization in 1835, so great was the devastation and ruin that the venerable Father Vincente Sarria, who had labored for the mis- sion for thirty years, and who refused to leave his post of duty or the remaining Indians, died here in 1835, the year of the secularization, of starvation and want. June 4th, 1846, Soledad Mis- sion was sold to Feliciano Soberanes for $800, yet the inventory of '35 had shown a valuation of $36,000, besides the church property. A heap of ruins standing alone in an open field, used for the growing of grain, is all that today remains of Soledad Mission. The Indians called the place Chuttusgelis, but the Spaniards called it Solitude. 1 «. ■1 I'-' ■-■ ..... .m^ifl LA SOLEDAD. SAN JOSE. Mission San Jose was founded June 11, 1797, Trinity Sunday. By an order from the College of Fernando, Mexico, the new mission was dedicated to St. Joseph, the foster-father of Our Lord. A wooden structure with grass roof was quickly constructed, and Father Barcenilla was left in charge. San Jose was founded by Father Lasuen. The northern missions contributed very generously toward the establishment of the new one. They sent 12 mviles, 12 }oke of oxen, 39 horses, 242 sheep and 60 ])igs. The Indians from the adjacent hills proved to be treach- erous and cruel. Father Cueva after having labored five years among them, was cruelly attacked, wounded and almost killed. He had been called a long distance from the mission, about ^^ i ,.-.^. .a^ ^M»^&^ Jl ^■ . -^^m [— 1^ p^ BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 17 fifteen miles, to attend to some sick neophytes. Upon arriving at the rancheria, the natives attacked him and his guard with arrows, kilhng the guard, a soldier and three neophytes and wounding Father Cueva. On account of the treachery of the Indians, and their having made several attempts to do injury to the padres and to the buildings, the houses were soon reconstructed, and made of brick from the excellent brick-earth near by. There are chalk hills near San Jose, and everywhere the soil is rich and fertile. The establishment was never extensive nor imposing, yet at one time Mission San Jose had a greater number of neo- phytes than any other mission in California, with the single exception of San Luis Rey. The illustration shows the mission as it was years ago, and gives some idea of the plan of the establishment. San Jose was never wealthy^ but still they could order a bell weighing looo pounds, and that was considered a luxury. At the time of the secularization the church property was valued at $155,000 over and above the debts. On May 5th, 1846, San Jose Mission was sold to Andres Pico and J. B. Alvarado, for $12,000, bv Governor Pio Pico. SAN JUAN BAUTISTA. The Mission of San Juan Bautista was built on the edge of a mesa, over- looking a fertile valley, of what is now San Benito county, in San Juan Valley, about seven miles from Hollister, the county seat. It was 200x70' feet on the ground and height of walls was forty-five feet, being higher than most of the mission churches. Each of the walls were supported by four buttresses. Those on the standing; one re- back ; while the west is covered lumber, to sup- tect it from the The church was and transepts, divided by seven which have been s u lu a b 1 y to building. There over the door entrance at the front. The church is lighted with eight quaint little windows, with glass of small panes about five inches square. The baptismal font, carved from sandstone, stands about three feet high, and is three feet in diameter, and over it hangs an ancient picture of the baptism of Christ. The principal altar is dedicated to St. John the Baptist, and is very gaudily frescoed and painted. Statues of redwood, one life-size of St. John, SAN JUAX BAUTISTA. northeast are still m a i n s at the entire wall on the ^\dth red w o o d port and to pro- elements, built with a nave The nave is sub- arches, five of walled in, pre- strengthen t h e is a choir loft 38 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA and four smaller ones, are executed with rare talent and artistic effect. That they are of our native woods proves that the padres, Indians, or perchance a Mexican, who dwelt at the mission, was more than ordinarily gifted in carving. In the mission gardens are pear trees, planted a century ago. The cemetery, one acre in size, is full to the limit. In many graves are said to be buried six bodies, one above the other. In all, 4,557 bodies are there interred. An old sun dial in the garden is an object of interest, carved from sandstone long be- fore the day of clocks in this country. It was originally intended for San Felipe and is therefore one second slow for San Juan Bautista. The site of San Juan, was selected as early as 1786, but the church of San Juan Bautista was not established until June 24, 1797, the day dedicated to the patron saint, John the Baptist. Work upon the chapel and the various build- ings was begun immediatel}'. It took hundreds of workers fifteen years to complete the task, and the chapel was dedicated by Father President Esteban Tapis, June 25, 1812. The establishment was so constructed as to form a court 200 feet square with buildings on three sides of it, and a high wall on the fourth. The material used was adobe (sun-dried brick) and ladiello, a kind of brick that was frequently used for flooring, and was made in a subterranean kiln. Adobes are made of certain mud mixed with straw or tough grass. Being thoroughly kneaded by hand or trodden by foot it is molded in the desired shape and dimensions and dried in the sun. Size, 16x30x4 inches and weight about 50 pounds. The ladellos were 8x12x2 inches, and after baking in a kiln were very hard. The old floor at this mission is more than a century old, and is in fair condition. The buildings were originally roofed with tile, a portion of which has given place to shingles until such a time as the tile can be restored. The walls of San Juan have been allowed to retain the delicate tint of the cinnabar that colored the mortar, and left an effect that no after-tinting can successfully imitate. The fine music of San Juan was a feature of the mission and a reason of its success. A chime of nine bells once called to worship. Onlv one of these now remains. A second one was cast from two of the originals in 1874, but lacks the sweet tone of the old ones. The other six bells have been given to other churches. An interesting and ingenious attachment to the original chime of bells is an old wooden wheel, with hollow arms, about two inches square, hung on an axle. Between each two arms is hung a wooden clapper, and as the wheel revolves, these clappers successively rap on the hollow arms. This wheel was used to call the people to worship upon occasions when the Catholic church rings no bells and could be heard at a great distance. The Padres placed a small organ (the first brought to California), on an elevation overlooking the valley, and swiftly turned the crank, and when the Indians first heard the strange sounds, they fell upon their faces in fear ; but as BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 39 the music continued their fear left them and they began to enjoy the sweet sounds. Finally they slowly approached the hill and gradually gathered about the Padre and the wonderful singing box and listened with delight. After play- ing for an hour or more, he offered them sweets and told them that he had come to live among them, and the good man received a hearty welcome. The box is a hand organ standing about A^z feet high. It has tin pipes and was built by Benjamin Dodson, 22 Swan Street, London, England, in 1735. It was brought to San Juan in 1797. It became disabled, and was removed to the storehouse of the mission, where it remained for many years, when a wandering tinker stopped at the mission for something to eat and repaired it. Father Tapis, the priest of San Juan, composed a great deal of music for the California missions. Three large volumes of his work remain at this mission alone. Much of the music is on parchment, and in bold, clear characters. The chapel of San Juan Bautista could accommodate one thousand or more worshippers, and in prosperous days the capacity was frequently taxed to its fullest. The mission possessed extensive lands and great herds. Between the years 1797 and 1835, 4,100 persons were baptized. When the crash of secularization came, the inventory showed a valuation of $147,413. In 1846, San Juan was sold for debt. There are many choice mementoes at San Juan church — ancient candlesticks of curious pattern, the old bass viol, the rude music stand, a violin past all music, the old organ, vestments, robes and sheet music, torn and faded, but dear to the devout and interesting to the historian. Today it is an impoverished parish church — but nevertheless one of the most interesting and artistic relics of the mission period. SAN MIGUEL ARCANGEL. The Mission of San Miguel (St. Michael, the Arcangel), " the most glorious prince of the heavenly militia," was founded on July 25, 1797, by Father Lasuen, assisted by Father Buenaventura Sit jar. The site chosen was a beautiful spot on the Salinas River called by the Indians Vahia, or Vatica, and by the Spaniards Las Pozas. Father Lasuen says that a great multitude of Indians gathered about with pleased expression, while he held the first service that founded the Mission of San Miguel. The chapel consisted of the wide-spreading branches of an old oak tree. A wooden church with mud roof, was soon erected, and it was not replaced with the present structure until 1800. In 1801, three Indians attempted to poison Fathers Martin and Carnicer. Father Pujol, who came from San Carlos to attend the sick missionaries, was also poisoned, and died, while the two whom he came to minister unto recovered. In 1806, a fire occurred, which destroyed all the implements belonging to the mission, all of the raw material, large quantities of wool, hides, cloth, and 6000 bushels of wheat ; besides doing great damage to the building. The other missions contributed 40 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA to the relief of the burned San Miguel. The largest enrollment at this mis- sion was in 1814, when there were 1076. Total number of baptisms was 2588, and the largest number of cattle owned at one time was 10,558, in 1822. All this bespeaks the prosperity of the establishment. In 1819 Father Cabot made a safe journey into the valley of the Tulares, a thing quite unusual, and a proof of the safety of the country at that period. When the Indians of San Miguel were consulted re- garding the scheme of secularization, they expressed themselves as de- cidedly in favor of the missionary fathers and their system. Their pref- erence was of no avail, and the mis- sion was confiscated in 1836, with a valuation of $82,000. By 1845 ^11 property had disappeared, except the buildings, valued at $5800, which were ordered sold by Governor Pico. The sale was made July 4th, 1846, P. Rios and William Reed being the pur- chasers. Tater the title was declared invalid, and the buildings restored to the church. The mission buildings consist of a chapel and a long row of low adobe btiildings. The corridor is a feature of the main edifice, the interior of which is to many most interesting, since it remains in its original condition, showing its ancient decorations and fixtures. The altar, very effective in color and design, is a valuable piece of decorative art. It is crowned with a statue of St. Alichael, the patron saint. The floors are of burnt brick laid in alternating rows of oblongs and squares. The chapel is in use and there is a resident priest. AX MiC.l L':L AllCAXUEl.. SAN FERNANDO KEY DE ESPANA. The mission of San Fernando was the second to be established within the present limits of Los Angeles county, and was founded September 8, 1797, by President Lasuen, assisted by Francisco Dumetz, at a site called by the natives Achois Comihavit, on the lands claimed by Francisco Reyes, who quarreled with the friars respecting the ownership of the land. The priests appropriated Reyes' ranch house for their dwelling. The mission was established with the usual religious ceremonies, in the presence of the troops and a great crowd of natives, and dedicated as required by instructions from Mexico to San Fernando, King of Spain. St. Ferdinand was Fernando III., who reigned in I2i7-'5i, and under whose rule the crowns of Castile and Leon were united. He was the founder of the Spanish Inquisition, and was canonized in 1671 by Pope Clement X. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 41 Francisco Javier Uria was associate priest with Dumetz. Ten children were baptized the first day, and thirteen adults had been added to the list early in Oc- tober. In 1797 there were fifty-five neophytes on the baptismal register; in 1800 there were 310, there having been to that date 352 baptisms and seventy deaths. The number of cattle (including mules and horses) in 1800 was 526, and of sheep 600. In 1799 there were 1,200 bushels of wheat, corn and barley raised, and the total yield for the three years 1798- 1800 was 4,700 bushels. The adobe church with a tile roof, the ruins of which yet remain, was com- pleted and consecrated in December, 1806. An earthquake occurred December 2T, 181 2, that did some slight damage to the church building, necessitating the introduction of thirty new beams to support the wall. In 1813 a neophyte was killed by the Indian alcalde, who threw a club at him from a distance of some sixty feet with a view to hasten his work. The killing was deemed accidental, and the penalty imposed was two months' imprisonment in the presidio. During i8i6-'i8 a large number of neophytes deserted; before 1818 a new chapel was completed The tion of this mis- in 181 9, and then Captain de la applied for a Rancho, which was already using for the mission troversy resulted failing to obtain^ it was not se-| mission. About greatest popula- sion was 1,080, began its decline. Guerra, in 1821, grant of the Piru Father Ybarra to some extent herds. The con- in de la Guerra the rancho ; but cured for the this time complaint was made that the soldiers behaved _^^^ L ■ ar— *** „„— — -*^^^fe :^^* ly^ e,. ^"'^ a»figMriksm^:Ma>s9Ma». ti.-.., ,,,. . ^ !^W^ SAN FERXANDO REY DE ESPAXA. badly, selling liquor to the Indians. The mission was no longer prosperous in any respect, showing a decline in live stock and agriculture. The amount of supplies furnished by this mission to the soldiers in 1822-27 was $21,203. In 1834, with others, the Mission San Fernando was secularized, with Lieu- tenant Del Valle as the commissioner in charge. Ybarre continued his ministry imtil the middle of the year 1835, when he temporarily retired to Mexico. Del Valle became major-domo the next year, which position he held until the year 1837, when he was succeeded by Anastasio Carrillo. Captain Jose M. Villavicencio served as administrator from the middle of the year 1838. In 1840 there were still about 400 Indians in the ex-mission community. At one period of its history there were nearly one and a half miles of build- ings connected with this mission, these including residences, workshops, schools and storehouses, all of which are now in ruins. The edifice erected especially as an abode for the padres and reputed to be the finest of its kind in Alta California, 42 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA is, however, still standing in a fair state of preservation. It is principally inter- esting as having been the abode of the Mexican General, Andres Pico, and was his headquarters during the war of occupation. It is two-story, nearly 300 feet in length by eighty feet in width, inside measurements; and the walls — of brick and adobe — are four feet thick. The rafters, after being cut in the mountain forests many miles away, were dragged here by Indians and oxen, each log being occasionally turned upon the wa.y, " that all sides might be planed alike." They are as smooth as though really planed. The long corridor of this building is paved with brick, and the heavy tile roof is supported by arches and columns of masonry. Many of the windows are protected by iron bars, giving it a some- what prison-like appearance. The church is 40x60 varas. tile roofed, board ceiling, brick floor, adobe walls, three doors, seven windows with wooden bars ; sacristy, eight varas square, with one door and window. The general statistics of the San Fernando Mission from the date of its foundation till its secularization in 1834, are as follows: Total number of bap- tisms 2,839, of which 1. 41 5 were Indian adults, 1,367 Indian children, 57 children de razon. Total marriages, 849, of which 15 were gente de razon. Deaths, 2,028; 1,036 were Indian adults, 965 Indian children, 12 white adults and 15 white children. The largest population was 1,080 in 18 19. The sexes were nearly equal; children from one-fourth to one-third. Largest number of cattle, 12,800 in 1819; horses, 1,320 in 1820; mules, 340 in 1812; sheep, 7,800 in 1819; goats, 600 in 1816; swine, 250 in 1814; all kinds, 21,745 animals in 1819. Total product of wheat, 119,000 bushels, yield nineteen fold; barley, (only raised six years) 3,070 bushels, fourteen fold; maize, 27,750 bushels, eighty-three fold; beans, 3,624 bushels, fourteen fold. It has been in part restored by the Landmarks Club. SAN LUIS KEY DE FRANCIA. The Mission of San Luis Rey de Francia (Saint Louis IX, King of France, member of the Franciscans) was founded by Frs. Lasuen, Santiago and Peyri, on June 3, 1798. The ceremony of dedication was supplemented by the baptism of fifty-four children. Within a week Father Peyri, who was left in charge, had bap- tized seventy-seven more. By July i he had 6,000 adobe bricks ready to begin the erection of the mission buildings. It was due to Father Peyri's energy, zeal and executive ability that San Luis Rey, the grandest mission building of Alta California, was erected. It was completed in 1802. During the first decade this mission made larger gains in number of neophyte population and had a lower death rate than any other establishment. Father Peyri was beloved by all. He ministered personally to the needs of his charges, and likewise superintended the agricultural pursuits. In 1818 San Luis Rey was the most prosperous mission in BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 43 SAN LUIS REY DE FRANCIA. California, and this in spite of the fact that so many of its sheep died that it was necessary for the padres to go as far north as San Juan Bautista to obtain wool enough for clothing. Father Peyri early established a hospital and taught the Indians the rudi- ments of healthful living. The highest number of neophytes enrolled at one time was 2,869, i" 1826. In 1828 there was a white population of thirty-five at San Luis Rey. Father Peyri, unlike most of the Franciscans in California, was a strong supporter of the Mexican republic and his surprise and disap- pointment at the expulsion of the Order in 1829 knew no bounds. The pathetic romance of his being spirited away at night and taken on board a vessel lying in the Bay of San Diego, is one well known to those inter- ested in the missions. When the neo- phytes learned that Father Peyri was gone, many of them mounted their ponies and rode in the gray dawn of the morning in a wild chase to the sea, in order to rescue their padre and bring him back to the mission. As they appeared on the shore the ship weighed anchor and slowly sailed out to sea. It is said that two venturesome boys swam after the ship and were taken on board and carried to Spain with the Father. San Luis Rev is the onlv mission that progressed after secularization ; but it, too, declined after a few years, and was finally sold, on May 18, 1846, to Jose A. Cot and Jose A. Pico for $2,437 i ^^^^^ their agent was dispossessed by General Fremont, and they failed to regain possession. Later it was decided that the governor had had no power to sell the mission. San Luis Rey was used as a military post by our troops during the M^exican war, and at the close of the war the government caused an estimate to be made of the cost of repairing and restoring it to its former condition. The figures were $2,000,000. An inventory taken August 22nd, 1835, gives a fair idea of the importance * and wealth of the mission. Valuation, $203,737.00; debts, $93,000.00; the church, of adobe, tile roof, clay floor, board ceilings, nine doors, eighteen windows, four adjoining rooms, value $30,000.00, was included in the total amount, as was also the six ranchos, valued at $40,437.00. These were Pala, Santa Margarita, San Jacinto, Santa Ysabel, Temecula and one other. In the day of its glory and wealth, San Luis Rey was the pride of all the missions. It owned and pastured upon its lands an annual average of 20,000 head of cattle, and nearly as many sheep. It kept 3,000 Indians to perform the various kinds of service. In 1834 the mission had 3,500 neophytes to support. In 44 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA the zenith of its prosperity, it raised and harvested annually more than 60,000 bushels of grain, and 250 barrels of wine were produced from the vineyards. The church is an imposing structure, 50x160 feet, and walls sixty feet in height, by four feet in thickness. The tower at one corner contained eight bells. The ornaments and vestments of the church, in gold and silver, were verv rich and beautiful. On one side of the mission building extended a corridor of two hundred and fifty arches. In the rear was a large square enclosed by buildings on each side. The front and rear sides formed corridors, with beautiful arches. In this square was a well-kept garden, with a stone fountain, the favorite retreat of the padres. In 1892, steps were taken by Father O'Keefe, who for so many years was well known at Santa Barbara Mission, to restore San Luis Rey to a condition of usefulness, and the good father had succeeded so admirably that May 12th, 1894, the mission was rededicated and title passed to the Franciscan order of the Catholic church. A school for the training of priests of the order is now maintained there. SANTA YNEZ, VIRGIN Y MARTYR. The Mission Santa Ynez was founded September 17th, 1804. The work of the Mission Fathers was there begun by the baptizing of twenty-seven children. The present buildings were not commenced until after the destruc- tive earthquake of September 21st, 1812. when a corner of the old church and many of the best houses were destroyed. It was at Santa Ynez that the serious and wide-spread Indian revolt of 1824 started. After destroying many of the buildings they fled to Purisima and set fire to that establishment. At the time of secularization, Santa Ynez was valued at $56,000. In 1844, the Mission had sufficient en- ergy, enterprise and w^ealth to estab- lish a seminary of learning. The Fathers, through the efiforts of Bishop Garcia, received a liberal grant of land from the government for this institution, beside an endowment of $500 per annum, on condition that all Californians in search of higher education be admitted thereto. There were about 270 Indians at Santa Ynez at this time. By order of Governor Pico, in 1836, the entire estate was rented to Jose Covarrubias and Joaquin Carrillo for $580 per annum. The mission was finally sold to the lessees in 1846, for $7,000, but the title was declared invalid. Santa Ynez remained a religious institution until 1850, when it was abandoned, and the Fathers went to Santa Barbara. T^S^M ,.^-.#i?»/if*/ .* '^ r* -1 'i ^ '^**Ww|«*T^1^?^~?%^ SANTA YXEZ, VIRGIN Y MARTYR. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 45 SAN RAFAEL. SAN RAFAEL. The mission of San Rafael, the first one located north of San Francisco, was established December i8th, 1817. The Fathers and the Government of California had a double purpose in fixing the site of this establishment. It was intended to head off the Russian encroachment from the north, and also as a refuge for the neophytes of San Francisco de Asis, of which it was a branch. A scourge had be- come epidemic at Mission Dolores and many of its occupants were trans- ferred to the new site, which was supposed to be in a healthier region. This establishment was never very populous or influential. It reached its zenith in 1828 when a membership of 1,140 neophytes was reported. After this date it steadily declined and at the time of its secularization only about 500 Indians remained. During its existence, 1873 converts were baptized. SAN FRANCISCO DE SOLANO. On the 4th of July, 1823, a cross was blessed, Holy Mass was offered ap, sacred songs were sung, and the Mission of San Francisco de Solano was founded. It was called New San Francisco. It was not until April 4th, 1824, that the mission church was formally dedicated, by Father Altimira, to the patron saint of the Indies. This structure was of wood, and the one of adobe, the remains of which are seen today, was erected the same year, many articles being donated by the Russians, then living in that region of country. The walls of the new church were about completed, when a terrific downpour of rain, last- ing several days, did great injury and changed the original plan. At the close of the vear, 1824, the mission numbered 639 neophytes, many of whom had come from San Francisco, San Jose, and San Rafael. At the time of secularization the movable property was distributed to the Indians. After i8^o, Solano had no existence as a mission community. During its entire history, 1,315 persons were there baptized. Its greatest population was in 1832, when there were 996 persons enrolled. SAN FRANCISCO DE SOI.AXO. CHAPTER IV. From Monarchy to Republicanism. PABLO VICENTE DE SOLA was governor of California when Mexico attained independence from Spain. He was of Spanish birth and was bitterly opposed to the Revolution, even going so far as to threaten death to any one who should speak in favor of it. Although the rule of Spain in Mexico was overthrown in September, 1821, it was not until March, 1822, that official dis- patches reached Sola informing him of the change. The " plan of Iguala " under which Iturbide finally overthrew the Spanish power contemplated the placing of Fernando VII on the throne of the Mexican Empire, or, if he would not accept, then some scion of the royal family of Spain. Such a termination to the revolu- tion did not afifect Sola's loyalist sympathies. He called a junta to meet at Monte- rey and on the nth of April the oath was taken to the new government. But Sola's royalist sympathies received a rude shock a few months later when news reached California that Iturbide had seized the government for him- self and been proclaimed Emperor with the imposing title of " Augustin I, by Divine Providence and by the Congress of the Nation, first Constitutional Emperor of Mexico." In September, 1822, the flag of Spain that for half a century had waved over the palacio of the governor at Ivlonterey, was lowered and the imperial banner of Mexico took its place. California, from the dependency of a kingdom, had become a province of an empire. Scarce half a year after the flag of the empire floated on the breeze had passed when the emperor was dethroned and forced into exile. The downfall of the empire was followed by the establishment of a republic fashioned after that of the United States. The country over which the viceroys of Spain had ruled for three hundred years was divided into nineteen states and four territories. Only the states were allowed representatives in the the senate; the territories, of which Alta California was one, were to be governed by a governor appointed by the president and a diputacion, or territorial assem- bly, elected by the people. Each territory was entitled to send a diputado, or dele- gate, to the Mexican congress. Luis Antonio Argiiello succeeded Sola as governor, or gefe poltico (political chief), as the office was later styled under the republic. He was elected, Novem- ber 9, 1822, president of the provincial diputacion and bv virtue of his office be- came temporary governor instead of Sola, who had been elected delegate to the imperial congress. Argiiello was a native Californian, having been born at the presidio of San Francisco in 1784. He was a man of limited education, but made good use of what he had. Like Sola he had been a pronounced royalist during the revolution, but with the downfall of Spanish domination he had submitted gracefully to the inevitable. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 47 The success of the revohition was most bitterly disappointing to the mission padres. Through the long years of strife between Mexico and the mother coun- try they had hoped and prayed for the triumph of Spain. In the downfall of Spanish domination and the rise of Republicanism, they read the doom of their feudal institutions, the missions. On the promulgation of the Federal Constitu- tion of October, 1824, in California, Father Vicente de Scrria, the president of the missions — a Spaniard and a royalist — not only refused to take the oath of allegiance to it, but also declined to perform religious services in favor of it. An order was issued by the Supreme Government for his arrest ; but before it reached California he had been superseded in the presidency by Father Narciso Duran of San Jose. A number of the padres were hostile to the Republic and evaded taking the oath of allegiance on the ground of obedience to the orders of their Superior. Their unfriendly attitude to the Republic was one of the causes that led to the secularization of the missions a few years later. The Mexican government, shortly after its inauguration, removed most of the restrictions imposed by Spain against foreigners settling in California and the colonization law of 1824 was liberal. The state religion was the Roman Catholic and all foreigners who settled in the country were required to embrace it. During Spanish domination not more than half a dozen foreigners had been allowed to become permanent residents. The earliest English settler was John Gilroy. who was left by his vessel at Monterey in 1814. He married a daughter of Ignacio Ortega and at one time owned a large body of land, but died poor. Joseph Chap- man, the first American settler, was one of Bouchard's men, captured at Monterev in 1818. Beginning with Baron Rezanof's visit to San Francisco, in 1806, for the purpose of buying grain for the starving Russian colony at Sitka, the Russians made frequent visits to the coast, partly to obtain supplies, but more for the pur- pose of hunting seal and sea otter. Their Aleut fur hunters in their bidarkas, or skin canoes, killed otter in San Francisco bay and the Spaniards, destitute of boats or ships, were powerless to prevent them. In 18 12 tliev built a village and fort about 18 miles north of Bodega bay, which they named Ross, and which mounted ten cannon. They also maintained a port on Bodega bay, and a small station on Russian river. The Spanish protested against this invasion of terri- tory and threatened to drive out the Russians, but nothing came of either their protests or threats. The Russian ships came for supplies and were welcomed by the people and the padres, if not bv the government officials. The Russian colonv was not a success, and after the decline of fur hunting the settlement became unprofitable, and in 1841, the building and stock were sold bv the Russian gov- ernor to Captain John A. Sutter for $30,000. The settlement was abandoned and the fort and town have long since fallen into ruins. Among the foreigners who came to California soon after the establishment of Mexican independence and became prominent in aflfairs may be named, W. E. P. Hartnell, Captain John R. Cooper, William A. Richardson, Daniel A. Hill 48 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA and William A. Gale. William Edward Petty Hartnell came from Lima as a member of the firm of McCullock, Hartnell & Co., ens^ai^ed in the hide and tallow trade. Hartnell was an Englishman by birth, well educated and highly respected. He married Maria Teresa de la Gucrra and twenty-five children were born to them. He died at Monterey in 1859. William A. Gale came in iSio as a Bos- ton fur trader. Lie returned to the territory in 1822 on the ship Sachem, the pioneer Boston hide drogher. It brought to the coast a number of Americans who became permanent residents of the country. California on account of its long distance from the centers of trade had but few products for exchange that would bear the cost of transportation. Its chief commodities for barter, during the Mexican era, were hides and tallow. The vast range of country adapted to cattle raising made that its most profitable industry. After the removal of the restrictions on commerce with foreigners by the Mexican government, a profitable trade grew up between the New England ship owners and the California ranch- eros. \'essels were -fitted out in Boston with a cargo of assorted goods suitable for the trade. Voyaging around Cape Horn and stopping at the various points along the coast they exchanged their stock of goods and Yankee "notions" for hides and tallow. It took from two to three years to make the voyage out from Boston and return, but the profits on the goods sold and on the hides received in exchange were so large that these ventures paid handsomely. Cattle raising, up to the time of the discovery of gold in 1848, continued to be the principal industry of the country. During the first decade of republican rule, there was but little change in polit- ical conditions or in the views of the people concerning the government. Mission rule was still dominant and the people were subservient to the governors appointed over them. But with the increase of foreigners and the advent of ex-revolution- ists from Mexico, the old-time native California Loyalists gradually became im- bued with a kind of republicanism that transformed them into malcontents, whose protests against the sins of governmental officials took the form of pronuncia- mentos and revolutions. The first of the numerous revolts against the rule of the governors appointed by the Mexican government occurred in November. 1829. The soldiers at the presidios for years had received but a small part of their pay and were but poorly clothed and provisioned. The garrison at Monterey rebelled and seized and im- prisoned their officers. That at San Francisco followed their example. Under the leadership of Joaquin Solis, an ex-revolutionist of Mexico who had been ban- ished from that country, they marched southward to meet Governor Echandia, who was moving northward with a force of about one hundred men from San Diego, where he had established his capital. The two forces met at Dos Pueblos, near Santa Barbara, and a bloodless battle ensued. The rebellious "escoltas" (militia) were pardoned and returned to duty. Herrara, the dejiosed commissary- general ; vSolis, and several other leaders were arrested and sent to Mexico to be BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 49 tried for high crimes and misdemeanor. On their arrival in that land of revolu- tions, they were turned loose and eventually returned to California. The principal cause of the California disturbances was the jealousy and dis- like of the " hijos del pais " (native sons) to the Mexican-born officers who were appointed by the superior government to fill the offices. Many of these were ad- venturers who came to the country to improve their fortunes and were not scrupu- lous as to methods or means, so that the end was accomplished. CHAPTER V. Revolutions and Secularization. MANUEL MCTORIA succeeded Echandia as gefe politico of Alta Cali- fornia in January 1831. Victoria was a soldier, arbitrary and tyrannical, and refused to convoke the diputacion, or territorial assembly. From the outset he was involved in quarrels with the leading men of the territory. Exile, imprisonment and banishment were meted out to small offences and some- times for none at all. At length Jose Antonio Carrillo and Don Abel Stearns, who had been exiled to Lower California with Juan Bandini and Pio Pico, residents of San Diego, formulated a plot for the overthrow of Victoria, and issued a pronunciamento arraigning him for misdeeds and petty tyrannies. The soldiers at the presidio, with their Captain, Portilla, joined the revolt, and with the leading conspirators and fifty men marched northward. At Los Angeles they released the prisoners from the jail and chained up instead. Alcalde Sanchez, the petty despot of the pueblo who had been very ready to carry out the arbitrary decrees of Victoria. The San Diego army, augmented by the liberated prisoners and volunteers from Los Angeles, to the number of 150 men, marched out to meet Victoria, who with a small force was moving southward to suppress the rebellion. The two armies met west of Los Angeles in the Cahuenga valley. In the fight that ensued Jose Maria Avila, who had been imprisoned by Victoria's orders in the pueblo jail, charged single-handed upon Victoria. He killed Captain Pacheco, of Vic- toria's staff and dangerously wounded the governor himself. Avila was killed by one of Victoria's men. Victoria's army retired with the wounded governor to San Gabriel mission and the revolutionists retired to Los Angeles. Next day, the governor, who supposed himself mortally wounded, abdicated ; later he was de- ported to Mexico. Pio Pico, senior vocal of the diputacion, was elected gefe- politico by that body, but Echandia on account of his military rank, claimed the office and Pico, for the sake of peace, did not insist upon his rights. Echandia did not long enjoy in peace the office obtained by threats. Captain Augustin V. Zamorano, late secretary of the deposed Victoria, raised an army of 50 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA about one hundred men, some of whom were cholos, or convicts, which under the command of Captain Ibarra marched southward and met no opposition until it reached El Paso de Bartolo, on the San Gabriel river. Here Captain Barrosa, of Echandia's force, with fourteen men and a piece of artillery stopped the onward march of the invaders. Echandia had gathered an army of neophytes, said to have been a thousand strong. On the approach of this body, Ibarra's men re- treated to Santa Barbara. The diputacion, which was reall\ the only legal authority in the country, finally effected a compromise between the two rivals. Echandia was to be recognized as military chief for the country south of San Gabriel, and Zamorano for all territory north of San Fernando, while Pico, who by virtue of his rank as senior-vocal, was the lawful governor was left without jurisdiction. After this adjustment there was peace. On January 14th, 1833, Jose Figueroa, "gobernador proprietario" of Alta California by appointment of the Supreme government of Mexico, arrived at Monterey. Zamorano at once turned over to him whatever authority he had and Echandia did the same. Figueroa was Mexican born, of Aztec descent, and is regarded as one of the ablest and most efBcient of our Mexican governors. He instituted a policy of conciliation and became very popular with the people. He inaugurated a number of reforms, especially in the treatment of the neophytes and in his attention to the conditions of secularization, which took place during his term of office. Another important event of this time w^is the arrival of the Hijar colonists. In 1833, Jose Maria Hijar, a Mexican gentleman of considerable property, aided by Jose Maria Padres, set about organizing a scheme for the foiunding of an extensive colony in California. Each settler was promised a ranch and was to receive rations to the amount of four reales per day with a certain amount of live stock and tools. All to be repaid later from the products of the faiim. A corporation known as the "Compania Cosmopolitana" was organized for the purpose of buying vessels and carrying on a shipping business between Mexico and California. About 250 colonists were recruited and left the City of Mexico for San Bias where they were to be given free passage. One of the vessels bringing them landed at San Diego, September ist, 1834, and the other, reached Monterey September 25th. Hijar had succeeded in securing an appointment as gefe-politico ; but after his departure for California, President Santa Anna countermanded the order and sent a courier overland by the way of Sonora with an order to Figueroa not to give up the governor-ship. By one of the most remarkable rides in his- tory, this courier reached Monterey before Hijar, and delivered his message to Governor Figueroa. Hijar, on his arrival at the capital found himself shorn of all authority. Part of the scheme of Hijar and Padres was the sub-division of the mission property among themselves and their colonists. But the revoca- BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 51 tion of his commission deprived him of his power to enforce his plans. An attempt was made to form a settlement at San Francisco Solano, but was not successful and many of the colonists returned to Mexico, while the remainder were scattered throughout the territory. Hi jar and Padres were accused of insti- gating a plot to overthrow Figueroa and seize the mission property. They were shipped out of the country and thus ended in disaster to the promoters the first California colonization scheme. The missions had been founded by Spain for the purpose of converting the Indians to the "holy faith" and transforming them into citizens. The natives residing between the Coast Range and the ocean from San Diego to San Fran- cisco had been gathered into the different mission establishments, each of which held in possession, in trust, for its neophyte retainers, large areas of the most fertile lands in the territory. This absorbtion of the public domain by the missions prevented the colonization of the country by white settlers. The first decree of secularization was passed by the Spanish Cortes in 1813; but Spain was then engaged in a death struggle with her American colonies and she had neither power nor opportunity to enforce it. In July, 1830, the territorial diputacion adopted a plan of secularization formulated by Echandia in 1828; but before it could be carried out, he was superseded by Victoria who was a friend of the padres and strongly opposed to secularization. Governor Figueroa was instructed to examine into the condition of the neophytes and re- port upon the best method of bringing about a gradual emancipation of the Indians from missionary rule. He visited some of the older missions himself and. after careful study, was convinced that any general measure of seculariza- tion would be disastrous to the neophytes. A few might be given their liberty and entrusted with property ; but the great mass of them were incapable of self- government or self support. In the meantime, the Mexican Congress, without waiting for information from Figueroa as to the advisability of the step, ordered the immediate emancipa- tion of the neophytes. August 17th, 1833, a decree was passed ordering the secularization of all the missions. It was provided that each mission should constitute a parish, served by a priest, or curate, who should be paid a salary. The Franciscans and Dominicans who had taken the oath of allegiance to the repv;blic were to return to their colleges or monasteries ; while those who refused to take the oath of allegiance were to quit the country. The expense of putting the decree into operation was to be paid out of the "Pious Fund." The Pious Fund of California was made up of contributions for the founding and main- tenance of missions in the Californias. It was begun for the benefit of the missions of Lower California, in 1697, and increased until it amounted to one and a half million dollars, in 1842. It was confiscated by the Mexican govern- ment ; but after long litigation the money was finally awarded to the Catholic church of California by the Hague Tribunal in 1902. 52 BRIEF HIST( )RY OF CALIFORNIA Figueroa and the territorial diputacion, under instructions from the Su- preme Government, June 31, 1834, adopted a plan for the secularization of the missions and the colonization of the neophytes into pueblos. Each head of a ifamily was to receive from the mission lands a lot not more than 500 nor less than 1000 varas square. One half of the cattle and one half of the farming- implements and seed grains were to be divided pro rata among those receiving lands for cultivation. Out of the proceeds of the remaining property which was to be placed under a major domo, the salaries of the administrator and the priest in charge of the church were to be paid. No one could sell or incumber his land nor slaughter cattle — except for subsistence. The government of the Indian pueblo was to be administered the same as that of the other pueblos in the territory. Before the plan of the diputacion had been promulgated, Figueroa had experimented with the neophytes of the San Juan Capistrano mission and a pueblo had been organized there. For a time it promised to be a success but ended in a failure. For years the threat of secularization had hung over the missions, but here- tofore something had always occurred to avert it. When it became evident that the blow would fall, the missionaries determined to save something for them- selves. There were, on the various mission ranges, in 1833, nearlv half a million head of cattle. San Gabriel, the richest of the missions, had over fifty thousand head. Thousands of these were slaughtered on shares for their hides alone and the carcasses left on the ground to rot. So terrible was the stench arising that the ayuntamiento of Los Angeles, in 1834, passeart in several engagements. Col. Cooke resigned his position as com- mandant of the south and Col. J. D. Stevenson of the New York Volunteers was assigned to the command. The Mormon battalion was mustered out in July and Companies E. and G. of the New York Volunteers and a company of United States dragoons did guard duty at Los Angeles. Another military or- ganization that reached California after the conquest was Company F of the Third United States xA.rtillery. It landed at Monterey, January 27th, 1847, under com- mand of Captain C. O. Thom])kins. With it came Lieut. E. G. C. Ord. William T. Sherman and H. W. Halleck, all of whom were ])rominent afterward in Cali- fornia and attained national reputation during the civil war. During 1847-48 until the treaty of peace between the United States and IMexico was proclaimed, garrisons were kept in all of the principal towns and the government of the territory was quasi-military. Attempts were made to estab- lish municipal governments in the towns, which were successful in the north ; but in I^os Angeles there was some clashing between Col. Stevenson and the " hijos del pais." There were rumors of uprisings and of Mexican troops on the way to recapture the place. Col. Stevenson completed the fort on the hill, begun by Lieut. Emory, and named it Fort Moore. There were no hostile acts b>- the citizens and the asperities of war were soon forgotten, as the natives became reconciled to the situation. The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was concluded on February 2nd, 1848. It was ratified at Washington March loth ; at Ouerataro May 30th, and was pro- claimed by the President of the United States July .^th. The news reached Call- BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 77 fornia August 6th and was proclaimed next day by Gov. Mason. The war was over and CaHfornia had now become a territory of the United States. Gov. Pio Pico returned to CaHfornia from Mexico in August, 1847. Col. Stevenson, fearing that he might incite rebellion, placed him under arrest, but he was soon convinced that Pico's intentions were harmless and gave him his liberty. A large overland immigration from the United States arrived in California in 1846 and 1847. The Donner party, made up principally of immigrants from Illinois, were caught in the snows of the Sierra Nevada in October, 1848, and wintered at a lake since known as Donner's Lake. Of the original party, num- bering eighty-seven, thirty-nine perished of starvation and exposure ; the remain- der were brought to Sutter's Fort by rescuing parties sent out from California. CHAPTER IX. Transition Frqm a Conquered Territory to a Free State. WHILE the treaty negotiations were pending between the L^iited States and Mexico, an event occurred in California that ultimately changed the destinies of the territory. This was the discovery of gold, January 24th, 1848. at what is now known as Coloma, on the American river, in the foot- hills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, about thirty-five miles above Sutter's Fort. Gold had previouslv been discovered on the San Francisquito Rancho, about forty- five miles northwesterly from Los x^ngeles, in the spring of 1841. Placers had been worked here, principally by Sonoran miners, up to the breaking out of the Mexican war. Rut the gold fields were of limited extent, water was scarce, the methods of mining crude and wasteful and this discovery created little ex- citement. Both discoveries were purely accidental. The first discoverer, Lopez, was hunting for stray horses. While resting under an oak tree and amusing himself bv digging wild onions with his sheath knife, he turned up a nugget of gold. He made known his discovery and a number of persons came from Santa Barbara and Los Angeles to work in these placers. John W. Marshall, who made the second discovery, was engaged in building a sawmill for Captain Sutter, proprietor of Sutter's Fort and owner of an extensive grant at the junction of the American and Sacramento rivers. Marshall, to deepen the race, turned a head of water through it. The next morning wdiile examining the efifect of the water, he picked up in the race a round piece of yellow metal, which he thought might be gold. Searching further he found several of these nuggets. He went to the fort to notify Sutter of his discovery. Sutter tested the metal with aqua fortis, pronounced it gold, and retin-ned with Marshall to the mill lo 78 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA make furtlier iiivesti.qations. The men working on the mih had discovered the nature of the metal and had also been collecting it. Sutter found several nuggets and before leaving the mill exacted a promise from the men to keep the discovery a secret for six weeks. Beside the sawmill he was building a large flouring mill near the fort and he feared all of his men would desert for the mines. But the secret could not be kept. Mrs. Wimmer, who did the cooking for the men at the mill, told a teamster and he told the men at the fort. The news spread slowly at first and there were many who would not believe the report. It was three months before the rush began. Kemble, the editor of the California Star, visited the mines two months after their discovery and upon his return to San Francisco pronounced them a sham and advised people to stay away. During April con- siderable quantities of gold were received in San Francisco and the excitement became intense. The city had been building up rapidly since the conquest; but now the rush to the mines almost depopulated it. Houses were left tenantless, business was suspended, ships were left in the bay wdthout sailors, soldiers de- serted from the forts and rancheros left their grain unharvested. The news did not spread abroad in time to bring many gold-seekers into California during 1848. In the spring of 1849, the great rush from the outside world began — both by land and by sea. Gold had now been discovered over an area of more than two hundred miles and new fields were constantly being opened. San Francisco, which was the great entrepot for commerce and travel b}- sea, grew with astonishing rapidity. At the time of the discovery of gold the population of San Francisco was about 800 and the white population of California about 6000. At the close of 1849 the population of the territorv numbered one hundred thousand, four-fifths of which had reached it in that one year. During 1848 Sutter's Fort was the great distributing point for the mines. Sacramento was laid out in 1849 ^^i^l soon became the chief commercial city of the interior. At the end of the year its population had reached 5000. California, in 1848, was still held as a conquered country. The Mexican laws were in force and the government was half civil and half military. The rapid influx of population brought complications. After the treaty was pro- claimed in California, August 7th, 1848, Gov. Mason promulgated a code of laws that were intended to tide over affairs until a territorial government could be established by Congress. It was not satisfactory to Americans. Gov. Mason was a faithful and conscientious military officer with but little knowledge of civil afifairs. He did the best he could under the circumstances, but he was able to exercise very little authority, either civil or military. His soldiers deserted to the gold fields and the municipal governments were anomalous affairs, generally recognizing no authority above themselves. Having been in the military service for thirty years, he asked to be relieved. April 12th, 1849, Brigadier-General r.ennctt K. Riley arrived at Monterey and the next dav entered upon the duties of his office as governor. Brig.-Gen. Persifer F. Smith was made military com- BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 79 ^>V^g mancler of the United States troops on the Pacific coast. Most of the troops he brought with him deserted at the first opportunity after their arrival A year had passed since the treaty of peace was signed, but Congress had done nothing for California. The pro-slavery element in that body was deter- mined to fasten the curse of slavery on a portion of the territory acquired from Mexico and all legislation was at a standstill. The people were becoming restive under the mixed military and civil government. The question of calling a con- vention to form a state constitution had been agitated for some time. Conform- ing to the expressed wish of many leading men of the territory. Governor Riley called an election August ist, 1849, to elect delegates to form a state constitution, or a territorial government, if that should seen best, and to elect judges, prefects and alcaldes for the principal municipal districts. The convention was to consist of thirty-seven delegates, but forty-eight were elected, and when it met at ^lonterey, September rst, 1849, ii'' Colton Hall, this number was seated. Colton Hall was a stone building erected by Al- calde Walter Colton for a town hall and school- house. The money to build it was derived partly from fines and partly from subscriptions and the greater part of the construction work was done by prisoners. It was at that time the most commodious public building in the territory. Of the forty-eight delegates, twenty-two were from the northern states, fifteen from the slave states, four were of foreign birth and seven were native Californians. Several of the latter neither spoke nor understood English and Wm. E. P. Hartnell was appointed interpreter. Dr. Robert Semple of Bear Flag fame was elected president ; Wm. G. Marcy secretary, and J. Ross Browne re- porter. Early in the session the slavery question was disposed of by adopting a section declaring that " neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, unless for the punishment of crimes, shall ever be tolerated in this state." The question of fixing the boundaries of the future state excited the most discussion. The pro-slavery faction was led by Wm. M. Gwin, who had recently come to the territory with the avowed intention of representing the new state in the United States senate. The scheme of Gwin and his southern associates was to make the Rocky mountains the eastern boundary. This would create a state with an COI.TOX HALT^. MONTEREY. 80 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA area of about four hundred thousand square miles. They reasoned that when the admission of the state came before Congress the southern members would oppose the admission of so large a territory under a free state constitution and that ultimately a compromise would be affected. California would be split in two from east to west, the old dividing line, the parallel of 36° 30" would be established, and Southern California would coine into the Union as a slave state. There were, at this time, fifteen free and fifteen slave states. If two states, one free and one slave, were made out of California territory, the equilibrium would be preserved. The Rocky mountain boundary was adopted at one time, but in the closing days of the session the free state men discovered Gwin's scheme arid it was defeated. The present boundaries were established bv a majority of two. A committee had been appointed to receive propositions and designs for a state seal. But one design was received, presented by Caleb Lyon, but drawn by Robert S. Garnett. It contained a figure of Minerva; a grizzly bear feeding on a bunch of grapes ; a miner with his gold rocker and pan ; a view of the Golden Gate with ships in the bay and peaks of the Sierra Nevada in the distance ; thirty- one stars and above all the word " Eureka." The convention adopted the design as presented. The constitution was completed on October loth and an election was called by Gov. Riley for November 13th. to ratify the constitution, elect state officers, a legislature and members of Congress. At the election Peter H. Burnett was chosen governor ; John ]\IcDougall, lieutenant-governor ; George W. W'right and Edward Gilbert, members of congress. During the session of the legislature, Wm. M. Gwin and John C. Fremont were elected to the Ignited States Senate. San Jose had been designated as the state capital. On Deceml)er 15th the state government was inaugurated there. The legislature consisted of sixteen senators and thirtv-six assemblymen. ( )n the 22nd the legislature elected the remaining state officers, viz. : Richard Roman, treasurer ; John S. Houston, con- troller; E. J. C. Kewen, attorney-general; Charles J. Whiting, surveyor-general; S. C. Hastings, chief justice; Henry A. Lyons and Nathaniel Bennett, associate justices. The legislature continued in session until April 22nd, 1850. Although this law-making body was named the " Legislature of a thousand drinks ", it did a vast amount of work and did most of it well. It divided the state into twenty- seven counties and provided for county government. It also provided for the HON. WM. M. GWIN. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 81 incorporation of cities and towns ; passed revenue and other necessary laws, both civil and criminal. California was a self constituted state. It had organized a state government and put it into operation without the sanction of Congress. It had not been ad- mitted into the union and it actually enjoyed the privileges of statehood for nine months before it was admitted. When the question of admission came before congress it evoked a bitter controversy. The senate was equally divided — thirty members from slave states and thirty from the free states. There were among the southern senators some broad- minded men, but there were many extremists on the subject of slavery — men who would sacrifice their coun- try in order to extend and per- petuate that sum of all villainies — slavery. This faction resorted to every known parliamentary device to prevent the admission of Cali- fornia under a free state constitu- tion. On August 13th the bill for admission finally came to a vote ; it passed the senate — thirty- four ayes to eighteen nays. Even then the opposition did not cease. Ten of the southern extremists joined in a protest against the action of the majority. In the house the bill passed by a vote of one hundred and fifty to fifty-six. It was approved and signed by President Fillmore September 9th, 1850. On the nth of September the California senators and congressmen presented themselves to be sworn in. The southern faction of the senate, headed by Jefiferson Davis, who had been one of the most bitter opponents to admission, objected. But their protest came too late. The news of the admission of California as a state reached San Francisco on the morning of October i8th, by the mail steamer Oregon. Business was at once suspended, courts adjourned and the people went wild with delight. Mes- sengers mounted on fleet horses spread the news through the state. Everywhere there was rejoicing. For ten months the state government had been in full oper- ation ; its acts were now legalized and it continued in power without change or 6 HOX. I'ETEIl II. BURNETT, First Constitutional Governor of California. 82 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA interruption under tlie officers elected in 1849 for two years. The first state election after admission was held in October. 185 1. John Bioler was elected ofovernor. i!' in rRT.EBRATION OP ADMISSION OF CALIFORNIA INTO THE UNION. CORNER OF CLAY AND KEARNEY STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO-lSaO. CHAPTER X. Vigilance Committkijs. Growth and Prosperity. THE tales of the fabulous richness of the California gold fields were spread throughout the civilized world and drew to the state all classes and and conditions of men — the bad as well as the good. They came from Europe, from South America and from Mexico ; from far Australia and Tas- mania came the ex-convict and the " ticket-of-leave " man ; and from Asia came the " Chinee." In 185 1 the criminal element became so dominant as to seri- ously threaten the existence of the chief city of the state — San Francisco. Ter- rible conflagrations swept over the city that year and destroyed the greater part of the business portion. The fires were known to be of incendiary origin. The bold and defiant attitude of the lawless classes led to the organization of the better element into a tribunal known as the '' Vigilance Committee," which disregarded the legally constituted authorities, who were either too weak or too corrupt to control the law-defying element and took the power in its own hands. It tried and executed, by hanging, four notorious criminals — Jenkins, Stuart, Whitaker and McKenzie. Such vigorous measures adopted by the Committee BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 83 soon purified the city from the worst class that preyed upon it. Several of the smaller towns and some of the mining camps also formed " vigilance commit- tees " and a number of the rascals who had fled from San Francisco met a deserved fate in these places. During the early fifties the better elements in the population of San Fran- cisco were too much engrossed in the rushing business affairs of that period of excitement, to give time or thought to political affairs and consequently the o-overnment of the city gradually drifted into the hands of vicious and corrupt men. Many of the city authorities had obtained their offices by fraud and bal- lot stuffing and instead of protecting the community against scoundrels, they protected the scoundrels against the community. James King, an ex-banker and a man of great courage and persistence, started a small paper called the Daily Evening Bulletin. He vigorously assailed the criminal elements and the county and city officials. His denunciations at last aroused public sentiment. The murder of United States Marshal Richardson by a gambler named Cora further inflamed the public mind. It was feared that, by the connivance of the county officials, Cora would escape punishment. The trial resulted in a hung jury and there were strong suspicions that some of the jury had been bribed. King continued through the Bulletin to hurl his most bitter invectives against the corrupt officials. He published the fact that James Casey, a supervisor from the twelfth ward, was an ex-convict from Sing Sing prison. Casey waylaid King, May 14th, 1856, at the corner of Montgomery and Washington streets, and in a cowardly manner shot him down. Casey immediately surrendered himself to a deputy sheriff, Lafayette McByrne, who was near. King was not killed outright, but the physicians, after an examination, pronounced the case hopeless; Casey was confined in the city jail and as a mob began to gather there, he was taken to the county jail for greater safety. A crowd pursued him, cry- ing, " Hang him, kill him." At the jail the mob was stopped by an array of deputy sheriffs, police officers and a number of Casey's personal friends— all armed. The excitement spread throughout the city. The old Vigilance Com- mittee of 1 85 1, or rather a new organization out of the remnants of the old one, was formed. Five thousand men were enrolled within a few days, arms were procured and headquarters secured on Sacramento street between Davis and Front. William T. Coleman, chairman of the old vigilantes, was made the pres- ident and Isaac Bluxon, Jr., was the secretary; Clias. Doane was elected chief marshal of the military division. The San Francisco Herald, edited by John Nugent, then the leading paper of the city, came out with a scathing editorial denouncing the vigilance commit- tee. The merchants at once withdrew advertising patronage. The next morn- ing the paper appeared reduced from forty columns to a single page, but still hostile to the committee. It finally died from lack of patronage. Sunday, May 84 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA i8th, 1856, the military division was ready to storm the jail if necessary to obtain possession of the prisoners, Casey and Cora. The different companies, 1500 strong- and with two pieces of artillery marched from their headquarters and completely invested the jail. One of these guns was planted to command the door of the jail, and a demand was made on Sheriff Scannell for the pris- oners. The prison guards made no resistance; the prisoners were surrendered at once and taken to the headquarters of the vigilantes. On May 20th, while the murderers were on trial the death of King was announced. Both men were convicted and sentenced to be hanged. King's funeral, the largest and most imposing ever seen in San Francisco, took place on the 23rd. While the funeral cortege was passing through the streets, Casey and Cora were hanged in front of the windows of the vigilantes' headquarters. About an hour before his execution Cora was married to a notorious courtesan, Arabella Ryane. better known as Bell Cora. Governor J. Neely Johnson at first seemed inclined not to interfere with the vigilance committee; but afterward, acting under the advice of Volney E. Howard, David S. Terry and others of the dominant pro-slavery faction, he issued a proclamation commanding the committee to disband — to which no attention was paid. The governor then appointed William T. Sherman, major- general. Sherman called for recruits to suppress the uprising. Seventy-five or a hundred — mostly gamblers — responded. Gen. Wool, in command of the troops in the Department of the Pacific, refused to loan Gov. Johnson arms to equip his " Law and Order " recruits and Gen. Sherman resigned. A^olnev E. Howard was then appointed major-general. A squad of the vigilance commit- tee w^as appointed to arrest a man named Maloney who was at the time in the company of David S. Terrey (then chief justice of the state) and several other members of the " Law and Order " party. They resisted the police and in the melee Terrey stabbed the sergeant of the party. Sterling A. Hopkins, and then he and his associates made their escape to the armory of the San Francisco Blues, one of their strongholds. When the report of the stabbing reached headquarters the great bell sounded the alarm and the vigilantes, in a very short space of time, surrounded the armory and had their cannon planted to batter it down ; Terrey, Maloney and the others of their party in the building, considering discretion the better part of valor, surrendered and were at once taken to Fort " Gunnybags," so known on account of a breastwork made of gunnybags filled with sand wliich the vigilantes had placed about the building- used as headquarters. The arms of the " Law and Order " party at their various rendezvous were surrenderd to the vigilantes and the companies disbanded. Terrey was closely confined in a cell at the headquarters of the committee. He was tried for assault upon Hopkins, who finally recovered, and upon sev- BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 85 eral other parties and was found gnilty ; but after he had been held a prisoner for some time, he was released. He was forced to resign his office as chief justice, however, and joined Johnson and Howard in Sacramento, where he felt safer than in San Francisco. On July 29th, Hethrington and Brace were hanged from a gallows erected on Davis street between Sacramento and Commercial. Both of these men had committed murder. The committee transported from the state some thirty dis- reputable characters and a number of others deported themselves. A few, among them the notorious Ned McGowan, managed to keep concealed until the storm was over. A few of the exiles returned after the committee was dis- banded and began suit for damages, but failed to secure anything. The com- mittee finished its labors and dissolved with a grand parade, August i8th, 1856, after doing a most valuable work. For several years afterwards San Francisco was one of the best governed cities in the United States. It is a noticeable fact that the vigilance committee was largely made up of men from the northern and western states, while the so-called " Law and order " party was composed mostly of the pro-slavery, ofifice-holding faction which then ruled the state. The rush of gold-seekers to California in the early fifties had brought to the state a certain class of adventurers — many of whom were too lazy or too proud to work. They were readv to engage in almost any lawless undertaking that promised plunder and adventure. The defeat of the pro-slavery politicians in their attempt to fasten their " peculiar institution " upon any part of the terri- tory acquired from Mexico made them very bitter. The more unscrupulous among them began to look about for new fields over which slavery might be spread. As slavery could only be made profitable in southern lands, Cuba, Mexico and Central America became the arena for enacting that form of piracy known as " filibustering." Although the armed invasion of countries with which the United States was at peace was in direct violation of international laws, yet the federal office-holders in the southern states and in California, all of whom belonged to the pro-slavery element, made no attempt to prevent these invasions, but instead secretly aided them, or at least sympathized with them to the extent of allowing them to recruit men and depart without molestation. One of the leading filibusters from California was a Tennesseean by the name of Walker. His first attempt was against Lower California. He captured La Paz and established what he called the Republic of Lower California and pro- claimed it slave territory. He and his army plundered and robbed wherever there was anything to be obtained. The country was so poor and his army so mutinous that he was compelled to abandon his so-called republic, after shoot- ing several of his dupes for desertion. After this he had a varied career as a filibuster in Central America. He was captured in Honduras in i860, court- martialed and shot. 86 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA State Capitals. As has been previously stated, the constitutional convention of 1849 "^^^ in Colton Hall in Monterey. During its sessions the question of locating the capital came up. San Jose offered to donate a square of thirty-two acres val- ued at $60,000 for capitol grounds and give the free use of a building for meet- ings of the Legislature. The offer was accepted and the first Legislature con- vened there, December 15th, 1849. "^he first capitol of the state was a two- story adobe building, 40 by 60 feet, which had been built for a hotel. This building was destroyed by fire April 29th, 1853. The accommodations at San Jose were not satisfac- tory. The Legislature next accepted a proposi- tion from Gen. M. G. Val- lejo to locate the capital at his new town of Val- lejo. He offered to do- nate 156 acres of land for a site and within two years to give $370,000 in money to be expended in the erection of public buildings. When the members of the Legisla- ture met at the new cap- ital January 2nd, 1852, they found a large, un- furnished and partly unfinished wooden building for their reception. Accommo- dations were very poor and even food was wanting for the hungry law- makers. Sacramento then offered its new court house as a meeting place and on the i6th the Legislature convened in that city. The great flood of 1852 inundated the town and the lawmakers were forced to reach the halls of legis- lation in boats — again there was dissatisfaction. Benicia now came to the front with the offer of her new city hall which was assuredly above high water mark. Gen. Vallejo had become financially embarrassed and could not carry out his contract, so it was annulled. The offer of Benicia was accepted and on May i8th, 1853, that town was declared the permanent capital. In the Legislature of 1854 the capitol question again came to the front. Proposals were received from several aspiring cities, but Sacramento won with the offer of her new court house and a block of land between I and J, Ninth STATE CAPITOL, BENICIA. BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 87 and Tenth streets. Then the question of locating the capital got into the courts. The supreme court decided in favor of Sacramento. Before the Legislature met again the court house burned down. A more commodious one was at once erected and rented to the state at $12,000 a year. Then Oakland made an unsuccessful attempt to secure the capital. Finally a bill was passed author- izing the erection of a capitol building in Sacramento at a cost not to exceed $500,000. Work was begun on the foundation in October, i860. The great flood of 1861-62 inundated the town and ruined the foundations of the capitol. San Francisco made a vigorous effort to secure the seat of government, but was not successful. Work was resumed on the building, the plans were changed, the edifice enlarged and finally after many delays it was ready for occu- pancy in December, 1869. From the original limit of half a million dollars, its cost when completed had reached a million and a half. The amount ex- pended on the building and the grounds to date is $2,972,925. State Senator E. C. Seymour, representing Orange and San Bernar- dino counties in the Thir- STATE CAPITOL. SACRAMENTTO. ^{^^1, ^nd Thirty-firSt SCS- sions, introduced a bill to remove the capital to San Jose. The bill passed, but the scheme was defeated in the courts. Civil. War. The Civil War (1861-65) did not seriously affect the prosperity of Cali- fornia. During its progress about 16.000 volunteers enlisted in the L^nion Army. Much to their disappointment these men were retained on the Pacific coast to fight Indians and keep the disloyal element in check. One battalion of five companies paid its own passage to the east and joined the Second Mass. Cavalry in which it did splendid service in Virginia and Maryland. Quite a number of Confederate sympathizers from California joined the Southern armies during the war. Those who remained in the state were closelv watched by the federal authorities and were not able to render much assistance to their friends of the South. 88 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA Mining. Previous to i860 the chief industry of the state was mining-.' During the decade between 1850 and i860 a number of rushes were made to new diggings reputed to be rich in the precious metals. The most famous of these were the Kern river in 1855 and the Frazer river in 1857 — both ended in disaster to those engaged in them. In 1859 the silver mines of Washoe were discovered and a great rush made to these. The Comstock lodes were very rich and many fortunes were made. Stock gambling became a mania in San Francisco in which fortunes were lost. CattlK Raising. The southern part of the state was devoted to cattle raising which in the early sixties was immensely profitable. The land was held in large ranchos and at the time of the discovery of gold was mostly owned by native Califor- nians. The sudden influx of population consequent on the discovery of gold greatly increased the value of the cattle and made the stock owners rich. With wealth came extravagant habits and when the decline began they borrowed money at usurious rates and the high interest ruined them. The terrible dry years of 1863-64, when thousands of cattle starved to death, ])ut an end to cattle raising as the distinctive industry of the south. The decadence of cattle growing brought about the subdivision of the large ranchos and the develop- ment of grain growing and fruit culture. In the southern part of the state the culture of citrus fruits — the orange and lemon— has become the leading industry. In favorable localities in the central and northern sections of the state the production of deciduous fruits — the apple, peach, prune, pear, etc., takes precedence ; while the great valleys of the Sacramento and the San Joaquin are vast wheat fields. Railroad Building. Several schemes for the building of a trans-continental railroad were promulgated in California during the fifties. The first railroad built in the state was the Sacramento Valley road, which was completed to Folsom in Feb- ruary, 1856, and was twenty-two miles in length. The next was the road from San Francisco to San Jose, fifty-one miles long, completed January i6th. 1864. On June 28th, 1861, at Sacramento the Central Railroad of California was organized, with Leland Stanford, president; C. P. Huntington, vice-president; Alark Hopkins, treasurer; James Baily, secretary; and T. D. Judah, chief engi- neer. The capital stock of the company was fixed at $8,500,000. The whole amount of stock subscribed by its promoters would not have built five miles of road ; none of the men at that time connected with the road were rich and the whole afifair was regarded in the nature of a joke. On July ist, 1862, the BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA 89 Pacific railroad bill was passed by Congress, authorizing the issuance of gov- ernment bonds to the amount of $16,000 per mile to the foot of the mountains and of $48,000 per mile through the mountains. Forty miles had to be built and equipped before any bonds were issued. In addition to this there was a government land subsidy of 12,800 acres per mile. Ground was broken for the road at Sacramento, February 22nd, 1863. The Union Pacific was built west- ward from Omaha. On May loth, 1869, the two roads met at Promontory, near Salt Lake, and were united. The first road built in the southern part of the state was the Los Angeles and San Pedro, completed to Wilmington, in October, 1869. This connected Los Angeles with a sea-port and greatly facilitated commerce. The Southern Pacific Railroad was completed to Los Angeles, September 5th, 1877. It had, in 1872, obtained a subsidy from Los Angeles county of about $600,000; $225,000 being the Los x\ngeles and San Pedro Railroad. For this it was to build twenty-five miles of road north of Los Angeles and the same distance to the east. The northern end met the extension of the road south from Lathrop on the Central Pacific in the Soledad canyon on September 5th, 1876, when the last tie was laid and the golden spike driven. The eastern end was completed in 1883 to El Paso, where it met the Texas Pacific and thus gave California a second trans- continental line. The Atlantic and Pacific uniting with the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe, built jointly their main line from Albuquerque to the Colorado at the Needles. From there the Atlantic & Pacific built to Barstow about eighty miles north- east of San Bernardino ; thence the California Southern continued the line to San Diego. The road was completed to Col ton in August, 1882, and opened from San Diego to San Bernardino September 13th, 1883. In 1887 the road was built westward from San Bernardino until it met the San Gabriel Valley line — which was built eastward from Los Angeles to Mud Springs. The dif- ferent divisions of the road were united under one management with its west- ern terminus at Los Angeles, thus giving California its third transcontinental line. The growth of the state and particularly of the southern part of the state since the advent of the railroads has been phenomenal. Education. The first public school in California was opened at San Jose in December, 1794, seventeen years after the founding of that pueblo. The pioneer teacher was Manuel de Vargas, a retired sergeant of infantry. Jose Manuel Toca, a ship boy, opened the first school in Santa Barbara, in 1795. ^Maximo Pina, an invalid soldier, was the first schoolmaster of Los Angeles, teaching in 18 17 and 1818. During the Spanish era the schoolmasters were mostly invalid soldiers — men of little learning — about all thev could teach was reading and writing: 90 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA and the doctrina Christiana. They were brutal tyrants and their school gov- ernments military despotisms. The people were indifferent to education and as the schoolmasters were paid by rate bills the terms were short and the vacations long. Mexico did somewhat better for public education than Spain. The school terms were a little longer and the vacations proportionately shorter, but it was not uncommon then for a vacation to last two or three years. During the war of American conquest the schools were all closed. After the cessation of hostilities in 1847, ^ school under army regulations was estab- lished in Los Angeles — or rather it was under the superintendency of Col. J. D. Stevenson, the military commander of the Department of the South. Dr. William B. Osburn was appointed teacher. This was the first English com- mon school established in California. After peace was declared and the munic- ipal governments organized, schools were opened in the large towns. These were subscription schools, although in some cases the town council appropri- ated public funds for the education of a certain number of poor children who were entitled to attend some private school. The first act to establish a common school system in California was approved May 3rd, 1852. Great advance was made in perfecting and building up this system from 1863 to 1869 under the administration of State School Superintendent John Swett, who has been called the " Horace Mann of Cali- fornia." The first state Normal School for " the training of teachers " was established in San Francisco in 1863. It was afterwards removed to San Jose. There are now five Normal Schools in the state. The public school system and the public schools of California rank among the best in the United States. ■®3il& 'n-^^^::t^:4iiM~^~^ \J' !l,i ]l " Governors of California. Under Spanish Rule. Caspar de Portala 1 767-1 771 Jose Joaquin de Arrillaga. . 1792- 1794 Felipe de Barri 1771-1774 Diego de Borica 1794-1800 Felipe de Neve 1774- 1782 Jose Joaquin de Arrillaga. . 1800-1814 Pedro Fages 1782-1790 Jose Dario Arguello 1814-1815 Jose Antonio Romeu 1790- 1792 Pablo Vicente de Sola 181 5-1822 Under Mexican RueE. Luis Antonio Arguello 1822-1825 Jose Castro 1835-1836 Jose Maria de Echandia. . . 1825-1831 Nicolas Cuiterrez 1836 Manuel Victoria 1831-1832 Juan Bautista Alvarado. . . . 1836-1842 Pio Pico 1832-1833 Manuel Micheltorena 1842-1845 Jose Figueroa 1833-1835 Pio Pico 1845-1846 Under American Military Rule. Commodore Robert F. Stockton Aug. 17, 1846-Jan. 16, 1847 Captain John C. Fremont Jan. i6-March i, 1847 General Stephen W. Kearney March i-May 31, 1847 Colonel Richard B. Mason May 31, 1847- April 13, 1849 General Bennett Riley April 13, 1849-Nov. 13, 1849 Goxernors of State. Pether H. Burnett 1849-1851 Roniualdo Pacheco 1875 John McDougal 1851-1852 William Irwin 1875-1880 John Bigler 1852-1855 George C. Perkins 1880-1883 J. Neely Johnson 1855-1858 George Stoneman 1883-1887 John B. Weller i8s8-i86o Washington Bartlett 1887 Milton S. Latham i860 Robert W. Waterman 1887-1891 John G. Downey i860- 1862 Henry H. Markham 189 1 -1895 Leland Stanford 1862-1863 James H. Budd 1895-1899 Frederick F. Low 1863-1867 Henry T. Gage 1899-1903 Henry H. Haight 1867-1871 George C. Pardee 1903-1907 Newton Booth 1871-1875 J. N. Gillett 1907 92 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA Spanish and Mi^xican Land Grants in Los Angelks County, GRANT. CONFIRMEIS. Agiiaje dc la Centinela B. Abila Loa Alamitos A. Stearns Azusa A. Dnarte Azvisa Henry Dalton La Ballona A. Machado et al Boca de Santa Monica Ysidro Reyes et al Boca de la Playa E. Vejar La Brea A. Rocha et al Las Bolsas R. Yorba and M. C. Nieto. Cahnenga D. W. Alexander et al La Canada J. R. Scott et al Canada de los x\lisos J. Serrano Canada de los Nogales J. M. Aguilar Los Cerritos Juan Temple Paso de la Tijera T. Sanchez et al Las Cienegas J. Abila et al El Conejo J. de la G. y Noriega Los Coyotes Andreas Pico et al El Encino V. de la Osa et al El Escorpion LTrbano et al_ Los Feliz M. Y. Verdugo Lomas de Santiago T. Yorba La Habra Andreas Pico et al Huerta de Cuati V. Reid Island de S. Catalina J. M. Covarrubias La Liebre J. M. Flores ACRES. 2,219 28,027 6,505 4431 i3'9i9 6,656 6,607 4-439 33460 388 5,862 10,668 1,199 27-054 4.219 4439 48,571 48,806 4,460 1,109 6,647 47,226 6,698 128 45,820 48.799 DATE. Los Angeles City lands City of Los Angeles 17,172 La IMerced F. P. F. Temple 2.363 Mission San Gabriel, lot. . . .J. S. Alemany 55 Mission San Fernando, lot. . . Bp. J. S. Alemany 79 Mission San Gabriel, lot Bp. J. S. Alemany 190 Mission Vieja Juan Foster 46,432 Ex-mission San Fernando. . . .F. de Cells 1 16.858 Los Nogales Maria de J. Garcia et al. . . 1,003 El Niguil Juan Abila 13,316 Los Palos Verdes J. L. Sepulveda et al 31.629 Paso de Bartolo, part B. Guirado 876 Paso de Bartolo, part Joaquin Sepulveda 207 Aug. 23 Aug. 29 June 6 May 29 Dec. 8 July 21 Mar. I April 1 5 June 19 Aug. 2 Aug. I June 27 May 4 Dec. 7 ]\Iay 22 June 15 Jan. 8 Mar. 9 Jan. 8 Dec. II April 18 Feb. I Dec. 4 June 30 April 20 June 21 Aug. 9 Aug. 4 Feb. 13 Dec. 4 May 31 Nov. 19 Aug. 6 Jan. 8 June 29 April 5 June 23 Sept. 27 Mar. 17 [872 [874 [878 [876 [873 [882 [879 [873 [874 [872 [866 [871 [882 [867 [873 [871 [873 t875 [876 [883 [871 [868 [882 [859 [867 [879 [866 t875 [872 [875 [864 [859 [866 t873 [882 [873 [880 [867 BRIEF HISTORY OF CALIFORNL\ 93 Tracts near San Gabriel. Paso de Bartolo, part Pio Pico 8,991 Aug. 6, Potrero de Felipe Lugo Morilla & Romero 2,042 June 15, Potrero Grande J. INI. Sanchez 4,431 July 19, Prospero tract R. Valenzuela et al 23 Dec. 4, Providentia ,D. W. Alexander et al . . . . 4,064 Aug. 6, La Puente Workman & Roland 48,790 April 19, Rincon de la Brea G. Ybarra 4.452 Nov. 14, Rincon de los Bueyes F. Higuera et al 3,127 Aug. 27, San Antonio A. M. Lugo 29,513 July 20, Rodeo de las Aguas M. R. Valdez 4,419 J"ne 2"/, San Francisco Jacobo Feliz et al 48,61 1 Feb. 12, ( Juan Silva 50 H. P. Dorsey 50 Michael White 78 Jose Ledesma 22 Daniel Sexton 227 J. P. de Courtney 49 Francisco Sales 19 [ Jose Domingo 22 San Francisquito Henry Dalton 8,893 San Joaquin Jose Sepulveda 48,893 San Jose Dalton. Palomares & Vejar. 22,340 San Jose de Buenos Ayres. . . B. D. Wilsou 4438 San Juan Cajon de Sta. Ana. J. P. Ontiveras 35,970 San Jose, addition to Dalton, Palomares & Vejar. 4,430 San Pasqual B. D. Wilson 708 San Pasqual Alanuel Garfias 13,693 San Pasqual Juan Gallardo 700 San Pedro Al. Dominguez et al 43-i 19 Dec. 18, San Rafael Julio Verdugo et al 36,403 Jan. 28, San Vicente y Santa Monica. .R. Sepulveda 30,259 Ji-dy 23, Santa Anita Henry Dalton 13,319 Aug. 9, Santa Gertrudes T. S. Colima 3,696 July 17. Santa Gertrudes Mcfarland & Downey 17,602 Aug. 19, Santiago de Santa Ana B. Yorba et al 78,941 Dec. 21, Sausal Redondo A. L. Abila 22,458 Mar. 22, Simi J. de la G. y Noriega 1 13,009 June 29, Tajauta E. Abila 3,559 Jan. 8, Temescal E. de la Cuesta 1 3,339 Sept. 13, Topanga Malibu Sequit M. Keller 13.315 Aug. 29, Tejunga ..D. W. Alexander et al 16,609 Oct. 19, Las Virgenes M. A. Machado 8,885 Sept. 5, 1881 1871 1859 1875 1872 1867 1864 1872 1866 1871 1875 Aug. 26, 1871 June 17, 1871 Mav 16, 1871 Jan. 20, 1871 June 20, 1871 Aug. 23, 1871 May 30, 1867 Sept. 19. 1867 Jan. 20, 1875 J^iiy 5, 1866 Mav 21, 1877 Dec. 4, 1875 Feb. 12, 1881 Apri 3- 1863 858 882 881 866 877 870 88.3 875 865 873 871 872 874 883 Condensed History of Los Angeles County. CHAPTER I. Organization. THE history of " el pueblo de Los Angeles ", as the central point of the southern district of the territory of Alta California, has already been given in the state history. We have followed the growth of the town from its founding, in 1781, to its final conquest and occupation by the United States troops in 1847. We have seen the rise and the fall of the mission establishments of ORIGINAL CHURCH OF OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS. 1S:;2. San Gabriel, San Fernando and San Juan Capistrano, and the occupation of the fertile valleys and mesas by the great ranchos granted to settlers of Spanish. Mexican and Californian birth and to a few Americans. At the time of the state organization, the territory included in I,os Angeles county was distributed in large tracts ranging from a few thousand to more than a hundred thousand 96 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY acres. The oldest of these grants was occupied as early as 1784, that being the date assigned for San Rafael rancho, granted to the Verdugos. Santa Ana was granted to the Yorbas and Simi to the Noriegas among the earliest allotments. The government of the L'nited States early appointed commissioners to examine into land titles in California and for a number of years investigations were made and patents issued or refused to the claimants. There was much confusion and no little fraud connected with the final allotment of titles, although there were not so many disputed claims in this district as in the north. About seventv-five patents were issued to lands in tlie county. Los Angeles was one of the twenty-seven counties created by act of the first California legislature, April i8th, 1850. Its boundaries as first indicated were very indefinite, extending from San Diego coimty on the south to Santa Barbara on the north and from the Pacific to " the top of the coast range." The second legislature amended the act by making the boundaries more exact and extending them to the eastern state line. The area of the original county was about 34,000 square miles, almost as large as the state of Indiana. In 1851 the ]\Iormon colony purchased the San Bernardino grant and established their colony of San Bernardino. In consequence San Bernardino county was set ofif from Los Angeles April 26th, 1853, taking an area of 20,055 square miles from the mother county. In 1866 Kern county was created, taking part of its territory from this county. After long discussion and dissension, Orange county was created, March nth. 1889, taking 780 square miles, which leaves Los An- geles with a present area of 3957 square miles. Pomona county has been several times proposed and strong efforts have been made to secure its creation from [,os Angeles and San Bernardino territory but, thus far, the movement has not been successful. The first county election took place April ist, 1850. The census for this year gives the county a population of 3530 ; 377 votes were cast and the officers chosen were: Judge, Augustin Olivera ; clerk, B. D. Wilson; attorney, Benjamin Hayes ; surveyor, J. R. Conway ; treasurer, Manuel Garfias ; assessor, Antonio F. Coronel ; recorder, Ignacio del Valle ; sherifif, George T. Burrell ; coroner, Charles B. Cullen. August 7th, 1851. the county was divided into six townships, Los Angeles, San Gabriel, San Jose, San Bernardino, Santa Ana, San Juan Capistrano. The supervisors were not elected until June 14th, 1852, civil afifairs in the meantime being administered by the " court of sessions ", appointed by the military governor. The first supervisors were Jefif'erson Hunt, Julian Chavez, F. P. F. Temple, Manuel Reciuena and Samuel Arbuckle ; the board was organ- ized with Arbuckle as chairman and B. D. Wilson, county clerk, clerk. The office of juez de campo, judge of the plains, was continued for a number of years after the American occupation, as late as 1872, although it was a part of the machinery of the Mexican administration. It was the duty of this officer to attend rodeos, settle all questions relating to brands and to the handling and CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 97 division of stock. They were appointed to different districts and were given large jurisdiction. One of the first important poUtical questions discussed in the southern district was that of forming a separate state. In 1850, before Cahfornia had been received into the union, a petition requesting that the southern district be left out of the state was prepared. It was felt that the rancheros of the south, thinly populated as it was, would receive but small favor from the north, which held the bulk of the population, and would have to pay an undue proportion of the expenses of state government. In 1859, an act was passed by the state legislature permitting a vote upon a proposal to divide the state ; but it failed to go through. State division has been a topic for much discussion and news- paper wisdom since that time, a bill for division being introduced in 1888; but has never since become a serious issue. The first state senator from this county was Dr. A. W. Hope, succeeded by Stephen C. Foster, one of the earliest and most prominent of American settlers. The first assemblymen were A. P. Crittenden and Montgomery Martin, who were succeeded by Don Abel Stearns and Ignacio del Valle. Los Angeles county and Southern California bore little part in the active government of the state during the first three or four decades of its existence. The first governor elected from the south was John G. Downey, inaug- urated January 14th, i860. He was long one of the leading citizens of Los Angeles and had served as as- semblyman and lieutenant-governor also. Since that time this county has furnished three governors — George Stoneman, Henry H. Markham and Henry T. Gage. As United States senators, Cornelius Cole, Stephen M. White and Frank P. Flint have been resi- dents of Los Angeles county. The discovery of gold brought wealth to Southern California, as well as to the north. J. J. Warner in his " Centennial History " says : " The discovery of the ' mines ' in the vear 1848 carried away many of the native population ; created a new demand for the horses and cattle which the southern rancheros could so easily supply ; brought a multitude of emigrants from Sonora, as well as from the LTnited States; left the people at home here (in Los Angeles) in a state of perpetual excitement and exultation. During the summer of 1849 and the year of 1850, Los Angeles was a thoroughfare of travel. With, or without means, the incomers crowded on ; seldom destitute, for their needs were supplied, when known, by generous hospitality from the Lugos of San Bernardino; Isaac Williams of Chino; Rowland and Workman at Puente and the liberality of native HON. JOHN G. DOWNEY. 98 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY Californians. With the people of Los Angeles, 1850 was a year of enjoyment, rather than an earnest pursuit of riches. Money was abundant. All sought to make the most of the pleasures of life." A strong contrast here toi the mad rush for gold in the placer mines. The prosperity of the rancheros continued for several vears. In 1857 a drought retarded the progress; but the increased market for stock and the importation of stock from the states had greatly in- creased the wealth of the county. The population of the county was 11,333 i" i860. The floods and the long drought of the early sixties; the disturbed condi- tion of the country and the cessation of immigration made the increase slow during the next ten years. The census of 1870 shows only 15,309 inhabitants. The first court house of Los Angeles was the adobe house which had been used as a government building during the later days of the Mexican rule. In 1859 the ofifices were removed to the Temple building, which was known for many vears as the " court house " ; this was located on the block where the Bullock block now stands. During the sixties the count y purchased the building and it was occu- pied until the erection of the present fine building in 1890, at a cost of $550,000. The first school in Los Angeles, taught in the English language, was under the instruction of Rev. Dr. Wicks and J. G. Nichols, in 1850. In 1854 there were four schools in the county, two of them being taught in English. In 1855 there were three school districts, Los Angeles, San Gabriel and El Monte, with T191 school children. Antonio F. Coronel acted as first superintendent of schools, succeeded in 1855 by Dr. John S. Griffin. In 1856 there were seven schools, four of them being in the city. In 1866 the county had 12 school districts and in 1876 123 teachers with a total valuation of school property of $202,262. In 1906 the county had 1616 teachers and school property amounting to $4,715,015. Many of the earlier settlers of the county were southern in sentiment and as the question of slavery began to threaten difficulties, there was much unrest and dissension. Another element of the population came from the mining dis- tricts of the north — mostly of those who had failed to find wealth. The spirit of lawlessness which prevailed in the state was not absent in this county. Crime "OLD" COURT HOUSE. CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 99 was rampant and robbery and murders were every-day occurrences. The courts seemed unable to meet the situation and the best citizens were uneasy T pro-slavery sentiment led to the attempt at state division in 1859; but on the breakn.o. out of the war, the people generally rallied to the Uni!.n and h r was no open disloyalty m this county. In 1861 a union club was organiz d and a regunent of volunteers was raised. Camps were maintained at Drum Bar racks, Wilmington, and at Camp Latham on the Ballona grant, and troops were stationed in the city at times, and at Fort Tejon. The agitation against the Chinese was not as aggressive in this county as in the north, the celestials were too useful in the vineyards and orchards ; yet there was much discus- sion and public meetings were held to uphold the anti-Chinese movement. The terrible Chinese mas- sacre of October 24th, 1871, was not a direct result of feeling against the race ; but originated in a quar- rel between two C^iinese factions over a woman. In an attempt to quell the disturbance an officer and two citizens were wounded by the Chinese. This aroused a mob. who rushed into the Chinese quarter and slaughtered right and left, without regard to right or mercy. Their houses were looted^ by the mob and nineteen deaths resulted from the affair The poi3ulation of the county more than doubled during the seventies, the census of 1880 showing 33.454 souls. The completion of transcontinental lines and the boom swelled the population to 101,381 in i8c,o, despite the 13,000 taken out by Orange county the previous year. Since that date Los Angeles county has rapidly advanced until now she stands second in the state and is a power to be reckoned with in all political questions. ANTONIO F. CORONEL. CHAPTER II. Stock Raising and Agriculture. STOCK raising, which was practically the only industry of Southern Califor- nia at the time the country passed into the hands of the United States, continued to be the chief source of wealth for Los Angeles county until the severe drought of 1863-4. According to the census report of 1850, the great county of Los Angeles had but 2648 acres of improved land and in i860 but 20,000 acres was under cultivation. The great influx of gold-seekers provided a new market for cattle and horses, which largely increased prices, and the rancheros of Southern California were as " flush " as the miners of the north, for a time. The value of live stock steadily increased and in i860 it is given as $1,451,000, although there had been heavy losses, many cattle dying of starvation during the drought of 1857. But the long dry spell, lasting two years and over, almost wrecked the business. Stock died, or was killed to save the hides, until almost none was left. After this time, the rancheros devoted more attention tO' sheep and the flocks were greatly increased, while cattle were handled in smaller bunches and improved stock was introduced by the Americans. The breaking up of the big ranchos began and a number of new settlements were made during the seventies. As early as 1844 Jose Palomares, owner of the San Jose rancho, where Pomona is now located, sold ofif a number of small tracts of land to INIex- icans, who took water from the San Jose creek and formed a prosperous little settlement. About the same time Juan Bandini induced a partv of New Mex- icans to settle on his Jurupa grant, now the site of Riverside, and the village of Agua Mansa, with flourishing orchards and grain fields resulted. In 185 1 the Mormon settlement of San Bernardino was begun and these industrious people soon demonstrated that small farms could be made profitable in this country. In 185 1 a number of immigrants, mostly from the southern states, settled at El Monte. Here was a natural cienega and the low damp lands were especially adapted to the growing of corn and hogs. In i860 this settlement had a population of over one thousand and was a noted place in the early history of the county. In 1874 it had a newspaper, the Observer, and a hotel. At Spadra, Ruebottom's hotel was a stopping point for all stages to the east and a noted hostelry in the sixties. This was also one of the earliest American set- tlements. About 1865 Governor Downey began to break up his Santa Gertrudes rancho and the settlement of Downey followed. Here, too, corn yielded mar- velous crops and the raising of hogs and of dairy cattle was profitable. Thus gradually small farms, with diversified farming, took the place of the old-time exclusive stock raising and Los Angeles county lost her distinction as a " cow " county ; although the raising of stock and dairying is still a profitable business. 102 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY Much attention in later years has been given to the prockiction of blooded stock, especially horses; while the value of the dairy products for 1905, according to the state agricultural report, reached a million dollars. In 1857 a party of Germans, mostly artisans resident in San Francisco, purchased a tract of land near the Santa Ana and established the settlement of Anaheim. At first most of the tract was set to vineyards and the colonists en- gaged extensively in wine making. This was the first horticultural settlement. Mission grapes had been set extensively during the sixties and seventies and wine-making became one of the most important resources of the county. In 1879 two million gallons were produced beside 50,000 gallons of brandy. There were then thirty distilleries in the county. The cultivation of the wine grape began with the " mother " vineyard at San Gabriel, which was planted from sHps brought from Lower California. In 183 1 Los Angeles city had over 100 acres of grapes and there were 50,000 vines growing on Los Nietos rancho. The Californians began early to manufacture wines and aguadiente and in 1850 the county is credited with 57,000 gallons of wine. This was shipped to San Francisco and brought good prices. In 1855 Sansevaine brothers shipped the first California wine to New York city and by 1861 L. J. Rose, B. D. Wilson and the Sansevaines were making large shipments to the east. L. J. Rose, Don Mateo Keller, Kohler and Frohling, and others were among the earlier manu- facturers who spent much time and money in experimenting, introducing new varieties of grapes and improved methods of wine making. The cultivation of the white muscat grape for raisins began about 1877-78 and for a time this grape was planted very widely and raisins promised to become one of the greatest crops of the county, but the appearance of the vine disease about 1885 destroyed many vineyards and greatly discouraged both wine and raisin makers. In the early seventies attention was turned to wheat raising on an extensive scale. J. B. Lankershim was one of the first growers, planting a large acreage on the San Fernando rancho. He was also one of the owners of the first large flour mill erected in the county. Dan Freeman was another large wheat grower, on the Centinela rancho. In 1879 Los Angeles county produced 752,000 bushels of wheat, from 22,000 acres of land, according to Bancroft. Corn was also Ir'rgely cultivated and barley was raised for hay on a large scale. But as the possibilities of irrigation and horticulture developed, land became too valuable for wheat culture, as it had already advanced beyond the possibility of profitable use for grazing purposes. During the eighties the chief feature of agricultural development was the extension of irrigation systems. Irrigation had been practiced to some extent since the first settlement of the country. The San Gabriel and San Fernando missions and the settlers of Los Angeles had irrigated considerable areas and built somewhat elaborate works. The waters of the San Gabriel and Los Angeles rivers had been utilized bv means of o])cn ditches for many years; but now CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 103 began the fonnation of water companies who improved upon the old crude methods and developed water from unused sources. In 1867 the first artesian well was put down by Downey and Hellman about six miles from Wilmington. Artesian water was found to be available in many districts and has been devel- oped until now probably half, at least, of the water used for irrigation in this county comes from this source. In 1876 the land under irrigation in the county was estimated at 26,900 acres; in 1890 70,164 acres were under irrigation, mostly devoted to citrus culture. The mission fathers planted orange trees at San Gabriel soon after its establishment. In 1834 Louis Vignes, a Frenchman, who was one of the first foreigners to locate in Los Angeles, planted an orange garden on his place, known at that time as " El Aliso." This garden, surrounded by a high adobe wall, contained not only oranges, but all the fruits then known in the country. He also had a considerable vineyard and established a winery, under the great sycamore tree, which gave the name of "El Aliso" to the place. In 1841 Wil- liam Wolfskin set out two acres of oranges, procuring the stock from San Gabriel. These trees bore the first oranges that were ever put on the market in this state and yielded such large profits that in 1858 Mr. Wolf skill set out thirty acres on land lying between Alameda and San Pedro, Third and Seventh streets. In 1852 B. D. Wilson set a grove at San Gabriel; but in 1856 there were only 100 orange bearing trees in the country, these surrounded by walls to keep out wandering cattle. The total yield was 100,000 oranges, which were sold by the hundred and brought a net income of $100 per tree, so Mr. Wolfskill stated. From this time the planting went on rapidly. About 1873 Thomas A. Garey, the pioneer nurseryman of the county, and L. J. Rose, B. D. Wilson and others began to introduce different varieties of citrus fruit, importing them from Europe, South America and Florida. The most valuable of these varieties proved to be the Mediterranean Sweet. About 1880 the Washington Navel was brought into the county from Riverside and its excellent qualities soon made it the favorite. Between 1880 and 1890 the planting of citrus fruit was at its height. Stimulated by the ready money and the exuberant hopes of boom times, large areas were put under irrigation and planted out. Pomona. Alhambra, Whittier, Sierra Madre and many other districts were thus started by people who looked forward to making an easy fortune from citrus culture. In 1874 there were 34.700 bearing orange trees in the county; in t88o. 192.000 bearing trees, and in 1892 1,500,000 trees were growing. In 1857 scale made its first appearance; but its inroads were not serious until the appearance of the cottony cushion scale about 1890. This especially affected trees near the coast and in a single year the crop in Los Angeles county fell from 2212 cars to 718 cars. But the introduction of the Australian "lady- bug " proved an effectual remedy and the groves were saved bv this parasite. INIany of the earliest seedling orchards have now passed out of existence, the 104 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY land being used for town lots, or for alfalfa or truck farming. Yet Los Angeles county still leads in the production of citrus fruits, the value of the crop for 1906 being estimated at $4,000,000 and there being 1,738,213 bearing orange trees in the county. The introduction of alfalfa from San Bernardino county in the later fifties gave a valuable crop for suitable lands and proved a great boon to the dairy farmer. The culture of the sugar beet was attempted about 1879 and in 1880 Messrs. Nadeau and Gemmert planned to build a sugar factory at Florence. This did not materialize, but later the location of sugar factories at Chino, Ala- mitos and Oxnard supplied a market and a considerable acreage is annually planted to beets. The growing of vegetables and small fruits has become an important branch of our agriculture and large quantities are raised for home use and for shipping. Diversified farming and the small farm, intensively cultivated, is the rule in the vicinity of Los Angeles now. Oranges, lemons, walnuts, olives and decid- uous fruits are raised wath profit in many districts ; grain and hay are produced on " dry " farms and the northern portion of the county still furnishes range for cattle and sheep. Los Angeles is now one of the leading agricultural counties in the state, her horticultural and garden products, in 1902, being valued at $10,307,290, and her cereals and hay at over $1,000,000, with dairy produces of equal value. And the possibilities are by no means exhausted. There is yet much valuable land which can be utilized and much room for increased produc- tion in lands alreadv under cultivation. CHAPTER III. Mining and Manufacturing. ALTHOUGH the first gold discovered in California was found in this county, Los Angeles has never ranked high in gold production. In 1852 placer mines were found in the San Gabriel canon and quite an excite- ment followed. Considerable gold dust was taken from these mines which con- tinued to yield for many years in paying quantities. Gold was found on the Santa Anita ranch in 1856 and there was a rush in that direction; some mines were also located on Catalina island and gold mines have been claimed at some other points in the county. But the only paying claims were those of the San Gabriel. Silver and other minerals have been found at various points ; but no very rich mines have been uncovered. The mineral wealth of the county is. however, large ; it produces a large quantitv of petroleum — which is quite as valuable, in its way, as gold. It is CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 105 said that Andreas Pico used to supply the priests at San Fernando mission with oil from Pico cafion, and it was from this district that the first oil wias taken. In 1859 the Pioneer Oil Co. was formed and wells were bored on the La Brea rancho and in other districts where brea or asphaltum indicated petroleum ; but no oil in merchantable cjuantity was found until about 1865, when wells were bored in Pico canon and a considerable oil excitement prevailed. The first shipment of crude oil was made from these wells in 1867. But no very active progress was made until improved machinery for drilling- and pumping came into use about 1877. Then the Pico and Newhall wells became large producers and the refinery at Newhall was built and, for a number of years, was successfully operated. The demand for the petroleum was not very active until about 1885, when a company was fonned to foster its use as a fuel and produced a distillate which could be used for domestic and manufacturing pur- poses in a suitable burner. The Puente oil fields were exploited during the eighties ; but the pre-eminence of this county as an oil producer did not com- mence until the discovery of oil in Los Angeles city. In 1892, Messrs. Doheny and Conner drilled a well in the old West Second street park which proved to be a gusher.- At once other wells were put down in this district and soon a forest of derricks had arisen. By 1895 over 300 wells were in operation in, or near, the city and their yield is put at 730,000 barrels. About this time an oil burner for use in locomotives was perfected and the Santa Fe road began to use crude oil as fuel. Manufacturing plants and steam vessels found oil from 30 to 60 per cent, cheaper than coal. This fuel also presented many other ad- vantages and rapidly grew in favor, so that in spite of the greatly increased output, the price rose. An oil " boom " naturally resulted. Oil companies were numerous and prospecting was done in all sorts of likely and unlikely districts. The Whittier field, the Sespe and other districts in Ventura county were devel- oped. There are now several refineries in the county and in 1905 over 1200 wells were yielding, their product reaching 4,000,000 barrels, valued at $1,755,000. The cheapness and abundance of oil has been one of the leading factors in the rapid progress of our county, giving a possibility of meeting eastern competition in manufacturing, and being a large element in the development of our electric railway systems and electrical power plants. Not its least benefit is in the im- provement of our public roads through the use of crude oil. We have now about 7000 miles of public roads in the county. These, when properly treated with oil, become almost dustless and as hard as macadainized roads, an advantage of incalculable benefit in this country. Second in our list of mineral wealth comes the clay products of the county. Nearly all of the Californian dwellings and of the missions were built of un- burned brick. Tiling, ollas and clay utensils were made by the Indians and Mexicans. The first kiln-dried brick were made in Los Angeles in 1852 by 106 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY Captain Jesse Hunter of the Mormon battalion, and used to Imild a house at the corner of Third and Main. In 1855 Mullaly, Porter and Aver started a brick yard and in 1858 manufactured 2,000,000 brick. It was known that a number of vahiable clay beds existed and several brick yards utilized the clay ; but it was not until the nineties that the business assumed large proportions. With the steadily growing demand for building material, not only brick, but artificial stone, concrete blocks and many other forms of manufactured clay products for building purposes have been devised. Water pipe was first made at Santa Monica in 1877. The manufacture of water and sewer pipe is now a large business. There are eighteen or twenty establishments manufacturing brick, pipe, potter^', concrete, and so on and their annual production runs into the millions. An art tile factory has lately been established at Tropico. The first carriage in California. P>ancroft states, was purchased by Temple and Alexander of San Pedro in 1849, tlie price, including horses, being $1000. Its appearance created a sensation in Los Angeles. In 1853 Anderson and Mathews advertised as carriage makers, and soon afterward John Goller began business as a black- smith and wagon maker. Warner says that his first wagon remained on hand a good while, the native people gazing on it with curiosity and dis- trust and then going back to their carretas. A number of firms now turn out vehicles — to the amount of $7!; 1, 720, in 1906. In 185 1 the first flour mill was put up in Los Angeles; there had long been "el Molino " at San Gabriel. In 1855 Don Abel Stearns and Jonathan R. Scott built a brick flour mill. About the same time Henry Dalton had a flour mill on his Azusa rancho. The Eagle mills were built in Los Angeles in 1865 and destroyed by fire in 1874. There are now a number of flouring and grist mills in the county and their product for 1906 is given as $3,038,855. In 1857 James Woodworth started a broom factory; in 1861 Perry and Woodworth established their planing mill and also manufactured beehives, furni- ture, etc. In 1873 P.arnard Ijrothers built a woolen mill on Pearl street. At this time the annual wool clip was very large and for some years this mill made DON ABEL STEARNS. CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 107 blankets and woolen cloth ; but it seems never to have been very successful and at last shut down, while the mill was used for the first ice plant in the city. Within the last few years many new ventures in the way of manufactures have been made. In 1903 the model town of Dolgeville was established. Here felt is made and piano hammers and other articles for which felt is used. There are now several shoe factories in the county, one being located at San Pedro and one at Venice. The meat packing industry is one of the most important in the county, the product of packed meats, lard and by-products reaching ^'4,000,000. Los Angeles does not claim pre-eminence as a manufacturinp region, yet the last report of the state agricultural board lists her manufactured products as reaching a total of $20,000,000. which is not bad for a beginning. CHAPTER IV. Transportation and Co,m merge. TRADING vessels had entered the port of San Pedro from the earliest his- tory of California, and the port had been a busy place in the forties. In August, 1840, according to Henry Melius, thirteen vessels touched at this port. In 1849 tl^e fii'st steamer, the Goldhunter, entered the port. The first steamer to make regular trips was the Ohio, which carried passengers to San Francisco, charging " $55 for cabin passage, the bill of fare consist- ing of salt beef, hard bread, potatoes and cofifee, without milk or sugar." Freight was $25 per ton. In 1872 the Pacific Mail Steamship Company put on its service, with passenger fare at $15 and freight $5 per ton. Before the building of the railroad in 1869 freight was hauled to the city by carts or wagons at the rate of $1.00 per hundredweight in the fifties. In 1852 Alexander & P)anning put on the first stage, fare to the city $10; in 1867 J. J. Tomlinson established a rival stage line and Benjamin Hayes writes : " I vividly remember stand- ing in front of the Ignited States Hotel in 1868, one night of a steamer's arrival, and hearing the rival stages of Banning and Tomlinson come up Main street, racing to get in first, the horses on the gallop and in the darkness a man on each stage blowing a horn to warn people in the street to clear the track." In 1855 fifty-nine vessels landed at San Pedro; in 1865 loi vessels touched at the port and in 1875 4^6 vessels entered; in 1906 1700 vessels arrived bringing miports to the value of $15,000,000. In 1858 the port was changed from San Pedro to Wilmington, through the action of Col. Phineas Banning in building up that town. In 1871 the government, after several preliminarv survevs, made GEN. PHINEAS BANNING. 108 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY an appropriation and began improving the harbor. From that date to the present work has continued more or less interm'ittentlv. and a very large sum has been expended in carrying- out the extensive plans for the improvement of the imier harbor and the construction of an outer harbor. \\> have seen the Californians galloping from San Diego to Monterey on their tough little horses, the best saddle horses in the world, all early visitors agree. Enroute they stopped at missions or ranchos and received entertainment and found fresh horses furnished them at every stopping place. Or, if a party were traveling, it might be accompanied by two or three Indian servants, driving a band of horses which supplied fresh mounts each day. Their women, and their baggage or freight, were trans- ported in carretas, the framework made of poles and hides and mounted on wooden wheels. The earliest mails were delivered more or less regularlv by post riders. Even after the American occu- pation Los Angeles had no regular mails and no stages for several j^ears. In 1851, Gregory's Great Atlantic and Pacific Express arrived in Los Angeles, bringing the first direct overland mail to the town, forty-nine days from St. Louis. ^^—^^-^^^^^^—^^^^— ^'i^it one trip seems to have finished the ri^jHtt^Hj^^^^H^^^^^HI Great Atlantic, we hear '^PJ^^PPII^^^^^^^^^ it. In 1852 a stage line was established between Los Angeles and the north, but it does not seem to have been main- tained regularly until about 1857, when David Smith established a bi-monthly route ^ia Visalia. In 1862 a reg- ular tri-weekly stage ran from San Jose to Los Angeles. In the early fifties stages ran to San Bernardino, and Phineas Banning put on a regular stage between the city and San Pedro. In 1859 a weekly stage made tri])s to San Diego. In 1858 the Rutterfield stage route was established. This carried the mails from St. Louis via the southern route through Los Angeles to San Francisco and gave the first regular overland mails ; the distance was 2880 miles and the shortest time made was twenty-one days. This service was a great advance over any previous one and was greatly appreciated; but in 1861 it was replaced by the pony express, which traveled the central route. In 1857 Wells Fargo opened an office in Los Angeles. For years this company did the banking of the country as well as the express business. MILITARY SADDLE OF DON ANDRES PICO. CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 109 In 1866 Banning- & Co. put on a fast coach from Wilmington to Fort Yuma, giving a seventy-two-liour ride, which was considered a feat in those days. The advertisement for this line reads : " Leave for Fort Yuma at 4 o'clock every Monday, passing through Los Angeles and San Bernardino. Returning, leave Fort Yuma every Sunday at 3 o'clock a.m." In 1867 a daily mail stage was maintained between Los Angeles and San Jose, then the terminus of the railroad. At the same time regular stage lines were operated between Los Angeles and Tucson, Arizona, and another line went to Prescott. As the central point for so many stage lines, and as the outfitting point for a large trade carried on by wagon trains, Los Angeles was not altogether dull in the days before the railroad came. In the fifties the trade with Salt Lake was established and for many years large quantities of freight were hauled to Salt Lake, to Arizona, and even as far north as Idaho and Montana. In March, 1859, the Star reports 150 wagons leaving with goods to the amount of $180,000. This freighting business was of such importance and profit that when a railroad from San Pedro to Los Angeles was first proposed, there was decided opposition to it ; and the Southern Pacific met the same obstacle when it made its first pro- posals in this section. A bill for a railroad between the port and the city was proposed in 1861, but although the county was granted permission to vote bonds for the road, nothing was done until 1867, when the question of granting the directors a subsidy of $150,000 from the county and $75,000 from the city was submitted to the people and was carried by a vote of 672 to 700 — a close shave. The road was completed in 1869 and, despite the gloomy forebodings of many citizens, soon proved itself a valuable asset to the county. In 1872 the Southern Pacific was building its line southward through the San Joaquin valley; two routes were surveyed, one through the Soledad pass and San Fernando valley to Ix)s Angeles, with heavy grades and costly tunnels ; the other crossed the Mojave desert to Needles, a comparatively easy route. After much discussion and negotiation, the railroad company agreed to take the Los Angeles route, provided the county would vote bonds to the amount of $500,000, including its holding in the Los Angeles and San Pedro road. The railway company on its part agreed to construct fifty miles of track within the county inside of eighteen months and within two years should connect Los Angeles and Anaheim by rail and should carry its main trunk line on its way to connect with any southern transcontinental line, through Los Angeles valley. The company carried out its agreement and completed its line north to San Fernando and east to Spadra, the first train going over the road April 4, 1874. The construction of the San Fernando tunnel required more than a year and the cost is reported at two and a half millions. The connection between Los Angeles and San Francisco was made September 8th, 1876 — a great day in the annals of this county. The Southern Pacific was completed to its eastern connection in March, 1881, thus no CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY giving a through southern r(xitc — a consummation which had heen talked of since the early fifties. The building of the Los Ar.geles and Independence road from Santa Monica to Los Angeles has been gone into in the Santa Monica history. It was fully believed at the time that this line would be continued to Independence and pos- sibly to a connection with the Central Pacific in L'tah. In 1884 the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Valley road was constructed to^ Pasadena, its opening being celebrated by an enthusiastic excursion party. September 17th, 1885. Later it was completed to the San Gabriel river and in 1887 taken over by the Santa Fe system. In 1879 representatives of a new corporation, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe, which was building a transcontinental line, visited California and decided upon San Diego as the terminus and the Cajon pass as the gateway for their road. In 1885 the Santa Fe company purchased the Southern Pacific branch already built from Needles to Mojave and built the connection between Barstow and San Bernardino, thus completing its line and giving Southern Cal- ifornia a second transcontinental line. November 29th, 1885, its trains began running into Los Angeles, using the Southern Pacific tracks from Colton until the completion of its own line in 1887. The completion of the Santa Fe led to a rate war which was the first cause of the " boom " of 1886-7. ^t first the passenger rate from Chicago was dropped from $115 to $70, while freight rates were mercilessly slashed. On February 2Tst, 1886, tickets between the coast and the Missouri river were sold for $25; March 6th the prices dropped to $20 from Chicago and $35 from New York. For a few hours on March 8th tickets were sold in Los Angeles by the Southern Pacific for a flat rate of $1.00 to Missouri river points. This was the ctdmination. Naturally, such an opportunity was seized by thousands of people who had hitherto never dreamed of seeing Cahfornia ; and during the year thai rates were below the normal, the rush continued. At first the newcomers lOoked around and purchased improved property, at reasonable figures ; as the inflvix continued, prices rose and property in and about Los Angeles changed hands at figures which astonished old timers ; then the speculative fever seized old residents and new comers alike ; and professional boomers and real estate sharks helped to feed it. Townsites were laid out anywhere ; at first a business block, a hotel and water pipe and sidewalks were sup])lie(l ; later the bare ground staked ofT, was sold at the price of city lots. Advertising, auctions, bands and excursions helped the excitement and sold the property to people who confidently expected to make from fifty to five hundred per cent, on their deals — as had been actually done in some cases. Many of the present thriving towns of this county were thus born and, having real merit in spite of the wild methods and hopes, they have survived their fiimsy foundation. Such are Glenclale, " Garvanzo ", " Ah- susah ", Glendora, Alhambra, l^niversitv, and others. While the real estate CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 111 boom had, of course, a tremendous reaction and there were many losses, there was also large gain. Substantial improvements were made as a result which greatly enhanced the value of property and prepared the way for a more solid advance. Many water companies organized during this time developed the water supply ; many orchards set out as a speculative venture, proved to be solid investments ; many buildings which were put up under the influence of inflated values, helped to create confidence and soon became fitted to the demand. At the height of the boom, in May, June and July, 1887, usually the dullest months in the year, the real estate sales in this county reached $35,067,830, for the three months. After this sales began to drop ofif. Yet during 1887-8 nearly $20,- 000,000 was expended in building. A large number of dummy, or narrow-guage roads were built during this period and many branches of the railway lines were completed. The cable system of Los Angeles was one result of the sudden ex- pansion. In 1886 a narrow-gauge line was built between Los Angeles and Glendale and in 1887 another narrow-gauge road was built to Pasadena. This road, known as the " Cross " road, absorbed the Glendale branch. In 1890 the " Ter- minal " Company, an organization of eastern capitalists, purchased the Cross roads and built a line to San Pedro. It was then believed that this was a move to secure terminal facilities at San Pedro for the Union Pacific ; but the plans for the completion of the line failed to materialize and it was not until 1900, when Senator W. A. Clark of Montana secured a controlling interest in the Ore- gon Short Line, that active work began in carrying out the long-talked-of con- nection between Los Angeles and Salt Lake. In 1906 the San Pedro and Salt Lake railway was completed, thus giving Southern California another transcon- tinental line and opening up a new and rich territory tributary to Los Angeles. Los Angeles county now has nearly 700 miles of steam railway within her bor- ders ; she has three transcontinental lines centering within her limits ; she has the fine harbor of San Pedro, beside ports at Port Los Angeles, Redondo and Long Beach. She is thus fully equipped to hold her place as the distributing point for a verv large territory and has at her command ample and easily reached markets for all of her surplus products. CHAPTER V. The Day of the Trolley. FR(3M the shrieking, log-wheeled, ox-drawn carretas, moving at the rate of two miles, or less, an hour to the broad gauge passenger coach, speeded by electric motive power at the rate of sixty miles an hour, is a transfor- mation that some citizens of Los Angeles have seen. The changes in the business and social life of the people, in the building and the general aspect of the country are scarcely less amazing. The city of Los Angeles, which in 1880 had a pop- ulation of 11,000 and was still for the most part made up of one-story adobes, has become a metropolitan, modern city, with a population of 250,000 and with twelve and fourteen story buildings equal to any in the LTnited States. And the county has kept pace with the city. The assessment for 1880 for the county gave a total valuation of $18,593,773, while the assessment for 1907 was $375,719,358. In 1880 there were but three banks in the county, all in the city ; there are now about sixty banks doing business, nearly half of them in outside towns. In 1880 the county reported 192,000 bearing orange trees; the latest report of the State Roard of Agriculture gives this county over 1,500,000 bear- ing orange trees and over 3,000,000 bearing fruit trees of all varieties. These figures are but indications of the tremendous changes brought about in the past quarter of a century by the development of our natural resources, the exploita- tion of our incomparable climate and the influx of eastern capital which has built up our railway systems. There can be no question that a large credit for our prosperity is due to our transportation facilities. The advance movement in the county began with the entry of the Souhern Pacific and Santa Fe roads; during the boom years a number of " dummy " roads were built, connecting the city with Pasadena, Glendale, Hollywood and Norwalk, and a broad gauge road to Santa Monica. During these years the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific built many branch roads — Pasadena, Santa Ana, and intermediate points ; Redondo ; Ballona and Santa Monica ; Long Beach, and Orange. Many new town sprang up along these lines and older places, like Downey, Compton, Florence, and a dozen other farming communities, took on a new aspect under the stimulus of the railroad. In 1874 the first street-car line in the city of Los Angeles was built, run- ning down Spring street to Sixth. Horses, or more likely mules, were the motive power. A number of other horse-car lines followed and it was consid- ered in those days that Los Angeles was very well provided for in the way of transportation. In 1884 the first cable line was built, out West Second street to Belmont hill. This did not ])rove a successful venture and was aban- CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 113 doned, as was an electric line attempted that same year, running out Pico street. During the boom a company was organized and plans were laid for a cable system which should give rapid transit to all parts of the city. Under the super- vision of Col. J. C. Robinson, an experienced engineer, these plans were carried out and June 8th, 1889, the first division of the new service, the line starting at the Grand Avenue power house, now the postoffice, down Seventh and " Fort " streets to the Baker block, was put in operation. The Temple street, Boyle Heights and Downey avenue divisions followed. In 1 89 1 the West Second street electric line was built and the first car went over it July ist. This line over the heaviest grades in the city was looked upon with very serious doubts at first. But when its success was assured, develop- ments were rapid. In 1892 the Pasadena and Mount Wilson Company was organized bv T. S. C. Lowe, and this, at the time the most remarkable moun- tain road in the world, was completed in 1893. In 1895 Messrs. Sherman and Clark built the electric line to Pasadena. This was the first inter-urban street-car line and it was freely predicted that " it would never pay." Yet the next year the same gentlemen announced their intention of building an electric line to Santa INIonica, and carried out their purpose. In 1895 the Traction Company entered the field and built their Uni- versity line. But the trolley history of the county really began when the Cable Railway system was sold under foreclosure to the Electric Street Railway Company, in 1898, for $1,344,320. The company was at once reorganized and in 1901 H. E. Huntington was announced as its head. The extension of lines in the city since that date has gone steadily on. But the greatest work has been in the building of suburban lines. First the Pasadena line was extended to Altadena and the foot of the Mt. Lowe Incline ; lines were built to Alhambra and San Gabriel, to Hollywood and Glendale. Then Long Beach, San Pedro, Redondo, and Newport were reached. These lines were constructed by the Pacific Electric Company and the Los Angeles Pacific. Within the past two or three years, roads have been built to Whittier, Monrovia, Covina, and Santa Ana. In 1903 the Pacific Electric constructed its building in Los Angeles, which gives a central point for its suburban lines. A number of elaborate and costly power plants supply the motive power and a large number of sub-stations distribute it. The expenditure of the many millions of dollars necessary to build and maintain this network of railways has been no small factor in our general prosperity. The extension of these roads with their frequent and comfortable service caused an expansion of the beach towns. Long Beach, San Pedro, Redondo and Santa Monica experienced a sudden rise in values that recalled the days of '87. New beach settlements. Ocean Park, A'enice, Playa del Rey, Manhat- 8 114 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY tan, Hermosa, and half a dozen others were platted and pnt on the market. The qnick transit bronght new settlers to the beach ; it also brought crowds of pleasure seekers ; and at once new bathhouses and pavilions, hotels and piers were provided. It is probably safe to say that the population of our beach towns has been more than doubled during the past seven years. But the suburban lines have created many new settlements between the city and the beach. People who could never hope to own a home within the city have been able to purchase a lot or a tract outside of the city, and at the same time be within easy reach of their places of business, or of labor. Many handsome homes have been built along the electric lines and such residence districts as Beverly Hills, Brentwood, Hollywood, South Pasadena, Hunting- ton Park, and others, have shown that there is a demand for high class sub- urban property. The electric lines also carry the mails, express and freight. So satisfac- tory has their freight service proved that the older steam lines cannot compete with them. They are now handling carload lots which are transferred direct to the steam lines. The fact that they can give a frequent service and stop wherever freight or express matter is to be handled has been of great benefit to the dairymen and small farmers. They are thus able to put their vegetables, berries and jiroduce on the market with an ease and a promptness which adds largely to their profits. Los Angeles county increased in population at the rate of 67 per cent, be- tween 1890 and 1900. And her progress in the present decade has been accel- erated and will doubtless show an even greater gain in 1910. And we cannot f|uestion that there is a relation between the mileage of our electric railways, now about 700 miles in the county, and our growing population. CHAPTER VL Cities and Towns. THE history of the city of Los Angeles is so closely interwoven with that of the county that the two can hardly be separated. Although Monterey was the capital most of the time during the early history of the country. Los Angeles had more inhabitants and was the center of a larger settled district. After the gold rush of the early fifties. San Francisco, Sacramento, and a number of northern towns exceeded Los Angeles in jwpulation ; but within the past three decades Los Angeles has steadily passed its rivals until now it is the second county and the second city in the state. During the past twenty-six years Los Angeles has made the most rapid, as well as the most constant, growth in population CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 115 of any important city in the United States, the popnlation now being estimated at 300,000. There are now twenty-seven incorporated cities in the connty, of which Pasadena, after Los Angeles, is the first in size. Pasadena. In August, 1873, a number of people, residents of Indiana, sent a committee to California to look over the country and select a tract for colonization, to be devoted to citrus and fruit culture. After traveling over Southern California these gentlemen decided upon a body of 4000 acres of the San Pasqual rancho. This grant had been made to Manuel Garfias in 1843 ^^^^ ^vas at this time owned by Dr. John S. Griffin and B. D. Wilson. The beautiful and highly improved ranches of L. J. Rose and Mr. Wilson, in this vicinity, showed what might be accomplished here. There were about fifty people in the original Indiana colony ; but many of these were unable to carry out their agreement and in consequence the purchase of the land was completed by a new organization, the Orange Grove Association. Each shareholder received a fifteen-acre tract while the balance of the land was held for the benefit of the company. In 1875 the name of Pasadena, meaning " Crown of the Valley ", taken from some Indian dialect, was adopted in place of " Indiana Colony." The original irrigation system of the Orange Grove Association was the first in California to distribute water under pressure, through iron pipe. The plan was such a radical change from the old system of earthen ditches and little wooden flumes that it was much commented upon and criticised ; but it has since then been largely imitated. The settlers built homes and started a school, in 1874, in a private house. The first church, the Presbyterian, was built in 1875-6 at a cost of $4200. In March, 1880, Pasadena held a citrus fair which attracted many visitors and showed the quality of fruit that could be produced. At this time the town had a tri- weekly stage and mail service. In 1882 the Pasadena Land and Water Company was formed and took over the rights and properties of the Orange Grove Association. The Lake Vineyard Company had been formed in 1874 and had purchased land adjoining that of the Orange Grove Company, secur- ing their water rights from the heirs of B. D. Wilson. Thev had sold a con- siderable area which was under irrigation and was known as the " east side ", while the settlement of the Indiana Colony was the " west side." A conflict grew out of the adjustment of the water rights of these two associations w'hich, after a number of years of uncertainty, was settled bv a compromise satisfactory to all. In 1884 the Los Angeles and San Galiriel road was built to Pasadena; in 1887 this became a part of the Santa Fe system. The Cross " dummy " road reached the town in 1887, and the first street car line was built this year. The old Raymond hotel was built in 1886 and first drew the attention of the tourist 116 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY world to the attractions offered by Pasadena and its environs. The burning of this hotel in 1895 was a severe blow. The town was incorporated in 1886. In 1901 it adopted a freeholder's charter. It is known as one of the best governed and most orderly towns of the country ; while its municipal improvements are unexcelled. In Throop College, established in 1894, it has the only strictlv tcclmical school in Southern California. Pasadena is a city of beautiful homes and magnificent hotels. It is now a mecca for the wealthy easterner who wishes to escape winter severities. The perfection of the trolley lines enables its people to do business in Los Angeles and has practically given the smaller city all the advantages of the larger place while still maintaining her own restful distinctiveness. Long Be:ach. The town of Long Beach was started about 1882 and had, at first, a very gradual growth. It was first known as a summer resort for those wishing a quiet, orderly place. Its fine beach gave it a strong attraction. For many years the Methodists held their annual campmeeting here. The Chautaucjua Associa- tion adopted it as their center, also, and a large pavilion to accommodate their summer assemblies was erected about 1890. The town has always been a " no license " place and still remains so. It was incorporated in 1888 and disincor- porated in 1896. The following year it was reincorporated and in 1907 adopted a freeholder's charter. In 1900 it had a population of 2252; in 1906 when the census was taken for the charter election, the population was 12,591, and 15,000 is now claimed. The town has taken on new life since the completion of the trolley line and has made a record for building and improvements of every character. An inland harbor is being constructed here and a large shipping plant is in course of construction. With the completion of these improvements Long Beach will become an important shipping center. Pomona. In 1874 the Los Angeles Land and Water Company, of which Thomas A. Garey, C. E. White, L. M. Holt, Milton Thomas, R. M. Town and H. G. Crow were members, purchased from J. S. Philips, a tract of land which had been a part of the San Jose grant, made to Jose Palomares. The company secured water rights from the Palomares heirs and also put down four artesian wells from which a considerable flow was obtained. A town site was laid out and the land surrounding it was divided into tracts. In February, 1876, an auction sale of these lots was held which resulted in (lis])osing of $19,000 worth of land — a surprising feat for that time. A number of houses were built and orchards set out and a little town grew up. In 1877 a fire almost destroyed the settlement and for some time the place did not recover itself. CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 117 The Southern Pacific reached the town in 1876. In 1882 the Pomona Land and Water Company was formed and by vigorous action placed the irrigation system upon a sounder basis and secured an increased supply of water. Like all Southern California towns, Pomona experienced rapid growth during the years of 1886-1887, and many new buildings were put up at that time. A handsome hotel, the Palomares, was built ; banks, school houses and street improvements added. The town was incorporated in 1888. Claremont was started in 1887, its chief inducement for the prospective buyer being a very handsome " boom " hotel. This was later made the seat of Claremont College, one of the largest preparatory schools in this part of the state. The town is practically a part of Pomona. In 1889 the beautiful statue of Pomona was presented to the- city by one of her pionef r residents, Rev. C. F. Loop. Pomona is the center of a very rich farming section and of the finest citrus orchards in the country. Its shipments of fruit, both fresh and canned or dried, is very large. Whittier. About 1887 a colony of Friends from Indiana located on a tract of the Paso de Bartolo rancho, near Ranchita, as the ranch house of Pio Pico was known. The settlers at first devoted themselves almost exclusively to citrus culture and the little village prospered as its orchards came into bearing. About 1890 it was chosen as the site of the State Industrial Home, for the accommodation of which buildings to the value of nearly a million dollars have been erected. About 1895 the Whittier oil fields were developed and since that date a very large amount of high-grade oil has been annually pro- duced by this section. It is estimated that the product for the last year brought $1,000,000 into the community. In 1898 the town was incorporated. In 1900 the census gave it a population of 1,590, but it has grown very rapidly, especially since the completion of the electric line and there are now between five and six thousand inhabitants. A Friends' college, with an endowment of $150,000, is maintained. Monrovia. In 1886 W. N. Monroe laid out the townsite of ^Monrovia. Its beautiful location in the foothills of the Santa Anita rancho, attracted a number of wealthv families who built handsome homes. A large number of orange groves were set out ; water was procured from Sawpit Canyon, and the town grew rapidly during the boom years. It was incorporated December 12th, 1887. Like all Los Angeles county towns it has taken on a new lease of life within the past few years. The completion of the electric line to the place in 1906 gave an added impetus to its growth. It now claims 4,000 inhabitants. 118 CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY San Pedro. In 1849 but a single building stood upon the bluff, known as Timm's landing. About this point a little settlement grew up in the early fifties ; a wharf was built and a warehouse and some stores and residences followed. But in 1858 General Phineas Banning, who handled most of the stage and freight- TIMM'S LANDING. ing business from the port, started a new town some six miles to the north and for a time the first town languished. However, after the building of the railroad in 1869, the old settlement revived. In 1888 the town was incorporated. The completion of the Terminal road and the extension of the Southern Pacific service gave improved facilities. The vast sums of money expended by the government in improving the harbor have also been of great benefit in building up the town of San Pedro. It is now the most important port in California, after San Francisco, and the volume of business carried on through the place is constantly increasing. Since the building of an electric line in 1905, a large addition to the business has been made and many public improvements have been undertaken. Wtlmincton. In 1858 Phineas Banning. J. G. Downey and B. D. Wilson purchased a tract of land and laid out the town of " New San Pedro." A wharf and ware- house was built here and all the business of the Banning Company was trans- ferred to this point. A reservation was donated to the government for barracks. Here Drum Barracks was built, and from the lieginning of the civil war until 1865 or later, large numbers of troops passed through this port and were garrisoned here. It was the miltary headquarters, at that time, for this section and Arizona. CONDENSED HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY 119 In 1863 the name was changed by act of the legislature to Wilmington and in 1874 the government changed the name of the port to Wilmington, which is still the official title of the harbor. In 1864 General Banning established the Wiiiniiigton Journal^ the first paper in the county outside of Los Angeles. It was a well put up and news.y sheet. As the starting point for stages for Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Arizona points, Wilmington was a lively place during the later sixties. In 1873 Wilson College, endowed by B. D. Wilson, was opened and for a number of years prospered, under the Rev. Dr. Campbell. The building was a large two-story house, which accommodated a number of boarding pupils. The rebuilding of " Old San Pedro " took away the prestige of Wilmington. The town which had been incorporated in 1872, repealed its incorporation in 1887 and remained a village until 1905. when it was reincorporated as a city of the sixth class. The improvement of the harbor has greatly benefited Wilmington and a large amount of shipping business is now done at its wharves. Redondo. The town of Redondo was started in 1887, by a company which built a very large and handsome hotel and also supplied a wharf. The Santa Fe, after m.aking an attempt to secure suitable terminal facilities at Ballona Port, determined upon Redondo as a harbor and entered the town with its railroad in 1888. The town was incorporated in 1892. It was reached by an electric line in 1904 and now has two electric lines connecting it with the city. The Pacific Light and Power plant, one of the largest in the United States, is located here. A large amount of freight is handled, especially lumber from the coastwise steamers. Other Towns. Other incorporated towns not mentioned are Alhambra, Arcadia, Azusa, Claremont, Compton, Covina. Glendale, Hermosa Beach, Hollywood, Hunt- ington Park, Sierra Madre. Vernon and Watts. Many of these have grown up within the past four or five years, a number of them, as Claremont. Hermosa Beach, Huntington Park, Sierra Madre and Watts have been incorporated within the past year. HON. JOHN P. JONES. History of Santa Monica Bay Cities. CHAPTER I. Santa Monica Bay Region. THE BAY OF SANTA MONICA extends along the coast from Point Vicente, latitude 33° 40' to Point Dume, latitude 34° a distance of seven- teen miles, north by west. The coast line of the bay makes an inward sweep which is some ten miles deep at its extreme point, in the neighborhood of Port Los Angeles, and includes an area of 25,000 miles. The waters of this bay are, ordinarily, quiet since the force of the waves is broken by the seaward islands and the deep, recessed position of the shore line. The depth of the water increases from the beach outward with an easy and gradual slope for several miles. The shore line is most varied. At its northern extremity, Point Dume rises, domelike, to a height of 200 feet, and back of it the Santa IMonica range rises abruptly almost from the waters of the shore to a height of 2,000 feet and forms the northern border of the bay. Gradually the slope falls into the palisades and sinks to the sand dunes and the Ballona lagoon, then rises again into low hills along the southern rim. Back from the palisades sweep the gently rising plateaus of the San Vicente and San Jose de Buenos Ayres ranchos. Southward extend the cienegas and pastures of the Ballona creek district and the low, rolling ranges of the Sausal Redondo and San Pedro region. The Santa Monica Bay territory thus includes a large variety of scenery, a most varied topography and a wide range of resources. Its mountains fur- nish an invaluable water supply ; the greater part of its lower lands are readily supplied with water from wells, while a considerable portion of the region needs no irrigation and includes some of the most valuable farming land in Los An- geles county. The distinctive topography of this district accounts for a climate which is incomparable, since it has all the advantages of both coast and inland — the freshness of the ocean air, with the freedom from harsh winds, of the interior. 122 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIFS DiscoxKin' AND Exploration. The first explorer of the CaUfornia coast, Cabrillo, after spending six days in San Diego Harbor, which he named San Miguel, sailed along "a mountainous coast, overhung with smoke," landed at Catalina to which he gave the name of Victoria, then anchored in a bay which he called "Bahia de Fumos" (Bay of smoke). San Pedro Bay and, on October 9, 1542 he dropped anchor in an "ensanada" or bight which is generally granted to have been Santa Monica Bay. At just what point he anchored is not known, but undoubtedly Cabrillo was the first European to observe the palisades, the fair fields and gentle rolling hills that mark this coast. After this brief visit there is no record of vessel or visitor to this region for more than two hundred years. ARCH-ROCK. DI.SIXTEGRATED AND FELL WOfi. The waters of the bay were sometimes disturbed by the rude boats of the- Santa Barbara Channel and Island Indians: the valleys adjacent to the coast and the Santa Monica mountains were the homes of a people who have long since disappeared and of whose existence we know only by the occasional un- covering of skeletons and relics. Several caves and mounds containing cur- ious collections of implements, weapons and bones have been found on the Malibu ranch at various times. These Indians roamed over the plains and through the cienegas, killing rabbits and small game and gathering acorns and grasses, roots and berries. They also fished along the shore, mostly with nets, and gathered shells — their most prized possession. It is said that these shells were particularly abundant along the shore where Ocean Park and Venice now HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 123 stand and that the Indians from the interior and from Catalina used to visit this spot to secure shells which took the place of money with them. Vizcaino describes the Indians seen along the coast of California during his explorations early in the seventeenth century as of good form and of active character, the men wearing a short cloak made of rabbit or deer skins, heavily fringed, the more industrious having their garments embroidered with shells. He describes a rancheria seen along the shore in this vicinity as composed of about twenty houses made of rushes over a frame of poles driven into the ground. These were very like the brush ramadas still constructed by the Indians of California. Bancroft states that the Indians of Los Angeles county ate coyotes, skunks, wildcats and all sorts of small animals. They would not eat bear meat or the flesh of large game for superstitious reasons. They were poor hunters having no effective weapons, and hunted deer by hiding themselves under a skin with the head and horns intact, until they were within bowshot. They made fishhooks, needles and other small articles of bone and shell, ground their acorns and seeds in a metate, or stone mill, and constructed wooden boats or tule rafts for their fishing expeditions, using seines made of tough bark. The Name. The Indians were the only occupants of the coast for some time after the beginnings of settlement had been made at San Gabriel and Los Angeles. It is claimed that the party of Captain de Portala, which made the first overland expedition through California in 1769 in search of the Bay of Monterey, passed through a canada near the present location of the Soldier's Home and paused under a group of sycamores while Fathers Crespi and Gomez, the priests ac- companying the expedition, said mass. A very old sycamore tree is pointed out as the one where the service was performed and is still looked upon with veneration. We have no authentic account of how the name Santa Monica came to be applied; but the old Spanish settlers have a legend of its origin which may be true. The story is that a couple of Spanish soldiers were given a furlough to explore the region about the new "pueblo de Los Angeles." They came one day to a couple of clear bubbling springs near the ocean. After drinking, they threw themselves upon the ground between the springs to rest. As they lay there on the gently sloping hillside, overlooking the wide, green plains and the ocean, one of them asked. "And what shall we call this spot, brother?" And the other, turning from one glistening pool to the other, answered: "We will call it Santa Monica, for the springs resemble the tears of the good Santa Monica shed for her erring son." The legend of Santa Monica is one of the most beautiful connected with the saints. According to tradition the holy woman was born in Africa about ZZ2 A. D. She was brought up so strictly that she was not allowed even a 124 HISTORY OF SANTA lAIONICA BAY CITIES drink of water between meals and was early married to Patricius, a gentleman of hot and hasty temper. She had two sons and one of them Augustine, to the great grief of his mother, would not yield to her teachings and be baptized into the church. Instead, he was carried away by heresy and entered upon an immoral life. The mother spent much of her time in praying for and weeping over the wayward son. For many years she sorrowed and once, in her despair, she went to a good bishop and related her woes. " Wait," the bishop told her, " and keep on praying. The child of so many tears cannot perish." At last the son fell ill and came near death. He recovered, however, in answer to his mother's prayers and this so softened his heart that at last he saw the error of his ways and became a devout believer, finally becoming the great Saint Augustine. Whether we accept this legend or not, the bay and the region were certainly named for the good Santa Monica, whose da}' in the calendar was May 4th. The name does not seem to appear upon record until the petition for the grant known as San Vincente y Santa Monica was made by Don Francisco Sepulveda and Augustin Machado in 1827. The springs mentioned in the legend, later known as San Yincente springs were included in this grant. Settlement. What is commonly known as the Santa Monica Bay region includes por- tions of four land grants, Malibu — extending twenty-two miles along the coast to the north ; Boca de Santa Monica, including the mouth of Santa Monica Canyon ; San Y^icente y Santa Monica, which had an ocean frontage of a mile and a half and extended back four miles from the coast, covering an area of about 40,000 acres ; and La Ballona rancho, with an ocean frontage of four miles. For nearly three (juarters of a century after the first settlement was made on the Malibu tract in 1804, or possibly earlier, this entire region was given over to grazing herds of cattle and sheep and to grain raising, on a small scale. The haciendas of the grant owners were each a little community in itself and the simple, pastoral life of the Spanish occupation lingered, to an unusual degree until the final breaking up of these ranchos, during the past twenty-five years. But life in those slow-moving days, while not as strenuous as in our day of perpetual rush and change, had its occupations, its interests and its amuse- ments. Most of these rancheros were also residents of Los Angeles and took an active ]xirt in municipal and territorial afifairs. At their country homes they were surrounded by a large retinue of relations, retainers and servants, the latter mostly Indians. All of these were vmder the protection and command of the head of the house and all were fed, clothed, and provided for. The number of ])eople about his ])lace was a matter of pride with the ranchero. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 125 And the days on one of these large stock ranges were not all "siesta" by any means. Herds and flocks must be guarded from thieves and the ravages of wild beasts ; they must be shifted from plain to valley, from coast to moun- tain-side, as the season demanded. There were rodeos, the annual rounding-up of stock, to attend and sometimes a large cattle owner must be present at several of these affairs in order to secure all of his stock. The matanza, or slaughter- ing, was a busy season requiring careful selection of animals and good judg- ment in bargaining with the traders of the hide droghers ; sheep-shearing was another period of arduous labor ; the tanning of hides, the rendering of tallow and the harvesting of grain all demand due attention. There were dry seasons when losses were heavy, and cold, wet years which were disastrous to cattle and especially sheep. The greater part of the necessary supplies were raised upon the rancho, but yearly the hides and tallow were traded with the sailing vessels that put into San Pedro, for such supplies and luxuries as were brought from the Orient, or from Boston. Certainly the life of those years was not without its interests. The unstability of political affairs the constaint bickering and jealously of Monterey and Santa Barbara on the one hand, and Los Angeles and San Diego, on the other ; the frequently changing and very uncertain orders and officials sent from Mexico, all of these afforded pretty steady excitement in Los Angeles. And Los Angeles seems never to have been a really dull place — even in its sleepiest days. There w^as generally something doing — if it was only a murder before breakfast. For amusements there were balls and weddings, horse races and bull fights and the various fiestas of the church. The ranchos near the coast were not as exposed to depredations from the dreaded "desert" Indians as were the more interior locations, but there are still traditions of lively scraps with loands of thieving Indians on the Malibu and the San Vicente, and there is at least one " encino del Indias " located on the palisades where an Indian horse thief was hanged without legal preliminaries. Tor.VNGA M.\UBU. The first land grant in this vicinity was that known as Toi:)anga Malibu made in 1805 to Don Jose Bartoleiueo Tapia. A deed executed in 1845 ^^'^^^ recorded in the county records states that July 12. 1805. the "Governor ol Loreto," then Governor of California decreed that certain " pasajes " which are called Malibu, Topango, Sottome, Simi and Sequit, be granted to Jose Bartolemeo Tapia. This deed further states that April 18, 1824, the property passed into hands of Sefior Tapia's heirs, Tomaso, Fernando, Juan Antonio and Tiburcio Tapia. The property is described as bounded on the north by the " Sierra Mayor, on the south. El Mar Oceano Pacifico ; the east by Rancho Santa Monica and the west by el Rio de San Buena Ventura." In 1848 it passed into the pos- 126 HISTURV UF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES session of Maria Villeboso and Victor Leon Prudhomnie for " cuatro cientos pesos " — four hundred dollars. The Malibu grant, with its almost impassable mountain ranges, extending into the very ocean, its inacessible canyons, its hidden mesas and wiiaernesses, has always been a land of mystery and many romantic stories of smuggling, of buried treasure, of robbery and murder have been connected with it. The first grantee, Jose B. Tapia, must have stocked the place, as he willed it with its "ganado" or cattle, to his heirs. His son Tiburcio occupied the place, probably during the twenties and thirties and it is said buried a couple of chests of his abounding coin somewhere on the ranch. Tiburcio Tapia was one of the most interesting char- acters of earlier Los Angeles history. Born in San Luis Obispo, w here his father was then act- ing as Alcalde, in 1789, he became a soldier. In 1824, he was a corporal of the guard at Purisima at the time of an In- dian uprising which threatened the mas- sacre of the entire Spanish population. With four or five men, Tapia defended the families and the padres during the night and only surrendered when the powder gave out. It is said that the rebels offered to spare Tapia, if he would give up his arms, but he declined the pro- position. Soon after this he must have removed to Los Angeles, where he was one of the earliest merchants. Alfred Robinson says of him, "We stopped at the house of Don Tiburcio Tapia, the Alcalde Constitutional (Constitutional Judge) of the city, who was once a common soldier but who, by honest and industrious labor has amassed so much of this world's goods as to make him one of the wealthiest inhabitants of the place. His strict integrity gave him credit to any amount with the trading vessels, so that he was the principal merchant and the only native one in "el Pueblo de Los Angeles." Don Tiburcio filled many positions of trust. In 1827, which must have been soon after his location in Los Angeles, he was chosen with Juan Bandini, Romualdo Pacheco and four other prominent citizens to act as vocale or member to represent the southern district in the territorial diputacion which convened TOPANGA. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 127 at Monterey, the legislative body of that time. Don Tiburcio was made a mem- ber of the committee on police regulations, which must have been one of the most important subjects under consideration in those days. His record makes it appear that Sehor Tapia was something of a politician, or so it would seem now-a-days ; but we are assured that in the early days of Los Angeles the office had to seek the man and sometimes went begging for an occupant, so we must put Senor Tapia down as one of the most self-sacrificing and public spirited citizens Los Angeles ever had. He was re-elected vocale twice. In 183 1 he was alcalde (mayor) of Los Angeles; in 1833 he was "sindico," recorder; in 1835 "encargado de Indians" ; 1836, alcalde — second alcalde — it took two mayors to keep things moving; In 1839 ^^^ ^^^^ alcalde again and was also confirmed in the grant of the Cucamonga Rancho by governor Alvarado. In 1840 he was one of the five substitute judges elected by the junta, or superior court. In 1844 he again served the city as alcalde. He must have been a busy man, as the leading merchant of the town and as one of the owners of the Topanga Malibu and, at the same time he was making extensive improvements on the Cucamonga Rancho, where he built a residence. It is said that as rumors of American designs upon California be- came rife, Don Tiburcio became alarmed for his store of coin, which was un- usually large for that period. He is said to have carried much of it to Cucamongo and buried it, and there are also stories of other chests of it hidden on the Malibu. Whatever treasures of silver and gold he may have stowed away, did him no good, for he died suddenly in 1845 ^^^^^ it seems to have been lost to his family. He left one daughter, Maria Merced, who later marriea Leon V. Prudhomme, one of the early French settlers of Los Angeles, and who is still living in that city. An interesting tale of an early smuggling episode is also related to Malibu history. According to Bancroft, in 1819, a couple of American vessels, strongly suspected of smuggling intentions, were cruising along the coast of Southern California. One of these ships was signalled off the coast of the Malibu and induced to make a landing. Two men, Antonio Briones, who is stated to have been a claimant for the Malibu grant at one time, and Maximo Alanis, who was later the grantee of the Buenos Ayres Rancho, induced the smugglers to land their goods, then seized the sailors and declared that they would turn them over to the authorities unless a ransom of $1000 was paid to them. As their captors had conclusive evidence, the cai)tain was about to pay over his thousand dollars, when one of the guard " celebrated "' too soon and in his happv oblivion allowed the prisoners to escape. The booty, however, remained in the hands of Briones and Alanis, who decided to sa}- nothing to the authorities about the little matter and keep the goods to recoup themselves for the ransom money they had lost. But the officials of that day seem to have had their eyes open 128 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES and in some way discovered the mysterious doings on the Alalibu coast. Briones and Alanis were arrested, the goods confiscated and these brilliant " promoters " of 1819 were imprisoned for six months in chains. It is to be hoped that somebody finally paid the duty on the consignment. In later years the Malibu was the favorite rendezvous of an extensive band of horse and cattle thieves. The early records of Los Angeles county contain many accounts of exciting chases and arrests made in the fastnesses of the Malibu, or Malaga, region. Don Tiburcio Tapia seems to have been a remarkable exception in his family, for the name Tapia appears almost as frequently in the criminal records as did Don Tibur- cio's in the political records of an earlier day. In the early sixties, the Malibu grant passed through tax sale into the hands of Mathew Keller, better known in those days as " Don Mateo." Mr. Keller was born in Ireland and came to America at an early date. After living in Mexico for a time, he came to California and located in Los Angeles about 1850, becoming one of its best known and most prominent citizens. He was one of the first to engage in wine-making and to plant out an exten- sive vineyard, for which he imported stock from France. He devoted a great deal of attention to the cultivation of the grape and was also in- DON MATEO KELLER. ^ 1 terested in the early experiments in raising cot- ton. At one time he had a complete ginning outfit set up in Los Angeles and offered its use to any one who would raise cotton. He made a thor- ough study of the process of making wine of different varieties and manu- factured it in large quantities. He established houses in Los Angeles and San Francisco and was instrumental in introducing California wines in the east' on a large scale, having extensive connections in New York for the hand- ling of his own manufacture. He put up a large ranch house on the Malibu and made improvements there and when he died in 1881 he left the grant to his son, Henry W. Keller, formerlv of Santa Monica, who sold it in 1891 to the late Frederick H. Rindge. Frederick Hastings Rindge was born in Cambridge, Mass., December 2 1 St, 1857. He was a descendant of the Puritan stock which has furnished so large a portion of the best blood and ablest brains of our country. Among his ancestors were Daniel Rindge, who commanded the Ipswich troops in the campaign which destroyed King Philip, of the Naragansett ; Samuel Baker, one of the minute men who marched to the relief of Lexingtotn in 1775, and Daniel Harrington, a resident of Lexington who served through the Revolu- FREDERICK P4AST1NGS RJNDGE HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 129 tionary war with distinction, retiring with the rank of captain. His father, Samnel Baker Rindge was a merchant of very large estate, which he used most wisely. His mother, Clarissa Harrington, was a woman of fine character. Frederick Rindge was the only surviving chikl of his parents and was left in a weakened state by an attack of scarlet fever in his childhood. His education was conducted with especial care and while still a youth he traveled extensively, visiting California in 1870 and during 187 1-2 visiting many places of interes't in Europe. He completed his preparation for college under Dr. James Laurence Laughlin and entered Harvard in 1875. Owing to illness, he was forced to leave college in his last year ; but several years later he was given his degree. Soon after leaving college he succeeded to his father's estate, and at once entered upon an active business career which proved him to possess unusal cjualities of good judgment and executive ability ; although his character and tastes were strongly inclined to a studious life. He visited California again in 1880, in search of health, and returned to New England with renewed strength. For a number of years he devoted him- self to the management of his large commercial interests in Massachusetts. As a testimonial of his love for his birthplace, he erected and presented to the city of Cambridge a city hall and, later, built for the city a beautiful public library building. He established there, and for ten years maintained, the Rindge Manual Training School for boys — the first manual trainmg school in the state. On May 27, 1887, he was married to Miss Rhoda May Knight, of Trenton, Michigan, daughter of James and Rhoda Lathrop Knight. They were the par- ents of three children, Samuel Knight, Frederick Hastings and Rhoda Agatha. In 1887, he came to California to make his permanent home. He soon settled upon Southern California as his place of residence. In January, 1891, he purchased property on Ocean Avenue, Santa Monica and at once built a handsome residence. This home was occupied by the family, in conjunction with the ranch house on the Topanga Malibu until they removed to Los Angeles in 1903. In 1891 Mr. Rindge purchased the property commonly known as the Malibu ranch, a Spanish land grant originally made to Jose B. Tapia in 1804, and later belonging to Don Mateo Keller. The original property extended along the coast northwesterly from Las Flores canyon for twenty miles. To this j\Ir. Rindge added other tracts until he owned a strip of land extending along the sea coast for twenty-four miles. Beautiful "pasages" or valleys ; fertile mesas, stretches of magnificent beach, lofty peaks and ridges, gave a wonderful variety of scenery and climate to this rancho. Mysterious caves, almost inaceesible can- yons, groves of ancient oak and sycamore lent romance and charm. It is not strange that ^Ir. Rindge, with his poetical tendenc) of thought and spiritual 9 130 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES trend of mind, found here his ideal home and loved this historical rancho — not as property — but as a divine inheritance. He built here a home that was per- fect in its adaptation to the environment and he spent here some of his happiest hours. His book, "Happy Days in Southern California" is largely a tribute to his life upon the Malibu, although it deals with other aspects of California life also. But while he sought rest and inspiration in the seclusion of his ranch home, Mr. Rindge never shut himself out from active participation in business and public affairs. During the years of his residence in this state, from 1888 to 1905, probably no other man was ever connected with so many and such large and varied interests. His investments were made not only with a view to the increase of his own wealth but, very largely, for the purpose of develop- ing the resources of this country and thus giving opportunity to men of lesser means. For this reason he was a moving factor in a large number of companies organized to develop water and reclaim land, and in various other enterprises. Among the most important of these was the Conservative Life Insurance Com- pany, of which he was president. Mr. Rindge, believing that a man should make his gifts while living, was a man of large yet unostentatious benevolences. He gave liberally to the Methodist church of which he was long a consistent member, being of a deeply religious nature. He aided many institutions, both in California and in New England, and lent a helping hand to many individuals. He was discriminating in his charities — as a man of such great wealth must be — if he is to be a power for good rather than for evil. While living in Santa Monica, Mr. Rindge closely associated himself with the life of the community. In 1895 he offered to erect and donate a church building to the Methodist society, provided the church would support a pastor and pay all incidental expenses. In consequence, a neat and commodious church, still in use, was built at a cost of $15,000 and dedicated before the end of the year. He took an active personal interest in the campaign which was made by the advocates of temperance and by the better class of business men to rid the town of saloons, speaking at the meetings and offering to indemnify the city treasury for the loss of revenue derived from the saloon licenses. Accord- ingly, after the "anti-saloon" party carried the election, he presented his check for $2,500 to Mr. Robert F. Jones, then mayor of Santa Monica. He served for several years upon the school board of the town, was president of the Good Government League, and was a member of various local organizations. In 1903 the ranch house on the Malibu, with all its furnishings, including a part of Mr. Rindge's fine library, was destroyed by fire. About this time the family removed to Los Angeles where I\Ir. Rindge had erected a handsome house on Harvard Boulevard, in a section of the city he had helped to develop. On locating in Los Angeles, he identified himself with the Westlake M. E. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 131 church, to which he contributed hberall)-. He was also deeply interested in the Young lAlen's Christian Association, being an active member and aidin- laroely m lifting the debt which for many years hung over the Los Angeles association He was one of the originators of the Ocean Park Y. AI. C. A. Company which started the town of Ocean Park. As a relaxation from his many cares, Mr. Rindge gave much attention to scientific research and the study of the early history of America and of California He was a member of the New England Historical and Geneaological Society and of the Archaeological Institute of America. His collection of coins and of aboriginal arts was of such value that he was induced to place them in the loan exhibit of the Peabody Museum, at Harvard College, and also in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. He gathered a large amount of material bearing on Pacific coast archaeology and his collection of memorials of California history was unequalled among private collections. In acknowledgement of the honor conferred upon him through his fore- bears, he became a member of the Society of Colonial Wars and also of the Sons of the Revolution. He was president of the Harvard Club of Los Angeles irom the time of its formation until his death. The death of Air. Rindge, which occurred August 29th, 1905, was in one sense, untimely. He was a comparatively young man and was in the midst of an active and useful life. Yet his existence had been a long struggle with weakness and his spirit was full-grown. Death may come at any tin^e to such a man and we cannot say that it is premature. To his family, to his friends-all over the United States, to the public generally, his departure meant a great loss and a great grief. But to himself it was onlv a passing on to a higher life. as a^VTr ''r" f^ "' '" "'"'"■ "^^ ' ^"-^"^^^^ ^"^"' ^^ ^ ^^-^'-^h leader, as a Y. M C. A. president, as a consistent worker for the development of can tale his place He was a rich man; but he employed his wealth for the greatest good of the greatest number-not in selfish pleasure nor for personal ' c^gSrandizement. He was a man of strong religious convictions: but the ^race of humility and a broad understanding prevented his religion fron. degeii^rat- n.^ mto religiosity. A staunch, steadfast, unassuming man. with alf of his llions those who dififered from him in opinion could admire his fidelity to Ills Ideals; and those not blessed with n.oney could be glad that such a for'tune was entrusted to worthy hands." as executTlrnf'^r""-' *'•'""" "'" ''"''""''' °' ^" ''"''»"d. ^<"- Rindge. enterprises wl„cli her lu,sbanestowed them in all their beauty and affluence upon block 251, and attached them thereto by almighty warrant as an incorruptible hereditament to run with the land forever." Of this same effort, L. T. Fisher said in the Outlook, of July 13th, 1887: " Under his eloquence many were led to believe that Santa Monica would at once leap to the front as a full-fledged seaport and commercial center. In fact, so strong was this impression that not a few prominent men of Los Angeles, who held large possessions there, were actually afraid that the precedence of the ' city of the Angels ' would slip away from her and be transferred to the seacoast. And, if we may be allowed the suggestion, it would have been a good thing for the country if it had. Here would have sprung up the great com- mercial city of Southern California. It had all the advantages of climate, drain- age and all of the best elements that should exist where a large population is concentrated." Hon. Joseph Lynch, Major Ben Truman and Col. J. J. Ayers, the historic trio of Los Angeles editors, were present and also made glowing speeches as to the future of Santa Monica and Southern California. The first lot sold, lot M in block 173, the northeast comer of Utah and Ocean avenue, went to E. R. Zamoyski for $500. Other lots on Ocean avenue brought from $400 to $500, and the prices ran down to $75.00 for lots back from the shore. Among the first purchasers were Major Hancock, Judge O'Melveny, W. J. Broderick, I. W. Hellman, George Boehme, W. D. Vawter and sons, H. T. Giroux and others. The sale continued on the ground for three ■days and on Saturday an auction was held in Los Angeles. Probabl}' about $100,000 worth of lots were disposed of during the week. The first building in Santa Monica was a rough board shack put uj) in April by J. C. Morgan, next to the Santa Monica Hotel and used as a boarding place for workmen. The first business house completed was that of H. T. Giroux on Second street, still occupied by him. The first general store was opened by W. D. Vawter, who purchased three lots on the last day of the auction, on Fourth street between Utah and Oregon, paying $125.50 apiece for them. Two weeks from that day his store was ready for occupancy. Later this building was removed to Third street, where it is still used. The first brick building in the town was built by William Rapp, on Second street, between Utah and Oregon. It is still in use. A postofifice was established at once and HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 147 W. H. Williams served as the first postmaster, the office being located in a building- on Second street where the Union livery stable now stands. The growth of the new town was most promising. A Los Angeles paper of September 14th thus summarizes the advance made : " Two months since the site of Santa Monica was a plain under the do- minion of a sheepherder. Today nearly one hundred substantial houses line its broad streets. Two hotels are overflowing with guests. Its lumber yards are doing the business of a metropolis and dealers in coal, wood, drygoods and groceries are rushing about in energetic ardor to keep up their stock of goods which are bought out as rapidly as exposed for sale. The price of town lots continues. The fare from San Francisco is $12.00 by boat, while it is $20.00 by continuous. The fare from San Francisco is $12.00 by boat, while it is $20 by rail, including a stage ride of no miles (the S. P. was not yet completed)". Allowing for newspaper exaggeration, we may conclude that the first two months of the new town's existence were certainly lively ones. While buildings and business sprang up so magically, the new town also provided for the mental and moral needs of its citizens. On October 13th, 1875, appeared the first number of the Santa Monica Outlook, a neat and well-filled four-page weekly, with L. T. Fisher as editor. He began at once that consistent and persistent support of the interests of the town which can only be supplied by a first-class local newspaper. He records in his first number the business houses and advance already made and the prospects for the future. Some extracts from earlv numbers of the Outlook will give a clear idea of the new town. " On the 15th of July, 1875. the first lot was sold at Santa Monica. At the date of this writing, October nth, 1875, six hundred and fifteen lots have been sold by the land company for $131,745 ; 119 houses and shops have been erected. The water of San Vicente springs has been collected in two large reservoirs, forming prettv lakes in the proposed park, and the flow of half a million gallons per dav is in process of being distributed in iron mains all over the townsite." — Outlook, October 13th, " Santa Monica continues to advance. We now have a wharf where the largest Panama steamers have landed ; a railroad completed to Los Angeles ; a telegraph station, a newspaper, postoffice, two hotels, one handsome clubhouse, several lodging houses, eight restaurants, a number of saloons, four groceries, three drygoods stores, two hardware stores, three fruit stores, one wool com- mission house, one news depot and book store, one varietv store, one bakerv, one jeweler and watchmaker, one boot and shoe maker, one tin shop, two livery stables, one dressmaker, two tin shops, several contractors and builders, three real estate agencies, one insurance agency, one coal yard, one brick yard, two lumber yards, two private schools and in a short time we shall have two churches and a public school." — Outlook. November 24th, 1875. REV. J. D. CRUM. First Resident Preacher of Santa Monica. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 149 Among the merchants of the first year we find W. D. Vawter & Sons, Fourth street, dealer in drvgoods, clothing-, etc. ; M. J. Bundy, dealer in paints, oils, o'lass ; tin shop. Boehme & Kilgariff ; M. Boufosky, groceries, liquors, etc.; H. Giroux & Bro., groceries, liquors, etc. ; Wilson news depot, which handled every- thing from eastern periodicals to gents' furnishing goods, drugs and medicines ; Tell's " Lookout ", which combined " native wines and brandies, fresh fruit, vegetables and fish ", with a " livery and feed stable." The hotels were the Santa Monica House, kept by J- C. Morgan and C. M. Monroe for a few months and then bv J. W. Scott, and the Ocean A^iew House, corner of Oregon and Second, kept by Malcom & Harper. The first child born in Santa Monica was Earnest Majors, who made his appearance on August 2nd and who grew to minhood in this city. The first marriage ceremony took place January 20th, 1876. when Alfred Hayes wedded Miss Mattie Mountain, Rev. J. D. Crum officiating. The first sermon was preached bv the Rev. A. F. White in September. In October, the Rev. ^Nlr. Cruiu began holding Methodist services in ilrady's hall, over a store on the coi- ner of Oregon and Fifth streets. The first church organized was the Meth- odist and thev dedicated their first chapel on January 2nd, 1876. A private school, known as the Santa Monica Acadeni}', was opened by D. G. C. Baker and wife, November 8th, 1875, and the first public school was opened in the Presbyterian chapel on the corner of Third and Arizona, March 6th, 1876, with Mr. H. P. McCusick as teacher. October 17th, 1875, the first railroad train left Santa Monica for Los An- geles, flat cars being used, as the passenger coaches had not arrived. Three trips were made that dav and passengers from the steamer Senator were landed in Los Angeles twelve hours in advance of those who went on to San Pedro. On November 3rd the Outlook exults over — "A Busy Scene. We watched a lively scene on Santa Monica wharf last Thursday that is decidedly encouraging. On one side the schooner John Hancock was discharging a large cargo of lum- ber; on the opposite side the schooner Newton Booth had just arrived with railroad ties ; further along the barkentine Ella was unloading coal. The Sen- ator was discharging a large cargo of passengers and freight, including several race horses. A train of cars was waiting to transport the whole into the back country. And it must be remembered that only a few months ago the site of this growing town was a sheep pasture and the spot occupied by wharf and vessels a lonely waste of waters." The same month the coast steamers began to make regular stops at the new town, and the Outlook states that at one tiiue 28 mule teams were loaded with freight for San Bernardino. On Sunday, December 5th, the new road was so far completed that an excursion of 400 people, the first one entering Santa Monica, was brought in. Two trains a ™' '»"'-^ "^ Santa Monica. old and distint^uishert famil, ,,■ *''°P'«f "'>• He was a descendant of an being native of VrlnirH 'k"""' ^"''""' ^"'' ^""«= ^'»"'«'-. both Aug:,st itt^y .'About ,8rthr;am/°""' *"f ' ""■• ''^'''=°"' '""--• "ocated on a farm' near I .0.™ of Ver"on '^Zfn" J"^"'"»^ —"^ -" farmer of his son- hut th. u7l , -^ ^''*" P™P°sed to make a Ae age of twe vT wen to I !, T '"'^'"^ '°'' "'^' ™^^'™ «"d ^°™ after he had a g rat affrtio,, Hit fi ' T"'' ^°'°'"' -'°'^" ^^^^'^^' '" -^om towns of Madison and Ver f Tf ""' ^'"""^ "" °-^ "^^m between the This work bv reason 0!°™ "1? d"'*,"""'""''^' ''' "'^ ""*'^ ='°-- suited the darinTsoTrit of h f T™''' '"" °'''''°"=" ^^"S-^"- f™" ^"^ges, tmcle and th n 'pa rCr i , th?"" T "• '"^"^ ^ ^'^^^ '" "« ^'°- »' "is Vawter. Together thev arried I "' '" '°™P"'^' "'"' '"^ ^°-'"' Smith -•s Cor,.r.^-„ ve!:^™ ™ -— r": iTarf' "'"' '™"'"- ^' ^ -"- was f realTrelXte " ""'""'", °' "" '°™" ^'°^ '•' """"'"■ »' -ars. He Bible deposTto V „; Ien,7'''"" ""' """ ""^ '"^^"" -'" -^-todian of the pos.tory of Jennmgs county, a branch of the American Bible Society, E. T. VAWTER. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 161 from its organization. He always took a lively interest in nuniicipal politics and in national affairs. He was a Whig during the life of that political party and a member of the Republican party from its birth. He voted for General William Henry Harrison and in 1888 cast his vote for General Benjamin Har- rison. In 1875 he came to California and w-as one of the original members of the Indiana colony which was the forerunner of the city of Pasadena. Mr. Vawter purchased a sixty-acre ranch in that colony, which is now occupied by the busi- ness portion of the city. Drawn by report of the great advantages offered by the new settlement of Santa Monica which was to become the commercial metrop- olis of Southern California, he with his sons located here and opened the first general store in the town, in a building on the lots on Fourth street still occupied bv the Yawter residence. As the town commenced to grow he established lumber yards and soon built a planing mill, which proved a boon to home builders. He secured a fran- chise in 1886 and with his sons built the first street railway, which was for some time operated at a loss. They demonstrated their faith in the future, however, bv extending the line to the Soldiers' Home, a distance of about five miles, and he lived to see it a paving enterprise. With his sons he organized the First National Bank of Santa Monica and opened the same in the brick building on the southeast corner of Third and Oregon, which they built in 1888. Mr. A^awter was married, July 15th, 1834, to Mary Charlotte Tilghman Crowder of Baltimore, Maryland. She died September 22nd, 185 1. Her chil- dren were Mary Ellen, May, Jane Cravens, William Smith and Edwin James. Mr. A'^awter married Charlotte Augusta Knowlton in November, 1852. She was a native of Shrewsbury, Mass. She died in Santa Monica, December 27th, i8<:)3, leaving one daughter, Emma. A son, Charles Knowlton, had died pre- viously. Mr. Yawter was one of the founders of the Presbyterian church in Santa Monica and was always one of its staunch supporters. He was a man of pure life — both in thought and action. He was pre-eminently just and never inten- tionally did any man a wrong. At the same time, he was not a man of loud or bold pretense and moved along life's journey doing the right thing at the right time: "because it was the natural outlet for energies which were attuned to those harmonies which could only accord with what was best." The memory of his noble life will linger like a restraining benediction to call us up toward a better standard of thought and action. Mr. Yawter passed away at his home in Santa ^Monica. July loth, 1894. Mary Eli^En YA^^•TER, the first child of W. D. and Mary C. Yawter, was born at Yernon, Ind., October 28th, 1836. At the age of eighteen she began teaching school. At twenty-three she married Ward Leavitt of Chatauqua, N. y. In the spring of 1875, ^^^- ^^^^ "Shs. Leavitt with their daughter, Florence, removed to California. They were stockholders in the Indiana colony, but after 11 162 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES a short residence there located in Santa Monica. In 1880 they returned to Pasa- dena and Hved for some years upon their orange ranch. In 1887 they again located in Santa Monica, where Mr. Leavitt died, October 23th, 1896. Mrs. Leavitt and daughter still reside in Santa Monica. May VawTEr was born at Vernon, Ind., March 4th, 1838. She was edu- cated in the schools of her native town and received a special musical training. After teaching school and traveling through the southern and eastern states and Canada, she accompanied her family to California in 1875. In the spring of 1876 she married Switzer S. Harwood, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Harwood lived at San Pablo and in San Francisco and Yreka. They finally removed to Sydney, Australia, where they made their home. Mrs. Harwood was a self-reliant woman, adventurous from childhood, and she several times made the voyage between Sydney and California. She early united with the Vernon Presbyterian church and was a charter member of the First Presbyterian church of Santa Monica. She died in Sydney, Australia, March ist, 1884. Jank Cravens Vawter is a native of Vernon, Ind. She received her edu- cation in private and public schools of her native town and later studied under Dr. J. C. Burt, following a college course. She also took a special course of reading extending over several years. When very young she was interested in political and national questions and became a staunch abolitionist. She was for several years a teacher in the public schools of Indianapolis. She united with the Presbyterian church at Vernon, and was the projector and one of the founders of the first Sunday-school in Santa Monica. This was organized and carried on for some weeks in the home of W. D. Vawter. Miss V^awter was a charter member of the First Presbyterian church and served for some time as its Sunday-school superintendent. She was long a teacher in this school, taking children from their tenth year and holding them until they reached majority. She was one of the two solicitors who collected funds for the present beautiful Presbyterian building. She and her sister. Miss Emma, now live to- gether in the fine old homestead on Fourth street. Santa Monica. Aramatha Charlotte; VawtiJr was born in \'ernon, Ind., September 25th, 1841. She was educated at Jennings Academy, Vernon, and at Oxford, Ohio. After teaching for a time, she was married, October i6th, 1866, to Septimus \^ater, now a prominent banker of Lafayette, Ind. Mrs. \^ater, who has always been an active worker in the Presbyterian church and its auxiliaries, has been ordained a deaconess in her home church and is widely known for her good works in her home city. WiLMAM S. Vawter, the eldest son of W. D. and Mary C. A'awter, was born near A'ernon, Tnd., /\])ril ist, 1845. He passed through the graded schools of the town and graduated from a commercial college in Cincinnati, Ohio. Re- turning to his native place, he was appointed deputy county clerk of Jennings county. Later he became editor and proprietor of the J'cnion Banner, a weekly HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 163 paper, which he conducted with success for a couple of Aears R t, the nianufacturinq- business whirh h. /-"^^P^e ot Acars. He then entered in 1875. '''' ^'' ^"^"^'""^^' ^'"^'^ 1^^^ came to CaHfornia f^^^^'^^i:::^:::;!;::': ^'^'^^ r ^->' -- ^-^^--- the vawters. .iucted an e^tens^r^^SetLu ::si::^ J^: "^.^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^°"- ni? the long period of depression succeed nl the I , ' ""'^ ^'''' '^''" the Southern Pacific Company and n ". , abandonment of the wharf bv retained their faith in'^^^ ^^^^^^^^ '^LXlrT^"^^ ^^"'^^^°"^' 100 acres of the Lucas ranrh .rU 1 , "^ ^^'^ Vawters purchased This ,a„c, w. ,ate'; s^s H™/;: ':,.: ^ar^ , ?:""'77' *' '°™- part of the present soml, end of the ci v TsJ^M 't "'' ' '"''^'^ they sold half of this Drooertv for ,, °* ^^"'^ Monica. Dunng 1887-88 W. S. Vawtet ^.^^ZZJ^^Z^ ."J:!^ i^' '^^ --;'^-" and residences in that district. °""'''' """^ °f 'h« ""' Mr. \'awter lias served the citv of lant, ir ■ was one of tl,e i^rst board of trusted then tl e io' '" '"""' '^''''"'"" "^ served from ,886 to 180^ ■ in ,no, 1 "'''"."'<^ '°"'" "as nicorporated and until 1906. ' '°^ ''" "■'= =■«'"' ^'^<^'«' '^i'.>- '"■'^tee and served svste"\:d"t,;rsXt"yo,;:f '"';;'""' r. "- ^^"^ *'°"'" -«* -"--■ Pacihc. With I -rt he" E J V^t*: "Tr v"V°" '° "" ""'^ ^"^^^'^ Monica Mill and r umber r^ • oo ' ^ '''''^'^'' o^^^nized the Santa pan,, in -8 ;:l's"::te?e7i:'T^^^^^ ^7™--a> Co,.- is now vice-Dresidp„t M ,1,. Ar ! National Banlt formed n, 1888. and was one o d , be s ^IT 0^ W f "n"'' "*"* °' ^'"^'^ ^'°"-- "^ ..^;e.r.,.ve-tr::-^v:rr,:— ^^^^^^ an acdve pa^rTi,; prbhvTff ■ '"'n^ '"•^' '''^''•""'^■^" '" P°""- and has taken son he ser "^ '■ °"''"'8^ "'<^ administration of President Harri *n. Ci:;:,!" TT'" °' '^"^ ''""'^'- ^^^-Sning on the electio of Pre - Stat Wd of Ra ;. Co?"™-^ °' "'I '" '"'' ^"P""*-' => "-"*- of the the prcsMencv oft e San m'™"'.'"-' '"'P'^' "" P"^'"""' ^^'^^-'S f-" cation to do so ®'""^' ^"""^ "«' '™™ ""= •=°ard of edt,- of John S Moore ^f ft A V ' ?"" °"' daughter, Mary C, now tl,e wife on the corner o Second ^^f" f ,' '"' ^''- ^''^*" ''''" ' beautiful home -..ytrees."he;r!:rofyrs.^"' ""'^°"" ^^•^""^- "'*" ^^ ^'~'^^ ^-^^ 164 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES Edwin James Vawtkr was born in Vernon, Ind., November 26th, 1848. After being educated in the public schools, he showed a decided tendency for business and made his first venture as a newspaper man, on the Vcnioii Baiiiicr. He was soon taken into partnershij) with his father, W. D. Vawter. in his gen- eral merchandise business, at the old " Vawter Corner ", in Vernon. On the removal to California in 1875, the ])artnership between father and son was con- tinued, and he was also one of the stockholders in the Indiana colony. He located in Santa Monica when the family decided upon this as a residence. He has taken a large part in the financial and business affairs of this vicinity and has always been known as an enterprising investor in every effort which prom- ised success. Many of the improvements which Santa Monica has enjoyed and is enjoying today have been inaugurated liy the Vawter family and carried forward to completion with perseverance in the face of difficulties. Mr. E. J. X'awter has had a large share in the enterprises which were organized by his father and brother, as well as having originated many other successful ventures himself. He was president of the City Water Coiupany organized in 1896 to supply the district known as Ocean Park with water ; he was cashier of the First National Bank of Santa Monica until it was sold to Senator Jones in 1893. In 1899 he began the development of what has proved to be one of the most important of Santa Monica industries — that is the growing of carnations and other flowers for the market. A large tract of land is now under cultivation and the business is steadily increasing in value. He was the founder of the Santa Monica Commercial Company, organized to carry on real estate, banking, railroading and other transactions. He remains the president and manager of this company, which represents the properties left himself and four sisters by the will of their father. He organized the First National Bank of Ocean Park, in 1905, of which he was president until 1907. Mr. Vawter has always been closely identified with the public interests ; he has served the city as a member of the board of city trustees, and as member of the library board and of the school board. He has also taken part in many of the political conventions of the Republican party and is identified with the Masonic order (being a 32n(l degree Mason), Knights of T\thias, and Pioneers of Los Angeles county. He was married to Miss Laura E. Dixon in Indiana, in 1S69. She died in 1886. They were the parents of one son, E. J. Vawter, Jr., who inherits the business ability of the family. In t888 Mr. Vawter married Mrs. Isabella L. Nelson. She is gifted witli a fine voice, which is often used in the aid of charitable causes. Thev have a pleasant home, in the midst of flowers, in South Santa Monica. Emma KNowi/roN Vawtkk was born in X'ernon, Ind., August 21st, 1853. vShe received her education in the public schools of Vernon, Ind., and in the Western Seminary and Oxford College, where she graduated in 1873. She came to California with her father's family and has since that lime been a resi- HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 165 dent of Santa Monica. Having received a good nK.sical edncation she acted She resides h ,th her s.ster, Jane Cravens, i„ ,he old l,ome at Santa Monica „.d after ,,is nto, J, LTin X. .fvldlr a' til"::::,:;;- ^ «R8 ; '^' ''^'''" ^^ ^"^^'"^d Purdue University Indiana Tn 1888 he entered the State University at Rerk-elpv k . -Indiana. In typhoid fever did not con.plete the course '' '"' """^^ ^° "^ ^"^^^^' ^^ In 1889 he took a position with the First Nation;,! P^,.i f e . ^r ■ On the organization of tite Cont.ercia, Ban o^S ta Mo La itfX r'h" :fTrt;r r «':r':::;s i:r -'- °^ r «-'--^' --- b^^" Ban. „ hen hecan, cas;ir ^t^^^^^ ^l; ^ i^^^ ^^:^:^ ■ p"' ","°r' '^'■'"''"" °* *" ^'^^' National Bank of Ocean Park --0C, ad has sted":^, .ts"'::!::': iTt^rr:,?" ^■"-" ^'""- Arka^as CiirWa:™ The '^"'f''- ''*' '° '"^^ ^^^^^ C'-nnell of Kdwina. ■ '""' '"° '^'"'*^"' Marjorie Dixon and Helen .£Sj>rL\ i'.' J. J. CARRILLO. CHAPTER III. From Town to City. 1880- 1890. THE opening of the new decade found Santa Monica in the midst of most chscouragmg circimistances. The population as shown by the United States census was 417, but this included the population of the entire township of La Ballona. Values had greatly depreciated. Three lots and a house on the corner of Oregon avenue and Second street were sold, about this bme, for $750. L T. Fisher sold his place on Third street, now known as the General Sargeant house, two lots, a small house and highly improved grounds for $300^ Three lots on the corner of Utah and Third, with improvements,' sold for $1200. As late as 1885 the corner now occupied by the Santa Monica bank bmldmg sold at a probate sale for $400. These are but samples of the effect of the dark days." But Santa Monica was not alone in her depression. The years from 1880 to 1885 were quiescent throughout Southern California The chief enhvenment came through the operation of the Southern California Rairoad which was building branch lines in preparation for the coming of the Atchison. Topeka and Santa Fe line, the completion of which ushered in the boom days of the later eighties. Santa Monica looked longinglv toward this new hue the ocean terminus of which was not yet determined,' north of San Diego But the Southern Pacific hold on the situation here was too strong to empt the California Southern this way. until after the failure to make a harbor at Ballona. Santa ATonica still had advantages, however, which were not dependent upon any railroad. She continued to be the favorite summer resort for pleasure seekers from the interior towns of the southern end of the state and she offered many attractions to eastern tourists and health seekers-when thev were fortu- nate enough to discover that such a place as Santa Monica exi;ted. During Monic. n'rr """""""Z T '"'""'''' ^''' ^''''^ accommodations and the Santa Monica Hotel was remodeled and increased by the addition of twenty rooms on""l;n ^°"!r^^\--^ built and many tents were grouped each summei- In isST 1 V . ' u" ''' ''""" ^'"^ "'^ ' ^^^^""^^^ -"^P"^^ r^^ort also, a refof ^ """""^ '^''' '"^^'^ ^^''^' "^ ^^^ ^"^ure by purchasing 100 acre for ^e' iZ^' """' ''^'"""'^ '" ^°^^'" °" *'^ ^°"^^^- ^^^'^^ '^^coo per cottal^s' we""ii ?V^^^i ""' '" """"^'"-^' ^^^ °"^ '' *b^ b-^b- Hotels and Stmdfv u '"'^ ^"^'^ *'^'" "°° '''''' ''''' °^^"P^^d «" North Beach, bimday excursions brought crowds and the annual encampment of the GAR m August, added to the enrollment. The Catholic church, which had been 168 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES begun in 1884, was completed in 1885. The population of the town had so increased that three teachers were employed and additional school room was necessary. During 1885 a free reading room was established by the ladies of the Women's Christian Temperance Union in August. This effort, which was begun by a few brave, hard-working women, gradually developed into a library and became the foundation of the present public lilirary. 1886. The completion of the through line of the Atchison & Topeka road in 1885 led to the greatest " rate war " ever known in this country and was the immediate cause of the marvelous influx of population and capital from which the later history of Southern California dates. The cpiickening of the real estate market, the breaking up of the large ranches in the vicinity of Santa Monica and the great projects for railroads and harbors wdiich were in the air, revived land values in this place. In January, 1886, it was reported that the Santa Fe, or Atlantic & Pacific road, as it was then called, would build a line to South Santa Monica and there construct a wdiarf long enough to accommo- date the largest ships. The company was also to build a three-storv hotel on its reservation. In view of this rumor and of the purchase of right of way for the road, many improvements were made in that direction and new comers began to secure lands in South Santa Monica. But the hopes of that section were dashed when it w^as learned in October that the " Ballona Harbor Improve- ment Company " had been incorporated and that the Los Angeles & Santa Monica road, which had been incorporated to connect the A. & P. with Santa Monica, had secured a franchise for a wharf and ship canal on Ballona slough. Work was at once begun at dredging for the harbor, wdiich had been carefully planned by Hugh Crabbe, an engineer of some note. During the next two years extensive operations were carried on and a large sum of money was ex- pended in the effort to create a harbor at Ballona Port. Another important event of 1886 was the building of the Hotel Arcadia. During the previous year, J. W. Scott, who had long been one of the most en- terprising citizens of the town, and wdio had been host of the Santa Monica Hotel for a number of years, purchased from the railroad company a tract of land lying along the ocean front between Railroad and Front streets, paying for it $3000. He subdivided it into forty lots and sold thirty of them for $30,000. \\''ith this money he began the construction of a first-class hotel, a long-felt want in Santa Monica. The hotel, when completed January, 18S7, was the finest seaside hotel in Southern California and was onlv cciualcd by the Del Monte at Monterey in the north. The grounds about it were at once improved and the place became the center of Santa Monica's attractions. A bath house and ])avilion, and a gravity railway were among the features that were added l)y the enter]:)rising management of the establishment. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 169 In November, 1886, another important step in the advancement of Santa Monica occurred. This was the incorporation of the town ; the election to 'decide the question being held November 30th and resulting in a vote of 97 for incorporation and 71 against. The boundaries as fixed were : " From the northern corner of Montana avenue and Seventeenth street, east along north- erly line of Seventeenth street to the boundary line between San Vicente and La Ballona; thence west to the south line of Santa Monica and Compton road; thence southeast to the south line of Lucas tract; thence to Pacific ocean." The first board of trustees chosen for the town was made up of John Steere, chair- man ; Dr. E. C. Folsom, A. E. Ladd. W. S. A^awter and J. W. Scott.' Fred €. McKinnie was the first town clerk; H. C. Baggs, Jr., was elected marshal and E. K. Chapin treasurer. Baggs failing to qualify, Michael Noon was ap- pointed in his place. While there was considerable opposition to incorporation by what the £.r- press terms the " old fogies ", on the ground of the additional 'taxes to be ex- pected as a result, the feeling in general was that the interests of the town de- manded the change and that public improvements must be made, even though the wherewithal must come out of the pockets of the propertv owners. The board of trustees at once entered upon a campaign of public improvements which within the next few years transformed the rough, dusty and ungraded roads which were called streets and avenues into well graded, graveled "streets with sidewalks, crossings, bridges, and which were sprinkled and shaded. Dur- ing the year fifty-five new cottages were erected in the town, beside the business buildings and hotel, and a new era of growth was thus fairly inaugurated. V- The year of 1887 was the most phenomenal period in the history of this •state. Santa Monica was not behind the other sections of Southern California m the real estate craze that beset the old settler and the " tenderfoot " alike. In January, L. T. Fisher, the former owner and editor of the Santa Monica Outlook, which had so ably represented the town in its first sunnv davs, returned to his first love and began the publication of a new series of the Outlook, joining with him T. J. Spencer, an experienced printer. This paper furnished the medium through which the real estate agents of the vicinitv made their glowing announcements. One of the first firms to indulge in large' capitals and superla- tive adjectives was that of Tanner & Lewis— R. R. Tanner and " Tom " Lewis, both of whom are well known in the annals of Santa Monica. They advertised ni January "Bargains in Vawter tract. Central addition, Prospect Hill and •other localities." On March 3rd a " Great auction sale " of Santa Monica lots offered by the land company, took place. Of this sale the Outlook savs : " This valuable property will be sold on its merits. There ^vill be no free band, no free lunch, no free ride." In this connection, it continued: "The S. P. rail- 170 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES way company are daily makings three trips between Los Angeles and Santa Monica, which shows the importance of the location. And yet this is a mere beginning-. Another party is after a franchise for a dummy road from Los Angeles to the ocean, to pass along the Cahuenga foothills. Another company has organized with a capital of $500,000 to construct an electric railway from Pasadena to the ocean. Their objective point on the coast is not yet announced, but Santa Monica is no doubt the place, as the conditions are favorable to this view. It should also be remembered that large capital is backing the enterprise of constructing an artificial harbor at a point about four miles south of this place. And there is still another improvement in prospect. This is a wharf in front of Santa Monica tO' be constructed by the Southern Pacific Company." I^ts to the amount of $42,000 were disposed of in this sale, which included prop- erty from Ocean avenue to Twentieth street, and a few weeks later another auction sale disposed of a still larger number of lots at prices ranging nearly double those of the first sale. On June 2nd occurred a " grand excursion and auction '", with Ben F. Ward orator of the day. This was " East Santa Monica " and prospective visitors were directed to bring their appetites and pocketbooks. The same month the " Santa Fe " tract, with " ocean view, street cars, water, and stone pavement ", was put on the market. This included fifty-three acres of land located in South Santa Monica and owned by Tanner & Lewis, purchased from the "Vawters for $53,000. The " Wave Crest '" and " Ocean Spray " tracts, also in South Santa Monica, were placed on the market about this time. Lots in these divisions brought as high as $1350, which to old settlers in Santa Monica seemed fabulous. But when it is remembered that these various tracts are now the site of Ocean Park district, the figures do not seem out of the way. One of the most important deals was the purchase for $55,575 of 247 acres of the Boca de Santa Monica, located on the bluff on the other side of " Old Santa Monica Cafion ", by a syndicate of which Abbot Kinney was the moving spirit. It was proposed to make this the " Nob Hill " district of Santa Monica. Streets were laid out, trees planted, the Santa Monica Outlook Railway was organized, with Kinney as president, Patrick Robinson, vice-president, James Bettner secretary and treasurer, to build a steam road from the Southern Pacific depot along the base of the bluff to the mouth of the canon and up a branch of the Santa Monica cafion to the " heights." Mr. Kinney was at that time secretary of the newly organized state board of forestry and offered to donate a site for a forestry station on the heights. The offer was accepted in Novem- ber, 1887, $5000 was set aside to be devoted to the experimental station and H. Rowland Lee was sent to take charge of the work. By August the " free lunch — free music " stage of auction sales had been reached, " round-trip fare fifty cents and twenty cars provided " for sales in the Ocean Spray and East Santa Monica tracts. Among other tracts of this HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 171 time were the Crippen tract, the Arcadia and Van Every's addition, all of which were actively pushed. During this year the townsite of Palms was laid out, about five miles inland from Santa Monica, on the line of the Southern Pacific. The town of Sunset also sprang into existence. This was located on the Wolfskill ranch, which had been the old land grant of San Jose de Buenos Ayres. This tract of 4500 acres had belonged to B. D. Wilson, who in 1865 mortgaged it for $6000. On this loan it passed into the hands of John Wolfskill, who during 1887 sold it to a svndicate for $440,000. A townsite and ten-acre tracts were laid out ; water was being developed ; a large hotel was planned and partially built ; even a news- paper was started. The " foothill " line, which was to reach the ocean in the vicinity of Santa Alonica canon was to cross the tract and a " grand boulevard " — that fair dream which has existed as a dream since the laying out of Santa Monica — was to be constructed from Los Angeles to the ocean, passing through the city of Sunset. An improvement which had a more substantial basis and which has been of great advantage to Santa Monica and Southern California, was set under way during the year. This was the location of a branch of the National Home for Disabled Veterans in this vicinity. The board of managers of the institution were on the coast to locate a site for a Pacific branch. They were induced to visit Southern California, where various propositions were laid before them. Judge Walter Van Dyke, acting for Messrs. Jones and Baker and the owners of the Wolfskill tract, offered 600 acres of land in the San Vicente and Buenos Ayres grants, together with other valuable considerations. This proposition was accepted and the announcement was made in November, 1887, that the present site had been selected. The news was received with rejoicing in Santa Monica, which thus became the nearest base of supplies for the home. Naturally such rapid advance in real estate values produced a rapid growth in the town and a demand for improvements to correspond. Early in February two applications for franchises to build street car lines were received by the board of trustees, one from O. G. Weiss and others of Los Angeles, the other by W. D. Vawter of Santa Monica. The latter was granted ; work was at once begun, and on June 19th the first car ran over the Ocean-avenue line and in the fall the extension was completed, on Utah avenue and Third streets, up Ari- zona to Seventh and on Seventh to Nevada. A franchise was also granted to a company which proposed to establish a gas plant and supply the town. This improvement, however, did not materialize and for years the only gas in the town was that manufactured by a private plant for the Arcadia Hotel, and two or three other private houses. The Ballona and Santa Monica railway was incorporated in 1887 to build a standard-gauge road from Ballona to Santa Monica, its board of directors being M. L. Wicks, J. Bernard, Jr., S. D. Northcutt, James Campbell and others. It was really an W. I. HULL. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 173 offshoot of the Santa Fe line and through it, the Santa Fe obtained a right of way through South Santa Monica to a junction with the S. P. on Railroad street. Work was continued during the year on the Ballona harbor project, and it was still hoped that the Santa Fe might make a terminus either at Ballona or Santa Monica. Among the buildings of the year, John Steere erected a two-story brick block on the northeast corner of Utah and Third, with a frontage of 50 by JS feet. The second floor contained a large hall which for many years was known as " Steere's Opera House ", and which served as a theater and public meeting place. The older residents of Santa Monica can look back upon many festal occasions enjoyed within and recall the remarkable display of stuffed birds which adorned its walls. Several other business blocks and a number of residences were built during the vear. St. Augustine's Episcopal church was erected and the Catholic church at Palms was built. The Fourth of July this year was celebrated with a great deal of enthusiasm, a large crowd gathering to witness the proceedings and the Hon. Abbot Kinney delivering the address of the day. The flower festival in Los Angeles was a most pleasing and novel attraction. The Santa ^lonica booth, prepared by Mr. T\ler, jNIrs. Chapin and other ladies of the town, was a representation of Santa Monica, with wharf and ship, made of flowers, and attracted a great deal of attention and praise as the most beautiful exhibit in the festival. In August the Lawn Tennis Association was incorporated and grounds were se- cured and laid out on Third street. The first tournament of the Southern Cali- fornia Tennis Association took place on these grounds and was a great success, closing with a grand ball at the new opera house. The year of 1888 was one of prosperity and advancement. While real estate movements were not so rapid nor so sensational as in the previous year and some of the wild schemes fell through, much solid and permanent develop- ment went on. One of the most important indications of the change from village to city was the formation of a bank, the directors being mostly local capitalists. The First National Bank of Santa Monica was organized in January, with G. H. Bonebrake of Los Angeles, president ; John Steere, vice-president ; E. J. Vawter, cashier; G. S. Van Every, John Steere, Nathan Ikmdy, H. C. Baggs, G. H. Bonebrake, W. S. and E. J. A'awter, directors. It opened for business in ^larch in the Central building on Third street and at once began to plan for a hand- some building of its own. In April the contract was let for the erection of Senator Jones" r.ew home on a block that had been reserved in the original town plat as a hotel site. This house was to cost between $30,000 and $40,000, and tile fact that the senator had selected Santa Monica as a permanent home went 174 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES far toward insuring the future of the place, as the Jones interests were still the cloininant factor in the town. The Santa Monica Improvement Company was organized this year with Ahbot Kinney, P. Robertson and Thomas Rhodes as the controlling committee. This association at once began work in improving the grounds of the lawn tennis courts and in erecting the " Casino '" on Third street. This was a substantial and beautiful club house, costing some $6000 and for many }ears was the center of much social gayety and the scene of many festivities. In April, after a rather lively contest, three new trustees were elected, Thomas A. Lewis, Thomas Rhodes and J. J. Carrillo, the latter of wdiom served as trustee continuously until 1900 — twelve years. The new board organized with W. S. Vawter president, and at once began a vigorous campaign for the improvement of streets. Before the end of the year active work had been begun and contracts let for the grading, curbing and graveling of streets to the amount of $23,000 while over $30,000 had been expended, or called for, in the putting down of cement sidewalks. The present day population owes much to the board of trustees of 1888-89 who, in the face of much opposition from people who thought the town would be bankrupted forever l)y such extravagance, and in the face of many difficulties, persisted in making the streets of Santa Monica the best thoroughfares in the country. Railroad schemes were always on the tapis and hopes for rapid transit were afforded abundant material for building upon. The Outlook of July i8th talks cheerfully of the situation : " Santa Monica has excellent railroad accommoda- tions. The S. P. trains now make four round trips on week days and six on Sundays. The round-trip fare is 75 cents except on Sundays when it is 50 cents. . . . The Los Angeles County Railroad will in a short time have another route completed to Sonta Monica. The entire distance is now graded and the material and rolling stock is now on hand. This road starts from the terminus of the Temple street cable road in Los Angeles and skirts along the foothills, running over a most charming route and passing close to the Soldiers' Home. And yet this is not the end. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe, which is now within five or six miles of this place, promises to extend its line to Santa Monica in the near future. The company already has a right of w^ay along Lucas avenue in South Santa Monica and have graded a short section to hold their franchise. Nor does this close the programme. A rapid transit road is in pros- pect which will start from some eligible point in Los Angeles and, paralleling the Southern Pacific as far as The Palms, wall then cross to the south side, mak- ing a beeline for South Santa Monica." Of these projects, the Los Angeles county road, or the Los Angeles & Pacific road, as it was later known, which was capitalized by Los Angeles men, completed its track to Santa Monica and in 1889 went into operation. But its career was short-lived. On January 29th, 1889. its first passenger train came HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 175 into Santa Monica and was greeted with enthusiasm; the officers, E. E. Hall, president, S. W. Luitweiler, vice-president, R. C. Shaw, superintendent, and Cornelius Cole, J. M. Hale, W. T. Spillnian and Arthur Gaylord, directors, being- on board. The road ran through Burbank, the Ostrich Farm at Kenilworth, Prospect Park, Hollywood, Cahuenga, Morocco, Sunset and Soldiers' Home, a distance of about 2^ miles. Its terminus in Santa Monica was on the bluff near Utah avenue. In September, 1889, it went into the hands of a receiver and in October all trains but one a day were taken off. Soon afterward the rolling stock was taken possession of by the creditors and one more disastrous failure was added to the wreckage of the " boom period." Late this year a Board of Trade was organized and at once began to take an active part in pushing the vital interests of the town, which at this particular time were generally conceded to be the building of a wharf and the completion of the new water system. Work had been begun on a new reservoir, new pipe was being laid and the Water Company, otherwise Jones & Baker, proposed to expend some $60,000 in providing a suitable water supply. The Santa Monica Mill Company's plant was put in operation this year at a cost of fuUv $25,000. The Cates block on Third street was put up at a cost of $10,000 and other build- ing improvements to the amount of about $100,000 made the town begin to assume the airs of a city. 1889. The year 1889 opened with the burning of the Santa Monica Hotel which -occurred January 15th and was a complete loss on account of the insufficient supply of water. This swept away one of the oldest landmarks of the place, as the hotel was the first building erected, having been put up by Jones and Baker in the spring of 1875. It had been added to at various times and was valued at some $25,000. The proprietor, T. R. Bennington, lost heavily on his furni- ture, and Mrs. Senator Jones was a heavy loser of clothing and jewels. The place had had many ups and downs, having been " run " by many different par- ties, taken over for debt, and closed entirely during 1880-81. Till the building of the Arcadia it had been the best hotel of the town and had been enlivened by many gay and festive scenes. The Outlook, in a reminiscent mood, recalls: Jim ' Eastman, in his palmy days, used to drive there in his fine turnout and throw up one or two hundred at a whack for champagne and swell dinners. Led- \-ard and Bullock, the once noted financiers of the Temple and Workman Bank, et id omnes genus, would also come down periodically and indulge in a little hilarity and the disbursement of some of their easily gotten wealth." On February nth, the First National Bank moved into its new two-story building, which was handsomely fitted up for its purposes. This spring the Jones mansion was completed and the family moved in. It at once became a social center whose hospitality was enjoyed by many distinguished people from 176 HISTORY OF SANTA xMONICA BAY CITIES all parts of the world. Among- its first visitors were Senator Hoar, of Massa- chusetts, Senator Allison, of Iowa, and Governor and Mrs. Stoneman, who were entertained in a party by Mrs. Jones. One of the most exciting questions of the year was that of the proposed outfall sewer from Los Angeles which was to be discharged into the ocean in the neighborhood of the present site of Venice, the cit}' being vigorously cam- paigned for votes on the bonding proposition to build the outfall. Santa ]\Ionica citizens entered a decided protest against such a plan as destructive to their beach interests; meetings were held, the board of trustees and the Board of Trade passed vigorous resolutions and the town hired counsel to defend their rights. Citizens of Santa Monica attended anti-bond meetings in Los Angeles and took an active part in the fight. The question' was settled in October, for the time being, bv the defeat of the bond issue. During this year, the street railway, or the " mule line " as it w'as popularly known, was extended to Seventeenth street, thus giving the town four and a half miles of street railway. The drive- war to the Soldiers' Home was also com- ])lete(l this year, a boulevard lOO feet wide, lined with trees set out under the supervision of Abbot Kinney, then road commissioner, and with four substantial bridges. It was proposed to complete this boulevard to Los Angeles, and a number of other roads were opened and' improved and set with shade trees about this time. The Soldiers' Home improvements were now fully under way and a num- ber of veterans had already been received. A brick kiln had been put into oper- ation in Santa Monica by Messrs. Sam Cripe and C. F. Geltner, which supplied a large number of brick for the new buildings on the Soldiers' Home grounds. A franchise was secured to Imild a street railway from the terminus of the Yaw- ter line at Seventeenth street to the Home and this line was put into operation in 1890. Among the social events of the year may he chronicled the visit of Senator Hearst, who was entertained l)y the I'.oard of Trade and of Fanny Davenport, who was so delighted with Santa Monica that she purchased a cottage and announced her intention of passing her old age here. The Polo Club, Tennis Association and a race course provided amusement for sport lovers. The town now had five chrrches, and amono- the man\- church entertainments th.' Floral SANTA MONICA HOTEL. HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 177 Festival, held in the new Presbyterian church, was an event that Hngers in the memory of participants and beholders. One of the most magnificent of the many hopeful prospects of the year was the apparent certaint}- that this place had been chosen as the site for one of the largest Catholic schools in the country. In September it was announced that the Sisters of St. Joseph, a St. Louis order, had made arrangements with Messrs. Crippen. who were to donate a tract of twenty-two acres of the East Santa Monica tract for the location of a large school. Mr. John F. Hogan, who had been instrumental in bringing the Sisters to this location, reported that work would at once be begun on a building. The Outlook of September 25th says: " Heretofore rumor said that at least $350,000 would be expended upon the building alone, with a possible increase to $500,000. But it seems that even these figures are too small. The Mother Superior is so captivated with the location that she thinks the Sisters may decide to spend over a million before the improvements shall have been completed." December nth, it is announced that the final arrangements for the location of the Catholic College at Santa JNIonica have been completed and Mother General Agatha, of St. Louis, drove the first stake in the grounds, which " is the beginning of a series of dedicatory services that will close with the final imposing ceremonial that will be held at the completion of the grand edifice." The final grand dedicatorial service has not yet taken place: Sister Agatha seems to have been too enthusiastic. The Outlook of January 8th, 1890, says: "The popularity of Santa Monica as a seaside resort is shown by the large travel over the Southern Pacific and the L. A. & P. railroads. After careful estimates bv the agent we find the Southern Pacific brought 200,000 visitors to the beach during tlie year. To this must be added about a fourth as many for the L. A. & P. during the time. Then there were thousands who cam'e bv private convevance ''The highest number of visitors on any one day was on the first Sunday of the bal- loon ascension, when the crowd was estimated at 12.000. When Los An-ele. shall have doubled her population (as she will within a few years) and'' the hues of railway have quadrupled, and the fare been reduced to one-half, it is easy to imagine what an immense crowd will visit this beach each week." It is interesting to note that all of the above predictions have been ful- filled long ago, except the reduction in railway fare. Thr Wharf FiOHT.-During the eighties the question of a wharf at .Santa Momca was considered the most vital one of all that presented them- selves. The people, the trustees, the Board of Trade, the contributors to the papers, and above all the editor of the Outlook, discussed this question in all Its phases. The Outlook alternated between arguments to prove the necessity •mnice). In the meantime many rumors were afloat as to the intentions of the Southern Pacific Company, which had again sent representatives to Santa Monica and looked at the old stump which still represented past commercial importance. During 1890 the town was in a fever of expectation as to the possibilities of the South- ern Pacific action and the probability of the Santa Monica Wharf and Railway Terminal Company actually doing something. But after waiting until the spring of 1*^01 for some tangible signs of fulfillment, the citizens again took a hand. In May a petition signed by about a hundred citizens was presented to the board of trustees requesting them to call an election to determine the ques- tion of issuing bonds for the construction of a wharf. After a full and enthu- siastic discussion of this project by the trustees and the citizens, the matter was put to vote and was defeated by the vote of two trustees. Another meet- ing was called and some very hot language was used ; a new petition was pre- pared, urging the trustees to respect the wishes of the citizens ; but the two obdurate members remained firm and again the petition was denied. The excitement ran high and the feeling against the two trustees was very bitter in some quarters. The following emphatic words expressed the feeling of the editor of the Outlook. " We haven't voted any bonds for a wdiarf at Santa Monica, nor has any person or persons agreed to build one ; yet when a location is mentioned for a wharf, it is like shaking a red rag at a mad bull. If there is any one thing that some Santa Alonicans can do better than anything else, it is getting up a raging opposition when something is proposed upon which all should agree. If a man started out tomorrow with a pocket full of twenty-dollar gold pieces, some ' chronic ' would start a howl of opposition because the right per- son, in his opinion, had not been selected to make the distrilnition." But the question of building a wharf and of selecting a location was at last settled, without regard to the opposition or opinions of Santa Monicans. On August I St, 1891, the Southern Pacific Engineering Corps began a survey in " old " Santa Monica canyon, and it was definitely known that C. P. Hunt- ington had decided on a wharf for Santa Monica. Thus ended the history of the agitation for a wharf. John J. Carrillo. — There is no better known figure in Santa Monica than that of John T. Carrillo, at present Police Judge of the citv. He is a native son — the son and the grandson of native sons, and lielongs to one of the oldest and best known families of California. He is a descendant of Jose Raymundo Carrillo, a native of Loreto, who came to California in I/^m). Of him l^>ancroft says: "He may l)e regarded as the founder of the Carrillo fam- ilv, which must be considered in several respects the leading one in California, bv reason of the number and prominence of its members and of their connec- tion bv marriage with so many of the best families, both native and pioneer." HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 181 Captain Carrillo married Tomasa Ignacia Lugo and their sons, Carlos, Jose and Domingo, were among the most prominent citizens of the Mexican period of CaHfornia history. Their only daughter, Maria Antonia, married Captain Jose de la Guerra y Noriega, one of the most brilliant figures in Santa Barbara history. Carlos Antonio Carrillo, grandfather of Juan J., was born at Santa Bar- bara in 1783. He began life as a soldier and was engaged in many military afi^airs. In 1830 he was elected a member of the Mexican Congress and worked earnestly for the interests of his country and the preservation of the missions. One of his speeches, "El Exposicion sobre el Fondo Piadoso " was the first production of a native Californian. printed in book form. In 1837, his brother Jose Antonio, who was an active politician, secured for Carlos an appointment as governor of California, with the privilege of locating the capital of the state at his pleasure. In consequence of this document, the original of which is now in the possession of Mr. Juan J. Carrillo, Senor Carlos Carrillo chose Los Angeles as capital and was inaugurated there with an elaborate ceremony — the only time that Los Angeles was ever made the capital. The distinction was short-lived, however, as Governor Alvarado refused to recognize the authority of his Uncle Carlos and after a brief and bloodless military campaign, Don Carlos retired from the field. He was the grantee of the Sespe Rancho and of Santa Rosa Island. He died in 1852. Bancroft says of him: "In person Don Carlos, like most of his brothers and cousins, was large and of magnifi- cent presence, distinguished for his courteous and gentlemanly manners. In all California there was no more kind-hearted, generous, popular and inofifen- sive citizen than he." His wife was Josefa Castro: his sons, Jose, Pedro C. and Jose Jesus; his daughters, Josefa, wife of Wm. J. Dana: Encarnacion, wife of Thomas Robbins ; Francisca, wife of A. B. Thompson : INIanuela, wife of John C. Jones, and Maria Antonia, wife of Lewis Burton. Pedro C. Carrillo, father of Juan J., was born in Santa Barbara and was educated in Honolulu and Boston. On his return to California he took an act- ive part in affairs, filling various offices in Santa Barbara and Los Angeles and being the grantee of Alamos y Agua Caliente, Camulos ranchos and San Diego island. During the American conquest, he favored the Americans and was active in their behalf. In 1847 he was the guide who led a messenger from Stockton to Fremont through the enemy's country. He was made receiver of the port of San Diego, after the American occupation and later served as receiver of port at Santa Barbara and at San Pedro. He spent the last years of his life in Santa Monica and died here May 28th, 1888. His wife was Josefa Bandini, a sister of Mrs. Arcadia de Baker and the oldest one of the famous Bandini sisters. It was she who made the American flag which was used by Commodore Stockton at San Diego — the first American flag raised in South- ern California. 182 HISTORY OF SANTA lAIONICA BAY CITIES Juan J. Carrillo was born in Santa Barbara, September 8tb, 1842. Wben he was ten vears old he was sent with a party of bo3's, sons of Californians, to New York, making- the trip around the Isthmus of Panama in charge of a priest, who placed the youths in a private family in New York City. The woman in charge proved to be a fraud, and the boys were taught nothing and were badly treated in every way, until an old friend of Mr. Carrillo's father discovered them. Then Juan and his brother were removed to the College of the Holy Cross at Worcester, Mass., near Boston. Here they remained six years, returning to California in 1858. Tn 1864 Mr. Carrillo came to Los Angeles and entered the store of Caswell, Ellis and Wright, then one of the largest establishments in the state. He re- mained with this firm for 14 years, then served for four years as city marshal of I. OS Angeles. Tn 1881 he located in Santa Monica and has since that date been intimately associated with the history of this place. He acted for a time as agent for the Baker interests in this vicinity and has been instrumental in se- curing many valuable concessions for the city. For instance, in 18S4 Mrs. Baker deeded the site of Woodlawn cemetery to him and he in turn, without compen- sation, deeded the same to the city. In 1888 he was elected as city trustee and for twelve years thereafter he was re-elected regularly, thus serving the city longer than any other trustee ever chosen. During this time he was for seven years, from i8qo to 1897, president of the board and thus acting- mayor of the city. During his entire service he gave much time and energy to city affairs and Santa Monica has never had a more disinterested and honest official. In 1888 he took an active part in the contest made by Santa Monica against the proposed outfall sewer of Los Angeles, with its discharge on the beach between what is now Pier avenue and Venice. Mr. Carrillo personally canvassed the Ballona district and secured the signatures of the property owners to a protest against this action and to an agreement which prevented Los Angeles from securing the proposed right of way for the sewer. When the first board of trade was organized in 1888, Mr. Carrillo was chosen as secretary, an office which he filled for seven years. Lie was one of the active movers in the efforts to secure a wharf and a sewer system, and has always been a strong advocate of good roads and parks. During his service on the board of trustees he accomplished much toward securing improved roads and streets. Old citizens have not for- gotten the long and weary fight he made to secure the road to Calabasas in January, 1897. After his retirement from the council he served two years as superintendent of streets, from 1904 to 1906. In personal appearance and in character Mr. Carrillo is a worthy son of his ancestors, indeed, the description of his grandfather might ap])ly with ef|ual truth to himself. Honorable in all his dealings, generous to a fault and kind- hearted, even to his enemies, probably no man in Santa Monica commands a more sincere regard. Lie was married, ( )ctober "th, i86(;, to Miss Francisca HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES i83 Roldan, a woman of great beauty of character and person. She died in Los Angeles March 2nd, 1897, and her funeral here in Santa Monica was a rare testi- monial of the love and respect which were felt for her and her family. Mr. and Mrs. Carrillo had 13 children, of whom are now living Elisa, Mrs. Eliza Lopez ; Atala, Mrs. A. H. Calkins ; Diana, Mrs. Will Holton ; of the sons, Ygnacio is a well-known dentist, practicing in Los Angeles ; Eulogio is assistant engineer on the Southern Pacific ; Leopold, or Leo, as he is more familiarly known, is traveling in the east, where his talents as a monologist and caricaturist have given him distinction. One son, Charles, died in Santa Monica, April ist, 1905, and die youngest son, Octavio, is now in the employ of the Southern Pa- cific. In 1904 Mr. Carrillo married a second time, Mrs. Eva Fellner, an accom- plished and beautiful woman. W. S. VAWTER. CHAPTER IV. Growth. 1890-1900. NATURALLY, Santa Monica shared in the reaction which followed the too rapid expansion of 1887-88; but she did not suffer the collapse which followed in many sections of Southern California. She was in no sense a " boom "' town and aside from some speculation in South Santa jNIonica prop- erty and some rather previous raihvay schemes, her growth had been a natural result of her advantages and it continued during the new decade with a steady forward movement which gave a solid basis for the marvelous prosperity of her later history. The population of the town, as shown by the census of 1890, was 1580, an increase of over 400 per cent, above the population of 1880, The assessed valuation of the town, which under the inflated values of 1887 had been swelled to $2,405,0-18, dropped back to $1,565,773 in 189T. Since that date, however, the annual assessments have shown a remarkably even and healthy increase up to the present time. One of the most important events of the year 1890 was the completion of the street car line to the Soldiers' Home. This line ran out Nevada street and was formally opened to the public April 3rd, with a special trip followed by a banquet at the Hotel Arcadia, where many complimentary things w^ere said of W. D. Vawter, whose enterprise had provided the town with a street car service extending from the southern limits of the city to the Soldiers' Home. The route from the railroad bridge was along (Dcean avenue to Utah, on Utah to Third, thence on Third to Nevada avenue, which leads in a direct line to the Soldiers' Home, a distance oi three miles. This boulevard had already been improved and adi^rned with handsome shade trees. All " old timers " retain many recollections of this line which, for a numl)er of years, was the only means ■oi communication with the home and which was only superseded bv the present electric line in 1905. There was a strong feeling that Santa Monica was now sufftciently urban to support an electric light system and applications for franchises for this pur- pose were made by two different parties ; one was granted to Messrs. H. M. Russell and H. A. Winslow, but they were apparently not able to " make good " tit this time. In February, W. S. Vawter was appointed postmaster to succeed Miss Mag- gie Finn, who had held the office during the past four vears. ]Manv people yet 186 HISTORY OF SANTA xAlONICA BAY CITIES recall their astonishment when, on going- for their mail on the morning of April 1st, 1890, to the old location on Second street, where the postoffice had been for years, they found no postoffice there. During the previous night the change of administration had unexpectedly taken place and the postoffice had been moved to its new quarters in the bank building on Third street. The new offices were fitted up temporaril}-, but within a few weeks were supplied with the latest style of boxes and conveniences and was then counted as being one of the best equipped postoffices in the county. It was presided over at this time by " Johnny '' Sum- merfield, who made a genial deputy postmaster. In April, 1890, the new board of trustees, after the election of Messrs. John Steere and J. L. Allen, was made up of these two with J. J. Carrillo, who was elected president of the board, a position which he ably filled for seven years, T. L. Tewis and E. J. Vawter. E. K. Chapin was re-elected treasurer, M. K. Barretto was marshal and H. E. Pollard town clerk. The matter of licenses aroused a good deal of discussion this year, as many objected to the plan of licensing business houses at all, and others thought the licenses altogether more than the traffic could bear. But, in spite of much pressure, the new board made few changes and continued the liquor license at $300 per year, only making an effort to limit the number of saloons to ten. Messrs. Jones and Baker this year deeded the bluff and the city park to the town, on condition that they be kept up as public parks, A large number of streets were graded, graveled and sidewalked. The question of providing for some disposition of the sewage was also agitated and a solution was thought to be offered to that and the wharf problem which so troubled the town. But after much talk, legal advice was sought and, in view of the later developments, the following" extracts may be of interest : " In order that there might be no un- certainty in the matter, the town attorney was instructed to employ assistant counsel. This was done and two opinions were read before the board and a number of citizens on Monday night, one from R. F. H. Variel, the other from Messrs. Edgerton & Blades. Shorn of all unnecessary verbiage, the opinions were based upon the proposition, can the town authorities of Santa ^Monica legally submit to the voters, at an election called for that purpose, the proposi- tion of voting $40,000 in bonds for the ostensible purpose of constructing a sewer system, having its outlet in the ocean, but really for the purpose of aiding a private corporation in building a wharf? This proposition was ably argued by the gentlemen and the}' very properly came to the conclusion that the city's fimds could not be legally expended in that way." In Xovember the ladies of the W. C. T. U., who had maintained a public reading room and library since 1886, offered to turn their library of 800 volumes over to the city, provided the city would maintain it as a public library. The ]^roposition was accc])ted and the Santa Monica ]nil)lic lil)rary was thus established. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 187 189T This is a memorable year in Santa Monica annals for many reasons. It developed that the Southern Pacific had secured the right of way along the beach to the canon and purchased the Santa Monica Heii^hts tract. In the fall surveyors beg^an work and the company secured a franchise from the city to build a line under the bluff and to build a wharf, within one year, under a $Sooo forfeit. At the same time the Santa ^lonica Wharf and Railway Ter- minal Company was applying for a franchise to build a wharf at South Santa Monica and offered to put up a tract of thirteen acres of land as indemnity. This oft'er was received with a good deal of derision at the time, as the land was supposed to be utterly useless " sand dunes." The Los Angeles and Pacific road had been revived — to a certain extent — and was also endeavoring to secure a franchise to build a wharf ; but the $5000 forfeit demanded by the board of trustees seemed to put a damper upon their wharf ambitions. With so many propositions coming- before it, the board of trustees had some very lively sessions, especially as there were strong- objections to everything- proposed and much " kicking " at the meetings and through the papers. The harbor ciuestion also demanded more or less attention and the board of trustees and board of trade were prompt to act whenever an opportunity presented itself. In October H. M. Russell and H. A. Winslow, two enterprising citizens of Santa Monica, again applied for a franchise for an electric light plant, which was at once granted them. They took steps to carry out their plans and made a beginning toward this important improvement. Among the business buildings of the year was the Bryson block on the corner of Utah avenue and Second street, which was erected at a cost of some $15,000. Other buildings were the handsome home of Dr. Elliott, a Minneapolis capitalist, on the corner of Nevada and Fifth and the homes of Dr. Place and J. L. Allen. In January, 1891, Mr. Frederick Rindge visited Santa Monica and was so pleased with the place that he purchased two lots on Ocean avenue and soon thereafterward began the erection of a residence which cost some $12,000 and was occupied for a number of years by his family as a home. At the same time he began making other investments in this locality and in 1892 purchased the Malibu ranch of H. W. Keller and at once built a handsome residence and made substantial improvements on this fine property. 1892. The year of 1892 was a prosperous one. The reaction after the depression of the past two or three years had set in here, although this was generally a season of depression in the state. The Southern Pacific pushed its improve- ments and work was well under way on the long wharf before the close of the year. It is estimated that their expenditures in the vicinity of Santa Monica for the year were not less than $200,000. The Santa Fe also came in during 188 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES the vcar and spent considerable money in making' improvements in South Santa Monica. A large amount of money was also expended at the Soldiers' Home in putting up new buildings and improving the water service. These large sums put into circulation, of course, meant much to the merchants and the working men of Santa Monica. The Keller block on the corner of Third and Utah was planned and partially built, at a cost of $25,000. The Windemere and the Para- dise, both intended as first-class family hotels, were built during the year. During the summer there were no vacant houses and tennis, polo and cricket games and tournaments were attractions which drew many visitors. On June i8th the Santa Fe trains reached Santa Monica and the event was duly cele- brated. The road at once put on seven trains daily and made a round-trip fare of seventy -five cents. The Outlook esti- mates that in July fully 5000 people came to Santa Monica on one Sunday. In September the fare to Santa Monica was d r o p p e d to fifty cents, the result of competition. The Los Angeles and Pacific road w^as not yet dead and many rumors were rife about it during the season. It had now passed into the hands of the Terminal Company and great things were promised from it. NORTH THIRD STREET. 1893. In 1893 Messrs. W. D., W. S. and E. J. A'awter sold their interest in " The First National Bank of Santa Monica " to Senator Jones and the bank passed under the new administration, with Robert F. Jones president and cashier. It was soon afterward made a state bank under the name of the " Bank of Santa Monica." During the panic of July, 1893, this bank was undisturbed and it has since that time enjoyed the favor of Santa Monicans. The Keller block wdien completed was one of the largest and handsomest structures in Santa Monica. The upper stories were opened as a first-class hotel, while J. B. Folsom and \V. T. Gillis occupied the large storerooms below. The \'awter block on Third street was completed in September. This was a one-story block, hand- HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 189 sonielv finished, to be used as the ofBcc of the Santa Monica Commercial Com- pany, the Santa Monica Mill and Lumber Company and the Santa Monica and Soldiers' Home Company, all of which were Vawter interests. The Santa Mon- ica soda plant was a new establishment of this year, under the management of Carl F. Schader and Jesse Yoakum. One of the most substantial improvements was the erection of the handsome residence on the corner of Ocean avenue and Arizona by Mrs. Doria Jones, now the Elks' club house. The North Beach Bath House Compau}- was incorporated in December by the Jones interests to build the North lieach bath house and pavilion. This establishment when finished was one of the most complete in equipment in the country. July 1st the Arcadia was opened under new management, having been closed for a yeai or more. Before opening it was thoroughly renovated and refitted, some $10,000 being spent in bringing it up to date. A special election was called for ]\ larch 21st to vote upon the question of lionding the town to the amount of $40,000 for the construction of a sewer system. The canq^aign elicited a good deal of discussion and considerable feel- ing, if we may judge by this letter which the Outlook published, wath a dignified repl}- : " Messrs. Fisher & Woodworth : There is an understanding on the streets that if you publish to malign any one who votes against bonds, your press will be taken and throwed into the sea and your papers, public and private, will be taken for a bonfire." Notwithstanding the talk the vote cast was light and stood 148 against and only 84 for, thus disposing of the sewer question for the time being. But the " sewer question " is one which will not down for long in Santa Monica, and it continued to be a subject of interest — and contention. In Jime J. J. Davis of Los Angeles applied for a franchise for electric light plant, agreeing to pay therefor $25.00 annually for fifty years. September loth electric lights were turned on the street for the first time, twelve incandescent lights being furnished. The year was prolific in " gala " days. July 4th was celebrated with unusual vigor, speeches, bands and amusements of every kind being provided and the largest crowds ever known in the history of Santa ^^lonica being ])resent, esti- niated at from ten to fifteen thousand. The visit of A'ice-President Stevenson was duly noted. In October the new restaurant on the big " long wharf " was or at almost any hour. In order to aid in protecting our country, a coni- ])anv of home guards was organized in Santa Monica, May 3rd ; J. B. Proctor, who was a j^ast master in mihtary tactics, being chosen captain, George Wil- hams, who had seen twelve years of service in the regular arn\v, was first lieuten- ant ; A'ictor Hopf, second lieutenant. This company enrolled 75 members, many of them lu'ing prominent citizens of Santa Monica and a large number of them being native Californians. At the Soldiers' Home a company of five hundred veterans was already organized and had ofifered itself for service at the call of the government. With such an example at hand, it is no wonder that the vour.ger generation in the vicinity were enthusiastic. The Santa Monica com- pany was made Co. H of the Eighth regiment of National Guards. On the resignation of Mr. E. J. \ awter, Jr., who had succeeded Captain Proctor, C. M. O'Dell was chosen captain of the organization. It soon became apparent that the chances for the Eighth regiment to be called into service were slight and such of the members as were anxious to get into the field sought other op- portunities to enlist. In March the Santa Monica Beach Improvement Companv was organized, witli a capital stock of $100,000, and with a strong directorate, consisting of F. A. Miller, then proprietor of the Hotel Arcadia; M. H. Sherman, president of the Pasadena and Pacific electric line ; E. P. Clark of the same companv ; W. D. Larrabee, superintendent of the electric road; F. W. Richardson. Jacob Kurtz. Robert F. Jones, Charles H. Forbes, W. H. Perry. Roy Jones and R. C. Gillis. The company proposed to secure a lease of the beach front, build a pleasure wharf, erect neat cottages and other buildings on the beach and maintain and o])crate boats for fishing and pleasure. The year opened with prospects of two new wharves — which ought to have satisfied the most exacting. After infinite difhculties, bids were called for the outfall sewer and the wharf to carry it ; but when they were submitted, there were so nruiy and strong protests that all were rejected. T. C. Elliott also ai)iilied for a franchise to build a wharf at the foot of Railroad street. This proposition was looked upon favorably ; but the Southern Pacific blocked it by clainu"ng a previfH's franchise to this location, (^n Wednesdav, April 14th, 1898, the contract for the outfall sewer was finally let to Thomas Thompson for the sum of $11,720. the deeds to the right of way having at last been secured. In June Kinney &: Ryan applied for the use of the piles for the outfall sewer for whrrf pur|)oses and were granted the privilege. The same month it was an- nounced that the new pleasure wharf would be built between Railroad avenue and the North Beach bath house and the contract was let for the same. Both of these structures were completed during the summer and added mtich to the beach attractions, as they furnished every convenience f(^r boating and fishing. The Lincoln school building was completed in June and was dedicated by the graduating exercises of the high school class of the vear. In September HISTORiY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 197 Santa Monica entertained three conventions at the same time, the Democratic, which met in a large tent on Ocean avenue ; the Silver Republican, which held forth at the Arcadia, and the People's party, which met in Odd Fellows' hall. This was the year of fusions and a great deal of " fusing " was done during these sessions, with small results, as appeared in November. 1899. January, 1899. was marked by the launching of the Santa Monica Improve- ment Club, an organization which had long been discussed and from which much was hoped. J. J. Davis was elected president, E. B. McComas vice- president, F. H. Taft secretary. Dr. S. P. Lindsey, treasurer. Sub-committees on finance, licenses, streets, pavilion, transportation, health and veterans' asso- ciation were appointed and a vigorous campaign for lower fares ; for higher license for saloons ; to secure the erection of a suitable pavilion for public meet- ings ; and to capture the annual encampment of the veterans' association was begun. But like many other good things in Santa Monica, the Improvement Club seems to have exhausted its energy in getting started and it soon disappears from the scene, having accomplished only one very substantial changie. Largely through its efforts the liquor license was this year raised from $300 to $500. A lively contest between the saloon men and the druggists followed this action. It was claimed that the druggists were regidarly selling liquor without paying any license, and after considerable sparring, a suit was begun against a drug- gist. The druggists, however, pleaded ur.intentional violation of ordinance and the suits were dropped. During this year the electric line on Ocean avenue to Montana was built and the first car was run on December 28th. In October the Southern Pacific reduced its train service to one train a dav. instead of three. As they had the contract for carrving the mails, this aroused great indignation and caused much inconvenience to the business men of the town. Vigorous protests were made and resulted in a mail service over the electric road. In August it was announced that a new electric line was proposed between Santa Monica and Redondo. Mr. Abbot Kinnev was the originator of the scheme and was con- fident that the project would be carried out, thus opening up a section of beach territory that had not yet been utilized and establishing a new and strong- attraction for the tourist as well as a new and rapid transit line. This plan did not materialize at the time, but it has since been carried out in the Playa del Rey and Redondo line. Another ambitious scheme which was ahead of the time was the formation of the San Pedro and Santa Monica Excursion Com- l)any. which put the little steamer, J. C. Elliott, on to make daily trips between the two points, landing at the Kinney and Ryan wharf. Some verv enjoyable trips were thus made, but the venture did not prove profitable and was dropped. Auiong new buildings of this year were an addition to the Bank of Santa 198 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES Monica, the Collins bnildinf^, comer of Utah and Second ; the Tappener block- on Third street, and the new power house of the Santa Monica Electric Company on the beach. This was a substantial improvement costing some $25,000. The gas plant was also built this year, including the largest gas tank in the state, the entire expenditure being over $40,000. Gas was turned into the mains December 14th and was a much appreciated improve- ment. In July, Mr. R. C. Gillis purchased 1,000 feet of beach front, north of the North Beach Bathhouse, put in a walk and erected several well constructed cottages. The Sisters of the Holy Name selected Santa Monica as a site for their convent this year and opened their school on Fourth street during the construc- tion of their handsome building on the corner of Third and Arizona. December 27th saw the destruction by fire of the Casino, which was built by the Santa Monica Improvement Company in 1888 and which had been the summer home of tennis in Southern California for many years and had seen many brilliant social affairs. The fire was evidently the work of an incendiary and caused a heavy loss as the insurance was small. Port Los Angeles. — From the time of the abandonment of the Santa Monica wharf by the Southern Pacific Company, in 1878, until the building of the " Long Wharf " in 1892-3, the people of this city hoped and worked for a new commercial wharf, which they firmly believed was all that was necessary to make their town an important center of commerce. During the later eighties and 1890-91, the agitation for securing a wharf was constant and sometimes became acrimonious. About this time it became certain that the Santa Fe would build into Santa Monica.' It also became evident that the new wharf completed in 1888 at Redondo was seriously encroaching on the business of San Pedro harbor and diverting freight from the Southern Pacific to the Santa Fe road. On Sunday, May 20, i- rail to Santa Monica. Kqually competent engineers deny this proposition. 206 HISTORY OF vSANTA MONICA BAY CITIES As we have before said, a harbor is an improvement whose utility extends indefinitely into the future. It is therefore of the first importance that a site should be selected where the status of the harbor is least likely to be disturbed. It is a well-known fact that the offing at San Pedro, which will be included in the breakwater, has been shoaling- for years, and that it would only be a cjuestion of time when the harbor would lose its usefulness, or else have to be kept open by expensive dredging. Even Col. Mendell admitted this point to the writer. Then why not, if necessary, expend a larger amount for a permanent harbor at Santa Monica?" After the making of this report, the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce sent Gen. Charles Forman as a special delegate to Congress, accompanied by T. E. Gibbon. They were the bearer of numerous petitions and resolutions from various individuals and organizations of Southern California, urging an immediate appropriation for the San Pedro harbor. But it was a " short session " and it was stated that appropriations would not be large, and, in fact, none was made. It was now claimed that the Southern Pacific was exercising undue influence to prevent the appropriation for San Pedro and the slogan of the " free harbor " was taken up. The Los Angeles Times threw itself into the fight with all its vigor and the Chamber of Comiuerce took a decided stand in favor of San Pedro. But the completion of the long wharf and the advantages thus given to Los Angeles merchants led many to begin to look upon the possibility that, after all, Santa Monica might not be so far ofi^ in her claims. A petition signed by eighty-three merchants of Los Angeles representing over ten millions of busi- ness capital was drawn up and the Chamber of Commerce was asked to endorse it, which asked for an appropriation for " the construction of a breakwater and creation of a harbor at Santa Monica, independent of any appropriation which may be needed to maintain in good condition what is known as the inner harbor of San Pedro and Wilmington." A compromise resolution, asking an appropriation for a deep-water harbor at Santa Monica and also to dredge out and improve the inner harbor at San Pedro, was proposed, and a vigorous protest against both these resolutions was made. Mr. C. D. W'illard, in his Free Harbor Contest, says: "The sessions of the board were supposed to be executive, but a reporter of the Express managed to smuggle himself into the room as an assistant clerk and remained there through the whole session. The next day the members of the Chamber became aware, through the publication of the debate, that the board was any- thing but unanimous on the subject of the harbor site and the discussion was taken up in earnest all over the city. Henry T. Hazard, who was at that time mayor of the city, led the debate on the San Pedro side, seconded by Mr. Patter- son and Gen. Forman ; and the principal Santa Monica advocates were Mr. James B. Lankershim and Mr. T^. X. Breed. On three dififerent occasions, when the matter was about to come to a vote, an adiournment was secured. In the course HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 207 •of the long- debate, Santa Monica gained and San Pedro lost. At first it was the Santa Monica men that dared not come to a vote, but in the end the condi- tions were reversed and it was clear that if a decision were reached in the board, it must be against San Pedro." " As a result of this situation, when it became evident that, if the board took action — and it could not well be longer postponed — the result would be a change of front for the Chamber, a ballot of the members of the organization was called for. " The weeks' campaign that followed was the most remarkable that ever occurred in the history of Los Angeles. The Times used every means in its power and the strongest language it could command to enforce the San Pedro side of the contest. The Terminal railway was equally active. The Santa Fe also took sides for San Pedro. April 7th, 1894 the members of the Chamber of Commerce balloted, the result being 328 for San Pedro and 131 for Santa Monica, which, with the influences at work, was a foregone conclusion. " In June the matter was brought up in Congress and after a hearing of several weeks, which attracted wide attention, because it was now made a fight for a ' free harbor ' as against a harbor control led by a ' monopoly,' a motion was passed deferring the decision to permit the members of the Committee of Commerce to visit the two harbors and form an opinion for themselves. " During the winter of 1894-95 the matter of the deep-water harbor was not brought up in Congress. The Chamber of Commerce continued its efforts in behalf of San Pedro, however, and the ' Free Harbor League ' was organized. In February, 1896, Col. H. G. Otis, Mr. W. G. Kerckhoff, Mr. W. C. Patter- son and Mr. W. D. Woolwine. were elected a special delegation to go to Wash- ington and lay the San Pedro case before the River and Harbor Committee of the House. Notwithstanding their able representation, the River and Harbor bill contained, when it was made up, two items : ' San Pedro, $392,000 and Santa Monica $3,098,000.' " The effect of this information upon the San Pedro advocates in Washington and upon the public of Los Angeles, and, indeed all Southern California, was electrifying. The Chamber of Commerce and League, of course, at once took steps to re-aftirm their position. Public mass meetings were held for each side. The city council and the Republican convention passed resolutions for both appropriations. Petitions for and against the proposed " double Harbor " scheme were circulated. Santa Monica people, took an active part in shaping the sentiment in favor of the Santa Monica appropriation and, naturally, were jubilant at the prospect of seeing their long hoped for dream fulfilled beyond the wildest hoDes of even L. T. Fisher. The Santa Monica delegation in Wash- ington was made up of Mr. J. S. Slauson, Col. J. B. Lankershim, Mr. John W. Mitchell and ex-Senator Cornelius Cole. On April 23rd, Robert F. Jones, President of the Santa IMonica Chamber of Commerce, received this telegram 208 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES from Mr. Mitchell. " Coniniittee just voted Santa Monica Harbor one hundred thousand dollars immediately available, continuing- contract system, which will permit contract for two million, eight hundred thousand to complete work. San Pedro inner harbor now being considered. Hard fight and close decision but think can be held in bill." Senator White and the advocates of San Pedro bitterly opposed the passage of this bill and finally, as a compromise, a bill was passed which carried the full appropriation for a deep sea harbor to be located by a commission consisting of an officer of the navy, to be named by the Secretary of the Navy ; an officer of the Coast Survey, named by the Superintendent ; and three civil engineers to be appointed by the president. " They are to make a close personal examination anrl report to the Secretary of War, whereupon he is to let the contract." This last " commission " was the result of one of the strongest contests ever made over a provision for appropriation in congress. Senators White and Perkins, Berry and Vest spoke on the one side, while Senator Frye made the speech for the Santa Monica harbor. In October the new board was announced ; Rear Admiral John G. Walker, from the Navy; Augustus F. Rodgers, of the coast survey; Wm. H. Burr, George S. Morrison and Richard P. Morgan, appointed by President Cleveland. In December the members of this board arrived and after looking over the ground, conducted a most exhaustive examination at the Chamber of Commerce rooms in Los Angeles. This was felt to be the last chance and both sides gathered all their evidence and put forth all their efi^orts. Santa Monica harbor was ably represented by Wm. H. Hood, E. L. Corthell, A. M. Jamison, J. S. Slauson, Cornelius Cole. John Cross, Captains Jackson, Pillsbury and Salmond. The San Pedro case was under the management of Robert Moore and H. Haw- good. The hearing lasted for seven days. The report was filed March ist, 1897 and was a large volume, containing many maps, charts, and much matter not belonging strictly to the question in hand. The decision was in favor of San Pedro, largely because of the work already done there and the inadvisability of the government maintaining two separate harbors. They said: "It is the judgment of this Board that the best public policy, both in the interest of economy and for the attainment of a deep-water harbor for commerce and refuge demands the concentration of expenditure at one point, with the corresponding cumulative excellence of results, rather than a dispersion and weakening of results by a divided expenditure at the two loca- tions. This conclusion gains considerable force through the fact that the selec- tion of the San Pedro site will, for the reasons stated, undoubtedly involve materially less ultimate total expenditure than is certain to be incurred by the inevitable construction and maintenance of the two harbors, if Port Los Angeles were to be selected. The preponderance of physical advantages, therefore, which leads to the selection of the San Pedro site, is in line with the best re- HISTORY (3F SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 209 quirements of the best public policy as to the matter entrusted to the decision of this Board." This report was signed by four members of the Board. Mr. Morgan submitted a minority report in favor of Port Los Angeles. This decision was regarded as final and Santa Monica citizens accepted it as such. However, it was not until April 6th, 1899, that the contract was awarded and the actual work on the harbor began. The event was celebrated by a " Jubilee " which had lost somewhat of spontaneity by its long delay. Since that time work has gone on at San Pedro, but the deep-water harbor is yet in the future. 14 First Common Council oi« holders' Charter. 1906 .^ THE City of Santa Monica Under the Free- CHAPTER V. Expansion. 1900-1908. THE year 1900 was an epoch-making one for Santa Monica since it brought with it many events which were far-reaching in their influence and which were important factors in the era of unprecedented prosperity and growth which has marked the first years of the new century. A radical change in the history of the town was brought about by the passage of the ordinance which made it a " no-saloon " town. Santa Monica had always been a "wide-open" town and while its citizens were just as respectable and law-abiding as those of any other beach town, the place had undoubtedly always been the favorite resort of the sporting element of Los Angeles. The proximity of the Soldier's Home had also made it the scene of the " old boy's " license, when pension money was plenty. Every efifort was made to suppress the dis- orderly element and as good order was maintained here, as a rule, as elsewhere ; yet the town had long borne the reputation of being a " tough " place. With the opening of 1900 a determined efifort was made to secure a better order of things. One of the leaders in this attempt, was the late Federick H. Rindge, a man of great wealth, sincere religious zeal and large philanthropy. He devoted his time, energy and money to this fight for the good standing of Santa Monica, which was then his home city. The campaign opened with an all day Sunday service devoted to temperance and local option. As a result of the meetings of this day a committee of citizens, consisting of J. F. Kiggens, E. J. Vawter, J. H. Clark, D. J. Twichell, J. S. Knesel, M. H. Kimball, W. I. Hull, Dr. N. H. Hamilton, C. I. D. Moore, J. O. Jennings, Dr. C. T. Wilson, T. H. James, H. P. Wilber, D. G. Holt, Dr. Glen McWilliams and J. F. Dunham, with F. H. Rindge, as chairman, was appointed to confer with the Board of Trustees and secure the passage of an ordinance submitting the question of saloons or no saloons to the people at the coming election. As a consequence of the action of these gentlemen, the requisite ordinance was passed. A vigorous, well organized, educational anti-saloon crusade followed. A series of public meetings was held on both the North and the South sides at which such speakers as Bishop Montgomery, Dr. Chapman. Dr. Hugh Walker, J. S. Slauson, F. H. Rindge, the pastors of the city churches, particularly Dr. Glen McWilliams of the Christian church and Dr. Wilson of the Methodist church ; and such business men as Rov Jones, W. S. and E. J. Vawter, D. G. 212 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES Holt, and others took part. The churches of all sects ; the anti-saloon forces of the county; the Womens Christian Temperance Union, the Good Templars, and a large number of the property owners and business men of the town, worked together heartily to secure the passage of the " no-saloon " ordinance. The Santa Monica Outlook took a vigorous share in the efifort and many who looked at the proposition simply from a business standpoint ranged themselves on the anti-saloon side. Naturally the saloon element, and a good many citizens who honestly be- lieved that the closing of the saloons would result in a financial loss to the town, put up a strong fight. Money was spent freely on both sides and the feeling was very strong; F. H. Rindge, in a public meeting promised to indemnify the town for the loss sustained by refusing licenses to saloons, and after the elec- tion, April 9th, which resulted in a vote of 305 to 218, a majority of 87 votes for " no license," he presented his check for $2,500 to the Board of Trustees. The trustees chosen at the election, J. C. Morgan, C. H. Sammis and T. H. Dudley had pledged themselves prior to election to carry out the expressed wishes of the citizens. It had been agreed that three restaurant licenses, per- miting the sale of liquors with bona fide meals, costing 25 cents, exclusive of liquors ; and one wholesale liquor license, under certain restrictions, should be granted. The ordinance passed by the new board was not exactly what the anti-saloon people had expected, as it permitted the sale of liquors at all hours and allowed the wholesale house to sell in original packages at its place of busi- ness, instead of simply delivering orders. It was to be expected that there would be violations of the regulations under this ordinance, which was certainly a great step in advance, although not all that had been hoped for by the movers in the " no license " fight. On August 6th, E. Gamberi, of the Pacific Gardens was arrested for selling liquors without meals and was convicted and fined $175.00, while his license was revoked. Rudolph Hopf was also arrested for violation of the ordinance, but prior to his trial he became insolvent and was acquitted. This marked the downfall of the old firm of Eckert and Hopf, which had been in business in Santa Monica since the seventies. In 1901 the Board of Trustees modified the restaurant license so that it merely required " something to eat," with the liquor. This, of course, led to the service of the timeworn cracker and, it is claimed, that the cracker box alone was considered sufficient in many cases. In 1902 the wholesale license was raised to $1,200 and in 1903 the wholesale license was raised to $3,000, this amount having been offered by Alexander Gunn. In the spring of 1903 the temperance people were so aroused b\- the changes made, which practically restored saloons to the town, that they made a strong campaign before the annual election to secure candidates for trustees who would support the law and take steps to carry out the provisions of the original ordin- HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 213 ance — which had been adopted to carry out the wish of the voters. Dr. Chap- man again took a vigorous, and as many thought, a not very wise, part in the campaign, working for the election of men who had pledged themselves to vote against issuing new Hcenses and removals of restrictions. After the city election, another special election to again submit the question of prohibition, by adopting what was known as the Long Beach ordinance, was called for. A brief cam- paign was made by Dr. Chapman and the question was submitted on June loth, resulting in a vote of 831 ; 287 for, 544 against. This result, so different from the previous one when this question was voted upon, was brought about by many causes ; chiefly the dissension of the temperance forces and the bitterness and, in the eyes of many, the unfairness of the methods adopted by the prohibition workers. As a consequence of this result, the Board of Trustees passed an ordinance, granting restaurant licenses, with no restriction as to meals ; buffet licenses, which were practically saloon licenses ; and the wholesale license. While there arc no open saloons in Santa jMonica, and the business is much restricted as compared with the old days when there were twelve or fourteen saloons running " wide open," there is ample opportunity for those who wish it to procure liquor and the town derives a considerable income from its various liquor licenses. Another important question which came up for discussion and action this year was that of the separation of the portion of the town lying south of Rail- road street from the "North side," or, as the Outlook puts it, the "legal separa- tion of Miss South Side from Mr. North Side, on the ground of failure to pro- vide." The citizens of the southern end of town felt that they had not received due consideration from the town trustees and that they had no representative on the board. There had long been a rivalry in growth, street improvements and attractions. A committee consisting of Col. A. B. Hotchkiss, a long-time resi- dent of the South Side, Joseph fjontty and Captain Malim, were active in urging this action, stating that the new town would remain a town, governed by the Board of Supervisors, and would save the expenses of a city government while improving her own streets and providing her own water, and light supply. The active discussion of plans for building a city hall had a bearing on the question, no doubt, and many other matters were connected with it. A petition with suffi- cient signatures was presented and the question was submitted to a vote of the people at the election of November 13th. A vigorous campaign was made against the division by the North Side and many citizens of the South Side also, and the election showed a very decided majority, the vote being 400 to 59, against the legal partition of the town. One of the movers in this attempt at disruption. Captain George D. i\Ialim, frankly announced in the Outlook, after stating that others who had promised aid had deserted the cause, " I have been at a loss of both time and money, fought alone and single-handed against nearly the whole town and got licked, (^,i*.( ). 11. HI'TTCJX. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 215 but have one great satisfaction, that is, that I believe I have stirred people up to argue questions, consider propositions, and stand up for their rights, which they would not have done had it not been for the work done by myself." It was generally agreed that the discussion of the question had brought about a better feeling between the two factions and would result in a clearer understanding of the common interests of the whole city. Another topic which engaged a good deal of attention and gave rise to a great variety of opinions, was that of providing a suitable city hall. It was generally believed, also, that the town could not prosper without having some sort of public auditorium for large meetings. It was proposed to combine a city hall and auditorium building. This met with opposition and an effort was made to secure an auditorium as a private business venture. Bonds for the city hall were proposed ; but at last it became evident that the city affairs could be handled more effectively under a new form of government and the subject of adopting a city charter and becoming a city of the fifth class was taken up. Public meetings to discuss the advisability of this step and the results following- it were held and a committee consisting of Frederick H. Rindge, George H. Hutton, A. W. McPherson, W. S. Vawter and Fred H. Taft was appointed to formulate plans for re-organization. It was agreed that the town should be divided into five wards, as equally proportioned as to voters as possible, each to extend from the ocean back to the east line of the town and the committee also stood pledged to a general city convention to nominate officers, irrespective of party lines. But when the matter came to the test of the polls, January i6th, 1 901, it was found that the interest was small compared with its importance. 353 votes being cast, of which 171 were for and 178 against, the re-organization plan being lost by seven votes. Among the improvements of the year was the putting on of the mail car on the electric line which made three trips a day, taking" in Colegrove, Sherman. Sawtelle and Soldiers' Home, Santa Monica and Ocean Park and which also carried express matter. The Hollywood line was opened for service in February thus giving Santa Monica three routes to Los Angeles and still further increas- ing her transportation facilities. The Southern Pacific and Santa Fe roads, in a desperate attempt to recover their traffic, issued a ten trip ticket for $1.50, good for one month. But the electric line met this with a ten ride ticket, good until used, and transferable, for $2.00. The railroads gained little but the people who traveled between the city and the beach were decided gainers. The United Electric, Gas and Power Company was incorporated this year and took over the Santa Monica Electric Light and Power plant, the directors being the same, F. H. Rindge, Alfred Steadman, H. A\ Carter, G. I. Cochran and J. J. Davis. This company also secured control of the light and gas company of Redondo, Long Beach, San Pedro, and other towns. '' Sunset "' beach, lying north of the North Beach Bath House, was improved 216 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES with walk, gas, electric light and sewer service and divided into lots to be leased to tenants for five and ten years. The owners were R. C. Gillis and E. P. Clark and after these improvements were carried out a number of commodious and attractive cottages was built on the tract. The death of " Bob " Eckert, April 27th, 1900, removed one of the best known characters of Santa Monica, or indeed, of Southern California. Mr. Eckert was born in the Fatherland. He came to Los Angeles in 1872 and soon acquired a reputation there as a caterer, a politicion and a teacher of gymnastics in the Turn Verein. His connection with the Turners made him known among the Germans of Southern California, and his genial, kindly nature won him many lasting friendships, not only among his own people, but with all with whom he came in contact. He opened a restaurant in Santa Monica in the later seventies and his fish dinners soon gained renown. For many }ears a feed at Eckert and Hapf's Pavilion was the best treat one good fellow could offer another. He catered to many distinguished guests and for many notable ban- quets, and was acknowledged as a past master in the art of serving a dinner. With his death and the canceling of saloon licenses, the Eckert and Hopf Pavilion which had been known from Alaska to Mexico, was closed. 1901. The more progressive citizens of Santa Monica were not satisfied to allow the matter of re-organizing the city government to drop. They felt that the best interests of the city demanded that the town be divided into wards which would allow each district to select its own representative in the council. The new charter would also permit the organization of a board of education which could exercise powers not vested in the trustees of a district. A new petition for an election was prepared and presented to the Board of Trustees February 4th. with a guarantee from the signers that the expenses of the election would be met by private subscription. The trustees, after due deliberation and ex- amination into the legal aspects of the case, refused to grant the petition. The movers for a new charter were not discouraged, however. They continued the agitation and in April organized a Good Government League, to look to muni- cipal matters, with F. H. Rindge, president; N. H. Hamilton, ist vice-president; W. S. Vawter, 2nd vice-president ; Fred H. Taft, 3d vice-president ; C. I. D. Moore, secretary and J. C. vSteele, treasurer. Mr. Rindge, who despite his many interests spared neither time nor energy in forwarding any movement for the public good, took an active part in this organization, which kept a sharp eyd upon the restaurant liquor licenses, that had been granted, as well as carrying on an educational campaign among the citizens on the subject of public improve- ments. A petition asking for a re-submission of the question of saloons or no saloons was received by the trustees in March ; but was not acted upon and although, there was a good deal of discussion of the subject, the trustees seemed HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 217 to feel that the restaurant Hceiise permitting the sale of liquor with meals — which had rapidly degenerated to empty cracker boxes, was the most satisfactory arrangement to be made. The matter of voting bonds for a city hall continued to be discussed. There was also great need of a new bridge on Ocean Avenue in place of Bridge No. i, as it was known. This had become imperative as this street was the main thoroughfare between the North and South ends of town. Storm drains were also greatly needed, and after one or two mass meetings, in which matters were fully discussed and it was shown that the large tax payers of the city were all -^(*W5^" 1ili I. 11 'ft "fjgl-*?*K. ■iTY ua:.l, .saxta muxica. in favor of these improvements, an election was called for November 19th to vote on the question of issuing bonds in the sum of $25,000 for Bridge No. i ; $10,000 for Bridge No. 2; $29,000 for storm drains, and $35,000 for City Hall and Jail. At this election the bonds for town hall and bridge No. i were carried, the others defeated. The Board of Trustees at once called for bids for a site for the public building and was flooded with offers. They spent some very strenuous hours before finally determining on the lots at the corner of Oregon and Fourth. The South Side felt that since it must pay taxes for this improvement, it should at least be as near them as possible. The question of town division was still a live one. The marvelous growth made during the year 1901 at Ocean Park was putting that division of Santa Monica in the front rank in importance and the old rivalrv between the two sections was enhanced in manv minds bv the N. H. HAMILTON, M. D. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 219 o-rowing wealth and many impovements of the " sand hills." The South Side had voted almost solidly against all the improvements, because of the desire to have its own town organization. A strong effort was made to secure the city hall for the corner of Third and Utah street, where a site was offered by Roy Jones for $12,000. The business men of the place generally endorsed this site and offered to guarantee that it should cost the city but $7,000. The matter was hotly contested by the citizens and the trustees seemed to be hopelessly divided in opinion — or interests. In February 1902 Roy Jones withdrew his offer of sites and thus removed the cor- ner at Third and Utah from consideration. Still the board could come to no decision and a straw vote was called for to decide what site would best please the voters. Condemnation proceedings to secure the property at Third and Utah were talked of and the fight waxed hotter than ever. A majority of 68 out of 441 votes cast was for Lots V. W. and X., of Block 196, being the south- east corner of Third and Utah, at the price of $6,500. At the next meeting of the Board of Trustees, it was reported that the chosen site could not be secured at any price, except by condemnation proceedings, which meant long and expen- sive litigation, therefore the Board, by a vote of three to two, selected the site at Fourth and Oregon, offered by J. C. Crosier for $4,800. Although there was much dissatisfaction over the result, it was final and steps were at once taken to proceed with the building, the bonds having already been sold to the Oakland Bank of Savings at a premium of $3,000. Among the more important improvements of the year on the North Side was the building of the long looked for Auditorium, in connection with the North Beach Bath house. The cost was about $7,000 and it gave a large room for public meetings. It was opened bv an entertainment given b}' the newly organized Y. M. C. A. and was then taken possession of by a \"audeville troop which made a brilliant failure and soon vanished. The people of Santa iNIonica seem always to have been able to provide their own entertainments and an out- side attraction must be very unusual indeed to draw any large number of Santa Monicans from their own homes and amusements. The Academy of the Holy Names, established by the " Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Marv," was completed and dedicated February 22nd. It was a handsome two and a half story building, beautifully finished and furnished and was dedicated with elaborate ceremonies, including a pu1)lic parade and testimonials from the city officials and citizens generally of Santa Monica. At South Santa Monica, or Ocean Park, the Los x\ngeles Times estimates that the improvements for the year amounted to $232,555, including the new power house of the electric line, costing $25,000; the Holborow Hotel. $10,000, the Casino, $10,000, waterworks and other improvements of Kinney & Dudley. $18,500 and 207 other building. Ainong the notable events of this vear was the visit of President McKinley 220 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES to the Soldier's Home, at which time the citizens of Santa Monica aided in the reception wliich was there given him. And on September 20th, 1901 the people of this city held Memorial services in honor of the president whom they had so warmly welcomed. All business was suspended and the mourning was general. One of the incidents of this occasion was the services of the newly formed Spanish Society, which had arranged for an elaborate celebration on September 1 6th, the Mexican Fourth of July, but changed their program to a Memorial service, after which they burned the murderer in effigy. 1902. The history of 1902 w^as largely municipal. As has been seen, the difficult task of settling on a site for the city hall was carried over into this year. But before it was decided the still more important matter of re-organization came up. The new election was called for January 28th. In the meantime, the Board of Trustees ordered a census of the town to be taken. The call for re-organiza- tion of the city had been based upon the United States census of 1890, which gave Santa Monica a population of 3057. Cities must have a population of 3,000, at least, in order to be raised to the rank of fifth class. Opponents of the change had insisted that the town did not now have the requisite three thousand and the census of the Board resulted in but 2,717 names. The promotors of the movement, however, asserted that this census did not count, as by law, the population would be taken from the United States census. At the same time the Good Government League claimed that the census taken by the Board was defective and set men to work to re-take the census. After a long and very thorough canvas, in which, we are certain every nose was counted, the result was reported as 3,260. The election resulted in a decided victory for the Good Government League and the progressive citizens generally, the vote standing 231 for and 118 against, giving a majority of 118 as against the majority of seven tlie other way at the previous election. But votes do not settle the question voted upon in Santa Monica. At the next regular meeting of the Board of Trustees when it was in order to officially canvas the vote, that long suffering body was served with a writ of injunction, sworn to by H. X. Goetz, enjoining them from canvassing the votes and declaring the election to have been illegal. When the Board had recovered from the shock of this attack, they engaged counsel to defend them in this case and in another action, brought by Attorney Fred H. Taft, demanding that the city fathers count those votes, or show cause why. The courts decided that the election was all right and on February loth. the last act in this long drawn-out drama took place, and the returns of the election were duly declared although the new city government could not, by the terms of the law, go into effect until the year 1903. The voters of Santa Monica certainly had ample opportunit\- to exercise HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 221 their free and sovereign right during the years of 190 1-2. Beside the regular state election in November, 1901 and the municipal election the next spring, live special elections gave them a chance to express their opinions. In view of the important matters under the control of the Board this year, a good deal of interest was taken in the annual town election. Mr. W. S. Vawter was nominated as the representative of the Ocean Park district by an enthusiastic public meet- ing. There were numerous other candidates for the trusteeship and for all the other city offices. The question of a special tax for the repair of the outfall sewer and the wharf at Pier Avenue was also submitted and voted on favorably. Messrs. Vawter and J. C. Steele were elected trustees, J. C. Plemingway, clerk ; E. W. Boehme, treasurer and M. K. Barretto, marshal. In the re-organization of the board, T. H. Dudley was elected president and F. H. Taft was chosen as attorney. One of the first acts of the new board was to raise the wholesale liquor license to $1,200 per year. During the summer of 1902 especial attention was called to the safety of Santa Monica Beach as compared with other beaches. It was shown that very few accidents, due to undertow, had ever occurred on this beach and that every precaution to prevent accidents was taken, a guard being maintained on the beach at all times, life boats being at hand in case of need. The Los Angeles Times stated: "It is safe to say that since this little city was laid out, nearly a million people have bathed in the surf there ; and while there have been a number of fatalities due to suicide, heart failure, and apoplexy or cramp, there has not been one authenticated instance of any person being overcome by a treacherous current or tide, or any person having been lost who was bathing from any public bath house." Among the conventions entertained this year were the Woman's Auxiliary of the Episcopal church and also the Summer Institute of Sunday Schools of the Episcopal diocese ; the annual convention of Christian churches of Southern California, lasted eleven days and brought a large number of visitors to attend its sessions. In October, the grand Lodge of the Good Templars, a state or- ganization, held its annual session here. The " short line " of the Los Angeles-Pacitic was opened in August, thus giving a new and considerably shorter route to Los Angeles. An important land deal of the year was the sale by the Pacific Land Company to the Erkenbrecher syndicate, of a tract of 390 acres of land, lying just east of the then town limits and including 38 acres within the town limits. A portion of this was divided into town lots and the rest was made into five and ten acre tracts. Another very decided improvement was the paving of Oregon and Utah streets which had long been discussed but. as usual, with a variety of opinions. The Columbia building near the corner of Third and Oregon was built by Bishop Montgomery on ground adjoining the Catholic church. This was a three story brick with J. C. HEMINGWAY. HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 223 two large storerooms on the ground floor and a pleasant hall for puhlic purposes upon the second floor. Another matter which the city fathers were called upon to meet this year was the question of allowing the Santa Fe road to abandon its line from Ingle- wood into Santa Monica. The road had petitioned the State Railroad commis- sion to be allowed to do so. on the ground that it was operating the line at a loss. There was considerable opposition to permitting this action on the part of the donors of the right of way, and at the same time a petition from many other citizens of Santa Monica prayed that the abandonment be allowed. It was generally believed that this would result in a competing electric line coming into Santa Monica, and rumors that the Traction Company were looking this way were frequent during the summer. In August Abbot Kinney made applica- tion for a franchise for a steam or electric line through the town to be operated by the Redondo and Santa Monica Beach line, of which he was the chief in- corporator. After some investigation this franchise was refused. In July it was announced that the right of way had been secured for a line direct from the city to the Ocean Park district, through La Ballona and Palms. The promoters were a compan}- of whom Frederick H. Rindge was the chief. In September the Traction Company made an ofifer of $3,500 for a franchise in Santa Monica. The Board of Trustees, being hard up for cash as usual, were disposed to look favorably upon this proposition ; but it was recalled that Mr. Hook had offered $5,000 for a similar privilege in Long Beach and it was also pointed out by interested citizens that, according to law, any franchise must be sold to the highest bidder. Lawyers differed as to this point and the dis- cussion waxed warm. A franchise was drawn up, granting the company all that was asked, for a consideration of $2500 and an electric current sufficient to supply 12 arc lights of 2000 candle power. While the discussion was going on, Captain John Cross, of the Terminal road appeared and offered $5,000 for a franchise; but the Board of Trustees passed the Hook franchise without con- sidering this offer and despite strong opposition on the part of many citizens. A day or two later John C. Morgan, one of the trustees, and a man who was always ready to fight for his convictions, brought suit against the Board of Trustees to restrain them from making the proposed " Hook " franchise a law\ Meanwhile the first payment was made on the franchise and the Traction road began making preparations for entering Santa Monica. The Los Angeles- Pacific also began to move, removing the poles which had long been a bone of contention, on Oregon street ; double tracking and otherwise improving their service — in anticipation of competition. In February, 1903, Col. A. B. Hotch- kiss took steps to test the validity of the Hook franchise, since it was granted without competitive bids. When it appeared that the Traction Company had secured their right of way through Santa Monica and Ocean Park, the Los Angeles-Pacific railwav, alarmed for its supremacy, also began suits to contest 224 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES the right of way. and in retaHation, the Los Angeles, Ocean Park and Santa Monica Company, which had been incorporated to handle the Santa Monica end of the Traction Company, began suit to condemn certain tracts in Ocean Park, needed for the Traction right of way. The officers of this company were W. S. Hook, Abbot Kinney, T. J. Hook, C. A. Sumner and E. E. Milliken, and it was generally known as " Abbot Kinney's Company." The Hook franchise was sustained by the attorney-general and the contest between the two trolley line companies became a bitter one. The annual election of city officials was approaching and the attitude of the trustees toward the railroad question became the vital question. The Herald announces : "The railroad election battle is on and that it promises to be hotly contested is evi- denced by the fact that each of the rival companies has established boarding camps within the city limits and is registering every available man in their em- ploy. Three registrars have been working for the last thirty days and on March 4th the citv registration shows an advance of 343 votes over the registration of last November. Since March 4th fifty additional names have been added and before the registration closes it is conservatively estimated that over 400 increase will be shown." The campaign that followed was one of the most strenuous ever known in Santa Monica. George D. Snyder, H. X. Goetz, A. F. Johnstone and J. C. Morgan were candidates for the trusteeship, and were pledged " not to put any impediments in the way of the Traction Company's building and operating a line in Santa Monica, according to the terms of the franchise recently granted them." W. S. A'aw^ter, T. H. Dudley and J- C. Steele were candidates for re- election. The saloon question was again involved and much type was used by the press and much talk was poured out on the streets and in public meetings over the situation. Messrs. Dudley, Vawter, Goetz, Johnstone and Steele were elected, and as at least three of them were pledged to the anti-saloon party, there was rejoicing in the temperance ranks. It soon developed that the railroad situation had already been taken out of the hands of the city officials, by the sale of the Traction road and its interests to Clark and Harriman, who having no use for a competing line, were not expected to push the road to Santa Monica. Abbot Kinney, however, still retained the franchises granted to the Ocean Park, Santa Alonica and Los Angeles road and made an attempt, which w'as promptly put a stop to by the city trustees, to occupy them. But in 1904 he sold his rail- road interests to the Los Angeles Pacific road, thus putting an end to the hope, still maintained by Santa INIonica, of a competing line. 1903. The year 1903 was marked by an unprecedented growth. With the new city government and the occupation of the beautiful new city building, came an expansion in everv direction that approached dangerouslv near to the fated HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 225 word " boom." The new city hall, a substantial structure whose simple lines and graceful curves are dignified and beautiful, was complete in its fitness and space for the needs of the city .affairs and was regarded by all — those who had opposed the bonds, the plans and the location, as well as those who had worked hard to settle all difficulties and secure the building — with pride. On the evening of its dedication, March 19th, 1903. the people of Santa Monica and many visitors from I.os Angeles inspected the building with approval and listened to the exercises with pleasure. A program was rendered and Mr. W. I. Hull gave a resume of the history of the building, in which he humorously re- called the various agitations which had led up to this happy finale. He closed by hoping that " those who take pos- session of it next month will keep it clean ■ — clean inside and out. Let every record made here be as white as the paper on which it is written. Let those who are elected to office fulfill their duty as a public trust and not as a private snap. Municipal government is the weak spot in our American system. Selfish and cor- porate interests seek to control elec- tions that they may enrich themselves at the expense of the people. If we are careful that such conditions do not occur in Santa Monica, we shall the more quickly realize the grand destiny that awaits us — the Queen Seaside City of Southern California." Beside the municipal offices, the public library was provided with pleasant quarters. which were greatly appreciated by the public. The city hall was built by H. X. Goetz, the contractor, and with its site, cost about $38,000. The city government under the new form required an election of new city officials throughout. The railroad and saloon questions had already become important factors in this municipal election. The many atifairs of importance which the new board of trustees would be required to handle made their selection more than ever of the deepest importance to the town. Yet it must be feared that a large number of the voters were swayed by self-interest and personal feeling, rather than bv the " greatest good to the greatest number." The ticket chosen was as follows : Trustees, T. H. Dudley, H. X. Goetz, A. F. Johnston, J. C. Steele and \\'. S. A'awter ; school board. \V. E. Devore, J. H. Hassinger, H. X. GOETZ. 15 226 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES Dr. J. S. Hunt, J. H. Jackson and S. F. Carpenter ; clerk, J. C. Hemingway, re-elected ; assessor, C. S. Dales ; treasurer, Frank W. A'^ogel ; recorder, A. M. Guiding-er ; marshal, M. K. Barretto, who had served in the same office since 1898; for city attorney, there was a sharp contest between F. II. Taft. the incum- bent, and Benjamin S. Hunter, who it was claimed was a non-resident of the city. Mr. Taft was elected, but the position was contested in the courts bv Mr. Hunter, without avail. With the organization of the new board of trustees on April 20th, the history of Santa Monica as a city of the fifth class began. T. H. Dudley was chosen president of the board ; the salaries to be paid city officials were, after some discussion, fixed: City clerk, $1020.00 per annum; attorney, $600.00; assessor, $520.00; marshal, $1200.00; treasurer. $400.00; recorder, $300.00; chief of fire department, $120.00 per annum. The disastrous anti-saloon campaign which followed the inauguration of the new government has already been' described. In view of the talk of incor- porating the section south of Santa Monica into a town, a petition was prepared bv some of the property owners in the strip of territory betw-een Marine avenue, the southern line of the citv limits, and Rose avenue, asking that this territory be annexed to the city. At the same time a largely signed petition from citizens of Santa Monica making the same request was presented. Acting upon these a special election was called for December 14th, which resulted in a vote of 30 in the proposed territory — ig against annexation. This result had been' antici- pated as a strong fight had been made by the " incorporationists " against the measure. 1904. The rapid growth of the town had made the old water system entirely inadequate to the demands upon it, particularly in the case of fire, and for a year or two there had been more or less talk of municipal ownership of the l)lant. The dissatisfaction with the conditions was so general that February 5th a mass meeting was called to discuss the situation and the possibilities of the city acquiring a water system of its own. At this meetings a communication from Mr. Rindge, president of the Artesian Water Company, then supplying the city water, was read, in which he stated that his company would guarantee the city an adecjuate supply and would at once enlarge their facilities for supplying water. After considerable discussion it was decided to suspend further action by the citizens until it was seen whether the water company fulfilled its promises. During the next two years the Artesian Company laid a 16-inch main down Nevada street and distributed a large amount of new pipe, replacing the old system and extending it to new districts. Nevertheless, it was still felt that the water supply was not equal to the demands of the rapidlj^ growing city and the board of trade appointed a committee, who after a thorough examination into the matter, reported favorably u])on the proposition to bond the city for a HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 227 sum sufficient to secure its own water system. The city engineer prepared a careful estimate of the cost and reported that he thought a complete plant could be provided for $240,250. At the request of the requisite number of voters, the council ordered an election to vote upon the proposition of bonding the city for $250,000. But many citizens felt that this was moving too rapidly, as the city was already heavily bonded and was now considering the adoption of a new charter, consequently the date of this election, January i6th, 1906, was recalled and the matter permitted to drop for the time being. The feeling is still strong that Santa Monica must soon have a more adequate supply of water, owned by the municipality ; but the building of school houses and the disposition of sewage must first be completed. After the incorporation of the town of Ocean Park, including the settled territory south of the Santa Monica city limits, there was still much talk of town division. Many of the people residing in the section which had first been known as " Ocean Park ", felt that they had built up that portion of the " sand hills " into a prosperous business and residence district with very little aid from the " old town " of Santa Monica. The rapid growth of the last two or three vears had brought in a new element who knew little of the past history of the town and did not realize that the question of town division had already been thoroughly canvassed and, it was hoped, settled by the decisive vote of Novem- ber 13th, 190T. Ocean Park had already secured a portion of the Santa Monica school district and it was now proposed to divide the city at Front street. It was the common belief that this section, if cut off from Santa Monica, would join the new Ocean Park municipality, although there were those who talked of a third corporation which should go it alone. Some of the older residents of the territory, who had already paid taxes for street improvements, schools, city hall, and sewers in Santa Monica, did not care to repeat the payments for the same purposes in the new town. The new corporation of Ocean Park was already voting bonds with a free hand ; there were dissensions among business interests — the causes were various but the result was — death to the division proposition. The petition was circulated but was never presented and the election did not take place. The Outlook of January 21st, 1905, pays its tribute to the division question thus : " P^oor little thing dead. The last sad rites performed over fatherless and motherless babe. There is crepe on the door of a suite of upstairs rooms on Pier avenue. The fight to divide Santa Monica is ended. Tlic ' executive com- mittee * for the division of Santa Monica has passed in its checks. The last meeting of this august bodv was held on Wednesday, when it was tlecided that the idea of dividing this citv was a forlorn hope and the committee adjourned ■ sine die.' While the meeting was secret, it is learned that the executive com- mittee i^ositively decided to abandon the project." And from this (kuc a r. ore s;)lid f:n'h in " greater S uit 1 Monica " has 228 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES grown up ill both sections of the town and it is only a matter of a few years before the memory of " north " and " south " feuds will have faded and Santa Monica will present an undivided front to the world. This vear was marked by the breaking- up of laroe tracts and the opening to settlement of many fine pieces of land hitherto unoccupied. In April it was announced that the Jones and Baker lands, including the San Vicente rancho, Boca y Santa Monica and Santa Monica rancho, over 30,000 acres in all. had been transferred to a consolidated company formed of the Artesian Water Com- pany, the Santa Monica and Sawtelle Water Companies, Frederick H. Rindge, Gen. M. H. Sherman, E. P. Clark, G. I. Cochran, R. C. Gillis and others. The purpose of the new water company was to supply water to the Ballona country, between Western avenue in Los Angeles and the sea coast, and to supply domestic water to Santa Monica and the entire coast southward to Playa del Rey. It was stated that the lands coming into possession of the new company would be subdivided and put upon the market at once and soon afterward a sale of 1000 acres of the San Vicente rancho was made to R. C. Gillis. This tract extended from Fourteenth street to Sawtelle between Oregon avenue and the Southern Pacific right of way, and was at once cut up into lots of from two to forty acres and ofifered for sale. The Santa IMonica Land and Water Company also sub- divided 450 acres between the Soldiers' Home lands and Twenty-sixth street. A number of other tracts and additions were put on the market this year also, among them the Irwin Heights tract east of the city, which was inxproved by Irwin and Towner ; the Artesian tract continued to attract buyers and the Oregon avenue tract between Thirteenth and Sixteenth streets Avas opened, streets paved and many lots sold and houses built during the vear. Six new houses, costing about $15,000, were put up in Washington Place. This portion of the town, east of Tenth street and north of Oregon, became, indeed, a new city within a very short period. The land east and north of the city limits had also become desirable residence property and many homes had been established on " villa " lots, or small ranches. The talk of annexation of this district grew and was brought to a head finally l)y the attempt on the part of Ocean Park to secure a division of the town of Santa Monica at Front street, and by the neces- sity of supplying school accommodations for the many new residents. It was estimated that during the year from April, 1904, to April, 1905, two hundred building permits were issued for the city of Santa Monica, the expendi- ture reaching $300,000. During the same period, four miles of streets were graded and several miles oiled ; 260,000 square feet of cement walk were laid, 40,000 lineal feet of concrete curbing were put in, 30,000 square feet of cross- walks, 12,000 feet of sewer pipe laid, 22,000 feet of gutter and 40,000 square feet of paving put down. This was done by the city and it is probable that the work done by private contract in the various new subdivisions almost equaled this record. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 229 1905. This is the banner year in the existence of the Santa Monica bay cities. It was a year of wonderful growth and unprecedented development in every direction. The " old " town of Santa Monica passed forever from the ranks of " country " towns and became a city in fact as well as in form during" this year. The southern part of the town, commonly known as " Ocean Park ", which was already an important business center as well as a popular summer resort, with the completion of the bath house and the Decatur Hotel, the building of the Masonic block and many other business blocks on Pier avenue, ]\Iarine street and the ocean front began to put on a metropolitan aspect ; while the creation of Venice — the " Dream City " of Abbot Kinney's fancy, made the new town of Ocean Park the center of attraction for the entire state. Another remarkable feature was the continued opening up of subdivisions which found rapid sale as suburban homes. Much of the San Vicente and Ballona ranches which had been barley fields, or, later, bean patches, was now- platted, graded and improved to be sold as lots or in small tracts. Westgate and Westgate Acres, Irwin Heights, Towner Terrace, the Artesian tract, Serra Vista, Palisades, Brentwood Park and Green Acres, to the north and east of Santa Monica ; Ocean Park Heights, East Ocean Park, \>nice Park tract, Vine- land, Clarkdale and many other subdivisions between Ocean Park and Los Angeles were put on the market. Most of these subdivisions were on or near the line of the trolley cars. In the case of Westgate, the promotors, in con- junction with the Los Angeles and Pacific, built a branch line from Sawtelle through the tract and along the edge of Santa Monica canon and Ocean avenue to connect with the Montana-avenue branch, thus giving the public the most picturesque trolley ride to be found in Los Angeles county. This line was com- pleted and opened for use August 9th, 1906. This company also constructed San Vicente boulevard from the Soldiers' Home to the city limits of Santa Monica, a distance of several miles, one of the finest stretches of roadway in the country. All of these tracts along the base of the Santa Monica sierras command magnificent views of ocean, mountains and valleys. They are improved with graded and oiled streets, cement walks, parks, trees, shrubbery and ofifer every modern conveniences — water, electricity, car service, as well as the unequaled location, the air, the space, the quiet and seclusion of country life. Building restrictions were placed upon all these tracts so that only desirable homes might be built and the rapidity with which magnificent country places, as well as artistic bungalow and cottage homes have sprung up proves that there was a demand for just such a residence section. The amount of money spent in im- proving these lands and putting them on the market would probably reach a half-million dollars and the expenditure in l^uildings and improvements by purchasers would perhaps reach the same figure. R. R. TANNER. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 231 In the spring of 1905 it was announced that Frederick H. Rindge would build a wagon road through the Malibu ranch and there was a general feeling of satisfaction that at last communication north along the coast would be opened up. But it soon developed that this wagon road was not for the public, and rumors that it was to be a railroad or a trolley line were rife before the death of Mr. Rindge in August. In October the Outlook rejoices greatly in the fact that the " Hueneme, Malibu & Port Los Angeles " electric line will be a great acquisition to Santa Monica. Mr. H. W. Lemcke of Santa Monica was ap- pointed general manager, and for some months the papers were kept busy as- serting and denying facts about this new road which was — and remains — an enigma to. the public. The new passenger depot of the Los Angeles-Pacific located in Linda Vista park was a substantial improvement which was greatly appreciated. Many improvements in the electric line service were made during the year, not the least of which was the completion of the Playa del Rey-Redondo line and the establishment of a five-cent fare between Santa Monica and Playa del Rey. One of the most important real estate transactions of the year was the formation of a syndicate by F. E. Bundy which was made up largely of Ocean Park capitalists, including E. S. Tomblin, R. W. Armstrong, A. E. Robinson, H. L. Miller & Co., Robert F. Jones, A. W. TNlcPherson, E. A. Wilson, Dana Burks, J. W. Tomblin, Smith Realty Co., I. E. Warfield & Co., and F. E. Bundy. This later took the name of the " United Land & Water Company " and marked a community of interests between the two factions of the Santa Monica bay region. This company purchased a tract of land south of the Oregon-avenue line between TWenty-sixth street and Sawtelle. They planned to make this a model village site and spent a large sum in improvements. The tract was put on the market as the " Serra Vista " and many sales were made. It became a part of the city when the new territory was taken in and is a valuable addition to the city's wealth. The Irwin Heights tract continued to settle up and many improvements were made in this vicinity. A large sum was expended by the Irwin Heights Company in developing water and an excellent system was pro- vided for this district. Another important real estate move was the opening up of the original Palisades tract, lying between Ocean avenue and Seventh street, north of Mon- tana avenue. This was improved by a company composed of H. D. Lombard. R. A. Rowan, W. S. Vawter, T. H. Dudley, W. T. Gillis and H. W. Keller. They spent $100,000 in improvements, grading and oiling streets, sewering, cement sidewalks and in planting trees, etc. Linda Vista park was also im- proved in front of this addition. Later the balance of the land lying between this tract and the Santa Monica cafion and extending north to Seventh street was improved at a very large expense, thus placing this, the most desirable beach property on Santa Monica bay, on the market. The large amount of money expended by private parties in public improvements in the Palisades, 232 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES as well as the hish order of buildings and improvements made by purchasers, added largely to the aggregate expenditures for the year. The Towner Terrace tract King between Eighth and Fourteenth streets, Front and Colorado, was another addition within the new cit\- limits which added to the population and wealth of the place. The building of the White Star pier, now known as Bristol pier, was com- pleted in |ulv and its attractions w^ere added to those of the other points of interest ou the beach. A good band was installed here and a number of " amuse- ments " provided, but there were now so many rival attractions that it was not a paying investment during its first season. A number of new business blocks were added to the business center during the year. The Odd Fel- lows hall, a substantial two-story brick ; the Guidinger block, on Third, north of Oregon ; the Bundy block, a three-story brick ; the Johnston block on Third, be- side two or three new business buildings on Oregon avenue were constructed. The organization of the Santa Monica Investment Company on February 27th was an important stc]) in the development which w^as marking the north side. This company was made up of leading business men and capitalists who proposed to buy. build, sell, lease and otherwise handle real estate. Its stock- holders included J. Euclid Miles, who was made manager of the enterprise; A\\ T. Ciillis. W. E. Sawtelle. T. Horace Dudley, E. H. Sweetser. George Boehme, E. W. Dike, N. R. Folsom, F. Niemann, R. R. Tanner, W. H. Dosing, J. P. Jones, Dr. N. H. Hamilton. Dr. J. S. Hunt, Frederick H. Rindge, B. A. Nebeker. H. X. Goetz, Roy Jones, Robert F. Jones. R. M. Miller, Sherman & Clark, George H. Hutton. The company at once purchased a tract on Fourth street, north of California, wdiicli they improved and built a block of six cottages upon. During the year they built a dozen pretty, modern cottages north of California street, thus providing what had long been needed, modern homes at reasonable rates for newcomers. During the year much property changed hands at a good figure and many handsome residences were erected. The Carnegie library was well under way on Oregon and the property on the corner of Third and Oregon had been purchased and the- handsome three-story lirick block for the Merchants' National Bank had been j^lanned. This new bank was organized in' May with T. H. Dudley president ; W. S. Vawter, vice-president ; George F. Doty, cashier; Carl F. Schader, Louis Blenkenhorn, W. C. Durgin. R. R. Tanner BRENTWOOD. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 233 and William iAIeacl directors. It opened for business in the newly completed Columbia block about August ist. The Pacific Land Company placed on sale a tract of 400 acres lying- between Sawtelle and Twenty-sixth street and the W. T. Gillis Company reported sales during the year of over thirty pieces of property, ranging from a single lot to twenty-two acres and valued at $45,000. The establishment of a large brick and tile manufacturing plant added a solid factor to the resources of Santa Monica. A company was formed by R. F. Jones, W. T. Gillis, J. H. Spires, C. H. Sweet and R. M. Miller. They secured a tract of twenty-two acres of land and began putting up an extensive plant, known as the " Sunset Tile and Brick Companv." This later passed into the hands of the Los Angeles Pressed Brick Companv, one of the most extensive manufacturers of clay products in the state. The clays of Santa Monica had long been known to be superior; but it is now fully demonstrated that they are of the finest grade for the best class of pressed and vitrified brick and that they are also susceptible of being used for a fine grade of pottery, under proper handling. The consolidation of the United Electric, Gas and Power Company with the Edison Company this year put the lighting and heating of Santa Monica upon a more metropolitan basis and marked the end of any local interest in the company. An important industry inaugurated this year was the organization of a stock company, known as the Plant and Floral Company, to carry on a nursery business and deal in plants and cut flowers. Ten acres of land were secured near Oregon and Twenty-first streets, which were later increased to twenty acres, so successful was the enterprise, now known as the Golden State Plant Co. Another new industry, which has brought much wealth into the community was the culture of the Lima bean. It had been supposed until this year that Ventura county was the banner bean county and need fear no rival. But in if)02 R. C. Gillis made some experiments with bean culture on lands near the Soldiers' Home, which resulted in a net income of $40.00 per acre. As a con- sequence, Mr. Gillis leased 1500 acres of land to be put into beans in 1903, and it was estimated that nearly 8000 acres of beans were planted on lands lyhig between Los Angeles and the Santa Monica bay region. The yield was not so large as was expected, on account of the season being unfavorable ; yet the profits were large enough to justify a still larger acreage in 1904. The bean raising industry is now firmly established in this district and is one of the most important sources of revenue. The acreage of TO04 was estimated as 10,000 acres and the yield was valued at $400,000. As the cultivation and harvesting is all done bv machinery, the percentage of profit is large and Los Angeles county is now closely ranking A^entura in the matter of bean culture. Street improvements were the order of the day during this year, over $72,000 having been spent and contracts let for $40,000 more, according to the estimate of the Times, exclusive of the work done l)v private contract; 184 buiUling per- mits were granted, covering an expenditure of $265,000. The Dudley building W. T. GILLTS. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 235 was in process of erection. The Santa Monica Bank was improving its building at a cost of over $12,000. The Carnegie Hbrary building was completed and occupied in July. The Hollister-avenue pleasure pier was under way, to extend 900 feet from shore and to cost about $25,000. In the Pier-avenue district, much street work had been done and many improvements were made. The Hammel building, a three-story brick, cost about $20.000 ; the Hanniman and A^olk blocks each cost about $5000 ; the Powell building, the Wisconsin and Metropole, and the Maier & Zobelein buildings were all substantial structures. There was talk of a hundred thousand dollar hotel betw^een Navy and Marine avenues, which would place part of the building in Ocean Park and part in Santa Monica. This proposition was merely talk, however, until 1905, when the Hotel Decatur was finally built, thus giving this section a hostelry suited to its demands. After several attempts to secure a franchise, the Home Telephone Company began work in July under a permit, and a franchise was granted later in the year. The Municipal League had been revived and during the spring held a num- ber of meetings in which needed municipal improvements were discussed. Largely through the action of the league a bond issue was called for, to secure funds to build two fire engine houses, additional fire apparatus and a fire alarm svstem. The cost was estimated at $14,500. Included with this was a proposal for bonds to fill in around bridges No. i and 2 and build retaining walls at a cost of $14,250; to repair and extend the sewer system, and build septic tanks, $21,000; to improve Linda Vista, Seventh street and South Side parks, $20,250, and to construct water works and secure its own water plant, $150,000. After a short and not very enthusiastic campaign, the entire bond proposition was defeated on August i6th. It was. of course, solidly opposed by the district which it was proposed to include in Ocean Park, and this election gave a hint of the relative strength of the divisionists and the advocates of a " greater Santa Monica." The question of rej^airing the outfall sewer was now forced upon Santa Monica. There had been much discussion of possible sewage disposition during the year. Ocean Park was still using the Santa Monica outfall sewer, although the council had demanded that their sewer be cut off the first of August. In the meantime the new town was making desperate efforts to solve the problem. At one time it was proposed that a main trunk line be constructed along the beach to connect with the Los Angeles outfall. But this was blocked by the Playa del Rey interests and found impracticable, although Los Angeles was willing — for a consideration. The sewage farm method was also considered, but proved impracticable. So Ocean Park continued to depend upon Santa Monica for sewage disposal under the old agreement between the city and Kinney & Ryan, made December 28th, 1897, which permitted those land owners to con- nect with the Santa Monica outfall sewer. The singular reversal of conditions which has later made Santa Monica dependent upon Ocean Park for sewage 236 HISTORY OF SANTA AlONICA BAY CITIES outfall is one of the many anomalies arising from the peculiar relations of the mother town and its ofifshoot. But Santa Monica maintained that the old agree- ment was with Messrs. Kinney & Ryan and not with the town of Ocean Park, antl in November, 1904, demanded a rental of $50.00 per month for the use of their outfall. As the rental was not forthcoming the city finally took steps to sue to collect the money. But the great storm of March, 1905, which almost destroyed the sewer wharf (at Pier avenue) and caused a break near shore in the sewer pipe, changed the aspect of matters. The Ocean Park bath house was newly completed and the discharge of sewage at Pier avenue proved dangerous to its success. The city trustees ordered the city engineer to temporarily repair the breaks ; but the complete restoration of the outfall required a sum which could onlv be obtained by a bond election and the bond election for that purpose having been defeated the previous August, another election for such bonds could not be called within the )ear. In February, Fraser and Jones had entered into a twentv-vear contract with the city for the use of the Pier-avenue wharf as the foundation for a pleasure wharf, they to keep the same in repair. But on the destruction of the wdiarf, Messrs. Fraser and Jones declined to keep the contract and there was no apparent prospect of the wharf being again rebuilt, imless the city was able to do it. The newlv incorporated town of Ocean Park had already voted bonds for a septic tank and sewer system and in order to save the situation at Pier avenue, the trustees of the town now offered Santa Monica the use of their new septic tank for six months, or until the older city could make some arrangements for caring for her sewage. After some discussion the Santa Monica trustees decided, June 27th. 1905, to accept this proposition. The new septic tank was not com- pleted as soon as was expected and rather than have the sewage turned into the sea at Pier avenue, it was turned into the Ocean Park mains and discharged on their dump — thus creating a nuisance which caused complaint from the people of South Ocean Park and Playa del Rey. In the meantime the matter of voting bonds for the repair and completion of the sewer system was again agitated in Santa Monica. The necessity of better fire protection was also urgent and October 31st, 1905, the city voted bonds to the amount of $100,000 to be expended — $37,500 for sewer system and septic tank; $6500 for repairing bridge No. 4 and for retaining walls for bridge No. i ; $17,500 for two fire engine houses, fire alarm system and apparatus: $to,ooo for garbage incinerator. It was supposed that this would settle the sewer ques- tion and soon result in relief for Ocean Park. But, after a careful consideration of the situation, it was found to be impossible to provide a septic tank and outfall sewer for the sum provided. As the residents of the Pier-avenue region were strongly opposed to the further use of the old outfall sewer. Santa Monica trus- tees continued to use the Ocean Park septic tank, now completed, and jmt in a pumping plant at Pier avenue to raise the sewage into the Ocean Park mains. But the new septic tank failed to deodorize the sewage, as was expected, and HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 237 althon^"h a wharf and outfall extending into the sea was hnilt at Center street, there was still complaint of odoriferous breezes and other things, which finally culminated in a bitter factional fight in the city of Ocean Park, leading to the attempt to disincorporate the municipality, and which placed the city of Santa Monica in a most unpleasant predicament, as she was ordered by the courts to cease using the Ocean Park mains, while she had still no provision for caring for her own sewage. During tqo6 the garbage incinerator was completed for Santa Monica and various mains were constructed in preparation for the erection of a septic tank. But a suitable location for the septic tank and outfall system could not be found. The entire communitv was canvassed ; innumerable suggestions were made by the citizens, the council and by outsiders ; but no solution of the matter that promised to satisfy all was reached until September, 1907, when the board of trade presented a plan, which was adopted by the council and which promises to be a complete success. This was. in brief, the building of a substantial pier at the foot of Colorado street ; the location of a septic tank and pumping plant at the shore end of this wharf and the discharge of the outfall at the extremity, 1700 feet from the shore. This plan met with approval all around and was ratified by the voting of $i6o,cx)o bonds for carrying it out, September 30th, 1907. Bids have been called for and the work will be pushed on the completion of the system as rapidly as is possible. It was natural that when Santa Monica found herself surrounded by a thicklv settled district which was demanding school facilities, she should begin to think of expansion. The demand for school buildings to accommodate the chilrlrcn of the Irwin Heights settlement and of the district east of Seventeenth street, led to the proposition to annex these districts to the city before attempting to vote bonds for school purposes. April i-jth. 1905, a mass meeting of citizens decided that at least two new school buildings must be provided, and that an election should be called to vote $60,000 bonds for that purpose. The board of trade immediately afterward proposed that the boundaries be extended from Eighth and Marine streets to Twenty-seventh and ]\Iontana avenue. A petition for annexation was presented by the people of the district and on August 29th, 1905, an election was held which resulted in an addition which nearly doubled the size of the corporation. On September 12th the bond election was held and $60,000 was voted for schools. But after consideration, it was decided that it would be economy to construct the new buildings of brick and that at least three buildings were needed. December 9th $15,000 additional was voted to complete the three buildings. But expanison in population and territory was not enough. It was felt by many citizens and by the board of trade that an expansion in the form of city government would give greater advantages to the municipality. It would require the division of the citv into equitable wards, give the people a chance to govern themselves accordii-g to their own special needs, instead of under RALPH BANE. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 239 state laws and give the municipality powers which it would not have under the incorporation as a city of the fifth class. In order to secure such a charter, a city must have a population of 3500 and to determine the present population of Santa Monica, the trustees ordered a special census. May 15th this census was com- pleted and a total of 7208 inhabitants reported. The charter must be prepared bv a board of fifteen freeholders, each of whom must have resided in the city and voted here for five years consecutively. They are to be elected by the people at a general or special election. A committee of the board of trade sub- mitted the following list of freeholders as candidates for election : T. H. Dudley, C. A. Stilson, George D. Snyder, R. R. Tanner, George H. Hutton, H. X. Goetz, W. I. Hull, A. M. Jamison, W. S- Vawter, Robert F. Jones, D. G. Holt, B. A. Nebeker, E. I. Vawter, Roy Jones, A. N. Archer. This was known as a non- partisan ticket. A " citizens' " ticket was also put up, but seven of the nominees declined to serve and three of those left were on the non-partisan ticket, which was elected bv a large majority at a special election held October i8th, 1905. November 3rd the board organized for duty, C. A. Stilson was made presi- dent and committees on law, boundaries, offices, public utilities, taxation and election, education and libraries, were announced. After several weeks of stren- uous work on the part of the board of freeholders, the proposed charter was submitted to the consideration of the people in January, 1906. There was some opposition to certain of its terms — it was held that it too greatly centralized power ; but it was felt that generally its provisions were wise and that it was best to adopt it. At the election March 28th, 1906, the instrument was adopted by a vote of 376 for to 183 against. At the same time the uninhabited territory known as the " Palisades " was annexed to the city and the uniform shade-tree act was adopted. Santa Monica, with her new charter, with an area of eleven square miles ; with an assessment which increased from $3,830,677.00 in 1905 to $6,523,186.00 in 1906; with her rapidly growing population; with ample school facilities, the best streets in the country and as fine public buildings as are to be found in any city of the same size, was now fairly on the way to become the ideal city of homes. The building of a new brick manufacturing plant by an eastern corporation, the Simmons Brick Co., added largely to the clay manufacturing possibilities. A large sum was expended in improved machinery and in buildings. To this company and to the Los Angeles Pressed Brick Company plant were awarded the contract for furnishing 18,000,000 brick required for the Los Angeles outfall sewer. Another company was also formed this year to utilize the Santa Monica clays in making pottery, but this industry is not yet established. It is only a question of proper handling, however, as it has been demonstrated that Santa Monica clays have no superior for fine work, in the hands of experienced workers. Among the incidents of the vear mav be mentioned the visits of the Knights 240 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES of Coliimljus, a national Catholic ort^anization, the members of whom were rovally entertained bv Santa Monicans and carried away golden memories of this citv by the sea. One of the worst iires on record in the city took place September qth when Budy's livery stable on Third near Utah, was burned and six horses lost their lives, while a large quantity of hay was destroyed. On June 4t]i the city was startled by the news that their postoffice had been robbed of more than $3000 worth of cash, stamps and registered mail matter. This was one of a series of exceedingly bold ])ostoffice robberies which occurred during this summer. 1906. During this }ear a determined effort was made to improve the streets of Santa Monica by the latest methods of oiling and surfacing. In pursuance of this object about 12,000 barrels of oil were used and many streets which had hitherto been dusty in summer and muddy in winter became practically as hard and clean as paved streets. The Santa Monica system of oil-paved streets be- came widely known and was rated as having an important bearing on the problem of road construction. This method was used in improving San Vicente road, the new boulevard from the Soldiers' Home to Ocean avenue. This street was 130 feet wide, with the trolley lines in the center, was curbed and lined with trees and when completed made one of the finest drives in the county. It was pro- posed to extend Sunset boulevard and improve it to connect with this new road. There was also much talk during the year of a finely improved boulevard from \\'ashington street, I.os Angeles, to Ocean Park to join the Del Rey speedway. A scheme for a boulevard to extend southward along the coast to Redondo and thence to San Pedro was also proposed and discussed, but has not yet materialized. Much talk of the Gould line which was supposed to be coming down the coast via the Malibu road which was in course of construction, and which would give Santa Monica a new " transcontinental " line, was indulged in. There was also much talk of Huntington purchasing everything in sight and building a new trolley line to Los Angeles — all of which served to fill the papers. One of the most beautiful suburbs of Santa Monica, located just to the north and within view of the ocean, is Brentwood Park. This is a tract of sev- eral hundred acres which has been highlv improved. Streets have been graded and oiled, curbs and gravel walks laid and many hundreds of trees and shrubs BRENTWOOD PARK. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 241 planted out. Water is piped to every lot and electric lights have been installed. A number of handsome homes have been built here. In January the Odd Fellows dedicated their handsome new building on Third street and January 31st the Merchants' National Bank moved into its own quarters in the Dudley block, a structure that would do credit to any city. The Kensington apartments, an attractive apartment house containing all the latest devices for comfort, was built on the ocean front south of the Arcadia, at a cost of $15,000. Several new blocks were put up on Pier avenue. The build- ing permits from January to June reached the sum of $194,277, aside from the three new school buildings, which were to cost $75,000, and the $50,000 pavilion at Pier avenue. Two new fire engine houses were also constructed and the garbage incinerator completed. One of the most notable improvements of the year was the Santa Monica hospital building, which was begun, after long planning, and was completed in the spring of 1907. This is a handsome two- story brick structure, standing on a commanding eminence on South Fourth street. It is completely equipped in the most modern style and is fast taking rank as one of the leading hospitals of the south coast- The handsome two-story brick building which took the place of the old Sixth-street school house was completed and occupied in the spring of 1907, as was also the Roosevelt school building on the Palisades. 1907. The most important advance of this year has been the final action in the matter of sewage disposal. After long agitation a plan which seemed to the majority to be feasible and desirable was suggested and on September 30th bonds to the amount of $150,000 were voted for the building of a 1700- foot pier at the foot of Colorado avenue which will carry the outfall sewer pipe from the septic tank at the foot of Colorado avenue. A number of other improvements will follow the completion of this wharf. During the year building permits to the amount of $250,000 were granted. These included the $10,000 addition to the M. E. church ; a new garbage incinerator, the new postoffice building and many private residences. The Santa Monica Development Company is engaged in the construction of a large reservoir, for impounding additional water for the city supply, in Sepulveda caiion. It will have a capacity of about two million gallons and will cost $75,000. An independent gas company has been organized and promises to become a factor in the situation. The demand for real estate, while not so active as during previous years, has been steady and property in " old Santa Monica " continues steadily to increase in desirability. The city of Santa Monica, after passing through many stages of develop- ment, is now a clean, well ordered, and most attractive place of residence. At present it has no hotel, no first-class restaurant and offers few attractions to the transient, or the crowd ; but it draws a constantly increasing number of perma- 16 A. F. TOHNSTOX. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 243 nent residents of the better class; while attractive cottages and apartments are filled by the people who wish to pass a restful season at the beach. The; Visit of the AtlaxNTic Squadron. The visit of a fleet of sixteen first-class war vessels of the United States navy, m April, 1908, was one of the greatest events in the history of the coast. Elaborate preparations for the reception and entertainment of the guests were made and Santa lAIonica and Ocean Park took an active part in the occasion. An executive committee consisting of David Evans, chairman; Abbot Kinnev R. A. Phillips, VV. T. Wheatley, Mayor T. H. Dudley, R. W. Armstrong and H. B. Eakin, was appointed. It was largely through the efl:'orts of this^body that the arrangement was made to divide the fleet and station it at different points. As a result of this plan the third division, consisting of the Maine, Ohio, lAIissouri and Minnesota, anchored off these shores for a week. The citizens of the Bay region, under the direction of various committees elaborately decorated streets and buildings ; planned entertainments for men and officers and were hosts to thousands of visitors. Balls for the enlisted men were given in the pavilions and a most elaborate ball was arranged for the officers at the country club. The W. C. T. U., under Mrs. HestheV T. Griffith, main- tamed headquarters at \'enice for the sailors and the ladies of the Bay cities welcomed the guests with masses of flowers and manv courtesies. Friday, April 23rd, was observed as a legal holiday and was given up to entertaining the guests. On Saturday, April 24th, the entire squadron, in the presence of the largest crowd ever assembled on Santa Monica Bay shores, maneuvered and then safled silentlv awav to the north. AxxuAL Assessment of City of Santa Moni CA. ^^^7 $2,405,048.00 1897 1,869,132.00 '^^^ 2,351,108.00 1898 1,871,588.00 '^^9 1,807,228.00 i8cj9 1,896.844.00 ^^90 1.771.332-00 1900 1,910,158.00 ^^91 1-565.773-00 1901 1,991,310.00 ^^92 1,648,846.00 1902 2,220,431.00 ^^93 1,654,274.00 1903 2,887,574-00 ^^94 1.705.467.00 1904 3,472,124.00 ^^95 1,830,503.00 1905 ^^_8^q5^^_qq ^^96 1,799.545-00 1906 6,523,086.00 1907 7,886,310.00 CHAPTER VI. South Santa Monica and Ocean Park. WHEN the town site of Santa IMonica was laid out it was surrounded by a very large area of unbroken and unoccupied territory. The great San Vicente ranch was mostly devoted to sheep pasturage. A few native Californians cultivated small tracts on the Boca de Santa Monica ; but that tract was also largely devoted to sheep grazing. On La Ballona, Anderson Rose and one or two others had begun to farm and the Machados raised some grain, but the greater portion of the tract was uncultivated. In 1874 Mrs. Nancy A. "Lucas, a wealthy widow, with three sons, purchased a tract of 861 acres from the ATachados. This joined the San Vicente on the north and extended as far south as the present city limits of the city of Santa Monica, the line having followed the lines of the Lucas tract. The price paid was $14.00 per acre. Mrs. Lucas at once began to improve her property and in 1875 she erected a house on the highest point of her ranch — the hill between what is now Strand and Hill streets and Third and Fourth. The house was an ambitious two-story affair, costing some $12,000, and was for years the finest residence in the vicinity of Santa Monica and a landmark of note until its destruction by fire in December, 1904. Her sons farmed on a large scale, raising fine crops of barley on the place. Two of them opened a lumber yard in Santa Monica and they were prominently connected with affairs in the early days of the community. In 1881, Mrs. Lucas, who was rather eccentric and lived on the place much of the time alone except for her Chinese cook, died suddenly under circumstances which gave rise to suspicion and much comment. She was said to have died from the effects of strychnine poisoning, supposedly used for killing rats. The property passed into the hands of her heirs and was soon broken up. The house, with three acres of land, was sold to Miss Mary Green, in her day known as one of the most beautiful women in California. She soon afterward married Dan Mooney, a well-known character of early days. He had been a miner in Arizona and had acquired considerable fortune. They took up their residence in the Lucas house which was thereafter known as the " Mooney Mansion." August T7th, 1885, Mr. and Mrs. Mooney started to drive to Los Angeles. While on the way, Mr. Mooney 's pistol fell from his pocket and inflicted a mortal wound in his back. Later Mrs. Moonev married Col. A. B. Hotchkiss, HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 245 a well-known and brilliant attorney, who was for many years a Southern Pacific representative. He was also the editor of a magazine, Public Resources, which did some effective work in advertising the country. He died April 3rd, 1905. Col. and Mrs. Hotchkiss owned and, at times, occupied the Mooney Mansion until its destruction. Many romantic tales have been set afloat at one time and another about the old house which stood alone in state upon the hill over- looking the ocean for so many years. Its burning was also mysterious — so mysterious that the insurance companies refused to pay up without a lawsuit. In 1875 Mrs. Lucas sold a fifty-acre tract, adjoining the new town and fronting the ocean, to Ivar A. Weid, a well-known Los Angeles capitalist. He at once advertised, " South Santa Monica — Five minutes' walk from the new Wharf. Block No. 4, with Ocean Frontage of 370 feet." Later he changed his ad to, " SOUTH SANTA MONICA, Lots 60x150 feet. Villa Sites purchased by Judges Bicknell and Glassell, Captain Thom, and others." In March, 1876, the Outlook announces that Captain Thom had sent down a carload of shrub- bery to be planted on his place at South Santa Monica. March 22nd, 1876, this item appears in the Outlook: " Improvements are progressing rapidly over at South Santa Monica. Major JMitchell, Captain Thom and Judges Bicknell and Glassell are all build- ing and planting trees. We understand that General Stoneman and Major Hancock will begin building within a few days. A well has been sunk and a windmill and tank erected which is the common property of several lot owners. C. H. Edwards & Co., of Los Angeles, are planting the shrubbery and making an excellent job of it." This little settlement, which seems to have had rather a military flavor, remained for some years the most exclusive and fashionable beach resort in the vicinity of Los Angeles. Some of these old cottages still remain on the bluff and are surrounded by fine trees. The Thom place with its luxuriant growth of trees and shrubbery is still kept up. Another early settlement in South Santa Monica was the Central tract, laid out by J. W. Scott in 1876. A number of giant eucalyptus still remain of the trees planted by him at this time. A portion of the Lucas ranch was divided into twenty-acre blocks by E. H. Lucas, one of the sons. A number of these were sold in the early eighties to various parties, including several Englishmen. The land was fertile and water was easily obtained by putting down wells and some prosperous little ranches were established here. Among these early settlers were Walter H. Wrenn, Nathan Bundy, Thomas Carlisle. Joseph and John Bontty. In 1884 the Vawters purchased 100 acres of the Lucas lands, lying south of Hollister avenue and east of the electric tracks. They paid $40.00 per acre for it. and in 1887 disposed of about half of it for a large sum. In 1886. the Crippens, a 246 HISTORY UF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES real estate firm of Los Angeles, bought 350 acres, extending from Eighth street east and to the San Vicente ranch line. In December this was put upon the market as East Santa Monica, villa lots of two and one-half acres being offered for $500.00, although the land had been sold the previous year for $40.00 an acre. The boom struck this portion of Santa ^Monica with considerable force. The \'awters sold the Santa Fe tract of 53 acres to R. R. Taniier and Thomas A. Lewis, who put down a well, subdivided into lots, put in sidewalks and advertised an auction sale to take place August loth, 1887. The highest price paid for one of these lots was $725.00. Houses were built on the tract bv T. A. Lewis, Messrs. Tanner, W. S. A'awter and others. In March, the Wave Crest tract was put on sale with an auction, and the newspapers report sales to amount of $52,490.00 for 90 lots. H. L. Jones subdivided a tract to which he gave the name of Ocean Spray, 120 lots, which met with ready sale. The Arcadia, Ocean View, Commercial Company's tract and others were opened up during this period and a large number of improvements were made. George Kintz built the Crystal Springs bath house and plunge during the latter part of '87, and the Ballona and Santa Monica road was incorporated, to build a standard guage road from the Port of Ballona to Santa Monica, a distance of seven miles. M. L. Wicks, J. Bernard, Jr., and James Campbell were among the incorporators. Work was at this time being pushed on what was fondly hoped to be the terminus of the Santa Fe road at Ballona, and Santa Monica was strong in the hope of a new " transcontinental "' line. But after the sudden rise in values in 1887 and 1888, came a depression when progress was at a standstill ; many of the town lots lapsed into acreage property and there was little sale for acreage even, although the drop in prices ^vas not so noticeable here as in many localities. South Santa Monica, although included as far east as Eighth street in the city boundaries, as adopted in 1886, was still a rural community with scattered residences and dusty roads. The street car line had been extended from Santa Monica to the city limits in 1887. but the service w'as infrequent and slow. In the spring of 1889 the Ostrich Farm was established at South Santa Monica. A tract of seven acres, known as the " Santa Monica Tract," was fenced in and thirty-four birds, with the nucleus of what was intended to be a menagerie, were brought here from Kenilworth, in the Cahuenga vallev, where they had been located. In 1882, Dr. Charles S. Sketchley. an Englishman who had been engaged in ostrich farming in South Africa, came to California and selected a site near Anaheim as the best location he could find in California for an ostrich farm. His attem])t here was so successful that about 1885 a syndicate was formed and Dr. Skctchlev was sent again to Africa to secure new birds. He HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 247 returned with thirty-four fine birds which were placed on the Los Feliz rancho in the Cahuenga foothills. A park and menagerie were planned and it was hoped to make this one of the leading attractions of Los Angeles. In 1887 the Ostrich Farm railway was built to Burbank and Kenilworth as the station at the Ostrich Farm was named ; but this location proved too out of the wav and the venture was not a financial success. Then South Santa Monica was chosen as a more accessible spot, offering other attractions as well. About thirty birds were brought here under the management of Mr. Henry Beauchamp, also English. But the Outlook states that Mr. Beauchamp was a " Moody and Sankey convert " and refused to keep his place open on Sundays, " which is good religion but poor business." After a couple of years the ostriches were removed to a new location near the Southern Pacific depot and under the management of Mr. Harold Perry, the place was made very attractive. Later Mr. Frank Ellis became manager, and in 1893 sold six birds to Sells circus, which were declared by the circus people to be the finest ostriches they had ever seen. Many old resident will remember the chase which followed the escape of a full grown African bird from the enclosure. The frantic creature, after being driven over the hills in the vicinitv of the Soldiers' Home was finally headed homeward, only to dash past the farm, into the ocean — to its death. About 1895 the remaining birds were removed to Anaheim and this attraction ceased to be counted among the charms of South Santa Monica. Up to 1890 this section had no school facilities and the children were obliged to attend the Sixth street school in Santa ]\Ionica — a long and difficult journey. After a good deal of discussion and several petitions for relief, the school trustees finally decided. February. 1890, to establish a school in South Santa Monica. February 25th, 1888, the board of school trustees voted to purchase two lots, 12 and 13 of the Santa Fe tract, at $1,000.00 each. Nothing further in reference to providing a school for the south side appears until February loth, 1890, when the minutes state that a proposition was received from E. Emerson, to build a house at South Santa Monica suitable for school purposes and to rent the same to the district for six months at a rental of $50.00 per month. This proposition was accepted by the board and February 28th they elected Miss Ellen L. Huie as teacher, at a salary of $60.00 per month. What happened in the interim does not appear but on the records under date of March 4th, all the " above action " is rescinded, and Miss Huie was allowed $7.50 to reimburse her for her expenses in coming to Santa ^lonica. At a special meeting of the board held August 21st, 1890, Miss Huie was again employed to teach " the south side " school at a salary of $50.00 per month, the " school to be discontinued at the pleasure of the board." 248 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES A small school house was built on the school lots, probably during the summer of 1890. In August, 1895, a special tax of $1,500.00 was voted to build a school house on the " south side " and a one-room building was put up and in the fall was occupied, with Miss Alice M. Frazier as teacher. Early in the seventies an Englishman, Col. Hutchinson, loaned money to the Machados. taking mortgages upon various pieces of land as security. One of these was a narrow strip of beach frontage extending from Strand street to the southern limits of La Ballona grant. This strip of sand was supposed to be worthless for any purpose, unless a wharf for commercial purposes could be built from it. Apparently the belief was general that the only thing needed to make a commercial city of Santa Monica was a wharf where vessels might land. After the abandonment of the " old wharf," in 1878, five acres of land were donated by Mrs. Lucas and others and Jiian Bernard began the construction of a wharf which is was fondly hoped might restore Santa Monica to the ship- ping lists of the Pacific coast. But the structure was never completed and no boat ever landed there. In 1888, Messrs. Lewis and Van Every proposed to build a wharf from the foot of Bicknell avenue and in 1891 the proposition of the Terminal Wharf Company came up, various grants and concessions being made in consequence ; but no wharf was built. In 1892 the Santa Fe and Santa Monica railroad was incorporated and proceeded to secure a right of way from Inglewood to Santa Monica. A concession of twelve acres of land was made them by the Terminal Wharf Com- pany and Kinney and Ryan, on condition that the company expend at least $15,000 in improvements, including a wharf and a pavillion. Considerable difficulty was met with in obtaining the right of way, condemnation proceedings being necessary in some cases; but a strip 130 feet wide was finally secured from the city limits to the Southern Pacific reservation. A depot was located near the Ostrich Farm and on June i8th, 1892, the Santa Fe brought in its first train, with a widely advertised excursion to the " Coney Island of the Pacific.'" Later a building known as " the pavilion " was erected on Hill street and a cement sidewalk laid to the ocean front. A group of trees on land near this depot was then known as Vawter Park : with the Ostrich Farm, the new pavilion, and the many beach improvements being made by Messrs. Abbot Kinney and F. G. Ryan, who had lately secured title to the Hutchinson property on the ocean front, South Santa Monica began to count itself as a " resort." The Outlook for May 6th, 1893. says: "It is quite lively on the South Side. Three new cottages have just been completed on the Santa Monica tract, to be given away with the lots distributed on the first of June. A number of summer residences are either completed or in course of construction. The land HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 249 company is now piUting down a plank walk from the tract across the sand hills to the sea, and it is on the programme to begin the construction of a bath house at an early date. Altogether we can safely say that the ' South Side ' will be in the swim this summer." The houses alluded to were built by Messrs. Kinney and Ryan on their Santa Monica tract and were given away with lots sold by distribution. Prices were $100.00 per lot, on easy terms. In the spring of 1893 the Young Men's Christian Association of Southern California, after considerable discussion and looking about, decided to accept the proposition of Messrs. Kinney and Ryan to donate them a strip of land between the Santa Fe tract and ocean, 250 feet on ocean front and extending back to the Santa Fe right of way, about five acres included. June 21st, the Young Men's Christian Association Ocean Park Company was duly organized with a capital stock of $10,000, and the following incorporators: J. C. Salisbury, M. H. Merriman, F. H. Rindge, A. D. Childress, S. H. Wheeler, A. A. Adair, of Riverside; Charles E. Day, president; R. G. Lunt, vice-president; George W. Parsons, secretary; F. M. Potter, treasurer; O. T. Johnson, J. H. Brawley, W. F. Bosbyshell, C. C. Reynolds, Lyman Stewart, and other prominent men of Southern California In announcing its decision, the incorporators give as reasons for their selection : " The land is about three- fourths of a mile south of Arcadia Hotel, is close to the railroad station of the great Santa Fe route, which reaches nearly every hamlet and village in Southern California. It has a fine, clean, sandy beach, of gentle slope, making a safe and delightful place for bathing. Near this land is a fine 70 by 1000 feet grove, with pavilion erected therein, making a pleasant place for a picnic and the only accessible place where a grove and the beach are so close together. A fine wharf will be con- structed close to this land in the near future, when the coast steamers will connect with the Santa Fe route for all points on their line. It will be one of the most popular lines between Los Angeles and Catalina Island." Which shows that the Y. M. C. A. people were no better at prophesying future results than the sanguine " wharf boomers " of Santa Monica. In consideration of the donation by Messrs. Kinney and Ryan and Messrs. V^awter, the " Ocean Park Company ", named from the eucalyptus grove of the \"awters, was to build a commodious bath house and an auditorium, which it was expected would be the scene of many religious conventions and assemblies. The bath house was built during the summer and many new cottages were put up. In July an auction sale of lots took place, 80 lots, 25 by 100 feet, being sold at about $45.00 apiece. During this summer St. David's Mission, Episcopalian, held services in 250 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES the school house and the South Santa Monica Baptist Mission was organized by Rev. H. S. Baker, and in 1894 the Baptist chapel was erected. In May, 1895, Kinney and Ryan named their settlement " Ocean Park "' and the Santa Fe giving- this name to their station, the existence of the district of Ocean Park may be said to date from this year. The Y. M. C. A. people put up some new buildings this summer and Kinney and Ryan put in a half mile of beach sidewalk, the first on the beach and a greatly appreciated improve- ment. In September, the Santa Fe fulfilled its promise of a wharf bv putting in a new type in such structures, using iron pipe for piles. It was located about 300 feet south of Hill street and was only 500 feet in length, and thus the connection with the great world, which had been hoped for, was again delaved. The Y. M. C. A. and the summer visitors were favored by many pleasant entertainments, concerts and lectures during this season and Ocean Park began to be regarded as a most desirable location for those who wished a quiet and inexpensive summer outing. Man}- lots were leased or purchased and many modest cottages were put up as summer homes. These first beach cottages were very simple affairs — a long box of upright boards, with a couple of parti- tions, being the usual pattern. At this time there were few buildings south of Hill street and the " hills " were still the favorite place of residence. A cluster of small business buildings had grown up about the street car terminus and the Santa Fe station. Ocean Park, although within the corporate limits of Santa Alonica, had not been supplied with water by the municipality. Messrs. Kinney and Ryan- had their own water supply piped to the beach ; but the people on other tracts began to discuss the advisability of having a water system and in December, 1895, the " City Water Company " was formed, with a capital stock of $20,000, and with J. H. Claudius. E. J. Vawter, D. M. Clark, G. R. Green and E. J. Vawter, Jr., as incorporators. Its object was to supply South Santa Monica- with water and to secure this wells were put down on the \"awter tract and pipes laid through the district. This company was later succeeded by the Ocean Park Water Company. On June 30th, 1896, the first electric car made its initial trip through South Santa Monica, after a day of strenuous labor on the part of the employees and officials of the Los Angeles and Pacific electric line. Their subsidy of $5,000, given b}- W. S. and E. J. Vaw-ter, for what was known as the " loop line," expired at midnight of June 30th. and the work had been delayed to the last possible moment. At 9:55 p.m., the first car left the corner of Ocean and Oregon avenues and, after crossing the bridge, ran down Second street to Hill street, thence eastward to Fourth and returned to Ocean avenue. The car and its occupants were given an informal but none the less hearty welcome by the HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 251 South Siders, who felt that at last they were to be brought into touch with the world (North Beach). The coming of the electric line was, indeed, a great advance for this settlement which had been so long hampered by poor trans- portation facilities. This year Santa Monica began to talk seriously of the sewage problem and proposed to locate its outfall at a point south of the ch\ limits. From this time on date the sewer troubles of the beach. In Jul}" an old-time auction sale with all its accompaniments, took place, H. L. Jones reviving his " Ocean Spray '" tract which had been first exploited in 1887 and going one better on the methods of boom days by offering " one lot free to the luck}- holder of a thirty round-trip ticket." At this time the Santa Fe was giving transportation at very reasonable rates to prospective purchasers of Ocean Park propert}-. Ben E. ^^ ard, now of lamented memory, was the auctioneer and eighty-eight lots were disposed of by his beguiling words — and the very real attractions of the location. May 3rd, 1897, witnessed a serious loss to Ocean Park in the burning of the Y. M. C. A. auditorium, a large two-story building, which had cost about $3,000 when erected in 1893. This was a misfortune as plans had already been made for the most elaborate exercises yet held by the Y. M. C. A. assemblv during the coming season. The loss was complete as there was no water to save the property, after the fire, which was evidently incendiarv, was discovered. There was no insurance; but Mr. Day, president of the Ocean Park Company, was equal to the occasion. He at once set about securing new quarters and in August the University Assembly, with a full program of excellent speakers and music, was successfully carried out. Among the speakers were Bishop Fallows, of New York, and Professor Syle, of the State University. Miss Ida Benfey gave a number of dramatic readings and a series of brilliant their summer guests appeared to find the attractions of the surf and the military concerts were presented. But, it must be confessed that Santa Monicans and encampment, the tennis court and polo races greater than such a feast of reason and culture and the assembly was not a financial success. In ]May the new City Water Company turned the water into a mile and a half of mains, the water coming from two wells and being stored in a 50,000 gallon tank. Thus, at last, the South Side hills had an adequate water supply and a chance at fire protection. The electric light svstem was also extended to Ocean Park this year and added to the metropolitan claims of the new resort. Many new buildings, including several stores, a ten-room house erected by Mrs. Bernard, forty or more beach cottages were added this year. Ocean Park had now become ambitious. She had grown so rapidly and attained such distinction that the citizens felt themselves entitled to ever}- advantage enjoyed by the "other side." The South Santa ]^Ionica Municipal 252 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES League was organized to " promote all measures ♦:hat will benefit the city ; to encourage all improvements, both public and private, to oppose saloons and disreputable places in South Santa Monica," etc. A Ladies' Mutual Benefit Association was also organized, its main object being to build a hall for public meetings and use, a lot having been donated by Kinney and Ryan for the purpose. All of these efforts added to the natural advantages offered and the spirit of enterprise which had been shown in developing what had seemed an almost worthless territory, brought about a development that became one of the phenomena of the times. Oce;an Park District. The settlement known as Ocean Park was separated from Santa Monica by the arroyo and the wide unimproved tract belonging to the Southern Pacific reservation. This w-as unfortunate, as it made communication between the two points difHcult. The Santa Fe service was irregular ; the horse car line and its successor, the electric line, gave infrequent service ; the drive over dusty, ungraded roads, and rickety bridges was not tempting, and the walking through a mile of sand or dust was certainly not attractive. The settlement about the Santa Fe depot and the Y. 'SI. C. A. holdings was largely made up of transient visitors from the interior, who rented cottages, or buih upon leased lands. They seldom visited Santa Monica and scarcely realized that they were within that municipality. It was natural that they should object to the long journey to the postofBce and begin to express a desire for a postofBce of their own. During 1898 the subject was .agitated and promises secured, although the ofifice did not open for business until July, 1899. This year Kinney and Ryan opened the Ocean Park race track and golf links, which were improved by grading and planting a large number of trees. One of the first golf tournaments held in California took place on these links when they w^ere opened to the public, in July, 1898. The same gentlemen had contracted with the city trustees to build a wharf on the piling used to carry the outfall sewer. This wharf was located at what was known as Pier avenue and was completed in August. It was 1,250 feet in length and aft'orded a fine opportunity to fishermen and pleasure seekers. The proprietors invited the public to a free barbecue and clambake on the evening of Monday, August 29th, which was attended by a big crowd who enjoyed the feast, music, speeches and dancing. By coincidence, the old Santa Fe wharf was condemned by the city trustees on the day the new wharf was opened and a few days later the old wharf was practically destroyed by a storm. The completion of the new wharf stimulated the building of the long proposed beach walk connecting the Kinney and Ryan walk with Santa Monica. The Southern Pacific began by constructing a board HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 253 walk, i6 feet wide, in front of its property from Railroad avenue to the Crystal plunge, and the North Beach Company followed with a walk connecting this and the bath house. The city and citizens later built walks and thus about 1902 easy communication was at last established between the " north side " and the " south side." The " Ocean View," an eighteen-room hotel, was built by G. H. Strong, and was opened July loth, with a spread; but only a few days later the new hotel was destroyed by fire. Ocean Park suffered much during its early history from fires which seemed to be, in many ca-^^s, incendiary and which were very destructive on account of the lack of fire-fightmg appliances and water. A few weeks later the store of Chambers & Co. was burned with its stock of groceries. There was a long dispute over the insurance in this case and a good deal of feeling was aroused by the circumstances. The Methodist church began holding services in the Santa Fe depot in October, with Rev. Robert S. Fisher as pastor; in August, 1899, the church was organized as the South Santa ^Monica M. E. church ; the old Methodist chapel was donated to them by the North Side church and removed to its present location on Lake street. 1899. The untimely death of Francis G. Ryan, of the firm of Kinney & Ryan, who had practically created Ocean Park, led to a change and in 1899 T., H. Dudlev married Mrs. Ryan and became interested with Mr. Kinney in the development of the now promising beach resort. Aggressive advances were made in the spring of this year. The Outlook of March loth says: " All told, there are now 200 cottages on this property, a great many of which were erectetl last year. There are now some ten or twelve in process of erection and contracts for new ones are being made every week. These cottages are not mere shacks, but will be neat and commodious, costing all the way from $350 to $1000. Thev are being put up by first-class tenants, mostly professional and business men from Los Angeles. Water is supplied from the city water works and electric lights are being put into the more pretentious structures. Beach lots are rented at about $15 per year to those who will put up neat and substantial cottages. No land is sold outright, but long leases are given." Messrs. Kinney and Dudley purchased the old Y. M. C. A. bath house this year, moved it a block south and refitted it. In Jnly, Pier avenue was opened, Kinney and Dudley giving a deed to the necessary land to the city. The first building put up was a bowling alley, situated near the beach and carried on by Mr. J. G. Holborow. July 28th the post office of " Oceanpark " was opened for business. This oflice had been secured after a long and hard contest bv Mr. Kinnev, it being the onlv instance of two separate post offices 254 HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES establishctl within a single numicipalit}'. ^Jr. L. \>. Osborne was the first post- master and the office was located in his grocery store on Second street. This year Air. E. J. Vawter began the development of the carnation beds which liave become one of Santa Alonica's best-known industries. He devoted fifteen acres of land on South Fourth street to the culture of flowers, mostly carnations and roses. A 5,000-gallon tank stored water for irrigation of the tract. The soil and conditions proved to be favorable for the production of the finest varieties and the venture proved most successful. Large green houses and increased acreage are now devoted to the propagation of flowers which are marketed in Los Angeles and shipped to distant points. Many street improve- ments were made during this year and Kinney and Dudley planted out nearly twenty acres to trees, using 10,000 eucalyptus trees alone, in the vicinity of the race track. 1900. Early in the season improvements began to multiply in " Oceanpark " as the growing settlement was now officially known, although it was in reality a part of the city of Santa Monica and more properly " South Santa Monica." The Santa Fe company astonished its tenants, who had erected cottages on leased lots, by ordering them to vacate at once ; the unfortunate cottage owners had to hustle to find new locations for their buildings. The company leveled the ground and made some imjjrovements ; but in August it was announced that the entire South Santa Monica holdings of the Santa Fe company had been l^urchased by Messrs. Hart and Eraser, of Los Angeles. The new proprietors named the tract " Central Beach " and immediately began grading and putting streets through it. The first street opened through and paved between the beach and the railroad tracks was India, now Hill street. In a short time lots on the ocean front were selling for $1,000, and lots on the side streets at from $300 up. Building restrictions were put on the property, which included 185 lots, 25 by 100 feet in size, extending from Hart avenue on the north to Grand on the south and between the beach and the railway tracks. In February the Oceanpark Fire Company was organized with A. N. Archer, president ; J. H. Hassinger. secretary and treasurer ; William Menzies, foreman ; C. J. Marvin and J. Rudisill, assistants. A " bucket brigade " was organized, later a hose cart and hose was procured. In 1902, Mr. William Martin, owner of the Martin block, on the corner of Ash and Second streets. gave the use of a part of a lot for a fire house and the board of city trustees provided the lumber for a small building, and bought a fire bell. Oceanpark now had her own water systems, fire company, school, churches and business houses. Tvlany of its residents were newcomers who knew little about the past history of the place or about the " north side." It was quite HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 255 natural that they should think that they might better manage their own affairs and pay their taxes for improvements in their own section. As a consequence, it was not surprising that a movement for the division of the territory south of Front street from " old " Santa Monica should arise. Petitions for the division were duly drawn up and presented and then the people on both sides began to discuss the question in all of its bearings. When the election came on November 12th, 1900, to the surprise of the principal movers in the action who, by the way, were all old settlers and were actuated perhaps more by personal feeling in the matter than by any serious consideration for the good of the community at large, the proposition was snowed under. The vote stood 341 against division and only 59 for it. Even the warmest advocates of division were compelled to admit that they had been mistaken in the sentiment of the people of South Santa Monica ; and the possibility of creating two towns out of Santa Monica was forever settled bv this decision. 1901. The growth of " Ocean Park " as the district extending from Azure street, now Hollister avenue, along the beach to the south beyond the city limits of Santa Monica, had progressed by leaps and bounds since 1898. But the development of 1901 and the two or three succeeding years threw all previous records of beach development into the shade. Ocean Park, started as a gathering place for the Y. AI. C. A. and kindred societies ; a quiet colonv of summer homes, occupied by people of moderate means, for the most part, suddenly became the most popular and fashionable beach resort in Southern California. And with equally surprising suddenness it developed into a bustling business town, having stores, hotels, banks and newspapers and all the necessary commercial facilities for a community of several thousand inhabitants. The extension of the electric line south of Hill street and the erection of a power house south of the city limits were indications of the southward trend of improvements. The pushing forward of this work, of course, was followed by rapid settling up of the territory thus opened up. The electric line was completed to a point one mile south of Second and Hill streets on April 30th. In August it became known that the Los Angeles-Pacific had acquired a new and more direct right of way between Los Angeles and Ocean Park. They had purchased the old right of way abandoned by the Santa Fe Railroad com- pany, and begun the construction of a double track via Palms. This, with the new cut-off by way of Rosedale cemetery, would considerablv shorten the time between the city and this beach. Messrs. Kinney and Dudley had already extended their beach walk some distance south of Pier avenue and had provided electric lights, water and sewer 256 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES system for this new district. The beautiful beach, the opportunity to build almost within reach of the ocean spray, the convenient trolley service, and the fine class of people who had already located here ; as well as the fishing, bathing and amusements ofifered, attracted residents and visitors. While the rapid increase in the value of property attracted investors, both little and big. Many people who had leased or bought merely for a beach home during the summer had found themselves unexpectedly enriched by the changed conditions, and immediately re-invested their gains. Many capitalists were also attracted by the chance to make quick money. By the first of March more than fifty lots in the new Short Line Beach tract had been sold and a number of buildings were under way. One of the most important improvements of this year was the Club House built just north of the golf links, laid out the year before. This building, 50 by 80 feet, with a ten-foot veranda below and a roof veranda was put up by Messrs. Kinney and Dudley. Some $15,000 was spent on the building and the improvements in the tennis courts, golf links and race course and the place was made an ideal home for a country club. The Ocean Park Country Club was organized with Messrs. Kinney, Dudley and H. M. Grindley as directors. They at once planned a week's sports for August and in that month a successful tennis tournament, and polo races and golf tournament attracted a large number of visitors and participants. In April. Messrs. Hart and Fraser reported that only three lots of the Central Beach tract, put on the market in the fall, were left, and that $85,000 had been expended in buildings erected on this tract. Among those locating here were Mr. G. A. Hart, Mr. A. R. Fraser, Judge R. B. Stevens, W. D. Winston, J. R. Newberry, A. Tichtenberger, William Hammel, and other business men of Los Angeles, many of whom built permanent homes here. The Ocean Wave tract, south of Central Beach, was ofifered for sale in March by Messrs. Kinney and Dudley and was all sold out in less than a month. South Second street was paved and sidewalked during the year and several new business blocks put up on Second street — this still being the business center of Ocean Park. Pier avenue was surveyed and graded from the railroad tracks to the ocean front and the lots ofifered for sale. In October a two-story frame building, with two store rooms below, was put up, the second building on this street About July 1st, it was announced that Abner Ross, a Los Angeles capitalist, would build a seventy-room hotel on Pier avenue. This substantial two-story building, which was long the principal hotel of Ocean Park, was erected in just twenty-four days from the time work began. Early in August it was opened to the public under the management of J. G. Holborow and wife, who furnished it and gave it the name. This building was later known as the Metropole and is now the Hotel Savoy. It was estimated that over 200 cottages were built HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 257 on the sand during the year, the building expenditures reaching $118,691, exchiding the hotel and the Casino;- $18,500 was expended in improving the water system, and at least $25,000 was paid out for improvements made by the L. A. -P. railway. 1902. But, rapid as was the pace set in 1901, the advance made in 1902 excelled it. A change took place at the beginning of the year, which meant much in the history of this section. This was the sale announced February 12th, of Mr. Dudley's interests in the Kinney and Dudley property to Messrs. A. R. Fraser. H. R. Gage and G. M. Jones ; Abbot Kinney retaining his half interest. This sale included the beach from Azure street, now Fraser avenue, to a point 700 feet below the Country Club house, now Horizon avenue, and the club house and grounds. If such a thing were possible, new energy was given to the developments along the ocean front by the new management. It was announced that the wharf would be rebuilt, a bath house and pavilion built at Pier avenue, and the old plank walk on the ocean front rebuilt. The entire tract was to be sewered and the alley between the front and the tracks, now Speedway, would be improved. But the most important move was the change of policy with regard to leasing lots. It was announced that no more lots would be leased and that leasers would be given until May ist, to purchase their lots or vacate. Here- after lots would only be sold with building restrictions which would put an end to the building of cheap " beach cottages." Many of the lease holders purchased their lots and removed the old buildings to put up modern cottages which would yield an income on the increased valuation of the property. Many of those who did this realized handsomely on the investment. To many, however, the prices charged for lots and the building restrictions seemed prohibitive and the cottages were removed to cheaper property. During 1902-03, it was a common sight to find a cottage on wheels moving back from the ocean front to the hills, under the escort of William Menzies. In March, 1902, the Ocean Park bank was organized with T. H. Dudley. Abbot Kinney, Martin Dudley and Plez James as stockholders. It opened for business April 8th in a building on Second street ; but work was soon begun on a brick and steel building on Pier avenue and before the end of the vear the new bank was occupying handsomely fitted quarters and had added a savings department. The previous year the old school house hid proved inadequate and the Baptist church was rented for the higher grades. The rapidly increasing school population made a new building for the Ocean Park school imperative, and after an enthusiastic public meeting on the South Side, followed b\' another public 17 258 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES discussion of the question on the North Side, the school trustees called for a bond election to vote $12,000 for a suitable school house for Ocean Park. The bonds were carried, practically without opposition; the two old buildings were disposed of and the handsome eight-room structure, now known as the Wash- ington school house, was built on the old location, the corner of Ash and Fourth streets. Two additional lots were purchased for the grounds and the entire building and grounds cost over $16,000. The election of W. S. Vawter as city trustee to represent the South Side, and the fact that T. H. Dudley was president of the board of city trustees, assured this section of full representation in civic affairs and still further obliterated the old feeling of estrangement between the two sections of -the city. The building boom continued. June 12th, the Los Angeles Saturday Post writes thus of this beach : " There are seven hundred cottages at Ocean Park. They are all tasteful and many of them are pretentious. Ocean Park is not a place with a stifif, ceremonious air. There is a hospitable individuality, a generous atmosphere, in their architecture that shows as much as an}thing else that the good people of Ocean Park are not divided into social cliques or factions." During this year Pier avenue became the leading business street. Among the business blocks of the year were the Rice and Kellogg block, of three stores, with housekeeping rooms above ; a two-story building put up by Gillett & Co.; the new bank building, occupying four lots and costing $10,000; a two- story block erected by Abbot Kinney. The rapid rise in values is well repre- sented by Pier avenue property. In 1900, lots on this street sold for a few dollars; in 1901, $500 would have been considered a high price for a lot; in 1902, twenty-five-foot lots sold for $40 per front foot; in 1903, a lot which had been purchased for $30 per front foot, was sold for $85 per foot. In 1904, C. J. Wilson sold a block on Pier avenue with a two-story frame building and a lot of 54 feet frontage for $21,000, and it is stated that the property was then yielding 10 per cent, on the investment. The company spent several thousand dollars this year in improving the sewer service. Twelve miles of new sidewalks were laid by the city and private parties and many streets were graded. It is estimated that street improvements reached about $20,000. On Saturday, November 15th. 1902, appeared the first issue of the Ocean Park Review, with A. Bert Bynon as editor. On August 2nd, the new line of the trolley road by way of Palms, was opened, the event being celebrated by an excursion of the Jonathan Club of Los Angeles, and distinguished citizens, who were entertained with a fish dinner at the country club. The Ocean Park Country Club sent out elaborate HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA 15AY CITIES 259 invitations, announcing a polo match, tea, dinner, and reception, with speeches and dancing, in honor of the occasion. The invitations read : " The Los Angeles-Pacific Railway company will open its Short Line cut-off from Los Angeles to Ocean Park, tomorrow, Saturday, August 2nd, 1902. And in honor of this event the Los Angeles Country Club has arranged for a demon- stration that will mark the epoch as the most important in the history of Ocean Park up to this date. " The opening of this line of railway communication is recognized as of such importance to the future welfare and prosperity of Ocean Park that the head moulders of the present and future greatness of that noted beach resort appreciate the necessity of this great proposed demonstration. •' And these head moulders of the present and future greatness are Messrs. Fraser, Jones, Kinney and Gage, the pro]irietors of the Country Club, and it is these gentlemen who extend a cordial invitation to participate in the exercises and the reception of the Jonathan Club of Los Angeles and the other guests." 1903. The new year showed no diminishni'.nt in building or in oeneral improve- ment in the " sand district." A\'ork was begun early in^ the yea'r on the pavilion at the foot of Pier avenue, which was to be the most complete pleasure resort on the beach. When it was opened to the public in the spring, it at once attracted the Sunday crowds. The question of granting a restaurant liquor license for the pavilion greatly harassed many of the older residents of Ocean Park, who had greatly prided themselves upon the high moral tone of their community. The matter was discussed warmly and was made an issue in the spring election which was hotly contested, the liquor question and the traction franchises being the mooted points. The result of the election was not satisfac- tory to the •• no-license " element who forced a special election, at which thev lost heavily in votes. And the liquor license was granted for the pavilion— the first one ever granted in Ocean Park district. The Traction matter was quite as important in its bearing on Ocean" Park affairs. This company had been interested in a project to build a line to Santa Monica Bay by Abbot Kinney, who was its representative in its negotiations here. A right of way had been secured; after a long fight which developed uuich opposition, the necessary franchises were granted by the citv of Santa :\Ionica and work was actively begun on a competing electric line which held out hopes of a twenty-five cent fare. The new road was well under way when the sale by Messrs. Fraser and Jones, of the Ocean Park right of way—the old Santa Fe right of way— to Sherman and Clark of the Los Angeles-Pacific. 260 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES and the later sale to the Harriman interests, put an end to this prospect of competition; as the new road thus lost its terminals. Several new tracts were opened up for settlement during the year. The Ocean Villa Tract, cast of the electric road and opposite the Country Club was sold in half acre lots which were quickly subdivided and a new residence dis- trict grew up. In September, Ocean Park Villa Tract No.. 2, 60 acres extend- ing from Ballona avenue to Eighth street v/as put on the market and made a record as a quick seller. These ventures were so successful that E. J. Vawter offered 60 lots for sale on the hill in the vicinity of Hill and Fourth streets, all of which were soon disposed of. Pier avenue continued to hold its own as the principal business street. A three-story brick block was erected by Maier and Zobelin, and a new block designed especially to accommodate the postofhce was built. Ttily 23d the postoffice was moved from Second street to its new home and several of the business houses on Second street followed it to the new loca- tion. Lots on the ocean front, near Pier avenue, sold this summer for $2,300 to $2,600. Marine avenue was opened up. paved and sidewalked this year and Hart and Eraser avenues were " parked." The placing of the sidewalk in the middle of a street, with gardens bordering it on either side was an innovation which has proved very attractive in the beach districts, and has now been adopted in many places, although Ocean Park claims it as original with her. The beautiful home built for J. M. Davies, a ten-room house, complete in every detail of artistic finish, and an equally handsome home for Thomas Fitz- gerald, now owned by Nat Goodwin, marked a new era in beach residences. The selection of Ocean Park as a permanent home by such men as Frank Wiggins, W. T. Gibbon, and many other prominent business men of Los Angeles, made the place a suburban as well as a resort town. The rapid growth of South Santa Monica and of the territory south of the city limits naturally gave rise to much discussion as to the future government of this prosperous young city. The attempt to divide the city of Santa Monica had proved so impracticable that it was now proposed to incorporate a new town to the- south, with the hope that when the new town was fairly organized, the Ocean Park district of Santa Monica might experience a change of sentiment and cast its fortunes with the new corjDoration. The matter was fully discussed in all of its bearings and in the fall the necessary steps were taken and the elec- tion called for February, 1904. On that date, the new town began its existence and the name " Ocean Park " became the property of a district which had been in existence less than eighteen months, leaving the postofifice of " Ocean Park " within the bounds of Santa Monica, and creating endless confusion as to the location of and the meaning of the name " Ocean Park." HISTORY UF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 261 South Santa Monica 1904-07. 1904. The dissolution of the Ocean Park Improvement Company, which had been the controlHng- element in Ocean Park affairs, was announced February 3rd, 1904, and was an event of importance in South Santa Monica. By this arrange- ment, Mr. Kinney, who had owned a one-half interest in the company, sold to his partners all of his interest in the property of the companv, both lands and buildmgs, between Navy and Kinney streets in Santa Monica, thus giving Fraser Jones and Gage the entire control of the Santa Monica holdings, ^inclu'ding the Pier avenue improvements. iAIr. Kinney received in exchange all title to the holdings of the company south of Navy street. As a result of this move, Mr Kinney planned Venice, while Messrs. Fraser and Jones devoted themselves to the development of their Pier avenue interests. Another result was the raising of prices for all lots belonging to the Improvement Companv from $4S per fron't foot to $60. ' It had already been announced that the Los Angeles-Pacific had purchased Mr. Kinney's interests in the proposed electric line that was to have been built through Ocean Park. They had also previously purchased the right of way owned by Fraser, Jones and Gage, thus giving them additional land^s and right of way. The railroad company at once began making improvements which were greatly appreciated by the residents of this district. The building of the plank walk between their tracks was a great boon to people who had been compelled to wade through deep sand to reach the cars. The erection of stations and improvements of the trolley way gave the town a new street and the companv also graded and improved a tract east of the line and put it on the market. In 1901 Captain Donahue brought a gasoline launch to Santa Monica which was operated from the wharf at Pier avenue, carrying fishermen and pleasure seekers on trips up and down the coast. This little craft had been the source of much pleasure to beach residents and visitors and it was with regret that they learned of her total wreck which occurred March 23rd. 1904, off the Short Line beach. June 30th the new Holborow, located in the handsome three-story brick put up by Maier and Zobelin, was opened to the public. This was then the finest hotel south of the Arcadia and was very popular. T905. In February, 1905, occurred one of the heaviest storms ever known on the Santa Monica bay coast. This washed out a large section of the Pier avenue wharf and later in the month another storm completed the wrecking of the pier. E. J. \\\WTER, JR. HiSTURV OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 263 As a consequence, the outfall sewer of Santa Monica was badly wrecked and the beginning of sewer troubles followed. Another storm in March carried awav 700 feet of the wharf and destroyed a mile of the beach walk. According to the terms of the agreement made between the city and the company who built the pier on the piles intended for carrying the outfall, Messrs. Kinney and Ryan were to keep the pier in repair for twenty years. The interest of Messrs. Kinney and Ryan had now passed into the hands of the Ocean Park Improvement Com- pany. A dispute as to who should stand the expense of the repair resulted in the sewer matter remaining unsettled. In the meantime a company was formed to build a new pier and it was proposed also to build another pier from the foot of Marine avenue. A permit for the Marine avenue pier was let to M. R. King, and later the idea of the horseshoe pier developed. A seaside theater was opened for the first time in the Pavilion at Pier avenue. The First National Bank of Ocean Park was organized in April, with J. M. Elliott, W. D. Longyear, E. J. Vawter, Jr., J. W. Lincoln, A. Eraser, C. H. Mullen and E. J. Vawter, Sr., as directors. E. J. Vawter. Sr., was president. J. M. Elliott, vice-president; Thomas Meldrum, cashier. June ist, the Com- mercial State Bank opened for business, with Eon A. Pratt, president ; Warren Gillelen, vice-president; J. W. Lawrence, cashier. Considerable feeling was aroused by an attempt to remove the postoffice from Pier avenue to Marine street and then make it the official office of the new town. A postoffice inspector was called in to straighten out postoffice matters; but after a conference with all parties interested, it was finally decided that the Ocean Park postoffice be left as it was and the new postoffice be named Venice. On the completion of the Masonic Temple, a handsome three-story brick build- mg, located on Marine avenue, the postoffice was again changed, despite a vig- orous protest, to a handsomely fitted up room in this building. But this was still within the limits of Santa Monica. Board of Education, City of Santa Monica. 1907. CHAPTER VII. PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS. Schools. AS in every other American community, one of the first interests of the new settlement of Santa Monica, in 1875, was to provide school advantages. The first shack to house the men working on the wharf was put on the ground in April, 1875 ; the first lots in the new town site were sold in July. On November 3rd, the citizens of the town held a meeting in the dining-room of the Hotel Santa Monica to discuss school matters and take steps to secure the formation of a school district. As a result of this effort, the Santa Monica School District was formed by the board of supervisors. It included within its limits the San Vicente, Santa INIonica and Malibu ranchos, the tract of land belonging to Mrs. Lucas, and a portion of the Ballona grant — a somewhat extensive domain. On December 3rd the first school election was held and John Freeman, L. T. Fisher and J. W. Scott were chosen as trustees ; at the same time it was reported that there were seventy-two children in the nevv' district. An election was called in February, 1876, to vote a tax for school purposes; but owing to some irregularity of form it was postponed until March nth, when a special tax of $5,000 was voted for a school-house, and Loren Heath was appointed as assessor and collector of the same. The first assessment of the district shows a valuation of $1,035,580. Jones and Baker had already donated two lots on Sixth street as a site and during the summer a neat frame building, containing two school-rooms below and a large room above was erected and ready for use in the fall. In the meantime the children had not lacked for educational opportunities. November 8th, 1875, the " Santa Monica Academy," D. G. C. Baker, principal, opened for its first term of twelve weeks, prepared to give courses " in all branches, including the Fourth Reader and Hebrew," and " with accommoda- tions for a very few young ladies to board and lodge at reasonable rates." ]\Irs. M. J. D. Baker was instructor in elocution and Aliss Ida M. Atkinson taught music and drawing. Thus every need of a full school curriculum was supplied. The first school exhibition given in Santa Monica was presented by the pupils of this school in the Presbyterian chapel, February 9th, 1876. The Outlook also announces that the second term of Mrs. PVink's private school would com- mence on February 7th. March 4th, 1876, the first session of the public school opened in the Presbyterian church, located on the corner of Third and Arizona, the building still standing in the rear of the present church. Among the pupils of this school were a number who have since been well known residents of Santa 266 HISTORY OF SANTA .MONICA i]AY CITIES Monica — George, Henry and Eugene i>oehme, Julia, May and George Suits, Mary Collins and Claude Sheckles. H. P. McCusick was the teacher and before the end of the second month he had an enrollment of ']'/ pupils. The next fall when school opened in the new school-house, Sei)tember loth, Mr. McCusick was assisted by Miss Lucy Whiten and the two lower rooms were used, while the " big " room was useful as an assembly room and a meeting place for pub- lic occasions. Many happy memories are associated with this room in the minds of older residents of Santa Monica. One memorable occasion was an entertain- ment and dance held on the evening of December 31st, 1881, the proceeds to be used for the purchase of an organ for the school-house. The Los Angeles papers announce that the affair was a great success and that the tableaux would have been creditable to a first-class theater. It should certainly have been a w'ell rehearsed affair, for in a dispute over one of the rehearsals, the teacher, W. H. P. Williams, an impetuous southerner, shot and seriously wounded one McDon- ald whom he thought to be interfering with his plans. Naturally the young pro- fessor was recjuested to resign, but the entertainment was carried out by his successor, W. W. Seaman, who later became a well known state official. The minutes of the school board for December 30th, 1881, state, " A Wilcox and White organ was presented to the public school of Santa Monica, the money for same having been raised by a series of public entertainments gotten up through the instrumentality of Mr. M. R. Gaddy and others." In 1877 the district showed an enrollment of 157 children, Mr. A. C. Shafer was the principal and was assisted by Miss Yda Addis, whose name and brilliant though erratic career are known to all older residents of Southern Cali- fornia. February 14th, 1878, a special tax for school purposes was voted. The school continued with two teachers until 1884, when the upper room was fur- nished and three teachers employed. In August, 1887, more room for the schools had become imperative and $5,000 bonds were voted and four rooms added to the school building. Four teachers w'ere now employed, with Elmer P. Rowell as principal. Mr. Rowell was. connected with the schools of Santa Monica for four years and many advances were made under his able leadership. In 1888 the rapid increase in population made even the new accommodations inadequate and a tax of $2,500 was voted to still further enlarge the school building, after which six teachers were required. In 1889. after a good deal of agitation, steps were taken to provide the south side with a school. This was opened in a private house ; but in 1888 lots had been secured at the corner of Ash and Fourth streets and in 1890 a small building erected. In 1891 another small building was put up in Garapatos can- yon. This section of the district has since been cut off from the Santa Monica district. In 1894 a neat building was ])rovided for the i)iipils resident in Santa Monica canvon. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 267 In May. 1885, the first class graduated from the grammar grade depart- ment, under the county laws governing grammar grades. The Santa Monica schools were counted as of the grammar grade until 1891, when the high school was established, under a new state law, and opened its first year of work in September, with Prof. Lero}- D. Brown as principal. Prof. Brown was an able educator and made a strong mark upon the character of the city schools. He was later principal of the Los Angeles schools and his untimely death was a sorrow to many who had enjoyed his instruction. The high school was opened in the Sixth street building and the first class of five members, Roy Arthur Sul- liger, Florence Corle Rubicam, George G. Bundy, Hilda H. Hasse and Delia Sweetser, graduated in 1894. For several years, beginning with 1889, Professor E. P. Rowell, Dr. A. W. Plummer, Professor Brown and others conducted a very successful summer institute in Santa Monica, for teachers and others desiring special instruction. These institutes provided interesting and profitable classes and lectures, con- certs and instruction in music and many enjoyable social affairs grew out of them. For several years they attracted a number of teachers and would-be teachers to this place for the summer courses. In 1893, two more rooms were added to the Sixth street building, and in 1895 another school room was added to the south side school. September 5th, 1897, bonds to the amount of $15,000 were voted for a high school building, although in April of the same year a proposition to vote $12,000 for the same purpose was lost, chiefly because it was felt that the sum was not enough to build a suitable building on the lots already secured at Tenth and Oregon. The contract for the building was let to H. X. Goetz and in June, 1898, the building was completed and dedicated by holding the graduating exercise for the year in it. In 1902 $12,000 bonds w^ere voted for a new building on the south side and the next }-ear an eight-room building, costing when com])lete about $16,000, was ready for occupancy. The city was now growing so rapidly, both by annexation and from within, that the school accommodations were felt to be entirely inadequate. In 1905 $60,000 bonds were voted and plans were made for three school houses, an eight-room building at Seventh and INIichigan, now known as the Garfield building ; a four-room school at Irwin avenue and Twenty-second — the Grant, and a four-room building on Twentieth between Oregon and Arizona. It was decided to construct all of these buildings of brick and to make them complete in equipment. But the growth of the school population was still beyond the capacity of the accommodations and in 1906 it was decided to replace the old Sixth street school, which had been added to tmtil little of the original building could be found, with a modern buildint?". 268 HISTORY OF SANTA xMONICA BAY CITIES In constMiuence the people were as^ain called upon to bond themselves for school purposes and the sum of $15,000 to complete the three buildings already under wav, was voted December 9th, 1905, and of $60,000 for the Sixth street school and a four-room building in the new Palisade tract. The Sixth street school was first occupied in the spring of 1907 and is the equal of any school building in the country. The Santa Monica schools are now fully equipped for eiTective service. Fifty teachers are employed and the attendance for 1907-8 will surpass all SIXTH STREET SCHOOL. ]M-evious years. The number of children O'f school age in May, 1907, was 2,499. Departments of music and drawing, with supervising instructors are maintained. Full courses in manual training and domestic science are given. The school district now has nine buildings : The Lincoln — the High School — located at Oregon and Tenth ; Jefferson, the old Sixth street school ; Washing- ton, Fourth street and Ashland avenue; Garfield, Seventh street and Michigan avenue ; Grant, Irwin avenue and Twenty-second street ; McKinley, Twentieth street between Idaho and Montana ; Roosevelt, Sixth street between Idaho and Montana ; Westgate and Canyon. The entire valuation of school property is $194,000. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 269 Beside the public schools, the Academy of the Holy Names, under the care of the Sisters, was established in 1899. The beautiful building occupied by this school was dedicated February 22nd, 1901. In 1906 the California Military Academy was established in Santa Monica, in response to the desire of parents who wished to place their sons in a genuine military academy. Its sessions were held in tents located in the park until December 9th, when the school was transferred to the Arcadia Hotel building and the hotel ceased to exist after serving the public for twenty years. The school has a boarding and day department and prepares its pupils for college. Certainly no more delightful and healthful location for such a school could be found. School Trustees of Santa Monica. 876-77 — John Freeman, L. T. Fisher, J. W. Scott (clerk). 877-78 — M. D. Johnson. J. W. Scott. George Boehme (clerk). 878-79 — Loren Heath, J. W. Scott, George Boehme (clerk). 879-80 — Loren Heath, George Boehme, W. S. Vawter (clerk). 880-81— M. D. Johnson, Loren Heath, W. S. Vawter (clerk). 881-82— George Giroux, W. R. Caddy, W. S. Vawter (clerk). 882-83— Mrs. L. B. Huie, J. W. Scott, M. R. Gaddy (clerk). 883-84— Mrs. E. E. McLeoud, Mrs. Geo. B. Dexter, E. K. Chapin (clerk). 884-85— Mrs. Geo. B. Dexter, Mrs. E. E. McLeoud, E. K. Chapin (clerk). 885-86— Mrs. Geo. B. Dexter, Mrs. E. E. McLeoud, E. K. Chapin (clerk). 886-87— F. H. Howard, E. J. Vawter, E. K. Chapin (clerk). 887-88— W. O. Baxter. Geo. D. Pendleton. E. J. Vawter (clerk). 888-89— W. O. Baxter, Geo. D. Pendleton, W. S. Vawter (clerk). 889-90— Geo. D. Pendleton, John C. Morgan. W. S. Vawter (clerk). 890-91— John C. Morgan, Dr. H. G. Gates, N. A. Roth (clerk). 891-92— John C. Morgan. W. S. Vinyard, Dr. J. J. Place (clerk). 892-93— John C. Morgan, R. R. Tanner, Dr. J. J. Place (clerk). 893-94 — Dr. J. J. Place, R. R. Tanner. Nathan Bundy (clerk). 894-95— R. R. Tanner, R. P. Elliott, Nathan Bundy (clerk). 895-96— R. P. Elliott, Dr. J. J. Place, Nathan Bundy (clerk). 896-97— R. P. Elliott, S. F. Carpenter, Fred H. Taft (clerk). 897-98— R. P. Elliott, S. F. Carpenter. F. H. Taft (clerk). 898-99— R. P. Elliott S. F. Carpenter, F. H. Taft (clerk). 899-00— R. P. Elliott, S. F. Carpenter, D. G. Holt (clerk). 900-01 — S. F. Carpenter, D. G. Holt (clerk), F. K. Rindge. 901-02 — S. F. 'Carpenter, F. K. Rindge, D. G. Holt (clerk) 902-03— S. F. Carpenter, F. K. Rindge, D. G. Holt (clerk). 903-04 the change was made from a board of school trustees to a cil_\ 270 HISTORY OF SANTA ^lOXICA BAY CITIES board of education, the first board under the re-organization being: S. F. Carpenter, J. H. Hassinger, W. E. Devore, Dr. J. S. Hunt, J. H. Jackson. This board held until 1906 when the present board, W. E. Devore, A. B. Clapp, F. \'. Dales, D. G. Holt, and ^^'. S. \'awter was elected. Sui'ERx-isiNG Princii'als oi* Santa Monica Schools. 1876-77— H. P. McCusick. 1877— A. C. Shafter. T878— A. McPherson. 1878-79— Chas, H. Hall. 1879-80— Miss Blanche L. Downs. 1880-81— Florella King. 1881— W. H. P. Williams. 1882-86— W. W. Seaman. 1886-90— E. P. Rowell. 1890-92 — Leroy D. Brown. 1893-00 — N. F. Smith. 1900-02 — C. I. D. ^loore. 1902-07 — D. A. Eckert (superin- tendent). 1907 — Horace Rebok (superinten- dent). School Exrollmlnt and Attendancl. The following table shows the increase in school enrollment and attendance in the Santa Monica school district since the vear 1876: Total Enrollment. Year. 1876 103 1876-1877 145 1877-1878 149 1878-1879 122 1879-1880 98 1880-1881 103 1881-1882 108 1882-1883 136 1883-1884 179 1884-1885 176 1885-1886 198 1886-1887 264 1887-1888 332 1888-1889 354 1889-1890 344 1890-1891 355 Av. Daily Attendance. 66 64 80 65 60 54 49 87 114 118 129 187 220 212 222 Total Enrollment. Year. 1891-1892 392 1892-1893 496 1893-1894 5^4 1894-1895 614 1895-1896 669 1896-1897 739 1897-1898 682 1898-1899 699 1899-1900 668 1900- 1901 660 1901-1902 755 1902-1903 973 1903-1904 1331 1904-1905 1352 1905- 1906 1604 1906-1907 T64T Av. Daily Attendance. 246 278 320 402 467 444 437 441 401 482 581 815 855 1035 1121 HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 271 Public Library. The people who settled the town of Santa ^lonica were of the intelligent and progressive class. They at once took steps to provide themselves with schools and churches, and on March ist, 1876, the Outlook announces: "A Library Association is about to be formed in Santa Monica. All those inter- ested in this movement are requested to meet at the home of Mrs. Devere, on Sixth street, on Thursday evening, when the plans will be explained." The association was formed and met once a week on Saturday evenings, when discussions were held and papers read. Books and periodicals were contributed for the use of the members. At a meeting of the association held April 19th, 1878, Dr. J. S. Elliott was chosen president; George Boehme, treasurer ; and M. C. Olmstead, secre- tary and librarian. The initiation fees of the society were $1.00 and the mem- bership $2.00 annu- ally, the money to be devoted to the purchase of books. There were twenty- five members, and June 19th, 1876, the first installment of books for the Santa Monica Library was received, the list including a number of standard works. This was certainly a good start toward a library. How long this society existed, or what became of the books purchased for it. is not known. The next movement for a library and a free reading room was made about 1884 by some of the ladies of the town, who felt that the young people needed such opportunities. Mrs. Asenath Lorimer, Miss Ella G. Dow. the Misses Vawter, Miss Niles, and others were interested. A subscription list was started. Col. R. S. Baker being the first contributor. Entertainments were given for the fund and a room in the rear of Dr. Fred C. :\IcKinnie's drug store was secured for a reading room. The work was carried on for some time by the women interested; but after the organization of the Woman's Chris- tian Temperance L^nion, the reading room was turned over to their charge. It was then removed to the building still occupied by the organization, being located in the down-stairs room. Of their work the Outlook notes: PUBLIC LIBRARY. 272 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES " A few unselfish ladies of the W. C. T. U. have been engaged for some time in establishing a library and free reading room in Santa Monica. They have labored faithfully and already there is gratifying evidence that their work has not been in vain. Their free reading room is handsomely fitted up and is one of the specially inviting places in Santa Monica. For a time they rented a room but they finally concluded to purchase a lot and building and take the chances of paying for it. In accordance with this plan they bought a 25-foot lot and a two-story building on Third street for $2,500. Mr. John Steere, of whom they made the purchase, has given the ladies their own time to pay for the propert}^ only exacting the interest. By renting a portion of the building, they have redticed the rent to a small amount per month. On their shelves there are about 400 volumes of well selected books and the tables of the pleasant reading room are supplied with many popular magazines and papers. The only charge is two bits a month for books taken from the room, while all are allowed free use of everything within the library. The officers are Mrs. Jane Austin, president; Mrs. D. B. Hubbcll, vice-president, and Miss E. A. Dow, secretary. A number of other ladies are taking an active interest in the institution which deserves a most liberal support from our own residents, and it is to be hoped that some benevolent visitor will come along some da}- and determine to help this Avorthy undertaking. — Outlook, July 18, "88. The ladies of Santa Monica did, indeed, labor hard to aid this work. They gave dinners and suppers, socials and fairs, and worked harder to earn money for this purpose than they would have dreamed of working to earn money for themselves. One instance is told of an auction sale on the South Side, where the W. C. T. U. ladies furnished the dinner. One of the owners of the tract, Mr. Tom Lewis, offered to give a commission of $100 to the ladies if they would sell the house and lot on the tract offered. After the dinner, one of the ladies, Mrs. D. B. Hubbell, heard of the offer, rounded up a purchaser for the property and made a sale. In course of time the $100 was paid over to her and she asserts that the day on which she spent a hundred dollars all at once for books for the Santa Monica library, was a red letter dav in her life. In 1888, the ladies of Santa Monica, under the direction of Mrs. Cliapin. Mrs. W. S. \"awter, and others, and with the aid of Mr. Tyler, prepared a floral exhibit for the second Floral Festival held in the old Hazard Pavilion, in Los Angeles. A full-rigged ship was seen floating on the ocean, the wharf and the 1)luft" were represented — all in the most exquisite of flowers. The Santa Monica booth was unanimously declared the most beautiful among many elaborate exhibits and received the first prise, $200. This after deducting expenses the ladies turned over to the reading room fund. P)Ut the purchase of the building and the maintenance of the reading room and library proved too heavy a burden for the women to carrv indefinitely. In HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES IIZ 1889, Mr. Steere very generously returned the money which had been paid on the building and canceled the sale. But upon his death, in 1892, he left this building to the Women's Christian Temperance Union on condition that a free reading room be maintained in it. In 1890 the ladies who were interested in the library proposed to turn it over to the city, provided the city would carry it on. The proposal of the ladies who had gathered together a well selected library of 800 volumes was as follows : " It appearing to the members of this society that said society is unable to pay the current expenses of the library belonging to them, and believing it will be for its best interest to donate the said library to the town of Santa Monica, a municipal organization duly incorporated and existing under the laws of this state, to be carried on by the said town in accordance with the laws of this state regulating public libraries, it is therefor " Resolved, that this society does hereby give, donate and bequeath to said town of Santa Monica all its said library, together with all appurtenances belonging thereto, for the purpose of maintaining a public library in connection with a free reading room. " We, the undersigned members of the foregoing society, do hereby consent to this disposition of the library. " Signed by Laura E. Hubbell, president ; J. A. Austin, secretary ; Rebecca B. Guilberson, I. D. Richmond (per Mrs. Richmond, his wife). Trustees, Mamie E. Guilberson, Mrs. I. D. Richmond, Mrs. J. A. Dexter. November 14th, 1890." The town trustees accepted the gift and appointetd W. W. Webster, E. H. Sweetser, H. A. Fisher, Abbot Kinney and L. T. Fisher as library trustees. Two rooms were engaged in the bank building and December, 1890, Miss Elfie Mosse was appointed librarian. The first monthly report of the library after it was turned over to the city, December, 1890, reads: " Report of Santa Monica Public Library, commencing December 5th. The book list names 808 books ; the records show fifteen books taken that have been out for several months. The list of subscribers during month is twenty-eight — sixteen of them new on the list. Receipts for the month, $7.25. Donation of a year's subscription of the following magazines by Mr. Abbot Kinney: Scribncr's, Popular Science Monthly, The Forum, Harper's Monthly, Puck and Judge. Mr. H. A. Winslow donated American Encyclo- pedia, 10 volumes; Mr. T. A. Lewis, 'Memoirs of W. T. Sherman,' 2 volumes, Elfie Mosse, librarian." A subscription of twenty-five cents a month was still required and still at the end of the first vear the librarv was badlv in need of funds. If it was to be J. H. CLARK. HISTORY OF SANTA MOXICA BAY CITIES " 275 carried on. sotiiething- nnist be done and a subscription of $200 was niade un among citizens to help it out. ^ March m ,893. the library uas ma- other towns in Southern Californ a had done. Early n, 1903 Mrs. J. H. Clark wrote to Mr. Carnegie sett ! forth t e needs of Santa .Monica and n,ai.ing a pica for consideration' f^thi: city, .\tter some correspondence she received the following letter: ANDREW CARNEGIE. 2 Fast 91st St., New York. Mrs. J. H. Clark, 13th April, 1903. Santa Monica. Cal city ag"e\'TyTe!o7,S'Sf i°orci!srrinS;;''a" ?" '"^='1'.'","''"'* "°"'-- " ">« less tlian Twelve Hundred and ray DollarLl veal- la 'f ''"'™"'>' "« ™=' <>' "o' Diuldlng, Mr. Cai-negie will be ,, ease, to ?n™fi x '^™"j! ^ ="'''''''«=''<='<'■■ tlte Dollars to ereet a Free Pablie\i'brar;"Bnmi,',rior S^a^nm MoT.ic""''""' '"'"' ""°'"-'<' Respectfully yours, JAS. BERTRAM, ^ . P. Secretary. the slnoort'o;?,' It'' ";""•"■ '"""■ '"'■"' ""= ''""'"' »""""' -'"^llv for as , rted a, T' T'' ™""""' '° ^^"'^^ '■' -^"^ '"^ -bscription as start d and in a few weeks the sum of $3,982.50 had been raised The ■ ™ saw tt Zn\ °", ",'"" "''"^' "" '^«""- ■'•">■ ^3«> of the same ^\as opened witli a reception to the pubhc and Iilr'"' w'tr °' "" '""''"' '' ^°--«l-- "i"' ••' h-l»me faca.le the rooms ben g bmit aroimd ,t and opening from it, in such a vvav that super- vision can be bad over the whole from the central desi- A l,, ■'■ , snitaKl. ,-!,,■ , . ., central desk. .A juvenile room with fo" ,!tot " ""' ' '"''"'■ "-'' ™"^ '"' '° "-■ conveniences nietbods'liaJe'T"""""^ """T™^ '"' ''""'■-^" '""' "' "''■ "''""■ "■°ri<. "totleni methods have been adopted an0-^ CHAPTER VIII. CHURCHES AND SOCIETIES. Methodist Church. THE oldest record of the Methodist church of Santa Monica reads : " Minutes of the First Quarterly Conference for Santa Monica, held Oc- tober 26th, 1875, at the residence of D. G. C. Raker. The presiding elder, A. M. Hough, in the chair. The session was opened with prayer by the presiding^ elder. On motion Rev. J. D. Crum was appointed secretary. Organization: FIRST METHODIST CHURCH. The following named persons, members of the Alethodist Episcopal church, being ])resent, proceeded to organize a society : J. D. D. Crum, pastor ; O. A. Snow, local i)reacher; D. G. C. Baker, A. Button, M. J. D. Baker, Eliza Corey, Ida May Atkinson, Margaret Atkinson. Minnie Atkinson and Mary A. Crum. Abner Button was appointed class leader. Stewards: B. G. C. Baker, O. A. Snow and Margaret Atkinson. B. G. C. Baker, recording secretary. Trustees: O. A. Snow, R. M. Widney, Samuel Atkinson, B. G. C. Baker and J. B. Crum. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 289 It was resolved that the trustees be instructed to incorporate and secure lots from the Santa Monica Land Company and erect a church building thereon. Margaret Atkinson and Mrs. M. J. D. Baker were apjjointed a committee to secure subscriptions to aid in the erection of a church." The Reverend Crum preached for the first time in Santa Monica, October 15th, 1875, in an upper room of the buildng, then occupied as a hardware store, on the corner of Oregon and Fifth street. On October 29th Rev. Hough preached. The society continued to use this room until January 13th, 1876, when the pastor gave notice that there would be no service on the next Sabbath, but that he hoped the}' would worship in a building of their own on the second Sunday. And this was done. The Santa Monica Land Company donated two lots for the use of the church on the corner of Sixth street and Arizona avenue ; the people of the little town, still largely a tent city, donated money and labor. Rev. A. M. Hough and R. M. Widney of Los Angeles subscribed liberally, and the pastor, being of the long line of Methodist elders who were able to work with hands as well as with brain and heart, himself labored with carpenter's tools. The church when completed, represented a value, including lots of $1,361.66. This building, after being removed to the corner of Fourth and Arizona, enlarged several times, was finally removed to South Santa Monica to house the new M. E. church there. This building was dedicated, free from debt, on February 3rd, 1776. Rev. Crum was pastor of the church most of the time vmtil 1878-79. He came of a family of ministers, his grandfather having been one of the founders of the United Brethren church and having had nine grandsons who entered the Method- ist ministry. He had spent fifteen years in the Southern Illinois conference before coming to this state, where his first charge was the Santa Monica church, which he so ably led under many discouragements. It is of record that for his first year of labor here he received $230, and his salary in the subsequent years was pitifully inadequate. Rev. Crum was succeeded by Rev. S. S. Russell, who only remained a year, and then for three years the church was pastorless and practically dis- organized. A pastor was sent here in 1883-4, Rev. J. B. Howard, who found but three resident members of the church. He nevertheless succeeded in gathering a number of new nK^nbers and strengthened the church by changing the location. The lots on Sixth street were sold and the present location on Fourth street and Arizona avenue was purchased and the building removed. The church continued to gain slowly under various pastnrs until 1890, when a serious disagreement occurred between the pastor, the official board and the membership, and as a result thirty-one out of the fifty-three members withdrew and formed the Prohibition Congregational church. The blow was a severe one and the church did not recover its strength for two or three years. 19 290 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES In 1892 Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Rindge became members of the church and rendered much assistance to it. Rev. Wm. Stevenson was pastor, and under his minis- trations the church was doubled in membership and began an advance move which has since continued. The Epworth League was formed this year. Dr. Stevenson remained as pastor of the church until 1897 and was then given a farewell reception which expressed somewhat the honor and love which he had inspired, not only in the church, but among the citizens of the town generally. In June, 1895, it was announced that Frederick H. Rindge proposed to build a new church building, free of all cost to the church, provided it would agree to meet the pastor's salary and all incidental expenses. In consequence on August 13th. 1895, ground was broken for this building and on the first Sabbath in 1896, the most beautiful Methodist church building in Southern California was dedicated. In 1897-98 Rev. R. C. Wuestenberg was pastor and the membership was increased to 150, while the Sunday school numbered from 250-270. In July, 1898, it was voted to remove the old church to South Santa Monica, where a mission was holding service in the old Santa Fe depot. But after some agitation the action was not taken. In August, 1899, a church was organized, then known as South Santa Monica M. E. church, with Rev. F. G. H. Stevens as pastor, the mission having been served by Rev. Robert Fisher. In December, the old church was donated to the new organization and was moved to Ocean Park. A new parsonage was erected on the site of the old parsonage. Rev. C. T. Wilson and Rev. T. H. Woodward served as pastors and Rev. J. C. Healy served during 1901 to 1903. During his term the parsonage was completed, a neat cottage which was a decided addition to the advantages of the church. In 1903 came Rev. F. G. H. Stevens, who still remains — one of the ablest and best beloved of the many good men who have served this church. Now, in 1907, the church has a membership of 240, while the Svmday school reaches 350. So rapid has been the growth of the church and congre- gations that the church of ten years ago is inadequate and an addition which will more than double the seating capacity of the structure is in course of erection. First Presi'.yteriax Church of Santa Monica. The history of the Presbyterian church of Santa Monica dates back to September 12th. 1875, when a Sunday school was organized at the house of W. D. Vawter, on Fourth street, the present home of the Misses Vawter. Later this school met in a hall on the corner of Fifth and Oregon, generously ofifered to them by Mr. J. O. Brady. On Septetmber 24th. a ]:)etition signed by twelve persons, was sent to the HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 291 Rev. Dr. White, chairman of the committee of the I^resbxtery, asking him to come to Santa Monica and ori>anize a Presbyterian church. ( )n Tuesday, September 28th, Dr. White met with the petitioners and organized them in accordance with their request into the " First Presbyterian Church of Santa Monica." Tlie names of the petitioners were as follows: Mr. R. S. I)assett, Mrs. E. Bassett, Miss Rose Bassett. Mr. T. H. Clark, Mrs. E. Mountain, Misses Mattie A. Mountain, Mr. L. M. Perkins, Mrs. S. P. Perkins, :\Irs. C. A. \'awter, Miss May Vawter, Miss Jennie \"awter, Miss Emma \'awter. The trustees of the new organization were: Y. S. Grinshaw, E. J. \'awter. G. W. Brady, W. S. A^awter. The new society proceeded at once to provide themselves with a ])ermanent place of worship. Messrs. Jones and Baker presented the church with two lots at the corner of Third and Arizona, and on these was erected the chapel which for eleven years was used, and was then moved to the rear of the lots, enlarged, and used for infant classes, mid-week meetings and socials. The Presbyterian Board of Church Erection assisted in building this first church, work on which was commenced January 17th, 1876, and which was dedicated March 12th. On Sunday, July loth, 1887, a move was made for building a more com- modious place of worship. On that day Col. Elliott F. Shepherd, proprietor of the New York Mail and Express, and an elder of the Fifth Avenue Presby- terian church of New York City, happened to be present and, hearing that the church intended to build, started the list with a subscription of $230. Encour- aged by this beginning, a committee consisting of Mrs. Mary E. Treadwell and Miss Jennie Vawter was appointed to canvas the congregation and community. By their energetic efforts sufficient funds were soon subscribed to erect and enclose the new church building. But before the completion of the work came the collapse of the boom and many of the subscriptions were not paid in. The ladies of the church met this condition and it is largely due to their efforts that the church was finally completed and dedicated, Sunday, September 4th, 1892. The ladies held a memorable series of entertainments during the four years of church building. The success of the Santa Monica ladies in taking the first prize at the Floral Festival in Los Angeles, suggested the idea of a Floral Festival at home. In 1889 'i "Feast of Flowers" was held in the new church building, then unfinished, which was arranged by the ladies of the town under the auspices of the Presbyterian ladies and which was acknowledged as one of the most beautiful floral exhibits ever made in Southern California. The succeeding year a Kalendar Kirmess was given, lasting three days, the booths representing the months and the whole conception most artistically designed and carried out. In 1891 another *' Spring Festival " was held which was an equally rich display of Santa Monica's floral wealth. These affairs were participated in by the 292 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES people of Santa Monica generally and attracted many visitors from Los Angeles and other places. Mnch of their success was due to the energy and executive ability of the committee of which Miss Jennie Vawter was chairman. The new church is of the Queen Anne style, ceiled and wainscoted within with cedar, lighted with stained glass windows and electrical chandeliers, and with a seating capacity of 250. The total cost was about $7,000, of which over $1,000 was contributed by Mr. W. D. Vawter, to whose encouragement at the outset and liberal contributions, the success of the undertaking was largely due. It was built under the supervision of a committee consisting of Messrs. W. S. Vawter, Patrick Robertson and E. H. Sweetser. In the summer of 1907 a fine pipe organ was placed in the church as a memorial gift from Mr. Joseph H. Clark to the memory of his son, Edward H. Clerk. It was built by the Estey Company and was installed at a cost of $2,600. The following ministers have served the church since 1875 ^s pastors, or as stated supplies: I. M. Condit, H. V. Noyes, John W. Ellis, H. Mackay, Thos. F. Fotheringham, Williel O. Thompson, J. W. Healy, Richmond Logan, James White, Samuel H. Weller, Enos P. Baker, J. B. Stewart, William R. Henderson, O. F. Wisner, Amos A. Randall, Henry P. Wilber. The following have served as ruling elders : G. H. Clark, J. C. Olmstead, Geo. A. Armtsrong, William E. Case, H. H. Dow, George D. Rowan, Andrew J. Viele, John M. Coyner, James E. Ward, C. S. Dales. Clarkson N. Guyer, T. H. Wells, H. J. White, T. E. Cramer. Catholic Church. July 28th, 1877, the Outlook states, saw the celebration of mass, for the first time in the new town of Santa Monica. The service was held in the house of Judge Morgan, Reverend Father Verdaguer, the beloved " Father Peter " of the Plaza church, Los Angeles, presiding. Services were probably held at irregular intervals thereafter until May 4th. 1884, when the Catholic church was opened for use, although it was not completed until the following year. On August 1 8th, T885, the bell of the church was blessed and the church was dedicated. In May, 1886, came Father Patrick Hawe as pastor of the church, and since that date Father Hawe has been the mainspring of the parish and the church work in this vicinity. Under his supervision was built the parochial house adjoining the church and the addition to the orginal church building which was dedicated August 19th, 1888, by Bishop Mora. In 1887 the statue of Saint Monica was presented to the church by Mrs. Victor Ponet, of Los Angeles. Also this year was built the Catholic church at Ballona. now Palms, HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 293 St. Augustine's — named for the son of Saint Monica very fittingly, since this mission was an ofifshoot of Saint Monica's church. In 1899, Julv i6th, a small band of Sisters of the Holy Name, came to Santa Monica to establish an academy. They rented a private house on Fourth street, and September 4th, opened their school with nineteen pupils. The year closed with fifty-two childrn under the charge of the Sisters. September 26th, 1890, the ground was broken for the building of the Academy of Holy Names on the corner of Third and Arizona streets. February 22nd, 1901, witnessed the dedication of the new building. This was an im- pressive ceremony and the occasion is one that will long live in the memory of the participants and witnesses. The civic services were the finest ever held in Santa Monica. Under the management of the grand marshal, J- J- Carrillo and his fifty aides, richly caprisoned as Spanish cabelleros, the parade was viewed in front of the academy. It consisted of a number of old soldiers from the Soldiers' Home ; a float representing all the states and territories ; two brass bands ; nine societies from Los Angeles ; Santa Monica Board of Trustees and fire department, and the children from the academy, the Ballona, Santa Monica and Canyon Sunday schools. As General La Grange, and the city officials, escorting the clergy, left their carriages the home band played " patriotic songs and the cannon of the Soldiers' Home boomed, while the flag unfurled and spilled the fragrant roses hidden within its folds." The mayor of Los Angeles welcomed the guests; Right Reverend Bishop Montgomery delivered the oration. Thus was the school inaugurated in its beautiful home. On May 5th, 1903, the academy was honored by a visit from Rev. Arch- bishop Diomede Falconi, representative in this country of the Pope, Leo XIII. The occasion was made a festal day and the distinguished guest was paid every honor, not only by the clergy and laity of the Catholic church, but by the city officials and citizens generally. July loth, 1903. was a day long remembered in the annals of Santa Monica. It was given up to the entertainment of the Knights of Columbia, who had that year held their annual session in Los Angeles. The streets and buildings were brilliantly decorated and the popula- tion turned out to welcome the guests who, in turn, gazed with admiration upon the chaums of fair Santa Monica. The day was still further marked by the inauguration of a council of the Knights of Columbus in this city, a council which has flourished and is now a powerful ally of the church. In 1904. under the auspices of Bishop Conaty, now head of this diocese, the Catholic Teachers' Institute was held in this city, and since that date these institutes have been an annual feature of the life of the Sisters who are engaged in teaching. As guests of the .Academy of the Hol\- Name they spend two RE\'. PATRICK HAWK. HISTORY UF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 295 weeks each summer in listening to the instructions and lectures of distinguished teachers. But perhaps the most glorious of all gala days in the annals of Saint Monica's was the celebration of May 8th, 1904. This was a triple festival, for it marked the twentieth anniversary of the founding of the Church of Saint Monica's, the eighteenth year of Father Hawe's service to this parish and the dedication of the church of St. Clement, of Ocean Park. This church had been started by Father Hawe ten years before as a mission. The corner-stone for the handsome building was laid on August 24th, 1903, and the church was finally dedicated August 20th, 1905. The Reverend Michael Hennessy is the rector of this church. The chapel at the Soldiers' Home is also included in Father Hawe's parish, he having held the first services on the grounds of the Home, soon after it was instituted in 1889. A beautiful building has been erected by the government, containing two chapels — one for the use of the Protestant churches and one for Catholic services. The churches now included in the parish of Saint Monica are four, beside the academy. The entire number of communicants is large. January 15th, 1903, Reverend James A. O'Callaghan came to Santa Monica to relieve the head of the parish and assist him in his labors. Father O'Callag- han is a man of fine education and of superior qualities and has been of the greatest value to the parish. In 1906 Father Hawe visited the home of his birth and also visited the venerable Father Adam, of beloved memory through- out California. During his stay in Europe Father Hawe also visited Rome and received the blessing of the Pope. He is again welcomed to his own field where he guides the many ailairs co-incident with so large and important a parish. Plans are already made for greatly enlarging the work of the Catholic church in Santa Monica. It is hoped soon to begin work upon a cathedral which shall be a magnificent expression of worship, to be located on the corner of California avenue and Fourth street. The Christian Brothers, a Catholic organization, has recently secured a site of eleven acres between California and Nevada avenues. Ninth and Eleventh streets. Here a large college for boys will be established. % Episcopal Church — Saint Augustine-by-the;-Sea. The first Episcopalian service held in this city was an Easter service in Roger's Hall, April 15th, 1876. The hall was suitably decorated for the occa- sion and the Rev. J. B. Gray officiated. After this there was talk of forming an Episcopal society here and a number expressed themselves willing to con- tribute to a building fund for such a church ; but it was not until about Novem- ber, 1885, that services were regularly held and a Sunday school organized. At 296 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES that time the Kcv. Henry Scott jetferys, of Los Angeles, was appointed by Ijishop Kip as missionary in charge of the work and at once proceeded to secure land and monev for the erection of an Episcopal church. Senator Jones and ]\Irs. Baker donated two lots on Fourth street and an active building committee, consisting of Rev. JelTerys, Messrs. Baxter and Tomkinson, set to work to get the needed subscriptions. At the end of the first year of Mr. JetTery's labors, sixteen adults and twenty-two children were connected with the mission. The corner-stone for a chapel to cost $3,000 was laid with much ceremony on June 10th, 1887. Bishop Wingfield acted for the Bishop of California and there were present beside the Bishop, the Rev. l{lias Birdsell, rector of St. Paul's church, Los Angeles; the Rev. A. G. C. Trew, of San Gabriel; the Rev. J. D. H. Browne, rector of All Saints' church, Pasadena ; the Rev. J. B. Britton, a retired mission- ary and the missionary in charge. In 1888, through the successful labors of .Mr. JeiTerys and the people the new church was opened for divine worship and a large congregation assembled, the preacher being the rector of Pasadena. Mr. Jefferys resigned in the early part of 1889 and the Rev. Orrin Judd, of North Carolina, succeeded him. Mr. Judd had come to California broken down in health ; but he was a most eloquent preacher, which gift led to his resignation of this charge a year later to accept the new church of St. John on West Adams street, Los Angeles, which had been built in order to find a ]^lace for him in the city. During Mr. Judd's incumbency the work prospered and considerable additions were made to the membership of the church. The Rev. P. S. Ruth, of Pomona, officiated temporarily until September, 1891, when the Rev. I. M. M. Jones became rector. Mr. Jones remained in charge for nearly six years and during that period the Parish Hall was built and in manv ways the church made progress. On the resignation of Mr. Jones, KEV. J. D. 11. UliOWNK. HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA BAY CITIES 297 the Rev. Edward Meany officiated temporarily and, at a critical time in the history of the congregation, maintained the regular services of the church and did much to arouse the people. When, in May, 1900, Mr. Meany's school duties in Los Angeles compelled him to resign, he was succeeded by the present rector, the Rev. John D. H. Browne, who had been for sixteen years in Southern Cali- fornia and who had just resigned St. John's church, San Bernardino. During the nearly eight years that have intervened since Mr. Browne assumed the work, there has been steady growth. The church building has been enlarged at a cost of $3,000, and has also been beautified by many costly memorials. The parish hall has been enlarged and finished within, and a $600 piano provided, with many other improvements made. The roll of communi- cants has increased from 2^] to 201. The contributions for the parish and for the missionary funds of the diocese and the foreign field have multiplied many- fold. The baptisms have been over 100 and the confirmations 75. The Sunday school has grown very much and under the care of Mr. Percy J. Dudley, as superintendent, is accomplishing a good work, especially among the boys. The Parish Guild, the Woman's Auxiliary, the Brotherhood of St. Andrew, the Daughters of the King, the Junior Auxiliary are all in active life and meeting the needs of old and young. The Parish of St. Augustine-by-the-Sea has come to occupy the seventh place among the parishes of the diocese and bids fair to continue to grow in importance and increase in influence for good in the life of the city. The present officers of the parish and members of the vestry are: Rev. John D. H. Browne, rector; Plon. T. H. Dudley, senior warden; Mr. C. S. Raynor, junior warden ; Mr. J. £5. Proctor, vestry clerk ; Mr. Percy J. Dudley, treasurer ; Mr. J. F. Ordway, Mr. E. L. Young, Mr. H. J. Blake and Mr. C. C. Alelville. Baptist Church. In April, 1889, Mrs. Drane living on vSouth Third street, near Sand street, gathered together a number of the children in that neighborhood and started a union Sunday school in her home. Sunday, January 12th, 1890, a call having been made by G. B. Studd and J. O. Mathewson for a Sunday school in South Santa Monica, about forty-two persons gathered at the house of Mr. Mathewson. at the corner of Bay and South Sixth streets. A school was organized and Mr. Andrew Mills was chosen as superintendent, a position which he filled for six years. For a time the school was held in the old school house and then in the house of Captain Clark, Fourth and Strand. This rough cottage was adapted for Sunday services as far as possible and neighboring pastors were frequently invited to preach here. PVom February ist, 1890, until Xovember 3rd, 1892, Rev. A. P. Brown. 298 HISTORY UF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES pastor of the Baptist church at i'ahns, preached on alternate Sunday afternoons- at Ocean Park. Three pupils were baptized from the ( )cean I'ark school into- the membership of the Palms church. In 1891, Rev. W. W. Tinker became- district secretary of the American Baptist Home ^lissionary society. He pro- posed to erect a chapel in commemoration of J. O. Mathewson, who had passed' awav the previous year. September 5th, 1892, this was dedicated as the " Baptist Mission." a branch of the Palms church. It cost $700, was furnished with 100 chairs, a pulpit and a baby organ. Dr. Daniel Read, of Los Angeles, preached the dedicatory sermon. During 1893-4 Rev. H. S. Baker, pastor of Palms church, preached regularly in the chapel, assisted by Mr. Charles Baird as singer. In 1895, Rev. Mr. Thomason, pastor at Palms, preached regularly. In June the church was encouraged by a visit from Rev. E. G. Wheeler and the chapel car " Emanuel." The same month the annual convention of Southern California Baptists was held in the Y. M. C. A. Pavilion at Ocean Park. Iir 1896 the church at Palms ceased to exist and the interest fell ofif very materially at Ocean Park. July 2()th. Rev. Mr. French, who had located in Ocean Park for his health, began to hold services in the chapel and organized a new Sunday school. He also organized a Baptist church of sixteen members. In Septem- ber, 1896, Rev. T. F. Tooker took charge of the little church and conducted the services and Sunday school for some time. In 1898, Rev. Chas. Pedley, a graduate of Charles Spurgeon's college, in London, located in Santa Monica, and acted as pastor of the church until the spring of 1899. After his departure the work languished and the Sunday school died out. The Methodists were granted the use of the building for their services until 1900 when they secured' their own church. In January, 1902, Prof. C. S. Taylor, vice-principal of the Santa Monica High School, and Mr. F. C. Marvin came to Santa Monica to reside. They interested themselves in looking up the Baptists of the community and in December, 1902, Rev. George Taylor, of Sawtelle. preached in the Baptist chapel, and again organized a Santa Monica liaptist church, fourteen members. This church was brought into connection with the Southern- California Baptist Convention and the American Baptist Home Mission society. It was served by various preachers until February 15th. 1903. when Rev. L. A. Gould was called as pastor and took up his residence here. September 7th, 1903, the church was admitted into full membership with the Baptist ConventioiT and recognition services were held, many guests being present and the charge being delivered by Rev. Robert Burdette. Rev. Gould remained as pastor untiE he was succeeded bv Rev. M. M. ^Tason. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 299 PiiNTEcosTAL Church of the Nazarkne. This church, whose articles of faith are identical with those of the Weselyan Methodist society, was organized in 1906 as a result of neighborhood meetings held in the home of J. E. Pearsall. corner of Michigan avenue and Twentieth street. The new church was incor])orated the same year with Rev. Thos. Fisher, pastor of the church. Chas. Allsman and J. E. Pearsall. as trustees. Messrs. Towner and Irwin donated a lot on the corner of Michgan avenue and Nineteenth street and a neat building, costing about $2,000, was erected. The membership is now twenty-six and the Sunda}- school has sixty members. Women's Christian Temperance Union. In the summer of [885 a few earnest women, among whom was Mrs. Jane Austin, Miss Niles, Miss E. A. Dow, Mrs. I. D. Richmond, and others, organized a W. C. T. U. in Santa Monica. These women felt that there was much need of their labors here as at that time there were a dozen saloons in the place. They took over the reading room which had been previously started in the hope of interesting the boys and the young people, and at once set about an earnest effort to support the reading room and library and to improve the moral tone of their beautiful town. They rented the lower room in the two-story frame building now owned by them on Third street. Bv means of soliciting subscrip- tions, giving suppers and dinners, socials and teas, and in many other ways which demanded the strength and time of the faithful workers, they managed to keep the reading room open and to add many books to those already collected. The early efforts that were made to keep the library and reading room up have been told in the history of the Santa Monica Public Library, of which this library was the foundation. In 1887 the ladies determined to purchase the building which thev were occupying and the owner. Mr. John Steere, made them a very reasonable rate, for boom times, putting the price at $2,500 and giving them their own time to pay in, provided the interest was kept up. The women, Mrs. Austin, then president, Mrs. D. B. Hubbell. vice-president and in charge of the library, and Mrs. Richmond, secretary, worked very hard to maintain the undertaking; but when dull times came in 1889. they found the burden too much and Mr. Steere took back the building and returned the money. $350, which thev had paid on it. They continued to occupy the same room as their reading room, however, and on Mr. Steere's death, in 1892. he willed this building to the W. C. T. U. of Santa Monica, on condition that the}- maintain a perpetual free reading room. This the organization has done. The large upper room is pleasantly fitted up and a supply of reading matter and books are kept on hand for circulation and for use in the room. A large amount of literature has been distributed b\- this society, also, to ships, camps of laboring men, canyons and school districts. 300 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES For eii^ht years Airs. Elizabeth Hughes, of Sawtelle, was president of the organization and much efficient work w'as done under her direction. Mrs. T. Hughes Lodge has acted as president or vice-president of the union and has the supervision of the reading room. The present officers are Mrs. Mattie Barrett, president; Mrs. T. Hughes Lodge, vice-president; Mrs. Ada Schutte, secretary; Mrs. Clara Odell. corresponding secretary; Miss Sarah Much, treasurer. Woman's Clut. of Santa Monica. In September, iy04, a lecture class in history was organized by Miss Elizabeth McLaughlin, with Miss M. E. Abbott as lecturer. The first class was held at the home of Miss McLaughlin, after wdiich the sessions were held in a cottage, on Nevada avenue until the class outgrew this and was removed to Columbia Hall. On December 8th, 1904, the members of this class formed an organization, with Mrs. D. G. Stephens as president and Miss McLaughlin as secretary and treasurer. This was in reality the organization of the Woman's Club, although the name" club " was not taken at this time. During the spring Miss Abbott resigned her place as lecturer and other ladies were secured, the subjects not being confined to history. December nth, 1905, the first annual meeting of the organization was held at which time the by-laws were amended, a regular corps of officers elected and the name changed to Woman's Club. Mrs. Daniel G. Stepliens, who is only second to Madame Severance, as a club mother in Southern California, was made honorary president; Mrs. A. M. Jamison was elected president; Mrs. J. S. Hunt and Mrs. E. H. Hutton, vice-presidents; Miss Elizabeth McLaughlin, secretary and Mrs. Jessica Clark, treasurer. In recognition of Miss McLaugh- lin's service to the club as secretary and organizer, she was made a life associate member, with all the privileges of active membership. The first meetings of this year were held in Columbia Hall, Mrs. M. R. King generously paying the rent. Lectures and musical programs were given and the club increased in interest and membership. During this year a civic committee was appointed of which Mrs. J. P. Jones was the first chairman, succeeded by Mrs. Arthur Noble. This committee did most efifective service, having secured the preserva- tion of the trees and the improvement of Nevada avenue, presented a petition to the school hoard, pointing out the necessity of a new school building to replace the Sixth street school house, which was a patchwork made up of additions to the original structure erected in 1876. The town had just voted the sum of $56,000 for building three new school houses, and it was thought imj)ossible to carry another hond election for school ]iurposcs at this time. But the ladies circulated a petition and received such encouragement that the election was held and the money for the beautiful Tcfferson building voted. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 301 The Woman's Club has also aided in preventing- the issuance of new liquor licenses. During 1907 they voted a scholarship fund to be used in keeping a bright girl who otherwise must have given up school, in the high school of Santa Monica. Surely a more practical and beautiful service could not be found. As will be seen this club has done most effective work in benefiting the community, as well as furnishing its members with much intellectual and social pleasure and development. The third annual meeting of the club was held December nth, 1906, in the Royal Arcanum Hall, the use of which was donated by Mr. Robert F. Jones. At this meeting the former officers were re-elected and a new constitution and by-laws were adopted. During the year of 1906-7 the club entertained the Woman's Parliament of Southern California, of which their Honorary President, Mrs. Stephens, was the founder. Many interesting programs and social affairs were offered the members and their friends. At the annual meeting of 1907, Mrs. A. M. Jamison, who had served most efficiently as president for two years, declined a re-election and Miss Charlena Welch was chosen as president. Santa Monica Lodge No. 906, B. P. O. E. On April 12th, 1907, Santa Monica Lodge of Elks was organized as Santa Monica Lodge No. 906, B. P. O. E., the Los Angeles Lodge to the number of 300 coming down to initiate the new lodge. After the ceremonies of initiation 400 Elks sat down to a banquet in the old Pavilion, which was one of the mo.st memorable aft'airs of the many that took place in the old building. The first officers of the lodge were : First Exalted Ruler, Brother W. T. Gillis ; Esteemed Leading Knight, Robert F. Jones ; Esteemed Loyal Knight, T. H. Dudley ; Esteemed Lecturing Knight, G. F. Doty ; treasurer, J. Euclid Miles ; secretary, J. B. Proctor; tyler, H. I. Pritchard ; trustees, H. G. Englebrecht, C. M. Lindsey, E. S. Tomblin. The first lodge rooms of the Elks were located over the Santa Monica bank. Later they removed their rooms to the Columbia building where they are at present located. Soon after the organization of the lodge it acquired the prop- erty on the corner of Ocean and Arizona avenues, formerly the home of ^Irs. Doria Jones, of Los Angeles, one of the most commodious family residences in Santa Monica. This was altered and refitted as a club house for the use of the members of the Elks Lodge and is one of the pleasantest and cosiest club houses in the country. At the Elks' reunion, held on the top of Mt. Wilson, May 27th. 28th and 29th, 1904, the newly formed Santa Monica lodge — a " Baby Lodge," as it was known — won a very handsome grandfather's clock for the best average attend- ance reported. On June 5th, 1905, this lodge went to San Pedro in a body to assist in the initiation of San Pedro Lodge, No. 966, and thus is ceased to be ■M^SMi^K MAJOR ROBERT DOTXARD. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 303 -the " Baby Lodge." On September 8th, 9th and loth, T905, the Santa ^^lonica lodge assisted in entertaining a reunion of the Elks of Southern California in Santa Monica canyon. One of the features of this occasion was a genuine old- fashioned barbecue. Each Christmas since its organization the lodge has pre- pared a Christmas tree for the youngsters of the town, at which those wHo have little promise of Christmas cheer are especially remembered. The Past Exalted Rulers of the lodge since its organization are: W. T. Gillis, J. C. Hemingway, P. S. Lindsey, W. G. Miller, who is the present occupant of the chair; J. B. Proctor remained secretary since the formation of the lodge. The present membership is about 215. and the lodge is in a most flourishing condition. Graxd Army of the Repubuc. Fort Fisher Post, G. A. R., No. 137, Department of California and Nevada, was organized in 1885. J. J. Mohen, H. M. Russell, J. W. Keith, G. T. Hol- ford, J. L. Allen, R. P. Elliott, C. B. Fuller, Guy C. Alanville, F. A. Westover, George Young, W. R. Waldron and Henry Gardner were the charter members •of this post. In June, 1887, Fort Fisher Relief Corps was installed, with Mrs. Josephine Baxter, president ; Airs. E. Gaddy and Mrs. Sadie Bennett, vice-pres- idents ; Miss Mary Elliott, secretary; Mrs. Alice IMosse, treasurer, and Mrs. Rebecca Gulberson, chaplain. In February, 1887, John A. Logan Post was organized in Santa Monica, with H. M. Russell as president, J. Mohen secretary, and with twelve members. This was later merged with John A. Martin Post, Soldiers' Home. Fort Fisher Post flourished until about 1901, when the enthusiasm died out and the organization was disbanded. The old soldiers and the Relief Corps had always taken a prominent part on public occasions and especially on Me- morial day, and were much missed from the civic organizations. On May 20th, 1907, a number of old soldiers met and resolved to form a new post, to be known as the Stephen Jackson Post, No. 191. The post com- mander of this organization is Robert Bollard; senior vice-commander, A. N. Archer; junior vice-commander, David Johnson; chaplain, T. B. Fisher; quar- termaster, S. D. Hayes ; officer of the day, J. W. Bowlden ; officer of the guard, J. N. Lewis; adjutant, H. C. Towner. Charter members, George Young, J. L. Ferguson, Thomas Gilroy, W. W. R. Mattox, A. G. Ford. S. A. Wheeler, C. L. Wells, James P. Rutledge, L. M. Pence, M. D. Gage, C. W. Loving. D.' W. Collis, J. M. McGlinch, Loyal L. Case, I. J. Lucas, Ed. Forbes, J. Teach. J. O. Hodgson, Peter Mardy (deceased), J. A. Greenlaw, G. W. Heimer, R. P. Elliott, A. Lockridge, E. R. Kennedy, W. W. Woodruff, A. Felix Gandv, George Pulham. James Stone. Ladies' Grand Army Circle was organized as Fremont Circle, No. ^7, De- partment of California and Nevada, 1904. Mrs. Mamie Young, president; Mrs. S. A. Wheeler, vice-president ; Mrs. Zoe Phvfer, treasurer. FK.WK D. LAWTOX. CHAPTER IX. MISCELLANEOUS. Outdoor Pastimes. FOR many years Santa Monica was the center of out-door sports in South- ern California. The tennis tournaments held on the Casino courts and the polo races of the Santa Monica Polo club were events which annually drew the " swell " crowd of Los Angeles and Southern California and sometimes attracted visitors from San Francisco and the north. While the surf bathing, salt water fishing-, swimming and bicycle races, baseball and Spanish sports drew everybody who cared for any kind of sport to this city. One of the first organizations completed in the village of Santa Monica was that of a baseball club known as " The Bonitas," formed in October, 1875, with T. Cronan, as president; J. J. Mason, vice-president; S. B. Adams,' secre- tary, and T. H. DuPuy, treasurer. There is no record of the games they played, but no doubt they won victories, over somebody and were dulv beaten' in turn.' One of the earliest and most popular of the long list of amusements which have proved "attractions " were the " Ring Tournaments " ridden by gallant knights, which were an exciting display of horsemanship. On June 13th, 1876, one of these occurred in which B. F. Reid was costumed as the " Knight of Fairfax ;" L. L. Hope appeared as " Fleur de Lis;" H. M. Aiitchell was " Old Dominion," and Miss Carrie Heath was "Queen of Beauty and Love." Other contests were between teams made up of Native Californians, led bv J. J. Carrillo and Americans led by B. F. Reid. These " ring tournaments "' drew such Su'nday crowds that the facilities of the L. A. & L were taxed to haul them all. Prize pigeon shooting contests were another favorite pastime of early days and some very skillful marksmen are recorded as taking part in them. In July, 1887, a lawn tennis club was formed in Santa Monica and soon afterward a lawn tennis association was incorporated under the name of the Santa Monica Improvement Club with Abbot Kinnev, Col. Baker, Senator [ones Hon. James Bettner, W. J. Broderick, I. W. Hellman. ludge W. P. Gardiner' J. Downey Harvey, J. E. Plater, H. G. Wilshire, A Campbell lohnston, H. B. Lockwood. Patrick Robertson, Judge W. S. Van Dyke and Hugh Vail as dn-ectors. They at once secured the grounds on North Third street and soon' had a fund of $10,000 in hand for the erection of a club house. The Casino courts were at once gotten into shape, and August 31st a tournament of the Southern California Association " beginners " was held, at which representatives 20 306 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES from Pasadena, San Gabriel, Pomona, Los Angeles, Riverside and Santa Monica took part. The play lasted four days and ended with a grand ball in Steere's opera house, then just completed. The first annual tournament of the Southern California Association was held this year at Riverside, and the Santa Monica club took part. In t888 the Casino had been completed and the courts put in fine shaj)e and from that time on the annual tournaments of the Southern California Association were held here. On these courts many close games and fine plays have been made and Santa Monica is justly proud of the fact that two ladies who have won worldwide distinction as players, won their first laurels on the Casino courts — Miss Marion Jones, who in 1897 won the cham- pionship of the Pacific coast and in 1900 the national championship at Philadelphia ; and Miss May Sutton who has now won the international championship. For years the annual tennis tournament and the polo races at Santa Monica were the great events of the year. Here gathered the prettiest girls, the dressiest dames and the handsomest and most athletic of the college men. The tennis teas, the parties and the balls that accompanied them were the gayest of social affairs and during the tennis week, Mirimar was alive with guests and the Hotel Arcadia was as gay as a Saratoga Springs hostelry " in the season." In those days the Hugh Tevises of San Francisco and the Bradburys of Los Angeles appeared in their drags and added color to the gatherings. In 1891, the tennis season was especially gay. Among the players who won honors in these earlier vears were the Chase brothers of Riverside, Theodore Coulter, Art Bumiller, the Carters, ]\Iiss Tufts and Miss Shoemaker. In 1900 a new Casino was built to take the place of the old club house which had been burned down the year before. The presence of the Sutton sisters at the tournament this year made the occasion memorable, especially as this season marked the first victories of May Sutton, she winning the Southern California championship at this time. In 1904 the same brilliant player won the American championship and in 1905 she secured the title of " Champion of All England," repeating English triumph again in 1907. An English paper thus describes Miss Sutton : " Magnificently muscular, she appears to care nothing for the minor graces, nor even the little tricks and dodges in which her male compatriots indulge. She is all for the rigor of the game. There is no tripping after the ball with her, no showing off of her figure at the net. She just stands near the base line for the most part and sends the ball over the net in terrific drives. Yet, with it all, there is nothing offensively masculine about her. She gives one the impression of being just a fine, healthy, athletic, American girl. She is, at any rate, a kind of tennis player that will take a deal of beating." — Lei- cester C /iron id c (Biii^Hsh). HISTORY UF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 307 Of late years the School Tennis meets have been a feature of the tennis courts and here Santa Monica has developed a new set of champions. In 1903 Miss Elizabeth Ryan, step-daughter of Mayor Dudley, won the championship in ladies' singles in the Interscholastic League play and since then Miss Ryan and her sister have won many honors both at home and on other courts. Miss Elizabeth has this year won a championship in British Columbia. A polo club was organized in Santa Alonica in 1877, but it did not find either members or ponies enough to make up a satisfactory game. In 1878, the club played a game with Manuel Marquez and four other Mexicans from the canyon — and was beaten. Apparently it did not survive the shock. In 1889 the Southern California Polo Club was formed at Santa Monica, grounds were donated to them by Messrs. Jones and Baker, and they began to play in earnest. This club was largely made up of Englishmen, of whom there were a number then resident in the vicinity. Mr. R. P. Carter, who later was known on the stage, playing for a time with Modjeska's company, was one of the enthusiasts. Dr. J. A. Edmonds, G. L. Waring, W. H. Young, J. B. Proctor, J. Machell and a number of other gentlemen were members of this organization. Many sports- men in Southern California will remember some of the fast and knowing ponies who were trained in these games. One of the first essays of the Polo Club was a public exhibition of polo in Los Angeles. This resulted in a disastrous financial failure and the club would have " gone broke " had it not been for a benefit performance gotten up by Mr. R. P. Carter and given in Santa Monica, which saved them. For fifteen years the polo club held race meetings every year at Santa Monica. In 1897 a match game was played here with the Burlingham team, from the north. In 1902, the annual races were held at Ocean Park. The chief supporter of this club has been Mr. G. L. Waring, who has labored with never-dying enthusiasm to keep the sport alive — amid many discouragements. In 1892 a Cricket club was organized and for several years cricket was played by its votaries and cricket tournaments were added to the attractions of Santa Monica. Among the best-known players were A. Balch, J. A. Lester, C. L. Waring, who is a typical English sportsman, Edward Cawston, R. H. H. Chapman, and others. Of course with the coming of golf into favor, golf links were laid out in Santa Monica and became a favorite game. In 1898 links were laid out on the North Side and also at Ocean Park, and since then the Country Club Golf Links of Ocean Park have seen some notable games, and have been the center of much social gayety. Tennis courts were also laid out here and the club house has been a gathering place for those who enjoy outdoor life. During the rage of the cycling fever the annual road race on July Fourth was the leading event of the vear to bic^■cle racers. On those davs Santa ^Monica 308 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES was crowded with dusty, sweating, red-faced youths, in the most abbreviated of clothes and with the most enthusiastic of yells, greeting each man as he pedaled into view. A bicycle path to Los Angeles was constructed, bicycle clubs and a club house flourished, and the Southern Pacific spent thousands of dollars on a bicycle race track and grand stand which was probably the poorest investment that the S. P. railway ever made, for almost before it was completed the bic}cle craze died out as suddenly and as completely as the various spells of roller skating, which sweep over the country and vanish into space. The "Ath- letic Park," as it was christened, was used for several years for ball games and sports of various kinds, but it has now become a thing of the past. Swimming contests, water polo, bowling, ping-pong and various other amusements have had their day and passed on. In 1905-06 roller skating was the thing, and large rinks were put in service at all the beaches, but already they are desolate, or turned into dancing floors. Perhaps the amusement which never loses interest is dancing. The various pavilions at the beaches have always been popular and are so still, and yet the crowds of today dance in a desultory, incidental sort of way that was unknown in the old days when the weekly dance was looked forward to as an event from which every possible drop of joy was to be drawn. TRANSPORTATlOi^. In January, 1875, the Los Angeles and Independence road was incorporated by F. P. F. Temple, the first banker of Los Angeles ; John P. Jones. Robert S. Baker, Thomas W. Park, James A. Pritchard, and J. S. Slauson, with a paid- up capital stock of $502,500. Work was at once begun on the road between Los Angeles and Santa Monica under the supervision of Col. J. U. Crawford, who was superintendent, engineer and general manager. The road, i6'/2 miles in length was completetd so that the first train ran over it by December ist. 1875. Two trains a day were put on between Santa Monica and Los Angeles and the fare was fixed at $1.00 per trip, freight at $1.00 per ton. At the same time work on the wdiarf was pushed and the steamer, the Orizaba, of the Goodall & Perkins line, made her first regular stop at this port on Septetmber 5th, after which steamer service was continued until September 9th. 1878. wlien steamer service to Santa ^Monica was discontinued. It was expected that the Los Angeles and Independence road w-ould be continued from Los Angeles to Independence. Inyo county, and thence into Nevada and possibly Utah ; Init the failure of the Panamint district to yield as rich ore as was anticipated and to become a bonanza mining district, led to the abandonment of the original plans, and ultimately to the sale of the " Inde- pendence " road to the Southern Pacific. This sale was consummated and the formal transfer was made on June 4th, 1877. when the railwa\', whru-f. two HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 309 depots, rolling stock and other property was turned over to the S. P. company. The Southern Pacific abandoned the Santa Monica wharf in the fall of 1878 and finally destroyed the greater part of it. A stump of this same wharf, however, is still to be seen near the foot of Colorado street. The Southern Pacific was the only means of transportation to the outer world from this time until January, 1889, when the first passenger train of the Los Angeles and Pacific railway came into Santa Monica. This road had originally been proposed by local capitalists as the Los Angeles County road, to run through the foothills and the Soldiers' Home grounds and to terminate on the bluff opposite the Arcadia Hotel. Later it became the Los Angeles and Pacific road, with E. E. Hall, president ; R. E. Shaw, superintendent, and W. T. Spilman, contractor. S. AV. Luitweiler, Cornelius Cole, M. L. Wicks, J. M. Hale and Arthur Gaylord were among the directors. The road started near the Sisters' Hospital in Los Angeles, and passed through Burbank, the Ostrich Farm at Kenilworth, Prospect Park, Colegrove, Plollywood, Cahuenga, Morocco, Sunset and the Soldiers' Home, the entire line about twenty-seven miles in length. The locomotives for this road were built by the Baker Iron Works of Los Angeles, and were the first locomotives ever turned out in that city. The regular service on this road began January 29th, 1889, and on September 1st, of the same year, the unfortunate enterprise went into the hands of a receiver, the contractor who had built the line. The train service was reduced to one train each way per day, which ran intermittently. " Jack " Henry of Santa Monica was the conductor, and it is said that his cry was, " Show your passes," when he got ready to take the tickets. After a few months, service on the road was abandoned altogether and though there was much talk of repairing and the franchise was sold to the Terminal people, nothing was ever done to revive it, and the city of Santa Monica finally revoked the franchise granted it. The first franchise for a street car line in Santa Alonica was granted February 23rd, 1887, to W. D. Vawter. On June 19th, 1887, the first car ran over the Ocean avenue line and the same fall the line was completed on LTtah avenue and Third streets up Arizona to Seventh, and on Seventh to Nevada. In July, 1889, the line had been extended from the south limits of the town up Nevada to Seventeenth street, making a road four and one-half miles in length. The motive power in those days was mules, or horses, and the little "bob tail" cars of the past are now only memories. The Santa r\lonica and Soldiers' Home street railway was opened November, 1890. A survey for an electric road between Los Angeles and Santa Monica was made in 1893, but it was not until April, 1895, that articles of incorporation for the Los Angeles and Santa INIonica electric road were filed. In June, 1895, an ordinance was passed permitting the building of an electric road by the Pasadena and Pacific railway company, of which General Sherman was president. On April ist, 310 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES i8y6, the first electric car reached Santa Monica over the Santa Monica branch of the Pasadena and Pacific road. This was a memorable day in the history of the town. In May, 1897, the electric service was extended to Sonlh Santa Monica bv the electricizing of the horse car line on the south loop, and the Third street line was also electricised. The first route to Santa Monica was by way of Bellevue, now Sunset, avenue and Sherman; July ist, 1897, the "short line" by way of Sixteenth street, was completed and this line was soon made a double track. In 1898 the Los Angeles-Pacific Railway company was organ- ized, with a capital stock of $1,000,000 to take over all lines between Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Hollywood, Soldiers' Home, etc. In 1899, the north loop in Santa Monica was electricised and the Hollywood line built, being opened to the public in February 21st, 1900; also the entire system between Los Angeles and Santa Monica was doubletrackcd and many improvements in roadbed, bridges, etc., were made. The " cut-ofif " by way of Palms, was completed in August, 1902, and gave the most direct route to the city. In Januarv, 1904, the Los Angeles-Pacific acquired all the railway interests of the Traction line and at once began making many improvements, especially improving the Trolleyway, and building the station in Linda Vista Park, Santa Monica, which was opened August 9th, 1905. On the same date the Westgate branch of the road was completed. In 1887, the Ballona and Santa IMonica Railway company was organized to build a line from Ballona to Santa Monica ; the Santa Fe having completed a line to "Port Ballona" September T5th, 1887. But the Ballona line was not built and in 1892 the Santa Fe and Santa Monica company was formed to build a line from Ballona Junction to Santa Monica, a distance of twelve miles. The Santa Fe railway brought its first passenger train into Santa ^Monica June i8th, 1892, and the new service was hailed as bringing assured prosperity to the town. The company built a depot on Hill street and another on Front street; put up a pavilion and the "iron pipe" wharf in South Santa ]\Ionica and expended a large sum in its various improvements. After the coming of the trolley lines, however, it |)ractically ceased to operate and in 1900 sold the land which had been donated to it, and in 190 1 obtained permission to abandon its right of way from Inglewood to its Santa Monica terminus. Eventually it sold this right of way to the Traction company and it was later purchased by the Huntington lines. In 1905 it became known that ^\v. Rindge was building a road that was at first supposed to be merely a driveway through his Malibu territory. Later developments made it appear that this was rather a roadbed, whether for an electric line or a steam railwa\' line was unrevealed. During 1907 a railroad has been constructed upon this roadbed. The purpose for which this road is intended to serve still remains unrevealed, although the belief is wi(les])read HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 311 that it is the entering wedge of a transcontinental line — what line still remains a mystery. It is popularly supposed to be a link in the Gould system which is reaching toward the Pacific coast ; but as yet the plans of the railway magnates have not been divulged. But to whatever system it may belong, the completion of a line down the coast to Santa Monica would mean much for this citv and section of country. State Forestry Station. The location of an experimental station in Santa Monica Can von bv the State Board of Forestry was determined upon in July. 1887. Mr. Abbot Kinney, who was chairman of the first State Board of Forestry, ofifered for this purpose a tract of land on Santa Monica Heights. This was accepted and an appropriation of $5,000 was made to begin the work. Mr. H. Rowland Lee, of the State University, was selected to take charge as head forester of the Santa Monica station in connection with the Hesperian station in San Bernardino county and the San Jacinto station in Riverside county. Up to 1890 $3,000 was expended in buildings and a large number of trees and plants were set out. The work of this station was largely devoted to the study of the comparative value of trees for the interior and along the coast ; the economic use of trees, costs and profits ; possible ranges of soil and climaite ; fitness for any purposes and contlitions. An especial study of eucalypti was made. Small collections of trees and plants were distributed to a large number of persons who had filed on timber claims, or who wished to carry on experiments under the direction of the forestry station. In 1889 Messrs. Jones and Baker donated twenty acres of land along the eastern edge of Rustic canyon to the station. This tract is thus described by Inspector of Stations : " The greatest and deepest barranca in the Santa Monica plain is that known as Santa Monica canyon.- It is not really a canyon in the strict interpretation of the Spanish word, which refers to mountain ravines, but more nearlv con- forms to the Spanish idea of a barranca — a wide cleft across the plains from the mountains to the sea. In realty there are two large barrancas, running in a direction somewhat parallel for several miles, although they are sometimes wide apart. The narrow tongue of land between them extends to within an eighth of a mile of the ocean. Here, on the sides and summit of this narrow central plateau, between two deep gorges and extending down to the bottom of one of them, the Santa Monica Forestry station is situated. It is greatly shel- tered from storms and yet the view is wonderfully extensive. The twentv acres belonging to the station, a little arboretum tract, extends from the bottom of the northern canyon, called Rustic canyon, up slopes and across levels to the very top of the mesa, on the same plane as the town of Santa Monica, and looks 312 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES clown from thence to the bottom of tlie south canyon. There are thus three distinct levels and two half-levels, with their connecting slopes for the most part not too abrupt for planting. Such is the charming topography of the station lands. " Work on the station includes lirst of all, the care and cultivation of the existing plantations. Then observations of these have to be made from time to time and records kept of the rate of growth of each tree, of its time of blos- soming and maturing of seed, behavior under different conditions, etc." In 1889, J. M. Sheckles was in charge of the forestry station. In 1893, the State Board of Forestry ceased to exist and the work was placed under the direction of the Agricultural Department of the State University. Later, in 1897, the work was enlarged by connection with the Forestry Department of the United States Department of Agriculture, experimental stations in thirty or more states of the Union working in co-operation. This plan has been of great benefit to the Santa IMonica station individually and to the general results of Forestry and Agricultural experimental work. The Department of Forestry has now become one of the most important branches of the governmental service. Out of a very small beginning has grown the great system of forest reserves and of re-forestration, together with the collection of invaluable data and practical aid to many industries. In 1897, Mr. J. H. Barber, later foreman of the South Coast Range, was appointed to take charge of the Santa Monica station. This year the appropria- tion for 1897-8 was made $8,000 and much needed buildings and improvements were made. In 1899, Mr. C. A. Colmore was in charge. He was succeeded by William Shutt who remained in charge for four years. During his incumbency considerable additional water was developed and the station made a steady advance, although hampered by a lack of funds. In October, 1904, disastrous mountain fires swept through Santa Monica canyon and all the buildings of the Forestry station were destroyed. Only the windmill and tower were left stand- ing. Considerable damage was done to the growth, also, a large number of seedling stock being killed and shrubbery and trees more or less injured. For some time it was a question whether the buildings would be replaced, but in the latter part of 1905 an appropriation became available and the neces- sary buildings were put up. Mr. J. P. Barber was appointed to take charge of the station. Since that time, the damage done by the fire has been largely overcome and the station continues to do valuable work in connection with the state and United States Agricultural Experimental schools. Reminiscences. An early comer, who is still a resident of Santa Monica, furnishes some very entertaining glimpses of the early days of the town and its life. Those HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 313 who drove from Los Angeles to the Santa Monica ranch to attend the first sale of lots in July, 1875, were greeted with a magnificent view, as they crossed the " divide." Before them lay the ocean, forming a blue crescent between the jutting points of Point Dume and Point Vincent. From Point Dume swept the Santa Monica range, merging into the San Gabriel range and the San Ber- nardino mountains. Following the circle, hills and mountains led the eye around to Point A'incent on the south, forming a vast amphitheater. As we drove over the ranch we saw a lone live oak, standing on the bluff above the canon, about half way between ocean front and Seventh street. Here the one road leading to the canon went down the grade. Near it was an old adobe, which was one of the landmarks of the time. A clump of trees stood near the springs which later supplied the town with water, and a group of great sycamores rose near the present site of Sawtelle. One of these, an immense tree, shading a large expanse, is supposed to have sheltered Father Serra on one of his journeys through the country. A line of sycamores marked the barranca which led out tow'ard the Soldiers' Home way. Here and there were to be seen a few small ranch houses, surrounded by fig and other fruit trees. Manv bands of sheep were passed, and an occasional ruin of some old adobe building. One landmark that can never be forgotten was the " Half-wav House ", a store and saloon, located about half way between the end of Washington street, Los Angeles, and Santa Monica. Here a watering trough was provided, and every traveler over the long, dusty road, stopped to water man and beast. In the early days the canons, Santa Monica, Rustic and Alanville, were the delight of the townspeople and the hotel guests. Every day saw driving and riding parties, camping and picnic parties visiting some one or other of these beautiful retreats. Arch Rock, four miles up the coast, was always an ol^ject of interest. Camping out just beyond the salt works (near the present site of Redondo) and at Portuguese Bend, was also a favorite diversion. Gun- ning in the mountains, duck shooting on Ballona laguna and boating on the laguna were popular pastimes. The boats on the laguna were known as the ■' Pollywog " and the "Mud Hen." Spanish, games took place in the spring, when a channel was cut from the laguna to allow the overflow water to escape into the ocean, at the point now known as Playa del Rey. Ring tournaments and other Spanish games were also played for some months on Ocean avenue ; but were discontinued on the protest of a number of families who feared the influence on the best life of the then growing town. During the days of the first wharf, one of the great events of town life was the coming and going of the coast steamers. \\'hen a Panama steamship came in and tied up at the wharf, everybody in town visited it. for the strange fruits, birds and plants which it brought were always interesting. The fishing on the wharf was always good and furnished a constant sport for men, women and children. The first residents of Santa ^lonica were a cosmopolitan lot. Some were 314 HIST(>RY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES the drifting class always attracted by any new opening or excitement, and soon- passed on. Others were drawn here by the incomparable climate, which was ideal for a home, especially in old age. Many then believed in a great business future for the new port. There were a number of young men, fresh from college, who had drifted to California for a start. Most of these were down on their luck and glad to take anything that ofitered, as for instance, the young Harvard graduate, who whitewashed the plaza 'fence — because his brains were not needed here. A Bostonian, also a college man, ran the engine on the first railroad be- tween Santa Monica and Los Angeles, while the first conductor on this road was a young Virginian. One of the first clergymen of the place was a north of Ireland man, educated in Dublin and Edinburg, who preached sermons which would have honored any pulpit. One of the first physicians had also been edu- cated in London and Edinburg and had traveled around the world. On his journey he happened to stop in Santa Monica and was so delighted with the location and climate that he stayed here for about a year. Another physician located here about the same time ; but he, too, moved on. The place was too healthy to be a promising field for a young doctor and for several years there was no resident practicing physician at all — and little need for one. The lives of the residents of the neighboring canons were closely linked with the town, for here they came for their mail and supplies and they fur- nished the butter, eggs and vegetables for the town dwellers. There w'ere many bee ranches hidden awav among the canons. The living of the apiarists de- pended, of course, upon the honey yield, which often failed because of dry or unfavorable seasons. Sometimes careless picnickers or hunters would be the cause of a mountain fire which, sweeping over hills and through cafions, mowed down the brush and growing plants, and sometimes destroyed bees and homes. During a terrible fire raging in Manville caiion, one old man only escaped from the flames by lowering himself into a well until the flames, traveling by leaps and jumps, had passed on. Another man, further up the canon, was compelled to lie down in a small stream, wdiere he found himself in companv with snakes and other small creatures which had taken refuge in the water. Many of these early settlers had located on what they supposed was government land, only to find, after years perhaps of hard work in improving their homes, that they could not secure title. They w-ere compelled to leave with only the memory of their labor to carry with them. Many odd characters were among these pioneers and many of them were brave hearted, true men, who were rich in everything but worldly goods. The social life of the new town was, for the most part, simple and de- lightfully free from formal constraint. The few more congenial families were drawm into close relations. Almost every evening found them gathered for a time in some one home or another, for those were the clays of truly hospitable home life. The first real party, of any pretensions, was given by Mrs. M. S. Baker in her new home — the first two-storv rustic house in Santa Monica. It HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 315 is safe to say that the company there gathered were as cultured as would grace any city party. During the early days of the town a literary and social club, called the " Baker's Dozen "', was formed among the young unmarried people. After a year it was enlarged to take in the married people as well and was known simply as " The Club." Among the members were doctors, lawyers, scientists, clergymen and teachers, as well as others who had no titles. After a program, usually of original papers furnished b}- the members, social diver- sions followed and were as much enjoyed by the men of letters as the rest. This club lasted about five years. There were occasional concerts or lectures which were of the highest merit. It must be remembered that many cultured people visited us at various times, in search of health or rest, and often our struggling little churches were given benefits which any city audience might have gladly heard. It frequently hap- pened that some city clergyman visiting this coast because of ill health of himself or some member of his family, filled our pulpits and gave us of their best. A touching incident occurred about 1876. A teamster lost his only son, a boy of fourteen, and wished to give him a fitting funeral at the church. There was no resident pastor in the place at that time, so one of the members of the Pres- byterian church agreed to read a burial service. The fact was mentioned at the Santa Monica Hotel and came to the ears of a New York City minister who was touring the west with his wife. He at once oiTered to conduct the service and did so to the consolation of the father. Then he ofifered to preach on the Sabbath, if it would be of any assistance, and for several weeks we listened to able sermons, for which the gentleman would accept no pay. One person who was closely associated with the early history of the town was L. T. Fisher, editor of the Santa Monica Outlook. He wrought early and well for the good of the town and gave it a bright, clean paper. But the glow- ing future he so well painted, did not make him any richer tlian he was when he came, so he moved on. After the destruction of the wharf, there was very little business here, barely enough to supply very modest demands of living. Everything seemed to come to a standstill and everyone who could get away did so, except the few who were satisfied to live on climate. Yet life for those who remained was not altogether stale. With so many diversions provided by nature, a daily dip in the ocean, an afternoon drive on beach, plain or in mountain canons, and with liappy home evenings, the days passed away swiftly and we were content. •/^/\CK\Ht<' iV\0^ ^- ^. Fostev*- Trustees of the City of Ocean Park. CHAPTER X. Thk City of Ocean Park. THE history of the town of ( )cean Park, with \'cnice of America, both now- less than three years old, is a modem business romance — a romance of fair dreams and marvelous fulfillments; of great ambitions and of sad- dening failures; of wonderful growth in wealth and population and of bitter contests of strong men with strong men. Many of the events in this brief historv partake of the comedy nature; there are elements of tragedy in the story, too — of fortunes made and lost, of high hopes disappointed. There are signs of promise also, a city built upon sand — and yet planted upon a solid foundation of pros- perity and steady growth. It scarcely seems credible, even to those who have seen the transformation going on before their eyes, that the ground now occupied by beautiful homes and handsome business blocks was, less than six vears ago, a barren waste, looked upon as practically useless for building or for any other purpose. The energy, the large conceptions and the large investments which have brought about the change have rarely been equalled — even in this land of commercial wonders. A rise in values within five years from a few dollars an acre to $15,000 for a twenty-foot lot is not often recorded even in California. Much of the earlier history of this section has already been given. A part of the present city of Ocean Park was included in the original Kinney and Ryan holdings. All of the land was originally a part of La Ballona grant and had been owned by the Afachados, or their successors. The " Short Line Beach " tract had been opened up for settlement in 1902. In 1903 the Ocean Park Villa tracts were put on the market and an addition made to the Short Line Beach, giving it an ocean frontage of 4150 feet. Th.e rapid settlement of this new territory soon created a district which must be provided with government, either by incorporation or annexation to Santa Monica. Earlv in the spring the talk of incorporating a new town began to take form and definite plans were made. Steps were taken during the. summer to arrange for a jirimarv school in the dis- trict, a lot being donated for the jmrpose. The rapidity with which the Short Line Beach lots were sold and occu])ied by dwellings ; the opening up of Marine street by ]Messrs. \'awter and Steele ; the occupation of the hills east of the elec- tric line, added to the desirability of the new corporation. It was generally agreed that the lines of the new town should extend from the Santa Monica citv 318 HISTORY OF SAXTA AiOXlCA BAY CITIES limits south to the south Hue of the Short Line I leach and along Lake street as the east boiuulary. At a |)ublic meeting held October 8th, the question of incor- poration, or of joining Santa Monica, was thoroughly discussed. At this meet- ing the old firm of land owners ofifered to lend the new municipality money to conduct its business until its own funds became available. It was estimated that the cost of carrying on the new city for one year would be $4,100, that the assessment value of the district was $80,800 which, at a tax rate of 75 cents would yield an income of $6,100, giving a surplus at the end of the year of $2,000. It was also stated that insurance rates would be reduced one-third. A vote of the sense of the meeting stood 52 for incorporation and i against. The objector, Mr. J. AL Roberts, then changed his vote and it was made unan- imous. A committee of five, Messrs. Henry Lavayea, W. T. Gibton, A. Ed. Robinson, Dana Burks and A. R. Eraser, were appointed a committee to circu- late petitions for signatures. The active spirits in this movement proposed to show to the world a model city. Dana Burks in an interview with the Los Angeles Times, September 9th, 1903, said: "We propose to make Ocean Park the best lighted city in the United States. When the lighting system is installed, steamers passing miles out at sea will have ocular proof of the exact location of Ocean Park. Pure food regulations w'ill be enforced strictly. Every milkman will have to " show us " and obtain permit before he can deliver milk in Ocean Park. A chemist will be regularly employed and regularly paid to make con- tinued inspection of food products ofifered for sale in the city. City officials will serve without pay, and character, ability and proved public-spiritedness will be the three requisites for election. Politics will be l)arred absolutely from the municipal conduct ; and with the elimination of spoils, purity of government will be easier to launch and to maintain. Attempted dishonesty will mean dismissal and dismissal will entail social ostracism." Mr. Plez James was ap]:)ointed registration clerk and a systematic census of the proposed incorporated district w^as taken. It was found that there were 300 houses and 750 inhabitants. Sixty-seven voters were registered. The peti- tions received the requisite numlier of signatures and on November 9th were presented to the board of supervisors. In the meantime a petition had been presented to the board of trustees of Santa Monica from property owners resid- ing between Marine and Rose avenues asking for annexation to the citv, and also a petition favoring such annexaticMi from citizens of Santa Monica. The city limits of Santa Monica, following the old lines of the Lucas tract, cut north- easterly through the block between Marine and Navy streets, thus leaving a por- tion of each lot in the city and a ])ortion in the comity. In accordance with these petitions, the city of Santa Monica called an election to vote on the ([ues- tion of annexation (m December 14th. The battle over the disputed territory HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 319 was a warm one. When the matter came up before the board of supervisors, petitions for annexation and for incorporation were presented and action was delayed until November 23rd. On November 12th a protest, signed by 27 resi- corporation. But such an iridescent dream was received with smiles by most residents of the beach. ABBOT KINNEY. CHAPTER XI. Venice of America and Its Founder. ABBOT KINNEY was born in Brookside, N. J., November i6, 1850. his parents being- Franklin Sherwood and Mary Cogswell Kinney, both descendants of old colonial families. His boyhood was mostly passed in Washington where his uncle, James Dixon, represented the state of Con- necticut in the United States Senate. Here the young man had advantages of education and of contact with many of the prominent men of that time and thus retains memories of the men who made the history of that period. To complete his education, he went to Europe and studied at Heidelberg, Germany, and in France and Switzerland, perfecting himself in foreign languages and making a special study of political, economic and social problems. On returning to Washington, he became interested in the tobacco business and after a couple of years practical experience, he decided to go to Turkey and make a personal study of their methods of manufacturing cigarettes. In 1877, he started on a three years' tour of the world, one year of which was passed in Egypt. His keen powers of observation and active intellect were devoted dur- ing these years to the study of conditions as he found them in various countries, and the conclusions thus acquired have since been applied in many ways to the problems presented in our own country. He reached San Francisco, on his return voyage, in the winter of 1880, and finding himself unable to proceed directly east on account of heavy snow block- ades in the Sierras, he came to Southern California. Here, after a few weeks spent at the old Sierra Madre Villa, he felt that he had fovmd the climate for which he had sought the world over. He secured a large tract of unimproved land in the vicinity of Sierra Madre and at once set about creating a beautiful and profit-yielding home out of what had been a waste. He planted out a large citrus orchard and turned his mind to the solution of the many difficulties which seemed almost unsurmountable to the pioneer horticulturists of this region. As a result, " Kinneloa " became a fine example of the possibilities of citrus culture and is known as one of the most beautiful country homes in California. Broad-minded and public-spirited, he devoted the knowledge gained through investigation and costly experiments to the public use and became one of the projectors of the Southern California Pomological Society and served as its president. 32& HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES In 1883, he was appointed a commissioner to serve with Helen Hunt Jack- son in an investigation into the conchtion of the Mission Indians of Southern CaHfornia. After several months of travel and personal examination of the various reservations and their people, Mr. Kinney prepared a report to the gov- ernment, advising the breaking up of the reservation system and the use of common-sense methods in the treatment of these miserable and helpless rem- nants of the first occupants of our country. It was during this period that Mrs. Jackson gathered much of the material used in the construction of Ramona and in her articles on the Missions and the Mission Indians. In 1884, Mr. Kinney was married to Miss Margaret, the daughter of Judge James D. Thornton, justice of the Supreme Court of California. In 1885 he was appointed chairman of the newly created board of forestry. Since that time Mr. Kinney has devoted much research and practical experi- menting to the subject of forestry, particularly in its relation to the welfare of Southern California. In 1887 a tract of twenty acres, located on Santa Monica Heights, was donated to the state as a site for a Forestry Experimental Station in this section of the state. The board at once set apart a fund to be devoted to this purpose. Mr. Kinney took a keen interest in the experiments and prac- tical working of this station and made an especially exhaustive study of Euca- lypti, the results of which he later published. He was also instrumental in securing the initiation of National Forestry on a practical basis and in procur- ing the legislation which set aside the forest reserves in California and in estab- lishing the School of Forestry in connection with the University of Southern California. This school gave especial attention to the subjects of forestry in relation to water-sheds and preservation of forests, with lectures by such men as Abbot Kinney, A. H. Koebig, Henry Hawgood, J. V,. Lippincott, T. S. Van Dyke and T. P. Lukens. Mr. Kinney is an unusual combination — the practical man of afifairs, look- ing personally to his large interests — and at the same time the student and thinker. He has been an investigator along many lines of thought and has pub- lished several books as the result of his studv. In 1893, ^^ issued " The Con- quest of Death," dealing with a sociological subject, and '' Tasks by Twilight," which sets forth some original theories as to the training of the young. As the author is the parent of five sons, he had practical data to deal with. He devoted much study to the workings of the Australian ballot system and published a pamphlet on this subject and earnestly advocated its adoption in this country. He has also published a strong argument on the tariff (|uestion : made a study of climatology, particularly with reference to Santa Monica, and written many valuable lectures and monogra])hs upon various topics. In all of his writing his use of English is direct and forcilile and his course of reasoning clear and logical. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 329 He has served as president of the Southern California Academy of Science and of the Southern CaHfornia Forest and Water Association; and as vice- president of the American Forestry Association of CaHfornia. In 1897 he was appointed by Governor Budd as one of the Yosemite Park Commission, which made sweeping reforms in the conditions which had nearly destroyed the pleas- ure of a visit to this wonder of the world. In all of his public work, Mr. Kin- ney has shown a broad public spirit and devotion to the general good. After a few years residence at " Kinneloa," Mr. Kinney found that the sea- side air was better suited to his health than the foothills, and, in the early eighties, he purchased a home on Ocean avenue, Santa Monica. Since that time he has been closely associated with the development of the Santa Monica bay cities. In 1886 he formed a syndicate to purchase a large parcel of land on the north side of Santa Monica Canyon. Here, he proposed to make an ideal resi- dence tract, with unsurpassed views of ocean, mountains and valley. Trees were planted, streets were laid out and a railroad planned. Later this tract was transferred to the Southern Pacific Company and furnished the site for the " long wharf." In 1888, Mr. Kinney was one of the organizers of the Santa Monica Im- provement Company which built the Casino on North Third street and laid out the grounds and tennis courts about it. This was the forerunner of " Countrv Clubs " and was for years the center of tennis interests in Southern California. About this time he was appointed road commissioner in the district of Santa Monica and devoted much time and energy to the opening up and improvement of the roads of the vicinity. The boulevard to the Soldiers' Home was laid out under his supervision and during his administration he set out some nine miles of trees along the public roads and started them to growing — a Herculean task in this country of sheep, squirrels, and other hungry varmints — to say nothing of the lack of water. Mr. Kinney was a member of the first library board of Santa Monica and was also instrumental in establishing the public library at Pasadena and in pro- viding a free library at the Soldiers' Home. About 1891 Mr. Kinney acquired an interest in a strip of ocean frontage, extending froiu the south boundary of the Lucas tract to the southern boundarv of Ballona grant. This strip of sand w^as then considered worthless for any purpose whatever. But Mr. Kinney has imagination and foresight. In the face of many discouragements, he and his partner, F. G. Rvan. began putting up cottages and leasing lots in what was then known as South Santa Monica, because such lots on the sand could not be sold until their advantages were dem- onstrated. Through their effort the Y. M. C. A. was induced to locate its sum- mer home on this beach and the " Ocean Park " Association was formed. 330 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES Messrs. Kinney and Ryan planted out trees, planned parks and pavilions, wharfs and sidewalks, and, slowly, they developed what became, for a time at least, the most popular resort on the beach — the old Ocean Park district. But there was still a stretch of sand to the south of the settled area which was apparently hopeless, as it was little more than a salt marsh. Drainage sug- gested canals to Mr. Kinney, and he had a vision of a city that should equal in beauty and picturesqueness the \*enice of his youthful enthusiasm. With the unfettered confidence of the progressive American in the power of mind and f'REATIXG VENICE. money over material obstacles, he began the creation of an ideal city upon his salt marsh. The courage and the persistence with which he has met the many unforeseen obstacles, the misunderstanding, and the o])position of a small but bitter faction, makes the history of Venice of America the crowning achieve- ment of Mr. Kinney's long and active career in California. While the plans and the hopes of her projector have not all been fulfilled, Venice is already the most beautiful and the most uniciue pleasure resort on the P^acific coast. Venicu of America. In January, 1904, the Ocean Park Improvement Company was dissolved and Mr. Kinney took over the unimproved and apparently worthless tract of land lying to the south of the Club House Tract and the Short Line Beach. When he began to talk of his plans for a city which should have canals for streets and HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 331 which should recall the most picturesque and romantic city of Europe in its features, the public was distinctly skeptical. " Kinney's dream " was a phrase heard on all sides, while the plans were taking form and the scheme was still in the paper stage. Still, as the plans were outlined, rumors of the new rival to " Alantic City " excited interest, although the doubters were in the ascendency. The first decided move was made when the Board of Supervisors were petitioned for the vacation and abandonment of that portion of the Ballona- Santa Monica road passing through the proposed city of Venice. On May loth, 1904, Mr. Kinney presented to the board of city trustees of Ocean Park a plat of Venice View tract, lying to the east and north of the Club House and containing 67 lots. Soon afterward Mr. F. \. Dunham was sent east to visit resorts, study plans and obtain ideas which might be of value in making the new city beautiful and attractive. June 21st the first contract was let, that for the excavation of the grand canal which was to be 70 feet wide, 4 feet deep and half a mile long. Other canals were to extend from this canal and form a net work. These canals were to be lined with concrete. The first spadeful of earth on the canal system was turned August 15th and thereafter an army of men and teams were em- ployed in removing the tons of sand and earth necessary to make these water- ways. The system was completed by the extension of a canal through from the Venice tract to the lagoon at Playa del Rey, the work being done by the property owners. June 27th the contract for the ship-hotel was let. This idea of a ship-hotel was regarded as chimerical, at first, by the public. But as the piers were set and the outlines became evident, interest was aroused and real estate men began to drop in to see what was going on. In July the contract for the electric light- ing and power plant was let and soon afterward work began in preparation for building the pier. This was planned to be 1700 feet in length and thirty feet wide. The first timber was set September 5th and thereafter work was pushed as rapidly as men and material could be procured. December 5th ground was broken for the first building on Windward avenue — St. Mark's Hotel. Already contracts for $300,000 worth of building had been let. By this time the newspapers and the public were fully alive to the fact that something was doing in Venice of America, and the interest increased as the greatness of the plans and the lavish expenditure of the ])rojector became evident. It was reported that the sales in fourteen days during November amounted to $386,000 and lots were now rapidly changing hands. With 1905 developments moved even more rapidly. Plans for an Audi- torium on the pier, which was to be the finest building of the kind on the coast, began to take shape. It was announced that a Summer Assembly would be held here which should represent the best of modern thought and art. Speakers and artists and teachers, the best afiforded bv our country, were to be heard and the 32>2 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES summer was to be one long- intellectual feast. Work on pier and buildings was rushed at even g-reater speed, for there was none too much time to complete the preparations. And then, during- February and March, came the heaviest seas known on the Pacific coast for a generation. The \^enice pier was wrecked, the pavilion and t)thcr buildings were badly damaged. At a low estimate the losses reached $50,000 and the public declared that the buildings over the water, as planned, would never be safe. But Mr. Kinney was not (launtenice attractions is the social life of the coniinunity. The Country Club has always been a favorite resort for those who cared for sports. The tennis courts have been the scene of some brilliant social affairs. The afternoon teas of the ladies of the club are pleasant affairs. The Five Hundred Club is an organization of ladies which meets Monday affernoons at the Cabrillo for a social card game. The Sunshine Club, of which Mrs. J. M. White is president, meets once in two weeks to work for charitable purposes. The members of this unique little club are doing a good work and hold most enjoyable meetings. The society dances on Tuesday evenings at the pavilion have become a ])opular feature of Venice society and are attended by many outsiders. Tlig children's dances, the swimming parties at the bath houses, the boating, are all features that add to the enjoyment of life. In January, 1907 the Venice Chamber of Commerce was organized with Dr. John Stanwood as president ; J. G. French first vice-president ; David Evans, second vice-president; Lewis Bradt, secretary and R. A. Dullugge, treasurer. The directors were Abbot Kinney, J. D. Simpson, Dr. J. B. Sands, H. C, Mayes, F. E. Reid, R. A. Phillips, Henry Wildey. This organization has since its for- mation taken an active part in everything pertaining to the welfare of Venice. It has been especially concerned in furthering Mr. Kinney's plans for a deep-sea harbor. The Venice harbor will be the nearest to Eos Angeles, the least costlv to build, the easiest to enter and to leave, and the safest from storm of anv on the Pacific Coast. The plans have been approved by the government and it is expected that they will be carried out in the near future. The Chamber of Commerce took a leading part in the effort for disincorporation ; in securing the location of a shoe factory, giving employment to thirty or more men, at Venice: in the proposed boulevard from Eos Angeles by way of Palms, in securing the Polytechnic High School, and in many other ways it has worked for the advance- ment of the community. At its second annual meeting, the officers chosen were. Dr. J. A. Stanwood. president; J. 0. French, first vice-president; H. P. Eakins, second vice-president: W. A. Rennie. secretary; R. A. Dullugge, treasurer. The executive committee consists of Abbot Kinnev. 11. Wickizer, H. C. Mayes, Dr. J. M. White, T. R. Taylor, C. A. Stavenow. Playa Del Rev. The ocean frontage of Ea Ballona Rancho was known in earlv daws as Ballona Slough. It consisted of marshy fields, broken bv sand dunes, ponds and lagoons of salt water, which were considered to be utterly worthless except as a home for ducks and other game birds. About 1870, Will Tell, a German of convivial ])r(jpcnsities built a shack, almost on the spot now occupied bv the Del Rey hotel, which he called " Tell's Eookout." For several years he kept u]) this estal)lishnient, advertising himself as agent for " Don Keller's native wines and brandies," and furnishing boats, gmis and fishing tackle for his patrons. His HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 335 place was a favorite resort for Los Angeles sportsmen and many a party of distinguished guests partook of his native products and hunted duck in his boats. The locality was generally known as " Will Tell's " in those days. In 1877 Michael Dufify, another royal host who will be remembered by many old timers, opened " Hunter's Cottage " in Tell's old location and was •' prepared to furnish sportsmen with board and lodging for man and beast ; guns, ammuni- tions, boats and everything complete for hunter's outfit. Good fishing and bath- ing in the vicinity. Come and enjoy a few days sport and I will use every means to make it pleasant for you." The flats of Ballona were looked upon as of value only to sportsmen until about 1885. The approach of the Atchinson, Topeka and Santa Fe railway, and the first rumblings of the approaching boom, brought many hitherto un- dreamed of projects to the surface. One of these was the scheme of creatmg a harbor out of the lagoons of La Ballona slough. In the spring of 1886 the Ballona Harbor and improvement Company was organized by capitalists of Los Angeles, M. L. Wicks being the leading spirit in the enterprise at that time. Among the directors were James Campbell F. Sabichi, H. W. Alills, E. H. Boyd, and Dr. Lotspeich. The capital stock of the company was $300,000, Hugh Crabbe, an engineer of national reputation, was engaged to plan the work. It was proposed to exca- vate a channel 200 feet long by 300 wide which would let the tide into the lagoon at the point where Ballona creek entered the ocean. This, with dredgnig, would create an inner harbor two miles long and from 300 to 600 feet wide, with a depth of from six to twenty feet. It was declared that this harbor would float the fleets of the world. This harbor was to be the terminus of the Santa Fe, or Ytlantic and Pacific, as it was then known, and was declared to be the nearest point to the Gulf of Mexico possible for an ocean port and 800 miles nearer to the Hawaian Islands than San Francisco. A franchise was granted to the Los Angeles and Santa Monica Railway, an ofifshoot of the Santa Fe, although or- ganized bv the members of the Ballona Harbor Company, to construct a wharf and ship canal at Ballona and work was begun during the year. The Los An- geles Express comments on the work being done in December, 1886, and says, - The hills around the harbor afford splendid sites for residences and will noubt- less be rapidly covered with houses."— a prediction which proved to be rather previous. Monday, August 21st, 1887, the railroad line was completed and the first train brought an excursion party of about 300 people to inspect the harbor im- provements and make speeches on the " great future " of this Port Ballona. A large amount of dredging was done and a large amount of money— nearly $300,- 000 was spent during the three years in which work was carried on more or less spasmodically upon the proposed harbor. The directorate of the company changed, M. L. Wicks dropping out and Louis Mesmer. Juan Bernard and others 336 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES coming- in. \W July 4th, 1888, work had come to a standstill and only a watch- man to guard the dredger and other property of the company was left on the ground. The Outlook in December, 1889, states that " The father of the Ballona Harbor scheme has been working on his pet project again. He is having the place cleaned up and getting ready to begin dredging again." But soon after- ward a storm carried away the greater portion of the wharf and deposited it along the shore at Santa Monica — wdiere it was welcomed as firewood. The dredger and barges were then taken away and Port Ballona became a thing of the past. Many causes operated to make the scheme impracticable, — the blue clay formation underneath the sand, the currents which brought sand back faster than it could be dredged out, and the failure of the Santa Fe system to co-operate with the projectors. A last echo of the Ballona Harbor Company was heard in 1892, when they entered a vigorous protest against the abandonment of the railroad right of way to Ballona and the removal of the rails from that branch by the Southern Cali- fornia Railway Company. But the protest availed nothing — the road to Ballona was taken up and a new line to Santa Monica took its place. For fifteen years after the abandoment of work upon the Port of Ballona, the lagoons and sand dunes remained a sportsman's paradise. The Recreation Gun Club purchased a large tract of the ocean frontage and the lagoons were only disturbed by the dipping of paddles and the echo of shot guns. Then came a new^ era of life for Ballona Slough. In June, 1902. it was announced that a company of capitalists had incor- porated as the " Beach Land Company " and had purchased a thousand acres of land, including two and one-half miles of beach frontage from the Mesmer estate. This included the old Ballona Harbor. Among the incorporators were F. H. Rindge, M. H. Sherman, E. P. Clark, E. T. Earle, R. C. Gillis and a number of other prominent Southern California men. Henry P. Barbour was president of the company ; M. H. Sherman and Arthur H. Fleming, vice-presi- dents ; A. I. Smith, secretary ; P. M. Green treasurer. The plans of this company were most elaborate. The new resort was to be named " I^'laya del Rey ", The King's Beach, or the King's Playground, as it was later translated. The Los Angeles-Pacific Company w^ould at once build to the harbor, wdiich was to be improved. A $200,000 hotel was proposed. Plans were made and plats completed under the direction of a landscape gardener. The company advertised their intentions lilx^rallv and the first sale of lots, July 1 6th. was a large one, many well known citizens being among the pur- chasers. Work was at once begun on grading and improvements. October 19th the electric road had cars running to Playa del Rey and a large number of excursionists visited the " King's Beach." Work continued steadily on the improvements during the next year. The lagoon, two miles long, of still water HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 337 for bathing and boating proved itself a popular feature — even before its com- pletion. Forty boats and gasoline launches were provided for the accommoda- tion of patrons. During the year the Redondo line was completed thus opening up a new district, and providing railway facilities for residents of the beach south of the harbor. In December, 1903, it was announced that an auto- mobile speedway from Los Angeles to Playa del Rey would be constructed under the auspices of the Southern California Automobile club. This boulevard would be eighteen miles in length, thirty feet wide and would be made the finest automobile road in the country. With the opening of 1904 the rush of improvements at Playa del Rey in- creased. Plans were made for the pavilion, which was to be three stories in heighth, with restaurant and dining room, bowling alleys and dancing floor and ample provisions for picnic and banquets. Work on this structure was rushed and it was opened to the public with a grand celebration of the occasion, boat races, dancing, etc., on November 25th. The hotel Del Rey, a handsome structure containing fifty rooms was built this year by George A. Cook, a capitalist of Redlands who had become largely interested in Playa del Rey. Boat houses and bandstand were completed. A two story bank building had been erected and many handsome cottages had been completed along the lagoon and on the blufif. In June 1904 a post ofiice was established at Playa del Rey, with Frank Lawton, lessee of the pavilion as postmaster. The electric line to Santa Monica was completed, thus giving a much improved car service, as the fare to Santa Monica was made five cents. It is estimated that the Beach Land Company and the Los Angeles-Pacific Company spent at least $200,000 on the foundation work for this resort. Six- hundred acres of sand beach, rolling dunes and lofty blufifs were graded and prepared for building permanent residences. In leveling lands and excavating for the lagoon, more than 700,000 cubic yards of sand were used for filling in purposes. Sidewalks were constructed along the beach and the lagoon; a sewer svstem ; water system and electric lights provided. An unusually high class of buildings was put up and the expectation of the projectors were largely realized, yet much still remained to make the resort all that was hoped for. During 1905, two suspension bridges were thrown across the lagoon and an incline railway constructed to the top of Mount Ballona, as the blufif is known. In April, through the eiTorts largely of Joseph Mesmer, Playa del Rey school district was organized, with 26 children. 22 CHAPTER XII. Pacific Branch National Home For Disabled Veterans. THE L'nited States has made liberal provision for the support and care of her volunteer soldiers. After allowing them pensions and land bounties, it became evident as early as 1865 that a large class of disabled and elderly veterans required care and attention which could only be given in an insti- tution especially adapted to the purpose. In consequence of this demand, Con- gress passed an act establishing a National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, in 1865. Later branches of this home were established in various parts of the United States. These establishments are governed by a Board of Managers, subject to the supervision of the War Department. There are now ten Homes in the United States. In March, 1887, an act authorizing the establishment of the Pacific Coast branch was passed by congress and in November of that year a commission of which Gen. William B. Franklin, president of the National Board of Managers : Col. William Blanding, of San Francisco; Col. E. P. Brown, Gen. James S. Negley and six other members of the National Board, were members, met in San Francisco to consider the several propositions which had been made for sites for the new branch. A large number of propositions were submitted from every section of the state. 'Many of these were generous in providing free land and other inducements to secure the Home ; but only two offers were made of a free site and also a cash bonus. The commissioners, after a careful consideration of the proposals, visited the various localities selected ,as worthy of serious consideration. A number of ofifers had been made from Southern California localities. One which presented many favorable points was near San Diego. Another very generous oflfer was that of the Inglewood-Centinella people. The choice in Southern California, however, soon narrowed down to two proposals, — that of the Hesperia Land and Water Co., of San Bernardino county, offering 500 acres of land, with water, and $250,000 cash ; and that of Messrs. Jones, Baker and Wolf skill, offer- ing 300 acres of land, a supply of water equal to 120,000 gallons per day, and $100,000 in cash — to be expended in improving the grounds. The commission after going carefully over the land, investigating the sources of water supply and the conditions generally, were banqueted at the hotel Arcadia and left for the north. They left California without announcing a decision ; but before reaching Washington, they decided by a vote of eight to two, to acce])t the Santa Monica pro])osition. In December, 1887, Col. Charles HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 339 Treichel, of Philadelphia, was appointed governor of the new branch and in January, 1888. he arrived on the ground and took charge of the preparations for the establislinient of the institution. The branches are all under the management of the National Board of Man- agers, with a local manager and a corps of officers. The officials are always men who have served with honor as officers of the United States Army. Colonel Treichel, the first governor of the Pacific Branch, made a brilliant record with the Army of the Potomac. He was several time wounded, and the end of the war found him Major of the Third Pennsylvania Cavalry and Brevet Colonel of the U. S. Volunteers. Under his direction work was begun to supply the grounds selected as the site of the buildings with a sufficient amount of water from temporary wells, while the survey for a pipe line and reservoirs was made inider the supervision of Col. Mendell, of the U. S. Survey force. By July 4th, the first building on the grounds, " Junipero cottage "" was nearly ready for use by the governor and the flag pole was in place for the raising of the flag which marked the occupancy of the grounds by the U. S. government. The location of this branch has proved to be almost ideal. Owing to the failure of " boom " laid plans, the cash bonus was not paid to the govern- ment by the Wolfskill ranch owners, but in lieu of this they placed at the disposal of the Home a tract of 330 acres, thus giving the government over 600 acres of land, a large part of which was tillable. The site chosen for the buildings was a gently sloping elevation, commanding a fine view, sheltered from winds of the north b\' mountains and open to the ocean breezes. It was planned to distribute the buildings in the form of a crescent, facing the south, and this general plan has been followed. The early appropriations were not large and at first the buildings were very simple in design and structure. The first barracks were completed in December, 1888, and were at once filled, a number of old soldiers having collected about the Home and been accom- modated in camps until the buildings were ready. The dining hall and hospital were also built this year. Up to the present, eleven barracks have been put up. Each is two stories, surrounded on three sides by verandas and equipped with all modern conveniences. From 150 to 200 men are accommodated in each, under the government of one of their own number who is known as " Captain," who is responsible for the conduct and order of his building. The dining hall and kitchen have been several times enlarged. The kitchen is provided with every convenience for facilitating the work of pre- paring three meals a day for from T,ooo to 1,500 people. The dining hall will now seat nearly a thousand men at a time. As the appropriations have come in from year to year, new buildings which provide for the comfort and happi- ness of the old soldiers have been erected. For manv vears the librarv was 340 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES located in the Headquarters building; but in 1906 Markham Hall, a handsome structure was erected. On the lower floor is a beautiful and well appointed library and reading room. Above is an assembly room for the use of various societies and public meetings. In 1900 the chapel was erected. This is a pretty building, unique in that under one roof is a Protestant and a Catholic church — separated by a thick wall. The organ in the Protestant chapel was prestend by T. H. Hatch, a member of the home — a musician and composer. The new hospital, built in 1904, is most complete. Here the old veterans receive every attention that can be given in the best equi])i)ed of private hos- pitals. A corps of nurses is employed. Ward Memorial Hall, built in 1898, provides a fully equipped stage and a pleasant gathering place for amusements, concerts, and so on. The buildings are all surrounded by carefully kept grounds, which are adorned with trees and flowers. This is one of the most beautifully arranged and kept parks in the country, and the climate gives perpetual bloom and greenness, making it a perennial garden of beauty. The many trees which have been set out on the Home grounds have now attained a fine growth and some of the long avenues through the reservation are delightful and enticing drives and walks. A large amount of hay and grain are raised on the place each year, beside all the vegetables and most of the fruit required for the table. Now the citrus fruit orchards are coming into bearing and considerable shipments of fruit are made beside supplying the Home. Fine stock — cattle, horses and hogs, are kept and thus the Home is in part self-supporting. In 1903-4 the farm is reported as netting $25,069 to the institution. The postoffice at the Home was established October ist, 1889, with Henry T. Lenty as postmaster. In 1895 it was made a money order ofifice with all the facilities of a city ofifice. A large amount of business is transacted yearly through this ofifice, the money order department especially handling an unusual volume of business as many of the members send a portion, at least, of their pension funds to families. The Home is abundantly supplied with water for domestic use and for irrigation. The first arrangement was a series of reservoirs in Rustic canyon with a pipe line to the grounds. During the dry seasons of 1898-1900 this source of water supply proved insufticient and wells were put down. Later arrangements were made with the West Los Angeles Water Company to supply water and in 1905 the government made an appropriation for a storage reservoir to hold a million gallons of water. This is located on the Home groiuids. An electric light and power plant was erected on the grounds and HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 341 furnished the needed " juice " for the Home until 1902 when contracts were made with the Edison company to supply the service. Since the establishment of the Pacific Branch about $800,000 has been expended by the government in permanent improvements. The annual expendi- tures of the institution average about $350,000. Between $200,000 and $300,000 is paid annually as pensions to the members of the Home. It will be seen that this means a large amount of money which is annually expended largely in Southern California and much of which is turned into local channels. Beside this, the beautiful grounds and the whole institution is a great attraction and one in which the people of Southern California and particularly of the Santa Monica Bay Region take great pride. The first governor of the Pacific Branch, Col. Treichel, died March 28th, 1894, having always suffered from the effect of the wounds received during the war. He had shown himself an able man and had brought the institution safely through the most critical years of its existence and created a beautiful and orderly home, well managed and popular among the veterans of the west, for whose benefit it was intended. Col. Treichel had contended with many difficulties and obstacles in laying the foundations of so large an establish- ment ; but he had given himself to the work with great devotion. Governor Treichel was succeeded by Col. J- G. Rowland, who remained in charge of the Pacific Branch until April, 1897, when he was transferred to the Leavenworth Branch and Col. A. G. Smith, of the Leavenworth Home, was brought here. Governor Smith was a strict disciplinarian and made many new rules and regulations which were intended for the general good ; but which some of the veterans felt were infringements of their personal liberty. The feeling against him was strong among a few of the members, although the majority believed that he had only the best good of the institution in view. On September 26th, 1898, Albert Bradley, who had previously shown symptoms of insanity, shot Governor Smith as he was passing through the grounds. It was feared at first that the wound would prove fatal ; but no vital point had been touched and Governor Smith recovered although never entirely restored to health again. After this unfortunate affair, he resigned and retired January ist, 1899. He was succeeded by the present incumbent. General O. H. La Grange. October 20th, 1899, another tragedy startled and saddened Home circles. ]\Iajor F. K. Upham had served as quartermaster and treasurer of the Pacific Branch since April 20th, 1895. He was genial, kind and lovable and most popular with the officers and the members. On this morning as he was pre- paring to go to the railroad station for money to pay the employees, he acci- dentally struck one of his pistols in such a manner as to discharge the contents 342 lllSTokV OF SAXTA MOXICA BAY CITIES into his body and cause instant deatli. Great sorrow was felt by members of the Home, by officials and the public generall} at this untimely loss. Major T. J. Cochran was ai)pointed to till the vacant place and still remains in the position. ( )ne of the best-known officers of the Home was Major H. G. liasse, who for eighteen years filled the office of chief surgeon of the Home. In 1905 he resigned and his place was filled by the ap])ointment of Dr. ( ). C. -McNar\-, formerly of the Leavenworth Home. The first member admitted to the Pacific Branch was George Davis, late of Company B, 14th N. Y. Cavalry. He was transferred from the Davton. SOLDIERS' HOME. Ohio, Home and came with Col. Treichel as his clerk. In December, 1888, a number of veterans who had gathered on the grounds in anticipation of the opening of the Home, were received into the barracks. In March, 1889, one hundred members of the Yountville, Cal., Home were brought to the new Home. The Yountville Home had been established in 1883 by private contri- butions from the G. A. R. and Mexican Veterans' societies. The next year the state adopted it, allowing $150 for each veteran cared for by the institution. lyater it passed under control of the United States government, and is still maintained as a home for members of the G. A. R. Applications for quarters in the Pacific Branch are always far in advance of the room, for the advantages of climate and favorable location attract many of the " old bo\s " from other parts of the United States. There are at present 3.^119 nieml)ers, of whom 2,088 are present. The death rate among these old HISTORY OF SANTA ^lONICA BAY CITIES 343 men is, of course large, yet it is small in this Home, when the age of the men is considered and also the fact that a large proportion of them have been in some manner disabled. At first the National Home was intended only for those veterans who had been so disabled that they were unable to earn a living, and who were dependent. The rules for admission have been gradually broadened until now any veteran who can show an honorable discharge can be received into the Home. Many avail themselves of the privilege temporarily or for only part of the time, thus receiving the benefits of hospital treatment and care when ill. Everything is done to make the institution as homelike as possible and to interfere with the personal liberty of the members as little as possible. Only such discipline as is absolutely necessary to obtain order in a large body of men is enforced. Members of the Home receive pensions, when entitled to them; and as many as are able or desire it, receive employment about the Home, being paid for their services. A number of them have homes at Sawtelle and reside with their families, while receiving the benefits of membership in the Home. Two Grand Army Posts are maintained, the John A. Martin Post and the Uncle Sam Post. A Masonic society and various other organizations are sustained by the members. Frequent entertainments are given for their benefit in the theater, assemlily hall and churches, and the men entertain themselves with tales of their fighting and active days as they sit about the parks and the verandas of their barracks. An abundance of reading matter is supplied by the library and the members are many of them regular subscribers for maga- zines and daily papers. In 1898, during the Spanish war excitement, a company of 5CK) was organized by the old soldiers and volunteered its services in case of need. Had this company of veterans been called into the field, it would have undoubtedly acquitted itself with credit beside younger men. After " pension da\- " a large number usually go out on furlough, and some of them spend their money foolishly. Everv effort is made to protect them by the Home management and b}- the city and count}' officials, yet " blind pigs "' and disreputable places exist and the soldiers find them. The arrest of veterans are made much of by the newspapers and the pulilic. yet the proportion of disorder is small and crimes are seldom committed by members of the Home. The passing of the veterans of the civil war is only a question of a comparatively few years now, and it is only just that every effort should be made by the government and the citizens of the United States to make these remaining years pleasant — at least to provide all possible comforts and care, when necessary, for these heroes of the past. STEPHEN H. TAFT. CHAPTER XIII. SawtellE. T,HE lands now included in the thriving town of Sawtelle were originally a part of the San Mcente grant. Traces of the old adobe homes of the Sepiilvedas ; the two springs because of which the name of Santa Monica was bestowed, and of the old burial ground of San Vicente rancho are found here. When, in 1896, Messrs. Sherman and Clark acquired the old Los Angeles and Pacific right of way and proposed to build an electric line to the beach, they asked the citizens of Santa Alonica and the Jones and Baker interests for a cash subsidy to aid them in the work. In response to this request. ^lessrs. Jones and Baker donated to the company a tract of 225 acres, now included in the townsite of Sawtelle. Mr. Sherman soon offered to sell the land for cash as he said he couldn't build a railroad with land. Messrs. R. F. Jones and R. C. Gillis purchased this tract, which lay just south of the Soldier's Home. Up to that time there had been no settlers on this land, the only building being a shack at the railroad crossing which was known as Castle Garden. Messrs. Jones and Gillis considered the possibility of selling this land in small tracts to old soldiers and finally secured from the management of the Home permission for members to build houses and reside outside of the reservation without losing their mem- bership in the Home. In 1896, Rev. S. H. Taft. who had had past experience in building up a town, having been the original proprietor of the beautiful town of Himiboldt, Iowa and the founder and first president of the College of Humboldt, located in that town, was invited to inspect the land of the Pacific Land Company. He gave it as his opinion that it would be quite possible to develop a thriving community here, provided water could be obtained. The company was already putting down wells and was successful in obtaining a fine flow of water from two wells. They put up a 50.000 gallon tank and began to lay pipes and grade streets. In February, 1897. the company asked Mr. Taft to take charge of the new enterprise upon a commission basis. Mr. Taft consented to do so upon three conditions,— ist. That the company should fix a maxinnun and minimum price upon all lots and acreage in the plat surveyed ; and leave him at liberty to sell within the limits named. 2nd. That he should have absolute control of all sales and that no other parties should be given authority to make sales ; in case of the company selling lands he to receive his commission on same. 3rd. That his control of the enterprise should continue for five years. Under this agreement Mr. Taft assumed charge and at once began the 346 HISTORY OF v^AXTA MONICA BAY CITIES erection of a cottage and office and the transformation of a barley field into a town. The original plat embraced between two and three hundred acres, un- broken' by any road except the electric line. The first work was to make a cross- ing at Fourth street and a little later to secure the co-operation of Governor Smith of the Soldier's Home in opening up Fourth street from the Home build- ings through the town plat and also the consent of the San Vicente grant owners to continue the road to the public road from Santa Monica to Los Angeles, thus giving a new and better road than had previously been available to the Home grounds. Trees were set out along Fourth street and other streets were graded and planted with ornamental trees. The office of the company was opened in " Lawn cottage," May ist, 1897 and almost immediately Mr. Laird com]ileted a building on the block purchased FIRST HOUSE ERECTED IN SAWTELLE. 1S97. l)y him at the corner of Oregon and Fourth, the first lots sold on the new towiT site. Mr. Laird opened here the first grocery store in the settlement. Mr. Taft at once took steps to secure a school district. He found in the fall of 'c)7 that there were thirteen children of school age, but the law required fifteen before a district could be formed. ^Matters came to a standstill until Mr. Taft accidentally learned of a bee keeper who had a ranch about two miles north of the Soldier's Home. He at once drove up to the bee ranch and to his delight found that the bee man had four children of the necessary age. The next dav ]\Ir. Taft went before the supervisors with his petition and early in 1898 a new school district was set aside and named Barrett district, after Gen. A. W. Barrett, for many years local manager of the Home and an old friend of Mr. R. C. Gillis. A site was selected for a school house and an acre of ground for school purposes was purchased of the company for $150.00. During the summer a school house, 10 by 12 feet in size was erected on the east side of Fourth street and in September, 1898, the first school was opened, with Miss- Goldsmith as teaclier and witl: five i)n])ils. Mr. Taft had also begun correspond- HISTORY OF SAXTA ^lOXICA BAY CITIES 347 ence to secure a post office for the new town. The postal authorities expressed a wilHngness to estabhsh the post office but objected to the name "" Barrett " on account of its similarity to Bassett. Mr. W. E. Sawtelle had lately become interested in the town and his name was suggested ; he consented to its use and it was sent on to the authorities who accepted it. This led to the change of name of the school district and town to Sawtelle. May 25th. 1899. the editor of the Outlook, after a visit to l>arrett X'illa. writes : " Barrett is yet an infant in age, it being but twelve months since its lots were placed upon the market. But it is a stalwart youth in development and strength. It has several miles of neatly graded streets lined with young palms and other varieties of beautiful trees. It has a church, a model school house, a town hall, a nobby little depot and many beautiful cottages surrounded by well kept grounds. " Barrett is on the electric car line fifteen miles from Los Angeles and about three miles from Santa Monica. A spur of the Southern Pacific system extending to the Home, touches its eastern limits. " It lies three miles from The Palms and five miles from Ballona. Broad and fertile fields lie around it in all directions, and a few miles awa\' is the Sierre Madre range of mountains with its towering cliffs, its rugged gulches and its beautiful canyons. Invigorating ocean breezes tempered bv a sweej) over the land, give it an irreproachable all the year climate. A broad extent of ocean is visible in one direction, and the city of Los Angeles is in view on the opposite side. L^nderlying strata at a depth of about 70 feet furnish an in- exhausitable supply of pure soft water. The surface soil is perfectlv adapted to the growth of the lemon and the deciduous fruits, all ornamental trees that adorn Southern California, small fruits, flowering shrubs and plants of everv variety, lawns, and garden vegetables. "Barrett's many advantages are easily set forth. They are: " Its beautiful location ; its accessibility and low rates of fare either from city or seashore ; it pure water supply ; its adaptability to vegetable growth of ever\- character ; its school and church privileges. " The moderate price asked for building sites and acreage and the liberal terms of payment granted ; its peculiar and unequaled climatic advantages ; its proximity to one of the most interesting Xational institutions — the Veteran's Home, with its 2000 members. Several prominent citizens both of Los An- geles and Santa Monica have already purchased lots here and will at once begin improvements upon them. Among these is Mr. Sawtelle of the latter place, who has already beautified a block on cMie of the principal streets." The Pacific Land Company had fixed the prices for land at from $80 to $100 for inside lots; $150 to $200 for corner lots and acreage from $150 to $200. A considerable number of old soldiers availed themselves of these prices 348 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES to obtain lots or acreage, many of them buying on the installment plan and paying as their pension money came in. It was noticeable that some men who had hitherto squandered their money in dissipation now purchased land and be- came valuable citizens. Many families of veterans and widows also secured little homes here. Mr. Taft wrote a series of articles for the press setting forth the opportunities ofifered in the new settlement for obtaining homes and also sent out many circulars which attracted attention. As the town has grown and increased in population, values have also increased very rapidly. Many of the original settlers have now disappeared, having sold out to advantage, or lost their holdinQ-s. The town was within the mile and a half limit for saloons PUBLIC SCHOOL. SAWTELLE. imposed by the government for the Soldiers' Home, therefore no saloons could be legally maintained within it. This was also an inducement to early settlers. Din-ing i8gQ a school house was built on the land purchased for the school at a cost of $600. This original building is included in the present building, which has been erected at different times as the room was required. Jnly 4th, 1899, the name of the town was formally changed to Sawtelle. At the same time a flag was raised on a sixty foot pole, erected in the park, which was given the name of Gillis park. A school bell which had been purchased by the con- tributions of the Pacific Land Company and many citizens and soldiers, was put in ])lace and rung for the first time. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 349 The electric people had erected a neat depot and the Holiness church had secured a building on lots at the corner of Second street and Indiana avenue ; a number of cottages had been erected and several stores had been opened; among the first merchants were Mr. Shull of the Shull Hardware store; F. B. McComas ; Farley Brothers and Wyant, who built Wyant hall. During 1899 Mr. W. E. Sawtelle became interested in the Pacific Land Company and in 1900 he superseded Mr. Taft as manager of the company and has since been the chief spirit in the various improvements and the steady ad- vance made by the town of Sawtelle. At the beginning of 1901 about one hundred families had located within the limits of the new town and ten new houses were then in course of construction. Two churches, the Holiness and the Free Methodist had been organized and the Holiness people had secured lots and erected a chapel. The town had a full complement of business houses and the volume of business was surprisingly large. During the year several new blocks were laid out and many sidewalks were laid, streets graded and other improvements made. In February, 1901, the Pacific Veteran-Enterprise, was founded by Air. A. A. Bynon, who later sold the plant to Mr. Fitzgerald. In April, 1902, Miss Susie Pierson Miller became the editor, a position which she still fills. The fact that water could be obtained almost anywhere in the vicinity of the town by putting down a well and that the soil was fertile and easily worked, made it possible for purchasers of acreage, or even of lots, to raise garden stuff potatoes, small fruits, and so on, to advantage; while every house is surrounded by flowers and shrubberv. The raising of beans has proved most profitable. Almost every property owner in the vicinity of Sawtelle finds it possible to make a living at least, off from a very small tract of land. This has been the chief reason for the rapid settlement of this locality. The Lindsey tract of 100 acres, the Pacific Farms tract and later the Artesian tract have been added to the original town site of Sawtelle, thus largely increasing its acreage. In 1902 the population was estimated at 500 and more school room became necessary. Bonds to the amount of $4,500 were voted for an addition to the buildmg. In 1903 The Pacific Land Company built a two story brick building which contained several stores. In March, the Santa Alonica Bank opened its Sawtelle branch in one of these rooms under the management of Mr. Schuyler Cole. The Sawtelle Water Company was incorporated this year with W. E. Sawtelle. W. T. Gillis, J. E. Miles, B. A. Nebeker and A. M. Jameson as directors. 1904 opened with a sensational bank robbery and a destructive fire which, on January 27th swept away several buildings on Fourth street. This year C. B. Irvine started the Sawtelle Sentinel, an enterprising weekly, which is now published by Henry Schultz. The town was now well supplied with religious organizations, the Baptist, Alethodist, Christian and Seventh Day Adventists having formed churches. A Women's Christian Temperance I'nion. and a ,]50 HISTORY OF SAXTA MONICA \'>.\\ CITIES number of Lodges and ( )r(kTs liad organizations also. The town had now- acquired such a population and ini])ortance that its citizens began to discuss the propriety of incorporation. Fire protection was needed and some better method of controlling the influx of gamblers and " blind pigs " which had followed Santa Monica's house cleaning efforts. The matter was discussed for more than a vear before any decisive action was taken. The Sawtelle Improvement Association was formed during the year and took an active part in the effort to secure incorporation. At a mass meeting held January 6th. 1905, W. B. B. Taylor, S. H. Taft. O. W. Jewett. Henry Schulz and others urged the matter. The question came to vote on August 15th, 1905 and was lost by a vote of 79 for to 130 against. A good deal of feeling and excitement arose over the result. It was proposed that Sawtelle seek annexation with Santa Monica, since she would not establish an adequate government of her own. Petitions to this eft'ect were circulated and the idea was discussed by the Improvement Associa- tion ; but nothing further came of the proposition. In 1906 the question of incorporation was again opened. Sawtelle now had a population of 1500 and the necessity for a better form of government was pressing. After a public meeting where the pros and cons were fully cliscussed, officers for the new town were nominated and on November i6th, 1906 another vote was taken which resulted 241 votes for incorporation and 58 against it. The trustees chosen were C. J. Nellis. chairman; E. E. Mudge, F. C. Langdon. J. E. Osburne and A. J. Stoner ; clerk. Leroy Fallis : treasurer, George W. Wiseman; marshal, J. P. Keener; W. B. B. Taylor was appointed city attorney and O. W. Jewett was appointed city recorder. The incorporation included a territory a mile square and extending to the town limits of Santa Monica on the west. The new government has not been able to entirely satisfy all and there has been talk among the dis-satisfied of dis-incorporation ; but this is merely talk and the town will continue to advance — not retrograde. During 1906 Mr. F. E. Bundy erected a handsome two-story brick building on Oregon avenue and several other business blocks were added. The Citizens State Bank was established in 1906, its officers being R. F. McClellan. president: W. E. Sawtelle. vice-president; H. VV. Crane, cashier; directors. R. F. McClellan, L. D. Loomis. J. P. Brady. D. L. Allen. Many pretty residences were built and the town made rapid advance. The opening up of the Westgate section and the building of the Westgate branch of the electric line brought rapid develop- ment in that direction. Naturally the location of Sawtelle in close proximity to the Soldiers' Home has been an important factor in its substantial growth. As the nearest business point a portion of large sums annually distributed as pensions is spent among its business houses, and the traffic and trade of the veterans and their friends has formed a solid basis for the prosperity of the town, which now numbers about 2,000 inhabitants. A. H. WVAXT. 352 HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES First Baptist Church. November 5th, 1901 a meeting was held in Wyant's hall for the purpose of organizing a Baptist ehureh in Sawtelle. After prayer by Rev. E. K. Cooper, a veteran, A. A. Bynon was elected chairman and T. R. Gabel, clerk. Sixteen persons then enrolled their names as members. Arrangements were at once made for the first service, which was held in Wyant's hall, Sunday morning, November loth, Rev. George Taylor of Pasadena, officiating, and preaching to an interested congregation. The following Sunday the first converts, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cox were baptized, this being the first time the ordinance was ad- ministered. On December ist permanent organization was etTected and Rev. George Taylor became the pastor in charge. A. H. Wyant and S. S. Sprague were the first deacons and A. A. Bynon, J. W. Cox, F. Peaslee, W. E. Haskins,. J. B. Gofl:", were the first trustees. The first church clerk, T. R. Gabel, was then postmaster and station agent of the Los Angeles-Pacific road. His efficient ser- vicer, in the earlv history of the church were of great value. His promotion to the position of general manager of the electric road, removed a valuable member from this church. May 8th, 1902, the organization was incorporated and immediately purchased lots on the corner of Sixth street and Oregon avenue. On July 4th, 1902, Pastor Taylor hauled the first load of brick for the foundation from Inglewood in his buggy. Work was at once begun upon the structure which was completed and dedicated during the years. The church has steadily increased in strength and membership under the services of Rev. Taylor who is assisted ably by his wife and son, W. B. B. Tavlor. The present membership of the church is 144, of whom 26 have been received by baptism. Palms. Palms is located five miles east of Santa Monica on land formerly a part of La Ballona grant. In early days this section was used as grazing land for sheep and cattle by the Machados. After the building of the Los Angeles and Independence railway a section house was located here which was known as " Grasshopper station." In the seventies the store of Saenz & Higuera was established at wdiat is now First and Washington streets. Palms, and was known as the " Half-way house." Here a postoffice known as Machado was located for many years. This was the first business and is now the oldest business establishment of Palms. Mr. Saenz purchased a considerable tract of land in the vicinitv and was one of the first ranchers of the neighborhood. Other ranchers who located here in the later seventies or early eighties were Isaac Beyer, and George Rose, son of Anderson Rose, who was the first American settler on La Ballona and was, for many years, an extensive rancher, carrying on a large dairy farm and raising blooded stock. Enoch Griffin, George Charnock, Mrs. Eliza Hoke, Gilbert Kidson, Professor J. M. Coyner HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 353 and other farmers located in this vicinity in the eighties. With the approach of the boom other lands were sold to newcomers and in 1887 Messrs. E. H. Sweetser and Joseph Curtis bought a tract of 560 acres and at once laid out the townsite of " Palms." They began making improvements and a local paper describes the situation thus: " The local of this paper the other day had a look at the ' Palms," an incipient town on the line of the S. P. road, some five miles from Santa Monica. It is no longer a misnomer as the proprietors have planted two large palms near the depot and some 160 plants on the various driveways. A force is grading the streets and we are told that it is the intention to plant all the avenues with shade trees of various kinds. The large reservoir which holds 150,000 gallons, is completed and a prospect hole has been sunk to test the water supply beneath the ground. A large quantity of water has been found and a well 6 by 10 feet will be dug, so as to place the pump near the water. A large steam pump will make it easy to lift the water up to the reservoir, which is placed on an elevation, from which there will be good pressure over the entire townsite. Quite a lot of property has been sold, and six houses, including a store room, have been built." A verv livelv real estate campaign followed. The Woman's Ballona Company was organized in May, 1888, to buy, improve and sell lands of the Palms district, the directors being Mrs. Ella L. Baxter, Miss Florence Dunham, Florence A. Barnes, ^Irs. Jane Pascoe and Mrs. Isabel Cook, all of Los Angeles. They had a capital stock of $14,400, but nothing is said of the amount actually paid in. Another woman's organization which was ambitious for those days was the " Woman's Palms Syndicate," which proposed to acquire, improve and sell certain lands in Palms and which numbered among its directors some well-known Los Angeles women of the time. Messrs. Sweetzer and Curtis were more successful in their promotion than many of the boomers of that day. They struck an abundant supply of water and the soil of the lands included in the townsite was responsive to water and labor. Mr. Curtis erected a handsome home which was soon surrounded by beautiful grounds. A school district was formed and a $10,000 school house was put up. A neat hotel, known for years as Palms Villa was built. This building is now the residence of Mr. E. M. Kimball. St. Augustin's, a pretty Catholic chapel, had been ]nit up in 1887 to accommodate the people of Ballona; a Congregational church was built and the I'nited Brethren erected a neat little church. The Southern Pacific added a neat depot for the thriving little settle- ment. Although the collapse of the boom retarded the growth of Palms, it did not cease to exist, like many other communities. In 1895 considerable improvement was made in the (piiet little town by 23 O. W. JEWETT. HISTORY OF SANTA MONICA BAY CITIES 355 the erection of several new residences and an influx of new residents. About this time a rural delivery route was started out from Palms. One of the first agents was Mrs. George Lyons, who worked up a fine route. She was suc- ceeded by A. F. Bryant who extended the delivery system until it covered a route of twenty-five miles with a list of 800 patrons. The extension of Los Angeles city boundaries has materially affected the territory of the Palms postoffice, however. The building of a branch of the Los Angeles-Pacific road through Palms in 1902 gave new life to the town. Within a short time twenty new families had moved in and since that date progress has been rapid. The Palms Light and Water Company was incorporated with W. R. Wheat. C. N. Garev, M. R. King, A. J. Forbel. F. B. Clark, Jr., J. B. Valla, E. S. Shanks, as directors, and purchased a tract of 379 acres to furnish a water supply for domestic purposes and for irrigation. During igoi, F. E. Schueddig had begun on a small scale the manufacture of eucalyptus oil and produced a triple distilled article which was unequalled on the market. In 1906 he put up a new building for his manufactory, which is now shipping eucalyptus products to all parts of the United States. The year 1907 has been marked by a strong advance, a re-awakening, as it were, of the quiet village. Earl}' in January a Chamber of Commerce was organized with C. N. Gary, president ; S. C. Perrine, secretary ; Arthur J. Stinton, treasurer. January 22nd was a memorable day because of the ban- quet tendered the new organization by C. N. Gary, at the ship hotel. Cabrillo. A'enice. One hundred and seventy-two men sat down to the feast and listened to stirring talk on the future development of Palms. The Palms Nczvs, a neatly printed and lively sheet, sent out its first number December 22, 1906, S. C. Perrine and W. G. Rennie, proprietors. The paper is now printed in the establishment of King. Geach & Co.. which is doing a large job printing business. A neat one-story brick building has been erected for this companv and is now occupied by them as a printing plant. In August a branch of the Citizens State Bank of Sawtelle was opened in Palms, located first in the office of I. C. Butler, but on the completion of a handsome two-story brick building by the Woodmen of the World, the bank moved into a corner room especially arranged for its use. The building contains a fraternal hall and two store rooms beside a number of offices upstairs. Several other business buildings and a number of residences have been erected since the beginning of 1906. ^m- EDWIN W. DIKE. Biographical. EDWIN W. DIKE, retired, a highly esteemed citizen of Santa Monica, is a native of Vermont, born in the town of Chittenden, Rutland County, February 10th, 1820. He is the son of Dan Dike, a native of the same town and a farmer by occupation, living there the greater portion of his life, sub- sequently removing to St. Lawrence County, N. Y., where he died at the age of about eighty-three years. The father of Dan Dike, Jonathan Alexander Dike, was a native of Tolland, Conn., and his father was a Revolutionary soldier. Mr. Dike's maternal grandfather w^as Thomas Mitchell, who lived at Taunton, Mass., then a suburb but now a part of the city of Boston. Mr. Dike's maternal great grandfather was a Howard by birth, a Scotchman, but by choice and instinct an American patriot. He was an active member of the historic "Boston Tea Partv" that indignantly threw overboard quantities of tea from a merchant vessel into the waters of Boston harbor in 1774 because of the arbitrary and un- just taxation of the English government. Edwin W. Dike was reared on the home farm, received an excelleni educa- tion in local public schools and finished at Burr Seminary, Manchester, Vt. From the farm he went into a general store at Brandon, Vt., where he spent four years and acquired a practical knowledge of business methods. Later he took up mechanics, became a wood and iron worker and held a responsible posi- tion in the shops of the Rutland & Burhngton Ry- Co. for six years, later became assistant master mechanic of the Burlington division of the same road for four years. He then purchased an interest in the Cove Machine Company, at Provi- dence, R. L, and assumed management of the same, making a specialty of the manufacture of calico printing and bleaching machinery. By reason of failing health he disposed of his interests and in 1857 came west to Faribault, Rice County, Minn., where, with the accumulations of past years of enterprise and industry, he embarked in the money loaning business. He also acted as pur- chasing agent for a Baltimore house, extensive exporters of ginseng to China and for them did a large business. The country was then new and infested with bands of hostile and warlike Sioux Indians. During the historic Indian uprisings throughout west and northwest Minnesota, in 1863 — in which ujjwards of seven hundred white men, women and children were massacred — Mr. Dike took an active part in the defense of the settlers and in the final punishment of the murder- ous savages. After the battle of Wood Lake, about four hundred of these Indians were taken as prisoners to Mankato and there tried by court martial. Two 358 BIOGRAPHICAL hundred of them were convieted and condemned to death. After a careful and deliberate review of the case by President Lincoln, he decided that forty of them should be hung. By reason of extenuating circumstances two of the forty were finally reprieved, and Mr. Dike was appointed one of the citizen marshals to execute these thirty-eight Sioux warriors at Mankato. This unpleasant duty was promptly performed according to law. They were all hanged until dead at one and the same time from one gallows. Later, for a time, Mr. Dike assumed management of a flour mill, the property of a cousin. Major W. H. Dike — Major of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry. He was a pioneer mill owner of the great west, and among the first to ship flour to the eastern markets from the State of Minnesota. In 1873 Mr. Dike w'as appointed Treasurer of the State of Minnesota by Governor Horace Austin to take the place of a defaulting treasurer, and removed to St. Paul, the state capital. Upon assuming charge of the state treasury, Mr. Dike evolved and put into use an entirely new^ system of bookkeeping, by which he was enabled to de- termine the nominal condition of the state finances at the close of each day's business and make technically accurate balances of all his accounts at the end of every month. These reports were published in the leading newspapers of the state. He was the first state treasurer to deposit the state's funds in national banks, receiving interest on daily balances, a new source of revenue to the state which, during his administration, amounted to about $9,600. At the time of the historic Jay Cook failure, which precipitated a financial panic throughout the country, Mr. Dike assured his bankers that the state's funds — upwards of three quarters of a million dollars — would remain with them on deposit. This declaration effectually restored confidence and safely held the impending crisis in check at St. Paul, the then financial center of the great Northwest. During his term of one year's incumbency by appointment, Mr. Dike inaugu- rated other salutary reforms and discharged the duties of the office with such marked ability and fidelity as to demand, by the people, his election to succeed himself. At the solicitation of his friends he ran as an independent candidate on an independent reform ticket and the following editorial paragraph that ap- peared in the St. Paul Daily Pioneer Press, published prior to holding the Repub- lican convention, expresses the sentiments published in many other leading news- papers throughout the state : "There seems to be a universal sentiment favoring Mr. E. W. Dike, the ])res- ent incumbent, for treasurer. He took possession of the office when its affairs were in a most disorganized condition, and when he was hampered by newly passed, untried and seemingly contradictory laws, and in a very short time brought order out of chaos. His sole desire seems to be to do his duty as he interprets this duty in the interests of the state and not to meet the exigencies of a spec- ulative relationship. The treasury needs the guidance of (what Mr. Dike is) an honest man. He has to a wonderful degree the confidence of the people and BIOGRAPHICAL 359 we shall be greatly disappointed in the wisdom and good sense of the Convention if it fails to nominate him by acclamation. No name could add more strength to the ticket." Mr. Dike's friends loyally supported him, ])urely by the reason of the en- viable record he had made as a faithful and able- public servant, for his strict integrity and his splendid personality. After one of the most momentous and memorable campaigns in the history of the state, he was elected over his Repub- lican opponent by a majority of four thousand votes, while the balance of the Republican ticket was elected by a majority of eight thousand. This was a great personal triumph for Mr. Dike. He served under the administration of three governors of Minnesota — Horace Austin, Cushman K. Davis and John S. Pillsbury. During his incumbency as state treasurer, Mr. Dike married Mrs. Julia C. Smith, ncc Robinson, of Woodstock, 111., a daughter of David W. Robinson, a prominent citizen of that city. She is a lady of charming social attainments and foremost in all worthy charitable work. They resided in Woodstock from 1876 to 1899. In 1883 Mr. Dike was appointed by President Arthur one of three United States Commissioners to inspect the western one hundred and fifty miles of the Santa Fe Railroad, then terminating at Needles, California. After per- forming this duty, he traveled somewhat in the state, visiting Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco and other cities. He returned to Woodstock and there remained until 1899 and in 1900 he permanently came to Santa Monica, where he has made substantial investments. He is a stockholder in the Santa Monica Investment Co., one of the strong financial institutions of the city and is (1908) its vice president. Mr. Dike is a man of high ideals and strong personality inherited from a sturdy ancestry that dates back to the early history of this country, and rounded out by a long and eventful career of individual endeavor. He is one of Santa Monica's most substantial and loyal citizens. Hale and hearty at the age of eighty-eight, he has retired from active business and enjoys the personal confi- dence and esteem of a wide circle of friends. Mrs. Dike is active in social and club circles and lends her influence to all worthy charitable movements. Their home, Violet Cottage, is one of the many pretty residences of Santa Monica, and is located at No. 1138 Third vStreet. Joseph H. Clark was born in Corning, N. Y., and there grew to vigorous young manhood, forming the foundation of what was destined to be a brilliant business career. Feeling that his native town did not offer sufficient induce- ments to a young man starting out in life, Mr. Clark sought a broader field for his labors, and removed to Minneapolis, Minnesota, which place has been the scene of his active business career. Beginning with less than two hundred dollars in cash, Mr. Clark, through unremitting industry, rare good judgment and in- 360 UIUGRAPHICAL sight into affairs of a business nature, amassed a considerable fortune in a com- ]iaratively short period of time. He became closely connected with several of the banks, also the great milling corjiorations of the city. He was one of the organizers of the Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce and retained his mem- bership in this institution until his removal from Minneapolis. Mr. Clark retired from active business life in 1892 and became a resident of Santa Monica in 1894 where he and his family have since resided, having built a home on the corner of Fifth Street and Nevada Avenue. He has always taken a strong interest in the welfare of Santa Monica. It was through his, and Mrs. Clark's efforts, that the Carnegie Free Public Library was secured and located on the corner of Fifth Street and Oregon Avenue in 1903. Mr. Clark placed a fine Esty pipe organ in the First Presbyterian Church corner of Third Street and Arizona Avenue, in 1907, in memory of his son. He is one of the stockholders and directors of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Los Angeles. Archie F. Johnston, late a prominent and successful merchant, Santa Monica, was a native of Pittsburg, Pa., born January 12th, 1863, a son of John AL Johnston, a farmer by occupation, now^ retired from active business. His mother was Mary A. Forrister, a daughter of Archibald Forrister, of Edinburgh, Scotland. He was a shipbuilder by trade in Pittsburg, Pa., with a home at Bakerstown, then a suburb, where the subject of this sketch was born. About 1873 the family moved to Peoria, 111., and near that city owned and lived on what was known as the Hickorj^ Grove Farm. They came to California in April, 1886 and located in Santa Monica. Here Mr. Johnston found employment as salesman for H. A. Winslow, who was then engaged in the grocery business. Later he became manager for Mrs. M. E. Chapin who was, for several years, a leading merchant of Santa Monica. He occupied this position for seven years and then, associated with Mr. George Baum, purchased the business. This business was conducted for two years under the firm name of Johnston & Baum. In 1900, Mr. Johnston became sole owner and as such built up an extensive and profitable business. In September, 1906, the concern was incorporated as the A. F. Johnston Company, of which Mr. Johnston was president, C. W. Rogers, \-ice president; Harry Cowles, secretary. The firm removed to the Johnston Building, Mr. Johnston's personal property, in January, 1906. By reason of impaired health, incident to many years of close attenlion to business, Mr. Johnston at this time practically retired from active management of the company's affairs and indulged in a needed rest. In March, 1908. he left home to make a trip into Josephine County, Oregon, to look after some acquired mining interests. While nearing his journey's end, in crossing the lapids of the Illinois River, the boat became unmanageable, capsized and he met an untimely death by drowning. The sad intelligence of this catastrophe reached the family the following day and greatly shocked the entire community PJOGRAPHICAL 3,51 where he was so widely and popularly kno^^n. After a most dili^^ent seareh for just a month his body was recovered, but in such a condition a^s to render bunal at home impossible. In the death of Archie F. Johnston. Santa Monica sustiancd a loss of one of her most substantial, popular and useful citizens- a loss which, at the time, seemed irreparable. In 1890 Air. Johnston married Miss Katherine I., a daughter of Thomas Elliott, one of Santa Monica's best known and highly respected pioneers Mr Johnston assiduously devoted himself to the building up of a very substantial business and a comfortable estate. His social temperament, courteous manner and keen sense of honor made his friends legion and extended his popularity as a merchant and citizen. For four years, from 1 903 to 1907, inclusive he served on the Santa Monica City Board of Trustees and ,,roved a most energetic, faith- ful and progressive servant of the people, his policy and efforts meeting the unquahhed and hearty endorsement of the public. Mr. Johnston was a charter member of the B. P. O. E. and of the K. of P., Santa Monica lodges. He was a meiBber of the Modern Woodmen of America, Fraternal Brotherhood and Maccabees. He was also an active and influential member of the Santa Monica Board of Trade. George H. Hutton, Judge of the Superior Court of the State of Califomia in and for Los Angeles County, elected in November, 1906, is a product of the frigid north where his childhood was spent as a ward of his uncle. Reverend George H. Bridgman, President of Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota at which mstitution he received his academic education. At the State University of Minnesota he received his legal education and was from there admitted to practice m 1893 and the same year became the assistant attornev or <.ener.] trial lawyer for the Minneapolis & St. Paul Railroad, which position he held until his removal to California m 1897, when he located and engaged in the practice of his profession at Santa Monica. He had, up to the time of his elevation to the bench, been actively engaged in his profession and had attained more than ordinary success as a lawyer, being widely known m Los Angeles County and hroughout Southern California. He was for several yearo the general attornev for the vast and varied interests of Ex-Senator John P. Jones, and attornev and trustee under the will of the late Andrew J. W. Keating, who left a fortune which during Judge Hutton 's trusteeship has increased in bulk from less than a quarter million to nearly two million dollars. He has been an extensive traveler and knows the American continent better than most men and is at home anywhere from Alaska, where he caught trout • to Washmgton, D. C, where he has appeared as attornev before the United States Supreme Court. He believes in the great west, its present and future and has contributed to \anoLS well known western magazines and other publications-to Out West, 362 BIOGRAPHICAL The West Coast, Pacific Monthly — his favorite themes being "CaHfornia Missions," "Early Religions," "Education" and "Agriculture." He is a public speaker of note and his oration at the funeral of Senator Patton, at Ocean Park, in December of 1906, was a classic in all that the word implies. He is a prominent member of the Masonic Order, the Knights of Pythias and the Elks ; of religious and public spirit, ever ready to give his energetic support to any movement tending to the betterment of improvement of the religious, moral and municipal conditions of the community. Judge Hutton possesses ability, dignity, firmness and courage, and is clear and direct in his statements ; his decisions are well considered and he has by these qualities and his uniform courtesy and patience earned the good will and confi- dence of the members of Los Angeles bar; while on the bench he is quiet and reserved and conducts his court with dignity. In chambers he is genial, cordial and approachable and in private life social and friendly. He will be thirty-seven years old August 5th of this year (1907). In 1897 he was united in marriage to Dolores Egleston, a daughter of S. J. Egleston, one of the founders of the City of Spencer, Clay County, Iowa. They have one son, George Robert Egleston Hutton, eight years old, the pride of his parents and the central attraction of a home that Judge Hutton finds to be the brightest spot on earth and where he spends his leisure hours to the exclusion of society or politics. He is a man of stern and strict habits whose life is dominated by two leading desires — first, to enjoy his home and family and second, to succeed in his profession. He is possessed of a most unusual memory and rarely forgets the doctrine of an} case he has once studied. Since his elevation to the bench he has impressed the bar and the public with his persistent and untiring diligence, with his keen analysis of facts, his clear perception of the truth and his tireless search for every possible legal principle that might aid him in reaching a correct and accurate conclusion Rev. Patrick Hawe, parish priest of Santa Monica, was born at the home farm of John and Bridget (Feehan) Hawe, County Kilkenny, Ireland, in the year 1847, one of seven children. At sixteen years 'of age he was sent to the Classical Academy of the Carmelites, from which he graduated three years later. He then took a five years' course of study in All Hallows College, Dublin, Ireland, and graduated from the Department of Philosophy and Theology in the year 1872. The ordination service consecrating him to the priesthood took place June 24th, 1872, at All Hallows and was presided over by Bishop Whalen, Bishop of Bombay, India. He came at once to California and was appointed to the diocese of Monterey and Los Angeles. For two months he assisted in the San Bernardino parish and for a year following was stationed at San Buena Ventura, followed by one year in the parish of San Luis Obispo. Subsequently, he spent nine years under the late lamented Father Joaquin Adam, V. G., at the Church BIOGRAPHICAL 363 of the Holy Cross, Santa Cruz. After a year as assistant to Father Villa, at Santa Barbara, he returned to San Bernardino for a similar period. From there he was stationed at St. Boniface parish, Anaheim, and while here erected the parochial residence. In May, 1886, he was appointed rector at Santa Monica church. Santa Monica was, at that time, a small town of about nine hundred people and the church had never had a resident priest, the work having been sustained by itinerant priests. Under Father Hawe's ministrations the parish has become one of thrift and importance. He has made material improvements in the church edifice, and he built the present parochial residence. The splendid Academy of the Holy Names was built in 1900 and dedicated February 22nd, 1901. In 1886, the parish at the Palms was organized and the present church edifice was erected by Father Hawe. He attended to the needs of the con- gregation until 1904, when it was made a mission church of the new parish of Ocean Park, of which Rev. M. L. Hennesy is rector. Father Hawe also held services at the Soldiers' Home in the early days of that institution, meeting in the old Assembly Hall. Later he effected a church organization there and erected a church edifice with funds supplied by the government. In the summer of 1902, Father Hawe held the first Catholic services at Ocean Park. Having no church edifice his people convened in the then Kinney Hall. In 1904 he built the present spacious and imposing church, and upon its completion placed it under the control of Rev. M. L. Hennesy, who organized the parish. Thus Father Hawe has devoted the best thirty -six years of his life to the spiritual uplifting and well being of his people in and about Santa Monica where he has drawn about himself a wide circle of friends. Charles E. Towner, one of the active, well known and successful pioneers of Santa Monica, is a native of Michigan, born at Homer, December 2nd, 1849. His father was John M. Towner, a native of North Adams, Berkshire County, Mass., and his m.other was Emily D. Robinson, born and reared in the Green Mountains of Vermont. Mr. and Mrs. Towner raised a family of five children — Henry C, born at Ballston Spa, Saratoga County, N. Y., May 2nd, 1842 ; entered United States army in 1862 from Manhattan, Kansas, served in Trans-AIississippi Department, came to California in 1883 and is now a resident of Towner Heights. William E., born at Ballston Spa, N. Y., November 28th, 1843, entered U. S. Army in 1862, served in Trans-Mississippi Department; died in Kansas City in 1897. Mary E., born at Homer, Michigan, January 19th, 1846, died, single, at Santa Monica, in 1898. H. D., born at Batavia, Kane County, 111., August 8th, 1852, now residing in Oklahoma. Charles E. Towner, the subject of this sketch, was the fourth of the family. He was born at Homer, Michigan, December 2nd, 1849. From 1851 to 1860 the family lived at Batavia, 111., and then came west to Kansas where they lived at Manhattan until 1878 when thev removed to Colorado, locating on the Platte 364 lUOGRAPHlCAL Ri\-er at Buffalo Station — about forty miles west of Denver on the Rio Grande Railway. Here they lived until 1883 and then came to Santa Monica. Mr. Towner bought twenty acres of land of Judge Lucas which he improved and sold. Later he purchased twenty-four acres in the same vicinity at $300.00 an acre, which was regarded at that time as a fair price. In 1903 he, in company with W. A. Erwin, purchased three hundred acres of land comprising what is now known as ErAvin Heights, promoted the Erwin Heights Land & Water Company, developed water in abundance, laid about twelve miles of water pipe and platted Erwin Heights. Mr. Towner also platted and piped water for the Towner Terrace Tract, of about one hundred acres, and made other substantial improve- ments. Mr. Towner was the tirst settler in this now delightful terrace country and has ever been in the lead in the matter of local improvements. This country was originally open and devoid of trees and foliage of any kind, whereas the broad avenues are all lined on either side with tall and stately shade trees, the result of Mr. Towner's personal energy and artistic thrift, which makes Towner Terrace one of the most attractive and homelike residence tracts on the coast. Of the Towner Terrace, about one-half is sold off, and a large amount of money has been expended on streets and water system. Mr. Towner has associated with him other men of large capital and experience in the development of this enterprise. The present Mrs. Towner was Mary E., a daughter of Robert Dobson, a California pioneer and resident of Towner Terrace. Mr. and Mrs. Towner have one son. Cherles E. Jr. Mr. Towner has two children by a former marriage C. C. Towner, I^istrict Attorney at Abilene, Kansas, and Mrs. Daisy B. Stroup, of Santa Monica, California. General William E. Towner, the progenitor of this branch of the Towners, was born in Massachusetts in 1758. He studied for a physician and served as assistant surgeon and surgeon in Washington's army in the Revolution. He afterwards settled in North Adams, Mass., and married Lurana Chadwick, mother to Charles E. Towner's father. He was successively Justice of the Peace, physician. Brigadier General of Massachusetts Militia, and, in 1812, was appointed Major General of Massachusetts troops. He would have taken the field in 1813 but was taken sick and died at Pownall, Vermont, January 12th, 1813. W. E. Sawtelle, a quiet and genial citizen of the city that, by reason of his unic^ue personality and popularity took unto itself his name, is a native of the town of Norridgewock, Maine, and WcS born August, 1850. His ancestors were Hueguenots who fled from France upon the revocation of the Edict of Nantes and sought refuge in England. Later generations came to America and became pioneers of Massachusetts. Richard Sawtelle was a native of Groton, Mass. Closely following the American Revolution he settled in Norridgewock, Somerset County, Maine, when that country was a virgin forest dominated by Indians. BIOGRAPHICAL 365 George Sawtelle was a son of Richard, and was born and grew up at Norridgewock. He became a merchant and man of affairs in his native town where he was for about twenty years postmaster, having received his appointment of President Lincoln in 186L He there married Sarah Peet, who was also a native of Norridge- wock. She was a daughter of Rev. Josiah Peet, a minister of the Congregational Church. George and Sarah Sawtelle had three sons and a daughter. One son Dr. F. G. Sawtelle, is a prominent physician of Providence, R. I. He served in the Union Army during the Civil War as a member of the Third Maine Battery. F. J. Sawtelle is an architect and lives at Providence, R. I. The daughter is Mrs. M. S. Hopkins, who lives in the old homestead at Norridgewock, Maine. W. E. Sawtelle grew up at Norridgewock and at nineteen years of age went to Worcester, Mass. , and became a member of the mercantile firm of The Sanford- Sawtelle Company, dealers in books and manufacturers of blank books, the busi- ness having been founded in 1835. It was one of the oldest established houses of that wealthy old city. He was associated with this concern for a period of about twenty -seven years. Mr. Sawtelle married Miss Mary Wheeler and they have two daughters, Katherine and Barbara. In 1896 Mr. Sawtelle, with his family, came to Califor- nia. In 1899 Mr. Sawtelle became part owner and an officer of the Pacific Land Company, the promoters of the then embryo town of Barrett Villa. Mr. Sawtelle assumed the business management of the new enterprise and by reason of his splendid qualities of mind and heart became exceedingly popular with the people. He was soon elected president of his company. He organized and was made president of the Sawtelle Water Company, and in fine was ever alert for the pro- motion of any and all enterprises looking to the betterment of his city. In the year 1900 application to the United States postal authorities was made for the establishment of a postoffice at Barrett. The name being so similar to that of Bassett P. O. in this state, the department wished another name, and the wishes of its people centered on their chief citizen as a fitting evidence of the high esteem in which he was held. William Jackson, one of the early pioneers of Santa Monica, was born in Yorkshire, England, September 2 7th, 1852. He was a son of Richard Jackson, a tailor by trade and occupation. He came to America in the year 1855 and located about forty miles northeast of Toronto, Canada, in the town of Peel. Later the family went to Detroit, Michigan, where the father died leaving the widow and two sons of whom William was the youngest. They soon thereafter went to Oil City, Penna., where Mrs. Jackson married John A. Donald, a Scotch- man who in 1875, with the family came to Santa Monica. At the auction sale of lots in the then new townsite, young Jackson purchased Lot S., Block 194, now No. 134 North Fifth Street (old number) and still owns the same. He also owns five acres of the Old Lucas Tract on Front, now Fremont Street, opposite 366 BIOGRAPHICAL Twelfth, which is his present lionie, one of the most sightly and pleasant family homes in the city. John A. Donald became a well known and useful citizen of Santa Monica. From 187 7 to 1883 he was the efficient local agent for the Jones & Baker interests. He died in 1886, highly respected and lamented by a wide circle of friends and business acquaintances. Mrs. Donald survived until 1899. Mr. Jackson married in Santa Monica in 1891, Miss Amy, a daughtei of R. D. Saunders, now of the Los Angeles 'fiuics editorial staff, and they have one daughter, Dorothy S., an efficient teacher in the Santa Monica public schools and two sons Lawrence R. and Leland W. Mr. Jackson took an active part in local affairs of the new town of Santa Monica. He may be regarded as one of the founders of the first fire department of the town, since he and the late Robert Eckert agitated the subject for nearly two years and finally induced the city trustees to provide a hose cart and a hook and ladder truck. The first fire company was duly organized with twenty-two volunteers who served without pay. Mr. Jackson is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. George D. Snyder. The history of the Santa Monica Bay cities would not be regarded as complete without including a brief sketch at least of the life of George D. Snyder, who for more than two decades has been one of the most enterprising and successful citizens of the Bay Coast country. Mr. Snyder is a descendant of Holland Dutch ancestors who emigrated to America at a time antedating the Revolutionary War, settled in New Jersey, and later removed to Seneca County, New York. The head of this family was George W. Snyder. Duiing the war w4th England he served as a scout under General Washington and endured many hardships. Porter Snyder, a son of George W. Snyder, was born in Seneca County, New York, was there engaged in farming and wdiile still a young man, moved to Calhoun, Michigan, located new land, which he improved, and also engaged in the building bu-siness at Marshall. He also served one term as sheriff of Calhoun County. At the time of his death he was sixty-two years of age. After the death of his first wife (by whom he had two sons now living) he married Sarah Jane Eddy, a native of Calhoun County, Michigan, still living in Marshall. In the family of Porter and Sarah Jane Snyder were three sons and one daughter. Two of the sons — George D., the subject of this sketch, and W. P., are contractors at Ocean Park, California. George D. Snyder was born near Marshall, Michigan, April 12th, 1859. In boyhood he learned the carpenter's trade in the shops of the Michigan Central Railroad. Later he followed mill-wrighting until 1886, when he came to Califor- nia and entered the employ of the Southern California Ry. Co. as foreman in their building department, having charge of repair work and erection of build- ings. Later he was made storekeeper for the track, bridge and building depart- ments with headquarters in San Bernardino. BIOGRAPHICAL 367 After the great strike of 1894 he resigned his position and removed to Los Angeles to take up general contracting and building. In 1899 he located at Ocean Park, then known as South Santa Monica, and entered actively into Ijuild- ing and became associated with various public movements for the development and building up of that now beautiful section of Santa Monica city. He has erected upwards of four hundred and twenty-five cottages, lesidences and other buildings, forty-five of which were built in 1901. During that year he also erected the Hotel Savoy, then the Holborrow Hotel at a cost of $10,000, closing the work in twenty-four days, with forty-eight men on the job the last week. The rapidity and thoroughness of the work elicited general comment as a "record breaker." His efficiency and thoroughness has brought to him an extensive business. Fre- quently he is called to Los Angeles and other cities to erect houses and public buildings. Mr. Snyder is gifted with a true mechanical genius and masters the various complicated problems of his work without difficulty. He is his own architect, a fact which enables him to give his work a character and indivi- duality that puts it, in a measure, in a class by itself. Mr. Snyder was married in Jackson, Michigan, to Miss Jennie C. Keeler. July 11th, 1883, a native of Racine, Wis., and they have two children. Alma and Clyde. Although his father was a Democrat, Mr. Snyder has from earliest manhood affiliated with the Republican party, his first ballot being in support of Republican men and measures. This seems natural since his first vote was cast within a stone's throw of the old oak at Jackson, Michigan, under the wide-spread- ing boughs of which the Republican party was organized. Mr. Snyder's interest in public affairs has manifested itself in every community where he has made his home, having served on local political committees and as a delegate to various political conventions and has done much to advance the interests of his party. He was made a candidate for the office of Trustee of Santa Monica city by an aggressive constituency and failed of election by a margin of four votes. In 1907 he was nominated for councilman of the First Ward under the new Free- holder's Charter, and was elected by a good majority. His varied and practical experience in local public affairs is appreciated by his official colleagues and he is serving on the Council Committees of Railroads, Wharves and Bridges, Judiciary and Ordinances, and Buildings. Mr. Snyder is a member of the I. O. O. F., A. O. U. W., Maccabees, K. of P., Elks, Pythian Sisters. He is a member of the Santa Monica Board of Trade, and one of the Executive Committee. William I. Hull, who is one of the most active and influential citizens of Santa Monica, is a native. of Lynn County, Oregon, born December 4th, 1859. His father, Nathan Hull, was a public school teacher by profession, upwards of thirty years of his life being given to the work. He was born in Cattaraugus County, New York, August 2nd, 1823. He came to California as early as 1852 368 BIOGRAPHICAL and mined in the plaeer gold diggings of the central part of the state and like- wise in the bed of the American River, in which he was moderately successful. In 1853 he emigrated to Oregon, locating in Lynn County, where he pursued his profession, held the office of County Superintendent of Schools and also en- gaged in farming. He there married Miss Nancy Stillwell, who was a native of Indiana; she came west at eighteen years of age, an orjjhan, to live with a sister. In 1876 the family removed to Inyo County, California, purchased a farm, and located near the town of Bishop. There Mr. Hull founded and served as president of the first corporation organized to take water out of the Owens River for irrigating purposes, which enterprise has developed into the most suc- cessful system in the Owens River Valley. He owned a transit and made his own suiveys. In 1884 he removed to Los Angeles where he purchased a ranch on Alameda Street, adjoining the city limits to the south; there he died in 1891 at sixty-eight years of age. He was a man of great energy; while possessing strong religious convictions he was not a member of any church. He had ten children, of whom William I. is the fourth and oldest living. Up to sixteen years of age William I. lived in Oregon and enjoyed the advantages of good schooling. In 1882 he came to Los Angeles where he found employment with Northcraft & Clark, furniture dealers. In 1884 he came to Santa Monica and embarked in business for himself, furnishing tents and camp supplies. This business he pursued about two years. In 1886 he built a bath house on the ocean front at the foot of Colorado Avenue, known as Cen- tral Bath, which he sold a year later. During the real estate boom of 1887 he bought and sold real estate, handling only his own property. In 1891 he purchased of J. L. Allen what was the nucleus to his present extensive furniture business. It was a small store on Third Street, between Utah and Arizona Avenues, having about 1500 feet of floor space. Mr. Hull has been continuously in the business from that date and now has a veritable emporium in the two story W. C. T. U. Building, 1429 Third Street, with over 8000 feet of floor space and 15,000 feet of floor space in buildings of his situated at 1517-1521 Third Street, embracing an extensive stock of house furnishing goods of nearly all descriptions. In 1888 Mr. Hull married Mary A., a daughter of Thomas H. Elliott, one of Santa Monica's esteemed pioneers. (See index.) Mr. and Mrs. Hull have two sons, Francis E. and Walter I. An only daughter, Grace, died in 1903 at five years of age. It is safe to say that no citizen of Santa Monica has been miore intimately in touch with the civic, business and social development of the city than has Mr. Hull. He has always taken a personal interest in municipal affairs and has ever been found on the side of clean government. By instinct and training a temperance man, he has stood for principles advanced by the National Prohibi- tion Party and has opposed the saloon on general ])rinci])les as a menace to good society and |)ul)lic morals and has, therefore, worked in harmony with :;11 move- BIOGRAPHICAL 369 ments to regu ate the local liquor traffic. When Mr. Hull came to Santa Monica . was a small town of about 300 people, supporting twelve saloons , is or l,e cmzen of the beaut.ful city of today to say whether or not organized opposi .on to saloons and r.gid regulation of the same by fostering a strong pubHc temperance sent.ment ,s a good thmg for a growing community. ^ ' When called by his party to stand for public office, Mr. Hull has accented the role that he deems the duty of every American citizen, and was mTde he mf iVHuir'T' '°%'':'"" ^^"""^ ■" '""^ ^"^ '>^« state Senate „ 904. Mr. Hull was one of the organizers of the first city fire department in 889 and served as president of the organ.zat.on about fifteen years. He r e 'reT;"";:'™"^ '? °' *^ '^^P^^*"™* » '''•^ ^P""« °f •'<"■ '-dering Mr Hunt 7« " " "■"" --ecognition of long terms of faithful service Mr^ Hull has served five years as a men,ber of the City Library Board of Trustees and was president of the Board from 1 90J to 1 907 ^ allianl' 'afT/ "" °''^'"""' °^ *"' ^'"'" ^'""'^^ ^oard of Trade, which is an a hance of afzens representmg the leading business and commercial interests of the cuy havmg at heart the public weal, civ.c and otherwise, and has Teen f'or:u2°offi'' "°?^"'"' '°'"' '"-^ >-^"^- -^'^ """ '-^ -ver been a se ler seemed 1 caf of ZTV' ' ™'' *° "'"''^ "" "^'' ^^"^^- '" -^P°»- '» ->-* thT I M nt'^' " ''''™' ^ candidate for mayor of Santa Monica under W thTvo r IZ °' ' '°' •""' ^™^ '°y^"^ ^"PP-'^^ '^-- - '-g^ consftuency. W.th tuo other candidates in the field, he failed of election by 107 votes hL dZe?h-s *V """^ "'' "^'^ "P°" ^ P'^*f°-^ -'™h clearlv and frankh- defined his position upon questions of public expediency that were made issues of the campaign, which was dignified and noticeably free from the average pohtical bickerings and invidious personalities average Mr. Hull is a member of the Independent Order of Foresters and has served He i c" H T T'Z ":;' ' '''" P'"°^ °' '™^ «= "'g'^ Auditor of the State, oorter of r ^^P'^^f tl^'^y-six years standing and has been an active sup- porter of the work of the local lodge. He is very active in the Grand Lodge of of sfnt M " °' u" ^""'"^^ ^°'™'""«^ f- -^"y >-— No cifizen JJZl T' ™, '""' '"^""' ''^''" °' ^""^ A""'^^" citizenship and more nearly succeeds in living up to those ideals than W. I. Hull. He is essentially Lride r?7 "f """"^ '"' '"^^y-f™-- y^^''-^ --"idence in Santa Monica ha's been ide„.it:ed v ith every pu blic movem ent for the city's upbuilding and growth. head'lf h^s Hamilto.m.M. °-. ™'= °f Santa Monica's leading citizens, at the ?7^h L.l ^'°^''''°"' '' ^ "«*'^'= °f Mi-^Wsan and was born at Ann Arbor, Feb. 1 Id Orel; f «f^' i" '«54, removed to Winona, Minne.:ota, and here the a d retur H 7 r , """' ^""^'^ ''"'°"^'' '^' S''^™"'" ^"^ ^gh schools o the M T n ' '" °' '" "■■"' ""^ P^^^^d "'"'"gh the Medical College a he R ;'°m" , "'.T,','^- "' ™t,sequently took a thorough course of study at the Ru.sh .Medical College, Chicago, now the Medical Department of Chicaoo 370 BIOGRAPHICAL University, from which institution he graduated in 1877 and almost immediately entered upon the practice of his profession at Grafton — a new settlement in North Dakota. The country rapidly increased in population and wealth and Grafton became a populous and very prosperous young city and Dr. Hamilton there built up an extensive practice. He remained at Grafton until 1893 and became thoroughly identified wdth the civic, industrial and political interests of the community. He was for fourteen years President of the United States Board of Examining Surgeons for soldiers' pensions and for a similar period held the office of County Physician. For two years he served his County as Coroner; for four years he was a member of the examining board for the insane, and nine years w^as secretary and superintendent of the County Board of Health. He was the first Vice President of the North Dakota State Medical Society, and served as District Surgeon for the Northern Pacific and Great Northern Railway Com- panies. The multiplicities of his duties and demands of his profession, coupled with the rigors of that northern climate, made such inroads upon his health that he found it necessary to make a change of location and accordingly came to Cali- fornia and located at Santa Monica in September, 1893. Dr. Hamilton's name in his adopted city stands for all that is good, progressive and right at all times and under all conditions. Aside from the duties of an exten- sive medical practice, he is District Surgeon of the Southern Pacific Railway Co., medical examiner for all the old line insurance companies in Southern Califor- nia, and acts in the same capacity for the fraternal insurance organizations. He is one of the organizers of the Santa Monica Bay Hospital Company, and is presi- dent of the company ; a history of which splendid enterprise may be found else- where in this work. Dr. Hamilton is a member of long standing of the American Medical Asso- ciation, the largest association of prominent physicians in the world. He is also a member of the California State Medical Society and the Los Angeles County Medical Association. Despite his engrossing professional and business cares he has also actively identified himself with some of the leading fraternities. He is a Royal Arch Mason, a member of the Commandery and the Mystic Shrine and affiliated with Santa Monica Lodge, No. 307, F. and A. M., Chapter and Com- mandery, and Al Malaikah Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S., of Los Angeles. He is also member of the Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias and the Independent Order of Foresters of Santa Monica. He is a director in the Western Masons Mutual Life Association of Los Angeles and maintains a deep interest in its wel- fare. Dr. Hamilton is an almost life long Republican, an active and influential member of the Presbyterian church. Dr. Hamilton was married October 21st, 1887, to Miss Bertha R. Crookston, a native of Ann Arbor, Michigan, and they have three daughters — Helen, Clara and Esther. The family residence. No. 522 North Fifth Street, is one of the finest of the many beautiful homes in Santa Monica City. BIOGRAPHICAL 371 Myron H. Kimball, well known in Santa Monica and Los Angeles as a sub- stantial and staid pioneer, was one of the earliest denizens of the Angel City to discover the beauties and desirability of Santa Monica by the sea as a place for retirement, in which to spend the declining years of a business life. He is a native of Oneida County, N. Y., born in the town of Verona, September 13th, 1827. His father, David Kimball, was a native of New Hampshire, a contractor and builder. He came west in 1837, and located in Monroe County, Michigan, and for many years was in the employ of the Michigan Southern Ry., as a bridge builder. He later retired to his farm neai Adrian, Michigan, where he spent many active years of his life, and finally returned to Oneida, N. Y., where he died at seventy- three years of age. Young Myron, early in youth, acquired a burning desire to see the world and lead a free and independent life and accord- ingly at ten years of age left home and obtained a situation in a grocery store at Toledo, Ohio, which was then a small town of about fifteen hundred people. He remained there about seven years and in 1844 went to Lafayette, Ind., where he clerked in a general store. His employer's father. Captain Brayton, was owner of a steamboat that navigated the Wabash River between Lafayette and Terre Haute, and young Kimball, then seventeen years old, was offered, and accepted, a position as clerk on the steamer and at times was its commander. He then went to Cincinnati and traveled from that city as a salesman for a wholesale tea and tobacco house. He made his way east to New York city, via Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Louis. He spent about five years in and out of the city of Cincinnati. The art of making Daguerreotype pictures had just been perfected, the beauty and utility of which appealed to young Kimball as at once a most attractive and practical means of making money and he placed himself under a thorough course of training and mastered the art. The year 1853 found him again in New York City as World's Fair correspondent of the Philadelphia Enquirer. This was the first World's Fair that ever took place on the American continent and was held in the famous Crystal Palace, erected for the purpose on ground now occupied by a public MYRON n. KIMBALL. Z72 BIOGRAPHICAL stjuare at Sixth Avenue and Forty-first and F'orty-second Streets. Mr. Kimball spent six months at the Crystal Palace and his descriptive articles so widely portrayed the wonders of the great fair as to bring to the Enquirer an extended reputation and wide popularity, for which he was liberally compensated. While a resident of Cincinnati, Ohio, Mr. Kimball took a course of instruction in th? new art of Daguerreotype picture making from E. C. Hawkins, a pupil of Samuel F. Morse, the inventor of telegraphy. Mr. Morse had obtained a know- ledge of the art from Daguerre himself while on a visit to exhibit his own wonderful invention. After relinquishing his duties as correspondent to the Enquirer, Mr. Kimball opened a picture gallery in New York City, on Broadway near Canal Street, where he promptly built up a profitable business. The Deguerreotype proved, however, to be only the forerunner of something better, as Mr. Kimball and others were quietly experimenting along lines that eventually produced a superior picture, known as the Amhrotype and superseded its predecessor. About this time the photographic pictuie process made its appearance and Mr. Kimball was one of the first to adopt and introduce it in New York. He sold his gallery and opened on a much more extended scale as No. 477 Broadway, near Broome Street, which was then in the heart of the uptown business center of the city. He did business there about five years. The Civil War had broken out in 1860. In 1863 Mr. Kimball was employed as a government photographer at Port Royal, South Carolina, and Jones Island in front of Charleston. He spent upwards of six months at the seat of war when he returned to his business in New York. In 1864 he was appointed official photographer for Princeton College, the work of which amounted to thousands of dollars and he acted in the same capacity for the Freedman's Bureau. He spent in all about twenty-five years in New York City and owned a fine country seat on Lcjng Island. He also at one time owned and conducted a wholesale and retail confectionery business in Fulton Street, Brooklyn. In 1874 he closed out all his interests and started for California, via the Isth- mus of Panama, and arrived in San Francisco February 25th, of that year. He soon embarked for San Pedro and Los Angeles. Los Angeles was then a small city of about nine thousand people. It had no railway connection with the outside world save the local line to Wilmington and the first street railway, a mule car line, was that year constructed. The city was inadequately supplied with hotels, the Pico House being the leading public stopping place and that was over crowded. The St. Charles (old Bella Union) and the Lafayette (now St. Elmo) were also full to their limit. Mr. Kimball in quest for an opening for busi- ness decided to erect a first class family hotel and accordingly purchased property on New High Street, north of Temple Street, and erected what was for years the leading hostelry of its class in the city, known as the Kimball Mansion. It became the home of many of the leading people of Los Angeles and prominent tourists from the east and abroad. Helen Hunt Jackson made it her home while in South- ern California, and it was there that she did much of the literarv work on her BIOGRAPHICAL Z7Z famous story, Ramona. He relates many interesting reminiscences of his ac- c^uaintance with this delightful guest. Mr. Kimball's residence of nine yeats in Los Angeles was crowded with business activities. Besides building the Kimball Mansion he made other investments in realty. He took an active in- terest in the progress of Los Angeles and Southern California and became super- intendent of the Southern California Horticultural and Agricultural Societies and it was under his direction and management that the joint exposition of 1878 and also 1879 were held. The Board of Directors accorded him full credit for the phenomenal success of an enterprise entered upon with misgivings as to its feasibility and outcome. Mr. Kimball was married at the old Episcopal parsonage in Hudson Street, New York City, by Rev. Mr. Tuttle, June 26th, 1857, to Miss Eliza, a daughter of William Robb, a Scotchman. He was a capitalist and a member of Rob Roy clan, famous in the sixteenth century history of Scotland, and the hero of one of Sir Walter Scott's novels. Mrs. Kimball was a lady of exceptional social attainments, amiable temperament and domestic tastes. She became wide- ly known and popular during their residence in Los Angeles. Mr. and Mrs. Kimball purchased a fine residence in Santa Monica in 1882 at No. 22 5 North Second Street. She died in the seventy-fifth year of her age, April 18th, 1903. Mr. Kimball is a man of great kindness of heart and popularity as one of the best known Los Angeles pioneers. He is a life-long Democrat, of the old Andrew Jackson school, a thorough adherent to the doctrines and precepts of American government that made the old party the bulwark of our nation's greatness. He has lived to see his party side-step many times to its lasting discredit and chagrin of its oldest adherents. Mr. Kimball is an almost life-long member of the Methodist Episcopal church, as was Mrs. Kimball. He was very active in the old Central Methodist Episcopal Church, in Los Angeles, and has for years been one of the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Santa Monica. He is a Free Mason of over fifty years standing. Richard R. Tanner, the pioneer lawyer of Santa Monica, is a native of the "Golden State," born at San Juan, in what is now San Benito County, then Monterey County, California, March 30th, 1858. His father, Albert Miles Tanner, was a California pioneer of 1847, who came overland to the Pacific Coast, a member of the famous Mormon Battalion under Lieutenant-Colonel Philip St. George Cook, to aid in establishing United States Government authoritv in California. He was born in the town of Bolton, Warren County, N. Y., in 1824, and there grew up. In early life he drifted to the then far west and was thrown in contact with the Mormons, who were pioneering Central and Southern Illinois. While he never affiliated with the Mormon Church, he for several years sustained intimate business relations with them, joined the battalion upon its organization in Iowa and shared its fortunes and misfortunes of war 374 BIOGRAPHICAL until mustered out of service at San Diego, March 14th, 1848. He then went north to Sacramento, from which point he engaged in freighting with the famous pioneer, Sam Brannon, on Mormon Island. As a result of the disastrous floods of 1849 and 1850 he lost his property and in 1853 came south to San Bernardino. There he married Lovina Bickmore, removed to San Juan, Monterey County, and engaged in stock raising. Finally, late in 1871, he removed to Santa Paula, in Ventura County. He died at his Ventura home in 1881, at fifty-six years of age. He was a Douglas Democrat, later a Lincoln Republican, a man of strong individuality and well grounded opinions. The widow and mother is still living in Santa Paula. In Ventura County young Richard obtained his schooling and grew to manhood. He served as assistant postmaster of Ventura from 1877 to 1883. He then took up the study of law in the office of prominent attorneys of Ventura, was admitted to the bar in 1884 and located in Santa Monica the same year. He was for thirteen years, 1888 to 1901, City Attorney of Santa Monica and his long continuance in office is a sufficient evidence of his popularity and a due appreciation of a well rendered public service. He served as Deputy District Attorney of Los Angeles County from 1892 to 1894. Mr. Tanner has devoted special attention to land law practice and is a recognized authority upon all matters pertaining to land titles in this section of the state. The firm, of which he is senior member, are attorneys for the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, of Los Angeles. He is senior member of the well known law firm of Tanner, Taft & Odell, with offices in the Dudley Building, Santa Monica, and the Coulter Block, No. 213 South Broadway, Los Angeles. Mr. Tanner is a stockholder and director of the Merchants National Bank of Santa Monica and Vice-president of the Santa Monica Savings Bank. He is a promi- nent Mason, an Odd Fellow, a Forester, a member of the Royal Arcanum, of the Native Sons of the Golden West and Elks. Mr. Tanner has been twice married — in 1883 to Miss Elizabeth J., a daughter of Judge Henry Robinson, of Ventura, by this union having one daughter, Mrs. Nora Ormsby. His second marriage was to Miss Sebaldina M. Bontty, of Santa Monica. The Tanner family residence, located on North Fourth Street, No. 144, is one of the many that have made Santa Monica famous as a citv of beautiful seaside homes. J. Euclid Miles, councilman, an enterprising and representative citizen, is a native of Mount Gilead, Morrow County, Ohio, at which place he was born September 7, 1851. His father, Enos Miles, was a pioneer of Morrow County and was the first sheriff of that county. He was by occupation a drug- gist, having a store at Mount Gilead. He also owned farming lands in the vicinity. Mr. Miles is the third of a family of seven children. He was educated in the public schools of Mount Gilead and Notre Dame, Ind., college, one of the most thorough educational institutions of its class in the country. After leaving college he entered a banking house in New York City, until 1873, when he re- BIOGRAPHICAL 375 turned to Ohio and entered the motive power department of the C. C. C. & I R Ry., learned mechanics and became a first class locomotive engineer. For nearly sixteen years he followed this strenuous calling. In 1889 he gave up his position on the railroad at Pueblo, Colorado. Here he engaged in the loaning, real estate and insurance business. For a period of about twenty-two years he remained in Pueblo. He prospered in business and was recognized as one of the most energetic and influential citizens of the place The Pueblo Star-youmal, of July 15th, 1906, has this to say of Mr. Miles, who was on a business trip to his former home city ; "J- Euclid Miles, a well known real estate man of Santa Monica, Cal., leaves for his home on the Pacific Slope today at noon. Mr. Miles was a resident of Pueblo for twenty years, leaving for California about four years ago on account of Mrs. Miles health. During a large share of the time he resided in our city, he was engaged in the real estate business and bore the reputation of being one of the most energetic hustlers in the business. ' ' Mr. .Miles acquired valuable property interests in Pueblo which he still holds. He came to Santa Monica in July, 1902, and soon thereafter organized the Santa Monica Investment Company, a business enterprise that has been most active and successful in the work of building and developing homes in this region of the country. Mr. Miles is the general manager of this company. In August, 1905, Mr. Miles organized the real estate firm of Miles & Tegner, which became the heaviest purchaser and owner of first class realty in the'city of Santa Monica. Mr. Miles promptly became identified with the substantial growth and development of his adopted city and active in the promotion of its civil welfare He was elected to the City Council from the Sixth Ward, under the new Free- holders Charter of 1906, and placed at the head of the Committee on Finance and made a member of other committees of less importance. His policy in directing the financial affairs of the city has proved one of wise economy and judicious expenditure. On May 26th, 1872, Mr. Miles was married in New York City to Miss Mary Ann Moore, a native of Queens County, Ireland, and the daughter of John Moore. Mr. Miles is a prominent and active member of the Knights of Columbia Elks, Independent Order of Foresters and National Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. Charles C. LeBas is a native of London, England, born April 30th, 1859, a son of Henry V. LeBas, who is the preacher of the Charter House, London' England. Mr. LeBas was educated by private tutors. At twenty-one years of age he went to Algiers for some time and returned home. Later he spent some time at Smgapore, Southeast Asia, chiefly in pursuit of health. He then returned to London and engaged extensively in the publishing business as a member of the 376 r.I()(;RAPHICAL house of Sonnenschein & LeBas, publishers of school, text and story books and also high class story magazines. He subsequently retired from the business and went to Australia. In 1893 he returned to London, after which he spent several years coflfee planting in Java, and there remained until he came to South- ern California in 1896, living in Los Angeles, Covina and San Bernardino. Since 1896 he has lived in retirement in Santa Monica, owning a modern home on Oregon Avenue. Mr. LeBas married, in 1896, Miss Marion Gene Eckford, a native of the beaut- iful Isle of Jersey. They have one son, Harry LeBas, a native of California. Mr. LeBas has made investments in California realty and is interested in mining properties. Fred H. Taft, lawyer, of Santa Monica, was born at Pierrepont Manor, Jefferson County, New York, April 4th, 1857. He is a son of Reverend Stephen H. Taft, now resident of Sawtelle. A com- prehensive sketch of the life of the father appears elsewhere in this work (see index), which throws some light upon the earlier surroundings and influences under which the subject of this brief notice was reared. He was about six years of age when the family located as pioneers in Iowa. He was educated at Humboldt College, Humboldt, Iowa, grad- uating from that institution in 1878. From 1874 to 1882 he edited and pubhshed the Humboldt Kosnios. In 1883 he was one of the founders of the Hardin County ('iti::cii at Iowa Falls, Iowa. For four years, begin- ning in 1884, he was associated in the conduct of the Fort Dodge (Iowa) Mcsscni^cr. There- after he followed semi-newspaper work and commercial lines in Sioux City, Iowa, in the meantime reading law. He was admitted to the bar while at Sioux City, and practiced there until the close of 1892. January 1st, 1893, he arrived in California, and the follow- ing year formed a law partnership with Richard R. Tanner, the hrm now being Tanner, Taft & Odell, with offices in Los Angeles and Santa Monica. From 1902 to his resignation at the end of 1907, he served Santa Monica satisfactorily as City Attorney. In his religious preferences Mr. Taft is a Unitarian, and his lodge affiliations are confined to the International FRIU) H. TAFT. BIOGRAPHICAL Zl"/ Order of Good Templars, of which he is an active member. Mr. Taft married at Humboldt, Iowa, in 1881, Miss Frances M. Welch, and they have two children living — Muriel and Harris, graduates of Stanford University. The family home is Kl S/uickcto, at the corner of Oregon Avenue and Sixth Street. John A. Stanwood, of Santa Monica, is a native of Newburyport, Mass., and was born March 3rd, 1856. His father, John Rogers Stanwood, was a hat manufacturer, organizer and promoter of the Newburyport Hat Company and a successful man of affairs. The history of the Stanwood family is closely associated with that of early New England dating as far back as 1652 to Philip vStanwood who was one of the pioneers of the Old Colony of Massachusetts, the annals of which record many of the names as preacheis, doctois, lawyers, soldiers, statesmen and authors. The mother of John Rogers Stanwood was Sara Rogers whose ancestors lived at Gloucester, Mass. ; were among the pilgrims who founded that town and were lineal descendants of John Rogers, the martyr. John A. Stanwood passed his boyhood and youth in Newburyport, Mass., passed through the public schools and later pursued a course of study in Berton. He then engaged in the drug business in that city for a period of four years. In March, 1882, he came to California and spent about a year on a stock ranch in the San Luis Rey Valley, San Diego County. In 1883 he located in San Ber- nardino where he took active part in local affairs, aiding in the incorporation of the City of San Bernardino. He later rem.oved to Redlands where he was likewise active and influential in securing the final location of the Santa Fe Railway through Redlands and donated valuable lands for railway purposes, being one of the original parties who insisted on its present location. Mr. Stanwood came to Santa Monica, soon conceived the idea of developing the sand dunes bordering the Ocean Front south of Santa Monica into a residential summer resort and in furtherance of his plans associated with himself Dr. Ell- wood Chaffee, Arthur Gayford, E. E. Hall and James Campbell who purchased and secured title to the land now comprising the southern portion of the City of Santa Monica and the City of Ocean Park, which includes Venice. This land was purchased from Captain Arthur Hutchenson — consideration. $2 5,000. They then organized the Santa Monica Terminal and Wharf Company, secured the franchise for the Santa Fe Railway into Santa Monica over what was then Lucas Avenue, which franchise finally passed to the Pacific Electric Railway Co. and is now used by that company. He negotiated the sale of the Short Line Beach Tract to Mr. Frank Strong. He likewise negotiated the sale of the Irwin Heights Tract to the Erkenbrecker Syndicate, of Los Angeles. He organized a syndicate and promoted Ocean Park Heights and the east Ocean Park Heights Addition to Ocean Park. He is president of the Venice Chamber 378 BIOGRAPHICAL of Commerce which, under his administration, is accomplishing much for the material prosperity of the Canal City. With some associates he is at present engaged in the development of the oil territory in the Santa Monica mountains. i\lr. Stanwood is a member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks and of the Woodmen of the World. Hon. Guilford Wiley Wells, soldier, lawyer, statesman and diplomat was born at Conesus Center, New York, February 14th, 1840, and is the youngest of three children of Isaac Tichenor Wells and Charity Kenyon, who were joined in marriage in Granville, New York, February 4th, 1830. Isaac Tichenor Wells was born at Fairfax, Vermont, August 11th, 1807, and died in Conesus Center, November 2nd, 1868. The Wells family trace their genealogy back to the time of William the Conqueror in England, and to the latter part of the sixteenth century in America and number among their ancestors in direct line many illus- trious personages on both sides of the Atlantic. Guilford Wiley Wells was educated at Genesee Wesley an Seminary and College, Lima, New York. Upon the breaking out of the war of the Rebellion (while he was in college) Mr. Wells enlisted on the first call for volunteers, as a member of the First New York Dragoons, and gave nearly four years of valiant service to the preservation of the Union and the defense of the "Old Flag." He fought under that intrepid hero of Winchester, General P. H. Sheridan, participated in thirty-seven battles, and rose by suc- cessive promotions for gallant services performed to the rank of Brevet Lieuten- ant-Colonel; was twice wounded, the last time in February, 1865, so seriously as to permanently disable his left arm, and was discharged from the service on account of his wound February 14th, 1865. Retiring from the army Colonel Wells resumed his studies and 1867 graduated in law at the Columbian College at Washington, D. C. In December, 1869, he moved to Holly Springs, Mis- sissippi, to practice his profession. In June, 1870, he was appointed by President Grant, United States District Attorney for the northern district of that state. The Reconstruction Act being passed by Congress about this time, the demoraliz- ing effects of the war began to be manifest in the organized lawlessness which prevailed, especially in Northern Mississippi, in the terrorism of the Ku Klux Klan. Laws had been enacted for the punishment of these crimes but they remained a dead letter on the statutes for the want of prosecuting officers with sufficient courage, tact and ability to enforce them. The ablest men in the Mis- sissippi bar — which was one of the strongest in any state in the Union — were employed to defend these defiers of the law. Comprehending the situation. Colonel Wells determined to do his duty and prepared as best he could to wage battle with those giants of the bar. He drew the first indictment under the re- construction act and secured the first decision rendered in the south against Ku Klux in District Judge R. A. Hill's court, thus winning the first legal fight and establishing a precedent which, was adopted in other states and finally re- BIOGRAPHICAL 379 suited in the complete destruction of that organization. TJie Ku Klux were hunted down and their secret hiding places invaded, their murderous secrets were revealed and the perpetrators of crimes punished according to their deserts. Mississippi was thus transformed from one of the most lawless to one of the most orderly states in the Union. This herculean task was performed at a great expenditure of labor and energy and at great peril of life but in perform- ing it Colonel Wells won the esteem of the best element of society. Though having no desire to enter the arena of politics by the prominence of his official position and his contact with public men, Colonel Wells was forced to assume a leading position in his party and was chiefly instrumental in securing the nomination and election of General Ames (then United States Senator) to the governorship of Mississippi in 1873. The legislature chosen at the same time elected a United States Senator, and yielding to the importunity of his friends Colonel Wells consented to become a candidate. For some unaccountable reason, Ames, the man he had befriended, and who had hitherto professed a warm personal friendship for him, turned against his benefactor, and by a strenu- ous effort and the use of his official power prevented Colonel Well's election to the United States Senate. Not content with this success against his old friend Governor Ames exerted himself to defeat Colonel Well's re-appointment to the United States District Attorney's office, but his faithfulness and efficiency in that capacity had been too well demonstrated, and at the expiration of his first term in 1874 he was reappointed by President Grant and his appointment was unanimously confirmed by the Senate. In 1876 Colonel Wells received the nomi- nation for Congress in the Second Mississippi District in opposition to A. R. Howe, the Ames candidate, over whom he was elected by 7,000 majority, re- ceiving the full vote of his own party (Republican) and the support of the best element in the Democratic party. During his term in Congress Representative Wells served on several important committees and though in the minority politically, by his energy and fertility of resource he was recognized as one of the most influential working members of the House. Recognizing in Colonel Wells the qualities adapting him for an important government position. President Hayes tendered him in June, 1877, the office of consul general to Shanghai, China, which he accepted, and sailed from San Francisco to his post of duty August 8th of that year. Previous to embarking he had received orders to investigate charges which had been preferred by his predecessor, General Myers, against O. B. Bradford, Vice-Consul at Shanghai. Myers had been suspended by Minister George H. Seward, and the latter 's friend Bradford placed in charge of the con- sulate before the charges against Bradford could be investigated. Arriving in China and assuming charge of the Shanghai consulate September 13th, 1877, Colonel Wells proceeded to examine the accusations against Bradford. He found him guilty, not only as charged by Myers, but of numerous other grave offenses, such as robbing the United States mails, embezzlement of government fees, violation of tieaty rights with China, extortions from American citizens, mutila- 383 r.IOCxRAPHICAL lion of records, conspiring with Seward to remove official records and papers from the Consul General's office, etc. Mr. Wells being convinced of Bradford's fraudulent and criminal proceedings, had him arrested and placed in jail, report- ino- at once by telegraph and by letter to the State Department at Washington the result of his investigations and asking for further instructions. After inexcusable delays in replving to his communications, and other matters trans- piring to convince Consul General Wells that an effort was being made by officials in hio-h authority to shield Bradford and Seward in their fraudulent proceedings, he tendered his resignation, turned over the alTairs of the office in Shanghai, and sailed for home January 10th, 1878. A committee subsequently created by the House of Representatives to investigate the Bradford charges returned a unanimous report that the charges were sustained, and filed articles of impeach- ment against Bradford. The investigation culminated in the retirement of both Seward and Bradford to private life. Colonel Wells twice refused the tender of Consul to Hong Kong, deciding to resume the practice of his profession. Colonel and Mrs. Wells having come by way of Southern California on their return trip from China were delighted with the climate and decided to make it their future home. Accordingly they settled in Los Angeles in 1879 and have resided here ever since. Forming a law^ partnership with Judge Anson Brunson, the hrm of Brunson & Wells at once attained a leading position in the bar of Southern California. This relation continued until Judge Brunson was elected to the Superior Bench and that partnership was dissolved. Up to the time of his final retirement from active practice, Colonel Wells stood at the head of the following law firms — Wells, Vandyke & Lee, Wells, Guthrie & Lee, Wells, Munroe & Lee, Wells & Lee and Wells, Works & Lee. The private law library of Colonel Wells, one of the most extensive in the state, is now in the office of Works & Lee, the latter, Bradner W. Lee, being Colonel Wells' nephew. In Avoca, N. Y., December 22nd, 1864, Colonel Wells married Miss Katy C. Fox, who was born in that town, a daughter of Matthias and Margaret Fox. They became the parents of a son, Charles F., who was born in Washington, D. C, November 9th, 1869, and died at Holly Springs, Miss., December 24th 1872. The second marriage of Colonel Wells took place in Louisville, Kentucky, December 31st, 1891, and united him with Mrs. Lena (McClelland) Juny, a daughter of Frank and Marion (Watts) McClelland, of Kentucky. Mrs. Wells was born in Paducah that state and is related to some distinguished southern families. She is Regent of the Santa Monica Chapter of the Daughters of the Revolution since its organization, and an influential member of the Santa Monica Women's Club. She is a cultured, sweet-spirited woman and takes a ])ersonal interest in local charities. BIOGRAPHICAL 381 S. W. Odell, City Attorney of Santa Monica, is a native of Illinois and was born in the town of Hampton, Rock Island County, that state, November 4th, 1864. His father's ancestors were from Yorkshire, England, and in the early days of the country, settled in the State of New York; later moving on to the western frontier in Ohio. His father, John P. Odell, left Ohio and located in Illinois about the year 1850. Mr. Odell's ancestry on his mother's side was partially of Scotch origin. The subject of our sketch received his education in the common schools of Illinois and Iowa, later attending Port Byron Academy, at Port Byron, Illinois, and the Bloomington Law School of the Illinois Wesleyan University, from which he holds a Bachelor's Degree. He was ad- mitted to practice law in the State of Illinois in 1887 and practiced in the courts of that state until the summer of 1903, with the exception of the year 1908, spent at Santa Cruz, California. He maintained an office at Moline, Illinois, for a period of fifteen years and was, for a portion of that time. City Attorney. He came to California in 1903. After some months spent in Los Angeles, he opened an office in Santa Monica in the spring of 1904 becoming soon thereafter a member of the law firm of Tanner, Taft & Odell. He was appointed City Attorney of Santa Monica. in April 1907 and his professional services to the new city government have proven invaluable. Mr. Odell married at Port Byron, Illinois, Miss Clara J. W. Morgan, in the year 1888, and they have two sons and one daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Odell are active members of the First M. E. Church of Santa Monica. The family residence is at No. 1034 Second Street. s. W. ODELL. William T. Gillis comes of the sturdy stock of Nova Scotia, being born in that province, the son of Robert Gillis, a successful shipbuilder in the LTnited States. He passed his youth at the place of his birth and received his educa- tion in Pictou, Nova Scotia, graduating from the Pictou Academy. He then fitted himself for the occupation of a druggist and became the owner of a drug store in Pictou. 382 lUOGRAPHICAL In 1887, drawn by the magic tales of California, he came to this state and located in Santa Monica, where he soon opened a drug store, which he carried on for a number of years, successfully engaged in the drug business. He returned to Santa Monica in 1901 since which time he has been a resident of this city. He at once became identified with the remarkable real estate transactions w^hich have marked the vicinity of Santa Monica, and have changed the entire aspect of the country within the past few years. As vice president and manager of the Pacific Land Company, he was one of the promoters of Sawtelle and the adjacent lands, which opened up a large acreage for settlement on such terms that the old soldiers, their families and the laboring people were able to secure homes. As a result of the policy pursued here, a thrifty community has grown up which is a valuable addition to the Avealth and population of this district. Later, Mr. Gillis, with other prominent real estate men, organized the Pali- sades Investment Company and also the Santa Monica Investment Company, which secured fifty acres of land known now as the Palisades; one of the most beautiful residence sites in California or, indeed, in the world. The company spent a large sum in improvements and it met with a large sale at most advan- tageous figures. Mr. Gillis was one of the organizers of the Sunset Brick and Tile Company which began the erection of the extensive plant now owned by the Los Angeles Pressed Brick Company, into which the first company was merged, its projectors retaining an interest in the present company. He is also interested in the South- west Warehouse Company, which owns a large warehouse, located on the tracks of the Southern Pacific and Los Angeles-Pacific Railways. He is a stockholder and director of the Bank of Santa Monica and of the Santa Monica Savings Bank and president of the Santa Monica Water Company. But Mr. Gillis is not only interested in financial affairs. He takes an active interest in public affairs, being a stalwart Republican in politics. He is also a prominent Mason, being a member and Past Master of Santa Monica Lodge, F. and A. M. ; a member of the Los Angeles Commandery, K. T. ; and a member of Al Malaikah Temple, of Los Angeles. He holds the rank of past exalted ruler in the Santa Monica Lodge, B. P. O. E., which recently presented him with a handsome jewel in appreciation of his services to the organization. Mr. Gillis owns and occupies a beautiful home in the Palisade district. Antoine Busier, a successful merchant, is a native of Hinesburg, Chittenden County, Vermont, born July 29th, 1862. His father's name was Antoine Busier, Sr., a native of Canada. Mr. Busier came to California in 1885, and after a brief stay in Sacramento, came to Southern California in 1886. He is a tinner by trade, and is a mechanical genius. When a boy he w^orked in a woolen mill as a loom operator because of his fondness for machinery. Upon coming to Lc^s Angeles in 1886, he worked in the old Baker Iron Works established by the late M. S. BIOGRAPHICAL 383 Baker, at the corner of Second and Main Streets. When he came to Santa Monica he took up the plumbing and tinning business until 1887. Later he worked in the grocery of E. C. Sessions. He was driver, for a time, on the first street car which ran to the Soldiers' Home. He opened the first fruit store in the town in August, 1887 with Victor Hathaway. He soon sold out to Hathaway Brothers and, in 1888, opened a stationery store at 217 Third Street in a building erected for him by W. D. Vawter. There he conducted his business for fourteen years when he removed to his present location in February, 1903. He carries an extensive and well selected stock of books, stationery, periodical literature, toys, etc. He has for fifteen years been a member of the Independent Order of Fores- ters, and its financial secretary for seven years. In 1906 he married Miss M. E. J. Peters, of Los Angeles. At present the family reside at No. 1524 North Fourth Street. Frank E. Bundy, an influential citizen, property owner and capitalist of Santa Monica, whose name is synonymous with the history and the business growth of the place, is a native of Iowa, having been born in the town of Ames, August 4th, 1871, the son of Nathan and Harriet (Smith) Bundy, who were among the first settlers of Santa Monica. Mr. Bundy was a boy of five years of age when the family left Iowa, came to California and located in the then embryo City of Santa Monica. He attended the first schools as they were organized, passed through the grades and graduated from the wSanta Monica High School. After leaving school he perfected himself in the trade of jeweler and watch maker and opened a store in this place which he carried on successfully until close application to business and indoor work so impaired his health that his physicians insisted upon a change which v/ould give him employment in the open air. He then embarked in the wholesale and retail oil business and he pushed the trade with such energy and good management that within a period of about four years he found himself the possessor of some of the best real estate holdings in Santa Monica, all puichased with the profits of his business. He then closed out the oil business and with renewed force and enthusiasm, inaugurated a series of land deals, the successful prosecution of which have placed him in the front rank of Teal estate promotors. He took an active interest in the platting and sale of the East Ocean Park tract. "Sierra Vista," the success and fame of which are by no means local, is Mr. Bundy 's individual enterprise and his fondest hopes for a substantial and picturesque addition to Santa Monica are here being realized in full. In 1905 Mr. Bundy erected, at 253-255 North Third Street, the F. E. Bundy Block, one of the most substantial and architecturally perfect brick buildings in the city. It has a frontage of fifty feet on the street, is one hundred and fifty feet deep and three stories in heighth. The first floor is occupied by the i\Iont- 384 moCRAPHICAL goinery Dry Goods House; the second is devoted to offices, single and ensuite, and the third is occupied by modern apartments, known as the Adelaide Apart- ments. In 1906, Mr. Bundy put up the P. E. Bundy Building No. 2, in Sawtelle. This, in size and architectural finish is fully up to the standard of his Santa Monica building. It occupies the corner of Oregon and Fourth Street and is an office building. In 1904, Mr. Bundy built for his family residence one of the most spacious and beautiful bungalow homes in Santa Monica. He has also (1907) just completed a fine residence in Los Angeles, located at the corner of 16th and Arling- ton streets. Mr. Bundy married, in 1899, Miss Ethel E. Spaulding, daughter of Jaied Spaulding, of Elgin, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Bundy have two daughters, Adelaide and Elizabeth. Frank E. Bundy is a plain, unassuming and courteous man of business, devoted to the best interests of his home city, the management of his various and valuable properties, and the happiness of his family. A. M. Montgomery, leading dry goods merchant of this city, is a native of California, and was born at Jamestown, Toulumne County, April 4th, 1870. His father is a California pioneer of the early sixties, and a sketch of his life appears on another page of this book. Mr. Montgomery was but six years of age when the family removed to Santa Monica from the central part of the state. Santa Monica was then but a hamlet of two years' existence, composed of a few hundred courageous and hopeful people and the youthful life of our subject may be said to have started with the material growth of the new city. He attended the first schools opened in the town, passed through the grades as they were estabHshed, and graduated at the High School, after which he managed the business of the old North Beach Bath House, later known as the Arcadia Bath House. He held the position for two years. He then took a position as accountant and salesman for H. A. Winslow, grocers, of Santa Monica, and was with the concern about five years. In 1896 he opened a Men's Furnishing Goods Store with F. B. McComas as partner, under the firm name of Montgomery & McComas. In 1899, Mr. Montgomery purchased his partner's interest and coon thereafter bought the dry goods and furnishing goods stock of N. A. Roth, and opened for business in a modest store at No. 223 Third Street, where he remained until December 1st, 1905, when he removed to his present location in the Bundy Block, Nos. 1408-1410 North Third Street. Mont- gomery's is the most extensive dry goods emporium in Los Angeles County out- side of the City of Los Angeles. It has a frontage on Third Street of fifty feet, and a lateral depth of one hundred feet. Its interior equipment is in all respects modern and complete, including a cash and package carrying system. The sales BIOGRAPHICAL 385 rooms are airy and light and the entire estabhshment is admirably arranged for the handling of their extensive business. In 1903, Mr. Montgomery opened a store at Pier Avenue, Ocean Park, of the same size, carrying the same line of goods, which in size and arrangement is now a duplicate of his splendid Santa Monica house. Mr. Montgomery was married January 10th, 1898, to Mrs. Isabella Mallory, and they have one son, Albert Irving, born March 11th, 1902. The family home is one of the many attractive residences of the city, No. 827 Second Street. Mr. Montgomery is a member of the Santa Monica lodge of Elks, Foresters of America, Native Sons of the Golden West and Santa Monica Board of Trade. O. G. TuLLis, a resident of Santa Monica, a native of Bloomington, 111., was born October 16th, 1864, spent his youth and received his early education in his native town. He came with his parents to Los Angeles in 1875. His father was Andrew T. Tullis, a photographer, who for a time owned the old Sunbeam Gallery, for many years one of the leading picture making establishments of old Los Angeles. He finally retired to his ranch in Cold water Canyon, where he died in 1877. A son, W. L. Tullis, now lives on the home place Mrs. Tullis was, before marriage, Matilda Bush, daughter of Michael Bush, a German. She was a sister of the late venerable Charles Bush, one of the best known pioneers of Los Angeles. She is living at the homestead in Coldwater Canyon. Mr. Tullis attend- ed the early schools of Los Angeles, first at Eighth and Fort Streets, now Broadway, later in the old building that stood on the present rite of the County Court House. He learned the manufacturing jewelers' trade of his uncle, the late Charles Bush and his brother, Woodford B. Tullis, deceased, 1897. He was a prosperous jeweler of Los Angeles, whose store was located at the corner of Fourth and Spring- Streets. Mr. Tullis came to Santa Mc^nica and opened his shop in ]\Iarch, 1885. at 1426 Third Street, in the front room of the postoffice, when the late Judge Boyce was postmaster, and is still doing business at the old stand. 25 O. G. TUI.LIS. 385 lUOGRAPHICAL Mr. Tullis married in Los Angeles Miss Anna C. Berdini and they have one daughter, Ohve. Mr. TulHs is a Mason, Elk, Odd Fellow, Knight of Pythias, Forester and Maccabee. He ii one of the substantial merchants of Santa Monica. The late Judge O. W. Jewett, of Sawtelle, was a native of New York, born in the town of Portland, Chautauqua County, August 7th, 1844. His father, Oris Jewett, was a mechanic, and for many years was identified with extensive machine works at Lowell, Indiana, where the family moved and located when the son was about six years of age. He there grew up and acquired a good common school education. In 1861, being at the time only seventeen years of age, he volunteered to defend the cause of the Union and was mustered into the 20th Indiana Infantry and served three years, the term of his enlistment. He then re-enlisted in the First Rhode Island Battery and served until the fall of Richmond and the close of the war, rounding out a continuous service of four years and three months, chiefly in the Army of the Potomac, during which time he participated in some of the bloodiest engagements of the sanguinary conflict — notably Fredericks- burg, Spottsylvania Court House, Mire Run, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg and many other minor engagements. After the war he went into the mining regions of Utah and Montana and followed the occupation of an engineer. By reason of impaired health he relin- quished this business and in 1880 located at Sturgis, then a new town on the fron- tier in South Dakota, where he thoroughly identified himself with the professional and business interest of his adopted city and county. There he held the office of Justice of the Peace from 1882 until 1890 and became a student of the law. He was there admitted to the bar of Mead County in 1890 and was almost immedi- ately elected County Judge, and as a jurist he was held in such high esteem that he was elected without serious opposition for a second term in 1892. He there- after practiced law at Sturgis, having a large clientage. In 1903 he came to California and located at Sawtelle where he formed a partnership with Mr. John Farley and engaged in the real estate business, mean- time practicing his profession. He served as attorney for the Sawtelle Building & Loan Association. He was also president of the Board of Trustees of the Saw- telle City School District, in which position he did much for the advancement of the cause of education and perfection of a sound local school system, not only devoting his best personal energies, but contributing at times money to defray expenses that could not otherwise be provided for. He was public spirited and always ready with his best energies and wise counsel to forward worthy move- ments for the public good. He was a man of the more refined social instincts, a member of the Masonic fraternity, the Odd Fellows, the Knights of Pythias and the Grand Army of the Republic. BIOGRAPHICAL 387 In politics, Judge Jewett was a consistent Republican, not blindly partisan, but stood for what he deemed wise party measures and a clean administration of public affairs. Judge Jewett was married at Lowell, Indiana, to Miss Delila Drake. She died at Sturgis, S. D., in 1887, leaving two children — Fred, now deceased, and Hattie, wife of Edward Galvin, of Sturgis, S. D. Mr. and Mrs. Galvin have one daughter, Madge. February 4th, 1889, Judge Jewett married Mrs. Annie, widow of Rev. Francis C. Haney, Assistant Rector of St. Thomas Episcopal Church, of Montreal, Canada, by which union there is one son. Oris Francis, born at Sturgis, S. D., November 22nd, 1891. Mrs. Jewett is a daughter of James Soutar, a native of Forfarshire, Scotland, a blacksmith by trade, who came to America in 1853 and located at Lachute, Quebec, Canada, about forty miles north of Montreal, where he lived until 1865. He then removed to Black Hills, S. D., where he pursued his trade and incidentally engaged in mining, passing through the great excitement of his home state mining days. He also engaged in farming and lived on the first located land in all that region of country. He finally retired to Sawtelle where with Mrs. Jewett he spent his declining days. He died April 14th, 1908. Mrs. Jewett spent her girlhood and early married life in the City of Montreal, Canada. Following the death of her first husband she sought the home and protection of her father at Black Hills. Young and ambitious, she caught the spirit of enterprise that pervaded the new and prosperous country and acquired by pre-emption and also by purchase valuable tracts of government land which she improved and stocked with cattle. These enterprises she so astutel)' managed as to make them profitable. Upon coming to California she disposed of her personal holdings. Mrs. Jewett is a lady of social refinement and domestic culture. She is sweet spirited and vitally interested in local charities. She is an active member of the Church of Saint Augustine by the Sea, Episcopal, of Santa Monica, is a member and officer of the Order of the Eastern Star, of Sawtelle. Judge Jewett died October 24th, 1907, and was buried under the auspices of the Masonic fraternity, at Woodlawn Cemetery, Santa Monica. JoHX J. Seymour is a native of Ohio, born near Washington, C. H. Fayette County, February 16th, 1852. When a child his parents moved to Illinois. He obtained an elementary education in the schools of that state and later entered the State University, graduating with the class of 1877 as a civil engineer. After graduation he was employed some time in the government service making surveys on the Mississippi River, then in various railroad construction corps in Indiana, Dakota, and later in Colorado with the Denver & Rio Grand R. R. during its palmy construction era. He afterward engaged in mining engineering and was a U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor in the San Juan silver mines 388 BIOGRAPHICAL in Colorado. In 1886 he came to California and was for some time engaged in railroad construction in Plumas County and later in a general engineering business in Santa Clara County. In 1890 he located in Fresno where he became general manager and part owner of the Fresno City Water Works. He early became interested in the development of electric water power and assisted in the forma- tion of a company organized to bring electric power from the San Joaquin River in the Sierra Mountains to the City of Fresno. He was president and general manager. This company was one of the pioneers in electric transmission and claimed the distinction at one time of having the longest transmission line (35 miles and later 69 miles) in existence, and of operating its water wheels under the highest head of water, 1400 feet. His health failing he was obliged to dispose of his business interests in and about Fresno and in 1903 he removed to Santa Monica which he has since made his home, making substantial investments in real estate in this vicinity. Mr. Seymour is recognized as one of Santa Monica's most substantial citizens. He takes a lively personal interest in local public affairs, is one of the charter members of the Santa Monica Board of Trade and its president-elect. Mr. Seymour was married in 1885 to Corinne, a daughter of Dr. Joseph Howells, of Richmond. Indiana, and a cousin of the famous author, William Dean Howells. j. W. Todd, junior member of the undertaking firm of Bresee Brothers and Todd, Santa Monica, is a native of Missouri, was born at Pleasant Hill, in Cass County, that state, November 3rd, 1874. His father, Charles F. Todd, for many years having successfully engaged in business in Missouri, has for eight years lived in retirement in Los Angeles. Mr. Todd received an academic schooling at Wichita, Kansas, and later at Garfield University, same city. He came with the family to California in 1899 and soon thereafter took a position with Bresee Brothers, leading undertakers of Los Angeles, where he acquired a thorough knowledge of undertaking in all its branches. In 1906 he organized the firm of Bresee Brothers & Todd, purchased the undertaking business of A. M. Guidinger, holding a one-third interest in the same and assumed entire management of the same. The building owned and occupied by the company is one of the most spacious and architectural in Santa Monica. The furnishings and equipment are modern and complete in all respects Mr. Todd married in 1893 Miss Olive Miller, a daughter of M. K. Miller, a prominent business man and two terms mayor of the City of Salida, Colorado. Mrs. Todd is a lady of fine mental attainments and was for mo:e than nine years a teacher in the public schools of Salida. Mr. Todd is a member of the B. P. O. E., I. O. 0. F., Modern Woodmen, Fraternal Brotherhood and of the Christian Church. xMrs. Todd is prominently identified with the Order of the Eastern Star and is an active member of the Crescent Bay Women's Club, Ocean Park, and the Santa Monica Women's Club. BIOGRAPHICAL 3gy nth day of March, 1856 Hi" a he'lvman W , . "'"" '^ "'^^ •^°™ ""= parentage and ancestry and was bo;n1n New 'Ha^p ^^f; ? ot" h"''^ boyhood was snent Whpn a ,.^, , •^I'lrnpsnire m 1802, where his in 185 7 the family moved to New YorVanri ir.^.+ i r • i^o maturity In .857 they en^.^rated to ini:- and e' ed 'feaToire™ Tn't"'" c"™'^' iry tt h;hfrth:pL::r^„--: .\tn^t: ™f — °-^ =■ as th'cr pr™;^a,- neighbors " "^""' ^^^^= '""^ ''^-^ "'" «»- '"d-- Returning to IlUnois they lived for a time at Cleveland «.H In .880 they removed to Bra.nerd, Minnesota, whte't'll^her-lclTIsar"^- Ne„ie"E.'d:tSrrco,:j^s:e:L?rR:t^^ veteran of the civ.l war for sev„ l i I ""^^ ^^ occupation, a He was a natn-e of L^d™, ^g anr^H^^C T^^^^ ^ "'""^=°"' for a time at In<^lewood H ^ j c Cahfornia m 1892 and lived yearsofale In^C: nter of 18r5 f.f "/'■"%-'"'^ ''"■ ''°'' ^' -™'>-three Dakota aSd engaged l:Zur!^Z^- '^^ ''"»"'"" "■^"' '° ^'^™^' ""'- C--^' operi«on':rn\::!f a':: cLTc ''Tr " ^^^-^^^ ^°' »°°'^- «« — --^ and for a time had nTi'^tsucTsf In^t! "'"l" T'!" "°"'"=^^* °' "^'^'^ the side of a bluff at PreTch Bar on the II M ^^-^ "'* *"""»" ■"*° vein of quartz that oroved K f f^" ""'°"" '^'^■■' ^^ unearthed a ntonds o'f ItaosrfaCrut teaU: 'Zfl ^ d' ^^"'''f^^, ^''^ ^^ '^- ^::^orririr^T--l--— ^^ sold their clain° for SsS 000 c h ^""'1""°"''""^ "'"'^ '""' '" '""""« °P"ations. the Roths^hTd L^ers o tonln E '7T 'f " ^^^^'^ ■"*" ^'^^ "^"^^ "^ developed rt and .t h^ smce't T sol tr ^^ o^Ootr ",rT '"d"' tn owns a quantity of these beautiful <,.„» «".UOO,000. Mr. I^angdon still AfterdisDosiuanf 1,- t.'^aut'ful gems as souvenirs of his mining exploits R tertrty ^les wLTr'"'"',!'' "/'°"'^"^' "^^ ^''"^''™ -'"-" «° «-* when he cam" to California ""'■ '"' ^""''«^' ^»^'" '" ^'°^'^' --"=" -'" '«" 390 I'.IOGRAPHICAL The following year Mr. Langdon settled with his famijy in Sawtelle and cast his fortune with the then small hamlet, made up of seven buildings and occupants thereof, and from that time has been one of its most active an'l enterprising citizens. He has invested heavily in city realty and now owns eighteen cottages, which he leases, besides other business and residence property. He built the Langdon Hotel in 1903, which for a time was operated upon the American plan but is now upon the European plan. He has been somewhat active and influential in city politics and was one of the original movers for the incorporation of the city, the histoiy of which move- ment may be found elsewhere in this volume. The second election for incorpor- ation, held November 26th, 1906, carried about three to one, and Mr. Langdon w^as elected to the Board of Trustees and subsequently chosen chairman of the board, which position he later resigned in favor of the present incumbent. Mr. Langdon 's services as a public official have proven eminently satisfactory to his fellow townsmen. His attitude upon all questions afifecting the public weal has always been consistently in favor of a clear government and healthy condition of public morals. A man of the strictest integrity and high ideals of citizenship, the people have implicit faith in him as a true and faithful public servant. Mr. and Mrs. Langdon have two sons and two charming daughters. Nellie is wife of Frederick Pardee, of Los Angeles; Cassie, a graduate of the Dobinson School of Expression, Los Angeles, is now Mrs. Harry Keys, of Bisbee, Arizona. The older son is Frank Clifford Langdon, of Modesto, Cal., and the youngest of the family is Tedd Russell Langdon, at home. Mr. and Mrs. Langdon are leading members of the Church of Seventh Day Adventists, of Sawtelle, and are ready workers in all movements favoring the moral and spiritual upliftment of their home city. K. B. SuMMERFiELD, of Santa Monica, is a native of Vernon, Indiana, born May 15th, 1864. His father, John W. Summerfield, was a lawyer and for many years practiced his profession at Vernon, the county seat of Jennings County. Later in life he held for two successive terms the office of County Clerk of Jennings County. He married Katherine McClaskey. The Summerfields descended from Dutch ancestors and the McClaskeys were Scotch. Mr. Summer- field passed the days of his youth in his native town and was educated in the public schools of that place. He came to California in 1883. For eight years he was in the employ of W. D., W. S., and E. J. Vawter, acting as an accountant, and for four years he served the Bassett & Nebeker Lumber Company in the same capacity. Later he held the position for two years as local manager of the Sunset Lumber Company. He received the appointment of U. S. Postmaster for Santa Monica, April 6th, 1902 and was reappointed in 1906. He is an efficient and popular public servant. BIOGRAPHICAL 391 Henry Dwight Barrows was born in IMansf.eld, Conn., February 23rd, 1825, a son of Joshua Palmer and Polly (Bingham) Barrows. His paternal grandparents, Joshua and Anna (Turn- er) Barrows, were, like his parents, natives of Mansfield. The Barrows family came to America from England and settled at Plymouth, Alass. Thencnv in the latter part of the seventeenth century, two brothers moved to Mans- field, Conn., where eventually their name became more numerous than any other family name in town. In 1845 the subject of this sketch counted more than thirty families of the name in that place. The maternal grandfather of Mr. Barrows, Oliver Bingham, was known and venerated as "Uncle Oliver Bing- ham, the miller of Mansfield Hollow." He is remembered by- his grandson as a large, well-proportioned man, re- sembling in appearance the pictures of George Washington. He had a brother, a miller on the Willimantic River, known widely as "Uncle Roger Bingham, of the old town of Windham." Joshua Palmer Barrows was born in 1794 and died in Mansfield in 1887; his w^fe was born in 1790 and died in 1864. They had three children, viz.: Mrs. Franklin S. Hovey, who died at Beverly, N. J., in 1890; Henry D. and James A., who for many years have been residents of Los Angeles. The early years of the subject of this sketch were spent on a farm. He received his education, first, in the public school, and later in the high school at South Coventry, Conn. Afterward he spent several terms in the academy at Ellington, Conn. Commencing when he was seventeen, he taught school for four winters. During this period he devoted considerable time to music, joining the local band, of which he became the leader, and taking lessons on the organ under a skillful English teacher in Hartford. In the village where Mr. Barrows was reared (South Mansfield, or Mansfield Center as it was known) books were scarce, but he read all he could get. "Dick's Christian Philosopher" delighted him, and he still regards it as one of the best works extant to widen one's ideas of the world around him. His first business experience was clerking in New York in 1849. The next year he went to Boston, where, as entry clerk and then as bookkeeper, he worked HENRY n. HARROW'S. 392 BIOGRAPHICAL in the large dry goods jobbing house of J. W. Blodgett & Co. for over two years, acquiring a business experience that was very valuable to him in after years. He greatly enjoyed the superior advantages in the way of books, lectures, music, etc., which a great city affords over a country town. He also heard with delight the early operas of Verdi, as well as those of Donizetti, Bellini, etc., as presented by Benedetti, Trufh, and other artists of that period, under the leadership of Max Maretzic. April 26th, 1852, Mr. Barrows sailed from New York on the steamer Illinois for California. The passage of the isthmus at that time was full of hardships, the connecting steamer on this side was the Golden Gate. Soon after arrival in San Francisco, Mr. Barrows went to the northern mines, going as far as Shasta; but, as the dry season had set in, he returned down the valley, working at haying at $100 a month on Thomas Creek, near Tehama. He reached San Francisco, July 31st, full of chills and fever, which the cold, harsh summer climate of that city, in contrast with the extreme heat of the Sacremento valley, only aggravated. He then went to San Jose, where he raised a crop of wheat and barley. At that time (1852-53) flour was very high, retailing at twenty-five cents a pound. In the fall of 1853 Mr. Barrows went to the southern mines, working at placer gold mining near Jamestown. Later he obtained an engagement as teacher of miusic in the Collegiate Institute in Benicia, remaining there until October, 1854, when the late Wilham Wolfskill, the pioneer, engaged him to teach a private school in his family at Los Angeles, from December, 1854, until the latter part of 1858. Among his pupils, besides the sons and daughters of Mr. Wolfskill, were John and Joseph C. Wolfskill, sons of his brother, Mathew; William R. and Robert Rowland; the children of Lemuel Carpenter, J. E. Pleas- ants, etc. In 1859-60 he cultivated a vineyard on the east side of the river. He was appointed United States Marshall for the southern district of California by President Lincoln in 1861, holding the office four years. In 1864 he engaged in the mercantile business, in which he continued about fifteen years. Mr. Barrows was married November 14th, 1860, to Juanita Wolfskill, who was born November 14th, 1841, and died January 31st, 1863, leaving a daughter, Alice Wolfskill Barrows, who was born July 16th, 1862, and who became the wife of Henry Guenther Weyse, October 2nd, 1888. Mrs. Juanita Barrows was a daughter of William and Magdalena (Lugo) Wolfskill. Mr. Wolfskill was born in Kentucky in 1798, of German and Irish parentage, and was one of the very earliest Am^erican pioneers of Los Angeles, having arrived here in Febru- ary, 1831. He died in this city October 3rd, 1866. His wife was born in Santa Barbara, California, the daughter of Jose Ygnacio Lugo and Dona Rafaela Romero de Lugo, Don Jose Ygnacio Lugo being a brother of Antonio Maria Lugo and of Dona Maria Antonia Lugo de Vallejo, who was the wife of Sergeant Vallejo and the mother of General M. G. Vallejo. Mr. and Mrs. Wolfskill were married at Santa Barbara in January, 1841; she died July 6th, 1862. There were born to them six children, viz.: Juanita Francisca, born in 1843 and be- BIOGRAPHICAL 393 came the wife of Charles J. Shepherd; Joseph W., born in 1844. married Elena Pedrorena; Magdalena. born in 1846, married Frank Sabichi; Lewis born in 1848, married Lomsa Dalton, daughter of Henry Dalton, the pioneer- and Rafaelita, who died in childhood. . T ^^""^TJ^'^' ^^^^' ^^'- ^^''°'''' ^^'"^^ ^^^'y Alice Workman, daughter of John D. Woodwcrth, and the widow of Thomas H. Workman, who was killed by the explosion of the steamer Ada Hancock in the bay of San Pedro April 23rd 1863. She was born in Des Moines. Iowa, and died in Los Angeles March 9th' 1868. leavmg two daughters: Ada Frances, who was born May 21st I865" and was married October 25th, 1890, to Rudolph G. Weyse (bv whom she has three children) ; and Mary Washington, who was born February ^22nd 1868 and died m infancy. The present wife of Mr. Barrow^s was Bessie A Greene a native of Utica, N. Y. They were married November 28, 1868 and have one son, Harry Prosper Barrows; the latter born December 14th, 1869 and married August 19th, 1893, to Bessie D. Bell, a native of Michigan. They have three children. Until the formation of the Republican partv Mr. Barrows was a Whi^. He voted for Fremont m 1856, and has voted for every Republican candidate for president since till 1900. when he voted for William L Bryan He believes that that great party, in its earlier years, made a glorious record as a champion of the rights of man and of constitutional liberty. But he has found occasion m common with many other original and sincere Republicans, to lament the departure of the party from its earlier simplicity and singleness of purpose m behalf of universal freedom, being dedicated wholly, as it was, "to the happiness of free and equal men." For many years prior to the '80s he took an active part m public education. For much of the time during fifteen vears he served as a member of the school board of this city. In 1867 he was 'elected city super- intendent, and m 1868, county superintendent. He has written much on many subjects for the local press, and especially on financial questions includin'o" resumption of specie payment, bimetallism, etc. He contributed one of the thirty-mne essays to the competitive contest invited in 1889 by M Henri Cer- nuschi on International Bimetallism. He also wrote philosophical essav m 1904, entitled : "Cosmos or Chaos.^ Theism or Atheism;-' From 1856 for nearly ten years he was the regular paid Los Angeles correspondent of the San Fran- cisco Bnllciiu, then one of the most influential newspapers of the Pacific Coast. . J^u'. ^^''°'''' ^^' administered a number of large estates, including those of \\illiam Wolfskin, Captain Alexander Bell, Thomas C. Rhodes, and others He was appointed by the United States district court one of the commissioners to run the boundary line between the Providencia Rancho and that of the ex- Mission of San Fernando. Also, by appointment of the superior court he was one of the commissioners who partitioned the San Pedro Rancho which con- tained about twenty-five thousand acres. In 1868 he was president of the His- torical Society of Southern California, of which he was one of the founders 394 r.IOGRAPHICAL and to the records of which he has contributed many valual)le papers of reminis- cences. He is also one of the charter members of founders of the Society of Los Angeles Pioneers. He wrote about one hundred sketches of early pioneers of Los Angeles, most of whcjm he knew personally, for the Illustrated History of Los Aiii^clcs County, issued in 1889 by the Lewis Publishing Co., of Chicago. He also wrote the text of the Illustrated History of Central California, published by the same company in 1893. Copies of both of these works may be found in the Los Angeles Public Library. Mr. Barrows has a strong conviction that every man and every woman should be a fully developed citizen; and that while all men and women should be guaranteed their natural equal rights and ec|ual privileges in order that they may be enabled as nearly as may be, to fight the battle of life on an equal footing so far, at least, as the state can guarantee such natural rights and privileges to all its citizens. He holds that every citizen also owes manifold obligations to the state and to the community in which he lives — obligations which, though they cannot be legally enforced, he is, morally at least, not entitled to shirk. "Who," says Mr. Barrows, "can imagine the beauty of that state in which every person, however humble his lot, enjoys, not only theoretically, but ])ractically, all the natural rights and privileges that every other person enjoys, and in which at the same time every person voluntarily and freely renders, proportionately to his ability and opportunity, to the state and to the community, all the varied obligations pertaining to his personal and particular sphere that the best citizens perform. There are myriad ways of doing good in the world open to every person, and there are myriad obligations which every person owes the com- munity which, if every person freely and faithfully performed according to his or her several abilities, this world would speedily become what it was intended to be, an earthly paradise." Loyalty to these principles and loyalty to the moral government of the universe and to the Great Being who upholds and rules that universe, Mr. Barrows adds, constitute his creed, his religion. In his opinion they are broad enough and true enough to serve as the basis of a universal re- ligion, of a creed which all men can subscribe to, and live bv, and, die by! John Charles Hemingw^ay, Clerk of Santa Monica, was born in the City of Chelsea, Suffolk County, Mass., October 19th, 1858, the son of John Hemingw^ay a farmer. He spent his boyhood in the city of Boston. He attended Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland. After leaving school he engaged in newspaper work as a reporter for the local press. Later, for a period of about ten years, he w^orked as a reporter on the leading daily papers of Chicago. In 1883 he came to Los Angeles and accepted a position in the same capacity on the Los Angeles Daily Herald. He followed journalism in the capacity of news correspondent until April, 1902, when he was elected City Clerk of Santa Monica. He was re-elected to the same office A])ril, 1907, under the Freeholders Charter. BIOGRAPHICAL 395 November 10th, 1889, Mr. Hemingway married Miss Emma J. Hayden, a native of Portland, but from childhood a resident of East Los Angeles. They have one daughter, E. Mearle. Mr. Hemingway is a member of the F. and A. M., I. O. O. F. and B. P. O. E., of which latter organization he is Exalted Ruler. Mr. and Mrs. Hemingway are members of Saint Augustine Episcopal Church of this city. Santa Monica has no more popular citizen than J. C. Hemingway and his record as a public official is beyond reproach. (/\t my request, Dr. Orin Davis, a venerable and beloved citizen of Sawtelle, has favored me with the following autobiographical review of some of the inci- dents of a long, useful and exemplary life.— The Author.) In the township of York, Living- ston County, N. Y., in 1823, forests covered the landscape with their leafy drapery excepting here and there an open clearing made by an early settler, and upon one of these there stood a log house with a clay-stick chimney and from within the curling smoke rolled up from an ample fireplace whose broad, uneven hearth-stone was quarried fiom the earth near by. From this chimney place hung the iron crane, embellished by several swivel jointed hooks and trammels of variable lengths, equipped for cul- inary service ; doors on wooden hinges and fastened by wooden latches; in one corner a rudely constructed lad- der, with holes and round sticks made to fit by the jackknife, led to cham- bers aloft, which were divided by calico curtains and white sheets; below, in the opposite corner, a caseless clock, from whose motor weights Avere suspended by cords communicating with hands that pointed to figures on the dial and whose bell strikingly announced the passing of golden hours. On the uppermost border of the plate was the smiling image of the moon just rising from invisible depths. Such were some of the environments on June 26th, when the helpless, half animate, new-born child of Asa and Sallie Clarke Davis was forced into this mysterious earth of ours to en- counter the hazards of life's alluring temptations and bitter sufferings — the sub- ject of this brief sketch. ORIiX DA\'IS, M.D. 396 BIOGRAPHICAL My father was not only a farmer by occupation, but also a nurseryman, and I had training in raising for sale the better kind of grafted fruit trees. As years rolled on, the old log house was supplanted by a large frame one, the colts grew to be horses and were harnessed to useful undertakings, loads of fruit trees brought cash, and with this constant unfolding of animal and vegetable life, the subject of this sketch also advanced and resolved that his future should be further unfolded in the study and practice of medicine. Early I became interested in the remedial properties of the then little known, indigenous nritcria nicdini. comprising many of those important domestic agents that had gained no standard remedial reputation in the dispensaries. Three years were devoted to the study of the regular text books in medicine preparatcjry to attendance n\ion two full courses of lectures in a regularly chartered college. I finally passed the quiz successfully and was honored with the Degree of Doctor of Medicine, in June, 1846. Immediately I entered upon the arduous duties of active practice and January, 1847, was elected to edit a monthly journal, the Eclectic Medical Reformer, published at Dansville, New York. In the follow- ing June I co-operated with two medical graduates and two professors from Cincinnati College in a preparatory two months' course of instruction for medical students who later intended to be better equipped for the college curriculum. Obstetricy and diseases of women and children was the department assigned to me for their instruction. On the following and during succeeding years, classes of students attended four months 'courses of medical instruction in Central Medical College at Roches- ter, N. Y., wdiere liberal principles of medicine were advocated by our faculty and the Eclectic Medical and Surgical "foiirual, until the college and its educational interests were transferred to New York City where a new charter was obtained. There it still continues to flourish, a successful exponent of medical progress, reflecting honor upon the cause of American medicine. In 1854 I established a Health Institute at Attica, New York, and for fifty years continued as its proprietor, treating chronic diseases of both sexe=, making pelvic ailments of women a specialty. These remedial efforts were successful so that previous to the Spanish War, which greatly enlarged our domain, my patrons were living in every state and territory of the Union, with the single exception of Alaska. In the meantime my contributions to medical literature embraced a wide range of topics, some of which were published by the state legislature of New York, also in various medical journals and thus obtained a wide circulation. One family work on popular medicine which I wrote is report- ed in numbers of copies published to exceed the two million mark. In 1874 I was elected president of the New York State Eclectic Medical Society and, among other timely topics, presented the idea originating high license as a means of reducing and ultimately destroying profitable traffic in alcoholic stimulants. Not only at the time of my inaugural address, but ever BIOGRAPHICAL 397 since then it has engaged attention of temperance reformers and has continued to be a live issue and contending factor in discussions in temperance organizations. For more than thirty-five years I have been a Master Mason, a conscientious behever in the enduring truths and upright principles inculcated by this worthy order, and have been a living witness of its benign influence and of the incalcula- ble good resulting not only to its faithful followers, but upon society at large. I have ever taken a deep interest in church music. In religious organizations its salutary, uplifting influence upon the community is second only to the gospel ministry of truth. Poetry wedded to inusic renders most expressively the yearn- ing of the emotive faculties which hopefully and confidingly bring us in close spiritual relation with our Heavenly Father. While the grand truths of science and religion are celebrated in song, yet it is such faculties as sympathy, joy, hope, confidence, love and devotion when blended by music, that raise the thoughts to a heavenly sphere — to the spiritual verities that ennoble the soul, giving increasing breadth and basis to universal charity. In matters of faith and spiritual know- ledge I believe in continual advancement, daily demonstrating in spirit the quality of life's purposes; by self-denial, repressing selfishness and perfect confidence in the Love that will finally be all in all. I attribute much of my success throughout life to the inspiring presence and genius of my beloved wife, who in 1843, for better for w^orse, joined her life and fortune with my own. Through all succeeding events, her counsel, timely assist- ance, punctuality, order and regularity in her every day duties, accompanied with evenness of spirit, made opportunities possible for the better devotion of my time and talents to the arduous duties of my profession. One daughter and two sons are living and one son passed away in early childhood. Many are the sweet remembrances that crowd upon the memory of a long and eventful life — of professional friendships and social endearments that are consciously reproduced and cheer us while passing the evening of our days in the quiet of out semi-tropic home in Southern California. Daniel Alton, a substantial citizen of Sawtelle, is a native of the State of New^ York. He was born in Jefferson County, February 20, 1843. His father, Christopher Alton, was a prosperous farmer and a native of County Limerick, Ireland, who came to America about the year 1828 at thirteen years of age and located in Canada where he spent his youth. At Kingston, Canada, he married Miss Ann Montgomery, a native of County Mayo. They came to New York and located on a farm near Watertown, the county seat of Jefferson County. They raised a family of four sons and one daughter, the oldest of whom was Adam, who married and located in Waudena County, Minn., and there died at about the age of fifty-nine years. Elizabeth married Charles Bloss and lived in Munroe Countv, Wisconsin. She is now deceased. Daniel, the subject 398 BIOGRAPHICAL of this sketch is the third born. Michael, the fourth born, is now (1908) a resi- dent of Clark County, Wisconsin, and lives near Neelsville. Joseph, the youngest, lives at Watertown, Munroc County, Wisconsin. Mr. Alton left home when a lad and went to Hartford, Washington County, Wisconsin. Later he lived in Janeau County. There he enlisted in the Union Army to fight the rebellion, June 21st, 1861, went forthwith to the front engaged in the second Battle of Bull Run where he received a severe wound in the right thigh. From the battlefield he was conveyed to the Military Hospital at West Philadelphia where he was confined until April 14th, 1863, where- upon he was honorably discharged from the army by reason of his disability and returned to Wisconsin. In 1865 he went to Minnesota and located in the town of Tenhaussen, Martin County, where for thiity-two years he engaged successfully in general agriculture. On March 22nd, 1866, Mr. Alton married Miss Mary E. Dennett and they raised and educated a family of six children all born on the old Minnesota home- stead. Lorenzo, the eldest, was born February 1 1th, 1867 and died in December, 1871. Carrie, born October 29th, 1869, is now Mrs. Fred Howland, of Serra Vista, Santa Monica. Alfred D., born April 13th, 1871, lives on the old home- stead. Josephine, born February 25th, 1874, is now Mrs. Abraham Kyle, of Tenhaussen, Minnesota. Alonzo E., born January 5th, 1877, lives at the old home in Minnesota. Herbert D., born May 22nd, 1883, now resident of Spokane Washington, and Lester Lee, born August 26th, 1889, lives at Serra Vista, Santa Monica. The family was reared under the best of social influences and all re- ceived a thorough High School or college education. Mr. Alton has been twice married. The present Mrs. Alton was America Weaver Lee, a member of a branch of the famous Lee family of Virginia. Mr. Alton's life has been one of great industry and business activity. Leaving the parental roof when a mere lad to make his own way in the world, he soon there- after promptly responded to the country's call to arms in defense and preservation of the Union, and with shattered constitution returned to the responsibilities of active civil citizenship. With meagre means he engaged in farming in a new and frontier country, and by diligent endeavor, aggressive yet conservative enterprise he became one of the most successful and influential farmers in his county. He also, as a matter of civic duty, took an active part in shaping the policies and conducting the public afi^airs of his county and was for seventeen years Supervisor of Tenhaussen Township and chairman of the Board of Supervisors of Martin County. Notwithstanding his manifold private responsibilities and his public duties, Mr. Alton found time for extensive travel, having visited nearly every state in the Union making, meantime, thirteen trips from the Mississippi River to California, thoroughly prospecting the country for the most desirable home location. Sawtelle may be congratulated upon the fact that Mr. Alton, after so much deliberation, has finally taken up his home in its midst, where he has invested many thousands of dollars in city realty and income property. BIOGRAPHICAL 399 Alvin N. Archer, a well known pioneer citizen of Ocean Park, Santa Monica, is a native of the State of Maine, born in the town of Charlotte, Washington County, October 23rd, 1844. His father, John N. Archer, a shoemaker by trade and occupation, a native of the same state, married Abigal Hughes and they raised a family of four sons and four daughters of whom Alvin N. was the fifth. Abigal Hughes was the daughter of John Hughes, a native of Wales, G. B. He was a man of great physical strength and a professional athlete. Young Archer left home at eighteen years of age and in 1862 entered the Union Army for the Civil War. He was mustered into the service at the town of Lincoln, Penobscot County; First Maine Artil- lery, Battery L, which w^as assigned to the Army of the Potomac. His regiment was held in the defense of Washington until April, 1864, and was then sent to the front under the command of General W. S. Hancock. They participated in all the bloody fighting involved in the Siege of Peteisburg and it is a matter of public record that the First Maine Artillery sustained a laigei per cent of losses than any other in the Fedeial Army. In one instance, when assaulting the breastworks, Mr. Archer's battery came out with only seven out of a total of sixty man who made the charge. Mr. Archer received two wounds during the war and still carries a musket ball under his shoulder blade. He mustered out in July, 1865, at Philadelphia, Pa., and soon thereafter returned home. For a time he followed lumbering and in 1877 went to Michigan, located at Midland and worked for the Flint & Pere Marquette Ry. Co. In 1879 he removed to Madison, South Dakota, and worked on a bonanza farm. In 1891 he came west to Oregon and in 1892 to Southern California. He was in poor health and located at Santa Monica. For the Y. M. C. A. he erected the first building in South Santa Monica in 1894. For four years he was local agent of the Santa Fe Ry. Company. Later he held the office of deputy constable and was also the first uniformed policeman of the new town. He was the prime factor in organizing fire company No. 2, and for years was its president. He was elected and served as a member of the board of Freeholders that draughted the present city charter AL\'1X X. ARCHER. 400 LUOGRAPHICAL of Santa Monica. He is at present member of the City Fire Commission having in charge all matters relating to the present efficient fire department. Mr. Archer married at Ocean Park, in 1892, Miss Luetta Litch, a native of Fredonia, N. Y., and a daughter of Joseph Litch, a one time extensive farmer and land owner of Chautauqua County, N. Y. He, however, met with financial reverses and died in middle life. The mother soon passed away leaving the daughter in the guardianship of her present husband. Mr. and Mrs. Archer have four children — Bula June, the first child born of American parents in South Santa Monica; Reed M.; Glen E.; Altha F. The Archer home is No. 245 Hill Street. Mr. Archer is one of the influential and progressive pioneers of Ocean Park, Santa Monica, and takes a lively interest in the public welfare of his adopted citv. Daxiel Meloy was born at Harrisburg, Pa., September 15th, 1833, the son of John Meloy, a farmer who settled on the western frontier in Ohio at what is now the City of Wooster, in 1834. In 1836 he removed to Mercer County, Ohio, and settled on wild land in a dense wilderness. There he developed a good farm. In 1841 he went to Whitney County Ind., and located near the county seat, Columbia, and developed an eighty acre farm. Later he made a new- location in Kosciusko County, Ind., which became the permanent family home. He married Mary Smith at Harrisburg, Pa., and they raised a family of thirteen children. He died on the old homestead in 1891 at eighty-five years of age. Daniel lived at home until twenty-one years of age. He then spent two years in Illinois and two years in Iowa. Iowa then had no railroads and corn was worth but eight cents per bushel. Upon the breaking out of the Civil War he enlisted in the Federal army, Co. B, 52nd. Ind. Vol. Inf., and went to the front. He was about nineteen months in the Fifteenth Army Corps, under General Thomas, did some lively fighting at the battles of Gettysburg, was in the fight at Shanondoah, Winchester and at Harpers Ferry. He remained in the army until the war was over. He had two brothers, Seth and Andrew, who responded to the first call for volunteers. The latter lost his life at Corinth, Miss. After the war, Mr. Meloy emigrated to Kansas and located near Senaca, the county seat of Numah County, and purchased one hundred sixty acres of land. Later he lived for fifteen years at Fort Scott, Kansas. In 1877 he came to Cali- fornia and lived a short time at Pasadena. In 1878 he located near Santa Monica, at what is now^ Twentieth Street, near Colorado Avenue, where he owns eight good residence lots. Mr. Meloy married in Kosciosko County, Ind., Miss Amarylis F. Thomas, a daughter of George Thomas, by whom he has four children living — Tryphosa F., Horace T. Meloy, a well known and successful business man of Santa Monica; Rosetta H. anl David C. Mrs. Meloy died August 3rd, at sixty-four years of age. BIOGRAPHICAL 401 Henry X. Goetz, for nearly a quarter of a century a resident of California and since 1888 an active and influential citizen of Santa Monica, is a native of the Province of Ontario, Canada, where he was born August 7th, 1861. His father, Andrew Goetz, was of German parentage, and spent his entire life in Ontario. He was a thrifty farmer whose parents emigrated from Strasburg Germany, about the time of his birth and were pioneers in the early settlement of the country. Henry Goetz lived on the home farm until 1881, when he started out single handed and alone to carve his own future in the business world He went first to the town of Walkerville, Ontario, and entered the employ of Hiram Walker & Sons, founders of the town. His services were so valuable to his employers that, although but a youth, they placed him in charge of a crew of men. He remained with Hiram Walker & Sons two years and acquired valu- able knowledge and experience in various departments of the building and me- chanical business. The years 1883 and 1884 he spent in Victoria British Columbia. In November, 1885, he came to CaHfornia, spending eleven months m San Francisco. The following year (1886) he came to Southern California and spent one year in Los Angeles, after which he located permanently in Santa Monica. Mr. Goetz found Santa Monica just awakening from a protracted period of lethargy, the result of a miscarriage of ambitious plans for building here a har- bor city. The completion of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R. R. into Los Angeles this year resulted in the influx of armies of people overland from the east, the spontaneous advance in realty and the greatest land boom the country has ever witnessed. Santa Monica began to expand and Mr. Goetz became active- ly interested in her civic, political and business development. He has erected a large number of Santa Monica's finest business blocks, public buildings and residences. He built the Santa Monica Bank building in 1888, and lat'^er the Academy of the Holy Names, corner of Third Street and Arizona Avenue He has built several of Santa Monica's finest school buildings, notably, the Lincoln High School and the Washington Buildings. He also built the North Beach Bath House, the Santa Monica City Hall, the PubHc Library, the Bundy Block and the Ocean Park City Hall and Fire House. The Dudley Building, corner of Third Street and Oregon Avenue, is evidence of the thoroughly architectural and substantial manner in which Mr. Goetz pursues his business, both as a de- signer and builder. In the building of Venice, Mr. Goetz took an active part He bmlt the Venice Bath House, the lake and grand canal system, in thirty days time, under rush orders; also, at the same time, the St. Marks Hotel, to- gether with a number of other buildings, a phenomenal feat in view of all' the circumstances. Few citizens of Santa Monica have been more active and influential in public affairs than Mr. Goetz. He served four years, 1893 to 1897, on the Board of City Trustees and was Chairman of the Judiciary and Ordinance Committee hkewise Chairman of the Committee on Streets and Parks, in this latter capacity 402 BIOGRAPHICAL introducing and testing the present splendid system of petrolithic oil paving for streets and roads now adopted throughout Southern California. To this work he devoted much time and serious attention and the results must stand as a monument to his energy and wisdom as an officer and public servant. Mr. Goetz, in July, 1908, was elected president of the Santa Monica Board of Trade to succeed Mr. J. J. Seymour. Mr. Goetz was married in 1887, in Los Angeles, to Miss Catherine G. Woods, a native of San Francisco. They have three child- ren — Joseph H., Mary and Milton. He is a member of the local lodge of Foresters of America, the Knights of Columbus and the B. P. O. E. For many years a consistent Democrat in politics, he is not radically partisan but stands rather for good men for office and good public measures, not party expediences. The Goetz family residence, one of the most substantial and artistic in the city, is on North Third Street, No. 1043. George Boehme, pioneer of Santa Monica, is a native of Alsace-Lorraine, then a province of France, and was born in the year 1829. He came to America in 1850, landing at New Orleans. In 1852 he came to California and spent several months in the mines. In 1854 he established himself in the tinning and plumbing business, in San Francisco. In 1855, he removed to Sacramento, and engaged there in the same line of business for a period of twenty years. He there assisted in laying the corner stone of the present State Capitol building, and later was assigned the contract for the copper roofing of the same. In 1865 was appointed lieutenant in the Sacramento Hussars, Fourth Brigade National Guards. In 1875 he came to Santa Monica and disembarked from the first vessel that touched at the first Santa Monica wharf. He immediately invested in about $2,000 worth of city lots, purchasing the same at the first auction held. From that date he took an active part in the material advancement of his chosen home city. In 1887, he built the Boehme Block, on Second Street, near Utah Avenue, which was at that time the most pretentious business block in the city. For many years he carried on a successful hardware and plumbing business and became a large holder of real estate, both business and residential. He held the office of City Treasurer from 1892 to 1895, and was succeeded by Eugene W. Boehme, his son, who held the office four terms. During recent years he has led a retired, quiet life. Mr. Boehme married in 1860 Miss Mary Kalgarif, a native of Ireland, who came to New Orleans, at eighteen years of age, and in 1855, with a brother, to California, and lived at Sacramento. They have three sons and a daughter, George C, Henry M., Eugene W., well known business men of Santa Monica, and Adaline. Mr. Bcjehme has been an active and successful business man, and commands the respect and esteem of all who know him. BIOGRAPHICAL 403 JoH\ Metcalf, capitalist and retired citizen of Venice, has been an impor- tant factor in the upbuilding and commercial development of the Canal City. He is a native of Yorkshire, England and was born February 9th, 1842. His father, Thomas Metcalf, was a lead miner by occupation and was reared to his calling in the mining regions of Yorkshire. He came to America in 1849, bringing his family with him, and located at Dubuque, Iowa, his destination. He soon, however, located almost opposite Dubuque across the Mississippi River in South- western Wisconsin in the town of Benton, La P'ayette County, where he purchased a farm upon which he lived until his death in 1855. He was about forty-three years of age. Young Metcalf grew up at Benton and commenced the battle of life at the tender age of thirteen years. He first worked in the lead mines of the Galena district near his home, for fifty cents per day, and by studied industry and frugal habits coupled with intelligent economy, he gradually improved his financial con- dition. In 1864 he joined the Union Army and went to Texas. He was in the service one year when the war came to a close and, returning home, he turned his "sword into a plough share" and went to farming. He raised and bought cattle and engaged in the butchering business. In order to better his field for operation he sold his property in La Fayette County and removed to Hardin County, Iowa, and later to Sioux City, buying and selling real estate. He finally became interest in property in Obrien County, northeast of Sioux City and located at Paullina, then a small town in a new but promising country. He engaged in the real estate business and also became heavily interested in grain and stock farms. In 1883, he estabhshed the present Bank of Paullina of which he has since been the owner. Latei , in 1902, he purchased the Bank of Merrill in Ply- mouth County, Iowa, of which he is still the owner. Mr. Metcalf has always pursued a liberal yet intelligently conservative business policy and he makes and values money for the good it can be made to accomplish for mankind at large. By judicious investment in worthy enterprises he makes it the force that opens up new industries and developes the country. Mr. Metcalf first came to California in the winter of 1893-4 and visited various sections of the State. He finally purchased fifty-four acres of land of Antonio Machado, it being a portion of the La Bullona Grant. He bought it for its value for alfalfa land, as an investment. The building of the Los Angeles Pacific Short Line R. R., and the development of the beautiful city of Venice brought this land into demand for other purposes and in 1905 it was platted as the Venice Gateway Tract into three hundred and fifty residence lots of the usual size. The major portion of the tract has been sold to home builders and to others as investments. The streets are sixty feet wide beside twenty feet on each side is devoted to sidewalk and parking purposes. The Ocean Park Cit}- Hall is located at Venice Gateway, the land for which was donated to the city. Mr. Metcalf is one of the incorporators and a stock holder in the Venice Shoe Manufacturing Company, Inc., and a director of the corporation. He erected W. B. B. TAYLOR. BIOGRAPHICAL 405 at an expense of about $12,000, the beautiful and substantial factory building which he leases to the new industry at a nominal rental price. In 1869 Mr. Metcalf married Miss Mary A. Simpson, of Dubuque, Iowa. She died at Paullina, Iowa, in 1892. In 1894 he married Mrs. Bell R. Carpenter. They maintain their old home at Paullina, Iowa, and have a beautiful modern California home at Venice Gateway. Wendell B. B. Taylor, pioneer attorney of Sawtelle, was born at St. Johnsbury, Vermont, May 4th, 1875. He is the son of Rev. George Taylor, pastor of the Baptist Church of Sawtelle. On the maternal side he is a sen of the Revolution. At the age of seven years, with his parents, he moved to Maine, where he lived three years, when the family determined to come to California, arriving here in December, 1885. After residing nine months in Los Angeles the family moved to Pasadena, where over fifteen years of Mr. Taylor's life was spent. There he received his education. After being graduated from the Pasa- dena High School, in the Class of 1897, and spending one year at Pomona College, Claremont, he took a thorough course of bookkeeping and stenography and enter- ed upon the study of law at the law offices of Hahn & Hahn, the leading attorneys of Pasadena, spending five years in hard study and office work, receiving a thorough training in both theory and practice. He was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of the State of California on the 20th day of October, 1903, at which time he enjoyed a good practice, which has since grown. His practice includes all phases of the law, both civil and criminal, but he is making a specialty of corporation and probate law and conveyancing. Since coming to Sawtelle he incorporated all the established churches of the place, the Sawtelle Water Com- pany, the Sawtelle Cemetery Association, beside other corporations, while his probate matters carry him frequently into the courts. These, together with his office practice, make him a busy man. He came to Sawtelle about the middle of April, 1902, and commenced work for Mr. W. E. Sawtelle, then manager of the Pacific Land Company, and remained with him until they formed the real estate co-partnership of Sawtelle & Company, which did a good business for a number of years. Mr. Sawtelle then became associated with the Citizens State Bank and Mr. Taylor became the first City Attorney of the City of Sawtelle and turned his attention solely to the practice of law and to fire insurance. Mr. Taylor has served as Clerk of the Sawtelle School District and Sawtelle City School District Boards for about six years ; has been two terms Chief Templar of the Sawtelle Good Templars Lodge ; is serving his fourth term as Clerk of the Baptist Church of Sawtelle; served one term as Noble Grand of the Sawtelle Lodge, No. 128, 1. 0. 0. P., and is serving his sixth year as Secretary of the Sunday School Convention of the Los Angeles Baptist Association. 406 BTOGRAPmCAL On the 8th day of June, 1904, Miss Carrie AdeHa Hoyt and Mr. Taylor were united in marriage at the home of the bride's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Goodale, at Los Angeles. Mr. Goodale was for fifteen years the efficient chief civil engineer at the Pacific Branch, N. H. D. V. S., which position he resigned to take up architectural work. During this period Mrs. Taylor was a member of Mr. Goodale 's family. She was a hard worker in the Protestant Chapel of the Home, as choir leader and organist and her activity in religious and patriotic circles of the institution made her acquaintance an extensive one. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor reside at Pine Knoll, No. 654 West Oregon Avenue. They have two small children. Mr. Taylor has two brothers, both married. Mr. Hawley O. Taylor is proficient as a civil and mining engineer, and is now a student at Cornell Univer- sity. Mr. Almo R. Taylor, with his family, reside at present at Sawtelle. He is chief artist for the Neuner Company, Los Angeles. In the long struggle for the incorporation of the City of Sawtelle, Mr. Taylor was a hard worker for the cause of incorporation, which finally triumphed. After the incorporation of the city and election of the first board of trustees and officers, the disincorporationists petitioned for an election to disincorporate under the law provided for that purpose. Mr. Taylor, as the first city attorney, rendered an opinion that the board of trustees were without jurisdiction to enter- tain the petition or call the election on the ground that there was no method of ascertaining the sufficiency of the petition as to the requisite number of qualified electors signing the same, as there had as yet been no municipal election in the City of Sawtelle within the meaning of the disincorporation act, the election to incorporate the city being a special election and not a municipal election. The act provided that the petition must be signed by qualified electors of the city equal in number to one-half the vote cast at the last municipal election held therein. The matter was carried into the courts and the opinion of Mr. Taylor was sus- tained. James Stephen Talkington is a retired resident of this city, a native of Crawford County, Ark., born at Cedar Creek, twelve miles north of Van Buren, the county seat, September 20th, 1844. His father was Allen A. Talkington, a farmer, a native of Todd County, Ky., who pioneered on the western frontier in Arkansas, raising a family of six children. He came to California in 1869, lived and died at Orange, Orange County, his decease taking place in 1903, when he was ninety-three years of age. The mother of the subject of this sketch was Elizabeth Nichols, also a native of Kentucky. She died in 1884, at seventy-four years of age, at her home in Orange, Cal. Mr. Talkington has a brother, Simeon N., of No. 323 Tenth Street, Santa Monica. Three sisters are living: Mrs. Marga- ret Marshall, widow, .\o. 231 West Sixt> -second St., Los Angeles; Mrs. Ethelinda Yarnell, widow, of Orange, Cal., and Mrs. James V. Sutton, of Orange. BIOGRAPHICAL 407 Mr. Talkington, at nineteen years of age, May 10th, 1864, joined the Con- federate Army. It was, however, under a misconception of the true condition of aifairs, and he soon made a trip into Mexico through Southwest Texas, and took a hand in the revolution then in progress in that country, encountering much hardship and adventure. He returned home in August, 1865. The family soon thereafter came overland with ox teams and covered wagons, Mr. Talkington driving a team of four yoke of oxen, with a "Prairie Schooner," the entire distance. They located and lived three years in the mountains of San Diego county. In 1869 they removed to Orange county, where the parents died, and a portion of the family still reside. Mr. Talkington later lived at Tropico, and also later in Los Angeles. In 1893, he located in Santa Monica, and now lives on 216 Arizona Avenue, between Second and Third Streets. There are few cities on the Pacific Coast that have attached to their citizen- ship a larger percentage of well-to-do and the wealthy men of the country than has Santa Monica. Bernard Quinn is one of the recent acquisitions to this most thrifty colony. Mr. Quinn is a native of Ireland, having been born in County Armagh in 1837. His father, Michael Quinn, died in Ireland and the widow, with seven children came to America, locating in Allegheny County, Pa., about twenty-one miles above the city of Pitts- burg. Here the mother died at the age of about fifty years. Young Quinn grew to manhood in Allegheny County and when ten years of age learned the business of operating a stationary engine, pursuing that calling for several years. In the year 1856, at the age of nineteen, he came west to the territory of Nebraska. Here he did a freighting business with teams and wagons for the United States Govern- ment, transporting supplies to the troops garrisoned at Fort Benton. In 1864 he, with a brother, Charles, came still further westward to Montana. The transportation was made with a train of twenty-hve emigrant wagons, each drawn by five yokes of oxen, young Quinn driving the lead team. The Quinn brothers owned six of these outfits. They located about one hundred miles north of what is now the citv of Helena and engaged in minin"' witli \-erv indift'er- HERXARD OUINN. 408 BIOGRAPHICAL ent success. In 1867 they went to Salt Lake City, where they purchased of the Mormons one hundred and sixty cows and calves. This stock they drove north into Montana and for about fifteen years engaged in stock raising in that state. Their range covered a stretch of country nine miles square, one of the richest and best watered in the region and they made the business profitable. In 1888 they disposed of all their stock interests and went to Butte City where they invested heavily in city property. The brother died in Butte City in May, 1897, at 78 years of age. Mr. Quinn prospered in business and acquired some of the best realty holdings in the city of Butte. By reason of physical disabilities, the results of exposure in the vigorous climate of Montana, Mr. Quinn, after extensive traveling, came to California and in 1908 purchased a delightful home, retiring from active busi- ness life. In 1894 Mr. Quinn married Miss Bell Durnan, a native of Philadelphia, Pa., and a daughter of Charles Durnan, a boatman on the Erie Canal. Mr. and Mrs. Quinn have one son, Victor John Quinn, born in Butte City, Montana, January 23rd, 1897. The family home is at Ninth and Arizona Avenue. '■^5 While residents of Nebraska the Quinn brothers took a prominent part in the warfare against the Indians of the Platte River Valley. They were typical and enterprising pioneers and brought the first harvesting machine into that country. When they finally went to Montana they took with them two Cham- pion mowing and harvesting machines, the first ever seen in that country. These machines were an innovation, and the enterprising Quinns had more w^ork than they could do cutting hay at $35.00 per day. Mr. Quinn is a member of the Society of Montana Pioneers and a devout member of the Catholic Church. Samuel L. Berkley, successful druggist of Santa Monica, was born in the town of Lowell, Muskingum County, Ohio, March 30th, 1864. His father, Thomas J. Berkley, was a native of Frederick County, Va., and there spent his boyhood and youth. He left home when a young man and located at Low'cll, Ohio, where he engaged somewhat extensively in the milling business until 1871. He there married Nancy De Long, and there six daughters and three sons were born. In 1871 the family removed to Virginia and lived at Winchester, Frederick County, until 1875, when they came west to Harrison County, Iowa. Samuel L. Berkley is the sixth child of the family. He was seven years old when the family left Ohio to live in Virginia and eleven years old when they located in Iowa. He attended the public schools of Winchester, Va., and finished in the Missouri Valley High School. He learned the drug business at Woodbine, la., and there spent about twenty years in the business. He married at Wood- bine, in 1888, Miss Ruby A. Kling, daughter of Jacob R. and Emily Bliss Kling, of Troy Center, Walworth County, Wisconsin, and they have three sons, Hugh Kling, Laurence Jay, and Robert De Long. Mr. and Mrs. Berkley are members of the Baptist Church. He is a member of the Woodmen of the World. BIOGRAPHICAL 409 R. F. McClellan, capitalist and influential citizen of Sawtelle, a native of the State of Maine, was born in the town of Brownville. Piscataqua Countv April 2 1st, 1859. His father, John McClellan, was the son of Scottish parents who were pioneers of the ' ' Pine Tree State ; ' ' located in Piscataqua County where they took an active part in the early developments of that far famed pine timber country. John McClellan grew up in the vicinity of Brownville and became thorough- ly identified with its business growth and there married Miss Emily A Mayo and with their six children came west to the timbered regions of Northern Minnesota m the year 1867. They located in the town of Princeton, where the family of five sons and two daughters grew up. In 1868, the father, while on a prospecting trip into the timbered wilderness of the Upper Mississippi River Valley died under circumstances never fully ascertained by the family. At thirteen years of age young Reuben F. McClellan commenced work in the lumber woods, doing whatever work came to hand. He acquired a thorough knowledge of the logging and lumber business. At the age of nineteen he em- barked m the business on his own account, getting out timber by contract on Rum river tributary to the Upper Mississippi, and was thus engaged for several years. Later he dealt extensively in timber lands with offices at Princeton He finally decided to enter upon a business enteiprise that had for sometime appealed to his aggressive and somewhat adventurous spirit and accordingly orgamzed what later became known to the mining world as the McClellan party for the purpose of prospecting the undeveloped mineral country of Alaska He enlisted seven "good men and true" of his personal acquaintance in his home town of Princeton. Mr. McClellan had devoted much time and thought to a some^vhat critiral investigation of mining developments in Alaska— that new field of mineral developments-and had selected a place of destination, shown on the maps as the head of Copper River. The party left Princeton in the month of April 1898 and via Seattle (where they outfitted) proceeded by steamer to a point 'about 600 miles northwest of Sitka, where they disembarked on a bleak and forbiddinc. shore, m six feet of snow, where, as yet no human foot had trod, but where now stands the new and thrifty town of Valdez, having a population of about 6 000 people. From this point they crossed the Valdez Glacier, a mountain of ice and snow some thirty miles in length, each man making his way independent of others drawing a sled freighted with 1,400 pounds of provisions and camping equipment' and by relay mg succeeded in getting into the field with about 1,400 pounds each' Ihey towed their boats up the main channel, making at best onlv an avera-e of about one mile a day. ' ^ It was May first when they struck a tributary to the Copper River about one hundred miles above its outlet and the same distance from its source Here they tarried long enough to construct boats from spruce timber that grew alon- the stream, whip-sawing the lumber therefrom, and they then ascended the main 410 BIOGRAPHICAL valley of the Copper River to it^ head waters. Two hundred miles into the in- terior they opened camp in the month of July and commenced prospecting. Gold was found but not in paying quantities. The party then divided and Mr. McClellan, with four of his comrades, crossed the country a distance of five hundred miles onto the Yukon River, mak- ing their own trail through a barren and forbidding country. They were the first white men to pass over that route. They arrived at Dawson August 24th, returning that fall to the Copper River Valley, finally discovering and locating what is known to be the most extensive and valuable copper deposit in the world. Mr. McClellan soon thereafter went to New York, made known his discoveries to heavy eastern capitalists, who at great expense inspected the property, the result of which is the capitalization of a company that has set aside twenty-five million dollars for the construction of a railroad from tidewater to the copper beds and equipment of a line of vessels to connect therewith for the purpose of transporting the ore of the Great Bonanza Copper Mine to the world's market. In this stupenduous enterprise are enlisted the Guggenheims, the New York copper kings; the Havermaiers, and other capitalists of almost limitless means. Mr. McClellan realized a laige sum of money on this deal and still retains a valu- able interest in that country. This deal was consummated in 1901, following which Mr. McClellan spent his winters in California and, in 1905, located with his family at Sawtelle where he has made liberal investments in city realty. In 1906, he, with W. E. Sawtelle and others, organized the Citizens State Bank of Sawtelle, of which Mr. McClellan is president, W. E. Sawtelle, vice presi- dent, and H. M. Crane, cashier. The bank has established a branch at The Palms. Mr. McClellan married at Wall Hollow, North Dakota, Miss Grace G. Loring, a daughter of George D. Loring, formerly of Princeton, Minn. Mr. McClellan is a Blue Lodge Mason, member of the Knights of Pythias, and of the Arctic Brother- hood, a fraternal secret order of Alaska. Mr. and Mrs. McClellan'have one son, Neil D. McClellan. Mr. McClellan is one of Sawtelle 's most public spirited and popular citizens and his influence is always found favorably aligned with all movements looking to the progress and development of his home city. William F. Parrish is a native of Pocohontas County, Iowa, born near Pomeroy, February 1st, 1873. He is the son of Isaac E. Parrish, a carpen- ter, a native of Kentucky. His mother was Helen Phipps, a native of New York. The family came to California in October, 1887. Mr. Parrish is an expert horse- shoer, one of the best on the Coast, and a blacksmith, and has followed the trade for seventeen years. He opened his first shop at No. 1644 Temple Street, Los Angeles. Tn November, 1903, he located in Santa Monica and did an extensive business. He sold out June 1st, 1906. He owns a comfortable home at Towner BIOGRAPHICAL 411 Ave. and 18th Street, and was one of the first to locate in Fairview Heights — that thrifty suburb to Santa Monica. He also owns valuable property on Twentieth Street, between Michigan and Towner Avenues. iMr. Parrish has been twice married. His first wife was Ethel Grashauser. She died at Nordhoff, in Ventura County, in 1887. For a second wife he married Miss Martha T. Sluthour, a native of Missouri, born near Zodiac, Vernon County. They have three children Gladys A., Helen A. and Martha L. Fred, an only son, died December 30th, 1907, three years and nine months of age. Rev. George Taylor, of Sawtelle, is of Scotch descent. He came to Southern California in 1885 and located in Pasadena. In early life he studied sculpturing and designing and, for years, in eastern cities, successfully pursued the same as a profession, doing statue and relief work on public buildings. He also designed and carved several soldiers' monu- ments. In Pasadena Mr. and Mrs. Taylor became interested in religious and reform work and important factors in the re- organization of the First Baptist Church, of that city and he was, for nine }'ears, the church clerk. He was, meantime, licensed to preach and was for two years pastor of the First Baptist Chuich, of El Monte. He was there ordained as a minister of the gospel, April 9th, 1896. In July, 1897, he was called to the pastorate of the Memorial Baptist Church, of South Pasadena, and during his pastorate, freed the church from a burdensome debt, made additions to the church edifice and left the organization in a prosperous spiritual and financial condition. For twelve years he has been clerk of the Los Angeles Baptist Association, and the Southern California Baptist Convention. Mr. Taylor had, for several years, been active in the practical work of the Young Men's Christian Association which experience proved a most valuable aid in his church work. = T- i" '- ir 1 !? E^ Mrs. Taylor is a native of Frederickton, Xew Brunswick. When a child, her parents removed to Hartford, Conn. Her ancestors were from France, England and Scotland, and five generations ago came to America and settled in South Carolina. Her greatgrandfather was a soldier of the American Revolu- tion and fought for independence. She is a relative, by marriage, on her father's RK\'. AND MRS. C.EORGE TAYLOR. 412 BIOGRAPHICAL side of the family to William Lloyd Garrison, journalist, orator and reformer of anti-slavery fame. Mrs. Taylor comes from a musical and literary family. She is a graduate of two musical academies and has been a professional music teacher for many years. She has also been a tireless student of the Bible, which accomplishments have fitted her for the duties of a pastor's wife. Mr. Taylor commenced his religious work in Sawtelle November 5th, 1901, and, as a leader of a band of sixteen charter members, organized the present Baptist Church in that city, mention of which is made on another page of this work. December 1st, following, the organization was perfected and Mr. Taylor became duly installed pastor and both himself and Mrs. Taylor have bent their energies to the successful building up of an influential and prosperous church and society. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor are : W. B. B. Taylor, attorney at law and first city attorney of Sawtelle, Hawley O. Taylor, Instructor in Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, in the Department of Physics and Science; Almo R. Taylor, artist, manager of the art department, Out West Co., Los Ange- les. The three sons are married and there are four grandchildren. J. D. Blanchard, Santa Monica, was born at Newton, Mass., January 10, 1862. His father, John B. Blanchard, in earlv life, was a seafaring man, as were his ancestors for generations past. Mr. Blanchard's mother, Nancy Lyon, was a native of Boston, Mass., a daughter of Dr. Henry Lyon. John B. Blanch- ard for many years sailed the open seas ; later he engaged in the sugar and shook business at Matanzas in Cuba as a member of the firm of Alphonzo & Blanchard. He died in 1874 at sixty-two years of age, leaving the widow with a family of five children, of whom the subject of this sketch is the youngest and only one living. Mr. Blanchard's early life was spent in Boston, where he attended the public schools and became a salesman in a " small- wears " store for five years. Later he held a position for five years with the Boston Rubber Shoe Company. Later he came tO' California and located on a ranch in Orange county, and subsequently spent three years at Beaumont, after which he came to Los Angeles and engaged in the dairy and creamery business. In 1902 he located at Santa Monica, and with others incorporated the Imperial Ice Company, of which he is the general manager. Mr. Blanchard married September 10, 1889, Miss Jamessetta Crockett of Los Angeles, a native of Massachusetts and daughter of Rev. James Crockett, a clergyman of the Freewill Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs. Blanchard have one son, Howard. ]\Ir. Blanchard is a member of the Santa Monica Board of Education. He is a member of the B. P. O. E., the Woodmen and Order of Red Men. BIOGRAPHICAL 413 Robert R. Grimes, twenty-two years a re^irlpnt ..f r.Tf ■ ■ of Missouri and was born at Macon City Ztst7 tLoTrnT' ^^ ^^^^^ James Grimes, was a California pioneer of lS?n l^- 1 [ Hisfather, was Sara. Bast, died .Hen .e ^ l^tli ^ n mors^oM' Ind^TroT "rt™: h s l:fe was one of Itardsliips and uncertainties. During childhood un.ih SIX years of age, he lived with an aunt at New London Mo lat"t " time with a neighbor, Robert Briggs From 856 to ,s/n h" r \ ' ut"^ '°™ Ui.rrU r> 1 1-1 ""feto^- -Tiuin 16:5 to looO he lived with Profps^nr Hugh Dunlop, wh.ch makes the sum total of his school days He then worked ou on farms. In 1868 he married Miss Ann T. Carter near Perry Rolscrnt Hrb"i Xsi nT rr ^T'^^^ot- ^""' 't'^-' '-'^^ ^^°^^^^ V, odint JO Ky. Lo. In 1870 he went to Dallas Texas Tn 1S7^ h^ TZTyVnl fo^""" ''"' 'T""" '" ^""'"^- L^'- he'purchased a b rom nlSSi he sTdT.™ '■"" '" '"''"' '^™°"' ™™ =""3 manufactured broomT In 1883 he sold this property and bought lands in Texas County southeast Mtssoun. Later he purchased the Smalley Hotel at Licking Mo wtthou't crches' "Z .'""' '"• M ''*'■ ''"'' " "''"*'' Monica-unable to walk of Stephe?wk on "^f f °°" ^^'^ '° --^ and obtained his first employment 01 Stephen Jackson. He later spent one year at the U. S. Government Forestrv Station and later was gardener for Senator John P. Jones for two yea s He is well known m Santa Monica as an expert florist and scientific gardener Fo h s second w, e Mr. Grimes married Miss Annie Wilson, a native of County Monaghan, Ireland. Mr. Grimes is father of six children b^ his former marr.a^e' Pasadena Wnr' ' /n'" Dom.nguez, of Los Angeles; Mrs. Clark Burnham 'of Pasadena, Wilham. of Orcout, California; Robert and John, of Los An=.eles twJ'"', ^/""r"" *' ^ "''"™ °^ ^P"^™" County, Kentucky, born about pI rish bo^h r A""" "^ " *'" ^°" °' ^^™''^ N. and Francis Eldr^™ Tu ,^ u ViTgmm. He is a carpenter by trade and a contractor and bmlder by occupation. He raised six boys and four giris. The sub ect of W tts trade Let""' T" '"' °"' °"^ '" ^''"^°--- «« -medlre L^ ! tZf , V " " "' '"'""'y y'^'' °* "»<=• ^'' "-^"t to Michigan spent a h 1 rieVLt" M-f; ^"a *'r,T"' '° ^°°' ^™"'y- O"'- At'Milto'nvi 1 /oll^ f u n ■ P"' ^'"^- "*"■ "■= *™' to Terre Haute Ind the followmg fall. Commg west to Des Moines. la., he there spent about th'irtv 7ssIZlTT'r'T'r '"'"^'"^ °P^^^'-"^- "« -™ to CaHornL n cl ■ dren iwo h 'f ^'"':'- *'"' ^""^'^ "^'^"^ J"'^ ^^f^' 'S^'. 1-ving six cniidren,*two by a former marriage. > t, i.v thel»?? '''°w o"^' *'■■■ ^""'^'' "'"■"'='^ Emily C. Bedwells Potts, widow of the la e James W. Potts, one of Los Angeles' best known pioneers Mr. and Mrs. Parrish live near Twentieth and Oregon Avenues, Santa Monica They are members of the Church of the Nazarene, Los An..eles 414 BIOGRAPHICAL The names of Daniel Shively, with that of his most estimable widow, are intimately associated with the history of the City of Sawtelle. Mr. Shively was a native of Ohio and was born in Hardin County, October 24th, 1846. At the age of nine years he was comi>elled to assume responsibil- ities to aid in support of the family that usually come to men only. Upon the breaking out of the Civil War he enlisted in the 130th In- diana Infantry and served in the ranks for a period of three years, participating in many of the blood- iest battles of the conflict. He was twice wounded, an injury to his head causing him pain up to the day of his death. After mustering out of the army, Mr. Shively follow- ed contracting in brick work near Lima, Ohio. In 1876 he married at Fort Wayne, Indiana, Miss Sarah Lucelia Booth, a daughter of Sidney Smith and Mary Jane (Whaiples) Booth, of Mentor, Ohio. Mr. Booth was of English parentage, a son of Sir John Booth, Earl of Booth Ford, North of England, a landlord of wealth and high social standing. He came to America and located at Mentor. Sidney Smith Booth latterly located with his family at Paynesville, Ohio, and it was here that Mrs. Shively spent her girlhood. She was educated in a private school under the care of a governess. Mrs. Mary Jane Whaiples Booth was a direct descendent of William Whaiples, who was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. Immediately after marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Shively came west to Peru, Kansas, where he engaged in farming and she, meantime, taught school. Later they lived at Dedan, Chanute and finally at Chard, Kansas, where they engaged exten- sively in merchandising and where he held the office of postmaster. Here they suffered severe loss by fire — the store with a valuable stock of merchandise all going up in smoke. Mr. and Mrs. Shively then went to Coffeyville, Kansas, and she engaged in the restaurant business, while he conducted a photograph gallery. In 1888 they came to California and for a time lived on Spring Street, Los Angeles. In 1901 they located at Sawtelle when the now thrifty little city was in its infancy. They invested in town property and became a factor in its industrial social and civic advancement. D.-\NIEL SURELY. BIOGRAPHICAL 415 Mr. Shively was in every way a most exemplary and useful citizen. He was a devout member of the religious order of Dunkards, was broad in his piety and tolerant of the religious beliefs of others. He was an honored member of Burn- side Post, No. 188, G. A. R., of Sawtelle, and the following tribute to his memory is quoted from a Memorial Address of the Post published in the Sawtelle Sentinel: "In the death of Daniel Shively, another name is stricken from the ever lessening list of the G. A. R. He was a man of generous impulses and never forgot the hospitable ways of the pioneer. The stranger and the beggar never failed to find food and shelter at his hands. He was often at the bedside of the sick, and he delighted in the performance of all kinds of neighborly offices. He was a man of sound sense and strong convictions. He was candid and out- spoken in his convictions. He lived nobly and died peacefully." .Mr. Shivelv died June 26th, 1907, the result oi' a stroke of ])aralysis about six months previous thereto. The funeral obsequies took place at the Baptist Church, the Rev. George Taylor preaching the sermon which was followed by the service of the G. A. R. and the W. R. C. Interment was in Sunset Cemetery, at which a choir rendered his favorite hymn, Only Renienibered By What I Have Done. Mrs. Shively is one of the most widely and favorably known of the women of Sawtelle. Upon arrival there she plunged into local work for the social, spiritual and civic upbuild- ing of the community. She worked diligently for the establishment of the first day school in Sawtelle, and was one of the prime movers for the first Sunday School, contributing the necessary funds to establish the same at Wyant's Hall on Fourth Street. She is prominent in the work of the W. R. C. and has served three terms as its patriotic instructor. The following resolution of respect will indicate the esteem in which she is held by the corps : "Whereas, That while we recognize that the present success and pros- perity of this Corps is due to the earnest efforts of all its members, we would at this time especially honor our Patriotic Instructor, Sarah L. Shively, the organizer of this Corps, who has by her generosity and constant efforts for the betterment of the Corps, won our highest esteem and deepest gratitude. Therefore be it MRS. shive;ly. 416 1'.1()(;R.\I'HICAL Resolved, That Sarah L. Shivcly be recognized and honored as the Mother of Burnside W. R. C, No. 105, G. A. R. ; that the proper record be made on our minutes and a copy of this resolution properly attested be given to Mrs. Shively, and that our Post be duly notified of our action. Elmira J. Stewart, C. P. Seville A. Gray, Secretary. She is a leading ' ' Rebecca ' ' and has served two terms as Chaplain in the local lodge. In 1904 she organized and uniformed the Sawtelle Guards, made up of twelve of Sawtelle 's brightest boys, which became a feature of the social life of the new town. She was the leading spirit in the organization of the Sawtelle Cemetery Association, of which she is now secretary and treasurer. Mrs. Shively has been a leading spirit in all communities fortunate enough to claim her as a member. Los Angeles was comparatively a small city when, in 1888, Mr. and Mrs. Shively came from the east and located there. Mrs. Shively was soon discovered and enlisted in the work of the Chamber of Commerce, then just organized and located in Mott Market, and served as one of the active mem- bers of its directing committee. Later they lived near Tropico and were instru- mental in securing the betterment of the highways betw^een Tropico and Los Angeles, notably the building of the old Walnut Street bridge, crossing the Arroyo Seco at Twentieth Avenue — a result of her individual effort. While a resident near Tropico and the Southern Pacific Ry. track she, one dark night, in 1890, hearing unusual sounds of distress and though ill, ventured out to learn its source, and discovered that a team of horses had run away onto the railway right of way and fallen into a cattle guard, breaking their legs and obstructing the track. She rushed to the house, lighted a lamp and returned barely in time to flag an oncom- ing passenger train by frantically swinging her light across the track. Such heroism is certainly worthy of marked recognition, yet Mrs. Shively relates it as the performance of an act of duty simply. Mrs. Shively, while a practical, discerning and alert woman of action, is at once inherently retiring and unobtrusive. She is nevertheless found wide awake when occasion demands and duty calls. Benjamin Stickney Hunter, of Santa Monica, is a native of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he was born November 10th, 1879. He is the son of a manu- facturer of linseed oil. Mr. Hunter passed his early years and was educated in the City of Milwaukee. He studied law and was admitted to the bar. He married Miss Mabel Genn, October 30th, 1905. In July, 1896, he came to Cali- fornia, located in Los Angeles and entered a law office as clerk. He was ad- mitted to practice 1901. Later he took up his residence in Santa Monica and commenced the practice of law. In 1907 he was appointed City Attorney of Santa Monica to succeed F. H. Taft, Esq., resigned. He served until January 1st, 1908. Mr. Hunter is a member of the B. P. O. E. BIOGRAPHICAL 417 Major Robert Dollard, a recent acquisition to Santa Monica, with his wife came here to make their home early in the winter of 1907. The Major was born at Fall River, Mass., in sight of Mount Hope, on Mount Hope Bay, where the famous Indian chief, King Philip, fell, and in view of the mouth of Taunton River, which empties into that bay where Thor Fin, the sea-roving Norseman, wintered in the eleventh century with one hundred and fifty men, four hundred years before Columbus discovered America. Major Dollard was born on March 14th, 1842; was educated in the public schools of Massachusetts, enteied the Union army at the outbreak of the war and served in the field with credit and distinction until its close. He rose from the ranks to major and the command of his regiment and was one of the youngest regimental commanders in General Grant's army in the campaign before Rich- mond and Petersburg, Virginia, in 1864 and 1865. During that campaign, in a battle before Richmond, w^here sixty percent of the men engaged were killed or wounded, he w^as promoted on the field by order of the commanding general of the Army of the James, the substance of which was : "Captain Robert Dollard, acting as field officer, and in command of the skirmish line at New Market Heights, inspired his command by his great personal bravery, coolness and ability, until he fell severely wounded near the enemy's main line is hereby promoted to major." Major Dollard went with his regiment to the Mexican frontier at the close of the war to join an army assembled along the Rio Grande to give the Emperor Maximillian and the French Emperor, who was backing him, a hint that the United States, having settled its family difficulties, was now ready to test the virtue of the Monroe doctrine, but the withdrawal of the French army from Mexico and the failing fortunes of Maximillian settled the question without hostilities and the troops thus assembled were mustered out early in 1866. Shortly after this Major Dollard located at Galesburg, Illinois, studied law and was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of that state in 1870. He married Miss Carrie E. Dunn, of Yates City, Illinois, in 1875. They have no children. He continued in the general practice of the law in Knox, Peoria and Fulton Counties, Illinois, after his admission, until 1879, when he located in Douglas County, Dakota Territory, a frontier county, in which he was the first settler. During the early settlement of this county a band of adventurers secured its organization and attempted to plunder it of about two hundred thousand dol- lars by the issue of fraudulent warrants on its treasury but were met by the honest settlers with Major Dollard at their head and, in a contest in and out of court, lasting ten years, in which was engaged some of the best legal talent in the North- west and the effective services of a vigilance committee, the conspirators were routed, driven from the country and the people saved from their fruadulent schemes. The major was a leading member of the Constitutional Conventions of South Dakota in 1883 and 1885, in the movement to create a state out of the south half 27 418 Bl()(;RArirriCAL of Dakota Territory, the last of which framed the constitution of the present State of South Dakota, and the work of which conventions practically resulted in the admission into the Union of the States of both South and North Dakota. He was elected District Attorney in 1885, Attorney-General of the Provisional State Government for South Dakota in the same year, a member of the Territorial Senate in 1888, in which he was Chairman of the Joint Committee of both Houses on the reform of the school law ; was elected the lirst Attorney-General of the State of South Dakota and served two terms during which he framed legislation that lifted the state from a condition of bankruptcy and has continued it on a cash basis ever since. He was subseciuently a leading member of the House of the State Legislature and later of its Senate in which he was Chairman of the Judici- ary Committee. He was still later successively an anti-machine candidate for Governoi and for Congress in a revolt that several years struggle crowned with success. James O. Hodgson, retired, of Santa Monica, is of the many permanent residents of the city, attracted to Sunny California to spend his declining years in quietude after having spent the active years of his life in the East and Middle West. He is a native of Onandaga County, N. Y., born in the township of Manlus, August 14th, 1838. His father, James Hodgson, was a native of the Empire State. Both paternal and maternal grandparents were from Manchester, England and came to the United States and located in 1801 near Auburn, N. Y. James Hodgson, with his family, located upon the then western frontier in the town of Elba, Lapeer County, Michigan, and took up government land when Michigan was a territory. They had five sons of whom James O. is the only one living. He attended school there and grew to manhood. It was a sparsely settled country, principally inhabited by Indians, and he was one of four white pupils who attended their district school, the others being Indian children, eighty in number, belonging to the Nypsing tribe, that inhabited the Flint River Valley. Upon the breaking out of the Civil War, young Hodgson, on the 16th day of October, 1862, responded to the first call for 300,000 men and joined the Tenth Michigan Infantry, went to the front and participated in some of the hardest fought battles of the war, notably those of Pittsburgh Landing, Shilo and Corinth. He was an expert rifle shot and was at times detailed for duty as a sharpshooter. He served the full time of his enlistment and was mustered out August 19th, 1865, at Ross Ville, Ga., and immediately re-enlisted and joined the Atlanta campaign, during which seige he was one hundred four days under continuous fire. During his army career he participated in upwards of thirty engagements and was con- tinuously with his regiment. He was mustered out of service at Louisville, Ky., the 19th of August, 1865, and returned to the peaceful pursuits of farm life. He was married May Lst, 1866. to Miss Alma Campbell at the old home. BIOGRAPHICAL 419 She was daughter of Chas. L. Campbell, a pioneer of Lapeer County, Michigan, town of Hadley. She was born in the town of Davidson, Gennessee County, Michigan, where her father engaged in farming, lumbering, kept a hotel and was an active and successful man of local affairs. Mr. Hodgson located in Flint City and engaged in the lumber business from 1872 to 1879. In 1882 he filed a Soldier's Claim on a quarter section of land in Esmond Township, Kingsbury County, Dakota, which he improved as a farm. He also kept a hotel at Esmond Valley and finally retired to DeSmit City, South Dakota, where they lived until finally coming to Santa Monica in April, 1907. They own one of the many beautiful homes of the Crescent Bay City, No. 437 North Fourth Street. They have an adopted son, W. K. Hodgson, a prosperous merchant of Del Mar, Iowa. Almon H. Calkins is a native of Oswego, N. Y., born January 1st, 1841. His father was Almon Calkins, a native of Connecticut, a Methodist clergyman of the Genesee, N. Y., Conference. He is of Welch ancestry. The mother of Mr. Calkins, Susan Alma, was a Quakeress, a na:tive of New York. The family came west in 1850 and located at Janesville, Wisconsin, where young Calkins grew up and passed through the public schools. Upon the breaking out of the Civil War he enlisted for the conflict under Professor Cass, who organized Company A, 40th Wisconsin Infantry and was elected its captain. This company was largely made up of Captain Cass's former pupils of the Janesville High School. They went to the front under the ninety days call of 1864, and were stationed at Mem- phis, Tennessee, where he suffered a sunstroke while under a forced march which permanently incapacited him for further military duty. He was honorably discharged from the service and returned home with his regiment. He then turned his attention to the development and promotion of a new device for burning fuel oil, of his own invention, upon which he was granted a series of letters patent by the United States Government, and which was also patented in foreign countries. He also, in company Vv-ith brothers, acquired ownership of several patents on barbed wire for fencing purposes, which they for years controlled in this country, the revenues from which made the brothers wealthy. The financial crisis of 1873 proved a disastrous occurrence for this and hundreds of other well-established business enterprises, which was followed by the death of the brothers and loss of health by the subject of this sketch. He came to California and Santa Monica in 1879 which has since been his home. Mr. Calkins has two sisters, residents of Santa Monica — Juliete, widow of the late Judge Boyce, and Jennie M., widow of M. Boyce, a prominent attorney of Illinois and a half brother of Judge Boyce. Mr. Calkins leads a quiet life and attributes the prolongation of his life to the health-giving climate of Southern California. E. C. GIRD. BIOGRAPHICAL 421 H. N. Hammond, capitalist and well known citizen of Santa Monica, is a native of Oakland County, Michigan, having been born in the town of Waterford, April 2Sth, 1876. His father, Eli Hammond, also a native of Michigan, was a merchant of Waterford. His mother, before marriage, was Miss Nettie Fifield. In 1S82 the family removed to Benton, Montana, where they remained about four years, afterward returning to Michigan and locating at Decatur. At this place Mr. Hammond engaged in the mail order business for a period of about eight years. He married at Decatur, August 24th, 1897, Miss Edith McOmber, a daughter of George McOmber, a merchant of that city. In 1898 Mr. Hammond removed to Bay City, Michigan, where he continued in the mail order business, wholesale and retail. In 1904 Mr. Hammond and his wife came to California and lived for one year at Ocean Park. The following year he made purchase of a lot on the now magnificent Palisades tract. They erected the first costly and archi- tectural residence thereon which is today one of the most spacious homes in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Hammond have two children — Harriet Janeita, and John D. Edward C. Gird, a California pioneer and well known citizen of Los Angeles and Sawtelle, is a native of Illinois, born in the town of Trenton, Clinton County, March 12th, 1863. His father was Edward Kinsley Gird, a native of Louisiana, whose father was a military instructor at the United States Military School at West Point. Later in life he went south and established a military academy in Louisiana. Edward K. Gird, with a brother, Henry H. Gird, made the trip overland to CaHfornia with ox teams, from Illinois in 1853 and remained here about five 3^ears. In 1858 they returned home. In 1868 Mr. Gird located in Bates County, Missouri, where he lived until he came to Los Angeles in 1883, bringing his family, which included Edward C, the subject of this sketch, then twenty years of age. They purchased eighty acres of land near the city of Los Angeles for which they paid $85.00 an acre, and embarked in the dairy business, which they conducted for about eight years. Los Angeles was then a city of about 20,000 people and their farm was considered quite in the country. With the marvelous growth of Los Angeles, this property was taken into the Wilshire Boulevard Tract and a portion into the Norwood Terrace Tract and now sells at the rate of about $15,000 an acre. Here the father died in 1900 at sixty-six years of age. Mrs. Gird, the mother of our subject, still occupies a portion of the old homestead and enjoys good health at seventy-one years of age. In 1896 Mr. Gird organized a newspaper route for the Los Angeles Daily 7 lilies, taking in the Soldiers' Home and contiguous country. Upon the founding of the town of Sawtelle, he opened there a news stand in which he carried a stock of books and stationery. This was the first store of its line in the town and he operated it about two years. Mr. Gird also became interested in real estate and bought and sold town property with a reasonable degree of profit. In 1907 he subdivided what was known as the Gird Tract of one hundred and ten 422 BIOGRAPHICAL residence lots, lying to the southeast and adjoining the city of Sawtelle, which is so favorably situated as to promise a substantial addition thereto. Mr. Gird owns and conducts a souvenir store at the Soldiers' Home, which he established about 1895, and has built up a good business. He has published a number of valuable souvenir books relating to the home life of the old veterans. His kindly spirit and uniform courtesy has made him exceedingly popular with the "old soldiers" of the Home, as with all others who know him. Mr. Gird married, in 1888, Miss Frances C. Walbridge, of Appleton City, Mo. She is a daughter of W. D. and Anna Van Meter Walbridge. Mr. and Mrs. Gird have two children — Mabel A. , and Anna Lucile. Mr. Gird was a charter member of Immanuel Presbyterian Church, of Los Angeles. The family are now members of the M. E. Church of Hollywood. The family home is at South Hollywood where the Girds own valuable property. Benjamin F. Van Tress is one of the early day pioneers of Los Angeles. He came to California in 1859. He is a native of Clinton County, Ohio, and was born near Wilmington, the county seat, December 26th, 1836. His father, William, was a carpenter by trade, a farmer by occupation, of Dutch descent. His mother, Melissa Hollister, and his father were both natives of New York and lived in the Mohawk Valley. The father was twice mariied, the subject of this sketch being one of two sons by first marriage. The other son, Charles, came to California in 1897, and went to Alaska where he died. Benjamin lived in his native county until 1854 and with the family removed to Warren County, Indiana, where he took up carpenter work. He later joined the gold rush to Pikes Peak, proceeded wxst to Nebraska City, Nebraska, and abandoned the trip. He there joined an overland party bound for California, and drove a four horse team via north Platte to Salt Lake, thence via southern route to San Bernardino with Joseph Meeks, and arrived at his destination in 1859. He spent two weeks there and then came to Los Angeles. Here he followed his trade for about seven years, doing a large amount of work for Bishop Mora. He worked on the building of the present Catholic Cathedral ; was one of the workmen who remodeled the Church of Our Lady of the Angeles, fronting the old Plaza. He personally laid out the work for the present "hip roof" and designed the old belfry that in 1904 gave place to the present mission arches. He describes the original building as having a flat roof with a slightly receding pitch to the rear, which was coveied with asphaltum and soil mixed. He states that the bells were originally in small adobe arches so near the ground that a person of average height could reach the clappers and ring them. There was one bell hung in an arch, which surmounted the front wall of the building over the main front entrance. Later Mr. Van Tress kept a meat market opposite the northwest corner of the old plaza. BIOGRAPHICAL 423 He married in 1863, Falipe Mendes, a daughter of Pedro Mendes, a manu- facturer of Spanish saddles, bridles, bits and spurs. He was an expert in his line of work. Mr. and Mrs. Van Tress have seven living children — Elizabeth, Mrs. Frederick Bickerdike; Ida, Mrs. J. R. Kull Franklin; Clara, Mrs. George Hall; William; Alice, Mrs. Allen Orr, and Charles. The family home is Twentieth Street, near Pennsylvania Avenue, Santa Monica. Hester Tuttle Griffith. The past decade has witnessed in South- ern California phenomenal progress in civic, political and .social reform. The best thought and energy of the best people in nearly all walks of life have combined to bring about in the most direct and practical manner possible these most salutary results. Especially is this true in the work of Temperance and Social Purity reform in which many of our most able and accomplished women of independent thought and achieve- ment have borne a conspicuous part, prominent among whom is Mrs. Hester Tuttle Griffith, of Coeur d'Alene Place, Ocean Park. Her mental endowments, her home life and her educational training seem to have specially fitted her for charitable and reformatory work. Mrs. Griffith is a native of Min- nesota, born at St. Anthony Falls, where the city of Minneapolis now stands, September 22nd, 1854. Her father, Calvin Tuttle, was one of the frontier settlers of the Upper Missis- sippi and Saint Croix River vallev. He, with his bride, crossed Lake Pepin and sailed up the Mississippi, thence up the Saint Croix in a small boat, to Saint Croix Falls where, in 1837, he built the hrst saw mill erected on that stream and where for a long time they were the only white settlers. Ten years later they removed to Saint Anthony Falls, the head of navigation on the Mississippi. and were among the founders of the ambitious city of Minneapolis. Here a son. Wilmot Garfield Tuttle, was born, the first white male child born in the then HKSTFIK TITTLE GRIFFITH. 424 r.lOGRAPHICAL small town of i\:inneG| olis. When, in 1S49, the territory of Rlinnesota was established, !\Ir. Tuttle was appointed Territorial Treasurer, and held the office until the territory was made a state. May 11th, 1858. He was a typical north- west frontiersman of broad intelligence, sterling character and resolute purpose. He acquired large land holdings at Saint Anthony Falls, a portion of which he donated to the state for educational uses and which is now occupied by the Minnesota State University. Later in life he built saw mills at Lake Minnetonka. He also became heavily interested in the development of the water power and town of Little Falls, Minn., and owned large tracts of land in that vicinity. He traveled over unexplored regions of country looking to final develop- ment of the state by building of railroads and other enterprises. He suffered business reverses by reason of the financial crash of 1857. Up to that time he had been very active in milling and in the promotion of milling enterprises at St. Anthony Falls. He w^as also instrumental in bridging the river below^ the falls, the hrst bridge that spanned the "father of waters" at this point. He then w^ent to Two Rivers, Minnesota, and built up extensive water power and lum- ber mills and there remained until he came to California. He married Char- lotte M. Minkler, at Upper Alton, Illinois, in 1840. She was a native of Hills- dale, Columbia County, New York, born July 31st, 1819. They had three sons and four daughters, the latter are (1908) all living'. Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle came to Pasadena in 1888 to make their home with Mrs. Griffith and, notwith- standing their love for and loyalty to their old home state, became thoroughly wedded to Southern California and Pasadena, where he died November 17th, 1900, at nearly ninety years of age. Mrs. Tuttle also died at Pasadena in 1892. Mrs. Griffith spent her childhood at Minnetonka Mills, Minn., and her girl- hood at Tw'o Rivers. At fourteen yeais of age she entered the Minnesota State Normal School at St. Cloud and graduated therefrom at sixteen in June, 187L After graduation she taught school at Melrose, Stearns County, Minn., and later at Little Falls. She then went to Minneapolis where, for five years, she taught in the public schools, three years of which time she was primary principal. February 4th, 1877, she married Mr. Elijah Griffith, a prosperous young contractor of Minneapolis. Mrs. Griffith w^as converted to Christianity at the age of fifteen under the temperance evangelist. Rev. W. W. Satterlee, and has steadily grown in the faith, towering in strength and influence until she is known throughout the land as one of the most effective advocates of temperance and pure living engaged in the holy cause. Never having been accorded the blessings of motherhood, she has been thrown all the energies of a strong, most lovable and spiritual character into w^hat she regards as her life work. Soon after coming to Pasadena she joined the Women's Christian Temperance Union and entered seriously into the work. This was followed by rescue and prison work in Salt Lake, Utah, for four years. The year 1892 she served as local president, territorial president and treasurer. This vear she also went as territorial delegate to the national BIOGRAPHICAL 425 W. C. T. U. convention at Denver. Returning to Pasadena she was made president of the Central Union for two years. Moving to Los Angeles, she held the office of Federation President for eight years, of County Vice President five years and is now State Superintendent of Prison Work and National Evange- list under this department, also National Lecturer for the department of Soldiers and Sailors. In 1906 she was elected by unanimous vote. President of the Los Angeles County Union and re-elected in 1907. This is the largest County W. C. T. U. in the United States. At the Santa Ana convention (1908) she was unanimously chosen State President. Martin L. Hudson is one of the thrifty, successful pioneers in the Irwin Heights Addition to Santa Monica. He is a native of Pennsylvania, was born in Charfield County, in the town of Charfield, June 1st, 1855, a son of Kalita Polk Hudson, a blood relative of James K. Polk, eleventh President of the United States, a bridge builder by trade and likewise a farmer and a man of local affairs. He married Mis3 Kezia Thompson, a daughter of Isaac Thompson. The family came west in 1865 and, located in Floyd County, Iowa, on a farm. There the father died in 1881, at fifty-seven years of age, the mother and seven children surviving. Martin L. is the oldest of the family. He remained on the home farm until twenty-one years of age. Meantime he acquired the mechanic's trade, having inherited from his father the mechanical instinct and a genius for handling tools. In 1883 he left Iowa and spent about five years in Dakota. In 1888 he went to the town of Everett, on Puget Sound, Washington, where he engaged in build- ing and house moving, where he acquired and still owns j^roperty. During his residence there he made four trips to Alaska. In 1896 he went to Cook's Inlet. In 1898 he went to Klondike where he had passing success mining. He returned home in the fall of 1899 and made the trip a fourth time in 1900 over the ice and w^as forty days alone on the way. He there engaged in building, "going" wages being $1.50 per hour. He finally returned home, via Saint Michaels, suffering shipwreck and extreme exposure. In 1902 he located at Santa Monica and followed his trade for a time. He meantime purchased five acres of land, one of the most fertile and sightly parcels of land in the Irwin Heights tract, a portion of which he still owns. Here he has developed a pretty home, the location being between Virginia and Delaware Avenues, on Twenty-second Street. He purposes selling a portion of this tract to desirable purchasers. He also owns valuable property in Ocean Park. Mr. Hudson married in 1891 Miss Hattie Maxfield, of Tacoma, Washington. She is a native of Illinois — a lady of social and domestic accomplishments. They have one son, Fred M. Mr. Hudson is a member of the Woodmen of the World and Independent Order of Odd Fello\ys. 426 BIOGRAPHICAL Andrew Henry Wyant, one of the first settlers and an esteemed citizen of Sawtelle, is a native of Armstrong County, Pennsylvaina, born December 24th, 1839. His father was Adam Wyant, a native of Burks County, Pa. He was of German descent and by occupation a successful farmer. His mother, by maiden name Sarah Ycrty, likewise of Greman ancestry, descended from that sturdy stock of Pennsylvania Dutch which made up the pioneer settlers and developed the material resources of the Keystone State. Adam Wyant suffered the loss by death of the thrifty wife who had borne him seven children and re- married, his wife being Sophia Bowser, wdio became the mother of ten children. The mother of A. H. Wyant died when he was six years of age and he lived much of the time thereafter with relatives. At twenty-one years of age, he was among the first from his state to enlist for the defense of the Union, joining the Second Pennsylvania Cavalry, October 1st, 1861. This regiment was recruited at Philadelphia, Lancaster Center, Northampton, Berks, Tioga and in Armstrong County. Company M , Mr. Wyant's company, was made up chiefly in Armstrong County. Mr. Wyant put in three years and eleven months of active and most strenuous service, as may be seen by the following battles and other engagements in which he participated: Cedar Mountain, second battle of Bull Run, Gettys- burg, Mine Run, Wilderness, Todd's Tavern, Richmond Fortifications, Meadow Bridge, Hawes' Shop, Hanover Court House, Cold Harbor, Trevillian Station, Jerusalem Plank Road, Malvern Hill, Deep Bottom, White Oak Swamps, Beane's Station, Poplar Springs, Wyatt's Farm, Strong Creek Station, Boydton Road, Hatches Run, Appomatox and others. Although almost continually on duty and at long and numerous intervals under fire, he was singularly fortunate in escaping serious injury. He, however, sustained a flesh wound in the left aim in front of Richmond at White Oak Swamps, August 16th, 1864. He mustered out of service at Cloud's Mill, Va., July 13th, 1865, after which he returned to his native state. There he attended school at Rudsburg for two years and at Chester for one year. He then engaged in the oil business at Parker's Landing with moderate success. In 1871 he married Miss Frances Lydia Harding in Armstrong County, Pa., and moved to Ohio where he located on a farm in Morrow County near the town of Gallon. Here he pursued farming and conducted a meat market. About 1882 he came west to Paola, Kansas, where he remained until 1886. He then removed to Arizona and engaged in mining about seventy-five miles south of Tucson. In 1892 he came to California and became a member of the Soldiers' Home. Upon the laying out of the town of Barrett Villa, which later took the name of Sawtelle, Mr. Wyant w^as one of the first to invest in local realty. In 1898 he erected Wyant's Hall which was the fifth building in the town, and soon became the popular meeting place for all public functions. It was there that the first religious meetings and Sunday schools were held and it was used as a public hall until December 15th, 1905. The owner then changed it into a furniture store which is one of the most com- BIOGRAPHICAL 427 plete establishments of its kind in Los Angeles County outside of the city. In this business Mr. Wyant has associated with him an only son, Charles H. Wyant. Mr. Wyant for years was a consistent member of the Baptist Church. He is now one of the ardent and loyal supporters of the Union Mission, Sawtelle. He is a man of exemplary habits and strictest integrity and is held in highest esteem by all of the citizens of Sawtelle. He has been enterprising and alert, encouraging and liberally supporting all movements for the upbuilding and betterment of his home city. His influence is always found favorable "To the promotion of a healthy condition of public and private morals. He is a Prohibi- tionist in politics but not radically partisan. Hon. Thomas Horace Dudley, mayor of Santa Monica, and by reason of his position, leading citizen, is a native of Liecestershiie, England, and was born October 2nd, 1867. His father, Thomas M. S. Dudley, M. D., was a son of Rev. William Mason Dudley, A. M , vicar of Whitchurch and rector of Laverstoke. Dr. Dudley married Emily Frances Draycott, daughter of Thomas Draycott, a farmer of Liecestershire, who bore him three daughters and a son of whom Thomas H. was next to the eldest. He was accorded the advantages of good schooling and passed through the Queen Elizabeth Grammar Schools. While yet a youth, the knowledge he acquired of American life and customs inspired him with a desire to try his fortunes in the new world. He came to the United States and located at Bakersfield, California, in 1889, and there engaged in the real estate and insurance business. In 1896 he removed to Santa Monica and engaged in the real estate and insurance business under the firm name of Proctor & Dudley. In February. 1899, he married Mrs. Matilda Brooks Ryan, of Santa Monica, widow of the late Francis G. Ryan; a lady of wealth, refine- ment and social prominence, and a daughter of Francis Wykoff Brooks (deceased) a California pioneer (see index). Soon thereafter the real estate firm of Kinney & Ryan, owners and promotors of the Ocean Park Beach Tract, was succeeded by the firm of Kinney & Dudley and under Mr Dudley's personal management this, then, new and comparatively undeveloped seaside resort was made a phe- nomenal success as time has duly demonstrated Mr. Dudley also became a fac- tor in other successful business enterprises. In 1902 he was one of the organ- izers of the Ocean Park Bank and has since been its president. In 1903 the Merchants National Bank was incorporated and he served as president thereof until early in 190S, when he was succeeded by James H. Giigsby. In 1905 the Bank of Venice was incorporated and Mr. Dudley was chosen, and still serves, as its president. In 1900 Mr. Dudley was elected a member of the Santa Monica City Board of Trustees, serving as chairman of the Board until 1907. Upon the reorganization of the city government under a Freeholders Charter in 1907, Mr. Dudley was elected mayor and is now (1908) the incumbent. He is a membet of the B. P. O. E., and a leading member and officer of the St. Aug- ustine Episcopal Church of Santa Monica. 428 iilOGRAPHICAL John J. Peveler, resirlent of California since 1882, a native of Illinois, was born in the City of Chicago at No. 252 Van Buren Street, January 12th, 1859. His father, George W. Peveler, was by occupation a farmer. He joined the United States Army as a volunteer in the War of the Rebellion, went to the front and was killed at the Battle of Antietam, September 17th, 1862, leaving a widow and an only child, the subject of this sketch. Young Peveler spent his youth in Chicago, attended the public schools and learned the carpenter trade and later the cement contracting business. In 1896 Mr. Peveler went to Alaska where he spent five years and passed through all the excitement and experienced the hard- ships of the gold seekers of Nome and Dawson. He returned to California in 1901 and for several years had charge of numerous jobs of construction cement work for the Los Angeles Pacific Railway Company. Mr. Peveler married in 1904, Miss Theresa H. O'Laughlin, a native of Litchfield, Minnesota, and they have one daughter, Virginia C. The family residence is at the corner of Ninth Street and Nevada Avenue, Santa Monica. James L. Brice, of Venice, a native of Hancock County, Ohio, was born May 24th, 1863. His father, Joseph Brice, was a native of Pennsylvania and a son of Henry Brice, a member of one of the pioneer families of Maryland, He was a thrifty farmer and lived in Washington County, Pennsylvania, when he entered for service in the War of 1812, following the example of his father who was a conmiissioned officer in the Revolutionary War. Joseph Brice was a sailor and navigated Lake Erie. He finally located near Findlay, Ohio, and en- gaged in manufacturing. He later removed to Lima, Ohio, where both himself and wife passed away. Mrs. Brice 's maiden name was Lucinda Wolf. She was a native of Ohio. James L. Brice received his education in the public schools of Allen County, Ohio. He graduated from the High School of Lima, Ohio, and embarked in life as a public school teacher. In 1886 he came west to Denver, Colorado, and later to Lyons, same state, where he engaged in the mercantile business, a member of the firm of Scanlon & Brice. In 1889, during the rush to Cripple Cieek, Mr. Brice removed thence to open a general merchandise store. Soon, however, he turned his attention to mining, in which occupation he has been eminently successful in various sections of the state. In 1894, he went to Leadville and in 1899 came farther west to Idaho and operated in the Couer de Alene country. He gained a technical knowledge of mining and became a practical mining engineer. In 1905 he became editor of the mining department of the Idaho State Tribune . In 1906 he established and edited the Idaho Mines and Metals, which property he sold in 1907, since which time he has been associated with various mining enterprises throughout the west. He is president and manager of the Snowstorm Extension Copper Mining Company, of which he is one of the developers, and in a similar capacity is identified witli the Idaho Lead and Silver Mining Company and the BIOGRAPHICAL 429 Whipple Mountain Gold and Copper Company, of San Bernardino County, Cali- fornia. In the year 1897 Mr. Brice married Miss Josephine M. Van Hansen, daughter of Hon. John C. Van Hausen, a wealthy farmer and pioneer of Schuyler, NebrasKa. He located at Schuyler about 1869 or 1870, and there married Miss Catherine Mohr. Of their five living children, Mrs. Brice is the oldest. Mrs. Jessie Brad- ford, widowed, is the youngest and is at home with Mrs. Brice. They were both born on the old homestead at Schuyler. John C. Van Hausen was a man of affairs, business and political. He has been honored with elections to the Nebraska State Assembly and likewise to the State Senate, as a Democrat. He was a son of Isaac C. Van Hausen, a native of Schoharie County, New York, and of Holland Dutch parents who were among the earliest pioneers of the Empire State. In 1907 Mr. Brice purchased valuable real estate on the Coeur de Alene tract near Venice of America upon which he has erected, without exception, the finest residence to be found in the Santa Monica bay cities. Mr. Brice is accounted one of the substantial citizens of the state, takes a broad view of life and a personal interest in the prospeiity of his adopted home city. Mr. and Mrs. Brice have one daughter, Beatrice M. Brice. RoscoE H. Dow, councilman from the seventh ward of the city of Santa Monica, was born in Booth Bay, Lincoln County, Maine, January 26th, 1873, and lived theie until twelve years of age. The family then removed to Bay City,' Michigan, and there young Dow grew to manhood. He received his education in the public schools of his native town and Bay City and finally attended Olivet College, Olivet, Michigan. While in Michigan he was more or less identified with Republican politics, holding various elective and appointive positions. At one time he had the distinction of being the youngest judge in the state, having been elected Justice of the Peace in Bay County, Michigan, immediately after attaining his majority. Mr. Dow is a son of John Wesley and Hattie (Tibbets) Dow, who were married in New York in 1 86 7 . John Wesley Dow was a native of Maine and was born in 1835, belonged to the Dows of English descent and bears rela- tionship to the late Honorable Neal Dow, of reform and prohibition fame. The major portion of his life has been spent as a mariner, having followed the sea from early boyhood until a time well into the eighties Hattie Tibbets Dow was also of old New England stock and her ancestors were sea-faring people Besides Roscoe H., there are two children— Frank H. and Maiy G. Mr. R. H. Dow came to California in 1903 and located in Santa Monica and soon thereafter assum.ed management of the business of the Southwest Warehouse Company. He m.arried in the year 1903, Miss Nellie K. Gillard, of Bay City, Michigan, a daughter of Henry B. and Jenrie (Evans) Gillard. They were natives of London, England, were married in 1866, and can:e to this country, locating at Port Huron, Michigan, in 1870. There he engaged success- 430 BIOGRAPHICAL fully in the lumber business, and later in farming and is now retired from active business pursuits. He reared a family of ten children. Mr. Dow was elected to represent the seventh ward of the city of Santa Moni- ca in the common council at the election in April, 1907, and is an efficient and conscientious officer. He is a member of committees on Finance and Supplies, Streets and Cemetery, and is Chairman of the Committee on Buildings. He is a member of the B. P. O. E., No 88, of Bay City, Michigan, and Santa Monica Lodge, No. 307. F. and A. M. Hon. H. B. Eak'ns, Mayor of Ocean Park, is a native of Pennsylvania, born in the city of Philadelphia, September 15th, 1865. He there spent his youth, attended the public schools and later passed through the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, Va., from which institution he graduated in 1880. He returned home and served an apprenticeship to the trade of watchmaking, which he later followed in Philadelphia and Washington, D. C. At Washington, he also held a position for about three years in the weather bureau under the U. S. Government. In 1887 he came west and spent two years in the Black Hills, South Dakota. There he followed his trade and also became interested in mining, being connected with the Home Stake Mining Company. He was also guard for the Wells Fargo Express Company during the period of extensive shipments of gold bullion from that district. Mr. Eakins also became interested, somewhat, in affairs of state and active in issues involving the location of the state capitol, making a systematic canvass of the country in the interests of the city of Pierre. At that time, William Jennings Bryan was canvassing North Dakota for the Farmers' Alliance and, as a matter of expediency, they joined issues, traveled together and spoke from the same platform, Mr. Eakin usually following Mr. Bryan in the presentation of his cause. He thus became intimately acquainted with the now great "commoner" and candidate for the presidency. In 1891 he came to Los Angeles. Here he became interested in mining properties in Arizona and also acquired an interest in and held a position with the jewelry firm of Montgomery Brothers, which interest he still retains. While with this house he personally installed the extensive time service of the Santa Fe Railway Co. in Southern California. In 1904 he organized the Commercial Warehouse Company (Incorporated), and is president thereof. He took up his place of residence in Ocean Park, No. 28 Club House Avenue, in 1903. In April, 1908, Mr. Eakins was elected member of the Board of Trustees of the city of Ocean Park and chosen President of the Board, by virtue of which position he is the executive head of the city government. Mr. Eakins, in 1890, married at Black Hills, S. D., Miss Gertrude E. Beemer, a native of Racine, Wis., and they have a son, Walter, and a daughter, Margaret. Mr. Eakins is a member of the Southern California Lodge, No. 2 78, F. and A.M. BIOGRAPHICAL 431 Clarence J. Nellis, leading merchant and representative citizen of Sawtelle, is a native of Livingston County, Mo. He was born October .3rd, 1866, only son of James J. Nellis, by profession a school teacher, now a resident of Sawtelle. Mr. Nellis spent his boyhood and attended the public schools in his native tow^n. At eighteen years of age he attended Park College, Park- ville, Mo., near Kansas City. He commenced his business career as a grocery salesman at Chillicothe, Mo., remaining there seven years. He then went to Tacoma, Wash., and worked in the same capacity for Fulton & Cathcart until they retired from business. He remained in Ta- coma until the spring of 1889, when he went to Alaska and engaged in mining on Forty Mile River. He located and worked claims in Frank- lin Gulch and Napoleon Creek, both tributary thereto. His expedition was on the whole a financial success. Mr. Nellis, coming to California in 1902, located in Sawtelle, engaged in the grocery business and has built up an extensive trade with one of the finest equipped stores in the Santa Monica Bay region. Mr. Nellis is one of Sawtelle's most enterprising and progressive citizens and has energetically worked for the advancement of the civic, business and social interests of his city. Upon the resignation of F. C. Langdon from the Board of City Trustees of Sawtelle, Mr. Nellis w^as appointed to fill the office and was promptly chosen chairman of the board. As the executive head of the city government he has made an enviable record, standing squarely for the enactment of statutory and efficient code of practical working ordinances and a faithful execution of the same. CLARENCE J. NELLIS. Nathan Bundy, one of the earliest residents of Santa Monica, was born in Morgan County, Ohio, December 16th, 1846, his father having died three months before his birth. He grew up on the farm and acquired a public school education. He learned the trade of house and sign painter which he followed in Iowa and to some extent after coming to California and locating in Santa Monica, April 30th, 1876. Santa Monica was then a small but growing village, nd Mr. Bundy 432 BIOGRAPHICAL did a successful business at bis trade Later he made judicious investments in real estate which proved profitable. He lived in Santa Monica upwards of twenty year? and in 1898 retired to Lo^^ Angeles, where he remained until 1907. At that time he built and located at Westgate. Mr. Bundy married Miss Harriet Smith and they have one daughter and five sons, the latter all highly esteemed and successful busines men of Santa Monica and Los Angeles — F. E. Bundy, G. G. Bundy, C. L. Bundy, Nathan P. Bundy and Thomas C. Bundy. The daughter, Sarah E. Bundy, is still at home. Charles Aley Bouck, of Venice, is a native of Green County, Ohio, where he was born in the township of Beaver Creek, July 1 1th, 1856. His grandfather, Henry Bouck, was a Pennsylvanian as was also his maternal grandfather, John Aley, and both were of Holland Dutch parentage. John Aley was an early-' day pioneer of Green County, owned valuable farm lands and a steam saw mill at "Aley's Mills," in Beaver Creek Township. The family had a large member- ship which, with its connections, constituted by far the larger portion of the thrifty and prosperous community; Sarah Aley Bouck was the fourth daughter of this family. Mr. and Mrs. Bouck had three sons — Orrin L., who became a wealthy manufacturer of Dayton, Ohio, died September 2 7th, 1906; William Lincoln, who died in infancy, and Charles A., the subject of this sketch. Mr. Bouck grew up on his father's farm and about the mills in which his father also was interested. At sixteen years of age he went to Dayton and attended the public schools about two years. He then followed the trade of carpentry about three years in Springfield, Ohio. Later he was with the Mast-Foos Co., manufacturers, until 1881. In 1881 he married Miss Cora D. Harnish, a daughter of Christian Harnish, a wholesale and retail grocery merchant of Springfield. In 1882 Mr. and Mrs. Bouck came to Los Angeles and were guests of the family of Ex-Mayor Henry T. Hazzard, whose residence was where the Grand Theater on North Main Street now stands. They were among the early comers to the Boca de Santa Monica Canyon. They returned east in 1884 and came again to California in 1890. In 1891 Mr. Bouck went to Colton and was one of the first purchasers of unimproved land in the now rich and beautiful Colton Ter- race tract, where he erected buildings and made other improvements. The same year, by the wrecking of a farm building during a severe storm, December 11th, 1891, Mr. Bouck received injuries which permanently disabled him for active business, but in no degree affected his mind. From the spring of 1897 to 1903 the family lived at Hollister Avenue and Ocean Front. In 1904 they Avere among the first to build at Short Line Beach, Venice, and have since been identified with the marvelous beach developments. Mr. Bouck takes a lively interest in all that transpires and, through his extensive reading, keeps in touch with the outside world. He is much interested in the development of his adopted city of Venice and has great faith in its future. Mrs. Bouck is a lady of splendid BIOGRAPHICAL 433 social and business attainments and lends her time and influence in forwarding the social and civic interests of Venice, and she has entire management of the Venetian Villa City. Mr. and Mrs. Bouck have one son, C. Harnish Bouck, born at New Carlisle, Ohio, February 25th, 1886. He married at Venice, December 12th, 1907, Miss Nettie Lillis Robinson, of Stockton, California. He may properly go on record as one of the active promotors of Venice, since in 1904 he aided in erecting the first building in the city having a roof, for the Abbot Kinney Company, and soon thereafter opened the first store which was located near the Ocean Front on the east side of Center Street. He is now chief engineer at the power house of the Abbot Kinney Company, Venice. Noah R. Smith, D. D. S., Santa Monica, is a native of Miss(juri and was born in the town of Claiksville, Pike County, February Uth, 1874. His father, John R. Smith, was a farmer by oc- cupation and was born in the same county in 1841, there grew up and married Catherine, a daughter of Noah Griffith, who came from Bourbon County, Ky., and pioneered in Mis- souri. John R. Smith's parents were Virginians and pioneered in Pike County, Missouri, as early as 1840, bringing with them considerable property which included a number of slaves. The father was a typical Southern man, a democrat of the pronounced type and a firm believer in the divine institution of slavery, the doctrine of the State's rights and secession. John R. Smith spent his entire life on his farm in Pike Coun- ty, and there raised a family of four children. While on a visit to Dr. Smith at Santa Monica he died, in 1901, and his remains were taken to Clarksville and laid beside his wife in the old family plot of the ClarkSville Cemetery. Dr. Smith is the third child of his parents. He attended the public schools of Clarksville, and later graduated from La Grange College, La Grange, Lewis County, Mo., in the class of 1891. He then attended the Western Dental College, Kansas City, Mo., graduating therefrom in 1896. He commenced practicing his profession at New Franklin, Howard County, Mo., and remained 28 N. K. SMITH, D.D.S. 434 moGRAl^HICAL there about Hve years. At New Franklin he met and married Miss Roberta M., a daughter of H. iM. and May (Hanson) Todd, now of Ocean Park, Cahfornia. By reason of faiUng health a change of climate was necessitated and they came to California, locating at Santa Monica in 1901. Mrs. Todd's mother, the grandmother of Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Sarah L. Hanson, is a resident of Beverly Hills. She is a charming and swxet -spirited woman of eighty-two years and is a native of Virginia. Her father was Colonel Peter Pierce who, during the period antedating the Civil War, was a foremost property owner and slave holder of Virginia. ' His ancestors and all the interests of the family were intimately associated with the history of that state. Dr. Smith has become a fixture, both as a successful dentist and an esteemed citizen of Santa Monica. He and Mrs. Smith are members of the Baptist Church. They have four children — Nelson R., John Robert., Roberta Elizabeth and J. Fred. The family home is No. 1417 Yale Street. The Rev. John D. H. Browne was born in Halifax, Xova Scotia, Canada, and educated at the grammar school, and by private tutors, and at Dalhousie College, Halifax, and King's College, Windsor, Nova Scotia. He was ordained deacon in 1873, having been the gospeler of a class of six. and priest in the following year, by liishop Binney of Nova Scotia, and entered at once upon the duties of the active ministry. In i88o Mr. Browne, having been the rector of the important parish of Dorchester, New Brunswick, was elected clerical secretary of the Diocese of Nova Scotia, and was also editor and publisher of Church Work, a very largely circulated monthly, and of The Church Cuardiau, published weekly, which soon became the most largely circulated Church paper in Canada. Ill health forced Mr. Browne to give up his important positions in the East, dispose of his jiapers. and remove to the P'acific Coast, in May, 1884, since which time he has been in active service in Southern California, where he has been successful in building a number of Churches, and in develojiing strong centers of Church work and life in several places. Mr. Browne built the beautiful Church at Pomona in 1885 ; a Church and rectory at Pasadena, in 1888; the Church at Covina in 1890; the Church in San Bernardino in 1898; and has greatlv enlarged and beautified the Church at Santa Monica, where he now resides, and of which Parish he has been the Rector for nearly nine years. Mr. Browne is a member of, and secretary to, the Standing Committee of the Diocese of Los Angeles. He is also chairman of the Convention's Com- mittee on Church Charities, chairman of the Committee on the Episcopate En- dowment Fund, chairman of the Press Coiumittec and chairman of the Commit- tee on Work Amonc: Seamen. bio(;raphical 435 In 1898 a Church paper for the Diocese was started and Mr. Browne was elected by Convention its editor, since which time the Los Aiigclcs Churchman has been continued under his editorial management. This |)aper is now owned as well as edited and published by him, and is successfully covering the field of Church Journalism in Southern California. The I^arish of St. Augustine-by-the-Sea, Santa Monica, when yiv. Browne took charge of it, reported twenty-seven communicants, while now it is in a very flourishing condition, having grown to 203 communicants and having be- come the seventh of all the Parishes and Missions of the Diocese. Mr. Browne finds time from his official duties to lend his aid to every public matter having to do with the moral and material welfare of the citv, and in the Board of Trade and elsewhere has been a useful and enthusiastic citizen, and a willint!' worker in advancing'- the "eneral interests of the communitw Thomas R. Lowe is a California pioneer, coming to the state from Girard, Erie County, Pa. He is a native of England, and was born at Durham in 1841. Coming to Canada with his parents in 1848, he located at Queenbush, north of Toronto, in the Township of Wallace. In 1863 he came to Pennsylvania and in 1867 to San Francisco, where he engaged in farming and a brief time at lumbering in the redwood forests of Mendocino County, near Eureka. In 1875 he went to Lincoln County, Nevada, where he engaged in farming on the Rio Muddy. From 1881 to 1883 he operated a ferry across the Colorado River at its junction with the Rio Virgin in Lincoln County, Nevada. In December, 1888, he came to Santa Monica, and for sixteen years was in charge of the property of the Santa Alonica Land & Water Company, as overseer of the water plant, and one of their trusted employees. He has made investments in Santa Monica property from time to time and now owns some of the best located residence property in the city. He is widely known and highly esteemed for his sterling traits of character. He has retired from active life. Frank Lawton, well known throughout this region of Southern California for his enterprise and business activities, is a native of Springfield, Hampden County, Mass., born August 12th, 1860. His father, Michael Lawton, was a civil engineer by profession and occupation and as such, was in the employ of the United States Government and, during the Civil War, served throughout the conflict as a member of the Engineer Corps. He was a native of County Cork, Ireland. He came to America when a young man, and married Elizabeth O'Reilly. They were thrifty, prosperous people and almost lifelong residents of Hampden County. They both died advanced in years at Chicopee Falls. 436 BIOGRAPHICAL In response to a burning desire for adventure and an ambition to see the world, Frank Lawton, at about eleven years of age, left home without even the formal consent of his parents, went to sea and for many years sailed the open seas, rounding Cape Horn and the Cape of Good Hope, visiting all the principal foreign seaports and San Francisco. After making a final voyage to Japan he returned to San Francisco and came south and located at Monrovia. This was in 1885 before the building of the Santa Fe Railway east of Los Angeles, when Monrovia was simply a "four corners" hamlet. Mr. Lawton here made his first business venture by opening the first hotel at Monrovia; later he opened the first restaurant in the town. He there met and married Miss Emily Kallmeyer, in 1886, a daughter of Garret Kallmeyer, a wealthy farmer of El Monte. This was the first wedding to take place in the new^ city. Mr. Lawton remained at Monrovia two years, then went to Santa Fe Springs, a new and promising health resort about twelve miles east of Los Angeles on the Santa Fe Railway, and opened a hotel. In 1889 he came to Santa Monica, opened a hotel of twenty-five rooms, and a restaurant on Long Wharf at Port Los Angeles and operated the same about four years. About this time the town of Sawtelle was exploited and Mr. Lawton was promptly on the spot with the first stock of general merchandise. This store he conducted for a time, sold out to C. J. Nellis and went to the new town of Sherman where he built a thirty-six room hotel, the Larramond . He did a successful business there for about three years, simultaneously having in charge the purchase and handling of all the commissary supplies of the L. A. P. Ry. Co. After the taking over of the property at old Ballona Harbor by the Beach Land Co., and completion of the improvements there, Mr. Lawton made a lease of the entire property and operated the pavilion dining rooms, skating rink and dance hall, two hotels, launches and row boats on the lagoon, etc., etc., making it an immensely popular resort for pleasure seekers until he sold out to C. M. Pierce, the present owner. In 1905 he took a lease on and opened the new ship hotel, Cabrillo, the auditorium and the Hotel St. Marks, at Venice. In this connection he brought to Venice the famous Ellery Band of fifty-four instruments which gave the new Venetian city a prestige and popularity that was the envy of all other resorts on the coast. In September, 1907, Mr. Lawton disposed of all his interests at Venice. Upon the retirement of Dana Burks from the Ocean Park Board of City Trustees, Mr. Lawton was chosen to succeed him and served until April, 1908. This is the only political otifice he ever held and it came to him entirely unsought. In the spring of 1908, Mr. Lawton negotiated leases on large tracts of the most picturesque portions of Santa Monica Canyon and also Rustic Canyon, tributary thereto, and is spending a large amount of money converting it into a first class pleasure resort. Famed for its natural scenic beauties, its towering bluffs, its grand spreading old sycamore trees, affording ample shade and ideal camping grounds, its abundant supply of cool spring water, its grateful breeze direct from the ocean, with direct transportation via L. A. P. Ry. from Los BIOGRAPHICAL 437 Angeles and all beach resorts on Santa Monica Bay to the canyon, surely Mr. Lawton's new enterprise cannot fail to prove a source of delight to all lovers of out of door life and rational recreation. It will be seen by the foregoing nar- ration of facts that Mr. Lawton is thoroughly possessed of the true spirit of the pioneer, having from the time he first came to Southern California been the first on the ground in undeveloped localities and new enterprises, alive to the demands of the present and the possibilities of the future and has ever "made good" in the accomplishment of his purposes. Mr. Lawton is the principal stockholder and president of the Montezuma Rubber Company of 'San Lviis Potosi, Mexico, extensive shippers and exporters of crude rubber, supplying some of the heaviest manufacturers of pneumatic and solid rubber tire manufacturers in this and foreign countries and employing from 350 to 400 men. Mr. Lawton owns a fine ranch and country home at El Monte and a seaside villa at No. 9 Club House Avenue, Venice. Mr. and Mrs. Lawton have two sons — David Edward, who is interpreter of Spanish for the Montezuma Rubber Co., in Mexico, and Homer Alfred, a student at Harvard Military School, Los Angeles. L. H. Case, M. D., Santa Monica, is a successful physician and is a native of New York. He was born in Watertown, Jefferson County, June 22nd, 1877, a son of Samuel Case, a respected and well known citizen of Santa Monica. Dr. Case was a boy of ten years when the family came to California. He received his schooling principally in the public schools of Los Angeles and Santa Monica. He studied medicine with the late Dr. J. J. Place, who, for about ten years, was a popular practitioner in Santa Monica. Dr. Case later took a course in medicine at the Hahnemann Pacific Medical College, San Francisco, from which institution he graduated in the year 1900, receiving the degree of M. D. He then returned to Santa Monica and commenced the practice of his profession. He is a member of the California State, and also, the Southern California Medical Societies. In December, 1901, he married Miss Catharyn Miles, a daughter of the lamented Rev. Elam C. Miles, a pioneer of Southern California and Santa Monica, a brief biography of whom appears on another page of this book. Mrs. Case is a native daughter of Santa Monica where she has passed the greater portion of her life. Dr. Case is a member of the F. and A. M. and the B. P. O. E., of Santa Monica. Mrs. Case is an active and popular member of the O. E. S., of Santa Monica and is Past Matron of the Santa Monica Lodge. She is also an active and effective worker in the Santa Monica Woman's Club, and one of its most popular members. In July, 1908, she was, by acclamation, chosen the club's president. She is charming in her personality, possesses good executive ability and makes an able presiding officer. 438 BIOGRAPHICAL Rev. Elam C. Miles (deceased) was born in Litchfield County, Conn., in 1832, a son of wStephen and Delia M. (Hawley) Miles. They were staid and highly res])ected New England people by Inrth and ancestry. He was a success- ful farmer. The son grew up on the old homestead, was passionately fond of good books and studiously devoted his spare moments to systemized reading and study; thus becoming in a liberal degree, self educated. He became an ex- pert mathematician and held the professorship of higher mathematics in Jefferson County Institute, St. Louis, Mo., when only twenty years of age. In 1861 he married Miss Elizabeth C. Massey in the town of Morris, Grundy Coimty, 111. Her father, Sylranus P. Massey, was of English and Irish exti action. He was a merchant by occupation and a native of Salem, Mass., where he grew to man- hood. He married Hannah Shedd, of Tewksbury, Mass., and there their two children, Elizabeth and Sylranus, Jr., were born, she being the eldest. She was born in the same house and rocked in the same cradle as was her father. About 1855 when this daughter was twelve years of age the family came on to the then western frontier and located in Illinois near the town of Manlins, La Salle County. Later the father became a prosperous merchant in the town of Lostant, in the same county. He there died at about seventy-five years of age. By a second marriage he left a son, Solon P. Massey, of Lake Mills, Iowa. Elam Miles joined the ministry and upon coming to California occupied the pulpit of the Unitarian Church at Pomona. He came to Santa Monica in 1878, when it was a small village. Here he held the ofhce of Justice of the Peace and was an effi- cient officer. He soon thereafter located on a ranch in Blakes Canyon, a mountain resort back t)f the Malibu Grant. Here for a time he engaged in bee culture. Returned to Santa Monica and later went to Florida where he spent several years. Returning to Porterville he there died in the year 1900, at about seventy-six years of age. He was a scholarly man and left a very large and valuable library. Besides Mrs. L. H. Case there are, of his children living — Waldo P. Miles, of Corona; George C. Miles, of Los Angeles; G. Bennett Miles, of Riverside; Bessie, wife of Peter Ting, of Porterville, California; Clara, Mrs. Clarence W. Preston, of Exeter, California, and Mabel, Mrs. Charles W. Smith, of Scioto, 111. Simon N. Talkington, for upwards of forty years a resident of California, was born in Crawford County, Arkansas, May 15th, 1846. He is the son of Allen A. Talkington, a native of Todd County, Kentucky, and by occupation a farmer. Later he pioneered with his family on the western frontier of Arkansas. Of the wafe and children mention is made in the sketch of James S. Talkington, in this work. In 1864 Mr. Talkington and an older brother, James S., were induced to join the southern army. Mr. Talkington was a youth of eighteen years and, in fact, knew little of the issues involved in the great civil conflict and the actual status of affairs. The two brothers, in time, made a journey across Southwestern Texas into Mexico and joined in the revolution then in BIOGRAPHICAL 439 ])rogress in that country, enduring great hardships and passing through many thrilHng experiences. They finally, however, arrived home in good health. In 1868 he preceded the family to California and located at Campo, in vSan Diego County, there engaging in stock raising. The family, including his parents, soon joined him. In 1869 they all moved to Orange, then Los Angeles County, and in 1885 he removed to Los Angeles and in 1891 to Compton, thence to Tropico. In 1903 he located in Santa Monica and on July 12th, 1905, he married Miss Olive Watenpaugh, of Santa Monica. He has invested in Santa Monica residence property. Mr. and Mrs. Talkington are member of the First Methodist Church, of Santa Monica. Gkack AdKLK t'liiKCE, a literar}- woman and lecturer, for six \ears a resident of Santa Monica, is the daughter of John C. and Alarron A. ( Pingrey ) Pierce, and was born in N'ew York State. She was educated in her native State and in Boston, where she trained for literary work and public speaking. She is an au- thor known on both continents, her ])oet- icil work being represented wilIi honor in tl:e I)ibliotheque National, Paris. She is the author of two books. " The Silver Cord and The (lolden Bowl " — a volume of poems — and " Child Study of the Clas- sics," used in the schools of lioston and introdrced as a text-book throughout the state of Massachusetts. ( )f her book of poems. Dr. Richard Burton says : ■■ This book contains genuine ]3oetr\-. Ihe work is artistic, refined, pure and high i'l quality, and inspired b\' worthy ideals. The work should be encouraged b\- all earnest lovers of literature, because its ethical infiuence is strong and the reader, while enjoying a poem sesthetically, is made better for its message." Mary Holland Kinkaid, the novelist, in writing of Miss Pierce, says: " Two poems in Miss Pierce's volume have enjoyed wide fame. Thev are the sonnets on Queen Victoria and on Browning's ' Saul' The sonnet on Queen \'ictoria attained a wide vogue in Great Britain. Miss Pierce's later poems fulfilled the promise given by these two remarkable sonnets. While the author has the poetic gift she has such versatility that she finds little time for verse. Her short stories are likely to make her name in a field where few achieve supremacy. Xo one GRACE ADELE PIERCE. 440 BIOGRAPHICAL in California better understands the technique of the short story and no one can handle a dramatic incident more artistically. 'This fact has been so well recoo^- nized l)y eastern editors that ]^liss Pierce has been kept busy tilling- her numerous commissions. As a ])latform speaker Miss Pierce is not less brilliant than as a writer. She has a talent for oratory ; she has something to say and she knows how to sav it, for in all her activities she is an artist." Miss Pierce is a contributor to many of the leading- magazines and journals of the East and is writing largely for the western press. She is associated with many of the organizations for the betterment of humanity and is deeply inter- ested in the wage-earning woman's problems. She is on the Advisory Board, Committee of One Hundred, the National Health League. New Haven, Conn., and is on the Board of Directors, the Ladies' Auxiliary R. C. P. A., Denver. Colorado. Miss Pierce is also a member of the International League of Amer- ican Pen Women, Washington, D. C, and is associated with the Southern Cali- fornia Woman's Press Club. Before coming to California Miss Pierce was con- nected with Chautauqua publications, having been classed among " The Makers of Chautauqua Literature." Bishop John H. Vincent. Chancellor of this great educational institution, said of her work : "Miss Pierce's work is worthy in every way. She has genius. The book reveals it. It yields the pleasant aroma of a human heart that has companioned with Nature, felt the spell of Art, experienced the joys and sorrows of Life, and found rest in God. The book does credit to her intellect and sympathies." Miss Pierce has an adopted sister — Miss Caroline M. Simmons — who has close companionship with her in her life and work. ToM ScHOFiELD is a native of England, born in Wales, March 21st, 1877. In 1879 the family moved to Yorkshire, England, and there lived until 1889 and then emigrated to the United States, locating in Edmunds County, South Dakota, where they pursued farming. There Tom attended the local public schools, learned the trade of blacksmith and became a horseshoer. There the father, John Schofield, died, and the widow, with four sons and one daughter, came to California in 1902 and located in Los Angeles. These children were Ernest and William, who are residents of Los Angeles, and Herbert in Mexico. Mr. Schofield married in Santa Monica Miss Mary A., daughter of Thomas Lawson. Mr. Schofield purchased the business of Robert Nairn in Santa Monica in January, 1907. He is a member of the Modern Woodmen of the World, Lodge No. 2 719. Mr. Schofield 's mother and sister live in Los Angeles. Mr. Schofield is a thorough mechanic in his line and turns out only the best class of work. He has recently distinguished himself by building at his shops, on Second Street, the first automobile built in Santa Monica. BIOGRAPHICAL 441 Edward F. Bontty is a native of Oregon, born at Portland, February 7th, 1877. His father, Joseph Bontty, is a Bohemian by birth, was born in Austria and came to America at twenty-five years of age and located at Portland, where he engaged in the building business. He lived in Santa Monica from 1885 to 1905 and engaged in the giocery business; he also became interested in some successful real estate deals. He then removed to San Diego, where he is now engaged in the grocery business. He has two sons and one dauo-hter. One son, Joseph, is a conductor in the employ of the Los Angeles Pacific Electric Ry. Co. The daughter, Sebaldeni, is Mrs. R. R. Tanner, of Santa Monica. Mr. Bontty came to Santa Monica with his family in 1883. Here he attended the public schools, was for several years salesman in his father's grocery, the first store opened at what was originally known as South Santa Monica. This cov- ered the years 1898 to 1905. ]\Ir. Bontty was a conductor four years for the Los Angeles Pacific Ry. Co., which position he resigned and in April, 1906, opened his present store — fish, poultry and game — on Utah Avenue, between Second and Third Streets. Mr. Bontty married September 4th, 1903, Miss AHce Novetny, of Chicago. They have one son, Richard Robert Bontty. Mr. Bontty is a member of the Masonic fraternitv and an Eagle. Ralph Bane. A sketch of Santa Monica's first Treasurer, under the Free- holders Charter may be read with interest by those not intimately acquainted with him, because of the responsible public position he holds and by any who may have misgivings as to what a young man of metal and earnest endeavor can accomplish in our sun-kissed land of material promise. Mr. Bane was a native of Ohio and was born at Newark, February 22nd, 1879. His father, Frank Bane, a merchant tailor of Newark, died in 1886, when his only son was but seven years of age. Mr. Bane, at the very tender age of two years, suffered the irreparable loss of his mother in 1881 , when he was practically adopted by his great aunt, Mrs. C. B. Buckingham, of Newark, a noble woman of great benevolence and christian fortitude, he being the last and youngest of her fourteen adopted children. She passed to her final reward at her life-long home in Newark on July 1st, 1907, at eighty-three years of age. Young Bane grew up under the tender care of his foster mother, passed through the excellent graded public schools and took a course of study at the Newark High School. From his seventeenth to his twenty-first years he engaged in various local business ventures, in which he succeeded. In the year 1900 he went to Zanesville, Ohio, and with J. H. Stephen embarked in general merchandis- ing. The new enterprise suffered unforseen business reverses and closed out. In 1902, Mr. Bane, somewhat impaired in health, came to California and soon after reaching Los Angeles, came to Santa Monica. He soon obtained employ- ment as conductor for the Los Angeles-Pacific Ry. and remained with the com- pany two years. 442 lUociRAI'HlCAL He resigned his position and for a period of about nine months acted as inspector of street work for the City of Santa Monica. He then went to Sacra- mento and acted as clerk of the legislative committee on public buildings and grounds, Thirty-sixth Session of the California Legislature, 1905. Upon return- ing, he accepted a position as Deputy County Tax Collector under W. O. Welch and served until March 1st, 1907. This position he resigned and became a candidate for the office he now holds under the Freeholders Charter. In the per- formance of the duties of the positions he has held Mr. Bane made a wide circle of friends and acquaintances and his htness for the office of City Treasurer was not questioned, but became a factor in according him victory. Mr. Bane married, in 1899, Miss Edith, a daughter of Elkanah T. Perry, and a niece of the late lamented W. H. Perry, a widely known and eminently success- ful pioneer of Los Angeles and Santa Monica. Mrs. Bane is a native of Newark, Ohio, and they were youth-day accpaintances. They have one daughter, Ethel Lillian, born in Newark. Mr. Bane is a Republican in politics, and a charter member of the B. P. O. E. of Santa Monica, and a member of the Woodmen of America, Los Angeles. Mr. Bane is a courteous and unassuming gentleman, an ideal public official who is thoroughly wedded to a faithful performance of the manifold duties of his office. Francis Wycoff Brooks, was a California pioneer of 1850, a native of Boston, Mass., where he was born March 14th, 1821. He was educated at Walpole Academy, Walpole, N. H. Later he went to New York City and, with a brother, engaged in the wholesale paper business. When the reports of the discovery of gold in California became current in the east, he joined the rush to the new El Dorado. After some experience in the mines he, with his two brothers, Horace and George Brooks, engaged in the wholesale paper business on Sansome street, San Francisco. He was a vigilante and did much for the establishment of law and order in San Francisco in the early days. The firm did a prosperous business for about twenty years, their field of operation extend- ing throughout the state. The brothers, individually, acquired large property interests in the city. Francis W. Brooks married Miss Matilda Smith, daughter of Floyd Smith, a leading business man and prominent lay churchman in New York City, where she was born , reared and educated. The marriage took place June 20th, 1855, and they came direct to California via the Panama route. Of their children two are still residents of this city, viz. — Matilda, now wife of Mayor T. H. Dudley, and Alice Brooks, who lives at the old home. Another daughter, Mrs. J. Erwin Hoy, lives in Paris, France. Mr. Brooks died in Battleboro, Vt., in 1885. In 1890, the family located in Santa Monica at the corner of Third and Washington Streets, where Mrs. Brooks died in 1897. BIOGRAPHICAL 443 Harry Fraxtz Rile, a well known photographer of this city, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 1st, 1860. His father was John C. Rile, a carpenter of English parentage, and his mother, Sarah Frantz, was of Dutch descent, born near Norristown, Pa. Mr. Rile spent his youth at his native home and at about eighteen years of age he took up photography in Philadel- phia and by degrees worked his way to California, via Chicago, Kansas City, and Portland to San Francisco and thence to Los Angeles. On December 20th, 1887 he reached the latter citv and almost immediately opened a studio on North Beach in Santa Mon- ica. For twenty years he has been continuously in the photographic bus- iness on this beach. Mr. Rile mar- ried, in 1889, Miss Georgetta May Heimer, a daughter of George Heim- er, of Galesburg, 111. She was born in the city of Galesburg. Mr. and Mrs. Rile have two daughters, Maud Frances and Caroline Inez. Mr. Rile is a member of the Royal Arcanum and Woodmen of the World. The family residence is at the corner of Eighth Street and Oregon Avenue. H. F. RILE. E. A. PrEuss, for forty years a resident of Los Angeles, is a native of New Orleans, La., and was born June 7th. 1850. When yet a child the family re- moved to Kentucky and located in the city of Louisville, where he attended the public schools and business college. In 1861, he entered the employ of a drug store in Louisville as an apprentice to the business which, after several vears. he thoroughly mastered. In 1868 he came to California, and. following a brief stay in San Francisco, he came to Los Angeles and embarked in the drug busi- ness. In 1875, he associated in business with the late John Schumacher, one of the best known of the early pioneers of the city. Some vears later. C. B. Pironi succeeded to the interests of Mr. Schumacher and the business continued until September. 1885, when Mr. Preuss permanently retired. In June. 1887. Mr. Preuss received the apjxMntment of postmaster of Los Angeles bv the lamented President, Grover Cleveland, which ofifi.ce he acceptably filled to Feb- ruary 14th. 18'>0. until the ajipointment of his successor. His encumbencv cov- 444 BIOGRAPHICAL ered four years of the most phenomenal growth that Los Angeles has ever had, known a,s the boom of 1887 to 1889, and it may safely be stated that probably no postmaster in any city of the conntry ever held his office under more stren- uous conditions. \W reason of the great and sudden influx of people from all parts of the country, the postoffice, not any too well equipi^ed for handling the business of a city of 12,000 people, was required, before Mr. Preuss' term of office closed, to meet the demands of 50,000 inhabitants, and this through one office, there being no branch stations. The office was then located on North Main street near Republic, opposite the Baker block. As the boom crowds in- creased the clamor for mail at the windows became so great that two long lines of men and women extended up and down Main street waiting their turn. ]\Ir. Preuss promptly petitioned the government for an increased allowance for the employment of additional help, and for a branch office in East Los Angeles, but relief, because of the exact and deliberate routine of the department business at Washington, was meager and slow in coming. The total cash handled during the year 1887 was $1,838,000.00, being an increase of more than $700,000.00 over 1886. Stamp sales alone exceeded $120,000.00 for the year 1887, when the office handled the mail for over 200,000 transients. Mr. Preuss retired from the office with a splendid record as a man of executive ability and ready resource for emergencies. During those days, Mr. Preuss was wide awake and ready to take a hand in forwarding the best interests of Los Angeles, and was also iden- tified with the social life of the city. He was one of the charter members of the Turn \"erein, organized in 1870. He was one of the prime movers in the organization of Los Angeles' first athletic club, in 1883. In 1877 he married Miss Mary A., eldest daughter of the lamented John Schumacher, one of the most prominent and highly esteemed pio- neers of Los Angeles, of 1847. Mr. Schumacher was a native of Wurtemburg, Germany, and was born January 23rd, 1816. In 1832, being then an orphan, he left his native town and went to Paris, soon thereafter coming to America. He lived in New York until 1846, when he enlisted for the Mexican War in the First Regiment New York X'olunteers, under Col. John D. Stevenson, and was mustered into Company G. On Septeml:»er 26th of that year he sailed for San Francisco in the ship Thomas H. Perkins, arriving at destination in the month of March, 1847. The following May they shipped for San Pedro and reached Los Angeles on the 9th of that month, there remaining until mustered out of service, September 18th, 1848. He almost immediately set out for the newly discovered ])lacer gold diggings on Sutter's Creek, El Dorado county, where he unearthed a gold nugget for which he realized $800.00. He continued in the mines for several months, having fair success, then returned to Los Angeles and embarked in merchandising in a store near the northwest corner of Spring and First streets, which property he very soon acciuired, together with all the lind bounded by S])ring, First, Fort (now Broadway), and Franklin streets, for which, it is said, he paid $700.00. He also later owned a tract of land at what BIOGRAPHICAL 445 is now Temple street and Belmont avenue, which, in company with Jacob Bell, he used as a sheep range. He was a man of energy and enterprise and experi- mented with the raising of grapes without irrigation on land he owned between Los Angeles and the sea — being a portion of the old Brea grant. He acquired other lands in the city which ultimately became very valuable. John Schumacher was a popular citizen, having a host of friends. He served on the Citv Council two terms. He spoke the German, English, French and the Spanish languages, was everybody's friend and was specially useful to the Spanish and non-English speaking people in adjusting their business affairs, as all had unbounded faith in his unerring judgment and integrity. In 1880 he built the Schumacher block on his property. First and Spring streets, then regarded as one of the most sub- stantial and architectural business blocks in the city. It stands today as a fitting monument to his enterprise and stability. He also built what was for years known as the White House, a pretentious and very substantial business block at the corner of Commercial and Los Angeles streets. He died from the effects of a stroke of apoplexy, March 2nd, 1885, leaving a valuable estate and an un- tarnished name as an inheritance to his six children. These children, besides Mrs. Preuss, are Carrie, who is the widow of Professor Paul Schumacher (no kin) — John H., Frank G., Percy F., and Arthur W. Mr. and yivs. Preuss are old-time summer residents of Santa Monica. They have one son, Kenneth. Claude W. Rogers, well known and successful meichant of Santa Monica, was born at Shawneetown, Johnson County, Kansas, July 31st, 189?. His father, Walton Rogers, a native of Kentucky, born in Gallatin County, was a Doctor of Medicine. He emigrated with his wife to Kansas in 1864. In 1859 they returned to Carrol County, Kentucky, and located in the town of Ghent, w^here young Rogers grew up. At sixteen years of age he went to Denver, Colorado, and worked for various commercial establishments as an accountant. He came to California and to San Francisco in 1893, where he spent three years. In 1896 he came to Santa Monica, taking a position with A. F. Johnston, merchant. Later, for two years, he became manager of the business. In 1906 the A. F. Johnston Company was incorporated and Mr. Rogers became a director thereof. Upon the untimely death of Mr. Johnston, Mr. Rogers succeeded to the piesi- dency of the corporation. The A. F. Johnston Company is extensively engaged in the wholesale and retail grocery business, being the most progressive and prosperous in its line in the city of Santa Monica. Mr. Rogers married in the city of Santa Monica in the year 1900, Miss Grace, daughter of the venerable Thomas H. Elliott, a most highly repected pioneer of Santa Monica. Mr. and Mrs. Rogers have one daughter, Arta. Mr. Rogers is a member of the F. and A. M. and the B. P. O. E. The family home is 928 Fourth Street. 446 r.IOGRAPHICAL h. A. ixGKKSULi-,, of Santa Monica, was born in the village of Delta. Eaton county, Michigan, August 7, 1851, a S(mi of Alexander and Emeline liaker Inger- soll. Alexander Ingersoll was a son of Erastns Ingersoll, who with a family of thirteen children located large tracts of heavily timbered land on (irand river in the interior of the lower peninsula of Michigan, in 1836, when that State was a Territory. He obtained a charter from the T. S. (jovernment to build a dam across the river, erected a sawmill and a grist mill, which formed the nucleus to a growing and prosperous community. l'])on the death of Erastus Ingersoll a large landed estate came into the possession of members of the famih and Alexander Ingersoll became owner of the water power and mills. He also owned timber and agricultural lands. He improved the milling property, built up an extensive business and was a moving spirit in the community He served sev- eral years as a member of the Count}- IJoard of Supervisors and was also for a long period director of the schools, deacon in the church and superintendent of the Sunday-school. Besides his interests in Delta he became interested largely in the milling interests of Lansing. In later years he closed out his interests in Michigan, located at Saint Croix Falls, M^is., where he died in 1890. Emeline E>aker Ingersoll was a native of the town of Stafford, Gennesee county, N. Y., a daughter of Captain Remember Baker, who was a grandson of Captain Remember Baker, a brother-in-law of Colonel Ethan Allen of Revolu- tionary fame. Captain Baker commanded a company of Green Mountain boys, and w'as Colonel Allen's second in the capture of Fort Ticonderoga in the name of "The Great Jehovah and Continental Congress." Baker immediately there- after took possession of Crown Point, was betrayed by Indians, and beheaded. His name is recorded in history as the first ofificer killed in the American Revo- lution. Captain Remember Baker, the maternal grandfather of L. A. Ingersoll, early in life went to sea, became master of a ship and navigated North river. He was the pilot of the Robert Fulton on its first voyage up the Hudson river. 'He was a .soldier of the War of 1812 and under General Brown held a captain's roving commission and did his country great service as a scout. He located on Grand river near Delta, Michigan, in 1836, later settled at Portland, thirty miles distant, where he died in 1846. Emeline Baker Ingersoll, his daughter, in early life taught school and later married at Delta. She was a woman of splendid domestic attainments and great kindness of heart. During her many years of active life she was tireless in church, Sunday-school and charitable work. She died at her home at Saint Croix Falls, Wis., February, 1906, at 83 years of age. L. A. Ingersoll grew up in the village of Delta, attended (llivet College. Olivet, r^lichigan, spent seven years in the dry goods house of an uncle. Harley Ingersoll. at Lansing, Mich., spent two years seeking health in the northwest, was from 1879 to 1886 engaged in compiling local history in Michigan, Illinois, Kentucky, New York and the New England States. In 1886 he established and for two years ])ublished the Saint Croix 1 'alley Sfaiuiard news]-)aper at Saint BIOGRAPHICAL 447 Croix Falls. Wisconsin. In 1888 he came to California and has devoted about twentv years to collatino-. writing- and publishing California history. In 1904 he published Jjii^crsoH's Century .liinals of Scui Bernardino County. Ingcrsoll's Ccnfurx History of Santa Monica Bay Cities, 1908. is the second book of a series of local histories he has in various stages of development. He married October .Tth at Ypsilanti. Michigan, Miss Mary Elizabeth Otto, a daughter of George and Rose Otto, pioneers of Southern Michigan, and there is one daughter. Grace. W. M. Palmer was born near Iowa Falls. Iowa, on October 23rd, 1870. His parents were New England Quakers of vScotch, Irish, French and English lineage and pioneers in the settlement of Iowa, having emigrated from the eastern states while Iowa was a wil- derness. His grandfather, John Caldwell, was the first Justice of the Peace in Hardin, Hardin County, Iowa, at a time when Indians and land claim jumpers were the chief subjects of judicial inquiry and legal enactment. The family continued to reside in that locality for more than fifty years. The subject of this sketch was graduated from Iowa Falls High School in 1888, after which a three- year course of study was pursued in Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa. Always, from inclination, associ- ating with youth, Palmer naturally became a teacher in the public schools of Iowa, though his first efforts as a pedagogue were put forth in Albany County, Territory of Wyoming. In this field of usefulness his predilection for athletic sports made him a favorite among the younger residents of the community in which he taught. Owing to the support of this element, while principal of the schools at Webb, Iowa, Palmer was elected mayor of the town and continued to hold that office until he took up the study of law, though the principal duties of the mayor of that town were to declare small pox quarantines and to act as police judge. In 1902 the study of law was taken up by Mr. Palmer, his preliminary study being directed by the law firm of Bryson & Bryson and by the Honorable S. M. Weaver, since and now a member of the Supreme Bench of the State of Iowa. In 1904 Mr. Palmer became a resident of the citv of Santa Monica, where W. M. PALMER. 448 BIOGRAPHICAL he has since resided, continuing his law studies in the office of Judge George H. Hutton. He was admitted to the. bar of CaHfornia in 1905. In 1894 Mr. Palmer was married to Miss Myrtle B. Mosely who had been his schoolmate from the primary grade. To them have been born four children. Mr. Palmer has, since 1886, been a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church and occupied a number of official positions therein. He is an enthusiastic believer in the brotherhood of man and advocates strongly fellowship and sym- pathy as a means of aiding mankind. He is also is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. George W. Foster, well known citizen and trustee of Ocean Park, is a native of Sangamon County, 111., born February 2nd, 1840. His father, Col. John D. Foster, was a lawyer by profession, and a native of Clark County, Ky. He was a pioneer of Sangamon County, lived near Springfield and practiced law throughout that region of country contemporaneously with Abraham Lincoln, not unfrequently opposing him in court. Mr. Foster's mother was Eunice Miller, also a native of Clark County, Ky. Mr. Foster was the eldest of seven children and spent his boyhood in Sangamon County. In 1853 the family removed to Missouri and settled at Kirksville, the county seat of Adair County. At the breaking out of the Civil War he recruited the 22nd Missouri Volunteer Infantry and commanded the same during the conffict. He was a brave and fearless officer and led his men in bloody charges against the enemy's breastworks at the seige of Corinth and in many other hard fought battles. Notwithstanding his youth, young George W. joined his father's regiment and was at his side during and to the close of the war. He held a commission as Quartermaster- Sergeant. He participated in the hottest of the fight at Corinth and many other battles. He served three years, luckily escaping bodily injury, and was mus- tered out of service at St. Louis in February, 1865. After the war he returned to Sangamon County, 111., and pursued farming until 1878, when he removed to Kirksville, Mo. There he left his family and went to Leadville, Colorado, to engage in mining. He followed mining in all of its phases until 1902, when he came to Ocean Park, bought a home and settled down. Leisure proved not a luxury to him, however, and he took up his trade, that of a carpenter, and is the efficient foreman of the carpenter department of the Abbot Kinney Company at Venice. Mr. Foster married, at Kirksville, Mo., Miss Margaret Scott, a native of Boone County, Ky., born 1845, who was sixteen years of age at the time of her marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Foster have four children living — Emma, wife of E. D. Wheeler, of Ocean Park; W. F. Foster, of Denver, Colorado; Abbie A., Mrs. F. C. McArthur, of Los Angeles, and Dora Bell wife of Fred Olds, of Milwaukee, Wis. John D. Foster met accidental death in a mine in Colorado in 1902, and George E. died at the age of twelve years in Denver. BIOGRAPHICAL 449 Mr. Foster is an active and popular citizen and takes an interest in local public affairs. In April, 1908, he was elected a member of the Ocean Park Board of City Trustees and is a member of the following important committees: Fi- nance, Lighting, Building and Lands. He is a charter member G. A. R., Farragut Post Dunn, is enrolled at the Soldiers' Home and is pensioned at $12.00 a month. Walter Mundell, P. M. of Sawtelle, is a native of Scotland and was born in Ross-shire, within three miles of Lands End, September 4th, 1842. His father was Robert Mundell, a shepherd by occupation and a son of David Mundell, who was by trade a cabinet maker. He was a prominent Free Mason and received his third degree in that order from Robert Burns, the great Scotch poet, who was then master of Kelwinning Lodge No. 1. David Mundell and Robert Burns were strong personal friends. There is now in possession of David Mundell, an older son, the first copy of the first edition of Robert Burns" works, presented to David Mundell by the author. David Mundell at the time lived in Dumfriesshire, where Burns was government excise officer. Walter Mundell was about fourteen years of age when the familv left their native heath and came to America. They located in Pickaway county, Ohio, on a farm where the parents lived until the close of their earthly career. Besides Walter, there are two sons living, David and James, the former at the , old home and the latter in Wilson county, Kansas. In August, 1862, Mr. Mundell, with his brother, James, enlisted in the Civil War and were mustered into Company A, 114th Ohio Infantry, under Captain John Lynch. They served under Grant at the siege of Vicksburg, where the subject of this sketch was wounded in both arms and taken to the army hospital at New Orleans. While there he was nursed by Mrs. Lizzie Southworth. A warm friendship ripened into mutual love and, when he had sufficiently recovered from his wounds, they were married September 20th, 1864. They made a wedding journey to the Ohio home, where the wife remained while the husband returned to his regiment at the front to complete his term of enlistment. Mrs. Mundell is a daughter of James Ince and was born in England, Chor- ley, Lancashire. Her father was a wholesale merchant. She grew up at her native home and there married George Southworth, who was by trade a painter and glazier. They came to America in the year 1859 and located at Lancaster, Dallas county, Texas. L'pon the breaking out of the Civil War. Mr. South- worth was conscripted into the Confederate army. He determined not to fight against the Union and crossed the Rio Grande into Mexico, where he was taken sick and died in the vicinity of Monterey. The stricken widow and only son. John, took the remains to Monterey, where the interment took place and she proceeded to return to England. Upon reaching Brownsville, she met General Herron. who induced her to take up army nursing. The battle of Brownsville 29 450 BIOGRAPHICAL soon took place and she accepted the offered position of nurse. She went down the Rio Grande river, crossed the gulf as nurse in charge of the hospital boat and landed at New Orleans, where she continued her work. The Mundell brothers both filled out their terms of enlistment and were mustered out of service in August, 1865, having served three years. Mr. Mun- dell, after the war, returned home and followed his trade, which was that of a millwright, and also that of stationary engineer. He came with his family to California and in 1887 located in Los Angeles, purchased a home and for a time lived in retirement. Later he was for about eight years in the employ of the street department and latterly four and a half years the park commissioner of the city. He located in Sawtelle in the fall of 1904, and in 1906 was ap- jiointed postmaster of that city by President Roosevelt. Mr. and Mrs. Mundell have one son, Robert, wdio is engaged in the lumber business at Oberlin, Kansas, and a daughter, Myrtle, who is assistant postmaster at Sawtelle. Mrs. Mundell has, by her former marriage, one son, John Southworth, who is proprietor of the Southworth apartments on Kinney street. Ocean Park. Mr. Mundell has always been an active republican and, while never seeking ofihce, has repeatedly attended the party conventions as delegate from his home district or precinct. He is a member of the F. and A. M. Joseph Jefferson Davis, widely known as a successful man of affairs, as head of the Santa Monica Land & Water Company and identified with other extensive business enterprises, is a native of Ottawa, Canada, born August 8th, 1869. His father, Jefferson Davis, was a capitalist and land owner, a native of Lancaster, England, and his mother, Mary Proctor, was of Sussex, England. The family came to the United States and located at Milwaukee, Wis., about 1862, there the father died, the mother surviving until 1903, when she passed away at Santa Monica at seventy-five years of age. Mr. Davis came to California in 1890. In 1895 he entered actively into the organization of the United Electric Gas & Power Company, for the purpose of supplying light, fuel and power to the city of Santa Monica and vicinity. Mr. Davis was vice president and general manager with offices at Santa Monica. In 1900 this company's stock and plant was sold to the Edison Electric Company and Mr. Davis, in 1905, associated with R. C. Gillis, purchased the San Vicente y Santa Monica Grants and interested others with them, which resulted in the development of that section of the country known as Westgate, Brentwood Park and Carlos Heights along the foothills. In 1903 Mr. Davis formed a company and took over all of the interests of the Santa Monica Land & Water Company. He also purchased the unsold lands of the San Vicente and the Boca Santa Monica Grants (see index, West- gate) and has spent an almost fabulous amount of money in improvements there- on. Mr. Davis, vice president of the Santa Monica Land & Water Company, BIOGRAPHICAL 451 is a stockholder and director in the Broadway Bank in Los Angeles and has other extensive financial and property interests. Mr. Davis married, in 1896, Miss Emma Volkman, a daughter of Martin Volkman, of Santa Monica. They have three sons, Herbert Leslie, Robert Carlyle and Joseph Jefferson. The family residence is one of the finest modern country seats at Westgate. Alf. Morris, popular citizen of Santa Monica and president of the City Council, is a native of England, now fifty-six years of age. He received his education in a private grammar school and at the age of sixteen years entered the counting house of one of the largest foreign shippers as an accountant. He spent several years in this employ and acquired a thorough knowledge of the business. Subsequently he took a position as an employee of the Great Western R. R. Company, acting as chief clerk in a branch ofifice. He arrived in New York City nearly thirty years ago and spent two years traveling in the states. He then engaged in the hotel business in the city of Chicago and met with a liberal degree of success. He came to California and located at Santa Monica in 1894, successfully conducting a restaurant business. In October, 1898, he purchased the Santa Monica Steam Laundry, operating the same until October, 1905. He built up an extensive and profitable business in this line, later disposing of it. He then bent his energies to the building of the Kensington Apartments. These have proven to be, not only an innovation in the line of family residential apartments, but with their convenient location to the quick transportation to and from Los Angeles, their close proximity to the sea beach and surf bathing and with their grand views of the ocean, they compose one of the most valuable property holdings of the kind extant. Mean- time, Mr. Morris has made several profitable real estate deals and has, withal, become one of Santa Monica's most substantial property owners. Mr. Morris has always been enterprising and alive to the best interests of his adopted city, and has borne his part in the promotion of its civic and political welfare. He was elected to the first city council under the Freeholders Charter from the fourth ward and took his seat April 15th, 1907. He was chosen pre- siding officer of this body. As president of the council his services have proven valuable, having brought honor and dignity to the position by the pursuance of a broad, impartial and judicious policy. His genial personality, uniform kind- ness and courteous bearing must have had much to do with his prosperity and success in life. Mr. Morris' mother died when he was yet a youth. His father, was, for many years, a manager for some of the largest mercantile houses in England. He died greatly respected in the year 1891. Mr. Morris married Miss Annette Olsen in the city of New York, January 20th, 1890. She is a daughter of Prof. O. Olsen, of Chicago, a native of Norway, and one of the finest scenic and land- scape painters in the country. J. H. DOBBINGS. BIOGRAPHICAL 453 J. H. DoBBiNGS, native of Middleboro, Yorkshire. Enoland. was born April 13th, 1864, the son of John and Sarah (Bell) Dobbings.' John Dobbings was born in Elstow, Bedfordshire. England, and his wife at Newcastle-on-Tyne, England. John Dobbings was by occupation a mining superintendent and' for a period of twenty-six years was thus employed in his native land. He came to the United States in 1888 and is since a resident of Pasadena. Both his father, J. G. Dobbings, and his grandfather, John T.. have to their credit long terms of service in the British navy— J. G. Dobbings being an officer thereo'f and retired at sixty-four years of age. Mr. Dobbings' maternal grandfather, George Bell, was an experienced railroad man and division manager of the North Eastern Ry., in England. J. H. Dobbings attended the local public schools of his native town. In 1878, being then a youth of fourteen years, he entered the employ of Blockow-Vaughn & Company of Middleboro. as an apprentice to learn marine engineering and served seven years. In September, 1885, he embarked for the United States and, upon arrival, located at Des Moines', Iowa, where he worked at his trade. In the spring of 1886, he came to Cali- fornia and worked for the Risdon Iron Works at San Francisco, until October, 1887. He then came to Pasadena and engaged in the retail oil business. In' 1889. he went to San Diego and, until 1893. was chief engineer of the Fourth Street Cable R\-. Company. He then came to Santa Monica and was appointed first assistant engineer at the Soldiers' Home. In January, 1904. he was made chief engineer, which position he now holds. In January, 1887. he married Miss Alattie A. Evans, a native of Concord, N. H., and daughter of George Allen Evans (see index.) Mr. Dobbings became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1890 and the country has no more loyal citizen and enthusi- astic American. He is one of the prominent Masons of Southern California. He is past master of the Santa Monica Blue Lodge, member of Perfection Lodge No. 3 of- Los Angeles, and Rose Croix Chapter. A. A. S. R. Temple of Los Angeles. He is past master of A'eteran Lodge 373. Sawtelle. and a life member of the Masonic Veterans' Association of the Pacific Coast. He is a member of the Uniform Rank of the K. of P.. Santa Monica, and a member of the National Association of Stationary Engineers. He is an influential republican and a member of the Episcopal church. Mr. and Mrs. Dobbings have one son. Olney J., and a daughter. Dorothv Bell. Charles S. Dales, for years a well-known citizen of Santa Monica, was born in the State of New York. September 20, 1853. For some vears as a young man he followed railroad telegraphy. He married at Middleport. White county, Illinois, Miss Dora, a daughter of D. W. Galloway, a successful farmer. She died, leaving two sons, E. V. and John B. Dales, prosperous grocery mer- 454 BIOGRAPHICAL chants of Santa Monica, doing business under the firm name of Dales Brothers, brief sketches of whom appear elsewhere in this volume. Mr. Dales came to California in 1886 and spent one year in Santa Cruz. In 1887 he came to Santa Monica and for a time clerked in the clothing store of C. B. Van Every. He was later elected City Clerk of Santa Monica and subsequently served as Con- stable. He is (1908) serving his second term as City Assessor of Santa J^Ionica. The present Mrs. Dales was Miss Anna Felts of Bellville. 111. She has one daughter. ]\Iarion. John B. Dales, successful grocery merchant and junior member of the firm of Dales Brothers. Santa Monica, was born in the town of Roland. White county. Illinois. September 23. 1880. a son of Charles S. and Dora Galloway Dales. (See biographical mention of Charles S. Dales elsewhere in this volume). In 1886 the family located in Santa Monica and here Mr. Dales attended the public schools, graduating from the Santa Monica High School in the class of 1898. In 1902 he entered the present business firm of Dales Brothers. For two years he was in charge of the Dales Brothers' branch grocery house at Ocean Park, until the consolidation of both stores at Santa Monica. Mr. Dales married in 1903 Miss Leah Johnson, a daughter of C. C. Johnson of St. Louis, Mo. They have one son, Leighton. His home is 1014 Fourth street. Mr. Dales is Past Master of Ocean Park Lodge F. and A. M. and member of the B. P. O. E., Santa Monica. T. J. Connelly, is a native son of the Golden West, born in Amador County, California, August 9th, 1861. His father, Jeremiah Connelly, was a miner and lost his Hfe by accident in the mines. Young Connelly went to Nevada where he learned the trade of blacksmith. He spent several years in mining camps, a portion of this time as an engineer in the Calico Mining District. He came to Santa Monica in 1892 where he has successfully engaged in general black- smithing and horse shoeing. He married Miss Mary E. Collins, daughter of Mrs. Kate Collins, deceased, one of the pioneers of California and Santa Monica; they have three sons and three daughteis — Miss Winnie, John T., Jr. ; Agnes, Ellen, Lawrence and PToward, all residing at 1333 Third Street, Santa Monica. BIOGRAPHICAL 455 George C. Boehme is a native Californian, born at Sacramento, November 29th, 1860. He is the oldest son of George Boehme, a well known pioneer of Santa Monica. He was schooled in Sacramento, and afterward learned the trade of a tinner and plumber. Leaving home at eighteen years of age, he pursued his trade in San Francisco. He spent the years from 1882 to 1884 in Los Angeles, managing the extensive tinning and plumbing business of Harper, Reynolds & Company. The years 1885 and 1886 were spent at San Bernardino.' Locating at Santa Monica in 1887 he embarked in the hardware and plumbing business at which he has been continuously engaged until the present year, 1907, but is now closing out. Mr. Boehme was married in 1884 at San Bernardino to Miss Addie Oliver, a native of Calaveras County, California. They have four children, Henry I., Howard E., Margaret M., and Herbert L. Boehme. Mrs. Boehme died. He has been uniformly successful ; was one of the original organizers of the Santa Monica Fire Company No. 1, has always taken an active interest in its success and upbuilding and is its present President. He owns an attractive residence on Sixth Street, and other valuable property in the city. John Guntrup, secretary of the Golden State Plant & Floral Co. (Incoi- porated), of Santa Monica, is a native of England and was born in Wolverton, in 1854, a son of Thomas Guntrup, who for fifteen years was a locomotive engineer for the London & Northwestern Ry. Co., running from Rugby to London. The British Government then sent him to India and he ran out of Bombay for about two and one half years. He then returned to England and in 1866 came to America, located at Corning, N. Y., and was with the Erie Ry. Co. for several years. He lived at Corning until he came to California with his son in the year 1885. He died at Santa Monica July 5th, 1908 The wife was, by maiden name, Mary White She died at Corning, N. Y., in 1879. She was mother of ten children, of whom four are living in New York. The subject of this sketch spent thirty-five years as a mechanic in Preston & Heerman's Foundry and Machine Shop at Corning, N. Y., a portion of his young manhood, commencing as an apprentice at sixteen years of age. He married at Corning, Miss Emma L. Quandt, a native of Rochester, N. Y., and they have two sons and two daughters— Mrs. E. B. Dequine, of Los Angeles; Mrs. F. J. Allington, of Corning, N. Y. ; Arthur J,, of Corning, and William T., auditor for the Armour Packing Co., at Richmond, Va. Mr. Guntrup was a mem- ber of the I. O. O. F. and was a Maccabee. The Golden State Plant & Floral Co. (Inc.), of which Mr. Guntrup was secretary, is one of the most extensive enterprises of Its kind on the Pacific Coast. It was incorporated April 28th, 1903, with a capital stock of $25,000; T. H. Dudley, president; Victor E. Hathaway, vice president and general manager. They occupy five acres of land, propagating a full line of general nursery stock and making a specialty of palms and all varieties of ornamental trees and shrubbery. 456 BIOGRAPHICAL J. B. E. Smale, dry goods merchant of this city, is a native of Scotland, having been born in Perthshire, Town of StirHng, July 24th, 1858. His father, William John Smale, was an excise officer of the Government Customs Office. Young Smale lived at home until he reached his twenty-first year and then went to London. In this city he held for five years a responsible position in the mer- cantile house of William Whitley, who is known upon the eastern continent as "The Great Universal Provider." This house is, without question, the largest establishment in its line in the world Mr. Smale was a salesman in the gents' furnishing goods department. He came to America in 1883 and located at Providence, R. L, where he became identified with the Scotch Syndicate Store in that city. In 1887 he went to Ashland, Wisconsin, and engaged in the general drygoods business. The winters of this locality proved too severe for his health and he removed to Omaha, Nebraska, where he became buyer in the dress goods department for the N. B. Falconer Co., the largest of its kind in that city. In 1892 he came still farther west to Leadville, Colorado, and for twelve years en- gaged in the drygoods business as a member of the Blakely-Smale Drygoods Company. The altitude was, however, too high for good health and Mr. Smale sold his interest in the business and came to Southern California. He traveled for one year until he had gained a fair knoAvledge of the country and then, on March 3rd, 1905, opened his present store. This place of business, which has become one of the popular trading places of Santa Monica, is situated at 1456 Third Street. In the year 1892, at Omaha, Nebraska, Mr. Smale was married to Miss Alice Maud Morse, of Bath, Maine. Miss Morse was a daughter of Reuben Morse, a wealthy lumber and timber merchant of that city. Mr. and Mrs. Smale have three children — a son, Kenneth, and two daughters, Dorothy and Pauline. Mr. Smale is one of Santa Monica's most highly esteemed citizens and, as a merchant, is in the No.l class. He takes a becoming interest in all matters of public concern and supports liberally all worthy local enterprises. He is a charter member of the Santa Monica Board of Trade and a member of the executive committee of that body. Rev. James A. O'Callaghan, the present assistant parish priest of Santa Monica, was born in County Kerry, Ireland, in the year 1880. At the age of thirteen he began his study of the classics at St. Brandon's Seminary, Killarney, whence he graduated four years afterward and entered the historic halls of St. Patrick's College, Carlow, to pursue the study of philosophy, theology and scripture, and in other respects fit himself for the sacred office of the priesthood. Leaving Carlow College in 1902 he came to the United ^States and entered St. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, New York, from w^hence he was ordained priest at the hands of Right Reverend Bishop McQuaide, on June 6th, 1903, after which a brief visit was made to his home in Ireland. On his return Father O'Callaghan was appointed assistant pastor to Father Hawe, at Santa Monica, where both have since labored for thv glory of God and uplifting of humanity. BIOGRAPHICAL 457 Adolph Petsch, retired, Santa Monica, was born in the city of Frankfurt- on-thc-Main, Germany, August 12th, 1852. He was educated in the Frankfurt pubUc schools and pursued a course of study in a business college. When, in 1866, the free city of Frankfurt lost its independence and was annexed by the kingdom of Prussia, young Petsch, although a lad of only fourteen years, believed that government with- out the consent of the governed was a mistake to which he could not sub- mit. In 1869, rather than submit to the newly imposed degradation of mil- itary service, he left, as a political exile, the home in which his family had been prominent for a period of six hundred years. In October, 1869, he landed in New York and went di- rectly to St. Louis, where two uncles, also political exiles, had settled in 1831. After a short stay he returned to Europe intending to locate in Southern France, but the Franco- Prussian War drove him to Switzer- land. He also visited Metz in Lor- raine and there the Prussian government found and exiled him in 1872. He then went to Belgium where he remained about five years in the city of Verviers, engaged in the banking business, but being without citizenship, and Belgium, like Switzerland, accepting no foreigners, he was led to seek a new home. He again came to America and to St. Louis, Mo. On April 11th, 1877, the Southern Hotel in that city was destroyed by fire and Mr. Petsch only saved his life by escape from a fifth story window by means of a rope made from sheets from the bed. Injuries sustained in this fire made him an invalid for two years, which fact brought him to Southern California, after a short stay in San Francisco. He was naturalized in 1882 and has since left the state only to pay two short visits to parents and the old home in Europe. In Pasadena, in the early part of the year 1878, he obtained his first ideas of horticulture and viticulture. At this period the Pasadena colony was short of water and Mr. Petsch began to look around for an abundant irrigation supply. During the summer of 1880 he spent, in company with Judge Benjamin S. Eaton, the pioneer of Pasadena, several months in traveling over the southern counties. In one of these trips he bought an interest in the Day Canyon Water Company and also made filings under the desert land act on some government land. Soon ADOLPH PETSCH. 458 BIOGRAPHICAL after he sold this to the Chaffey Brothers, and upon it they founded what is now a portion of the beautiful Etiwanda. Mr. Petsch then purchased one hundred and sixty acres pre-emption claim of Henry Reed, together with available water rights in nearby canyons, and the first steps to the founding of what became the Hermosa Colony were taken. He added some four hundred acres to his original purchase, organized a water company, platted his holdings into lots of convenient size for small farms, bordered the streets with ornamental shade trees and wind break, planted some of the tract to orange and other citrus fruit trees, and eventually disposed of the entire tract to homeseekers. The enter- prise was beset with some difficulties, but none so formidable as to deter the indomitable Petsch from the execution of his plans. Wild jack rabbits raided his orchards and girdled his trees and Mr. Petsch made a characteristic move against them by building a solid stone and cement wall with iron gates around the tract to shut them out. While this was, in a measure, a failure as a rabbit tight fence, it was so much talked and written about as to make Hermosa famous, and proved to be valuable advertising. The phenomenal success of Hermosa led, in 1883, to the establishment of the Iowa colony on adjoining lands. The two names were finally blended into that of "loamosa," an occurrence for which Mr. Petsch disclaims any responsibility. In 1884 Mr. Petsch married a native daughter of California, whose father, John L. Frese, was a pioneer of Oakland. In 1892 he retired from Hermosa to Los Angeles and there became popularly known as the tireless promotor of La Fiesta de Los Angeles. His great energy and enthusiasm fired all Los Angeles with the Fiesta spirit from year to year. The marvelous beauty and uniqueness of its floral parade, made by the numerous and costly floats, were the direct outcome of his own designs and personal over- sight in construction. For several years the family home was at Figueroa and Twenty-first Street, until they made a trip to Europe in 1894 Upon their return, they purchased property, built a home and settled in Santa Monica. Mr. Petsch is an active member of the Santa Monica Board of Trade, and the novel, original and strikingly appropriate interior decorations and furnishing of the Board of Trade rooms are due to his genius. Mr. and Mrs. Petsch have one son, Carl. James D. Simpsox, Venice, is a native of Iowa, born in the city of Dubuque, October 22nd, 1860. His father, John Simpson and mother, Martha (Lobley) Simpson; were both of English birth and natives of Yorkshire. John Simpson was interested in lead mining in England. He came to America about the year 1840 and was one of the pioneer settlers of Dubuque, Iowa. He there engaged in mining and became successfully identified with other business enterprises. He died in Dubuque in 1890 at about eighty years of age, his estimable wife having preceded him in 1888 at the age of seventy-eight years. James D. was the youngest of their six children and grew up in the city of Dubuque, passing through the graded schools and closing his studies at Cornell University. In BIOGRAPHICAL 459 1882 he went to Paullina, O'Brien County, Iowa, and for twelve years was cashier o the bank of that place. In 1893 he became sole owner in the estabTishment of the Bank of Merrill at Merrill, Iowa, and at Le Mars, Iowa, In .905 t c-e o Vemce to assume charge of the mterests of Mr, John Metcalf, and provTd Gatew t' XTs", '? T '''""« ""* ^"' development of the Venice Gateway, He was also one of the organizers of the Venice Shoe Manufacturing Company (Inc. and .s a director and vice president of the company, Mr Smpson marrjed at Paulhna, Iowa, in 1890, Miss Evelyn Micklett, a daughter of h"S on Mr klett^ owner of the Paull.n Ranch. They have two children-Elizab th Paullm Smrpson and Evelyn Marie Simpson. The family residence at Venice Gateways one of the many attractive modern homes of' that thrifty subub Mr. Simpson ,s one of the most active and enthusiastic citizens of Venice' being an influential member of the Venice Chamber of Commerce and an ardent Ms^aired dr' r""T'- "^ "^^^ "-■^'^^^ ^-^'^ - ^^^ stabt future : ms adopted city. He is a charter member of the orders B, P Q E at Le Mars Iowa, and I. O. O. F. and K. of P., of Paullina, Iowa. and tTv7 ^ J^"'"":' '°' ^bo"t twenty-two years a resident of Santa Monica, and well known as an active and successful business man, is a native of Kankakee Sheffield En^la'd '^H "™- "'^ '''""■ ^^^P"^" J^''-"' ^^ ^ -*-' °f Annatek!,n 1- "T '° *'" """"'^^ "'*'' '''^ P"-*=' Edmund and Anna Jackson , and was raised on a farm near Kankakee, The family consisted o seven sons and one daughter. Here young Stephen grew up and'a the ge UnterStaT°"A '^^«t"^°"* "' '^' ^'"' ^^^' ^'^^^ ^ ^ ™'-teer in the by eason o h ''■ . , " ""' '° '"""'^ °PP°^^'^ '° '"e move that, by reason of his age, he demanded and secured his release and return home bovtTat h , J"'"', ""f ''™* *=''*'= °f ""^y "'« had so fired the zeal of the boy that he clandestinely left home and re-entered the army. He was an expert SWSho'ot^'^rH"'"'^""^" ""^^ ™^ '^"°™ - ™'''-y circles as Yae Sharp Shooters and during his term of service was almost continuously on active right" an^leT- "r ^i" ,°' '"°''°"' "°""*^'"' -^'^"^ ™" fe" at both his right and left in line of battle, and was also in many other fierce and bloodv .Tsfa-r Sherr„" '""^ "^ '^^ ""^^ *^™-'^ ^-^ -^ '^-^^ a nat^vrof'r "'?""p° TV"" '' """""' *'"= ^''^^ "^"""^^ ^* Kankakee. Land R °' '-°"''°"' ''"«'='"^- "« »t"cd the employ of the Chicago & Rock island R, R, Company as a track man and became a civil engineer, finally doinc PacIlcTalT 7 '°^-*'" "r '^°« * '^•'■f- 'h« Te-xas^acific and' Union i^achc Railway Companies. He came to California in 1883 and to Southern California m .885, locating in Santa Monica in February, .886. He buil the Santa Monica and Soldiers' Home horse car line for the W D. Vawter Con any Fie owned the old North Beach Hotel and laid the first sidewalk on Third Stret' 460 BIOGRAPHICAL in front of what was then the E. D. Suits meat market, now Kennedy's Buffalo Market. He made the first street grade in Santa Monica, which was on Second Street from Utah to Nevada Avenues. He did the contract work for the U. S. Government at the National Soldiers' Home. He at one time owned the Santa Monica Hotel, now the North Beach Hotel, which he sold to J. M. Orr. He took an active part in local civic affairs and was highly esteemed for his sterling merits as a citizen and a business man. As a veteran of the Civil War he was very popular in the Grand Army of the Republic and when the G. A. R. post was organized at Santa Monica it was given the name of Stephen Jackson post. He died April 18th, 1898. Arthur Jackson was a lad of sixteen years when the family located in Santa Monica. He passed through the local schools and entered the employ of his father as timekeeper and accountant. In 1893 he opened a cigar and tobacco store on Third vStreet; finally disposing of this stock he replaced it with books, stationery, toys and school supplies, later adding a stock of pianos. He conducts the Los Angeles Daily Times and the Los Angeles Examiner newspaper routes which constitutes a feature of his business. In 1894 Mr. Jackson married Miss Mary H. Lawrence, a native of San Diego, California, the daughter of Mr. Frank Lawrence, who was the first representative of the Wells Fargo Express Co. in that city. They have two sons — Lawrence A., and Kenneth A. Mr. Jackson is a member of the Masonic Lodge, the I. O. O. F. and the B. P. O. E. Mrs. Jackson is Past Matron and Grand Organist of the O. E. S. The familv residence is at No. 1117 Fifth Street. Robert Crawford Dobson is a typical California pioneer. He came overland to California in 1850 via the northern route; that is, along the north fork of the Platte River from Platte County, Mo. He was born in Greyson County, Va., June 26th, 1836. His father, Robert Dobson, was a potter by trade , who raised two sons and seven daughters. Robert Crawford left home when a boy and lived with a sister. At thirteen years of age he joined the rush to California, a result of the discovery of gold. He mined gold in the placer diggings at Hangtown, later at Agua Trio, in Mariposa County. He came south to Los Angeles in 1860 and was appointed jailer of Los Angeles County by Sheriff Thomas Sanchez, who was in office at the time of the unofficial hanging of Laschenes and the occurence of the Chinese riot. He served eight years in this capacity and was later on the city police force several years under William Warrens, who as marshal, was Chief of Police. He left Los Angeles about 1887 and has for some years past lived at Santa Monica His present and permanent home is at Irwin Heights Mr. Dobson married Miss Marcalie Melindrus, a native of Los Angeles County, and they have two living children — Mary, who is Mrs. C. E. Towner, and Virginia. RIOGRAPHICAL 4ol Mrs. Catherine Collins, a widow then residpnt ,-,fS i- from a map on file in a real estate agency i he" c tv tw . L , ?"/"'"■ ""'"'''^ a Change of ^n...^"r:::^:z:r::^z::i:7^^i::^-'^:'y had ereeted a dwelling. She tnded at h.S^' t m"- ' ''''""'"' ''^ ^"^ .375. Shestead„yi4roved.nriltn'stbrgMt:!::;;r"'^^^^ east corner of Utah Avptiup ^r.ri q i o. ^^^^^ni ^^^o lots at the north- residence to this tw^rchase convened T'' t'"' ^°°" *'^"^"^^ "°^=^ '^e profitable business by akinTth; • ? . '"'° "" ™°"""S '™"^<= ^nd did a Hotel. She beca:i'i:f zttH oiit; otzit t^t ■"°"- who beeante her guests, as a good woniln of st ngtai s ofharL't ^ '""""'I endeavor and business ability. She conducted the C„l i h "^'f'"'^"' <^^'-"'=st r:: 'r: ri^r r ■ hef l:;- ^-f °f f - -- -uTcr-; LTot j.rp::--vTr "^^^^^^^^^^^^ cits,:':at'.r4tgr;T- =r:= o:S^V?=^^^ - .n^ chiMren, one lit^^ r;^::^:::^":;;^ f rcrinejst^rti"'' '"- which consumed four months and entailed many hardships '' ^°"™^' Fort hLc, S."L"'S.:rD'"weTr'''''""\'°"'"^- "^« °"-'' "^ "^s at flt fift.. , f ' " ^'^°'^" '^ Santa Monica, died here in loo^ ::\l'^ro?;.T' rrr :-e"oT r^"-;; ^"'"- ■- --— Ma^E.- business men. Agnes is th 'wife of CHr '? '"P^"^^ ^""^ =-«-f"' Tien-tsin, China. \ a s:l;':a:r,age"to'rr'ro .^rr o!ir?T' °' daughters, twins, Lucy and Elizabeth Corbett Collins ''"' '"'^ Monica.'' Hl'i": L^oVdI!;' Tm ^°"" f"' ^"^^^^^'"' ^"^'"-^ -- °f Santa this volume *'"°y' " ^"^''''^'^ "' ""™™ appears elsewhere in in the hir7J'rheX v;sr'j!rvtT^ r t-^ -^^^ -^ -^'^ he was engaged on the MaHh, Cr/ , !i ' ^'<'^'''°1^"'8 ™ter- Later Rindge. Ibout moL Grant in the same capacity for Frederick H. and ifas acquired 1 thorou^hroTd "",'"' "'f ' °" ^™'^^^'^- ^ ^ "^-i--- water cour es, whi h has broultif "''" ''' *'' '""' °' ™derg,ound Mr, Meloy has a fortune LeTf ''" ''"™"''' ^"'^ P™fitable business. Heownsvalulblprretvin ?/"»,'"'""' '"'""'"^ "^ well-boring outfits, a uaoie property in Santa Monica and a ranch up the coast. 462 BIOGRAPHICAL Nicholas Gabriel Baida. The brief story of Mr. Baida's career is a forcible illustration of what well-directed energy, industry and enterprise can be made to accomplish in this free country of opportunities for the poor man. He was born in the year 1869 in the ancient city of Beyrout, Syria, Turkey, which is one of the most flourishing seaport towns on the Mediterranean Sea, and about fifty-seven miles from Damascus. His father, Gabriel Baida, was a stone cutter by trade ; an industrious man and a devout member of the Greek orthodox church, having faith in Christ as their Savior, adherents to which faith were rigidly circumscribed and ofttimes persecuted by the dominant church of that country. Being an ardent Christian, he raised his family in the faith. Nicholas Gabriel was the oldest of the family of five sons and two daugh- ters, and recognizing the difficulties that hampered the ambitious youth of his country to make for themselves a prosperous future, he decided to avail himself of the privileges of a free government and in 1890 came to America, landing at Castle Garden, New York City. He came almost immediately to California and opened a small store for the sale of oriental rugs and drapery on North Main Street, Los Angeles, where he prospered in business. In 1905 he opened a branch store on Pier Avenue, Ocean Park, which he continued for about two years. Besides his present estab- lishment at No. 414 South Main Street, Los Angeles, he has a store at No. 1662 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco, which is doing a prosperous business. In 1897 Baida married in Los Angeles, Miss Saiedia Safady, a native of Syria, a lady of rare intelligence and feminine graces of the Oriental type. Both Mr. and Mrs. Baida speak the English with a remarkable degree of accuracy. They have five children — Gabriel, Zeimoztaney, Adella, Stossel and Isabella. The Baida Moorish palace at the corner of South Third Street and Bicknell Avenue, Santa Monica, is one of the most imposing and strikingly unique private residences in the Crescent Bay City. Its elevation commands a sweeping view of the ocean, Santa Monica, Ocean Park, Playa del Rey, Redondo and Santa Catalina Island. It is purely Oriental in its architecture and interior arrange- ment and equipped with all modern conveniences. Mr. and Mis. John Brickner are among the best known of the first settlers of Santa Monica, and have seen it grow from a four-corner hamlet to the present thrifty proportions of a thriving and promising city. Mr. Brickner is a native of Germany and was born near Berlin, January 3rd, 1835. He there spent the earlier years of his Hfe and in 1875 married Miss Augusta Court, a maiden of sixteen years. They almost immediately came to America, landing in New York and made their way westward to San Francisco, thence to Los Angeles, where they remained one month. On September 16th, 1875 they came to Santa Monica and cast their fortunes with the then new and wholly undeveloped seaside city, where they made some substantial investments, which, with the BIOGRAPHICAL 4f.3 -somewhat sudden rise and subsequent fall of the town finally terminated in heavy- losses. Later they opened the first store for the sale of curios in Santa Monica, which is said to have been the first store in this line in Southern California. Mr. Brickner relates interesting stories of his hunting expeditions, notably duck hunting on the lagoons of what is now Playa del Rey, and likewise where the canal city of Venice now stands. This he pursued in a business-like manner and made it quite a source of revenue, finding ready market for his game in Los Angeles. Mrs. Brickner took up the curing of the plumage of the many fine specimens of these birds and became a somewhat expert taxidermist. The work was placed on exhibition with the Agricultural Association of Southern California, then the leading institution of its kind in Southern California, and received diplomas and cash premiums for superior excellence. They have been continu- ously in business in Santa Monica since they arrived here and were for eighteen years on Utah Avenue, between Second and Third Streets. In March. 1907, they removed their store to No. 210 Third Street, where they have one of the most complete stock of curios, notions and furnishing goods in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Brickner are widely known and highly esteemed for the-r -splendid traits of character and strict integrity in all matters. Juan Bandini, a member of one of the earliest and most prominent families •of California, is a son of Don Jose Marie Bandini, a venerable citizen of Santa Monica and grandson of Don Juan Bandini, who, during his lifetime, was one of California's most distinguished and exemplary citizens. He was a native of Peru and came to California in 1821 when it was Mexican territory. He lived ior several years at San Diego and there married a daughter of Juan Estudillo. By this marriage his children weie Arcadia, who became the wife of Don Abel Stearns, after his death marrying Col. Robert S. Baker; Josepha, who married Pedro C. Carrillo; Ysidora. w^ho married Cave J. Coutts; Jose Marie and Juan. Of these children, Mrs. Baker and Jose Marie still survive and are residents of Santa Monica. Later Senor Bandini married Senorita Refugio Arguello, and of this marriage Dolores, widow of the late Charles E. Johnson; Margurite, Mrs. J. B. Winston, and Don Arturo still survive. Senor Bandini spent the last years of his life in Los Angeles. He owned large tracts of land in Southern California, among others, the Jurupa Grant, lying mostly in what is now River- side County, where he for a time resided with his family. This land was granted to him in 1838 by the Mexican Government. In 1843 he established the little town of Agua Mansa (Gentle Water) upon the bank of the Santa Ana River which runs through the grant. He donated building sites to the settlers and aided them in the erection of a church. It became a pretty and romantic village and the business and social center for the surrounding country. He also owned extensive tracts of land in San Diego County, upon a portion of which is now located the city of San Diego. He was a man of broad information, an eloquent 464 BIOGRAPHICAL public speaker, whose counsel and opinion had much to do in shaping public affairs. He held various positions of public trust under the Mexican Govern- ment of California, not the least of which was the adminstration of San Gabriel Mission under secularization. He aided in making the first state constitution of California and was one of its most able and stalwart supporters. He died in Los Angeles in 1859. His daughters were all beautiful women of the most intelligent and charming California type and were social leaders of their day. Reference to Mrs. Arcadia B. de Baker and to her only surviving sister, Mrs. C. E. Johnson, is made elsewhere in this work. Jose M. Bandini lived, for the most part of his active business life, on his ranch of 4,500 acres near Tia Juana, just over the Mexican line in Lower Califor- nia. He retired and has lived at Santa Monica since 1894. The Vs'iie died in Los Angeles, October 18th, 1878. Besides Juan Bandini, the third of this name, there survive of her children, Mrs. Sarah B. Freeman, of Santa Monica, and Josefa, wife of James Thomas, of London, England. Juan Bandini, the third, married Miss Ida, daughter of William Frost, now of Florence, Colorado. The ceremony took place in San Pedio, January 18th, 1897. They have one son, Juan Bandini, Jr. The Bandini home is at 112 7 Second .Street, Santa Monica. GusTAV W. ScHUTTE has been a resident of California since 1874. He came to Los Angeles at nine years of age. His father, August Schutte, a cabinet maker by trade, worked many years for Dotter & Bradley. Young vSchutte attended school in the old building that stood at the corner of Spring and Second Streets, where now stands the Bryson Block. His teacher was Miss Bengaugh. He also attended Miss Parker's school on Eighth Street, between Broadway and Hill Streets. He attended the old high school then on the present site of the Los Angeles County Court House. He was born in Berlin, Germany, August 1st, 1866, baptized in St. Stephen's Church. The family came to America in 1868 and lived for a time at Allegheny City, Pa. Later they came overland to San Francisco. Mr. Schutte learned cabinet making and was an expert in the busi- ness, but by reason of poor health was compelled to abandon the same, and took up the study of music, perfected himself as a cornetist and violinist under German masters, notably Prof. J. H. Ohllwedal, a graduate of Leipsig Conservatory. Mr. Schutte pursued music as a profession for six years as a member of the original orchestra with Lillian Russell, later in Nellis Boyd's "All Gold Instrument Band Dramatic Company," two seasons, in which he was known as the boy band leader. He was six years in the band of the Pacific Branch of the National Home for Disabled Veteran Soldiers. He was compelled to abandon music because of loss of health and eyesight, and took up his residence at Santa Monica. He organized an orchestra of string instruments in his home city and is its leader. Mr. Schutte married Miss Sarah Wright, a native of Hillsdale, Michigan. She grew up and received her schooling at Washington, D. C. They have four children, Bertrand, Raymond, Varney and Jessie, a daughter. BIOGRAPHICAL 465 George W. Corey, M. D., for about fifteen years a resident of California and for nine years a citizen of Sawtelle, is a native of Edqar county 111 and was born m the town of Grand - ' - View, January 10th. 1833. His father, Jonathan Corey, was a thrifty farmer and incidentally a preacher in the M. E. Church. His mother. by maiden name Diademia Griffith. was a daughter of John Griffith, a farmer and brick manufacturer. Both the Coreys and the Griffiths were full-fledged Scotchmen from Dumfriesshire. They were both am- bitious men and left the old estate in Scotland to seek their fortunes in a country of greater opportunities. Jonathan Corey, upon his arrival in this country, went to Olean, Cat- taraugus county, Southern New York, where he married. There, he and John Griffith jointly built a flat boat and with their families sailed down the Allegheny river to Pitts- burg ; thence down the Ohio river to Cincinnati, where the}- landed. They were among the early pioneers of that now large and wealthy city. Here John Griffith burned the first bricks and erected the first building of Miami College. He afterwards removed to Rock county. Wis., and practically retired from business at Evansville. where he died about 18o8. Mr. Corey went on westward and settled in Illinois, about thirty miles west of Terre Haute, in Edgar county. There he lived until about 1836 when he moved to Rock Grove, in Stevenson countv. the same state on the Wis- consin state line. In 1850 he went to Monroe. Green countv. Wis where he lived until his death in 1859. The mother came west and spent her declinin- years with a daughter, Isabel Moses, at Leavenworth, Kansas. She died at the age of eighty-six years, and was the mother of sixteen children, fourteen of whom she raised to maturity. Dr. Corey, the subject of this sketch, spent his bovhood at Rock Grove Stevenson county, 111. When yet a youth he purchased a scholarship in the Lawrence University at Appleton. Wis., where he took a two xeavs' course of study. He then took up the studv of medicine at Rockford. 111..' and later orad- uated from the Rush Medical College, Chicago. Februarv 16th. 1859. He "com- menced the practice of medicine at Cherry A'alley. seven miles east of Rockford. 30 G. \V. COREY, M.D. 466 BIOGRAPHICAL where, on March 25th, 1861, he married Miss Margaret Ann Brantingham, a daughter of Robert M. Brantingham, a wealthy capitahst and man-of-affairs of New York City. Dr. Corey was an aggressive and wide-awake republican and was chairman of the township republican committee, a member of Winnebago county central committee and captain of the local Wide-Awakes, the political club of the first Lincoln campaign. He rendered valued service to the party, making stump speeches throughout his section of the country. October 22, 1861, he volunteered as a private in the Federal army and was mustered into the 12th Illinois Cavalry. Soon thereafter he was appointed acting assistant surgeon and later made surgeon of the 12th Missouri Cavalry. After Lee's surrender and the close of the Civil War he was detailed to fight the Indians on the western plains of Nebraska, and passed through a most strenuous and exciting campaign. He served in the army about four and one- half years. As a surgeon he held the rank of major, and, by an act of congress of August 1st, 1865, he was, for meritorious services as an officer, brevetted lieutenant-colonel. At the close of his military career he went to Rockford and settled up the large estate of his father-in-law, who meantime had died. In 1866 he located in Cheyenne City, Wyoming, where he practiced medicine successfully for about twenty-one years. There in 1876, his wife died and for several years he trav- eled in various sections of this country. In 1893 he came to California and spent six years in Sacramento. In 1899 he came to Sawtelle, where he is prac- ticing his profession. Dr. Corey is a member of the Volunteers Retired List Association, an organization composed of about six thousand retired army officers. It will be seen that he has led a most active, eventful and useful life. He is a man of broad information, quiet demeanor and is eminently successful in his profession. John L. Smith, well-known druggist and pharmaceutist of Sawtelle, is a native of Michigan and was born in the city of Saginaw, March 14, 1887. He is a son of George H. Smith, now of Sawtelle. He passed through the excellent graded schools of Saginaw and came with his parents to California in 1901. He spent two years in the Santa Monica High School. Later he took a course of study at the University of Southern California and graduated from the de- partment of pharmacy in the year 1907. In 1908 he assumed management of the business of the Laing Drug Company of Sawtelle, which owns the leading drug store of that city. Mr. Smith is a member of the F. and A. M. and also a member of the Commercial Club, a social organization made up of the leading business and professional men of Sawtelle. Of these Mr. Smith is deservedly one of the most popular. BIOGRAPHICAL 4^7 1S7ft"';^' fTZ}', " "''"™ °' "'''°""' t""™ ^' Independence, July 14th 876. H,s father, M.lton L. Huston, was born in the same town whe e he grew up and beeame a contracting builder. He was a pioneer of Kansas clty in hk me of work. He came to California in 1888 and located in Los Angel s'^ whet he now hves H^E. Huston, when a boy of ten years, commenced woA in I meat market on Washington Street. Los Angeles, for Ryder & Taylor and m 1898 commenced busmess on his own account. In 1904 he came to sLta Monica Z%ZZ '"\P'-!- "-"«' -hich promptly grew into a profitable bu^.ness In 906 he purchased a busmess lot on Third Street and erected thereon an archi ectural and substantial brick building twenty-five feet front by ninety fee wo stones ,n hetght, on the ground floor of which is the new Pioneer Mark!' occTofed aTh s™ T""'"'' '"^'"""^ ' ^°'^ ^'°^^^^ P^*' ^he second floor s occupied as his residence. AnJes fr'rf """'"' '" """■ '"" ''°'"' ''''"^•^*" °f ^'^i" F-y. Esq., of Los head of' the t r "'""'l'' "'"^ ^''''' °'''"''' '^"°™<=>' "' ^ern County and head of he kern County bar. Mr. and Mrs. Huston have one son, Alvin Mrs. Huston ,s a nat.ve daughter, having been born at Kernville, Kern County' January 14th, 1880. v^uunty, the sllte'of M-^'h-^''™"!,' "^"-'^■™™" ""«" oi Santa Monica, is a native of the state of Michigan and was born in the town of Marshall, Calhoun countv September 20th, 1869, His father, Porter Snyder, was one of the ""n ! s of' Calhoun county and located at the then new town of Marshall, on tinLred land which he improved, and also engaged in the building business. He was an clZ'"'"' "f ";'""'"' """ °' ^«^'"' '"^ -"«' f- - '™- - sheriff of w o rthT • ' "'' ' '°" °' '^"°^»^ *■ S".«l". - native of Holland, who „ th his parents came to America and settled in New Jersev, and soon thereafter removed to New York and located on wild land in Sen ca count, During the war of 1812 with England, he served as a scout. I, may be sa d that he was a soldier of fortune since he was three times captured bv the Indians and once barely escaped burning at the stake. After the war he returned tome where he lived until his death at ninetv-four vears of a-e one .tau^lte^"T'' '%\r""'' '^''^S^' '° Sarah J. £ddy, had three sons and one ,alZ p fi "h ZTtr T"'" and to Los Angeles somewhat broken in health, in 19^, LlZl.f,T7 roller coaster at Ocean Pari- wl.,vi. ., , ^^ ^^^ '^"'^^ the that citv. This he onerare^l 'f" •' °'""y' '''"'™ "" am'-ement feature of pursuits. He V otl'paH- Mr"l '^'^r'""' '™'" ^^''^^ '^-■-- January 3rd 1898 Miss Flennn , ,' "^""'°" "'^"'«' '"'^ ^ second time, bus, Ohio, anc a r^h^ad offi il^ t'thTf ^°'" '"'" ^ ""'^^ "' ^°'"- children, of whom four are H:„Ael::ri;XT '^VT ^^^^" Audley and Louis of Spokane Washin=rton Tl ^''^'denck of P.ttsburg, ment enterprises origi.ra,,,. inaul:: n:\,r f^th^ ri:''"' 'u-^?™'^^- career has been one of large and^uccessftd L ie m nts Bes ITtt ?r'""" bnsmess enterprises that Mr. Ingersoll has hnilt ,,„ ^ , extensive several successful inventions. He i " nt tl V.ft "ot ""• T ""' '" '"''' ever eame into practical and popular use and fo ,e T'^ ^"^ '™""™ ""' them on a larw scale ,„ ri„v '"""', ™'^ f°f several years manufactured proved a phe:™:,e,:a?s ces "&°e is ^ntr^r^"'? ^ ^'^ '""'^ '^^'" "'^i'^'' pendent thought and action. ' Tl" e eha c" r s ic^ h T ''"T'"''"' '""' '"^- an men of stei.i.;; w^tr^ u::^:hL::-:— L^^^^^^^^^^ is a t:;ve':rHe:d::t"\r c^ty^-L^"^^^^^^^^ His father Taroh V Mo ^"^nty seat of Henderson County, Kentucky A. Meye^i' i'n llr;k7L%lrfr:f .'s^.T, "'^ -"'^^-'^-' «-^e which business he acquired from h^ ather who 1 "'" "1 '"P"* »"""^"""^' army during the Revolutionary War Ta™? P M ' '™' f". *"« continental whose ancestors were patriots of the R , * !' """"'' ^"'^J' B°"d. family of George WasC on °Vh , J ,'™"^ ^'^^'^ ^""^ ^^=°"^'- °f the age,slv,vedby%hTh:sba;Tandt:rtdd:m™"^'^ " ^'^°" '°"-^ -^"^ °f 470 BIOGRAPHICAL Mr. Mayer received his education in a private school and later graduated from the Henderson Public High School, and subsequently pursued a special course of study at the University of Chicago. He then entered the employ of the well known hardware house of Hibbard, Spencer & Company, Chicago. He worked in all departments of the business and finally became traveling sales- man, covering the field in Oregon and Washington. He later resigned his posi- tion and located in Los Angeles, entered business on his own account, and did a successful business at 537 South Broadway. In February, 1905, Mr. Mayer disposed of this business, removed to Venice and has since been identified with the commercial and civic growth of that city. At the city election of 1908, Mr. Mayer was elected a member of the Board of Trustees of Ocean Park, and is a member of the Committee on Public Works, Fire and Police, Lighting and the Legal committee. He is secretary and treas- urer of the Venice Shoe Mfg. Co., and one of the founders of this enterprise which is the first of its kind on the southern coast. Mr. Mayer married, at Henderson, Kentucky, Miss Sarah Bradshaw, a mem- ber of an old Kentucky family, and they have one child, a daughter, Sarah Louise. Edward V. Dales, senior member of the grocery house of Dales Brothers, Santa Monica, is a native of Illinois. He was born in the town of Middlepoint, White County, September 10th, 1877, a son of Charles S. Dales. The family came to Southern California and located at Santa Monica in 1886 when young Edward was but nine years of age. His youth was spent, therefore, in Santa Monica where he passed through the graded schools and finished in the Santa Monica High School as a graduate of the class of 1895. He then worked for Lang & Middlekauff, hardware merchants, as salesman for two years. In 1898 he embarked in the grocery business under the firm name of Gray & Dales, on Third Street. In 1899 he purchased his partner's interest and conducted the business alone until 1902, when his brother John became interested and the present firm of Dales Brothers was organized. Besides their store on Third Street, Santa Monica, Dales Brothers operated a store for two years on Pier Avenue and Ocean Front, Ocean Park, but in 1906 the two stores were merged at Santa Monica. Mr. Dales mairied Miss Florence Wright, of Santa Monica, February 20th, 1900. She is a daughter of Mr. P. B. Wright, now of Imperial, California. They have two sons, Verner and Lowell. Mr. Dales is a prominent Mason, having twice served as Master of Santa Monica Lodge, F. and A. M. He is also a member of the B. P. O. E., of Santa Monica. He was elected a member of the first city Board of Education under the Freeholders Charter and is now doing important committee work. BIOGRAPHICAL 471 Walter E. Devore, leading merchant and influential citizen of Ocean Park, in Santa Monica, is a native of Clay City, 111., and was born January 15th, 1856. His father, Jerre Devore, was a well to do farmer. Mr. Devore lived on the farm until about twenty-five years of age, then went to Springfield, Mo., where, for five years, he held a position as salesman in a furniture store, and acquired a thorough knowledge of the business. From Springfield, he went to Denver, Colo., where he remained seven years and was manager for the firm of Lunt & Company, Furniture. In 1896 he became a resident of Santa Monica and held responsible positions with the meicantile house of G. Knesel and later with the old house of Jackson Brothers. In 1902 he associated himself with Chauncey B. Petis, under the firm name of Devore & Petis, and opened a store on Main Street In 1904 they moved to their present quarters on Pier Avenue, in Ocean Park, Santa Monica, and they have built up an extensive business in furniture, hardware and general household equipment, having the most complete stock in their line in this section of the state, outside of Los Angeles. In 1908 the furniture stock was segregated from the hardware stock, materially enlarged, and installed in spacious double store quarters opposite the original stoie on Pier Avenue. Mr. Devore married in his native town, Miss Ivan Nicholson. She was born, reared and educated in Clay County, 111., where they were youthful friends. Mr. and Mrs. Devore have one child, a daughter, Burnsie E., born in Denver, Colorado. Mr. Devore has for five years been a member of the Santa Monica City Board of Education, is now first president of the Board under the Free- holders Charter and makes a most efficient presiding officer. He is counted among Santa Monica's most substantial citizens. August M. Guidinger, for a quarter of a century a resident of California and widely known in Los Angeles county, is a native of Manitowock. Wisconsin, and was born July 31st, 1863. His father, John B. Guidinger, was a native of Germany. Mr. Guidinger was nineteen years of age when he left home, coming to California and almost directly to Los Angeles, where he attended the State Normal School. This was in 1883, and the school was in the second year of its existence. Mr. Guidinger completed a thorough course of study and grad- uated in the class of 1886. He then went to Santa Paula and was principal of the Santa Paula high school from 1887 to 1890. He then returned to Los An- geles and with Howry t&; Peck gained a thorough knowledge of the undertaking business. In 1894, he opened this business for himself in Santa Monica and con- tinued for about thirteen years. He meantime served the city of Santa Monica about ten years as magistrate, a portion of this time as police judge and other- wise as justice of the peace. In 1906 he erected the splendid Guidinger building at 1334 Third street. 472 KX^RAI'HICAL which is (lesi!4iic(l csj^ecially for the undertakiiii;- husiness, being- fitted with all motlern conveniences. It is of the mission style of architecture and the most artistic building- in the city. Mr. Guidinger in 1907 disposed of the business to I'rezee Brothers & Todd, retaining^ ownership, however, of the building. He has valuable real estate holdings in Hollywood, which is at present his home. He also has business interests in Sawtelle. Mr. Guidinger married at Santa Paula, Miss Emma F. Hall, a daughter of R. R. Hall, deceased. They have one son, Theodore, born in Santa Monica, August 1st. 1905. William R. Chapmax, retired citizen of Sawtelle, one of the early settlers of the town, is a native of Erie County, New- York, and was born in the city of Buffalo in 1841. His father, James Chapman, w'as a merchant in Buffalo and in 1850 came west via the Great Lakes on the steamboat Mayilowcr to Racine, Wisconsin, where he pur- chased land and engaged in farming. He died there in 1856 leaving a widow and four children. Young William R., while yet a mere lad, secured employment on the steamers plying on Lake Michigan and be- came a cook. Later he apprenticed himself to learn ship carpentry in Chicago. The Civil War broke out and because of his irresistible love of adventure he left his work and in May, 1860, enlisted in the U. S. Reg- ular Army and was mustered into Company G., First U. S. Dragoons, which was the U. S. First Cavalry, at Carlisle, Pa. He served in the Dragoons for three years. On July 1st, 1863, he was transferred to Bat- tery A., 3rd U. S. Artillery, in which he served one year. On the 25th of July, 1864, he was honorably discharged and the same day re-enlisted for three years in response to the call of President Lincoln for 300,000 more men. He served the full term of his enlistment and was discharged from the service in July, 1867, having served his country continuously for over seven years. About this time Mr. Chapman married Miss Mariah Wheaton, at Chelsea, Mass., and located in Washington County, Illinois. In 1878 he came west to WILLIAM R. CHAPMAN. BIOGRAPHICAL 4/3 Colorado and mined gold at Central City, Gunnison and Rln.t u , he started for Californ.a. driving a teanf from D nver o protn^'^A '" ''" fron. hat pomt came by ra.l to Santa Moniea and ent red the Sold ""» "" r:'^r:ira:;^°^^„:^■ltTer '""T' -"-"-""-^ ^..A.andaShepherd,ofL.e,t^-^ A. K Hancock, of Santa Monica, Californ.a is a nativ. f „ Tennessee, he havmg been born in that city on the ^6 h dav c p K ''""''"• where he contmued to reside until he removed u-iH . / '^^'^™ary, 1853, His father. Captain A S Hancock Z ' 1 '"^^'""■'y '" Santa iVIonica. of Memphis, having come'tx,' uZ^^TnTsTTt' """''" "'""^^^'^ ™-^hants operated a Ime of steamboats t:w;enMrp; 3' nfw^^^ ^ '"" 7^^' »<1 history includes many names of distinguished mn both soM !^ "" '^^''^ Albert K. Hancock received his educationTn t h ' ''"'' ^'^"^^men. city finishing at.Saulsbury Cone :,tr:rrTerer-^^^^^^^^^ the leading educational institutions of Tennessee-after h' , , ™' °"" "^ s.vely in cotton planting, cultivating larce tr ? r f , '''' ™K^«^<^ ^'"''n- In .875 he married Mi s Connie nX 1 ^^ '' '""""'PP' ^^"^y- W. Duke, a distinguished lawyerTnd fudge of H^^K^'"^^ °' J"^«^ «-^g' County, Arkansas and who Z lo a 1 ^°"' '" Crittenden received her education at War^^Sem n r "ft^^l^nie^T"'"' ''\ "^"^"^'^ Seminary for young ladies in the state "Nashville, Tennessee, the leading '" '882 Mr. Hancock commenced the practice of l.„. • u- state and soon took position amon., the „ P™"'« °f law m his native city and he having in a shortLgaird an 'liable "":"'"' '"™''^" °' "'■' P™'--- actions and in the defense orcrfmTnalcIses "" " '^ ^ P™^^^"'°^ '" ^'-"^g^ whil *::o r™V:r,::r J-t^X^- i- -- distnc. m f ,03 and, ' at ..frCrSpq :L':1- "^h-^ --JP -: --ess a.airs in «:; — r^^iTetc ^ f-- - r - '^ -S^trai: home, and has established lis office in Ls l^f'"^ California his permanent lucrative and satisfactory law practice ° '" ''' '' ™J°-""2 ^ ^'"v A. l" dom'a"::ire"d^:a~*a.;rt"ft:tf M ""■ 'T" "'^ '''"' °' ^^^l ,ames a tobacco merchant of Ne v Olean! La T' "'"' '"'' "' ■'°''" D- Jordan, urieans. La., and a young son and daughter, Hadys 474 BIOGRAPHICAL and Corinne, aged respectively 12 and 10 years, all of whom reside in Santa Monica except Mr. and Mrs. Jordan, who are expected to join their mother and father within the near future and become permanent residents of beautiful Santa Monica by the Sea. Mrs. George Sibley is one of the essential factors in the business, social and civic life of Venice, a woman of exceptional abilities and charming per- sonality. She is a native of Cleveland, Ohio, where she was born August 28th, 1858, a daughter of Alfred and Laura (Foot) Bright, both natives of the same state. Her father died when a comparatively young man. Mrs. Sibley spent her girlhood in Cleveland and, at eighteen years of age, married Mr. Henry W. Taft, an own cousin of Hon. William H. Taft, ex-Secretary of War and,- at the present time (September, 1908), republican candidate for the Presidency. Mr. Taft died in 1882 and the widow, with an only daughter, Irene, lived in retirement in Cleveland for a period of about ten years. In 1891 she came to California and located at Los Angeles. December 25th of the same year she married Mr. George Sibley, then a wholesale merchant of Los Angeles. In Mav, 1900, Mrs. Sibley came to the coast in quest of better health. After a season of relaxation and rest, she caught the spirit of enterprise and business promise that marked the founding and spontaneous growth of the embryo city of Ocean Park as a seaside resort, and in her characteristically quiet way com- menced the sale of real estate. Her practical restoration to health and her great faith in the future of the new town made her one of the most effective advo- cates of and successful promoters on the beach and she soon laid the foundation for the extensive business interests she today controls. In 1901 she opened' offices on Pier avenue and there continued in business until 1905. Meantime she incorporated the Guarantee Realty Company and has continuously held the office of president thereof. They purchased property in the then new city of Venice of x-Xmerica, at the northeast corner of Windward avenue and Trolley- way and there erected the Guarantee building, one of the most substantial busi- ness blocks in the now famous city. In 1906 the business was removed thereto. Mrs. Sibley is always found ready to forward any movement for the bet- terment of Venice. She is an active worker in the Venice Chamber of Com- merce, she is president of the Pick and Shovel Club, an aggressive civic organ- ization that has done much for the civic and social growth of the city. She was one of the organizers of the Ocean Park Country Club and first president of the Ladies' Auxiliary. By her former marriage Mrs. Sibley has one daughter, Mrs. Irene Taft Loring, wife of Howard S. Loring of Venice, and by her present marriage, she has one daughter, Louella Marie Sibley. The family home in Walgrove is one of the most spacious and substantial of that pretty Venice suburb. Mrs. Sibley, by reason of her inherent honesty and business acumen, has accumulated" a comfortable fortune and is accorded a high place in the commercial world. BIOGRAPHICAL 475 Adolf Vache is a California pioneer of 1855. He is a native of France born near La Rochelle in 1835. His father and grandfather were bakers by trade and pursued the business as a life occupation. His father was also a vineyardist and wme maker, and Adolf acquired a thorough knowledge of both trades He became an expert bread maker. He was nineteen years of age when he came to San Francisco. He there followed his trade as baker, went to San luan m then Monterey, now San Benito County, and for eighteen years conducted a bakery and meat market. The building of the Southern Pacific Ry through San Bemto County opened up the new city of Hollister and business at San luan declined, when Mr. Vache went to San Bernardino and joined his brother E Vache, m grape culture, at Brookside, near che present city of Redlands Later Mr. Vache raised grapes on an extensive scale on leased land of the Barton Ranch at old San Bernardino. In 1887 he came to Santa Monica and purchased two lots at the corner of Oregon Avenue and Fourth Street, where he built a dwellino- and bakery and conducted business for many years. His bread became famous for Its excellent quality and his patronage extended to Los Angeles and surround- mg towns. Some people who spent the summer season at Santa Monica or- dered their bread from him after their return home. Mr. Vache married in 1875, Miss Francisca Pellissier, in Watsonville Cali fornia. She died in this city in 1891 leaving a family of seven children, namely Emily Mrs. Jesse Yokum, of Arizona ; Adolf, of San Jose ; Joseph, of Santa Monica ■ Zoe, who IS Mrs. Joseph Hall, of Los Angeles; Marcelina, Mrs. M. Biene of Brook- side, California; Miss Madaline, single, and Ernest, in Arizona. Mr. Vache is one of Santa Monica's most reliable and respected pioneers He has retired from business. James H. Grigsby was born in McDonough Countv, 111., January 7th 1851 where he lived until he moved to California. His father, William Grimsby' settled m McDonough County. 111., in 1829 and accumulated over four thou^sand acres of land m the county which is worth today $200 per acre. Father and son were engaged m the general merchandise and milling business for a number of years, when they started the Grigsby Bank. May 1st. 1882 and continued in the business until 1900, when William Grigsby turned his interest over to Jame<^ H Grigsby and he conducted the business until July 22nd, 1907. when he sold the Bank to the Huston Banking Company. William Grigsby died July 25th 1907 James H. Grigsby and family moved to California, November 19th, 1907 and settled m Santa Monica where he is again engaged in the banking business as president of the Merchants National Bank. He was also engaged in the horse importing business for a number of years with J. C. Huston and also in the Canadian land business with his son E Gric^sbv for three vears. ' ^^ - • 476 BIOGRAPHICAL William Wallace Woodrl'Fi", retired, of Santa iMonica, is a native of Flnteville. in the town of Litchfield. Conn., and was born May 20th, 1844. His father, Isaac Vk WoodrutT, descended from the earhest colonists of that name in Connecticut, and became a successful manufacturer of fifes at Fifeville. Later he. with W. L. Gilbert, founded the W. L. Gilbert Clock Company at Winstead. Litchfield county. Conn., which is one of the most extensive institu- tions of its kind on the western continent. He was, for fifty years, until the time of his death, a moving spirit in the development of the business. Mr. WoodruiT grew up at Winstead and. at eighteen years of age, entered the Fed- eral armv. was soon detailed as a musician and served as a fifer in Company G, Nineteenth Connecticut Infantry. He served from 1862 to September 15th. 1865, during which time he played a solid silver instrument, the production of his father's factory at Fifeville. Upon the close of the war he returned home, entered the employ of the Gilbert Clock Company and became thoroughly familiar with all the intricacies of clock making, developing an instinctive mechanical genius that became invaluable to him in his business. By reason of impaired health, he came to California in 1903 and is one of Santa Monica's esteemed citizens. He is a member of the G. A. R. and one of the founders of the Stephen lackson Post of Santa Monica. Mr. Woodruff is prolific in vivid reminiscences of the Civil War and plays with as much life and relish the pop- ular airs and war songs as when a lad leading the boys in blue to battle, nearly half a century ago. Mr. Woodruff married at Litchfield. Conn., in 1887, Miss Eleanor Loraine Smith who. during their five years' residence in Santa Monica, has gained many steadfast friends. J. S. Hunt. M. D., Santa Monica, is a native of Newark, Licking County, Ohio, born June 7th, 1865. He is the son of John Bingham Hunt, M. D., and Angeline (Patterson) Hunt. Dr. John B. Hunt was a successful physician and, for many years, practiced medicine at Newark and Columbus, Ohio, and later at Indianapolis, Ind. Dr. J. S. Hunt spent his boyhood and youth in the two latter named cities, receiving his schooling at the Ohio Weslyan Uni- versity and later pursued a course of study at Pulte Medical College, Cincinnati, from which institution he graduated in 1891. He commenced practicing his profession at Athens, Ohio, and there remained until he came to California, locating in Santa Monica in the year 1900. In this city he has built uj) an ex- tensive practice. Dr. Hunt married, June 11th, 1890, Miss Adelaide Junipher, a daughter of Mr. A. A. Junipher, a successful farmer of Greendale, Hocking County, Ohio. Dr. and Mrs. Hunt have one daughter, Henrietta. They are members of the Presbyterian church. Dr. Hunt has extensive realty interests n Santa Monica and Venice and is one of the promotors of and a stockholder in the Santa .Monica Bay Hospital and is treasurer of that institution. BIOGRAPHICAL 477 Stephen Carpenter, for nearly half a century a citizen of California, and more than a quarter century resident of Santa Monica, is a native of Vermont. He was born in the town of High- gate, Franklin county, IMarch 29th, 1834. His father, Loren C. Carpen- ter, was a native of the town of Barre, Washington county, and was by oc- cupation a millwright, owning a foun- dry and machine shop at Highgate. He was a man of affairs and was a soldier of the War of 1812. He mar- ried Caroline Fisk, a daughter of Stephen Fisk, who served in the Rev- olutionary War, entering the army, a youth of seventeen, as a drummer and serving until the war closed. He then repaired to the timbered forests of \>rmont. w-here he cleared up a farm and lived during the remainder of his life. Air. Carpenter, when a small boy of four years, suffered the loss of his mother by death, which event broke up the home. He was taken in charge by an aunt at Bethel, w^ith whom he lived for about five years. He lived with other relatives until he was seventeen, when he learned the millwright's trade of his father. Later, for seven years, he followed his trade in Fillmore county, Alinnesota. In 1863 he came to California via the Isthmus of Panama. He proceeded to the then new development of the mines of the Comstock lode and w^orked at his trade and timbering shafts as a superintendent for several years. He came to Santa Monica in 1875 and returned north. In 1882 he practically retired from active business pursuits. For nineteen years his home stood on the property now occupied by the Santa Monica City Hall. He served nine years as a mem- ber of the Santa Monica City School Board and was for several vears its chair- man. Mr. Carpenter married in 1862 in Minnesota, Miss Madaline Webb, a daughter of H. H. Webb (deceased) and sister of H. H. Webb, a well-known business man and pioneer of Santa Monica. Mrs. Carpenter died in Santa ]\Ion- ica October 3rd. 1904, leaving one daughter. Laura E., wife of Albert D. Hawes of Santa Monica. Theirs was the first wedding ceremony performed in Santa Monica. By a former marriage Mrs. Hawes has one son, Stephen T. Garey. of Santa Monica, who, September 8th, 1906, married Miss Alvira Harrison of Santa Monica. STEPHEN CARPENTER. 478 BIOGRAPHICAL J. LiNDT, for many years a resident of Santa Monica, was born in the southern part of Germany, on the Rhine, February 8th, 1840. His father, Peter Lindt, was an art wood worker and glazier. He worked out designs and made cathedral windows, doors, etc. Young Lindt served an apprenticeship, passed three examinations in different departments of the work, adding the art of painting and decorating. He travelled for about two years in the Valley of the Rhine in pursuit of his trade. In 1859 he came to America, landing in New York and there follo^^ed his trade for about thirty years. In 1890 he came to California and in 1902 he located in Santa Monica. He has executed some of the best work in his line on the coast and has done the interior decorating of many of the best residences in this section of the state. Mr. Lindt married Miss Mary Granger, of Baden, Germany, in 1884, and they have four children — Frances, Annie, Emma and Christina. They are mem- bers of the Catholic church. Mi. Lindt is a thrifty and energetic man of means and owns a comfortable home near Twentieth Street and Oregon Avenue. Santa Monica. Jose ValEnzuKla, of 1824 Fifth street, Santa Monica, is a member of one of the oldest Spanish California families, a native of Los Angeles, and was born March 18th, 1851. His father. Ramon Valenzuela, was one of the best-known native-born citizens of Los Angeles, and was a son of Jasper and (Maria Y. Ygnacio Lopez) Valenzuela. also native Californians. Ramon Valenzuela was reared on a cattle ranch in San Diego and November 28th, 1840, married Senorita Ascension Serrano of San Gabriel Mission. Her parents, Thomas and Nicholaza ( Navarra) Serrano, were both born in, and during their lifetime never left the confines of. Los Angeles county. After his marriage Senor Valenzuela followed, for years, the occupation of fruit raiser on a small ranch at San Pedro and Sixth streets, Los Angeles. This place he sold in 1846, purchasing a tract of land at what is now the corner of Seventh and Gladys streets. This land becoming too valuable for farming purposes, he subdivided and upon a portion thereof built houses to rent. He sold the property in 1889. He died in Los Angeles in 1889 at the advanced age of eighty-four years, leaving ten chil- dren — Eduardo, who married Francisco Aguirre, now both deceased — Manuela, deceased, who married Jose Antonio Machado — Jubencio, Felipe, Mrs. Elario Raves, Salbadora, widow of Dolores Ruiz — Jasper — Jose — Crotilda, Mrs. Elario Ybarre — Ramond. died 1906 — Ascension and Armulfo. There are forty-two grandchildren and thirteen great-grandchildren. Jose Valenzuela grew up in the city of Los Angeles, living the free open life of the cattle ranges, also being at times employed at various other occupa- tions. April 17th, 1871. he married Sarah, daughter of Nathan Pettey, who was a well-known pioneer of California. He crosed the plains, mountains and rivers for California in 1849, coming from South Carolina and locating in Mar- BIOGRAPHICAL 479 iposa county, where he became well known and prominent in political affairs. He served as sheriff at Mariposa county nine years and was a conspicuous figure in the pursuit of the famous bandit, Joaquin Murietta, and during his public services was known as a terror to evil-doers. He married Elizabeth Holland, also of southern birth and parentage. Her grandfather and great-grandfather were Revolutionary soldiers and lost their lives in the cause of American inde- pendence. Mrs. Valenzuela and one son, Albert Pettey of Fresno, are the only surviving children. Mr. and Mrs. Valenzuela located on their present property November 14th, 1905, where they own a comfortable home, No. 1824 Fifth street, and adjacent income property. They have one son, Roy Valenzuela. Mr. Valenzuela is a man of independent thought and action. He is, in politics, a democrat, and has imiformly voted his party ticket. D. G. Holt, editor and owner of the Daily Outlook, Santa Monica, was born in the city of Philadelphia, Pa., October 6th, 1861. He lived in the East until about six years of age, when he went to make his home with an uncle in Wis- consin. Two years later his father, Sidney A. Holt, his mother and two younger brothers were lost at sea. Mr. Holt grew up in Wisconsin and was educated in the public schools of that state. In 1873 he joined the " rush " to North- western Minnesota and Dakota, and there followed newspaper work for several years, latterly at Pine City, where he was connected with the Piiic County Pio- neer. In the fall of 1886 he left Pine City and started for California, making San Francisco his destination. He chose the Canadian Pacific railroad route and, after spending a few months in Winnipeg, proceeded westward. The win- ter was a severe one and he was snow-bound for a week at Medicine Hat, N. W. T. While thus delayed he was engaged to take charge of the local paper, the joint property of local merchants, wdiich had suspended publication for about three months. Mr. Holt put the paper on a good business footing and con- ducted the same for a period of about two years. He then resumed his journey v/estward to San Francisco, arriving there in the spring of 1889. In the spring of 1890 he founded the Rii'er News at Rio Vista, Solano county, California, and conducted the same for five years. In the spring of 1896 he came to Santa Monica and assumed charge of the Santa Monica Outlook, then a weekly publi- cation. He transformed it into a daily in 1896. and has made it one of the most Influential news journals of Southern California. Mr. Holt married at Medicine Hat. Canada. Sept. 30. 1891, Miss Laura Preston of Niagara Falls, Ontario. Canada, and they have one son, Sidney, born at Rio Arista, Solano county, Cal., Sept. 18, 1892. Mr. Holt has been prominent in the political life of California and is a loyal supporter of the republican party. For many years he held the position of min- 480 BIOGRAPHICAL ute clerk of the California State Senate and was one of the most efficient and popular attaches of that body. He has ever evinced a becoming; interest in local public afifairs and for six years was a member of the executive committee of the Rejiublican County Central Committee. For many years he served the city of Santa Monica as a trustee of the public library. He was elected a member of the Board of School Trustees in 1897 and served until 1901. Upon the reincor- poration of the city under the Freeholders' Charter in 1907, he was elected a member of the Board of Education and is now president of the board. The California Military Academy, truly a Santa Monica institution in the sense that it is located in Santa Monica, is incorporated by Santa Monica men and is backed by Santa Monica capital. It was opened in response to the urgent demands of a large number of parents who desired to place their boys in a genuine military academy, near Los Angeles, differing in several important respects from any school then existing in the vicinity of that city. The Academy occupies the premises formerly famous as the Arcadia Hotel. The institution is organized as a military post under command of the Superin- tendent, the members of the Faculty being assigned to perform such military duties as circumstances may require. The Corps of Cadets is organized similarly to that of the United States Military Academ}^ except that it is organized as a cavalry command, and is governed in accordance with military customs. This institution possesses unexcelled facilities for ocean bathing on its own beach, which is one of the best and safest on the bay. The salt water plunge, at Ocean Park, is within easy walking distance. Three regular courses of study, each leading to graduation with the Academy Diploma, are open to Cadets, as follows : I. The Classical Course, fitting for college. II. The Scientific Course, fitting for Scientific or Technical Institutions. III. The English Course, for boys wdio are not to enter college. Effort is made, also, to secure instructors who have had military experience, especially as cadets in school or college. The school year begins on the Wednesday nearest the 25th of September, and ends on the Wednesday nearest the 10th of June. The usual vacations at Christmas and Easter are observed, also such legal holidays as may be advisable, and it is not in session during the summer but its situation and command of facilities for out of door sports and recreation, render it a most enjoyable place in which to spend the summer if a boy must be away from home. Major E. H. Baker, the Superintendent, a native of Maine, was educated in Chicago and New York. His military training was acquired in the National Guard and in military schools. He has had twenty-three years experience as BIOGRAPHICAL 481 Commandant and Superintendent of military boarding schools in New England the Middle States, the Mississippi Valley and California. He came to Los Angeles in the spring of 1905 with the intention of opening a military academy ^similar to the best schools in the east. Having thoroughly canvassed the vicinity of that city, he selected Santa Monica as offering the most and greatest advantages for a boy's boarding school. He secured a lease of the well known Hotel Arcadia property for a term and opened the Academy in a military camp September, 1906. Acting as Superintendent he has conducted the affairs of the institution since that date. With the co-operation of Professor Bishop and Mr. Roy Jones, he organized the Academy Corporation, which has a fifty years charter and an authorized capital stock of two hundred thousand dollars. This insures the permanence and high quality of the institution. Bartlett R. Bishop was born December 25th, 1879, at Ashland, Hanover County, Virginia. He was reared in the States of Missouri and Virginia, entering William Jewell College (Liberty, Missouri) in the fall of 1896, at the age of sixteen years. He specialized in science, graduating from William Jewell Cotlege, June 13th, 1900. He has received the degree of A. B. He has traveled exten- sively throughout the United States and in Old Mexico. He has wide acquaint- ance throughout the states, particulariy on the Atlantic and Pacific Slopes. For some time he occupied the position of solicitor for the Snoqualmie Falls Power Company, being one of the four members of the board which established the power and light rating of Seattle. He was also statistician for the Hallidie Machinery Company of the same city, and was connected with various other mercantile establishments He has an extensive experience in the law depart- ments and scientific work and has taught for three years in miHtary academies. In the fall of 1906 he returned to Los Angeles to co-operate with Major Baker in the launching of the California Military Academy. He is now secretary of the Board of Directors and Principal (Head of Scholastics) of this institution. Richmond W. Ar.mstrong, well known citizen of Santa Monica, is a native of New Haven, Conn., and was born July 2 7th, 1848. His father, Lorenzo Aim- strong, was senior member of the commercial house of L. W. and P. Arm- strong Company, West India importers. Their principal offices were in New York City. Mr. Armstrong was a member of this house for about thirty years, but retired therefrom and came to California in 1896. He located at Ocean Park, Santa Monica in 1900, where he owns a fine residence at 135 Fraser Avenue. Mr. Armstrong was elected to the Santa Monica City Council in 1907 from the Second Ward and is one of the hard working members of that efficient body. He married in the year 1872, Miss M. C. Mead, a daughter of Rev. A. H. Mead, a Methodist clergyman of New York City. They have a son. Dr. M. M. Arm- strong, of Los Angeles. Mr. Armstrong is a Royal Arch Mason, Scottish Rites and a Knight Templar. 31 482 BIOGRAPHICAL Rov G. Putnam, City Clerk and well-known business man of Sawtelle, is a native of Berlin, Green Lake county, Wisconsin, where he was born May 27, 1886, a son of Horace Putnam, a na- tive of Massachusetts, and Vera (Smith) Putnam, a native of New York. Horace Putnam was the in- ventor and an extensive manufac- turer of what is known as the Snow Pack or Snow Shoe, which has be- come an indispensable article of footwear throughout all snowy coun- tries during winter seasons. In 1894 he practically retired from active business pursuits, came to California and purchased an orange ranch and there lived until his death, which oc- curred in February, 1904, the widow surviving until the following Decem- ber. They had two sons. Horace died in 1903, at nineteen years of age. Left alone, Mr. Putnam, upon the death of the parent, settled up the estate and came direct to Sawtelle and located, where he has dealt in real estate and has become a factor in the civic and business development of the city. He is a member of the real estate firm of Putnam & Crane. At the city election in 1908, Mr. Put- nam was elected City Clerk and is a most competent and popular officer. He is a Royal Arch Mason, affiliating with the lodge in Santa Monica. He is also Secretary of the Blue Lodge at Sawtelle. He is an active member and Secre- tary of the Sawtelle Commercial Club, an organization composed of the leading business men of Sawtelle. Mr. Putnam's popularity is due to his unobtrusive and pleasing personality, his temperate habits of life and his recognized business ability. R. G. PUTNAM. Luther C. WatkKvs, the Santa Monica Superintendent of the Land and Water Company, was born at Rochester, New York, September 18th, 1854. His father, Henry Watkeys, was superintendent of motive power for the New York Central Railroad Company, holding this office for a period of thirty-three years. He was a native of Nova Scotia. The major portion of his life, barring ten years from 1885 to 1895 in Indiana, was spent in New York. He was, by pro- BIOGRAPHICAL 483 fession, mechanical engineer and an expert in his line. He had the personal confidence of William H. Vanderbilt and was frequently called to consult with him upon business matters. Mr. Watkeys had an older brother who was thirty- five years an engineer of the N. Y. C. Ry. Company and died without warning while on duty in his engine cab. Mr. Watkeys' mother was Miss Zerriah T. Colman, a native of Newburyport, Mass., and a daughter of Luther Colman. Young Watkeys left home in 1875, at the age of twenty-one years, and became a civil engineer. Later he entered the employ of the N. Y. C. Ry. Company and for eleven years served as passenger conductor, running between New York and Rochester. He came West to Indiana in 1887, and to Kalamazoo, Mich., in 1892. In 1895 he came to California and engaged in orange culture at Covina. In 1904, he assumed his present position and is known to the citizens of Santa Monica as a most competent and popular manager of the important interests he represents. Mr. Watkeys married in 1892, Miss May Florence Pickard of Kalamazoo, Mich., a daughter of J. H. Pickard, a California pioneer of 1849, who spent several years in the state as a successful miner, and returned to Kalamazoo, Mich., where he died about 1892. John B. Procter, Santa Monica, was born September 12th, 1861, and was the third son of the Rev. Gilbert Procter of Penny Bridge, near LTlverston, Lan- cashire, England, who was vicar of the parish of Egton. Mr. Procter came to the LTnited States in the spring of 1883, and located at Larchwood, Lyon county. Iowa, where for four years he was a member of the English colony established there. Returning to England in 1887, he married the only daughter of Thomas M. Machell, Esq., of Newby Bridge, Lancashire, and towards the end of the same year he came to California, settling at Santa Monica, where he has resided continuously for the last twenty-one years. In 1900 he was elected to the office of Citv Clerk and Assessor, for the term of two years, and in 1904 he was again appointed City Assessor, continuing in office for two years more, proving an effi- cient and popular public servant. Besides being a Mason, he is a Forester of America, and a prominent and influential Elk, holding the office of Secretary since the organization of the lodge five years ago. For a number of years he has acted as Clerk of the Vestry for the Parish of St. Augustine-by-the-Sea. He has two sons, James Machell and Gilbert, both " Native Sons." Mr. Procter is an enthusiastic sportsman, and was one of the first to introduce the game of polo in California. For many years he was engaged in the real estate and insurance business, and is now manager of the extensive property interests of Mrs. Arcadia B. de Baker at Santa Monica. 484 P>I()GRAPHICAL Oi.i\I':k S. Wi:s'1'()\er, a well-known and hij^lil}- esteemed citizen of Santa IVIonica, is a native of Indiana, having been born in Fayette county, near Con- nersville, October lltli, 1(S32. He is the son of Hiram Westover, a farmer of Holland Dutch descent, his ancestors having come to America before the War of the Revolution. There were three brothers who were active participants in the war, one, a loyalist, removed to Canada, one located in Xew York and one in Virginia. Hiram Westover. the father of the subject of our sketch, was born in Cen- tral Xew York, on the shores of Cayuga Lake, was a farmer, and married Minerva Campbell, a grand-niece of Alexander Campbell, the founder of the Camjibellite Church. About 1820 the family came West and located in Fayette countv. Ind. Later they removed to the northern part of the state and located in Huntington countv. In this cfumty, Hiram Westover donated land and laid out a town, naming the place Clayville in honor of Henry Clay, for whom he had great admiration. The first brick house in Clayville was his spacious and substantial home, which has withstood the ravages of a vigorous climate for over fift\- vears and is still in good condition. He raised a family of seven chil- dren, of whom Oliver S. is the third. The subject of this sketch spent his boyhood on the farm, attended the local schools and, at twenty-two years of age, taught the district school at Clayville and the adjoining county. In 18.^2. he married Miss Lncinda Lewis, by whom he has one daughter. In 18.^'^ Mr. and Mrs. Westover located in LInion county. Iowa, near the town of Afton, at that time the county seat. They were among the first settlers of that frontier county. The daughter, Cjnthia, wife of John Alden of Brooklyn, New York, is known throughout the world as Cinthia West- over Alden, the founder and President-General of the International Sunshine Societv. She is a woman of brilliant attainment and pleasing personality and is devoting her entire time to the work of her organization. Mrs. Westover died in 1862. In 1863. he was again married to Miss Isabel Cornelius, a daughter of James Cornelius, a Kentuckian, owner of valuable lands near Ashland in Fayette county, the heart of the famous " blue-grass region." Mrs. Westover's ancestry is in direct line from the famous MacClouds of Scot- land, her father's mother having borne that illustrious name. At this time Air. Westover held the offices of Justice of the Peace, Township Supervisor and Assessor. They lived at Afton about four years and then joined the gold rush for Pike's Peak, which resulted in their locating at Denver, Colo., then a small frontier mining town. Here Mr. Westover spent four years mining and prospecting in Gilpin county. It was during this time that Mrs. Westover became interested in mineralogy and geology, gaining a practical and com]:)re- hensive knowledge of the same. She interested her husband in these subjects and for some years they carried on a business of preparing collections of miner- alogical sju'cimens for educational and other i)ublic institutions. The Westover?. BIOGRAPHICAL 485 were proprietors in Denver of a large store, mineral and geological, carrying on an extensive business. On account of the high altitude, they left Denver in 1887, coming to Los Angeles, where, with W. D. Campbell, they engaged in the curio business. They also owned a store in Pasadena. In 1893. they came to Santa Monica. They have two children. \\'alter R. of Denver, an expert on Indian blankets and bas- ketry, and Grace, the wife of John B. Fraser of Sacramento. I Peter H. SoxnESVN. successful and popular merchant of Sawtelle. was born of well-to-do parents near the town of Bergen. Xorwav. in the year 1868. He received a good high school education and, at nineteen years of age, left his native land and embarked for America. Upon his arrival in the United States he went directly to Alankato. Minn. There he clerked in a wholesale and retail drygoods store for W. W. P. McConnell for a period of about nine years. In 1896 he went to Spokane. Washington, and engaged in tht retail fruit business for three years, his place being at the corner of Sprague and Lincoln streets. In 1899 he came to California and engaged in the clothing business, remaining until 1901. when he came to Sawtelle and opened a drygoods and men's furnishing goods store. He did business for about four years on Fourth street and in 1906 moved to more spacious quarters on Oregon avenue. Mr. Sonnesyn has acquired a wide and favorable acquaintance and has built up a profitable business. He married at Spokane. Washington, in 1898. ISIiss Anna Sederberg. a young woman of Danish parentage and birth. The Sonnesvn resi- dence, the finest in the city of Sawtelle. is at the corner of Third street and Indiana avenue. Henry Peachev Wieber, D.D.. of Santa Monica, is a native of Ohio and was born in the town of Elyria. Lorain county. His father. Francis Augustus Wilbur. Ph. D., was born in Vermont, a descendant of Captain Church of King Philip's War fame. His grandfather saw service in the Revolutionary War and his father was a soldier in the War of 1812. Dr. Wilber's mother. Favelle Peachey Wilber. was born in London. England, and came to this countrv in childhood. She grew to womanhood in the city of Cincinnati. Ohio, graduated from Mrs. Ryland's School for young ladies and became a teacher in the Cin- cinnati public schools before her marriage. The Rev. Francis A. Wilber was a Presbyterian minister at Elyria. Ohio, for a period of about thirteen years. Later he conducted classical academies in Ohio and Indiana. Dr. Wilber was pre- pared for college at his father's academy in Wabash. Indiana, and graduated from the classical department of Wooster University, Wooster. Ohio, in 1887. He studied theology at Princeton and at Union Seminaries. Before coming to 486 BIOGRAPHICAL California he was professor of Latin in Pierre University at Pierre, South Da- kota, and subsequently was pastor of Presbyterian Churches at St. Lawrence and at Rapid City, South Dakota. In January, 1893, he came to California and was pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Fernando from 1893 to 1898. From 1898 to 1899 he was professor of Latin in Occidental College, Los Angeles. In the year 1900 he assumed the pastorate of the First Presbyterian Church at Santa Monica, which he relinquished in 1907. Dr. Wilber received the honorary degree of D.D. from his Alma Mater, the Universitv of Wooster, Ohio. Col. James A. Loudon. Santa Monica by the sea, with its superb scenic sit- uation and surroundings, its delightful climate and splendid public institutions, has drawn permanently to its confines many people of culture, refinement and wealth, seeking retirement from the strenuous life of a business world. These people have purchased its choicest residence property, own its most luxurious homes and have become a most important factor in making it one of the wealthiest and most attractive seaside home cities of the Pacific Coast. Colonel Loudon is one of its recently most welcome citizens. Colonel Loudon is a native of Ten- nessee and grew up in the city of Memphis. His paternal ancestors were Scotch and are directly descended from Lord Loudon, who was the owner of Loudon's Bonn}^ Hills, Woods and Braes, one of the most beautiful feudal estates in the lowlands of Scotland. Col. Loudon is a son of John Loudon, father of eleven children, all of whom, save three, the subject of this sketch, a brother, Hopkins Loudon, and Miss Debbie Loudon, died before the demise of the father. Col. Loudon grew up in the city of Memphis amid the busy scenes of a most delightful social influence and broad hospitality of southern life. When the calamities of civil war overtook his home city he, even though a youth of fifteen years, volun- teered in the Confederate army and served with distinction throughout the entire conflict, from 1861 to the final ending in 1865, in defense of his country's cause. He entered the cavalry service as a private soldier and at times was in the hottest of the fray. He was three times captured by the enemy and twice escaped. (See " Harvey Mathew's History of the Old Guards in Gray " and also " His- torical Biography of Eminent Americans.") Col. Loudon, at the close of the war, in 1865, was paroled as a Confederate officer from the military prison at Little Rock, Arkansas, and returned to his native state. For many years he has been intimately associated with the business, civic and political growth of the city of Memphis. Essentially a man of afifairs, his activities have been along business lines and his rewards amply the result of successful enterprise. Col. Loudon, January 13, 1870, married Miss Virginia Lewis Shanks. She died leaving a son, Lewis S. Loudon. September 7, 1904, he married ]\Iiss Sarah, daughter of Hon. Albert K. Hancock, then a prominent lawyer of the Memphis bar and a member of the Tennessee State Senate, now a resident of BIOGRAPHICAL 487 Santa Monica and practicnig his profession in Los Ano-eles Mrs T nn 1 • lady of charming personality and social refinement T^^ev h/ 7' . '' ' Lou Lou Ann, aged three years and Arii " ^^ ^'''° slaughters, ac^ed one year Vol T Aihngton. a natiye daughter of California, d^,eu one }ear. Lol. Loudon, m January 1906 ^^^■,fU ^ • r ■ ■ active business pursuits, came to Ca.i on i', aml'to Lo- a"", T'"'' '™" a ho,„e in Ingraham street where the f ^iK H , Y^ ^'^ ! '"" ''"''^'''"' months. The^ollowiug Nov .. e , pu r 1 "n ' """"^ °' ^"°"' "»""' and there hVed for a time t7 V u ''""'''''f ^ "" "ra"?*^ g™« at San Gabriel Gables of he W H P '^'"^ '^"" °^ '*^ '^^ P"'''^'"''"' Grav „o- of he W. H. Perry estate on Ocean avenue, Santa Monica which the'v regard as the.r permanent family home. Col. Loudon declares to L ' ter th. Santa Mon.ca has tn my opinion, the finest clintate on earth - and Lr ho " to exceed the age of his lantented mother's father, David Trowbridge who lived to the age of one hundred and one years, - ■ and here, where the sut^^t n, I, e ocean s blue to gold ' may I be buried, if it is God's will " of To . f "'■ "•^"-'^""°"-" ""«" °f Sawtelle, is a native of the state nZZl 7' ]","■' *'' .' ^'""^ ''"'' ''"'' '""^■•«'«1 i" "o°'«' n,ills which manufactured cashmeres, flannels and other woolen fabrics. He was a native of Holland attd came to this country when a child, the famdv locati g Tn Tennessee. He ntarried Miss Amanda Langford. who bore Itin, nine children of whom Jantes P. ,s the second born. He grew up in Des Moines worled a mac n,e shop, .vhere he learned the millwright t'rade in Ccnterville J:'.' Jn 18/,S. he came to Cahfornia, reaching San Francisco April 22nd of that vear went into' tl"" "°''''' ,'" "" "'""'" '™" "■°'"^-=- P™'" San Francisco he went , to the mmes and erected quartz ntills, l,aving a seeming monopolv of d,e bustness n, Plumas, Lassen and Sierra counties. He also buil, ntills at .. 1904 he came to Southern California and located at Sawtelle. For mme. ^ •• , , . "'" v.c...iwiiiici duu lucatea at sawtelle a tmie he engaged m the grocery business, which he finall< • """'' '■'" 'h-^ ■■<^-»" <"-• "»' knowledge lecturt n Boston bV^ T"' ' """'"'" ''"' ^^^^^ ™- c^nmencedl T. A A , ^ ^^^^^^ '^y'"«^ '^'"^''''' ^"d Gentlemen: We are all descended from— we are all descended from— grandparents. ' Well ha back' » I VaT, • Tf '^^ 'l"■'^— ' 'hat the line e'xtended mu^furt e back. If I had heretofore entertamed any doubts on that point.what I see and ■Jettle'dt XrH ^T'^^^rT' "^-- »'y S-ndfatLr. Nath n , Taft settled m New Hampshire m the latter part of the eighteenth century where he resided until his death. He had a number of childrem Amon. the names thev 3,ore were David, Daniel, Nathaniel, Rufus and Stephen, the fast n.™" be^. 505 BIOGRAPHICAL my father. His mother was grandfather's second wife. My father and his brother David left New Hampshire in the early part of the present century and settled in Richfield, Otsego County, New York, whence my father soon moved a hundred miles further west into Oswego County. Uncle David had a nutnber of sons, two of whom, Ferdinand and Nathaniel, also moved into Oswego County. My father married Miss Vienna Harris, whose father, Stephen Harris, lived and died in Richmond, New^ Hampshire. My parents had seven children who lived to years of maturity, four girls and three boys, all but one of whom are still living. One of my brothers, Jerome B. Taft, who took an active part in protecting Kansas from the curse of slavery, died in the autumn of 1863. In 1853 I married Miss Mary A. Burnham, of Madison County, New York, and in the spring of 1863 went west with a colony of over forty persons and settled upon a tract of land in the Des Moines Valley, which I purchased of the State of Iowa. Here I have since been at work, building up a town and estab- lishing an institution of learning. We have had six children, five of whom are still living, namely, four sons and one daughter. My brother, Lorenzo P. Taft, has a family of four daughters and one son, and the brother who died left one son, Wendell Phillips Taft. My four sisters are married and all have families. I trust I shall be pardoned if, in this connection, I speak of some incidents in my own history which, under ordinary circumstances, would hardly be appro- priate, but which the present occasion would warrant. We learn from the ad- mirable historic address to which we have listened this morning that our great progenitor, Robert Taft, was an active participant in a colony enterprise, in connection with which he bought and sold much land, built bridges, made roads and bore other burdens incident to a pioneer life. It seems that all unbeknown to myself I have in the order of divine providence been repeating the history of our family in the line of colony work for, as already remarked, I took with me to the distant west a company of friends, bought a large tract of wild land and entered upon the work of building up society, in tlie course of which it fell to my lot to open up roads, build bridges and mills and dispose of numerous pieces of real estate. The county records show that I have sold over eighty farms and many hundred pieces of town property since commencing this colony enterprise. This work has not been all sunshine and prosperity; but instead, want of means with which to do, loss by floods, sickness, severe trials and exposure, have dimmed the light of many a day, but at no titne have I been bereft of that hope and strength which comes of an assurance that I was doing the work to which I had been ap- pointed of God. The burden would have been lighter had I known as I now do that like and severer experiences had been the lot of our great progenitor, whose memory we so sacredly cherish today. The family histoty which I have given, taken in connection with the numerous descendants of Robert Taft here assem- bled, who represent a still larger number not here, warrants us in congratulating ourselves that our family does not belong to the number which are running out because of self-imposed sterility. That this is true of many families is painfully BIOGRAPHICAL 507 evident. On this subject an able scholar and caieful observer, Dr. Nathan Allen, of Lowell, said in an address delivered in June last, before the Massachusetts Medical Society: 'It is safe, we believe, to state that the average number of children to each marriage has diminished nearly one-half since the present century commenced.' And he further adds, 'If this decrease is continued another hun- dred years in the same proportion as in the past it will, in all probability, remove the old New England stock from the stage. Their record will exist only in his- tory. In this quiet, gradual decline of population is one of the greatest problems of the age.' Well, Mr. Chairman, that impeachment does not apply to the Taft family, and I am glad of it. I am told that little or no credit is due to the male line in which the name descends, since the mothers generally bore other names than Taft. And then I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, whether it is not creditable to our side of the house, that we have been able to select and possess ourselves of such good and noble wives. I will add but a few words more. The growth of our family tree has been hopefully vigorous and promises well for the future. We need not concern ourselves to try to settle the question as to whether we originally ascended from the lower forms of animal life or have descended from a state of angelic \ erfection ; for, if from the former, then have we made noble progress upward, and if from the latter, the evidence warrants us in believing that we are making out way home again. Let us remember that there is given to mankind a surplus of vital force beyond what is necessary for the performance of the ordinary functions of life and that the use made of this surplusage detei mines the destiny of individuals, families and nations. If devoted to self discipline, in knowledge and virtue, so as to find expression in noble, helpful acts and high aims, then does its possessor walk the pathway of the just which grows brighter and brighter unto the perfect day; but if devoted to selfish ends and merely animal pleasures, then does it lead down to moral corruption and spiritual death. May it be ours to come into such harmony with the divine order and such virtuous relationship with each other that the spiritual breezes of heaven as they move through the branches of the family tree may make still sweeter music in the future than in the past, thus making glad the hearts of men and angels. I offer in conclusion the follow- ing sentiment : Our Family Tree — Removed from Old Ei!i:,hnid iieo Jiinidred years ai^o and planted at no i^reat distanee from Plymouth Rock. May it continue to i^ather strength and beauty from each succeeding century and yield such fruits of vigorous, virtuous man. and wonmnJiood that the af>probation of the good and the favor of Heaven may ever rest upon it, causing it to extend its roots and multiply its braiwhes through all coming time. In 1879, on the resignation of Rev. Julius Stevens as pastor of the Christian Union Church of Humboldt, Mr. Taft was asked to resume his pastoral relations with the church, which he resigned when entering upon his educational work. Up to this time the society had held its meetings in the school house. Mr. Taft 508 BIOGRAPHICAL agreed to serve the church for a year on conchtion that steps be at once taken to build a house of worship, toward the expense of which he would contribute the salary he received for the year and donate a lot for the church. With this understanding he resumed the pastorate. While the attendance at the meetings and Sunday School was altogether satisfactory but partial i)rogress was made toward building. The coarse lumber was bought and placed on the ground, as also most of the stone for the foundation. As Mr. Taft believed that a house of worship was indispensable to the welfare and future growth of the church, he agreed to labor another year, donating his salaiy as before. The coursing stone for the foundation having been dressed and mechanics' labor being difficult to obtain, and money scarce, Mr. Taft, with his son, William, as mason tender, took in hand the building of the foundation walls, which were completed before cold weather in autumn. The secretary of the church, J. M. Prouty, had pro- cured plans and specifications for the building from a Chicago architect and, with these before him, Mr. Taft proceeded to lay out the frame work of the build- ing and superintend its erection. The church was completed and dedicated as had been planned and Mr. Taft says : "The day on which the house was dedicated and christened Unity Church, and Miss Mary A. Safford was installed pastor, as his successor, was one of the happiest days of his life." Mr. Taft's work as an abolitionist and a prohibitionist and a founder of an institution of learning, has given him the personal acquaintance of many of the distinguished men and women of the past and present century ; among them were Garrison, Phillips, Sumner, Longfellow, James Freeman Clark, Edward Everett Hale, Dr. Manning, Senator Wilson, Joshua R. Giddings, A. Bronson Alcott, Fred Douglass, Garrett Smith, George W. Curtis, Mrs. Lucy Stone Blackwell, Antoinette L. Brown, ]\lary Livermore, Dorothy Dix, Lucretia Mott, Susan B. Anthony and Julia Ward Howe. Of the above he has entertained as guests at his home, A. Bronson Alcott, Garrett Smith, Fred Douglass, Mrs. Livermore, Lucy Stone Blackwell, Antoinette L. Brown, Julia Ward Howe and Susan B. Anthony. Mr. Taft regards the establishment of righteous civil government as indis- pensable to the preservation of our nation from destruction, holding that the licensed poison drink traffic, so far from being a legitimate business, is a system of legalized robbery and murder and that the political parties, which for a money consideration give legislative sanction to the saloon, betray their sacred trust as administrators of the government, violate the national constitution by bar- gaining away the public health and the public morals, and that by such alliance with the criminal class, make the government the despoiler instead of the pro- tector of its citizens, thereby not only discrowning the government of all moral power but making it a potential teacher of immorality and graft. And that the corrupt financial, political and social conditions everywhere obtaining where this traffic of death is licensed, are but the legitimate harvest from the seed sown by these rum-ruled parties and that the preservation of Christian civilization demands the triumph of a political party pledged to righteous civil government. BIOGRAPHICAL SO*." Mr. Taft is a total abstainer from the use of intoxicants, eats very little meat, drinks neither tea nor coffee, reads without glasses, never uses a cane when walking. He is an early riser, writes more easily in the morning than at any other time, is always busy either in his office, library or garden, and takes as deep an interest as ever in social, political and religious questions. John G. French, one of the active men in the upbuilding of \'enice, was born in Miami county, Ohio, October 22, 1855, son of Asa D. and Ruth E. French. The family moved to White county. Indiana, where he grew up on a farm devoted to stockraising. At the age of 17 years he became a school teacher. His health becoming impaired, he left home in the fall of 1875 for Harvev county, Kansas, and after teaching a year, engaged in the stock and grain ship- ping business. In 1882 he associated himself with the wholesale grain and com- mission business at Atchison, Kansas ; later he engaged in the wholesale grocerv business, and while thus engaged became largely interested in real estate in Central Kansas. Retiring from the grocery trade 1888, he engaged in real estate and general mercantile business in Harvey and Pratt counties, Kansas. In 1891 he moved with his family to California, where he became a manufacturers' agent, with offices in San Francisco and Los Angeles. In 1898 he became associated with the Wm. H. Hoegee Co. of Los Angeles, founding their wholesale business, which he managed. In January, 1905, he became the manager of the Abl30t Kinney Co. in the selling of Venice property and overseeing the building of Ven- ice of America. Many of the unique, special features of the famous place are the result of his eft'orts. Upon the organization of the ( )cean Park city school district, in 1904, he was elected a member of the Board, which position he still retains as president and clerk. Being active and energetic in the school work as well as having advanced ideas, he has been a factor in making the school one of the best in the country. He has been an advocate of the unification of the Santa Monica Bav interests, and had his ideas prevailed much more would have been accomplished. Politically Mr. French has been a lifelong Republican, fra- ternally a Knight of Pvthias. Pedro M. B.^dillo, a member of one of tlie early California families, is a son of Pedro P. Badillo. born in Los Angeles. February 24th. 1868. Pedro P. Badillo was a son of Francisco, a native of Madrid, who came to California in 1812 and was granted a large tract of land as a reward for valuable military services rendered the Spanish government. He lived at Santa Barbara, where he married Peralta Garcia, a native of that ]:)lace. They had two children — a son. Pedro P.. and a daughter. Tomasa, who for many years lived in Los An- geles, where she died in 1874. After the father's death the son came into pns- 510 BIOGRAPHICAL session of valual)lc lands in Santa i'>arl)ara connty and of other holdings in Lower Californii. lie ninrried Miss jane Courtney, a native of California, daug'hter of Andrew Courtnew and granddaughter of Miehael Wdiite, one of the best-known American pioneers. Pedro Padillo grew up in Los Angeles, and iri 1892 married Delfina En- riquez. Since 1893 he has been in the secret service of the United States customs department of Southern California. In 1894 he distinguished himself bv the detection and capture of three Americans, who were expert smugglers, and sev- enty-four pounds of o]iium smuggled into this country on the Malibu coast. The men were tried, convicted and sent to the penitentiary. Mr. Badillo is widely known, and highly esteemed for his kindness of heart and strict integrity. He has two sons, Louis and Pedro. The family home is in Santa Monica Canon. Jas. W. Kennedy, one of the prosperous and substantial merchants of Santa Monica, was born in Cleveland, O., December 17th, 1869, son of James Kennedy, a native of Canada. The family lived in the vicinity of Cleveland until 1884, when they came to Santa Monica. Here he clerked in the general store of M. E. Chapin about seven years. He later went to White River, Ariz., wdiere, under the firm name of Schuster & Kennedy, he did a profitable business for six years. He returned to Santa Monica in 1905, and in 1906 purchased the business of A. Mooser, corner Third and Utah. The stock comprises a complete line of cloth- ing and furnishing goods. W. ]\I. Kendall, M. D., was born in Leavenworth, Crawford county, In- diana, December 25th, 1869. His father, William H. Kendall, was a druggist of that city and a native of the same State. The Kendall family are of English ancestry, many members of which have attained prominence in the dramatic world as actors in this country and in Europe. The father died in 1882 and the widow and three children removed to Cin- cinnati, r)hio. Here Dr. Kendall took a high-school course and a course in med- icine at Pulte Medical College, Cincinnati, graduating in 1892. Later he took a special course in surgery and post-graduate course in orificial surgery at Chicago Homeopathic Medical College. Dr. Kendall commenced the practice of his pro- fession in Cincinnati. He remained there three years, then removed to Dayton, Ohio. In August, 1905, he came to California and located at Ocean Park, where he has acquired an extensive practice. He is member of the California State Homeopathic Medical Society and the Los Angeles County Aledical Society ; local surgeon for the L. A. & P. Ry., and health officer of the city of Ocean Park. He is a Mason, and member of the B. P. O. E. At the school election, 1908, he was, without oi)])osition, elected a member of the IJoard of School Trus- BIOGRAPHICAL 511 tees. Dr. Kendall married, November 22nd, 1892, Miss Jessie Todhunter, danghter of W. H. Todhunter, a prominent attorney of Middleton, Ohio. They have two children, Marcus T. and Marion G. Dr. Kendall's home and office IS at No. 207-20/1/^ Ocean Front, Ocean Park. John J. PevelEr. resident of California since 1882. is a native of Illinois born in the city of Chicago, January 12th, 1859. His father, George W. Pev- eler, was a farmer. He joined the United States Armv as a volunteer in the Rebellion, went to the front and was killed at the battle of Antietam, September 17th, 1862, leaving a widow and an only child, the subject of this sketch. Young Reveler spent his youth in Chicago, attended the public schools and learned the carpenter trade, and later the cement contracting business. In 1896 Mr. Reveler went to Alaska, where he spent five years and passed through all the excitement and experienced the hardships of the gold seekers of Nome and Dawson. He returned to California in 1901, and for several years had charge of numerous jobs of construction cement work for the Los Angeles-Racific Rail- way Company. xAIr. Reveler married, in 1904, Miss Theresa Langam, a native of Litchfield, Minnesota. They have one daughter, Virginia C." The family residence is at the corner of Ninth street and Nevada avenue, Santa Monica. W. S. Smith was born in San Antonio, Texas, March 11, 1879, son of lohn A. Smith, by birth a Rennsylvanian. In 1884 the family removed to Arizona, and later to San Diego, and finally to San Fernando. Dr. Smith here spent his youth, passed through the San Fernando High School, graduating in 1895. He took a course of study at the University of Southern California, graduating from the department of medicine in 1902. He was two years assistant physician at the Los Angeles County Hospital under Dr. Bryant. He then practiced medi- cine at Rhoenix, Arizona. He held the office of County Rhysician of Yavapi county, was member of the Territorial Board of Examiners of the Insane, and two years Superintendent of the County Hospital. He was one of the organizers of the Yavapi County ^Medical Society and its first president. He came to Santa Monica in 1905, and has a wide circle of friends and lucrative practice, being a member of the medical staff of the Santa Monica Bay Hospital. He married. June 15th, 1903, Mabel, daughter of I. S. Wilson, a pioneer and retired merchant of Santa ]\Ionica. Robert Alexander Phillips, foremost citizen and merchant of \'enice, is a native of Allegheny count}-, Pennsylvania, born July 7th, 1860, son of Robert Phillips, a thrifty farmer, and Eliza Mackay Phillips, both natives of Belfast, Ireland, who came to America in childhood. Mr. Phillips grew up on the home 512 BIOGRAPHICAL farm. He passed tlirouoh the public schools, and the Western University of Pennsylvania, graduating- in 1879. From 1882 to 1900 he engaged in the produce commission business in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. He made a tour of the West and California in 1902, and in 1905 was one of the early investors in A'enice. With Dr. Sands he founded the Venice Drug Co. (Inc.). He married, in 1882, Ella M., a daughter of John Burgess, a retired merchant of Pittsburg, and they have three children — Aileen, Lillian and Floyd. He is a leading member of the Chamber of Commerce, and active in the promotion of the best interests of Venice. C. C. CiiKxEv, pioneer, crossed the plains as a boy with his father's family, driving an ox team. They located in Lake county, engaged in stock raising, later removed to San Luis Obispo county, and finall\- settled at Downey, in Los Angeles county, where he spent his youth and studied veterinary surgery, be- coming an expert practitioner. He went to Arizona and engaged in mining. In 1890 he located in the Garapatos, Malibu mountains, where he has developed a valuable ranch property, which as a summer resort is very popular with the peo])le of Santa Monica, Los Angeles and surrounding country. Mr. Cheney married, in 1885, Miss Lucy J., daughter of J. H. Stewart, one of the first set- tlers of the city of Downey. She was born in Salem, Oregon. Mr. Cheney is a public-spirited and enterprising citizen and a member of the Elks" lodge at Santa Monica. Mrs. Jose Dolores SepulvEda, widow of the late Don Jose Dolores Sepul- veda. was born in Los Angeles in 1840, and is the only surviving daughter of Johann Gronigen, a native of Holland, who came to America as a ship car- penter on the brig "Danube," which was wrecked off the coast of San Pedro in 1829, he being one of the few survivors. He settled in Los Angeles and by reason of his arrival in town on Sunday and the difficult pronunciation of his German name, the natives called him Juan Domingo, the English of which is John Sunday, and he abandoned thereafter the use of his family name. He became a man of property and influence, with a fine home at the corner of Aliso and xA.lameda streets, where he lived until his death, December 18th, 1858, leav- ing a large family and a comfortable estate. He married Ramona Teleliz, a member of one of the influential and wealthy families of Southern California. Jose Dolores Sepulveda was born in Los Angeles April 2nd, 1827, a son of Don Francisco Sepulveda, mention of whom is made on page 132 in this work. There are eight children of Don Jose Dolores and Louise Domingo Sepulveda living, all in Los Angeles, viz., W. O. Sepulveda; Ascencion, who is Mrs. Frank Bernal ; Miguel; Louise, who is Mrs. Reyes; Plutarch; Angelina, Mrs. Mark Burns; X'ictoria, Mrs. George Farrington, and Griselda, Mrs. Charles Earley. There are thirteen grand-children.