77E Qdd Ku, Is by STAN RUBENSTEIN LTHOUGH California Had Prac- Immense Profits

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

77E Qdd Ku, Is by STAN RUBENSTEIN LTHOUGH California Had Prac- Immense Profits Historically Speaking 77e qdd ku, is by STAN RUBENSTEIN LTHOUGH California had prac- immense profits. Fraud and deception A tically no means of wide com- were rampant. Involved in the maze of munication in 1848, that did not pre- land fever was Harry Meiggs who, fol- vent the spreading of news about the lowing the real estate collapse in 1854, discovery of gold in Sutter's sawmill. became the most ambitious railroad Somehow this single event was echoed builder in South America. James Lick, from coast to coast and even reached who profited from the purchase of acres the continental shores of Europe. Never of worthless sand dunes adjacent to the thereafter did California, or in par- village of Yerba Buena, also realized ticular, San Francisco, return to the fortunes in and around San Francisco. primitive frontier-like atmosphere that The Lick observatory is a memorial to had characterized the sparsely settled his role as an early settler. west. In addition to wealth gained from Gold loomed large in importance speculation in city lots and other real and California was admitted to the estate, numerous large estates were ac- Union as a free state. The westward carded Mexican grants comprising movement served as the prime example about one quarter of the arable land. of land which attains value as a direct This was an opportune time for shrewd result of increasing population. lawyers and speculators, for many of Probably no single event in American these grants were verbal and undefined history has had a more electrifying and legal records had never been made effect than the discovery of precious or were missing. Fraudulent land grab- metal had in the middle of the last cen- bing operations became common fol- tury. Hordes of adventurers left their lowing the gold rush, and for decades homes, mortgaged farms, or sold busi- federal officials were swamped in their nesses to emigrate in search of gold in efforts to determine the legitimacy of the river beds. Little did they realize various claims, such as the Limantour that while millions of dollars might be claim which involved more than 600,- realized from the gold nuggets a much 000 acres. larger fortune was awaiting investors As California's population multi- via increases in land values. Few of the plied and fortunes were made and lost new arrivals were alert to the possibility it is interesting to note the effect all of amassing wealth through the pur- this had on the principal character, chase and sale of land, but local in- John Sutter. After the early rush had habitants soon recognized and under- subsided his property seemed to attract stood the influence that increased popu- many idle squatters, so that a once suc- lation exerts on business ventures and cessful colony there was destroyed. An real estate. important San Francisco street bears his A boom ensued about this time and name today but few will recall that con- city lots in San Francisco rose sharply trary to the usual success pattern, Sutter in value. Local politicians became spent many years attempting to pay off deeply involved in various manipula- debts incurred by the discovery of gold tions, and the land grabbers enjoyed in his sawmill. 6HENRY GEORGE NEWS .
Recommended publications
  • Learning to Write and Assess Writing Quality
    SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT RESEARCH SERIES Research You Can Use Snapshot #21 James Lick Middle School San Francisco, California Kathleen Cotton RESEARCH FINDINGS Many of the findings identified in the effective schooling research base pertain to practices which (1) improve students' writing skills and (2) enhance their ability to judge the quality of written material. Some of the relevant classroom and schoolwide practices, as cited in EFFECTIVE SCHOOLING PRACTICES: A RESEARCH SYNTHESIS/1990 UPDATE (Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory, April 1990) include: CLASSROOM: 1.1.1 INSTRUCTION IS GUIDED BY A PREPLANNED CURRICULUM 1.3.1 STUDENTS ARE CAREFULLY ORIENTED TO LESSONS 1.3.2 INSTRUCTION IS CLEAR AND FOCUSED d. Students have plenty of opportunity for guided and independent practice with new concepts and skills. e. Students are taught strategies for learning and for remembering and applying what they have learned.... 1.3.4 STUDENTS ROUTINELY RECEIVE FEEDBACK AND REINFORCEMENT REGARDING THEIR LEARNING PROGRESS 1. Students receive immediate feedback on their in-class responses and written assignments; this feedback is simple and clear to help them understand and correct errors. 2. Teachers make use of peer evaluation techniques (e.g., in written composition) as a means of providing feedback and guidance to students. 1.5.1 LEARNING PROGRESS IS MONITORED CLOSELY g. Teachers use assessment results not only to evaluate students but also for instructional diagnosis and to find out if teaching methods are working. SCHOOL: 2.3.2 ADMINISTRATORS AND TEACHERS CONTINUALLY STRIVE TO IMPROVE INSTRUCTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS 2.3.3 STAFF ENGAGE IN ONGOING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND COLLEGIAL LEARNING ACTIVITIES SITUATION Named for a local philanthropist, James Lick Middle School is located in the Noe Valley neighborhood of San Francisco.
    [Show full text]
  • Booster Club Blasts SJS Athletic Policy
    California State Library Sacramento Calif crIlia Bonfire Rally Tonight Increasing Cloudiness Rails Coommittre requests that I Air uilh In. reasing el I- nil stodent ssoolsing on (boats 11., V. the iir.ilhcrrnan’ pre - Friday night arrange to take Santa Clara %alley one hour, 8 to 9 p.m. otf pelt.. king temper- 65 to 7..! and attend the bonfire rails be- , ature with /a, tijg of ing staged in the parking lot degrees. a n itit sitriable at Spartan Stadium, pa thin valid& ate. rho ad. i SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE VOL. 45 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1957 NO. 31 Council Okays New ATTACK WAHLQUIST POLICIES FORM COMMITTEE Improvement Plan Booster Club In an abbreviated meeting, the Student Council yesterday an- nounced a new long-range improvement plan for the council, okayed Blasts SJS the change of by-laws for the Awards Committee constitution, and made tentative plans to join in honoring es -Spartan footballer, Billy Wilson, of the San Francisco 49ers at Kezar Stadium, Dec. 3. The meeting was cut short because of last night's peace pact Athletic Policy dinner with College of _ Pacific. ASB president Don Ryan and the COP By RANDIE E. POE and JIM DRENNAN *student body president signed the pact before the Student Council, A group of more Oleo 85 interested San Jose State boosters faculty members and 13 represen- yesterday criticized President John T. Wahlguist's athletic policies and Student Body tatives from COP. promised to carry their fight for better Spartan football to high The pact, in general, pledges state officials.
    [Show full text]
  • School Accountability Report Card School Year 2019-20 (Published During 2020-21)
    School Accountability Report Card School Year 2019-20 (Published during 2020-21) James Lick Middle School 1220 NOE ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94114 Principal: Ruby Detie Phone: 415-695-5675 Fax: 415-695-5360 SFUSD School ID # 634 Calif.School ID #: 6062053 SAN FRANCISCO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Superintendent: Vincent Matthews 555 Franklin Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 Phone: 415-241-6000 Web Site: www.sfusd.edu SARC Contact: Research, Planning and Accountability Ritu Khanna, Executive Director Phone: 415-241-6454 Fax: 415-241-6035 The School Accountability Report Card (SARC) is required by law to be published annually, by Feb 1st each year. It contains information about the condition and performance of each California public school. Under the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), all local educational agencies (LEAs) are required to prepare a Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP) which describes how they intend to meet annual school-specific goals for all pupils, with specific activities to address state and local priorites. Additionally, data reported in an LCAP is to be consistent with data reported in the SARC. - For more information about SARC requirements, see the California Department of Education (CDE) SARC Web page at http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/ac/sa/. - For more information about the LCFF or LCAP, see the CDE LCFF Web page at http://www.cde.ca.gov/fg/aa/lc/. - For more information about the school, parents and community members should contact the school principal or district office. DataQuest is an online data tool located at http://dq.cde.ca.gov/dataquest/ that contains additional information about this school and comparisons of the school to the district, the county, and the state.
    [Show full text]
  • Settler Colonialism and the Making of the Lick Observatory, 1846-1919
    Excerpts from Noble Hills: Settler Colonialism and the Making of the Lick Observatory, 1846-1919 One Sunday afternoon in late August 1861, a reverend, a topographer, and a botanist, set out to summit the mountain. They had met nearly a decade earlier in upstate New York, where the botanist, William Brewer, was teaching in the town where the Reverend Laurentine Hamilton was a minister.1 When Brewer was recruited by the California Geological Survey at the turn of the 1860s, Hamilton had also moved to California to work as a preacher for a small mining town. The two men rekindled their friendship, and along with the topographer Charles and Hoffman, they set out to survey the mountain.2 As they made their way towards the summit, navigating through fields of brush, the Reverend Hamilton rushed ahead of the others and declared himself first to the top.3 As they returned to their office, Brewer and Hoffman debated what to name the mountain. Brewer made “diligent inquiries” into whether it had a previous name, but found none, and so they decided to name it Mount Hamilton in honor of their friend the minister who had beat them to the summit.4 It is Mount Hamilton on which the Lick Observatory was established in 1888, and still operates today. Of course, the mountain did have a name – possibly many—before Brewer, Hoffman, and Hamilton’s excursion. Spanish colonists had named it La Sierra de Santa Isabel decades before.5 But Brewer and Hoffman had treated the mountain as terra nullius – empty land – and assumed upon themselves the power to name it.
    [Show full text]
  • George Davidson 1825-1911
    NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS VOLUME XVIII—NINTH MEMOIR BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF GEORGE DAVIDSON 1825-1911 BY CHARLES B. DAVENPOR' PRESENTED TO THE ACADEMY AT THK ANNUAL MEETING, 19.37 GEORGE DAVIDSON 1825-1911 J!Y I'll AKI.HS ]',. DAVENPORT George Davidson was horn at Nottingham, England, Mav 9, 1825. He was of Scottish descent, his father, Thomas Davidson, Sr., having been born 1792 in Arbroath on the rocky east coast of Scotland, and his mother |anet Drummond at Montrose on the same coast about thirty miles north. The Drummond family had warehouses in Montrose and supplied the British with sail cloth during the Napoleonic wars. Of such maritime ancestry, it was appropriate that (ieorge became a geographer of the 1'acihc coast of the United States and Alaska and his younger brother, Thomas Davidson, Jr., (b. 1828) a naval constructor with high rank in the L. S. Navy, who built the "Tusearora" used by Admiral Belnap in his Pacific deep-sea soundings. Thomas Davidson. Sr.. was not very prosperous even in Kng- land and so migrated with his family to Philadelphia in 1832. The sons received the rudiments of education from their mother and George graduated from the Central High School at Philadel- phia in 1845 with the highest honors of his class. From the beginning of his high school course Davidson had been in contact with Alexander Dallas Bache who had left the army to become (1836) President of Girard College, then in course of erection. But before it opened he was elected (1838) principal of the Central High School.
    [Show full text]
  • California's First Philanthropist the Legacy of James Lick
    James Lick Cigar advertisement, circa 1890 California’s First Philanthropist The Legacy of James Lick February 1 – August 31, 2017 Pioneer Hall at The Presidio Key propositions: California’s first multimillionaire, Lick’s philanthropy was informed by both empathy and foresight; many continue to benefit from his generosity and largesse. The exhibition is done in partnership with other organizations that benefited from/continue to benefit from his largesse: The Lick Observatory, San Francisco’s Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, The Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park, The California Academy of Sciences, and others. This exhibition will be open and free to the public. Defining James Lick’s Legacy After an adventurous and prosperous early life, James Lick arrived in California just before the Gold Rush. Fortuitous timing and shrewd real estate investments made him the state’s first multimillionaire. In addition to purchasing significant tracts of land in and around San Francisco, he opened the opulent Lick House. Its grand dining hall, modeled after The Palace of Versailles, catered to San Francisco’s status-conscious nouveau riche. Ironically, Lick held a strong personal disdain for high society. He preferred a simple, solitary life that his contemporaries considered eccentric and antisocial. He rarely attended public functions, never married, and his relationship with a son from an early, failed love affair in his youth was distant and inconsistent. Near the end of his life, James Lick used his considerable wealth to establish charitable “protection and relief” organizations to address the basic needs of the many who are less fortunate in a boom and bust economy.
    [Show full text]
  • 830 North Capitol Avenue San Jose, California 95133 408 347-5000
    East Side Union High School District 830 North Capitol Avenue San Jose, California 95133 408 347-5000 SCHOOL DIRECTORY 2011 Mission To provide a safe and effective learning environment; to provide support for all students Board of Trustees and families; to strive for continuous Lan Nguyen, President improvement; and to implement clear Frank Biehl, Vice President measurements of success Van Le, Clerk Patricia Martinez-Roach, Member J. Manuel Herrera, Member Vision (Effective 1/2011) Academic, personal and social success for each and every student Dan Moser, Superintendent Table of Contents East Side Union Board of Trustees..................................... 1 Superintendent ........................................ 1 High School District Business Services .................................... 2 830 North Capitol Avenue Human Resources .................................... 3 San Jose, California 95133 Instructional Services.............................. 3 Facilities/Operations ............................... 4 Main Number: 408•347•5000 Student Services....................................... 4 Fax: 408•347•5015 Andrew P. Hill High School.................... 5 http://www.esuhsd.org Evergreen Valley High School ................ 6 Foothill High School …………………… 7 Independence High School...................... 8 Main Number 75000 James Lick High School ......................... 9 Mt. Pleasant High School ....................... 10 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Oak Grove High School .......................... 11 Board President Nguyen, Lan 347-5093 Board Vice
    [Show full text]
  • Museum Newsletter Summer 2011
    I S S U E N U m b E r 3 • S U m m E r 2 0 1 1 Forty years Under the GUnn by Dennis Evanosky ore than eighty of alameda museum M curator george gunn’s closest friends recently feted him at a dinner at Alameda’s Pier 29 restaurant. They planned an evening to thank him for his forty years of service as curator. As he usually does, however, Gunn turned the tables and feted the guests for all they’ve done for the museum. “It’s not about me,” Gunn told the diners. Walking around the room, with the usual gleam in his eye and microphone in hand, he handed unsuspecting (and some suspecting) guests the microphone, giving them the chance to add some color to an already bright evening. March 20, 1971, was the day Gunn began his task as curator, taking over the job of managing the city’s collective memory, the Alameda Museum and its collections. Some recalled Gunn’s attempt to mask his real age by claiming more than once that he was just six years old when he took the helm. Inheriting an organization founded on September 15, 1948 “City assessor Fred J. Croll played an important role in starting the association,” Gunn said in an interview after the party. In 1951, the museum found its first home in the basement of the city’s main library in the Carnegie building across from City Hall. “This was an important spot for the museum because it set a precedent for the city’s supporting the museum in a prominent location,” Gunn said.
    [Show full text]
  • Lick Observatory Records: Research and Publication Files UA.036.Ser.05
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8g165dx No online items Guide to the Lick Observatory Records: Research and Publication files UA.036.Ser.05 Alix Norton University of California, Santa Cruz 2016 1156 High Street Santa Cruz 95064 [email protected] URL: http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/speccoll Guide to the Lick Observatory UA.036.Ser.05 1 Records: Research and Publication files UA.036.Ser.05 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: University of California, Santa Cruz Title: Lick Observatory Records: Research and Publication files Creator: Lick Observatory Identifier/Call Number: UA.036.Ser.05 Physical Description: 5.75 Linear Feet6 boxes, 3 oversize boxes Date (inclusive): 1840-2009 Date (bulk): 1870-1970 Access Collection is open for research. Arrangement This collection is organized into six series: 1. Research logs 2. Research notes and charts 3. Lick Observatory publications 4. Manuscripts and reports 5. Publications correspondence 6. Indexes Historical note The Lick Observatory was completed in 1888 and continues to be an active astronomy research facility at the summit of Mount Hamilton, near San Jose, California. It is named after James Lick (1796-1876), who left $700,000 in 1875 to purchase land and build a facility that would be home to "a powerful telescope, superior to and more powerful than any telescope yet made". The completion of the Great Lick Refractor in 1888 made the observatory home to the largest refracting telescope in the world for 9 years, until the completion of the 40-inch refractor at Yerkes Observatory in 1897. Since its founding in 1887, the Lick Observatory facility has provided on-site housing on Mount Hamilton for researchers, their families, and staff, making it the world's oldest residential observatory.
    [Show full text]
  • California Gold Rush Merchant; the Journal of Stephen Chapin David. Edited by Benjamin B. Richards
    California gold rush merchant; the journal of Stephen Chapin David. Edited by Benjamin B. Richards Huntington Library Publications California Gold Rush Merchant The Journal of Stephen Chapin Davis Edited by Benjamin B. Richards The Huntington Library San Marino, California, 1956 COPYRIGHT 1956 BY HENRY E. HUNTINGTON LIBRARY AND ART GALLERY Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 56-12476 The publication of this volume has been assisted by The James Irvine Foundation Publication Fund of the Huntington Library PRINTED BY ANDERSON, RITCHIE & SIMON: LOS ANGELES DESIGN BY JOSEPH SIMON Contents page vii Introduction page 3 The Journal, 1850-1854 page 105 Notes page 119 Index FOR JANET vii Introduction IN JULY 1850 a seventeen-year-old New England boy, Stephen Davis, and his brother Josiah sailed from New York City via Panama for San Francisco and the California gold fields. They were California gold rush merchant; the journal of Stephen Chapin David. Edited by Benjamin B. Richards http://www.loc.gov/resource/ calbk.072 but two of the thousands of Argonauts who were seized by the gold fever and journeyed to the Sierra foothills. Many of these adventurers have left accounts of their experiences; some of them are clear and well written, others are no more than a letter or two written home or a journal valiantly begun but trailing off into silence once the trip was under way. Among the journals that have been discovered, the diary of Stephen Chapin Davis is unusual because the author sees the gold rush through the eyes of a merchant rather than a miner.
    [Show full text]
  • FINAL CITADEL VALLEY RANCH OM.Pdf
    FOR SALE 5,400 ACRES CITADEL VALLEY RANCH PRICING: $25,000,000 STEVE BECERRA | 408.891.6453 GENERAL MANAGER INTERO COMMERCIAL | [email protected] A Berkshire Hathaway affiliate | www.InteroCommercial.com CITADEL RANCH San Jose, California For centuries, very little has interrupted this example of nature's innate beauty-the spectacular Citadel Ranch. Outside of the area's original founders, few individuals have been privileged enough to view this fertile ranch over the past 30 years. Truly one of California's treasures, the ranch embodies a rare natural splendor best captured in a glimpse of an elk or a bobcat making an early-morning trip to one of its many lakes. Like no other location on earth, the Citadel Ranch is a true jewel full of natural splendor. HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE Numerous local roads and paths offer unique insight into the views early settlers must have encountered as they crossed the area from Sacramento to San Jose via stagecoach. Evidence of the presence of settlers can be found dotting the picturesque points of the ranch. Once home to 400 head of cattle, the ranch still evokes a simple beauty undaunted by time. It is easy to envision the property as a hunting lodge or a majestic ranch; in either regard, this is a rare opportunity to own one of California's most spectacular ranches. CITADEL RANCH San Jose, California AWE-INSPIRING LANDS The Citadel Ranch's sprawling 5,100 acres encompass five ponds and lakes, several mountain ridges climbing to more than 3,200 feet, ro1ling hills, and breathtaking valleys. Situated near the impressive peak of Mount Hamilton, the unspoiled ranch is located in the heart of the rugged and striking central Diablo coastal range.
    [Show full text]
  • School Accountability Report Card School Year 2017-18 (Published During 2018-19)
    School Accountability Report Card School Year 2017-18 (Published during 2018-19) James Lick Middle School 1220 NOE ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94114 Principal: Timothy Reidy Phone: 415-695-5675 Fax: 415-695-5360 SFUSD School ID # 634 Calif.School ID #: 6062053 SAN FRANCISCO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Superintendent: Vincent Matthews 555 Franklin Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 Phone: 415-241-6000 Web Site: www.sfusd.edu SARC Contact: Research, Planning and Accountability Ritu Khanna, Executive Director Phone: 415-241-6454 Fax: 415-241-6035 The School Accountability Report Card (SARC) is required by law to be published annually, by Feb 1st each year. It contains information about the condition and performance of each California public school. Under the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), all local educational agencies (LEAs) are required to prepare a Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP) which describes how they intend to meet annual school-specific goals for all pupils, with specific activities to address state and local priorites. Additionally, data reported in an LCAP is to be consistent with data reported in the SARC. - For more information about SARC requirements, see the California Department of Education (CDE) SARC Web page at http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/ac/sa/. - For more information about the LCFF or LCAP, see the CDE LCFF Web page at http://www.cde.ca.gov/fg/aa/lc/. - For more information about the school, parents and community members should contact the school principal or district office. DataQuest is an online data tool located at http://dq.cde.ca.gov/dataquest/ that contains additional information about this school and comparisons of the school to the district, the county, and the state.
    [Show full text]