- Faxon Atherton
Infobox Person
name = Faxon Dean Atherton
birth_date =January 29 1815 [ [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-1615(196504)21%3A4%3C421%3ATCDOFD%3E2.0.CO%3B2-C Date of birth confirmation at JSTOR] ]
birth_place =Dedham, Massachusetts , USA
death_date = death date and age|1877|7|18|1815|1|29
death_place =San Mateo County, California , USAFaxon Dean Atherton was an American businessman and landowner, and was a prominent citizen of
San Mateo County, California . [Stanger, pg. 112] A native ofMassachusetts , Atherton was born of an establishedNew England family with roots in the colonial period of the United States. He was educated in his native state and went into the shipping and merchant business at the age of 15. He was charged with the operation of vessels plying between Boston -Valparaiso, Chile andMonterey, California , gaining him wide and varied experience. He is the namesake ofAtherton, California .In 1834 Atherton traveled to
Valparaiso, Chile where he would later establish a ship chandler's store, trading in tallow, hides and merchandise.Hynding, p. 115] During theCalifornia gold rush , he amassed a great fortune with his shipping business and the import and export of goods. In Valparaiso in 1843 he married Dominiga de Goñi; they had seven children, some of whose names appear on West Atherton street signs: Isabella, Alejandra and Elena.Atherton first visited
San Francisco, California in 1836, when the city was in its infancy. His friend and business associate,Thomas Larkin urged Atherton to move to California. Larkin wrote, "... [T] here is education available for your children and a dignity of living on landed estates down the San Francisco peninsula (that is) convenient and accessible ... [Y] ou and I were of that country. Our eyes were turned towards it in admiration and in my part in gratitude. My children were from there. They and yours will soon be."In 1860, Atherton bought convert|640|acre|km2|1 at ten dollars an acre of land on the San Francisco peninsula in what was then known as Fair Oaks, becoming one of the first residents of the area. He built his home, Valapariso Park, approximately where the Circus Club, a private country club, is now located.
Atherton was a land speculator purchasing tracts in Hayward, Watsonville and other places. Atherton purchased the Milpitas Rancho in the area of
Fort Hunter Liggett from Ygnacio Pastor immediately upon its title clearance in the San Francisco court. (The U.S. Land Claims commission, set up as a result of theMexican-American War to mediate land claims, had been examining the land granted under the Mexican land grant system.)During the conversion of land, records under the Land Commission were changed and Ygnacio's small ranch grew from several thousand acres to convert|42000|acre|km2|0. Owners of plots dating back to the Hispanic period, including Indians, Mexicans and Spaniards, on land not originally owned by Pastor became squatters overnight. Atherton then sent notice to evict them. Many were settlers on improved lands awaiting preemption, including George Dutton and others who had believed they owned property in the town of Jolon.
George Atherton, and his wife Gertrude,who later became a well-known novelist, dispossessed fifty-three families from Rancho Milpitas in 1877-78.Fact|date=March 2008 The Athertons arrived with sheriffs and guns and burned the houses and possessions of the residents who were considered to be squatters. The wealthier among them repurchased their properties, but many moved on.Fact|date=March 2008
In 1881, after her husband's death, Dominga built a house on California Street in San Francisco and moved in with her son, George,and daughter-in-law, Gertrude. Both Dominga and Gertrude were strong women who so dominated George that in 1887 he ran away from home to seek his fortune in Chile. Fact|date=March 2008 Halfway to Chile, George's kidneys failed. The sailors put his body into a barrel of rum to preserve it and shipped the barrel to the Atherton Mansion. Fact|date=March 2008 George was dried out and received a proper Christian burial. Local legend says his ghost soon began knocking on the bedroom doors of his mother and widow. He became so troublesome that Dominga sold the house and moved out.
Legacy
Atherton's greatest legacy was his family name given to the town of Atherton, previously known as "Fair Oaks". On the town's incorporation in 1923, it was found that the name was already in use, so Atherton was chosen. [Bush & Merrill, pg. 7] However, as early as 1912, it was already being referred to by that name.
Faxon Dean Atherton married Dominga de Goñi in 1843 and had the following children:
# Maria Alejandra Atherton (b.1844), married Jared Lawrence Rathbone.
# Elena Amanda Atherton (b.1845), married Frederick William Macondray, Jr of Boston, Massachusetts, son of one of the first merchants of San Francisco and large land owner.
# Anacleto Francisco Atherton (b. 1849)
# Jorge H. Bowen Atherton (b.1851), eloped with Gertrude Franklin Horn in 1876.
# Eulogia Isabel Atherton (b. 1853), married Enrique Edwards, of Valparaiso, Chile. Their great grandson, Dr. Carlos Lopez, became president of Menlo college in 2004.
# Francisco Fascon Atherton(1857), married Jane Selby, daughter ofThomas Henry Selby , 13th mayor ofSan Francisco, California , who built the Selby Shot Tower in San Francisco and founded the Selby Smelting Works.
# Florence Atherton (b. 1861), married Edward Lilburn Eyre, first mayor of Atherton in 1886. [NOTE: She has sometimes been confused with Florence Atherton Faxon Spalding, a Boston music teacher, who married, also in 1886, George Frederick Spalding of Newton, Mass., father of John Varnum Spalding, an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (1944-1971)]References
ources
* Stanger, Frank M. "South from San Francisco", 1963, Publisher San Mateo County Historical Association.
* Bush, Sarah L. & Merrill, Genevieve. "Atherton Lands", 1979 (Self published.)
* Hynding, Alan. "From Frontier to Suburb: The Story of The San Mateo Peninsula", 1985, ISBN 0-89863-056-8
* Alexander, Philip W., "History of San Mateo County : from the earliest times, with a description of its resources and advantages, and the biographies of its representative men.", 1916, Burlingame, Calif.: Press of Burlingame Pub. Co.
External links
* [http://www.ci.atherton.ca.us/history.html Atherton History]
* CalBios: San Mateo County: [http://www.calarchives4u.com/Biographies/sanmateo/sanm-athe.htm Faxon D. ATHERTON]
* Consulate General of Chile, San Francisco: [http://consuladochilesfo.com/ChileCal.htm The Chile-California Connection]
* The San Francisco Genealogy [http://www.sfgenealogy.com/sanmateo/history/smhsm2.htm The History of San Mateo County by Phillip Alexander]
* Harlan Hague [http://www.softadventure.net/larkin.htm The Jumping Off Place of the World: California and the Transformation of Thomas O. Larkin] Originally published in California History, Winter 1991/1992
* Supreme Judicial of Massachusetts [http://www.massreports.com/memorials/379ma931.htm Memorial of John Varnum Spalding]
* Monterey County Historical Society [http://www.mchsmuseum.com/mcoverview.html Overview of Post-Hispanic Monterey County History] by MaryEllen Ryan and Gary S. Breschini, Ph.D.
* National Park Service [http://www.nps.gov/pwro/fhl/fhl_resource_description2.pdf Draft Fort Hunter Ligget Special Resource Study & Environmental Assessment: Chapter 2 Cultural Resources]
* Federation of East European Family History Societies [http://feefhs.org/FDB2/6995/6995-18.HTML San Francisco Call Newspaper Vital Records for 1869-1895 (Surnames from: Atherton, Faxon Dean)]
* Noe Hill [http://www.noehill.com/sf/landmarks/nat1979000527.asp Landmark 79000527 Atherton House in the National Register of Historic San Francisco]
* The Literature Network [http://www.online-literature.com/gertrude-atherton/ Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton]
* The Almanac [http://www.almanacnews.com/morgue/2004/2004_05_19.lopez.shtml New Menlo College president has deep roots in Atherton] , 19 May 2004
* Palo Alto Online [http://www.paloaltoonline.com/neighborhoods/westatherton.php West Atherton: Large estates and heritage trees] , by Susan Golovin and Sue Dremann
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