Adolph Sutro

Adolph Sutro

Infobox Officeholder
name = Adolph Sutro



caption =
order = 24th
office = Mayor of San Francisco
term_start = January 7, 1895
term_end = January 3, 1897
deputy =
predecessor = Levi Richard Ellert
successor = James D. Phelan
birth_date = birth date|1830|4|29|mf=y
birth_place = Aachen, Prussia
death_date = death date and age|1898|8|8|1830|4|29|mf=y
death_place = San Francisco, California
constituency =
party =
spouse =
profession =
religion =


footnotes =

Adolph Heinrich Joseph Sutro (April 29 1830 – August 8, 1898) was the 24th mayor of San Francisco, California, serving in that office from 1894 until 1896. He is today perhaps best remembered for the various San Francisco lands and landmarks that still bear his name.

Sutro Tunnel

Born in Aachen, Prussia, Sutro, educated as an engineer, at the age of twenty arrived in the United States and in 1850, he introduced himself to William Ralston of the Bank of California and introduced his plans for de-watering and de-gassing the mine shafts of the Comstock Lode by driving a tunnel through Mount Davidson to drain the water. Sutro incorporated the Sutro Tunnel company and raised $3 million, a considerable fortune through this work in Nevada. He included the miners in his scheme, and planned to sail to Europe to negotiate with the Parisian Bank, but the Franco-Prussian War commenced in the middle of July 1870. Sutro was stymied, but out of the blue came an offer from a London bank led by a banker named McClamont, who offered $650,000 in gold per year for the Comstock. Ralston was defeated.

According to Dickson, "... Sutro set off blasts of dynamite, ... leading the way for tunnel diggers. He fought avalanches, mud slides and poisonous gases. He dug air shafts to relieve the danger; the shafts filled with water, one of them to the depth of nine hundred feet. He fought cave-ins and solid rock. Through the grueling months, day after day and month after month, he marched ahead of his men, stripped to the waist, laboring with them, sweating with them, facing death with them, and in the end, winning through with them to victory."

Adolph Sutro became King of the Comstock because his tunnels drained three to four million gallons of water a day, rented by mine owners at an average of $10,000 a day, "all moneys accumulated for his stockholders."

Estate, baths, and home

His wealth was increased by large real estate investments in San Francisco, where he became an entrepreneur and public figure after returning from the Comstock in 1879. These land investments included Mount Sutro, Land's End (the area where Lincoln Park and the Cliff House are today), and Mount Davidson, which was called "Blue Mountain" at the time.

Sutro opened his own estate to the public and was heralded as a populist for various astute acts of public munificence, such as opening an aquarium and an elaborate and beautiful, glass-enclosed entertainment complex called Sutro Baths. Though the Baths were not opened until 1896, Sutro had been developing and marketing the project for years, attempting four separate times to insulate the site from waves using sea walls, the first three of which collapsed into the Pacific. In 1896, Adolph Sutro built a new Cliff House, a seven story Victorian Chateau, called by some "the Gingerbread Palace," below his estate on the bluffs of Sutro Heights. This was the same year work began on the famous Sutro Baths, which included six of the largest indoor swimming pools north of the Restaurant that included a museum, skating rink and other pleasure grounds. Great throngs of San Franciscans arrived on steam trains, bicycles, carts and horse wagons on Sunday excursions.

The Baths were saltwater and springwater pools, heated to varying degrees, and surrounded by a concert hall and museums stocked with treasures that Sutro had collected in his travels. The baths became very popular despite their remote location, across the open dunes to the west of the populated areas of the city. This popularity was partly due to the low entry fee for visiting the Baths and riding the excursion railroad he built to reach them. The railroad grade still exists as a walking trail along the Land's End cliffs.

Sutro managed a great increase in the value of his outlying land investments as a direct result of the development burst that his vacationers' railroad spawned. He also increased the value of his speculated lands by hiring schoolboys to plant his property at Mount Sutro with saplings of fast-growing eucalyptus. This occurred coincidentally with city supervisors' enactment of rules granting tax-free status to "forested" lands within city limits. The forest still exists, and is the location of, and property of, the University of California, San Francisco.

Mayor

Sutro's reputation as a provider of diversions and culture for the average person led the politically weak and radical Populist Party to draft him to run for mayor on their ticket. He won on an anti-big business platform, inveighing against the tight grip that the Southern Pacific Railroad had over local businesses. Nevertheless, he was quickly considered a failed mayor, ill suited for political work, and did not provide the popularity boost his party had hoped to achieve by association with him.

At the time of his death, in 1898, his fortune was extensive and his legal affairs in disarray. As a result, his heirs fought bitterly over his holdings.

Many of Sutro's gifts to the city of San Francisco still exist and bear his name, such as Mount Sutro, originally Mount Parnassus (a lower hill nearby is the location of the Sutro Tower), and Sutro Heights. Sutro Baths became a skating rink and then was destroyed by a fire in 1966. Today it exists only as ruins just below the Cliff House.

ee also

*Luis Abadiano

Further reading

* The [http://www.magnes.org/collections/wjhc.html Western Jewish History Center] of the Judah L. Magnes Museum in Berkeley, California has a large collection of papers relating to Adolph Sutro and the Sutro Tunnel.

* The [http://www.library.ca.gov/collections/#sutro Sutro Library] in San Francisco, California houses Adolph Sutro's impressive [http://www.library.ca.gov/collections/adolphsutro.html rare book collection] , as well as local history resources and the largest genealogical collection west of Salt Lake City.

ources

*Samuel Dickson, "Tales of San Francisco" Stanford University Press 1957

External links

* [http://www.sfmuseum.net/sutro/bio.html Adolph Sutro's story] (written about the time of his death)
* [http://www.knpb.org/productions/sutro/ Sutro's efforts to tunnel to the Comstock Lode]
* [http://www.outsidelands.org/sutro.html Adolph Sutro bio @ Western Neighborhoods Project]
* [http://www.outsidelands.org/forest-fires.html Farms, Fire and Forest: Adolph Sutro and Development "West of Twin Peaks]
* [http://www.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a.tcl?topic=Sutro%20History Sutro-related discussions on greenspun.com]
* [http://www.cliffhouseproject.com/ Cliff House Historical information]
* [http://www.magnes.org/collections/wjhc.html/ Magnes Western Jewish History Center, Berkeley, CA]


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