- James Alexander Forbes (1805-1881)
James Alexander Forbes (
January 6 1805 –May 6 1881 [cite web | url=http://historylosgatos.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/Forbes&CISOPTR=18&CISOBOX=1&REC=2 | title=Forbes mill | work=Hooked on Los Gatos | publisher=Los Gatos Public Library | accessdate=2008-01-21] ) was the British vice-consul to Mexican California as well as the first British consul to theU.S. state ofCalifornia . He built a flour mill outside ofSan Jose, California (now known asForbes Mill ), and that land eventually became the basis of the town of Los Gatos.Early life
Born in
Inverness ,Scotland to John Alonzo Forbes and Marta Rodriguez, he emigrated toArgentina around the age of 12 with an uncle who owned a shipping line. He was later educated byJesuit s inMontevideo ,Uruguay , and fought for Argentina during theArgentina-Brazil War , having converted one of his uncle's ships into aman of war .cite news | title=The Old Mill Stream | url=http://www.svcn.com/archives/lgwt/03.27.96/old.mill.html | publisher=Los Gatos Weekly-Times | date=March 27 1996 | first=Bob | last=Aldrich | accessdate=2008-01-21] He then came to California on a whaleship in 1831, [cite news | url=http://www.phylisbutler.com/articles/losgatostxt.html | title=Los Gatos' small-town holiday charms | publisher=San Francisco Chronicle | first=Phyllis Filberti | last=Butler | date=December 9 ,2001 | accessdate=2008-01-21] and worked for a while as anaccountant on the ranch ofJosé Castro near Richmond. In 1834, he married Ana María Galindo, daughter of themajordomo ofMission Santa Clara de Asís .cite web | url=http://historyofberkeley.org/chapter02.html | title=Assembling the Cast of Characters | work=A History of Berkeley, From the Ground Up | first=Alan | last=Cohen | date=2007 | accessdate=2008-01-21] The Forbes family lived on El Rancho de Potrero de Santa Clara, a convert|1939|acre|km2|1|adj=onranch near San Jose. The property, which was received in aland grant from GovernorManuel Micheltorena in 1844, [cite web | url=http://www.historysanjose.org/labellegacy/people/forbes_and_stockton.html | title=Forbes and Stockton | work=Label Legacy | publisher=History San José | accessdate=2008-01-21] and cattle were sold in 1847 to CommodoreRobert F. Stockton for USD$10,500, a high price for the time. [cite book | title=Land and Law in California: Essays on Land Policies | first=Paul Wallace | last=Gates | pages=132–33 | publisher=Purdue University Press | year=1991 | id=ISBN 1557532737 | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=fBy8Uhq7w8gC&pg=PA132&dq=british+consul+%22James+Alexander+Forbes%22&lr=&as_brr=3&sig=kXIbcQr70jIpMIkfaR-x2kLMgbk#PPA133,M1] The couple had a total of twelve children, three daughters and nine sons. In 1851, he persuaded the Jesuits to establish a school at Mission Santa Clara to educate his sons; this school formed the basis of what would becomeSanta Clara University . Five of the Forbes sons were part of the first class at Santa Clara College. [cite book | title=A History of the New California | first=Dennis J., S. J. | last=Kavenaugh | coauthors=Irvine, Lee H. (ed.) | publisher=Lewis Publishing Co. | year=1905 | url=http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ca/state1/newca/newca20.html]He worked for
Hudson's Bay Company beginning in 1836, [cite book | title=Historic Spots in California | page=370 | first=Douglas E. | last=Kyle | coauthors=Hoover, Mildred Brooke | publisher=Stanford University Press | year=2002 | id=ISBN 0804744831 | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=AYMPR6xAj50C&pg=PP1&dq=british+consul+%22James+Alexander+Forbes%22&lr=&as_brr=3&sig=SV0BwGfnkkL05jyf0D6fzlZBJAM#PPA370,M1] becoming administrator of the company's affairs in California in 1845, although that office closed the following year. [cite book | title=The Beginnings of San Francisco from the Expedition of Anza, 1774 to the City Charter of April 15, 1850 | first=Zoeth Skinner | last=Eldredge | page=523 | year=1912 | publisher=Zoeth S. Skinner | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=7ZgMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA523&lpg=PA523&dq=%22james+alexander+forbes%22+british+consul&source=web&ots=LqZ1Z9hE34&sig=P70HujM36uthQGpvDpBEHGnsiUY#PPA523,M1] Prior to that, he had been appointed vice-consul in 1842. [cite book | title=Sutter of California | page=140 | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=8YXj7xJrD6sC&pg=PA140&lpg=PA140&dq=%22james+alexander+forbes%22+british+consul&source=web&ots=fD4uyiPo-s&sig=-jRIAb9itfIm2Nvm7m0mvKGWPqI | first=Julian | last=Dana | id=ISBN 1419114999 | year=1934, reprinted 2005 | publisher=Kessinger Books] While serving as vice-consul, he advocated the takeover of California by the British government; the proposal was flatly rejected. Forbes was informed that Great Britain had no desire to interfere in California politics, but that she would look with great disfavor upon such interference by any other power. This sentiment was communicated toThomas O. Larkin , United States consul, but did little to dissuade the U.S. from annexing California in 1846. [cite book | title=The United States Consulate in California | page=254 | first=Rayner Wickersham | last=Kelsey | publisher=University of California | year=1910 | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=g4osAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA254&lpg=PA254&dq=%22james+alexander+forbes%22+british+consul&source=web&ots=Ir3UADI70a&sig=zrcJanbADkUvDu15HMPYrZVZdHE]New Almaden
He was also an early investor in the
New Almaden quicksilver mine with Alexander Forbes, British consul to Mexico and author of one of the first histories of California in the English language.cref|relationship Their company had purchased the title to the mine fromAndrés Castillero in 1846, and it proved to be extremely profitable. However, another man,José Berreyessa , also lay claim to the mine on the basis that it lay on land given to him in aland grant by the Mexican governor of Alta California. Furthermore,Justo Larias also claimed ownership, and the United States government even stepped in to claim that the mine lay on public land. A complex legal case involving Mexican laws and theTreaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo described by "The New York Times " as "one of the most remarkable civil trials in this or any other country", [cite book | title=Commander of All Lincoln's Armies: A Life of General Henry W. Halleck | page=93 | first=John F. | last=Marszalek | publisher=Harvard University Press | year=2004 | id=ISBN 0674014936 | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qPF5znzC8wEC&pg=PA90&lpg=PA90&dq=forbes+castillero&source=web&ots=L6NzLEIntC&sig=uJ63s7GRHPmyZW1HbPdW-F1RzQM#PPA93,M1] "United States v. Andres Castillero " eventually reached theUnited States Supreme Court whereupon it was finallydecided in 1862 that, the mine was on the Larias grant, and that the furnaces and improvements of the company below the hill were on the Berreyessa grant. The company bought into these two titles and then sold the entire operation in 1864 to theQuicksilver Mining Company . [cite book | title=The History of San José and Surroundings: With Biographical Sketches of Early Settlers | pages-412–13 | first=Frederic | last=Hall | publisher=A.L. Bancroft and Co | year=1871 | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=9Y2Sz0vLcmQC&pg=PA402&lpg=PA402&dq=forbes+castillero&source=web&ots=4zz_CTelgo&sig=Z-aSH0T5Ix8m4es8hHuYgwY2O1s#PPA412,M1]Los Gatos
Forbes' lasting legacy, however, is the town of Los Gatos. In 1850, noticing that there was no local production of flour (it was being imported from
Chile ), he purchased about convert|2000|acre|km2|1 ofRancho Rinconada de Los Gatos fromJosé María Hernandez with the intent of building a mill on Los Gatos Creek. In 1853 he raised the money for the construction, and in 1854 the mill was built. After many delays, the mill started grinding flour on December 1, 1855. However, the location Forbes chose was unfortunate, as there was only enough water in the creek to power the mill during the winter months. This, coupled with the delays in its opening which allowed competitors into the market thus dropping flour prices from a lucrative $50/barrel to a mere $5, [cite web | url=http://www.losgatoschamber.com/history.html | title=Our Rich Heritage | publisher=Los Gatos Chamber of Commerce | accessdate=2008-01-21] meant that it was not generating enough income and eventually Forbes was forced intobankruptcy , much of his money also being tied up in litigation with regards to the mine. In 1858, he was evicted due to non-payment of the loan. However, a town sprang up around the mill and was initially known as Forbestown before changing its name to Los Gatos. [cite web | url=http://www.losgatosmuseum.org/History/historymuseum.html | title=Brief History of Forbes Mill | publisher=The History Museum of Los Gatos | accessdate=2008-01-21]Personality
Los Gatos historian William A. Wulf describes Forbes as "a suede-shoe man [i.e., a devious individual] . He was bright, and better educated than most men in California when he first arrived. But he was basically a bad guy who ended up losing control of circumstances." When the Jesuits arrived from Oregon to Mission Santa Clara, they asked him to move out of the mission, which he did, but not before getting $11,000 from them. He then used this money to build a mansion right behind the mission. Later, he sold this to a group of
nun s, neglecting to tell them there was a $20,000lien on the house. Also, according to the Hernandez family, Forbes never paid $8,000 he owed for the Los Gatos rancho. With regards to his marriage, he is described as having treated his wife as a servant, often not allowing her to converse with dinner guests; instead she was made to help the other servants.Forbes died in 1881, in Alameda.
Notes
References
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