History of the Shasta-Hanchett Park Neighborhood Agricultural - TopicsExpress



          

History of the Shasta-Hanchett Park Neighborhood Agricultural Park, often referred to as the Fair Grounds in the 19th century was a favorite recreational spot in San Jose for over 40 years, serving as the site for livestock fairs, circuses, bicycle races, dances and some of the best horse races in the state. People came from far and wide to attend the attractions. The seventy six acre site located at the bend in the Alameda, was purchased in 1850 from General Henry M Naglee by the newly reorganized Santa Clara Valley Agricultural Society. The selling price of $6,000 was raised by public subscription. You have to put you self in the history of that time period. The main unpaved roads in most cases were The Alameda, Stevens Creek, Monterey Highway and San Carlos/Bascom. The population centers were San Jose, Santa Clara, Cupertino, Saratoga, Sunnyvale, MountainView , Campbell and Los Gatos. The site was perfectly central for travel to the location on the existing road system of the period. By far, the most famous and popular attraction at the park was the race track which Race Street, which ran alongside, the track is named. It’s here that many fine horses attained fame, including Leland Stanford’s prize racers, Palo Alto and Occident. Former President Grant after a round the world excursion 1n 1870 spent an enjoyable afternoon watching the races. Prior to the Automobile the horse was seen as a growth industry. Leland Stanford sold one of his horses for slightly less than the amount paid for the Fair Grounds. If seen on Sunday out for a ride in the sun, it was seen as a measure of your social standing to have a highly trained trotter pulling your buggy. To the detriment of the park., the State Legislature in 1880, reorganized agricultural districts and cut off a$2.000 yearly subsidy which had enabled the Agricultural Society to operate in the black. Gate receipts and donations could no longer meet expenses during the depression years to follow. In 1901. 20 years later it was sold and developed into the housing subdivision called Hanchett Park. Streets were laid out, homes built and all the traces of the once famous race track disappeared. Sounds familiar doesn’t it. Hanchett Park was an upscale development ghreat care was used in the size and look of the homes built there. The Shasta Hanchett Park neighborhood in San José, California is located just west of the downtown area. The neighborhood includes four areas: Shasta Hanchett Park, Garden Alameda, St. Leo’s, and Cahill Park. Shasta Hanchett Park is a unique combination of residential, commercial, and industrial areas. Shasta Hanchett Park occupies land that was owned by Mission Santa Clara de Asís and Roberto Balermino. The land between Mission Santa Clara and the Guadalupe River, Rancho El Potrero de Santa Clara, served as pasturage for the mission’s herd of several thousand cattle. In 1844, Los Coches Rancho, a Mexican colloquialism for “The Pigs”, was granted to Roberto Balermino, a Native American educated at the Mission Santa Clara, by Governer Manuel Micheltorena. In 1847 Balermino sold his land to Antonio Suñol. Suñol divided the ranch into thirds, keeping one-third for himself, giving a third to his daughter Paula and her husband Pierre (also known as Pedro) Sainsevain, and selling the remaining third to Henry Morris Naglee. The Alameda, which bisects Shasta Hanchett Park, is part of El Camino Real, Spanish for the “Royal Road” or “King’s Highway”, the first true road in California. It connected the 21 missions, 4 presidios and 3 pueblos of Alta California. The Alameda, Spanish for “tree lined street”, has served as a transportation corridor between San José and Santa Clara for over 200 years. In 1799 hundreds of willow trees were planted by 200 Native Americans under the direction of Father Magin Catala. By providing a pleasant, shady walk Father Catala hoped to encourage the pueblo residents to attend mass at the Mission. In 1862 Hiram Shartzer’s Turnpike Road Company improved The Alameda and began operating it as a toll road. The cost of maintaining the road, especially in the winter months when it became very muddy, was too much and the road was sold to the County of Santa Clara in 1868. Later The Alameda was home to stately Victorian Mansions and beautiful gardens. The Alameda also served as a thoroughfare for many forms of public transportation. In 1850 a stagecoach made the nine-hour trip between San José and San Francisco, via The Alameda, three times a week. The San Jose and Santa Clara Railroad Company was founded in 1868 and began laying tracks for a horsecar line from San José to Santa Clara via The Alameda. The horsecar made its inaugural 45 minute journey on November 1, 1868. Twenty years later, The San Jose and Santa Clara Railroad Company began constructing an underground electric trolley line. When completed, the mechanical problems were so frequent that service was suspended and the horsecars returned. In 1889 the underground electric system was removed and replaced with an overhead electric system that ran up and down The Alameda until the mid 1930s, when the system was replaced by buses The east side of Shasta Hanchett Park, near the railroad tracks, was mostly industrial and included business such as: California Canners and Growers, Fredericksburg Brewery, Muirson Label Company, CalPak Plant #51, and Union Ice. The Fredericksburg Brewery began in 1869 when Gottfried Frederick Krahenberg opened a brewery in a small brick building on the corner of The Alameda and Cinnabar Street. In 1872 Theodore Lenzen designed a castle-like brewery and malt house that were built on the same site. In 1888 Fredericksburg produced 53,000 barrels of beer. Fredericksburg ceased production in September of 1918, shortly after the city of San Jose passed a “pre-Prohibition” ordinance. This law allowed for the sale of beer and wine in restaurants only and the city issued 17 permits to restaurants for this privilege. After Prohibition was repealed, San Francisco brewer Jonny Wieland purchased the “castle” brewery. In the 1950s Falstaff Brewing Corporation bought the building, but later moved production to their San Francisco plant. The building was torn down in 1980. At the opposite end of the block,Muirson Label Company operated on Stockton Avenue between Lenzen Avenue and Cinnabar Street from 1914 to 1970. California Packing Corporation, which later became the Del Monte Corporation, Plant #51 on the former White Street, processed and packed dried fruit. Between 1859 and 1901 the 76 acres of land situated between The Alameda, Race Street, Park Avenue, and Hester Avenue was known as Agricultural Park. Operated by the Santa Clara County Agricultural Society, the park served as the county fairgrounds and hosted livestock fairs, fancy dress balls, traveling circuses, and exhibitions for everything from fruit to quilts. It included a horseracing track, bicycle velodrome (track), baseball fields, and picnic grounds. During to the depression of the 1890s, the park was too expensive to maintain and the land was sold to Peninsula Land & Development Company, headed by Lewis E. Hanchett, in 1901. ) In 1905 Lewis E. Hanchett acquired the former Agricultural Park from the Peninsula Land & Development Company. He decided to sub-divide the land to develop a desirable neighborhood. The sales brochure stated, “We challenge comparison with any subdivision offered anyplace on the Peninsula, as far as quality of the improvements and location of tract are concerned.” The amenities included electric streetlights, flush toilets, and a septic tank sewer system. Residents bought a lot and then commissioned an architect to design a home that met Hanchett’s design standards. Most of the homes were built between 1915 and 1930. Shasta Hanchett Park continues to be a thriving community of residents and businesses, concerned with preserving their neighborhood’s history and character.
Posted on: Thu, 25 Sep 2014 15:31:22 +0000

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