Sacramento County

Biographies

 


B. F. Beans

B. F. Beans lives one mile from Elk Grove, which is his postoffice, and sixteen miles from Sacramento. He was born in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, in 1839, and lived there until 1856. At the age of sixteen years he came to California across the plains, first settling in El Dorado County, where he remained until 1863; he then settled in this county, on his present farm. Mr. Beans was married in 1870 to Mrs. Mary E. McFall, a native of Rome, New York.

Transcribed by Debbie Walke Gramlick.

Davis, Hon. Win. J., An Illustrated History of Sacramento County, California. Page 458. Lewis Publishing Company. 1890.


William E. Dixon

William E. Dixon was born October 22, 1857, son of Alfred and Martha (Biggot) Dixon; the former a native of New Brunswick and the latter of Ohio. Alfred the father, was raised on a farm and went with his parents to Ohio in 1837, where he resided until 1843, when he went to Quincy, Illinois. There he began the study of law with the firm of Browning & Bushnell, remaining with them for two years, and he was there admitted to the bar. He removed to Porter County, Indiana, and engaged in the practice of law, farming as well, which he continued until 1860, when he came to California, crossing the plains. They brought horses with them, which they sold on reaching California. Their journey lasted six months, the first halt being made in Sacramento County. He soon purchased a farm in this county, northwest quarter of section 30 and southwest quarter of section 19, township 6. The farm is one of those through which the old overland road used to pass. He gave up his practice of law to a great extent and engaged in farming and stock-raising. In 1880 he went East on a visit, and while in New York city he was out in the wet, and the result was pneumonia, which resulted in his death, September 19, 1880.  His wife was with him during his last hours. He was a very ambitious man, determined and persevering in all his undertakings. He will be long remembered by his many friends in this county. William E. Dixon, the subject of this notice, was raised on a farm and came to California with his parents. He was married April 26, 1882, to Miss Julia I. Barnes, a native of New Brunswick. They have five children: Edna B., Anna M., Alfred C., Aubrey E. and Jennie H. Mr. Dixon is one of the best farmers in this county; one among the largest grain-raisers.

Transcribed by Marla Fitzsimmons.

Davis, Hon. Win. J., An Illustrated History of Sacramento County, California. Pages 458. Lewis Publishing Company. 1890.


SAMUEL HOWARD GERRISH

 

Samuel Howard Gerrish, for many years a foreman in the railroad shops of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, in this city, was born December 27, 1834, at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The family is one of the oldest in New England. His father, William Gerrish, was born at Lebanon, Maine, one of a family of thirteen children, twelve of whom were sons. He was a clock manufacturer and a merchant. He died in 1837. The founder of the family in America was Captain William Gerrish, of the British army, born in Bristol, England, who emigrated to America during Cromwell’s time, in 1638. On his mother’s side he is a descendant of the well-known Hartford family of New England; his grandfather Hartford was a New Hampshire farmer and a soldier of the War of 1812, in which war he died; Samuel Howard, for whom he was named, was his maternal grandmother’s father and was a Revolutionary soldier. When in 1837 his father died, our subject was two and a half years old. Although later on his mother removed to Boston, he remained in Dover to attend school. His brother-in-law, John B. Wood, was editing a newspaper at Great Falls, and at the age of fifteen years young Gerrish proceeded to that village to learn the trade of printer. After about one and a half years he went to Boston and worked at his trade in a job office on Washington Street. After a year had passed he concluded to learn the trade of machinist and went to Northampton, Massachusetts, where he worked for Dimock Bros. six months; then went to Holyoke, where he worked for the Hadley Falls Company one and a half years. Leaving there, he worked for a time in Boston and New York. His brother-in-law, R.M. Whitehouse, was foreman of the Connecticut River Railroad repair shops located at Northampton, Massachusetts, and he went there and worked seven years. In 1860 he came to California with George A. Stoddard, leaving New York June 5, coming by the Panama route and arriving in San Francisco on the 28th. He began working for E.T. Steen and continued with him for a year and a half. For the next four years he was engineer on the United States dry dock in the Mare Island Navy Yard. Then he came to Sacramento and was employed by Goss & Lambard, proprietors of the Sacramento Iron Works. In May 1866, he was employed for the railroad company and ran the first engine for the Central Pacific shops, where he worked and made the first tools used. His brother, J.L. Gerrish, now of Oakland, was also employed at the time in the same shops. He has held many positions of trust, among them that of trustee of the City Library and secretary of the board. He has been a Freemason since 1863, when he joined Naval Lodge, No. 87, of Vallejo; he is now a member of Concord Lodge, No. 117, of Sacramento, and has been a Master of that lodge during three years. He is also a member of Industrial Lodge, No. 157, I.O.O.F., of which he is a charter member. He was also a member in 1866-’67 of the California National Guards, Company D, Infantry, Captain Dasonville. Being of a scientific and statistical turn of mind, he has kept a record of the rainfall and temperature in his experiments in acclimating tropical trees ever since he came to Sacramento, making, as a voluntary observer of the United States Signal Service, monthly reports to Washington. Of his home life we need say but little. He was married September 4, 1855, to Sarah J. Rogers, a native of Northampton, Massachusetts, whose ancestors came over on the Mayflower in 1620. Her father, Thomas Rogers, was a carpenter, builder and contractor. Mr. Gerrish has four daughters and one son. Their home is on G Street, where they have lived for twenty-one years.

Transcribed by Debbie Walke Gramlick.

Davis, Hon. Win. J., An Illustrated History of Sacramento County, California. Pages 457-458. Lewis Publishing Company. 1890.

 


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