San Francisco County
Biographies
John Henry ANTHONY was a lawyer of ability, but he gave many years of able service as a Government pension examiner, an office of which he was the incumbent at the time of his death, January 29, 1911, his final field of jurisdiction having comprised the states of California, Washington, and Oregon, and his home having been maintained in the City of San Francisco, where his widow still resides, at 900 Oak Street.
Mr. ANTHONY was born at White Sulphur Springs, Greenbrier County, Virginia (now West Virginia), on the 26th of January, 1852, and was a son of James W. and Elizabeth Caroline ANTHONY. The father was a blacksmith by trade, and upon moving with his family to Illinois he engaged in farm enterprise near Paris, that state, his death having there occurred in 1875, and his widow having long survived him, she having been of venerable age at the time of her death, in 1917.
In the public schools of Paris, Illinois, John H. ANTHONY continued his duties until he had fully profited by the curriculum of the high school, and thereafter he made a record of successful work as a teacher in the schools of that section of Illinois. Later he studied law and was admitted to the Illinois bar, and after having been of a number of years engaged in the successful practice of his profession he took the required civil-service examination and was appointed a Government pension examiner, his official headquarters having been established in New York City and his earlier service having been in New York and other eastern states. In 1894 he was assigned to the field comprising California, Washington and Oregon, and here he continued his active and efficient service until 1910, when he retired, his death having occurred on the 29th of January of the following year, as preciously noted in this context.
On the 17th of March, 1875, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. ANTHONY and Miss Alice Leslie KAUFFMAN, who was born and reared in the State of Illinois and who since his death has continued to maintain her home in San Francisco. Of the five children the eldest, Henry Edgar, likewise resides in this city; Nell Laurena is the wife of J. W. LEAVITT, of San Francisco: Guy Leonard resides in Honolulu, Hawaii; Edna Caroline is the wife of W.H. HARRISON, M. D., of San Francisco: and Robert Cleveland, resides in Honolulu at the time of this writing, in the winter of 1922-23.
Transcribed by Deana Schultz.
Source: "The San Francisco Bay Region" Vol. 3 page 80-83 by Bailey Millard. Published by The American Historical Society, Inc. 1924.
Faxon D. ATHERTON was a California pioneer whose character and large and beneficent influence were such as to make specially consistent a tribute to his memory, and this publication is a proper vehicle for such a memoir, for it was in San Francisco that he lived for many years, a substantial capitalist, who used his resources wisely and well for the general good of the community. He was about fifty-nine years of age at the time of his death, and his wife passed away in 1890.
Mr. ATHERTON was born in Massachusetts, January 2, 1818, and was a representative of a family that was founded in New England in the early Colonial period of our national history. He acquired his early education in the schools of his native state, and at the age of eighteen years entered the shipping and mercantile business, and as supercargo had charge of the operation of vessels plying between Boston, Valparaiso, Chile, and Monterey, California. He gained wide and varied experience. His first visit was made to San Francisco, California, in 1836, when the future metropolis was a small town but already an entrepot of no little importance. He was established in business in South America at the inception of the great gold excitement in California in 1849. He amassed a substantial fortune through his connection with the exporting and importing trade and the shipping business. His marriage was solemnized in Valparaiso to Senorita Dominiga DE GONI, a member of one of the patrician old families of that country. In the early ‘60’s, Mr. and Mrs. ATHERTON established their home in California, where he purchased land and built a fine residence in what is now the exclusive residential district known as Menlo Park. Retiring from the shipping business, he became prominent as a very large land holder in different parts of the state, owning large tracts of land in Haywards, Watsonville and other places. His financial resources and his influence were given freely and loyally in advancing measures and enterprises for the general good of the community. Mr. and Mrs. ATHERTON became the parents of seven children, of whom only the youngest is now living. The names of the children are here given in respective order of birth: Alexandra, who married J. L. RATHBONE; Elena, who married Frederick W. MACONDRAY; Francisco; George, who married Gertrude HORN; Isabel, who married Enrique EDWARDS, of Valparaiso, Chile, South America; Faxon D., Jr., who married Jeannie SELBY; and Florence.
The marriage of Miss Florence ATHERTON to Edward L. EYRE was solemnized in San Francisco, and in this city Mrs. EYRE still maintains her home, at 2112 Pacific Avenue, and also in Menlo Park, she having long been a prominent and popular figure in the representative social life of the community.
Edward L. EYRE is a son of Col. Edward Engle EYRE and Mary (TUTT) EYRE. His parents crossed the plains to California in 1849, and Colonel EYRE was engaged in mining for a time, afterwards entering the stock brokerage business in San Francisco. They were always prominent and highly respected citizens of the community. Mr. and Mrs. EYRE are the parents of two children, Edward E. and D. Atherton.
Transcribed by Deana Schultz.
Source: "The San Francisco Bay Region" Vol. 3 page 263-264 by Bailey Millard. Published by The American Historical Society, Inc. 1924.
Joseph Fairfield ATWILL was a California pioneer of 1849, and became prominently identified with early business enterprise in the City of San Francisco, where he was a leader in public affairs. Later, for a number of years, he was engaged in the practice of law in the State of Nevada, where also was elected to judicial office, and he passed the closing period of his long and useful life as an honored pioneer citizen in Oakland, California, where he died at the age of eighty years.
Of sterling Colonial American ancestry on both the paternal and maternal sides, Judge ATWILL was born in the City of Boston, Massachusetts, and was a son of Eben and Sarah (DODGE) ATWILL, both likewise natives of the old Bay State. The father became a successful contractor and builder, and was still a young man at the time of his death, which occurred prior to the year 1820. His widow, the mother of Joseph F. ATWILL, passed away in 1856, on the day of the inauguration of President Franklin PIERCE. She was a woman of most gracious personality, and had been acquainted with every president of the United States from General George WASHINGTON to President PIERCE.
Joseph F. ATWILL was reared in a home of culture and received his early education in his native city of Boston. He was the youngest in a large family of which four sons became prominent; the eldest Rev. William ATWILL, a clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal Church; Winthrop, one of the editors of the New York Observer; and Eben, a business man, who died in New Orleans, a victim in one of the early cholera epidemics in that city.
As a young man, Joseph went to New York City, where he became prominently identified with the music-publishing business and the sale of musical instruments, and where he numbered among his personal friends many men of national renown, including James Gordon BENNETT, the founder of the New York Herald. Prominent in musical affairs in the national metropolis, Mr. ATWILL formed the acquaintance of Jennie LIND, the great “Swedish nightingale”, Madam Anna BISHOP, the English singer, and many others of international fame.
While a young business man in New York, Joseph F. ATWILL married Miss Eliza Ann DUGLISS, the daughter of Hosea DUGLISS of New York. Miss DUGLISS, born and reared in the State of New York, was of Dutch and English ancestry. Of this union there were born five children, of whom all but one are dead. The eldest, Sarah Ann, was the widow of William Henry KEITH, druggist and importer of San Francisco, and of their two children the elder is Miss Eliza D. KEITH, principal of the Sherman School in San Francisco well known as a writer and public speaker, and a former grand president of the Native Daughters of the Golden West. The other child is William Henry KEITH, a talented baritone soloist and a leading vocal teacher in San Francisco.
Eliza D. ATWILL, the second child of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. ATWILL, was the widow of Henry D. REYNOLDS. She had one child, Lillian, now the wife of Sheldon L. KELLOGG, of Alameda, and mother of one son. Mary Josephine, the third daughter, the widow of Dr. T. H. Pinkerton, once a leading physician of Oakland, California is the only living child of Mr. and Mrs. ATWILL. Emeline Augusta, the youngest, was the widow of John G. BLOOMER, of San Francisco. Augusta Atwill BLOOMER of San Francisco is their daughter. The son, Joseph F. ATWILL Jr., died at an early age in San Francisco.
The death of Judge ATWILL occurred about the year of 1893, and his widow survived him about a decade, passing away in 1903.
The discovery of gold in California drew to this state men of all classes and conditions, and among those of exceptional ability and high attainments who arrived here in 1849 was Joseph F. ATWILL. He came by way of the Isthmus of Panama and arrived in San Francisco in October of that year. After passing a brief interval in mining camps he returned to San Francisco and became a pioneer in the business activities of the city, where he was the contemporary and close associate of other leading men of the day, including Theodore PAYNE and C.K. GARRISON. The Pacific Coast even in that period had appreciation of cultural agencies, including music, and Mr. ATWILL established a prosperous music-publishing and general music business, under the title of ATWILL & Company, with headquarters on Clay Street, where he went through three severe fires that damaged much of the business section of the city, but fortunately escaped having his establishment destroyed in the conflagrations. In 1853 Joseph F. ATWILL was here joined by his family, who made the trip from New York to San Francisco in a clipper ship that sailed around Cape Horn and landed at the foot of Clay Street on Montgomery Street. The family home was established in a house built for Mr. ATWILL on the corner of Clay and Powell streets.
As a man of exceptional ability, and as one of the progressive citizens of the period in San Francisco, Mr. ATWILL became prominent in public affairs in the community, served as a member of the Board of Aldermen and as acting mayor during the absence of C.K. GARRISON, the incumbent, and was chosen the first president of the San Francisco Board of Education. He made investments in local real estate, and at one time owned the property on which the Palace Hotel now stands.
In the ‘60s Joseph F. ATWILL went to Virginia City, Nevada, where as has already been stated, he engaged in the practice of law and also became a judge of one of the early courts. He finally retired, returned to San Francisco business life and later established his home at Oakland, California, where he passed the remainder of his life, as did also his wife. His family religious faith was that of the Protestant Episcopal Church, of which his brother, the Rev. William ATWILL and his wife were long identified with the Methodist Church. Mr. ATWILL also became actively affiliated with the Society of California Pioneers, and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. It was by such men as he that was laid the foundation of San Francisco’s greatness and her enduring fame.
Transcribed by Deana Schultz.
Source: "The San Francisco Bay Region" Vol. 3 page 282-284 by Bailey Millard. Published by The American Historical Society, Inc. 1924.