San Francisco County

Biographies


JOSEPH E. ARTIGUES, M.D.

Joseph E. Artigues, M.D., whose office is at 651 Broadway street, San Francisco, was born in this city in 1863, the son of Louis Artigues, who was one of the early settlers of San Francisco, where he was for many years a merchant and manufacturer.  Joseph received his education in Toulouse, France, where he attended the public schools, and later the Lycee, where he graduated in 1880.  He returned to California in 1881, where he devoted some time to learning the English language, and also took a course at Heald’s Business College, and was also engaged for two years in business pursuits.  In 1885 he commenced the study of medicine at Cooper Medical College, graduating at that institution in 1887, after a full three-years course, and receiving his degree as Doctor of Medicine.  Dr. Artigues was then appointed house physician to the French Hospital, where he remained for two years, and has since that time been engaged in private practice.

Transcribed 11-7-04   Louise E. Shoemaker

Source: "The Bay of San Francisco," Vol. 1, page 574-575, Lewis Publishing Co, 1892.


JAMES BURTON BARBER

 

James Burton Barber, Tax Collector of Alameda county, was born in Marysville, California, November 9, 1850, the first-born American of that city, a son of Arthur S. and Elmira (Burton) Barber.  The mother, born in New York State, died in 1852 in child-birth, leaving only one surviving child, the subject of this sketch.  His grandfather, S. P. Burton, a farmer by occupation, was among the early settlers of Clinton county, Iowa, having moved there from New York State.  A. S. Barber, the father of J. B., born in England in 1817, and married in Clinton county, Iowa, came to California in 1849, and went to mining in Marysville.  In 1853 he came to Alameda and is still a resident of that city.  He went into business there, first carrying on a general store and later on a grocery store, and was Postmaster from 1856 to 1889.  He is the father of two sons and three daughters by his second wife, and is now retired from business.  He is a member of the Pioneer Society and a Mason for many years, being a charter member of Oak Grove Lodge, No. 215, F. & A. M., of Alameda.

 

J. B. Barber was educated in the public schools of Alameda, and worked in his father’s store to the age of twenty-one.  He then learned telegraphy and went to work for the Central Pacific for two years in that line.  In 1874 he went into business on his own account in Alameda, conducting a wood and coal yard about seven years.  In 1882 he was appointed deputy Treasurer and Tax Collector under J. A. Webster, and afterwards served as deputy Assessor from the first Monday in January, 1887, to the same day in 1889, when he entered on the discharge of his present duties as Tax Collector, to which he had been elected in 1888.  He is a candidate for re-election in 1890.  He is a charter member of Halcyon Parlor, No. 146, N. S. G. W., of Alameda, and Senior Past President of the same.  He is also a member of Oak Grove Lodge, No. 215, F. & A., M., and of Alameda Lodge, No. 49, Knights of Pythias, in which he has passed through the chairs.

 

J. B. Barber was married in Alameda, in 1878, to Miss Anna M. Cooke, born in Philadelphia in September, 1856, a daughter of Napoleon B. and Martha (Smith) Cooke, who came to this coast soon after her birth, and have been residents of Alameda for many years.  The father is aged about sixty and the mother fifty-eight years.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Barber have one child, William Burton, born October 20, 1879.

 

Transcribed by Donna L. Becker 

Source: "The Bay of San Francisco," Vol. 1, page 581-582, Lewis Publishing Co, 1892.


Hon. J. S. Bellrude

 

Hon. J. S. Bellrude, lumber merchant of Sausalito, formerly Justice of the Peace, was born at Christiania, Norway, October 1, 1827, where he was educated and reared to manhood.  He then went to London, England, remaining about three years, when he emigrated to America, and was for a time engaged as an interpreter to a Scandinavian society.  He soon afterward located at Portage City, Wisconsin, where he engaged in clerking; later he was a Notary Public.  In 1855 he came to California via the Isthmus of Panama.  After remaining in San Francisco one year he went to Marysville and engaged in the lumber trade and also livery business until 1860, when he came to Sausalito.  In 1861 he was elected Justice of the Peace for one term.  Two years later he went to Nevada, locating for a few months at Virginia City.  Then he was in the city of San Francisco some six months, when he permanently located at Sausalito, where he was appointed Postmaster, continuing in the office six months.  Next he was elected Justice of the Peace four terms successively until 1891.  He has been a very prominent business man in Sausalito during the years of his residence there, and he has been for several years identified with the dairy business in Marin county.  In addition to his lumber business he also conducts a large feed and sale stable.

 

Judge Bellrude is the fourth in a family of seven children born to his parents.  He is the son of Charles and Annie Bellrude, both now deceased.  Our subject is a Democrat politically, and is still active in polities.  He is a man of many sterling qualities, a worthy citizen and one who has the respect and confidence of his fellow-citizens.

Transcribed Karen L. Pratt.

Source: "The Bay of San Francisco," Vol. 1, page 595-596, Lewis Publishing Co, 1892.


Isaac Bluxome

 

Isaac Bluxome, deceased at his home, No. 1422 Hyde street, November 9, 1890, was among the pioneers of 1849, and was also a noted man in San Francisco’s early history.  He was born in New York city in 1829.  His father was an Englishman of good family, and his mother was a daughter of Colonel John De Camp, aid de-camp to General Washington in the Revolutionary war.  Mr. Bluxome was educated in a school at Flushing, Long Island, conducted by a clergyman, where he remained to the age of sixteen years.  He was then placed by his father in the hardware business, where he remained until January, 1849, in which year he started for California in the bark Madonna, arriving in San Francisco in June of the year.  Within a month of his arrival he began a business career as a general merchant, but was burned out with hundreds of others in the great fire of 1850.  He resumed business again as soon as his fortune would permit.  When he arrived in this city it was under the reign of terror on account of  “The Hounds,” an organization of thieves and ruffians, to whose band it is said many young men whose families in the East were respectable had been attracted.  Mr. Bluxome took a prominent part in ridding this city of this dangerous element, being one of the Citizens’ Band of Safety of 1849 and 1851.  He took the lead in founding a citizen soldiery, and was also the founder of the California National Guard.  As “No. 33,” however, Isaac Bluxome’s name is best known to those citizens who know of the early days of this city only through history.  The cause that led to the creation of the Committee of Safety of 1856, better known as the Vigilance Committee, was principally the fact that citizens owning property were unable to protect their interest without such an effort.  Criminals and ballot-box stuffers had made it impossible to have an honest election, and the courts were more than suspected in many instances of favoring the criminals at the expense of justice.  Everything was done with a secrecy that the people against whom the committee work was directed speedily learned to dread.  The publication of the committee, its notices and advertisements of meeting were signed always “33, Secretary.”  The orders were signed in the same way, and the mysterious individuals whom the number represented was one whom the criminal element swore to kill.  Undoubted Mr. Bluxome would have been killed had the fact been known that he was the man.

 

For some years after giving up the mercantile business, he was a coal and iron broker in San Francisco.  Later he was for many years engaged in general mining in Amador county until the passage of the anti-hydraulic mining laws, since which he was engaged in no active business.

 

Mr. Bluxome was married in 1864, to Miss Gertrude T., daughter of Miers F. Truitt, an early settler of California, who was a prominent mining man on this coast up to his death.  Mrs. Bluxome is a grandniece of General Henry Dodge, the hero of the war of 1812, and subsequently Governor of Wisconsin, and also United States Senator from that State.  Mr. and Mrs. Bluxome have nine children who are living.

Transcribed Karen L. Pratt.

Source: "The Bay of San Francisco," Vol. 1, page 586-587, Lewis Publishing Co, 1892.


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