Santa Clara County
Biographies
BACKUS L. BARTLETT
Backus L. Bartlett, son of Martin and Abigail (Smith) Bartlett, was born in Fonda’s Bush, Fulton County, New York, January 4, 1822. At the age of fifteen he became a clerk in a mercantile house in Albany, and at the end of seven years became a partner of his employer, the business being carried on under the firm name of B. L. Bartlett & Co. This was a branch store. At the end of five years (in 1849) he went to New York city, where he remained till 1852, when he came to California, and settled at Shasta, in Shasta County; there he remained till 1861, carrying on a mercantile business, and then removed to Red Bluff, Tehama County, and engaged in the forwarding business for about three years, when he was appointed Deputy Internal Revenue Collector, at San Francisco, in which service he continued till 1873. Since that time he has been Adjuster to the Board of Trade of San Francisco.
In politics he is a Republican. He owns a ranch of twenty-two and one-half acres at Los Gatos, but on account of his business he is obliged to live in San Francisco. He has 400 apricot, 500 Bartlett pear, and 400 French prune trees six years old, and 350 French prune, 350 peach, and 100 apricot trees one year old, besides 300 grape-vines. In 1887, when his apricot trees were but five years old, they yielded him $175 per acre. It was an off year for prunes, but his fruit yielded $50 per acre. The indications point to a heavy yield of prunes and pears this year.
Pen Pictures From The Garden of the World or Santa Clara County, California, Illustrated. - Edited by H. S. Foote.- Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1888.
Pg. 316
Transcribed by Kathy Sedler
Proofread by Betty Vickroy
WILLIAM RICE
William Rice was born in Murray County, Tennessee, February 17, 1821. His father, Ebenezer Rice, was a native of Vermont, and his mother, Catharine (Baldridge) Rice, was a native of North Carolina. She was of English and Irish descent. When she was six years old her parents moved to Tennessee, where she married Ebenezer Rice. When Mr. Rice was a very small boy his father was sent from the East to Tennessee as a missionary to the Indians. In the fall of 1833 he removed with his family to Morgan County, Illinois, where he made it his home until his death, in 1858. Mrs. Rice, his widow, afterward died at the residence of her son William, near Saratoga, California, March 17, 1888, aged nearly ninety-eight years. There were twelve children in her family, of whom three are now living. William Rice made his home with his parents until he was twenty-five years of age. He was married in 1847 to Eliza Jane Campbell, who was born in Murray County, Tennessee. Her father, James Campbell, was a native of Kentucky, his parents having come from Ireland and settled there. Her mother was Margaret Berry, a native of Kentucky, but her parents were natives of Scotland. Before his marriage, William Rice purchased a farm of eighty acres, and lived on it until 1875. During this period he made several additions to it, until at one time he had about 600 acres. In May, 1875, he sold out and came to California, and shortly after his arrival here bought his present place, in Santa Clara County, near Saratoga, which at that time contained 190 acres. Afterward he bought seventy-five acres adjoining it. He has sold off this land from time to time, until now he has but thirty acres. The place is all in orchard, consisting of twenty acres of prunes from four to eight years old. The rest of the land is mostly in pears, from two to four years old. It is one of the finest pear orchards in this part of the country, and is just beginning to bear. There are three acres of the eight-years-old prunes which have been bearing heavily for the past four years. In 1887 they bore about sixteen tons, which is a big yield for three acres of ground. Mr. Rice has been a member of the Christian Church ever since he was twenty years old, and now belongs to that church in Saratoga.
Mr. and Mrs. Rice have one son: William Allen Rice, born at Concord, Morgan County, Illinois, March 10, 1870. They have lost eight children, several of whom were grown.
Pen Pictures From The Garden of the World or Santa Clara County, California, Illustrated. - Edited by H. S. Foote.- Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1888.
Pg. 316-317
Transcribed by Kathy Sedler
Proofread by Betty Vickroy