Iron Horse 

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   Hannah Clayborn's History of Healdsburg   © 2003 Hannah Clayborn   

 

The Iron Horse Comes to Healdsburg

  ( a work in progress, May, 2003 More images in preparation.)

 

 

Sonoma County Votes for Petaluma

 

Harpending’s Midas Touch

 

The Land Went to Shills

 

Irish vs. Chinese in the Railroad Race

 

Money Talks:  The Race Is Over

 

“Big Four” Take Over

 

Northwestern Pacific

 

Dispute with Dry Creek Ranchers

 

    click to enlarge images

          The Iron Horse did not gallop to Healdsburg.  At one time, in fact, it seemed that it would never get here at all.

            Ever since Charles Minturn (previously known as the "Ferryboat King") opened his three mile Petaluma and Haystack Railroad on August 1, 1864, Healdsburgers had been discussing the possibility of a railroad of their own..   For years all they got were paper railroads.

            Like real estate speculation and banking, railroad building offered the lure of a potential fast fortune.  That is why so many local entrepeneurs made a bid to be the "Railroad King" of Sonoma County.

            In October 1865, C.W. Langdon of Santa Rosa, I.G. Wickersham of Petaluma, and John McMannis, a merchant from Healdsburg, organized the Petaluma and Healdsburg Railroad Company.  Singly or collectively, however, these men could not raise enough capital to buy a locomotive.  The project ended in mutual recriminations.[1]

            Public opinion was divided as to what route such a railway should take.  Although most County residents agreed that Healdsburg was a natural northern terminus, Petaluma and Vallejo were in direct competition for a rail route.  To insure a profitable outcome, a group of  Petalumans adopted a charter for a company to build a railroad to Healdsburg, with a spur to Bloomfield (in western Sonoma County), on December 26, 1867.  They called their enterprise the Sonoma County Railroad Company.

            Lawyer, politician, land baron, real estate speculator, and banker, John Frisbie, who had interests both in Vallejo and Healdsburg, organized a rival company soon after.[2]  His Vallejo - Sonoma- Santa Rosa route would bypass Petaluma completely.  He was joined in this enterprise by Jackson Temple, the pre-eminent lawyer of Santa Rosa and one of California's most powerful Democratic party operatives.[3]  A third company, the San Francisco and Humbolt Bay Railroad Company, was incorporated by Utah mine owner, General Patrick O'Conner on March 2, 1868.

            The last was the most ambitious of the three companies.  O'Conner, along with partners, Fred McCrellish, publisher of the San Francisco Alta California newspaper, and John McCauley, a promoter and lobbyist, envisioned a route from Sausalito to Humbolt Bay.  They incorporated the company for $8,6000,000, a staggering figure at the time.

 

Sonoma County Votes for Petaluma

            All three companies expected to receive a subsidy of $5,000 per mile from the County coffers.  To solve the dilemma the State Legislature decreed that the voters would decide which company received the subsidy, and thus a colorful campaign was begun.  Each company immediately accused the other of knavery and every town in Sonoma County held boisterous rallies with impassioned public speakers.[4]

            The new owner of the Healdsburg Democratic Standard newspaper, W.J. Bowman, came out in favor of the Vallejo route endorsed by Frisbie in April, 1868.  The previous owners of the newspaper had endorsed the Petaluma route.[5]

            John Frisbie owned a great deal of land around Healdsburg and was a principal landowner and litigant in the famous Healdsburg Squatters Wars of the late 1850's and early 1860's.[6]  The paper reasoned that Frisbie's route through Vallejo could connect to many more lines in other parts of the State and they accused the Petaluma supporters of bringing their own cheering section to Healdsburg to influence local opinion.[7]

            At the special election on May 12, 1868, both Santa Rosa and Healdsburg turned in large majorities for Frisbie's company, but the overall County vote (2095 to 1586) favored the Sonoma County Railroad, via Petaluma.  But, as long as a railroad - any railroad - came to Healdsburg, locals were relatively content.

            Victorious Petaluma held a "ground breaking" ceremony for the Sonoma County Railroad Company on its main street on July 4th, but that was the beginning, and end, of construction.  Unable to carry out their directive as promised, the Petaluma group soon transferred all their rights and subsidies to General O'Conner and the San Francisco and Humbolt Bay Railroad Company.  Yet even General O'Conner and his partners did not have all the cash that was needed for such a large project.  They got the cash from a man named Asbury Harpending.

 

Harpending’s Midas Touch

            Harpending seemed to have a knack for making money.  As a sixteen year old Kentuckian en route to California with five dollars in his pockets in 1857, he managed to make several hundred dollars on board ship by auctioning off the purser's fruit supply.  Thus he arrived in San Francisco with a respectable "stake".  Soon after Harpending took over a mining claim that several experienced golddiggers had abandoned as worthless.  Blessed with the Midas Touch, Harpending dug a little deeper, and struck gold.

            During the Civil War Harpending spent much time and money plotting to make California a Confederate state.  Frustrated in these plans, he went east, served for a short time at Shiloh, and was given a naval captain's command by Jefferson Davis.  Harpending ended up as a prisoner on Alcatraz after being apprehended on a recently purchased Confederate cruiser on San Francisco Bay.  After being released he was broke, and fearing rearrest, hid out in the foothills near Fresno.  Here he struck another gold mine, netting $800,000.

            Harpending was busy buying up land parcels for the extension of Montgomery Street across Market with banker William Ralston in 1868, when he was approached by Fred McCrellish of the San Francisco and Humbolt Bay Railroad Company.  The enthusiastic young Harpending quickly bought out General O'Conner and John  McCauley's interests, and became owner of 90% of the company.  McCrellish was retained as a lobbyist for the project.

            With visions of Congressional land grants through the Eel River redwoods, Harpending soon began construction of the rails.  He sent General O'Conner to Washington to lobby for the grants, and, ever ambitious,  set to work planning a suspension bridge across the Golden Gate.

            Grading proceeded north of Petaluma through the fall and winter of 1868, but by early 1869 even Harpending was running short of cash.  Some Healdsburgers, suspicious of any project emanating from Petaluma, belittled the construction as "earth scratching", a vaccination to ward off a railroad.[8]

            Healdsburg's Republican newspaper, the Russian River Flag, supported Harpending's company, predicting in its December 3, 1868 issue that:

 

"The coming of railroads [the newspaper expected two lines to be put through to Healdsburg] will open up to us a market for our inexhaustible supplies of white, black, and live oak, madronia, manzanita, laurel, pepperwood, fir, redwood, and other timber, thereby giving employment to a greatly increased population.  Our people will be encouraged to enter more largely into grape culture for shipment to the older states, and every business and branch of industry will  be quickened by the coming of the iron horses."

            

The Land Went to Shills

            The rails had nearly reached Santa Rosa when, in order to raise cash, Harpending and Ralston held a disastrous auction of the Montgomery Street lands.  Setting the minimum bid too high, the land went to shills that had been planted by the owners.  A few days later construction of the railroad in Sonoma County came to a halt.

            When the Petaluma group had turned over the rights of the Sonoma County Railroad Company  to the San Francisco and Humbolt Bay line, they stipulated that the S.F.H.B. must have ten miles of track laid by November 16, 1869, or rights would revert to the original holders.  Further misfortune befell Harpending when he discovered that a ship carrying his railroad ties from England had been sunk in the harb or of Valparaiso, Chile.[9]  Three days before the deadline Harpending reorganized the company under the name, San Francisco and North Pacific Railroad.  This allowed him to get another contract from the Petalumans.

            Harpending, still incorrigably ambitious, was now considering a transcontinental railroad line and had secured control of another paper railway, the Oroville and Virginia City Railroad.  He aimed to put a line through the North Fork of the Feather River (the Central Pacific, owned by the "Big Four", Charles Crocker, Mark Hopkins, Collis P. Huntington, and Leland Stanford, had gone over the Sierras).  Harpending's rival route did not please Central Pacific owners, who exerted pressure on Harpending through William Ralston, the financier who had bankrolled the Central Pacific.

            Whether Harpending could have succeeded with his transcontinental railroad scheme is a matter of historical conjecture.  Ralston was able to persuade him to sell his interests to Peter Donahue, who was already the owner of the San Francisco and San Jose Railroad.

 

Irish vs. Chinese in the Railroad Race

            A few days before Harpending sold his interests to Donahue, in June, 1870, Sonoma County voters had agreed to a subsidy of $5,000 per mile to the first railroad company to complete 10 miles of track, also agreeing to issue $25,000 in bonds to the California Pacific Railroad (which had already laid 163 miles of track in northern California) upon the completion of the first five miles from the Napa County line.  Voters included a stipulation, however, that if the San Francisco and North Pacific railroad - or any other company - were able to complete a railway through the County first, no bonds would be issued to the California Pacific.

            New owner of the S.F.N.P., Colonel Peter Donahue, moved in with amazing speed, putting 100 workers on the line laying track.  Unlike Harpending, Donahue refused to use Chinese laborers, employing instead crews of mostly Irish workers. 

            Donahue had built up the enormous Union Iron Works from a tent foundry in San Francisco, where he had come to find gold in 1849.  His foundry eventually turned out ships, mining machinery, and locomotives.  Now he had gone on to build the railways themselves.

            By September, 1870, Petalumans actually rode on a working locomotive on Donahue's line.  At the end of October a beautiful yellow passenger coach, with Lakeville emblazoned on its side, carried a cargo of Petalumans to Santa Rosa amidst a champagne drenched party.  Soon two more coaches arrived, the Santa Rosa and the Petaluma.  Regular service between Petaluma and Santa Rosa began October 31, 1870.  The terminal of the railroad line was a brand new town built by Colonel Donahue on Petaluma Creek, modestly christened Donahue.

            Still the owners of the rival California Pacific were not the type of men to give up easily.  With 100 Chinese laborers they were busy laying track in an attempt to beat the S.F.N.P through the County. 

            To best them, Donahue rushed more Irishmen to Santa Rosa.  The California Pacific added 200 more Chinese laborers.  The race was on, and the California Pacific was soon covering a mile a day.  All of Sonoma County cheered their favorite and set wagers on their progress.

            Healdsburg's Russian River Flag newspaper, which backed Donahue as they had Harpending, glumly predicted the inevitability of a buy-out by the California Pacific, and ultimately by the Central Pacific, as early as October 6, 1870.  Their prediction came true.

 

Money Talks:  The Race Is Over

            Suddenly the race was over.  Colonel Donahue had been convinced, once again by William Ralston, to sell out to Milton Slocumb Latham, owner of the California Pacific.  Latham was one of the richest men in San Francisco, ex-governor, ex-senator, and head of the London and San Francisco Bank.  Donahue, mindful that the California Pacific would always be a determined competitor, made a tidy profit on the sale on April 1, 1871.  As part of the deal Donahue agreed to finish laying track to the Russian River using his own Irish work force.  The S.F.N.P. now became the Petaluma and Humbolt division of the California Pacific.

            Making steady progress, the railway arrived in Windsor on March 1, 1871, to the Grant Ave. stop below Healdsburg on April 10, 1871, and on July 1, 1871, Latham's line was opened to Healdsburg.  The first train to reacj Healdsburg on June 24, consisted of a baggage car, smoking car, and two coaches.  Oddly, no town celebration marked the long awaited and endlessly discussed arrival of the Iron Horse.  A  $23,000 Howe Truss railroad bridge was completed over the Russian River in the fall of 1871, and a permanent depot building costing about $7,000  was completed by January 18, 1872.  The depot consisted of a sitting room for ladies, another sitting room for gentlemen, baggage room, telegraph office, and a large freight room.[10]

 

“Big Four” Take Over

            As the prescient Russian River Flag had predicted, Milton Latham soon relinquished control of the California Pacific line to the Central Pacific "Big Four" in September, 1871.  In a rush to complete the line and win the County subsidy by the June 21, 1872 deadline, Central Pacific opened passenger service to Cloverdale on March 15, 1872.

J.G. Dow, a Healdsburg pioneer and the first man to open the road to Cloverdale in 1849, was a prominent passenger aboard that first train. The Sonoma County Supervisors were also aboard.  It was their job to inspect the road before awarding the County subsidy of $5,000 per mile.[11]

            Sonoma County residents may have been thoroughly confounded when, after so much trouble, the Central Pacific Big Four soon decided that the Sonoma County line would not figure in their long range plans (only Governor Leland Stanford showed an interest).  By January, 1873 the line was purchesed for one million dollars by none other than Colonel Peter Donahue!

            We may never discover all the intricacies of power politics and big money that went into the construction of the railroad to Healdsburg.  But under any name or owner, the important thing to residents was that they now had a railroad.  Some towns were not so lucky.  The once thriving town of Bloomfield in western Sonoma County, which had long been promised a line, was left out of the system completely, even by the narrow guage.  Its industry thereby dwindled and all but disappeared.[12]

            Aside from the powerful political maneuvering involved there was at least one other negative impact of the railroad's entry into the north County.  This was the impact on public safety.  By 1891 some local children enjoyed the sport of jumping on and off moving trains, much to their parents' horror, and the town had its share of tragic railroad accidents:  cars and wagons hit at crossings; train wrecks and derailments; people caught unawares while crossing the railroad bridge on foot.[13]

Northwestern Pacific[1]

             In 1884 the southern end of the line that came to be known as the Northwestern Pacific Railroad was extended to Tiburon, and later to Sausalito.  A passenger and freight depot was added to the Windsor stop in 1886, and at the Lytton and Geyserville stops in 1891.It stretched north to Ukiah in 1889, and by 1914, to Eureka.[14]

            Northwestern Pacific built a new depot building in Healdsburg in the summer of 1928.  Santa Rosa builder, A.M. Hildebrandt, acted as contractor for this building with is still standing.[15]

            It did not seem that the utility of the railroad was ever doubted.  Even when the iron road was in decline in the late 1920's, local editorials stressed the importance of railroads to the north county's industry, progress, and prosperity.[16]  Some citizens were disappointed that Healdsburg never became attached to some of the other electric and steam rail lines in the county.

 

Dispute with Dry Creek Ranchers

            To serve the many lumber mills, a coastal railway was built from Albion to the mill at Wendling (now Navarro on Highway 128).  Northwestern Pacific railroad officials also proposed a line to connect with it from Healdsburg, through Dry Creek Valley, on up Dry Creek to the point of junction of Highway 128, through Booneville and on to Navarro.  Although some preparatory work was done in the 1880's and 1890's, including surveys and purchase of right-of-ways, various financial and other difficulties stood in the way.

            Among those difficulties were landowners in Dry Creek Valley.  As surveyed, the proposed railway would have bisected most of the farms that it crossed.  These agriculturalists, owners of prime and fertile land, were outraged that they might have to travel a half mile or so down the road to a crossing in order to reach their own land.  They sued the railroad over the dispute and received settlements.  Railroad officials were so angered that they refused for many years to sell back the right-of-ways that they had purchased.  Most of the Dry Creek farmers had to wait till the 1940's to negotiate back those parcels of land.

            Healdsburg also missed out on the electric interurban railway system that linked Petaluma, Santa Rosa, and Sebastopol in the early years of this century.  In 1914 such a railway was proposed to the City Trustees by the Healdsburg Electric Railway Company.  This line would have been laid in the center of the main thoroughfare, West Street, out to Dry Creek Road, and then up the Valley to intersect the road from Geyserville to Skaggs Springs.  Yet by the time this proposal was made, the parent company, the Petaluma and Santa Rosa Electric Railway, was beginning to experience money problems.  It never extended the line to Healdsburg..[17]


( a work in progress, April,  2003 )  © 2003 Hannah Clayborn

  -- image from Thos. H. Thomas Co. 1877  Historical Atlas Map of Sonoma County

 

 


   
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[1]Unless otherwise noted, the source of information for the section The Iron Horse Comes to Healdsburg is Gilbert H. Kneiss, Redwood Railways; a History of the Northwestern Pacific Railroad and Predecessor Lines (Berkeley:  Howell North Co., 1956).

[2]John B. Frisbie came to California as a captain in one of the companies in General Stevenson's regiment.  Previously, in New York, Frisbie had been a lawyer, politician, and militia officer.  Soon after coming with the military to Sonoma, Frisbie was an unsuccessful candidate for Lieutenant Governor of California in 1849.  He married one of Gen. M.G. Vallejo's daughters and took up residence in the town of Vallejo where he became a prominent businessman.  Along with brothers, Levi Frisbie and Dr. Edward G. Frisbie, he amassed a great deal of wealth and land through real estate speculation in Solano, Sonoma, and Shasta Counties.  He sent the first cargo of wheat to Europe in 1860, and in 1867 was a member of the Legislature.  Aside from his railroad and real estate activities he also served as president of a bank.  He and his brother, Levi, were major protagonists in the Healdsburg Land Wars of 1858-1864.  He lost his fortune in 1880 and moved with his family to Mexico where he engaged in mining operations.  Bancroft, History of California, Vol. 20, pg. 750.  Memorial and Biographical History of Northern Califronia, 1891, pgs. 249, 311, 312.  Bay of San Francisco, Vol. 1 pg. 500.

[3]Russian River Flag 29 April 1868 (2:1).  Democratic Standard 11 April 1868 (4:1).  Clayborn, Hannah M., A Promised Land:  Grantees, Squatters, and Speculators in the Healdsburg Land Wars, (M.A. Thesis, History, Sonoma State University, 1990.).  LeBaron, Gaye, Santa Rosa, a Nineteenth Century Town, pg. 40.

[4]Democratic Standard 2 May 1868 (4:3); 9 May 1868 (1:2).

[5]Democratic Standard 11 April 1868 (4:1).

[6]Clayborn, Hannah M., A Promised Land:  Grantees, Squatters, and Speculators in the Healdsburg Land Wars, (M.A. Thesis, History, Sonoma State University, 1990.)

[7]Democratic Standard 18 April 1868 (1:1) and (4:1); 2 May 1868 (4:3); 9 May 1868 (1:2).  Russian River Flag 29 April 1869 (2:1).

[8]Russian River  Flag 19 Nov. 1868 (2:3); 3 Dec. 1868 (2:2).

[9]LeBaron, Gaye, Santa Rosa, a Nineteenth Century Town, pg. 41.

[10]Tribune, Diamond Jubilee Edition, 26 Aug. 1940, p. 11.  Russian River Flag 24 June 1871 (3:3); 7 Septmeber 1871 ; 18 Jan. 1872 (3:2); 28 March 1872 (2:3).

[11]Tribune, Diamond Jubilee Edition, 26 Aug., 1940, p. 11.  Russian River Flag  21 March 1872 (2:1); 28 March 1872 (2); 11 April 1872 (3:1).

[12]Clayborn, Hannah M., Dirt Roads and Dusty Tales:  A Bicentennial History of Bloomfield, California (Santa Rosa:  Cleone Publishing, 1993).

[13]Tribune 2 April 1891 (3:4).  Enterprise 9 June 1917 (8:3).  Sotoyome Scimitar 20 Sept. 1928 (1:3).

[14]Tribune, Diamond Jubilee Edition, 26 Aug. 1940, p. 11. 

[15]Enterprise 23 Feb. 1928 (1:3); 31 May 1928 (1;6); 19 July 1928 (1:3).  Sotoyome Scimitar, 26 July 1928 (1:5).

[16]Enterprise 3 Jan. 1929 (4:1).

[17]Pat Schmidt, "Dry Creek Express", in Russian River Recorder, Spring, 1987, Issue 32, p. 5.  Tribune  11 May 1898; 28 May 1898; 12 Dec. 1902; 18 June 1904; 16 July 1914; 20 August 1914.  Dr. Dennis Harris, "Preserving an Example of Railroad History in Sebastopol", in The Journal of the Sonoma county Historical Society, 1991 No. 3, p. 4-7.