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Winters Express
312 Railroad Avenue, Winters, CA 95694
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John
Reid Wolfskill, the area’s earliest American settler, 1842
"Remember, Youth, as you pass by, As you are now so once was I; As I am
now so you must be, Prepare for death and eternity."
These cheerless words, etched in stone, are the legend left by John Reid Wolfskill,
the pioneer of Solano County. He was the first English speaking man to settle
in the area around what is now Winters. There, he worked, prospered, raised
a large family, and died.
Born in 1804, John Reid Wolfskill was one of five brothers, all of whom eventually
left their birthplace in Madison County, Kentucky to come west.
William, the eldest, was the first to come to California. He arrive in the
southwest in 1821 while the region was still held and administered by the Mexican
government. He spent ten years trapping in the New Mexico area, where in 1828
he was made a Mexican citizen. Eventually, he moved west to Los Angeles, opening
the Santa Fe Trail to California in the process.
William Wolfskill eventually turned away from trapping and from 1838 on devoted
himself wholly to the vineyards in southern California which were to make him
rich and famous. Vines and fruit trees were his primary interests. He relied
on mission varieties initially an experimented with these and other types.
In 1857, he became the first man to plant and grow oranges commercially in
California.
Marrying into an influential Mexican family in 1841, he became prominent in
southern California society and public life.
John Wolfskill arrived in Los Angeles in Feb. 1838. He worked for his brother
for two years, then he took the advice of a friend, Juan Jose Warner, and headed
north to seek a place of his own. He first stopped at Sonoma to ask General
Mariano Vallejo’s permission to scout the area for a suitable place to
settle. The General allowed him to look over the territory, but made it clear
that under no circumstances would the land be granted.
Again on the advice of Warner, John Wolfskill scouted the area around what
is today Winters. It was there, along the banks of Putah Creek that Wolfskill
saw what he considered to be the best land for settlement. The area was slightly
higher than the surrounding valley floor and the constant source of water provided
by the creek a crucial factor to any agricultural was plentiful. Wolfskill
relied on the presence of wild oats as an indication of soil fertility and
water distribution.
Mark West, a friend of Wolfskills living in Sonoma, asked Vallejo to reconsider
the possibility of a grant. He refused. In 1841, Jacob P. Leese, the son-in-law
of the general also intervened on Wolfskill’s behalf. If was finally
agreed that a grant of four square Mexican league’s, over 17,750 acres,
would be approved by Vallejo, clearing the way for a grant by the Mexican governor
of California.
On May 24, 1842, the grant was made by Governor Juan Bautista de Alvarado to
William Wolfskill, a naturalized Mexican citizen. In that same year John Wolfskill
headed out from Los Angeles with a herd of cattle, oxen, and a few horses for
the property that he was later to describe as "...four leagues of the
finest land in the world."
Once on the property, named Rancho de Los Putos, John Wolfskill put his livestock
out to graze and constructed a small shack out of mud and reeds. This served
as his home for the first few years. Along with grazing cattle, Wolfskill also
planted and tended fruit trees, barley, corn, beans, and vines. For the first
three years water was hauled by bucket from the creek.
Most of these projects were carried out by Wolfskill with the help of a few
Indians who still inhabited the area. (A small pox epidemic had decimated the
native population in 1837-39). Various American and Mexican adventurers who
happened through the region also helped him occasionally.
Until 1849, the property was in William Wolfskill’s name. In that year,
one half of the property was transferred into John’s name. His portion
was the section on the south side of the creek, in what is now Solano County.
Legal problems arose with the land grant when California became part of the
United States, but in 1854, upon the petition of William Wolfskill, the grant
was confirmed by the Board of Commissioners appointed to settle private land
claims in the State of California.
During the more than 50 years that John D. Wolfskill lived in the Winters area,
his concentration on different types of crops and products shifted. In the
days before the gold rush of 1849, his main emphasis was on fruits, vegetables
and livestock. When the gold rush started he was among the first purveyors
of fresh fruit.
By the time the mania for gold had subsided, enough of the original gold seekers
and others had settled permanently in greater bay and valley areas to provide
a good, steady market for Wolfskill’s produce. His ranch continued to
meet the demand for fruits and vegetables in the Sacramento and San Francisco
markets for the next four decades.
Although there is no data on profits the estimated value of his holdings grew
phenomenally. According to the U.S. Agricultural Census Schedule for 1850,
Wolfskill’s total assets were valued at $5,000. By 1870, the estimate
was $190,000.
For transportation, Wolfskill had the insight to goods to Sacramento. Later,
he hauled his produce to Suisun City and there put it on boats for San Francisco.
With the connection in 1869 of the Vaca Valley and Clear Lake Railroad to Elmira,
four and one-half miles away, fruit from the Winters area could be shipped
to the east coast for sale by commission.
Up to his death in 1897, John Wolfskill continued to grow crops of many varieties.
His emphasis was heavy on wheat in the 1870’s but he eventually returned
to the orchard and vine products.
He had figs, olives, oranges, apricots, black walnuts, Muscat vines, Eastern
Shellbark hickory nuts, pecans, French Madeira nuts, peaches, plums, apples,
lemons, limes, pomegranates, almonds, persimmons, and melons of many varieties.
It is difficult to determine sources for these crops. There are e references
to olive and vine cuttings and figs and blood oranges from the Mission San
Francisco Solano. Other reports credit shipments from Kentucky and Los Angeles
as sources of seeds and products for the Wolfskill ranch.
John Wolfskill’s initial success in the area was to inspire his brothers,
Malthus Wolfskill, born in Howard County Missouri, in 1810. Crossing the plains
with his family by ox teams, he reached his brother John’s ranch in October
of that year. He settled in the Winters bridge. In 1865 he sold his holdings
to Theodore Winters, founder of the town of Winters. The next year he moved
to Suisun.
In1852, Sarchel Wolfskill brought his wife and son to the Winters area to farm
alongside his brothers. With 1200 acres of land, they prospered through a career
in agriculture. They lived in John Wolfskill’s house until 1874, when
they built their own home. In 1858, Milton Wolfskill came to California with
his wife. The house they built is still standing about seven miles west of
Winters.
Though obviously prominent, and a motive force for his brothers, John Wolfskill
seemed unconcerned with publicity or prestige. According to his grand-daughter,
he was a man without pretensions. His friends were usually other farmers or
people with strong interests in the land.
Not often in the public eye, he was content to graft new varieties, to experiment
with new methods of pest control or irrigation, or in his later years, to read
farm journals. For social ritual and entertainment, he restricted himself to
visiting county and state agricultural fairs, and he frequently participated
in exhibitions of farm products and on occasion, won. He was fascinated by
gadgets and brought some back with him from each fair that he attended.
Reportedly a generous man, he provided a small school for the children of laborers
in the 1880’s and he and his wife, Susan, the daughter of Major Stephen
Cooper, made calls on the poor and the sick bringing with them good wishes
and baskets of vegetables, fruits and smoked meats.
One of the most famous homes in the area was built in 1892 when the earthquake
destroyed the Wolfskill home. Appropriately referred to as the "Wolfskill
Mansion," the new building was a two-story structure built around a large
central fountain and a spacious patio area. A hand painted mural was on the
walls of the den, and the entire house was furnished with oriental rugs and
carved oak furniture. The wall paneling was made from the wood and bark of
walnut and oak trees on the property itself. This home was later destroyed
by fire.
At the age of eighty, when his short biographical statement was taken by a
friend, John Wolfskill said that he preferred the quiet life of the country
to the life of "excitement of the business man."
After his death his daughter Francis took over the property and operated it
with the help of her second husband, Lawrence Wilson. In 1934, when she died,
she left approximately one hundred and seven acres of the grant to the Department
of Pomology of the University of California, Davis, with the understanding
that the property was to be used as an experimental horticulture station and
the line of olive trees planted by Wolfskill in 1861 was to remain standing.
In 1936, the ownership of the property was transferred and since then has been
operated by the Davis campus.
The accomplishments of the experimentation are impressive. Work there has resulted
in the development, naming, and release for commercial orchard use of five
new cling peach varieties, six new plum varieties, a new almond variety and
several new strawberry varieties.
Experiments are also continuing in olive, walnut and fig varieties and tests
are being conducted to determine the effects of chemical thinning procedures
used on apricots.
Reprinted from the 1975 Centennial Edition of the Winters Express. The
preceding article consists of excerpts from "John Reid of Wolfskill, The
Pioneer of Solano County," by Brooks C. Sackett.
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