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Adolph Sutro

Adolph Sutro was next to the oldest of the 13 children brought to Maryland from Germany by his widowed mother. California’s Gold Rush brought him west and he arrived in San Francisco in 1850 where he became a tobacco merchant. Nine years later, after the discovery of silver in the Comstock Lode, he headed for Nevada where he quickly realized that the mining methods in use were outmoded, inadequate and dangerous. Mount Davidson above Virginia City, Nevada, and written about by Mark Twain in Roughing It, was said to be cursed after Edgar Allen and Hosea Grosch died shortly after being the first to discover the silver in it. But Adolph Sutro would make his fortune with a tunnel into the silver rich mountain and use it in 1880 to buy 1,200 acres of Rancho San Miguel, including the hill now known as Mount Davidson in San Francisco and the present Mount Sutro which he named Mount Parnassus. He would continue to add to his land holdings until he owned 12,000 acres, about 10 percent of the City of San Francisco, stretching from Bakers Beach and Lincoln Park to the shores of Lake Merced. (Courtesy Ron Davis.)

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Gallery
912-1402.jpeg In February 1865, Engineer Adolph Sutro came to William Ralston, the builder of the Palace Hotel and Bank of California with a plan to build a tunnel deep into Mount Davidson. Mark Twain wrote, “The Sutro Tunnel is to plow through the Comstock Lode from end to end, at a depth of two thousand feet, and then mining will be easy and comparatively inexpensive; and the momentous matters of drainage, and hoisting and hauling of ore will cease to be burdensome.” Ralston agreed to the request and with signed agreements from twenty-three Comstock mines, Sutro headed east to raise the $3 million he needed to begin this tunnel. (Courtesy www.californiapioneers.org)
In July 1876, Congress passed the Sutro Tunnel Act, which gave him federal right-of-way, liberal mining rights along the tunnel’s seven-mile length, and a large plot of land at the tunnel’s entrance. Sutro ran for the United States Senate in every election from 1872 to 1880, drumming up money and preaching the wonders of the tunnel. For nearly a decade, the work progressed until completion in the summer of 1878. In October 1879, ex-president Ulysses S. Grant led a victory parade through the tunnel. (Courtesy Glenn Koch.)sutrocrest.jpg
1890-parapet-sutroheights.jpgAdolph Sutro, San Francisco’s philanthropic mayor from 1895-1897, enjoyed riding horses with his daughter Emma (one of the first women medical students at the University of California) out to enjoy the miles-long view of the Pacific shoreline. He decided to build his last home here, constructing it to the rear of this granite parapet built on the very rim of the heights, above the Cliff House, adorning it with replicas of Greek statuary and urns. The public was welcome to stroll his extensive formal gardens boasting terraces, lawns, shrubs, grottos and arbors, with a profusion of imported exotic plants and trees planted in a shipload of soil he imported from Australia, - but smoking was not permitted. It was here that Sutro played host to everyone from Oscar Wilde to President Benjamin Harrison. (Courtesy Ken Hoegger.)
Sutro’s Cliff House restaurant survived the 1906 Earthquake but burned down a year later. It was rebuilt, pictured here at Ocean Beach in 1915, behind Sutro Baths, the world’s largest swimming pool, that he opened in 1896 to give the average San Franciscan a place where they could afford to have fun. (Courtesy Margie Whitnah.)459sutrobaths.jpg
078joe-cliffhouse1920.jpg Joseph R. Bisho Sr. standing on the beach with the Cliff House in the background in 1920 on a visit from Hawaii. His son will grow up in San Francisco and raise his family west of Twin Peaks. (Courtesy of Dave Bisho.)
The naturalist poet, Joaquin Miller, who acheived great popular and critical succes with his Songs of the Sierras, was enthusiastically planting trees on “The Heights” in the East Bay when he envisioned the beauty that might be created by trees on the San Miguel Hills and suggested the plan to Adolph Sutro. Sutro celebrated the nation’s new Arbor Day on November 26, 1886 by enlisting schoolchildren to plant trees on Blue Mountain pictured here to the south now covered in trees by 1910.(Courtesy www.kenhoegger.com.) 407-1910_sanmiguelranch.jpg
513cowsmtdavidson1903.jpg Mount Davidson as Adolph Sutro preserved it in 1903. He died on August 8, 1898, leaving his estate to his six children. However, his will stipulated that none of the land could be sold until the death of the last child, and the proceeds would go to a charitable trust. His heirs challenged the will and persevered even longer than Sutro did to get his tunnel built, to obtain a California Supreme Court ruling that overturned it in 1919, twenty-one years after Sutro’s death.(Courtesy Private Collection.)
The view of Kezar Stadium from atop the 977-foot high television transmission tower built in 1972 and named for the former owner of the hill, Adolph G. Sutro, whose home, La Avenzada, designed by Harold G. Stoner was destroyed to build this tower. (Courtesy Ron Davis.)705sutro-tower-2-1972.jpg
706sutro-tower-3-1972.jpg Looking up one of the Sutro Tower legs before it is closed off. On nearby Mount Olympus, the exact center of San Francisco, overlooking Market Street, Adolph Sutro had erected his own skyline beacon - the statue Triumph of Light (a concrete copy of a Belgian work of art showing Liberty victorious over Depotism) in 1887, telling the schoolchildren at its dedication, “May the light shine from the torch of the Goddess of Liberty to inspire our citizens to good and noble deeds for the benefit of mankind.” (Courtesy Ron Davis.)

 
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