Pierre Sainsevain

Pierre "Don Pedro" Sainsevain
Born November 20, 1818
Béguey, Gironde, France
Died October 4, 1904
Nationality French settler
Mexican
American
Other names Don Pedro
Occupation Farmer, vintner
Known for Member of the first California Constitutional Convention
Spouse(s) Paula Suñol

Pierre "Don Pedro" Sainsevain (November 20, 1818 October 4, 1904) was a French settler in California during the Mexican era. Sainsevain was the recipient of a Mexican land grant, and built a lumber mill and a flour mill. He was a member of the first California Constitutional Convention; and became a winemaker and the first producer of sparkling wine in California.

Life

Sainsevain, a carpenter, came from Bordeaux, France to Santa Barbara, California on the ship Ayacucho on July 4, 1839. He had been sent by his family to find his uncle Jean-Louis Vignes in Los Angeles. He settled on Vignes' property, El Aliso, and assisted with growing grapes and oranges, and with winemaking. In 1840, he loaded a shipment of wine and brandy on a ship to sell along the California coast. On this trip, he made his first visit to Monterey and Branciforte. In 1841 he worked at Vignes' sawmill near San Bernardino.[1]

In 1843, Sainsevain was granted Rancho Cañada del Rincon en el Rio San Lorenzo near Santa Cruz, California by Governor Manuel Micheltorena, and in the Fall of 1843 he built one of the first sawmills in the valley of the San Lorenzo River, in association with Charles Roussillon (also known as "Rochon"), another Frenchman. In 1844, he was granted permission to start a flour mill with a daily capacity of 75 fanegas on the Guadalupe River in San Jose. In 1845, Sainsevain married Paula Suñol (1827–1883), whose father Antonio Maria Suñol owned Rancho Los Coches. In 1846, Sainsevain and Charles Roussillon built a schooner (the Antonita) on the beach at Santa Cruz. She was launched on June 25, and sailed to the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii) to have a copper bottom installed. In 1847, Roussillon was the defendant in the first jury trial (Isaac Graham vs. Charles Roussillon) in California.[2]

In 1848, Sainsevain and Roussillon went to the gold mines near Coloma. Sainsevain, Roussillon, Antonio Sunol, and Amador, with help from twenty-five Indians, mined gold at Don Pedro’s Bar on the Tuolumne River. Sainsevain and Roussillon soon had enough of mining and returned to Stockton in 1849 to open a store supplying the California Gold Rush miners. They owned a hotel in San Jose that became California's first State House.[3] Sainsevain was a delegate to the 1849 California Constitutional Convention in Monterey.[4]

Wine

In 1859, Sainsevain sold Rancho Cañada del Rincon en el Rio San Lorenzo, and with his brother, Jean Louis, bought the El Aliso vineyards in Los Angeles from their uncle, Jean-Louis Vignes (also known as "Don Luis Del Aliso"). The firm of Sainsevain Brothers, immediately proceeded to expand the scale of operations at the old El Aliso vineyard. In 1857 they opened a store in San Francisco; and by 1858 they led the state with a production of 125,000 gallons of wine and brandy. In 1857, the San Francisco cellars of the Sainsevain Brothers produced champagne. However, it was not a success, and as a result of their investment in sparkling wine, Sainsevain Brothers was soon in financial difficulties. The partnership was dissolved in the 1860s, and only Jean Louis Sainsevain remained at the El Aliso property when it was sold in 1865.[5][6]

In 1865 the Sainsevain brothers bought part of Rain's Rancho Cucamonga and set out a large vineyard. In 1868 his Claret won best wine at the county fair.[7] In 1870 the Sainsevain brothers moved to Cucamonga, and ran the vineyard and winery with Joseph S. Garcia. In 1874 the Sainsevains purchased land in Hawker Canyon four miles east of Etiwanda and built a large stone house and a reservoir.

In 1875, Pierre Sainsevain went to Central America, returning in 1880 to his Sainsevain Villa in San Jose. After his wife's death in 1883, he returned to France, where he spent the rest of his days.[6][8]

Legacy

The Don Pedro Reservoir behind the Don Pedro Dam takes its name from Don Pedros Bar mining town.[1]

San Sevaine Lookout in the San Gabriel Mountains, San Sevaine streets in Rancho Cucamonga, Mira Loma and Fontana, and the San Sevaine flood control channel and spreading grounds, are named (with misspelling) for the Sainsevain brothers.[9]

Jean Louis Sainsevain

Jean Louis Sainsevain (1817–1889) was born in Béguey, France a village near Bordeaux. He came to Los Angeles in 1855 to join his brother, Pierre. In 1868, Jean Louis Sainsevain was awarded a contract by the City of Los Angeles to create a new domestic water system.[9][10]

Bibliography

Notes
  1. 1 2 Don Pedro Recreation Agency (2010). "Who was Don Pedro?". donpedrolake.com. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  2. William Henry Ellison, 1950,A self-governing dominion, California, 1849-1860, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-03713-7
  3. California's first State House, San Jose, 1849
  4. First California Constitutional Convention
  5. Thomas Pinney, 1989, A History of Wine in America: From the Beginnings to Prohibition,University of California Press
  6. 1 2 Sullivan 1998
  7. Sullivan 1998, p. 298
  8. Eugene T Sawyer, 1922, History of Santa Clara County California
  9. 1 2 An illustrated history of Los Angeles County, California, 1889 ,Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago
  10. "Water in Early Los Angeles". Water and Power Associates. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
References

See also

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