15 - Uptown and Downtown (updated Nov. 6, 2014)


Names on the Signs: Uptown and Downtown (originally published Nov. 4, 2011)

The rapid transitions from mission to pueblo to county seat in only fifteen years from 1835 to 1850 meant many changes for Santa Cruz. New forms of just about every kind of human activity appeared during those years. The Mission had been, by necessity, self-reliant. The padres and their neophytes built and made and grew nearly everything they needed. When the Americans came, they took over some of the abandoned Mission operations, notably the grist mill and tannery. They also brought new ways and new talents. Merchants, manufacturers and other kinds of entrepreneurs appeared for the first time. 


Thomas Fallon (and some other guy) statue in San Jose

In 1846, an Irish-born, Canadian-raised American named 
Thomas Fallon came to Santa Cruz with Captain Fremont’s third expedition and stayed on to raise and command the group of twenty-two locals who marched off to capture the Pueblo of San Jose and join Fremont’s California Battalion when the Mexican-American War broke out later that year. Fallon returned from the war to San Jose, where he met Elihu Anthony. The two veterans came back over the hill to Santa Cruz in 1847, where Fallon took up his trade as a saddler while Anthony established his iron works. When the Gold rush began, it was Fallon who delivered Anthony’s iron picks to the gold fields. 

With the money he made from sales of the picks, Fallon built a 2-story building on the Mission plaza, where the half-scale Mission replica is today. The structure housed Fallon’s residence, saddlery business and a hotel. Sometime in that period, he also found time to woo and wed Carmelita Castro Lodge, daughter of the grantees of Rancho Soquel

Why, you may ask, don’t we find Fallon’s name on any signs in Santa Cruz? Well, because he left in 1853 and went back to San Jose. He built a very nice house downtown in 1855 that is today one of San Jose’s most prominent historic structures. In 1859 he was elected to be the town’s tenth mayor and served a single one-year term. Fallon even achieved that lofty symbol of approbation, a statue in the park (albeit an obscure park), after considerable controversy over the meaning of his legacy.

Meanwhile, the structure Fallon built on the plaza was sold and became the first county courthouse. Prior to that, Judge Blackburn’s court had presumably been located in the old juzgado which Blackburn had acquired in 1848 and converted into the Eagle Hotel. As any fan of western movies knows, every old-west hotel also had a saloon, so we have the interesting possibility that Judge Blackburn was also saloon-keeper Blackburn. Perhaps the name of a venerable bar across the street from today's courthouse (The Jury Room) is a tribute to those days of old. Incidentally, the residence next door to the Eagle Hotel belonged to one 
William Thompson. Regular readers of this blog will remember Thompson as William Buckle, one of The Sailors. No one knows why Buckle changed his name, so we can only speculate.


In the 1870 photo above, looking south from High Street toward Mission plaza, the 1857 Holy Cross Church is at center left, with the old adobe mission chapel behind it to the left. Proceeding to the right on the far side of the plaza, there's the Fallon building, the juzgado and the Thompson house. By this time, Fallon's building had become the first county hospital and the juzgado was part of the Sisters of Charity school (the tall building behind Thompson's house at far right). The only structure in this photo still standing today is the long, low building extending along the street behind the juzgado. Now known as the Neary-Rodriguez Adobe, it's part of the Santa Cruz Mission State Historic Park.

The Americans also brought new religious preferences to Santa Cruz. The First Methodist Church, which doubled as a schoolroom, was built in 1850 at the eastern corner of Mission and Green Streets. Elihu Anthony became its first pastor. The structure was later moved to 123 Green Street, where it still stands as part of a private residence. The Methodist churchyard was also the county’s first Protestant cemetery.  At least some of the graves were later probably transferred to Evergreen Cemetery, which opened in 1858.

From construction dates of buildings, we can see that Santa Cruz development in the 1850s was split between the old Mission “upper plaza” area and the newer “lower plaza” down the Mission Street hill on the riverside flats. 
Anthony’s residence and iron works began the move to the flats and, by mid-decade, it was joined by many other structures, both commercial and residential. A “Main Street” was established (today’s Front Street from Mission to Cooper). At the south end of Main Street stood the mercantile store of two of the four Cooper brothers, John and William, who came to Santa Cruz from Gettysburg, PA in the early 1850s. The other two brothers went into the same business in Watsonville. Besides Cooper Street, Santa Cruz “old-timers” (pre-1989) remember the name from the old Cooper House. That building (built in 1894) was originally the third County courthouse (second on that site), built on land donated by the Cooper and Eli Moore families.