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Chapter 1 -- "Beginnings" -- Page 1 >>>>>
BEGINNINGS: 1800-1920
"Those early years were the best times of my life. Our
dairy hands used to go to their early morning chores singing. With
glowing orange lanterns in their hands, they would soon disappear
in the gray fog or mist."
-Tillie Mozzetti

Charles "Bud" Mozzetti
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The Legacy
"Here they need not make bricks for houses..."
To discover the early history of Brisbane, one need look no further than the
oyster shell mounds found along the canyons and ravines of its creeks. From
those mounds, archaeologists have unearthed relics of the first inhabitants
of the area: the Costanoan Indians.
It is believed that the Costanoans lived an idyllic life. As Dorothy Radoff,
Brisbane's resident historian, has recorded, "Here they need not make
bricks for houses. Their dome-shaped dwellings of boughs and tules kept them
cozy and the San Bruno Mountains provided shelter from the fogs and winds of
the west. Nor did they need to cultivate the land. Squaws gathered watercress
in neighboring marshes, hills teemed with rabbits and deer, and a leisurely
stroll on the shores of the Bay netted an abundance of shellfish."
For all its beauty and calm serenity, the Costanoan culture was doomed by
the advance of European civilization. By 1776, the Spanish Conquistadors had
arrived. The Franciscan missionaries soon followed leaving numerous large land
grants in their wake.
For a time, the Costanoans coexisted with their missionary neighbors in peace.
With the coming of Mexican rule, the lands controlled by the Mission were released
to private enterprise.
It was time for a new group of people to come upon the land.
Grandees and Gamblers
One of the new settlers was a man named Jacob Lesse. Lesse, who first came
to California in 1833, took possession of the land grant entitled Rancho
Canada de Guadalupe la Visitacion y Rodeo Viejo in 1838, three years before
he received the official title to the land. The grant covered 9,500 acres and
included three separate valleys: La Visitacion, Rodeo Viejo and Canada
de Guadalupe, the valley which now contains the city of Brisbane.
Around the year 1843, Lesse traded his grant to Robert T. Ridley for the Rancho Calloyami in
Sonoma. Ridley never lived on the property nor developed it to any extent.
He did, however, manage to lose most of it in a lawsuit which involved a gambling
debt. In the subsequent foreclosure proceedings, Charles Crocker purchased
the bulk of the property, a little over 3,000 acres, for $4,000.
"Legend has it..."
As the great landlords made their imprint on the history of Brisbane, another
type of man was also making his mark. According to local legend, during the
1 850s, Joaquin Murieta used the area as a refuge from the local police. Depicted
by some as a notorious desperado and by others as California's Robin Hood,
Murieta preyed upon the San Francisco to San Jose stage line from Costanos
Canyon. Although Murieta was eventually hanged by the San Francisco Vigilante
Committee, his fame lives on in the folklore and legend of the area.
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In 1933, John Loheit, one of Brisbane's most poetic early settlers, gave the
following description of Murieta's legacy: "Ofttimes when in a troubled
state of mind I light my pipe and for an hour or two wander through the Brisbane
woods above Highland Park.... Legend has it that these woods furnished a rendezvous
for Joaquin Murieta. The great oak with its long horizontal bough still stands,
on which tradition says he hanged his victims. Rumor has it that here somewhere
he cached part of his ill-gotten gain. Who knows, but someday a wanderer here
may unearth his private hoard
If Murieta's fortune remains hidden in the earth, other enterprising men were
able to extract riches from the ground. In 1895, the Crocker Estate Company
leased a section of Crocker's Visitacion Ranch to two men named Warren and
Malley for the rights to exploit the quarry on its property. For use of the
quarry, the Crocker Company was paid $100 a month, plus "rock royalties." By
the turn of the century, the quarry employed over 100 workers.
With its temperate climate and ideal location, the area could not for long
be the exclusive property of quarry workers and ranch hands. By 1900, with
frontier conditions fading across California, it was inevitable that people
would attempt to settle in this pleasant site overlooking the buoyant waters
of the Bay.
Early Pioneers
"They lost a lot of money in here..."
For thirty terror-filled seconds on the early morning of April 18, 1906, the
San Andreas Fault shifted. Known to history as the San Francisco Earthquake,
this tremor in the earth's crust caused enormous fires, devastated the city,
and left over 250,000 people without homes.
In the wake of this calamity, land developers anticipated a great boom in
the value of real estate. Soon, their eyes turned to the rich potential of
the Guadalupe Valley. In 1908, the American Realty Company began terracing
a semicircle to build homes for the earthquake victims. In doing so, they named
their proposed subdivision the "City of Visitacion."
Seemingly, it was an idea whose time had come.
Unfortunately for the speculators, it was also an idea that far outstripped
their resources. Their Utopian design included such amenities as a fire station,
a school house, a city hall, a community center, and streetcar and railroad
lines.
In reality, the city lacked the most basic necessities. The streets were little
more than cow trails. In addition, the water lines, sewers, gas and electric
lines only existed on the developers' blueprints. Finally, while the 25 by
100 foot lots were priced at $1,300, similar lots elsewhere on the Peninsula
sold for less than half the price.
"The developers lost a lot of money in here," recalls Delbert "Bud" Sweet,
one of Brisbane's earliest residents. "One of them, I think, killed himself
over it. They did a lot of grading and put in all the old rock gutters that
were here. They even had plans for a streetcar line up San Bruno Avenue to
connect with San Francisco. Those were the plans they had... but none of them
ever matured."
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"Nothing but wide open spaces and a mere five famiIies..."
Despite the grandiose plans of the realtors, only a few homes were actually
constructed. From those early pioneers, however, Brisbane can boast a number
of its most prominent names.
Emile and Julie Allemand emigrated from their native France and purchased
a lot and home on Inyo Street. Subsequently, they built the Brisbane Hotel,
the community's first major structure. Still standing today, the hotel can
be seen at the comer of Mariposa and San Bruno Avenue. Over the years, the
hotel also served as the town's first grocery store, post office, general merchandise
store, and hunting club.

The Allemand's hotel as it appeared in 1929
Soon after the arrival of the Allemands, Joseph and Charles Mozzetti established
a large dairy and poultry ranch in the meadow below their home. In 1916, their
brother Steve arrived from Northern Italy with his wife, Tillie, and their
infant daughter, Lena.
"At that time," remembers Tillie Mozzetti, "there was nothing
but wide open spaces and a mere five families living in town -- us, the Sweets,
Naughtons, Allemands, and Duncan Washington.'
Life was hard for Tillie Mozzetti and rivaled the trials and tribulations
of the hardiest frontier wife. Tending to the needs of her husband and daughter
was only a small part of her routine. In addition, she prepared all the meals
for the 18 dairy hands who handled the cows and poultry, chopped firewood,
carried water to the house in 10-gallon cans, cleaned the kerosene lamps, and
washed and hung the clothes by hand.
Still, she recalls those days with fondness. "Those early years were
the best times of my life. Our dairy hands used to go to their early morning
chores singing. With glowing orange lanterns in their hands, they would soon
disappear in the gray fog or mist."
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Chapter 1 -- "Beginnings" -- Page 6 >>>>>

Emile and Julie Allemand
"Oh, it was country..."
Along with the Allemands and Mozzettis, other pioneering families put their
mark upon the area. In 1912, the Sweets formed the Improvement Club, which
later changed its name to the Social Club. In 1917, the Linde family arrived
and began building their home at Number Four Solano Street.
At that time, only a few residents had any kind of piped water coming into
their homes. Up in the hills overlooking the Bay, people were forced to carry
water in 25-gallon containers. In response to this situation, Linde and his
sons, Ted and Heine, brought in water equipment and dug trenches for pipelines
to bring water to such early residents as the Fitzgeralds, O'Neils, and Staffords.
Despite having only 28 residents, the town of Visitacion was able to finance
a number of community improvements during the 192Os. For the most part, life
remained simple and rural. The valley continued to serve as grazing land. Hunters
stalked the surrounding meadows for geese, wild turkeys, and rabbit.

City of Visitacion
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Chapter 1 -- "Beginnings" -- Page 7 >>>>>
Winnie Naughton Wilson is a member of one of those pioneering families. She
remembers both the difficulties and pleasures of life in those days. "We
were living in San Bruno at the time and my father wanted to get us a house
to live where it was nice weather. I had an aunt who lived in South City and
she said, 'Why don't you come on out to Visitacion?' So we moved out here with
a horse and wagon, with furniture and everything.
"Oh, it was country. We used to have chickens and the roosters crowing.
You only had a wood stove here and kerosene lamps or lanterns. There was no
electricity, The roads were all clay roads. You'd come in with too heavy a
car or truck, and you'd get stuck. Two or three times, some real estate guy
was going to start selling, but there was no transportation here. You either
had to have a horse or there was no way to get out here.
"In those days, we had to walk from Brisbane all the way up by the Cow
Palace to go to a one-room school. My brother and sisters, and the Lindes,
and Bud Sweet, and the Mozzettis' three children would all walk roughly two
miles, maybe two and a half miles.
"Everything else was horse and buggy in those days. My mother used to
go to South City shopping with a horse and buggy every other day with us kids
in it. She had a surrey with a two-seat and we used to drive over to do our
shopping.
"We used to get clams and mussels down by the Bay. We used to go swimming
right here. Many a times I played hooky from school. It's a wonder I know what
I know today. I used to take my brothers and we'd all go down and have our
lunch, and go swimming and boil up some clams. It was beautiful in those days.
I loved it.
At this time, the Bay came up to the corner of Visitacion Mall and Old Country
and was a popular swimming spot.

The 7-Mile House at the turn of the century
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Chapter 1 -- "Beginnings" -- Page 8 >>>>>
"Don't forget that we had bootlegging going on..."
If its out-of-the-way location gave Visitacion a certain rural charm in the
days following the First World War, it also helped attract a new class of people
to the area: bootleggers. Following the introduction of Prohibition in 1918,
a number of San Francisco mobsters employed moonshiners to manufacture liquor
in Costanos Canyon. As a result of these activities, the area soon became known
as a center of speakeasies and gambling dens.
'Don't forget that we had bootlegging going on," relates Winnie Wilson. "After
we moved out of a house down by the Brisbane Inn, some bootleggers got in.
Us kids used to hickey them if we saw anyone coming. They used to dump their
mash, like apricot mash, all over on the side there. They'd hide, but they
finally caught them anyway.
John Wilson, Winnie's husband, was also aware of some of the slightly less-than-legal
activities occurring in the area. "During Prohibition, we had these boats
come in off the ocean and throw the stuff overboard and leave it, any way to
get it in there," he remembers. "The bootleggers threw them off out
in the ocean and let the stuff float in. They had guys laying there waiting
for it."
As a resident of the area since 1915, Ted Linde recalls that Visitacion enjoyed
quite a boom during the dry days of the 192Os. "Visitacion Valley was
an extremely popular place for many people during the early days of Prohibition
because of the many natural creeks and springs flowing through the property.
Large crowds would gather at the Visitacion Ranch Creek to gather watercress
and to sample and bottle the water. This delicious tasting water had an unusual
whiskey-like kick to it due probably to the sour mash dumped down the creek
from a number of illegal stills located back in the hills."
Despite this brief business boom, the people of the area were glad enough
to see Prohibition go. In 1933, when the people of San Mateo County were asked
to vote on repealing Prohibition, the tally came to 2,282 nays and 20,051 ayes.
The era of moonshining and bootlegging had come to an end.
At the close of nearly three decades of land settlement, the still sparsely
populated city of Visitacion had become home to many an immigrant. For some,
the area was rich in financial opportunity. For others, it was a rural sanctuary
to be protected. Finally, for a third, less savory population, the area afforded
a chance to operate beyond the reach of the law.
With the advent of the Great Depression, all three groups were to find themselves
sorely tested.

The Zeitelmann home in Brisbane --1910
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End of Chapter 1 -- "Beginnings" >>>>>
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