Life on Sausal Creek, 1868-1888
From "The California Recollections of
Caspar T. Hopkins," California Historical Society Quarterly, 27(1), 65-73, (1948).
In the spring of 1868 I sold my lovely home, 524 Post Street, for
$18,000, and once more set out to find a suburban residence where large
grounds, fresh air, freedom from obnoxious neighbors, a horse and carriage,
fruits, flowers, milk and eggs of our own production, should add to our
family comforts and gratify my innate love of country life.
The creation of our beautiful home "Alderwood" in Fruitvale, about five
miles out of Oakland, was the result of our present removal. For $6,000 I
purchased six acres of an apple nursery that had been allowed to grow up,
there being no market for the trees. There was a small house which I
repaired, thinking we could live in it while the children were at school.
But it was close quarters. The location was, however, beautiful--in the
bottom of the long narrow valley of Sausal Creek, which penetrated the
mountains east of Oakland through a steep, narrow, well-wooded cañon,
and only a quarter of a mile below its debouchment from the hills. The
place was sheltered from the prevailing northwest winds, and its altitude
being 125 feet above sea level, it was rarely visited by fogs. The soil was
very rich, and the vegetation consequently rank. The creek meandered
through the lot in form like the letter S (it has since been straightened and
spoiled) and was lined with huge oaks, laurel alder and buck-eye trees.
The large alders of California, a tree resembling the eastern beech, were
the most numerous; hence we gave the place the name of "Alderwood."
They were the charm of the place, and bowers fitted with rustic seats, a
rustic bridge and summer house (all my own handiwork at early dawn and
dewy eve) soon made the most of their beauties. The improvement of this
lovely spot was for several years the joy of my life and I was greatly aided
therein by the sympathetic and artistic concurrence of my wife.
I designed a large, low, Gothic cottage with wide porches on three sides.
The old house, removed to a new location in a bend of the creek, formed
a part of it. The apple trees were nearly all dug out and replaced with two
hundred and fifty fine cherry trees, peaches, almonds, apricots, etc. The
grounds were laid out in winding avenues, lined with cypress and eucalyptus.
A new street was opened and fenced on the north side, shortening
the drive to Oakland from five to three miles, and our street lines were
planted with walnut, fig, and gum trees. A nice barn, carriage house, hen
and cow houses, were built and appropriately occupied. I bought four more
acres across the creek, on the hillside, and planted thereon 2500 mulberry
trees, intending my girls to earn their pocket money by raising silk (a
scheme badly addled by Mrs. Grundy), at whose instance I dug out the
trees again and converted the lot into a cow pasture.
We widened Fruitvale Avenue from forty to sixty feet; the work of two
years ere the cooperation of all the property owners could be secured. The
neighbors clubbed together and built a water work which cost $20,000 and
has since supplied the vale with water in pipes to every house. We again
clubbed together and built the Brooklyn and Fruitvale Horse Railroad
across the hills, which is still running [1888] with constantly increasing
profit. (I was president both of the water works and the railroad, and did
most of the work of organizing and constructing both.)
Around our cottage were lawns, flowering vines, and shrubbery which
grew to perfection; and the perfume of violets and jasmine, of roses, melissa,
Spanish broom and heliotrope, the tall plumes of pampas grass, the perpetual
flowers of the solanum, the massive bloom of the wisteria, the luscious treat
of abundant cherries, blackberries, and other fruits, plenty of milk and
delicious cream, good horses, comfortable carriages, and fine roads, all these
now made our place a heaven on earth for my family and haven of delight
for old and new friends, who could not come often enough to please my
hospitable wife and daughters. The house was nearly always over-run with
company, especially in the season for ripe cherries, and I suppose California
cherries are the finest in the world...
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