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[[Image:noevaly1$24th-st-and-burnham-1940s.jpg]]
[[Image:noevaly1$24th-st-and-burnham-1940s.jpg]]


'''It wasn't until San Francisco was "built out" in the post WWII era that the higher, hiller parts of town lost forever their rustic, semi-rural quality. Here is a small cluster of workers' housing near today's 24th and Burnham.'''
'''It wasn't until San Francisco was "built out" in the post WWII era that the higher, hiller parts of town lost forever their rustic, semi-rural quality. Here is a small cluster of workers' housing near today's 24th and Burnham, c. 1930s.'''
 
''Photo: Greg Gaar Collection, San Francisco, CA ''


Jose Noe, like the other rancheros in San Francisco, had no reasonable means to preserve his rancho. A dynamic force had captured San Francisco. The frenzy for gold, the instant-riches mindset had invaded the gracious, self-contained lifestyle of the ranchos. There was no way to return to those pastoral days. The value of land in town became linked to the ebb and flow of treasure seekers needing land to live on as they commuted to the gold fields. Wages to police the ranchos were high. Costs to litigate rancho claims against the U.S. government mounted. A series of droughts and floods whittled profits of the ranchos. The Financial Panic of 1857 also hurt San Francisco. Noe must have weighed all these factors and decided to sell.
Jose Noe, like the other rancheros in San Francisco, had no reasonable means to preserve his rancho. A dynamic force had captured San Francisco. The frenzy for gold, the instant-riches mindset had invaded the gracious, self-contained lifestyle of the ranchos. There was no way to return to those pastoral days. The value of land in town became linked to the ebb and flow of treasure seekers needing land to live on as they commuted to the gold fields. Wages to police the ranchos were high. Costs to litigate rancho claims against the U.S. government mounted. A series of droughts and floods whittled profits of the ranchos. The Financial Panic of 1857 also hurt San Francisco. Noe must have weighed all these factors and decided to sell.
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Noe had not sold all of Rancho San Miguel. He willed some of this property, buildings, and livestock to his family. Most revealing about Noe's temperament was his recommendation that his sons should avoid all legal proceedings if they have familial differences and instead engage in friendly arbitration to resolve them. This advice clearly echoed the wisdom of the Rancho Period.
Noe had not sold all of Rancho San Miguel. He willed some of this property, buildings, and livestock to his family. Most revealing about Noe's temperament was his recommendation that his sons should avoid all legal proceedings if they have familial differences and instead engage in friendly arbitration to resolve them. This advice clearly echoed the wisdom of the Rancho Period.


--Mae Silver, from her chapbook, ''Rancho San Miguel'', San Francisco: 1992
''--Mae Silver,'' from her chapbook, ''Rancho San Miguel'', San Francisco: 1992


Contributors to this page include:


''Gaar Collection,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer ''
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Silver,Mae - Writer


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[[category:Noe Valley]] [[category:1850s]] [[category:1860s]] [[category:Mexican]] [[category:1930s]] [[category:real estate]]

Revision as of 20:10, 4 October 2008

Noevaly1$24th-st-and-burnham-1940s.jpg

It wasn't until San Francisco was "built out" in the post WWII era that the higher, hiller parts of town lost forever their rustic, semi-rural quality. Here is a small cluster of workers' housing near today's 24th and Burnham, c. 1930s.

Photo: Greg Gaar Collection, San Francisco, CA

Jose Noe, like the other rancheros in San Francisco, had no reasonable means to preserve his rancho. A dynamic force had captured San Francisco. The frenzy for gold, the instant-riches mindset had invaded the gracious, self-contained lifestyle of the ranchos. There was no way to return to those pastoral days. The value of land in town became linked to the ebb and flow of treasure seekers needing land to live on as they commuted to the gold fields. Wages to police the ranchos were high. Costs to litigate rancho claims against the U.S. government mounted. A series of droughts and floods whittled profits of the ranchos. The Financial Panic of 1857 also hurt San Francisco. Noe must have weighed all these factors and decided to sell.

On March 14, 1862, already sick and sensing he was near death, Jose de Jesus Noe wrote and signed his will. The Bulletin published it on June 16, 1862:

"In the name of Gold Almighty amen: Being sick and having complied with my spiritual obligations, desirous of setting my temporal affairs--I, Jose de Jesus Noe, being of sound mind, do herewith declare that these presents are my last will and testament by which I dispose as follows:

i. I declare I have no passive debts.

2. I wish that four masses of one dollar each be said to the Virgin of La Soledad de Santa Cruz with the corresponding candies.

3. Also that four more masses be said to the Virgin Dolores. These masses to be held at the Mission of Dolores.

4. Gives to his actual wife, Donna Catarina Valancia, the adobe house and the "Solar" on which it stands, near Centre Street (16th St.) at the Mission (San Francisco), and the frame building and lands near by.

5. Gives to his daughter and minor sons, Jeses (Jesus) and Vicente, another wooden house and land on Centre Street, with 29 feet frontage.

6. Disposes of his ranch of San Miguel, to the south of the mission, containing 200 varas square to each of the latter, and twice that to the former--the balance of the ranch to be divided equally between his daughter Dolores and two sons, Jesus and Miguel.

7. Divides the Rancho de las Arbas, in San Mateo County, equally among his wife and children.

8. Bequeaths all the remainder of his stock and property to his daughter, Dolores and sons, Jesus and Vicente, equally.

Other clauses refer to administration etc., and 12.) recommends to his sons, that if, for some cause or other, differences should arise between them, they should avoid all legal proceedings, and submit such questions to the decision of friendly arbitration."

Noe had not sold all of Rancho San Miguel. He willed some of this property, buildings, and livestock to his family. Most revealing about Noe's temperament was his recommendation that his sons should avoid all legal proceedings if they have familial differences and instead engage in friendly arbitration to resolve them. This advice clearly echoed the wisdom of the Rancho Period.

--Mae Silver, from her chapbook, Rancho San Miguel, San Francisco: 1992


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