History of San Benito County, California : with illustrations descriptive of its scenery, farms, residences, public buildings, factories, hotels, business houses, schools, churches, and mines : with biographical sketches of prominent citizens, Part 20

Author: Elliott & Moore
Publication date: 1881
Publisher: San Francisco : Elliott & Moore
Number of Pages: 304


USA > California > San Benito County > History of San Benito County, California : with illustrations descriptive of its scenery, farms, residences, public buildings, factories, hotels, business houses, schools, churches, and mines : with biographical sketches of prominent citizens > Part 20


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39


February 10, 1879, J. P. Gury bought tbe tin and stove store of J. G. Anderson. Recently B. F. Bonnell, of Tres Pinos bought an interest in the business, and the style of the firm is Gury & Bonnell.


H. Snibley, also in the tin and stove business, came bere in 1872. In 1874, he bought out A. G. Annis, and has condueted the business ever since.


The San Jose Furniture Manufacturing Company bas recently established a store, with Charles Hervey as manager.


Jacob Nye is the pioneer jeweler; has been in business sinee tbe fall of 1870. Besides keeping a full assortment of jewelry' he deals in stationery, etc.


J. T. Lowe, during the year 1880, opened a jewelry store in the post-office building. He is an experienced workman.


Thomas Yost has been postmaster sinee April 15, 1873, and has giveu entire satisfaction. In connection with the post- office he keeps a stationery and book store, wbich is as eomplete as can be found in any interior town.


James Mears eame in 1876. He keeps a variety store and news-stand; is agent for the leading daily papers.


J. B. Shaw has the only tailor shop in town. He came in 1874, and bought out Levison, who was the first tailor iu the place. In answer to an inquiry about his competitors, he said, " I have seen the panorama of nine pass before me."


Anton Werz is the pioneer boot and shoe- maker. He eamo in January, 1879. Besides doing eustom work he keeps on liand an assortment of boots and shoes.


K. Coleman opeued a boot and shoe shop in Hollister in 1873.


Dave Gluekman started in business in 1878. He has met with some reverses, but now has an entensive trade, and carries a large stock of goods.


There are two millinery stores in the town, one kept by Mrs. Graves, established in 1870, and one by Mrs. Coleman, estab- lished in 1874. Mrs. Wells has been engaged in dress-making since 1876.


Two harness and saddle shops, the one first established beiug kept by J. G. Hamilton; the other by L. Thorton. Both of these gentlemen carry a large stock of goods.


THE MCMAHON HOUSE.


The MeMahon House is the leading hotel, Rector Bros., proprietors. They took charge of the Western Hotel Deeember 15, 1874. When the MeMahon House was completed they moved into it, and opened it for the first time December 16, 1877. They are energetie business men, and have given the people of Hollister a hotel first-class in all its appointments.


The French Hotel was established in 1871 by Joe Marehetti, who now keeps the only oyster saloon in town. Mr. Bayle, the present proprietor, took charge of it in 1876.


James Ross, a genial host from the Highlands, has kept tbe Eagle Hotel since 1876.


Thomas O'Donnell, proprietor of the San Benito House, is a pioneer. Exeepting a short stay in British Columbia, he has been here sinee 1879.


The town has three buteher sbops. One kept by O. D. Peek, who has been here since 1870; one by E. H. Campbell, and the other by J. H. Townsend.


Latture & MeCoy were in the livery business here in 1874. They were burnt out in 1879, but cleared away the ruins and ereeted a new stable on tbe site of the old one, on Fifth street, wbere they can now be found.


There are two drug stores, one kept by J. H. Boyer, and the other by Ed. Eaton. Botb gentlemen eommeneed business in 1879.


S. T. Wells eame here in 1875, and is now running a black- smith and machine sbop. He bas no specialty, but makes any- thing, from a wheelbarrow to a threshing maebine, or a plow- share to a steam engine. There are otber blacksmith sbops, kept by Holloway & Sons, M. Sherman, W. F. Reynolds and A. Eaton.


·


98


DESCRIPTIONS OF TOWNS AND VILLAGES.


F. Cunning has the monopoly of the fruit and vegetable business, excepting the opposition of peddlers. He went into business in 1875.


W. Degner deals in wall paper, paints, oils, etc. He came here in an early day.


G. G. Johnson, real estate and insurance agent, came bere November 26, 1876, and began work a few hours after his arrival.


R. P. Lathrop is the leading hay merchant, and proprieter of the Mammoth hay warchouse with a large storage capacity. He has been in business since 1876.


C. C. Little, in the grain and commission business, came to town in October, 1873.


Joel Redway has lately established himself in the business of photography, and is prepared to exceute anything in his line with satisfaction and dispatch.


Wm. Palmtag and Eastman & McClure are the prominent liquor dealers. In 1869, Mr. Palutag ran a brewery wagon from Watsonville to Hollister. In 1872 he came over here and established in the liquor and cigar business. Now, besides having a large wholesale and retail establishment, he takes orders for lumber, and is agent for the Hamburg and Rotter- dam steamship lines.


Eastman & McClure, retail liquor dealers, established here in 1872. They subsequently moved to the quarters they now occupy, known as the Magnolia Saloon. In con- nection with their magnificent bar they have a large billiard room.


There are two dentists in town and five physicians, four" allopaths and one eclectic ; six practicing attorneys ; a publie school with five teachers, an academy with three teachers, and a private school.


San Benito Township.


ADJACENT to San Benito is quite an area of good farming land, on which early sown grain seldom fails to make a crop. But this section is unlike other portions of the county, inasmuch as grain sown late seldom makes even good hay.


San Benito is quite a little place, composed of a score or more of sociable and pleasant people. W. H. Blosser, Buchanan Smith, and John Golden have places in what migbt ;be termed tbe eastern suburbs. N. Schlesinger keeps the village store, and also attends to the duties of postmaster.


There are no cloud-reaching church spires; nor magnificent temples, nor even brown stone-fronts, but there is an air of pretension that would do credit to cities of more importance.


The country here is capable of producing ahnost anything, but being railroad land, which ought to have, but has not, reverted back to the Government, it has not been improved as it otherwise would have been.


PARK MILLS AND SURROUNDINGS.


From San Benito to Park Mills it is about five miles. Steplien Kennedy, A. J. Smith, J. D. Justice and W. K. Goff reside along here. The Park Mill is owned by C. A. Werner, a thorough, practical iniller, and much of a gentleman. It has all the appliances for making a superior article of flour, and with Mr. Werner to manage it, to say that the flour is superior would be superfluous. The mill is run by water, has a fall of forty-two feet on a twelve-inch Turbine wheel which makes seven hundred revolutions per minute. Tho capacity of the mill is about a barrel and a quarter per hour, and as it is run sixteen hours out of the twenty-four it can readily be seen that more flour is manufactured than can be used in the immediate locality.


J. F. CORNWELL'S place must not be forgotten as you travel down the San Benito river. He is very desirably situated. and as pleasant a man as can be found in the county.


A few miles from here is a historie spot in San Benito county, known as Robber's Roost, the place where the noto- rious Vasquez and companeros waylaid the stage, tied the pas- sengers down on the sands of the river while they appropriated the treasure belonging to the party, This is an appropriate spot for such deviltry, and the applicability of the name is foreibly evident.


Paicines Township.


PAICINES is composed of a hotel, storc, post-office, saloon, and blacksmith shop. Fifteen years ago Mr. Sepulveda kept a store here. In 1872 Mr. A. Snyder, now a resident of Santa Ana valley, was proprietor of the store. It was during this year, or the year following, that Vasquez inade his first raid, Paicines being the seenc of the mercenary and murderous aet. Snyder and others were tied down, while the bandits went through the store; $500 in money was found and appropriated by them, and a lot of goods and eight or nine horses taken. Three persons, Redford, Davidson and a Spaniard were killed by the outlaws, who thought no more of taking a human life than a hunter would of killing a rabbit. This was the erime for which Vasquez was tried and executed. The bandits loi- tered around the place for an hour or more before they rode away toward the south. Paieines at present is a quiet little village, with one of the best country hotels in the State. It is kept by the McPhail Bros., who also own the store and do a fair business in the line of general merchandise. J. N. Hubler, formerly of Hollister, does the blacksmithing, horseshoeing, carriage and wagon making. A. B. Grogan's ranch is the largest in this portion of the county. It contains nine thou- sand and fifty-four acres, and has a nice residence, sometimes used by Mr. Grogan as a summer resort.


99


DESCRIPTIONS OF TOWNS AND VILLAGES.


Paicines is a large scope of farming country, settled by an industrious and apparently prosperous class of citizens. The mountains, where they can be tilled, produce the finest quality of wheat, but the quantity is not so large as the product of the valley land. Grapes and other fruits do well here. The eliminate is salubrious and equitable, the elevation of the coun- try being only slightly above Hollister. Iu fact, it is said and authenticated by restored invalids that Paicines and surround- ings is one of the most healthful spots in the world.


Brown's valley is about six miles from Paieines. Henderson Brown, of Hollister, owns over one thousand three hundred acres in this valley, besides controlling two or three sections of range in the adjacent mountains. This year he has rented out all of his farm land, and will give his entire attention to his stock.


CINNABAR AND NEIGHBORHOOD.


Twenty-one miles from Hollister is a little place which bears the significant and mineralogical name of Cinnabar. Julge C. Y. Hammond is the major-domo here, and surrounded by what a Southern man might mistake for a plantation. Nearly all men possess some distinguishing peculiarity, and the inarked trait in the Judge's character is the mania for build- ing houses. If he continues, in the course of twenty years he will have quite a little village at Cinnabar.


C. Y. HAMMOND is the postmaster at this place, and also Jus- tice of the Peace. During his absence, bis daugbter Nellie attends to this department of Uncle Sam's postal service. One would think that the Judge was surrounded by quite a colony of people to see the houses on his premises, but they all belong to him. A view of his property is given on another page.


Erie Township.


ERIE is sixty-five miles south of Hollister. The place consists of a post-office where the people of Hernandez valley and neigh- borhood get their mail. It is near the head-waters of the San Benito, surrounded by precipitous mountains, tbe summits of which are four thousand feet above the level of the sea. The post-office derives its name from the school district, and sup- plies eight or ten families with nail. The valley contains about two thousand acres. The mountains eut up by deep cañons, their summits overgrown with chaparral, their sides covered with mountain oak and underbrush, are all that is to be seen.


BITTER-WATER VALLEY.


At the southern end of the valley is a section called Bitter- water. The Hon. E. C. Tully came here about 1860, when his nearest post-office was Gilroy, sixty-five miles distant, and


only two families resided on the road. If he has not made the financial success of life which some under similar circum- stances would have made, he has doue what is far greater and better, raised a large family of boys who are gentlemanly, hon- orable and intelligent. The weary never come to his houso without finding rest, nor the hungry without being fed. His place has beeu and is n familiar stopping-point for teamsters andl stoekmen of this section, an asylum for the helpless and homeless.


A narrow-gauge railroad is talked of to reach this section of the country, of a length of fifty or sixty miles from Tres Pinos, the present terminus of the railroad. The section it would pass through is a stock country of considerable importance; por- tions of it are well adapted to agriculture; and there are local- ities that are rich with undeveloped mines. Besides, a railroad woukl tap New Ilria, and obtain all the freighting from that quarter. The Picacho mines, now in the hands of a rich company that proposes to develop it, would, doubtless, furnish consider- able freighting. In fact, if such a railroad were constructed. what are now prospect holes wonhl soon be converted into mines, as there is no doubt from the eroppings that rich depos- its of quicksilver exist in inany places.


Tres Pinos, the Railroad Terminus.


TRES PINOS, six miles south of Hollister, lies on the Tres Pinos creek, and forms the terminus of the Hollister branch of the Southern Pacific Railroad. Indecd, the town owcs its existence to this fact. It is the spot to whichi most of the team- ing is brought from the mountains. At first it was the inten- tion of the railroad company to run their southern line through the San Benito valley, but a later choice fell on the Salinas valley. The county has not been left out in the cold, however, and a branch from the main line at Gilroy has been run to Hollister and Tres Pinos, thus giving quick communication and cheap transportation to the most productive part of the county.


At Tres Pinos are large cattle-yards, and from this place stock is shipped by rail to San Francisco. This is a small vil- lage, supporting a few business houses. Being the railroad termiuus, considerable trade and business naturally centers here from the mines still further south. Tres Pinos became noted as the scene of one of Vasquez' raids, more fully mentioned elsewhere.


OTHER LOCALITIES.


Besides the towns already mentioned may be added Bear Valley, Bitter Water, Carneros, Erie, Einmet, Fairview, Gabi- lan, Jefferson, Lone Tree, Live Oak, Pacheco, Paicines, San Felipe, San Benito, San Juan, Santa Ana, Union, Hollow Creek and Yanitos.


100


MINERAL WEALTH OF SAN BENITO COUNTY.


San Benito County Mines.


THE PICACHO MINES.


SEVENTY-FIVE miles south of Hollister, near the boundary line of this county, on the quicksilver belt leading from the New Ahnaden to the New Idria, and occupying an eminence from which the source of the San Benito river can he viewerl, are located the Picacho mines. They are four miles from the San Benito river, which, a few miles above, finds its source in a number of small rivulets that are fed by some of the numer- ous springs which are to be found in these mountains. The river bed is narrow, and the canon through which the water first flows, after the confluence of the little streams ahove mentioned, is deep and steep.


"The Picacho mines are very conspicuous for the huge red peaks, which, like silent monitors to the wild country, lift their heads above the mountain crest, and have given the name to the place. These rocky peaks contaiu cinnahar in greater or less quantities, in some places the red streaks show- ing where the metal has run out of the rock. On top of the mountain is a vein that would astonish okl miners. There is a lead of out-croppings three hundred feet in width. Some years ago the mines were operated under the supervision of Tom Cody; the ore was taken out by miners on tribute, so that the veins on top of this mountain have been stripped down a dis- tance of a few fcet, and wherever there were favorable indi- cations there are small holes, where a few tons of ore have been extracted, probably obstinate rock encountered, and the place abandoned. A visitor says, to use a mining phrase, the place is full of " wild-cat holes." It is plain to any one that this kind of work could not last and would not pay very long. On top of the hill is a shaft one hundred and fifty feet in depth, and from the top to the bottom good pay ore is in sight. This much is known to an absolute certainty. But the present company are not satisfied with this, so are running a tunnel which will strike the center of the mountain four hundred and fifty feet helow the surface and about nine hundred feet from the place of entrance. If quicksilver is found at this depth the supply will be absolutely inexliaustible, AND THE MINES WILL BE WORTH MILLIONS. The tunnel is now in a distance of six hundred and twenty feet, and should be near the ore. It is prohahle from the configuration of the ledge that it dips a little, which will make the tunnel longer hofore reaching inetal than one would think from a eursory glance. At present the miners are making progress very slow. The rock is quartz, as hard and tough as nature could make it.


The New Idria ruines are some eight miles distant, and the Fourth of July, San Benito, Monterey, and other claims are near by. A short distance east of the Picacho is a forest of pines and cedars, some trees measuring five and six feet in diameter.


DATE OF DISCOVERY OF MINE.


The Picacho mines were discovered in 1858, and located shortly afterwards. Wiley Williams and E. C. Tully wore two of the original locators. At one time the mines employed a large force of men, and the ruins of the boarding-houses and a number of other dwellings just over the summit noar the mines, tell where the town of Picacho was started. A few hundred yards distant is a superior kind of clay, from which the tile that inade the hearths and floors of some of the dwellings, now fallen into ruins, was taken. Several of the old houses have been crushed by snow, which has fallen on these mountains to a depth of five feet, and not unfrequently it is two feet deep.


There are trees which have been broken by its weight. And this within seventy-five miles of Hollister, where boys go shoo- less the whole year. / We certainly have a diversity of climate in California only equaled by its salubrity.


The mines are owned by a New York company, possessing the capital and enterprise to develope them.


INTERESTING STORY.


There are some very interesting tales connected with these mines, for it must be remembered that twenty years ago these mines were much wilder than they now are. . Grizzlies were numerous. We saw the port-hole in the chimney of the old boarding-house, inade by Bill Cody and another gentleman, through which they intended to kill a bear that was making nightly raids upon a hog-pen a few feet from the house. Bruin came after his accustomed mcal, and Cody saw him not forty feet distant, slaughtering the hog, but didn't fire. After a brief interval he concluded that it would be better to shoot from the top of the house, so he and his friend climbed up to see. They had a fine view, and after watching bruin a while Cody said to his friend: "You get down and get the gun, and I'll shoot." "O, never mind, Mr. Cody, I am very comfortable," replied his companion from the top of the ridge-log. And there they sat, like " patience on the monument," until the bear had eaten his fill and gone into the ehaparral.


SAN BENITO MINE.


The San Benito mine is located in the hills of this locality. It was recently bonded to a Jan José company, who proposed to re-open it immediately; but, we are informed, are deterred by a disputed title, another party claiming to have purchased the mine from the original owner. It is on the same lead as the New Idria mine, and if worked and managed properly, it would doubtless pay well. A short distance further down the creek and on the summit of the mountains to the right are the conspicious Picacho mines.


Gypsum is found in the mountains near by. If it were not for the cost of transportation, the gypsumn mines here would be valuable.


RESIDENCE OF J. MALSBARY, 3 MILES EAST OF HOLLISTER, CAL.


101


RECORD OF ELECTIONS HELD IN THE COUNTY.


Votes Cast in San Benito County*


Since its Organization in 1874 to the Present Time, 1881.


Names and Politics of Candidates, Total Votes cast, and Majorities.


SPECIAL ELECTION TO CHOOSE COUNTY OFFICERS, HELD MARCH, 1874.


Olficere.


Candidates.


Politics.


Votes.


Maj. or


Pluralities.


Sheriff.


. G. B. Montgomery D 225


.B. F. Ross .. D 410


108


R


8


. J. D. Fowler R 302


R


93


O. Lyon


D


257


104


Ind.


365


"


.. H. M. Hayes


R


298


41


D


244


4


.W. T. Brown


=


D


196


.. L. E. Cramum


R


90


. L. V. Parsons


R


27


R


184


State Treasurer. . Win. Beckman. Ind.


649


320


=


.T. L. Baldwin R


D


178


D


353


52


8


A. P. Boyd R


18


R


631


287


R


51


... P. Van Cleif


R


89


D ..


344


Surveyor Gen7 .. Robert Gardner


D


647


313


Surveyor


309


. . E. Twitchell


R


89


Ind.


347


Clk Supm. Court. G. I. Taggart


D. B. Woolf


D


643


296


John Edwards R .


D .


207


Member Congress. S. O. Houghton


D


664


347


J. T. Jones


D .


607


230


Coroner


R . 377


Thomas Flint


D


R


514


Assemblyman


.. G. M. Roberts D


559


45


Sheriff


B. F. Ross


D


636


214


T. N. Batty


R 554


66


Co. Treasurer.


. W. S. Letcher


. T. M. Davis


R 456


County Clerk . . H. M. Hayes


.J. J. Hunt


R 599


125


Dist. Attorney . .N. C. Briggs


. J. J. May


D 634


194


Surveyor


.T. A. Talleyrand.


R


440


"


.H. Z. Morris.


D


680


277


School Supt.


John Edwards


D 716


357


Coroner


F. O. Nash


R


359


*Prepared by the County Clerk.


SAN BENITO TOWNSHIP .- For license, 21; against license, 47; majority against license, 26.


PAICINES TOWNSHIP .- For license, 26; against license, 36 ; majority against license, 10.


The law under which the said elections were held, was sub- sequently hell to be unconstitutional, in ex porte Wall, 48 Cal., 279.


GENERAL STATE ELECTION, HELD SEPTEMBER, 1875.


Officel.


Candidates Politics, Votes, Majority.


358


Governor Wm. Irwin. D .... 643


=


T. G. Phelps Ind. 285


John Bidwell R 99


W. E. Lovett R


49


639


337


Licut .- Governor. . J. A. Johnsou


D Indl .. 302


J. M. Cavis


R. Pacheco. R 149


W. D. Hobson


Ind .. 365


Sec'y of State . . . . E. HaHett


.... Thomas Beck D 592


. . . . Win. Rausch R


State Controller. . J. J. Green


.. J. W. Manderville D 615


.. J. Russell .


R


8


Treasurer . A. L. Smith


301


. . J. G. Estudillo


. . F. Bachr


R


98


. . C. P. Thompson R = Ind ... 336 Att'y General ... E. D. Sawyer


... J. Hamilton


D 647


311


Dist. Attorney. . N. C. Briggs


.. W. E. Lovett


. . J. J. May


.. George Roberts D


D ... 664


59


School Supt


. J. N. Thompson


169


Paul Morrill


R


317


A. Martin


Ind . . 92


P. D. Wigginton


J. S. Thompson


R 506


Senator


568 62


Assessor


. S. Allen


211


D


483


D


272


. George Chalmers


D


307


Supervisor, No.1. W. Triplett.


R


317


10


M. Pomeroy


R


106


38


=


No.2. Thomas Flint


R


68


Jolın Breen


D


. .


85


16


No.3.D. J. Watson.


Thomas Butterfield R 69


Ind .. 52


J. V. Mathis


Record of the votes cast in San Benito county at a special election held on June 6, 1874, in and for the townships of Hol- lister, Paicines and San Benito, whereat the question of licensing the sale of liquors was submitted to popular vote under the provisions of the "Local Option Law."


HOLLISTER TOWNSHIP .- For license, 233; against license, 293; majority against license, 60.


Ind . . 10


.J. D. Fowler R


422


Ind ..


9


C. W. Wentworth


D


488


Ind .. 34


D 621


165


D 474


.F. P. McCray


Ind .. 91


.J. M. Black


J. Clark


R 265


W. F. White


. John Breen


. H. Dowley


J. G. Sanchez.


Ind. 334


355


.. Wm. Minis


. F. P. McCray


. H. Z. Morris


D ... 304


D . . . 245


R 86


227


County Clerk. . . J. S. McConnell


. B. H. Brotherton


323


D


. John Malcom


. Thos. McMahon .


=


R 403


J. M. Black


102


SUPERVISORS. DISTRICT NO. 2.


Supervisor


.C. E. Mitchell


R


.J. G Sanchez


D


69


Assessor M. Pomeroy R 423


649


226


. A. Dowdy D


FOR CONVENTION TO REVISE CONSTITUTION.


120


Yes.


98


No


JUDICIAL ELECTION HELD OCTOBER, 1875.


Supt. Pub. Instr'n. O. P. Fitzgerald D 494 210


Ezra S. Carr


R


284


County Judge. . . J. J. Harris


D


489


204 . . W. E. Lovett R 285


PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION HELD NOVEMBER, 1876.


230


President S. J. Tilden D 664


. R. B. Hayes. R 434


Congress. . Romualdo Pacheco R 424


668


432 State Controller . . D. M. Kenfield


2


.. W. B. C. Brown. 661


. . Romualdo Pacheco


1


COUNTY OFFICE, SUPERVISOR, DISTRICT NO. 3.


Supervisor


. T. J. Conkling. D 143


.G. W. Towlc R 83


GENERAL STATE ELECTION HELD SEPTEMBER, 1877.


Assemblyman ... . Win. Kelley. D 445


. . .J. F. Brcen R 524 79


FOR CONVENTION TO REVISE CONSTITUTION.


Convention .. . . . For.


661 488


.Against.


173


Sheriff. Wm. T. Brown D .. 54 511


O. D. Peck R 457


« A. P. Boyd R


1


240


359


.. N. C. Briggs.


R.


1


D 489


22


District Att'y. .. J. J. May . N. C. Briggs. R 467


Treasurer . A. L. Farish D. 524


.C. W. Wentworth R


431


. B. W. Chappell. D.


1


D.


481


14



W. T. R. Helm


D. 471


D.


549


133


Coroner . L. R. Howard.


R


520


81


"


H. Crepin. D. 439


Supervisor No.1.J. W. Hawkins D.


549


549


SUPERVISORIAL ELECTION HELD SEPTEMBER, 1878.


Supervisor No.2.C. E. Mitchell. R .. 68


15


53


CONSTITUTIONAL ELECTION HELD MAY, 1879.


737


For the New Constitution .


536 Against the New Constitution 201


GENERAL STATE ELECTION HELD SEPTEMBER, 1879.


374


Lieut-Governor.John Mansfield


W.


174


W. R. Andrews


N. C ... 375


Levi Chase


Sec'y of State .. . D. M. Burns.


W ..


. .


169


= A. A. Smith .


N. C .. 383


.. . Lauren E. Crane.


R .. .


.. 316


... W. J. Tinman


R. .


. .


245


State Controller.D. M. Kenfield.


Hugh L. Janes


N. C .. 375


W ..


.. 176


57


Hugh M. Larne


R ...


. .


318


W. B. C. Brown




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