The San Joaquin Historian - San Joaquin County Historical Museum
Transcription
The San Joaquin Historian - San Joaquin County Historical Museum
The San Joaquin Historian cite CH ICORY fACTORY OF t?ACI-IMAN AND GRANDT ON IllE SAN .joAQUIt-J A Publication of the San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum The San Joaquin Historian A Publication ofthe San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum Vol. XIV- Number 1 Editor Daryl Morrison Design Karen Hope Published by The San Joaquin County Historical Society, Inc. Micke Grove Regional Park P.O. Box 30, Lodi, CA 95241-0030 (209) 331-2055 * (209) 953-3460 President Helen Tretheway Vice Presidents Craig Rasmussen Immediate Past President Mel Wingett Finance Christopher Engh Publications Elise Austin Forbes Secretary Robert F. McMaster Treasurer Director, San Joaquin County Historical Society Michael W. Bennett Cover: Ralph Yardley cartoon Courtesy Haggin Musuem The San Joaquin Historian Spring 2000 About This Issue In this issue we learn the background of the charming River Mill. The River Mill is a banquet facility located in French Camp in an historic building that was once the Bachman & Brandt California ChicofJ/ FactofJ/. I became aware of this establishment when I had a family event there in 1993. The beautiful grounds and his toric old building can only make one wonder, "What went on here r I began to do some reading to learn about the California ChicofJ/ Works and the business partnership of Bachman and Brandt. I presented my guests with a one page histofJ/ of the California ChicofJ/ Works. [I also happened to have a few pounds of chicofJ/ coffee in my freezer from visits to New Orleans and served my guests chicofJ/ coffee. For those who are curious/ chicofJ/ coffee may be special ordered from Aquarius Coffees in Lincoln Center, Stockton or online from Cafe du Monde: http://www.cafedumonde.com/cafeshop]. A recent quefJ/ by a reader as to whether there was more information on the California ChicofJ/ Works made me realize this stOfJ/ would be worth developing. So dear reader, grab a cup a coffee (oiy you probably don't have chicofJ/ cof fee/ yet) and enjoy! The author, Daryl Morrison, is Head of Holt Atherton Special Collections at the University of the Pacific Library and editor of the San Joaquin Historian. Page 1 Bachman & Brandt California Chicory Factory By Daryl Morrison The old California Chicory Factory founded in 1873 was owned by Charles H.W. Brandt and Carl August Bachman (often spelled Bachmann). The factory still exists today as a large, red brick building and is now called The River Mill. beautiful facility, few may know of its interesting historical background. On August 8, 1980, the Historical Resources Commission made the site a California landmark based on its being the largest and oldest standing chicory processing plant of its time. The structure was built to last with foot-thick walls towering over 20 feet high. The redbrick build ing's design is a rectangular box of some 200-feet long by 100-feet wide. It has plain straight walls with pilasters at intervals for vertical reinforcement. There are stepped parapets at the roof edges. Details can be easily seen of the Flemish bond used by the professional masons of the day. (Dart, p. A8) Chicory-A Beverage ofChoice The facility is owned and was renovated by Jim Silveria and Clint Marshall. It operates as a banquet hall and winery in the historic building with the embellish ment of a beautiful garden. To get to the site head south from Stockton on Interstate Five and at French Camp take Matthews Road exit and drive along Manthey Frontage road to Bowman Road. Follow Bowman Road west until you reach the San Joaquin River. The old Brandt home may also be glimpsed on nearby property. The River Mill does a brisk business with weddings and other special events. Al though many have enjoyed this The San Joaquin Historian Unless you have sipped chicory coffee with your beignet (a fried puff pastry rolled in powdered sugar) at Cate du Monde on Jackson Square in New Or leans, you may be unfamiliar with this savory, rich beverage. Chicory was thought to aid digestion and regularity and has been used for centuries in Europe for medicinal purposes. Herbal ists as early as 1800 imagined its curative properties. In the nineteenth century chicory was in much demand and after processing was used to blend with coffee grounds. Chicory was used especially during the Civil War, when coffee was scarce. Later, it was popu- Page 2 lar, not so much as an extender, but as an enhancement. When kiln dried, roasted, and ground, chicory becomes coffee's natural partner, enhancing the coffee's flavor and body. Chicory (not to be confused with the chicory weed, commonly found growing on America's highways) is the root of the endive plant. Chicory, or succory, is a native plant of Great Britain, where it grows wild and in great profusion but was not cultivated to any extent. It was, however, carefully cultivated in Belgium, France, Holland, and Germany. There many thousands of acres are devoted to chicory and tons of the raw material were exported to the United States. Chicory belongs to the genus Chicorium have little in common with coffee./I (Stockton Daily Independent, Nov. 9, 1876). "It is not of the same nature as coffee, and does not contain the slight est trace of coffee's essential oil or caffeine. Its action on the system is the opposite of coffee and instead of being a stimulant and irritant, chicory is a sedative tonic, diuretic and astringent./I (Weekly Mail, June 4,1892) "Chicory is mixed with coffee, at the average rate of about one-half pound of root to one pound of coffee. Consumers report that it adds much to the flavor of coffee./I (Stockton Daily Independent, Oct. 26, 1877). "Its addition to coffee in creases the bitterness but gives greater body and a brighter color to the liquid. When added to coffee to stretch it, it Bin with dried chicory root and the ground product. Courtesy of the Haggin Museum. intybus, the same botanical family as the dandelion. The shape of the leaves of the plant look almost exactly like a dandelion, but the leaves of the chicory are much the larger, courser, and darker colored. Endive is winter lettuce that has a carrot-like root. It has the ap pearance of a parsnip root being white in color and having a bitter flavor. (Brandt, p. 28; Weekly Mail, 1892). In newspaper articles of the day, chicory was described as "not unpleasant to the taste, although the chemical properties The San Joaquin Historian cuts down the caffeine for the drinker./I (Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892) Chicory as a San Joaquin County Industry With the popularity of the chicoried brew, the knowledge of immigrating Germans about the plant, and the rich fertile soils of the San Joaquin River re gion, the door was open for a new industry in San Joaquin County. The domestic chicory had an advantage of being more economical than the Ger- Page 3 man import because of import taxes and transportation. In the 1870s there were large manufac turing establishments in Europe with two hundred manufactories in Germany alone. In this country chicory was raised quite extensively on Long Island, in New Jersey, and in some of the Western States. The soil best adapted was a sandy loam. (Stockton Daily In dependent, Oct. 26, 1877). When chicory was introduced to California, it was said to grow to enormous size compared to the European product. (Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892) Of the minor crops that received sus tained attention in the Delta in the early years, chicory was the most highly local ized. A small acreage was raised downstream from Sacramento and Washington (West Sacramento) be tween 1860 and 1880. Between 1872 and World War I a larger acreage was raised on mineral soils on Roberts Is land. The southern crop area was located within a few miles of a mill (Bachman & SAN Y)AOUI Brandt) located on the right bank of the San Joaquin about eight miles southwest of Stockton. (Thompson, p. 371). Chicory processing had existed in the general vicinity before Brandt and Bachman estab lished their business. Raab, Meine and Co. had a factory in 1871, but it burned in October of the same year. (Stockton Daily Inde pendent Oct. 26, 1871). They again prepared to establish a chicory manufacturing operation on the San The San Joaquin Historian facturing operation on the San Joaquin River in February of 1872, and had an active operation by the summer of 1872 that lasted until around 1878. (Stockton Daily Independent, Feb. 10, 1872; Sept. 21, 1872). The Stockton Daily Independent of July 3, 1878 notes that "a new chicory fac tory has recently been built on Brandt's ranch on the river, west of French Camp and the old factory has been removed to Martin Ott's place a mile or two fur ther up. From these active preparations for business we judge that the industry of making chicory is expanding and ex tending." (Also Horton, p. 17). In the 1870s when all of the production was to the east of the river, between 200 and 500 acres were harvested. In 1892 the San Joaquin County chicory industry was considered the largest of its kind in the United States. Then known as the California Chicory Works, it was located on the right bank of the San Joaquin River about thirteen miles Postcard, Courtesy ofHaggin Museum from Stockton by water and eight and a half miles by wagon road. The area is described as "having natural beauty and the most fertile land in the country. Approximately several thou- Page 4 sand acres of the land in the vicinity is in chicory root, although the manufac turers themselves have only six hundred and fifty." (The Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892). In the early 1900's up to 1,200 acres were harvested. Cultivation virtu ally stopped before World War I, the result of a disappearing market among the San Francisco coffee roasters, for eign competition, and the 1911 flood. Vegetables and alfalfa have replaced it. (Thompson, pp.371-372). The Partners The history of the California Chicory Factory is the story of two men, Charles H. W. Brandt and Carl August Bachman, both old pioneers who made their for tunes by their own efforts and by availing themselves of the natural ad vantages of California. "They worked at many different kinds of business before starting the manufacture of chicory in 1872. In that year the beginning was a modest one and early on all the work was done in one small frame structure. Both liked the country and were deter mined to succeed and make homes for themselves. It was hard work, but each year saw some addition to their property and the farmers in the area began to also cultivate the root, so that by 1892 nearly 300 were reported to putting in a large part of the year at that work and finding it profitable." (Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892) Charles H. W. Brandt Charles H. W. Brandt, the founder of the California Chicory Works, was born in Hanover, Germany in 1840. He was the son of Frederick and Phillipena Brandt. By the time Charles was fifteen years of age he began to chafe under the re straints in his native country and set out for America. Setting sail from the port The San Joaquin Historian Charles H.W. Brandt of Bremen in 1855, he reached Galves ton, Texas after a comparatively uneventful voyage of three months and nine days. He settled in Washington County, Texas where he learned the trade of carpenter and worked at that trade until 1859. He then went to Cherokee, New Grenada, where he be came involved in the butchering trade. He traveled in Central and South Amer ica, and after two years returned to the United States, arriving in San Francisco in 1861. He then worked as a cabinet maker for three years. Brandt came to San Joaquin County in 1864, saved his money and acquired land on the banks of the San Joaquin River near the set tlement of French Camp in Castoria Township. He engaged in the fruit and vegetable business. (Gilbert, p. 103; Guinn, p. 206-Note: Guinn has Brandt coming to the County in 1862). In 1867 Brandt purchased 133 acres and continued to add to it. For the next few years Brandt raised row-crops on his small farm. He tested different crops to see which would bring the most Page 5 money. He was familiar with chicory, which was imported fully processed from Germany. There was little domes tic chicory. Brandt recognized that the mineral soil of the reclaimed tule land was ideal for the growing of chicory and the long growing season promised good crops. (Dart, p. A8). In 1870 Brandt erected a two and a half story house with thirteen rooms, costing $2,500. At about this time he married Therese Bachman, the daughter of his neighbor, Carl Bachman. They married in French Camp on September 18, 1870. Therese was also a native German, born in May 15, 1853. Mr. and Mrs. Brandt were to become the parents of nine children (Charles A., Frederick c., Au gustus W., Louis, Emil A., Theresa, Dorothy, Mildred and Oscar). (Guinn, p.206). to $10 per ton. Brandt decided to begin processing the chicory root himself into a near finished product. (Dart, p. A8) He erected a chicory factory in 1872 at a cost of $3,700. Brandt's factory was a wood frame structure to house the ma chinery for the operation. To the north side of the factory he had wooden dry ing platforms, where the white, carrot like roots were cut into two-to-three pieces and crushed in the grinders. The root cubes were ground to about the consistency of course ground coffee. There was a landing on the San Joaquin River about twenty-five feet from the factory. (Gilbert, p. 103). The following year the factory shipped 328 barrels of processed chicory. The chicory was shipped to market on the steamer Hattie Pickett. In 1872 Brandt concentrated his atten tion upon the raising and manufacture of chicory for commercial uses, begin ning at first in an experimental way. After the first few years, the harvest yielded 10 to 15 tons per acre and was sold to San Francisco processors for $8 Brandt ran the chicory factory with Mar tin Ott as manager and August and Charles Dangers as employees. (Stock ton Daily Independent, Feb. 12, 1877). Brandt sold his original building in 1877 to Ott and became partners with is fa ther-in-Iaw, C.A. Bachman. They Chicory Factory, near Stockton, California. The large building is the roasting and grinding building, with storage buildings for the raw product behind. CA. 1888. Courtesy of the Haggin Museum. The San Joaquin Historian Page 6 erected a larger building, 50 x 48 feet, at a cost of $7,500. On September 16, 1878, they celebrated the opening of this second chicory factory with 125 friends and well wishers present. (Daily Evening Herald, Sept. 16, 1878). With the establishment of the partner ship and building of the larger factory, the firm became Bachman & Brandt's California Chicory Factory and the busi ness grew expansively. In 1909 Guinn noted that "the factory is located eight miles from Stockton, on the San Joaquin River at Brandt's Bridge, which was named in honor of Mr. Brandt. In addi tion to carrying on the manufacturing business, Brandt owns three ranches upon which he carries on general stock raising and other agricultural purSUits." (Guinn, p. 206). Carl August Bachman The story of the older partner, Carl Au gust Bachman (or Bachmann), is similar to Brandt's. He was born in Prussia in 1827. His parents were Henry and Teresa (Kunz) Bachman. Bachman re ceived his education in his native town of Magdeburg, and after completing an apprenticeship worked in the upholster ing trade. He traveled throughout Europe. He then entered the military service, joining the Twelfth Hussar Regi ment, and took part in the wars of Baden and Holstein. Bachman married Dora Echler in 1851 in Germany. Leav ing the army in 1853, Bachman immigrated to New York, then going to St. Anthonls Falls, Minnesota, where he established a furniture factory. In 1859 he gave up his business and embarked on a steamer for California, crossing the Isthmus. He arrived in San Francisco on the 24th of October 1859. He remained in San Francisco until the spring of 1860, when he went to north as a The San Joaquin Historian miner. He was unsuccessful and re turned to San Francisco, where he obtained employment in a carpet store. In 1866 he and his family came to San Joaquin County and purchased a ranch of 327 acres on the San Joaquin River and commenced farming. Having some knowledge of the chicory business, a crop grown in Prussia, he thought chic ory would prove profitable. He cultivated 300 acres of which 25 were chicory and the rest grain. He had 500 trees of apples, peaches and pears, and 25 head of horses and some milk cows. The Bachmans erected a residence in 1866 on the San Joaquin River, just be low that of Mr. Brandt's. The house was added on to and in 1879 was described as being two stories with nine rooms. (Illustrated History ofSan Joaquin County, p. 525; Gilbert, p. 102). The Bachmans had one daughter, Theresa. The union of Brandt and Theresa Bach man brought the families together not only as relatives but partners. A New Factory and Prosperous Partnership When the two men joined together the chicory factory prospered and the proc essed tonnage increased greatly. The Daily Evening Herald, Stockton, Sep tember 16, 1878 noted that Bachman & Brandt celebrated the opening of their chicory factory. "The buildings are new and substantial. A 15 horsepower en gine furnishes the power. The capacity of the factory is twelve tons a day and it ranks as one of the largest in the State. The chicory is sold in San Francisco at about 6 cents per pound. It comes into competition with German chicory, which is sold at about 7 1/2 cents per pound and is said to be superior in quality to the German chicory." The new brick building housed the roasting room, grinding room, drying room, a cooper- Page 7 age, a tank house, engine room, coal storage house, and a storage ware house. (Dart, p. A8) It was reported that little chicory was then grown outside of San Joaquin and Sacramento Counties. It cost about $5 a ton to raise the roots, including seed, cultivation, digging and hauling, while the prepared chicory was worth from $125 to $250 a ton in the market. The net profit per acre was as high as $300 to $500. (Stockton Daily Independent, Feb. 12, 1877) The capacity of the new factory was two tons per ten hour run during the season. (Gilbert). The processed product was sold in San Francisco at six cents per pound to manufacturers of coffee. The average yield per acre was from ten to twelve tons. Bachman and Brandt planned at that time to expand their op erations by the cultivation of between three and four hundred acres. (Daily Evening Herald, Sept. 16, 1878). barrels of processed chicory. The fac tory processed about 600 acres of planted chicory, 300 of which was planted by Bachman & Brandt. (Daily Independent, August 18, 1883.) In 1884 Mr. Bachman was in Europe and while there selected improved ma chinery for his factory. (Illustrated History ofSan Joaquin County, p. 525). Bachman & Brandt continued profitably and in 1885 a new factory was built. This factory was made out of molded and wirecut biick purchased from local brick factories. It had iron doors and iron window bars and is the building that still stands in good condition today. Fourteen men were employed at the factory and the capacity was five tons a day of processed chicory. The average output was five hundred tons a year. In 1890 they had the largest chicory factory in the United States, with a trade extending through the Pacific Coast and Central States. In 1889 they harvested 6,000 tons of roots, By 1883 producing one Bachman that fourth & Brandt weight of the fin was de ished product scribed as ready for market. the only (Illustrated His operating tory ofSan chicory Joaquin County, factory in p. 525). By 1900 the State the California of Cali Chicory Works fornia. was a flourishing Until this business center time most in which seven of the teen men were profit had Workers pushing the dried roots to the roasting and grinding rooms employed. gone into factory. Courtesy ofthe Haggin Museum. (Guinn, p. 205). mac~lin Charles Brandt was the superintendent ery, but from 1883 on their investments of the factory operations, while C.A. began to pay. The chicory factory was expected to turn out some six thousand The San Joaquin Historian Page 8 I-\ARVESTlf.,\6 CHICORY ON \U:C!AIMED U\NO .souT\-\ V\IE5T OF ,,:>TOCKTO"'l AC>OUT IB}l5" Bachman was the business manager and sales man ager. (Gilbert! p.280). The Agricultural and Manufactur ingProcess The manufacturing of the chicory root Yardley Cartoon, Courtesy ofHaggin Museum into a saleable product was a relatively woody and would be killed altogether. This was very arduous labor. Brandt simple process and done entirely withnotes that "The help employed were out the use of chemicals. The buildings Japanese! Chinese! and Hindus. [Sikhs]. and machinery used for the manufacturThe Italians worked their own fields. It ing was quite extensive and represented a large amount of capital. Everything is estimated that one man must be employed for every one and a half acres. about the ranch and grounds was described as being in perfect order. The roots grow very fast and by the time they are ready to be pulled aver aged about two or three pounds. Planting The tops often obtained a growth of several feet in height. (Brandt and In a pamphlet San Joaquin County, For Weekly Ma/~ June 4! 1892). the Farmer, F.e. Brandt, Brandt's son, II reported on chicory. Chicory seed was imported from Germany at a cost of $1 per pound. Before planting the land was put into sub-irrigation. He notes! "Chic ory will grow in about the same type of soil, as that required for sugar beets. A sandy loam is best. It must be soil that will not bake. After the seed sprouts, the plants are thinned. 1I Harvesting Harvesting began in August and contin ued through October. A specially designed plow was used to stir the soil and pull the roots from the ground. The roots could then be picked up or pulled "by the Chinese laborers.1I The plant tops were cut off and the roots thrown in heaps. (Stockton Daily Inde The seed was very fine and was drilled in like onion seed, in rows about twelve inches apart. It was planted in Feb ruary or March. Weeds were Asian laborers pulling up chicory roots. Courtesy ofthe Haggtn Museum. kept out by cultivation or the plants would become The San Joaquin Historian penden~ Nov. 9, 1876; Feb.12, 1877! Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892; Brandt). Page 9 Cutting, Roasting, and Grinding The roots were then hauled to the fac tory or mill, where they were taken to the cutting machine and chopped into pieces about an inch square and spread thinly over a large wooden platform for sun-drying. The drying usually took from three to five days. The roots when dry very closely resembled pieces of bone. On different sides of the platform were storehouses for the unroasted root. The dried roots were sometimes stored away until demanded by the trade. The principal building erected in 1885 was where the roasting and grinding was done. It was two stories high, about 100 feet long and built of brick. The lower floor contained the furnaces and the upper floor was where the grinding took place. The new drying kiln or roasting furnace was one of the finest in the country. (With the new kiln, sun drying was probably minimized). Damp ers and flues made it possible to regulate the heat. Roasting required great care, as the end product could be ruined. The roasting temperature must just reach a certain point; a little above or below would ruin the root. The roasting was done in a furnace containing three hollow drums, which kept revolving by steam power using a coke fire. The drums were ar ranged on a shaft that could be drawn from the furnace for the purpose of fill ing or emptying. Each drum was capable of containing 200 pounds of the dried root, which after roasting lost about a quarter of its weight. Green root placed in the kiln was ready for the grinders in nine hours. When the root came from the roaster, it was spread on the floor of the roasting room, afterwards it was taken to the floor above to the grinders and bolters, which worked similarly to the manufac turing of flour. The roots were put through a mill and ground to a course powder like ground coffee. One of the grinders was a very expensive machine imported from Germany. To protect the rollers from any foreign metallic sub stance falling in, the root made a pass over a series of magnetic plates. The product was now practically fin ished, as far as the flavor was concerned, but it was an unpleasing color of yellowish brown. Through a "secret process of the manufacturer" it was changed to a rich chocolate color. The root was now ready for the con sumer. In 1892 an average of fourteen men was employed and the works had a ca pacity of five tons of the finished article a day. The average output of the works was about 500 tons a year. In the process of drying and roasting, the chic ory lost about one-third of its weight, so that ten pounds of the roots would yield about three pounds of chicory. (Manu facturing process described in Stockton Daily Independent, Feb. 12, 1877; Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892; and Brandt). TIlE RO.tSTIsa FUR.'UC1:. The San Joaquin Historian Page 10 Shipping From the Works the product was shipped in bulk in large sacks or barrels to the wholesale dealer, who put it into packaging and shipped it to all parts of the world. (Stockton Daily Independent, Nov. 9,1876; Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892). In 1882 the partners purchased a steam launch named The Dora. (The steamer was built in Stockton with the exception of the boiler. The boat had a speed of about sixteen miles an hour.) The Dora carried the product from the factory to Stockton and San Francisco. Transport ing by horse-drawn wagon to Stockton was a full day's trip. (Weekly Mail, June 4, 1892, Dart) The End ofan Era At the death of Mr. Bachman on No vember 18,1903, the business was carried on under the sole name of Brandt's California Chicory Factory. Mrs. Brandt (Theresa Bachman Brandt) died July 28, 1904. (Guinn, p. 206; Irvine, vol. II, p. 898) The final blow came in 1906 with the Food and Drug Act, which prohibited the mixing of coffee and chicory to be sold under the name of coffee, even if called a coffee blend. Chicory had to be pack aged separately and sold as chicory, since coffee couldn't be adulterated with anything other than another type of cof fee. (Dart) When Brandt's son, Frederick C. Brandt, wrote his description of the chicory in- Thompson and West illustration of the California Chicory Factory, Castoria Township, 1879. The tariff reform of 1895 foreshadowed doom for the domestic chicory when imported raw material ceased to be taxed. Importers now brought in sliced, dried, and unroasted chicory as raw ma terial, which any coffee processor could finish off by roasting and grinding. The San Joaquin Historian dustry, there were about five such concerns in the United States. F. C. Brandt reported that "The land planted to chicory was flooded two years in suc cession and the growers became discouraged, so that for the last three years, no chicory has been produced. Production depends entirely upon the encouragement given the growers by Brandt's factory, which contracts with Page 11 the farmers to buy their crop at so much per ton." (Brandt) 10, 1924. (Stockton Evening Record, Dec. 11, 1924). Brandt de scribed the market for chicory "as very limited and easily flooded and it is only safe to plant a small acreage. About one thousand acres will supply the Pacific Coast demand." He stated that "It is probable that The River Mill Banquet Room showing old factory walls. the chicory fac Susan Platt-Case, photographer:- Signature Photography. tory located here will begin to manufacture the Although the factory building was never product again and thus encourage the used again for chicory processing, it has planting of a limited area." (Brandt) not been abandoned all the time. Until shut down by revenue agents, the fac At the time the price paid the grower for tory was used for the production of the green chicory roots was "usually $10 illegal alcohol during Prohibition. During to $12 per ton at the factory. The yield World War II, Sharpe Army Depot used was from fifteen to twenty tons per it to store groceries. For a time a flea acre. The cost of production including market was held in the building. (Dart) the delivery of the crop to the factory Restored and renovated, it now oper was always figured at $50 per acre, al ates successfully as The River Mill with a though it might be a little greater or less special ambiance that hearkens back to according to the yield. The rental for the days of the Bachman & Brandt Cali fornia Chicory Factory. the land was usually about $15 per acre. If the grower received fifteen tons to the acre and sold at $10 per ton, he got $150 per acre and his costs were about $70 per acre, leaving a profit of $80 per acre." (Brandt) Some time after the 1911 floods Brandt's California Chicory Works quit business. Charles Brandt was seventy two in 1911 and probably had retired. Charles Brandt resided on Union Island at the time of his death on December The San Joaquin Historian Page 12 The River Mill Susan Platt-case, photographet; Signature Photography. The San Joaquin Historian Page 13 Bibliography Brandt, F.C, "Chicory" in San Joaquin County California/ For the Farmer. n.d., p.28-29. Dart, Bill, "Landmark, Chicory Factory Historical Site" in The Manteca News, Wednesday, October 8, 1980, p. A8 Gilbert, F.T., History ofSan Joaquin County, Oakland, Cal.: Thompson and West, 1879, (Reproduction of Thompson and Wests History ofSan Joaquin County, California. Berkeley, California: Howell-North Books, 1968). p. 280 Guinn, J.M., and George H. Tinkham. History of the State of California and Biographical Record ofSan Joaquin County. Vol. II. Los Angeles, CA: His toric Record Co., 1909. Horton, Earl A. Doug, French Camp/ Land of the Beaver. History Thesis. Stockton: University of the Pacific, 1978. An Illustrated History ofSan Joaquin County, California, Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Co., 1890. Irvine, Leigh H., A History ofthe New California/ Its Resources and People. Vol. II. New York: The Lewis Pub. Co., 1905. [Student Paper, author and title un known] (excerpt in River Mill file). Thompson, John., Settlement Geogra phy of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta/ California. Ph.D. Dissertation, Geography. Stanford, University, 1957. The San Joaquin Historian Stockton Newspaper Articles (listed chronologically) "Chicory Factory Destroyed" Stockton Daily Independent, October 9, 1871, p. 3, col.1. "A Chicory Manufactory" Stockton Daily Independent, Feb. 10, 1872, p. 3, col.1. "The Chicory Factory" Stockton Daily Independent, Sept. 21, 1872, p. 3, col. 1. "Chiccory [sic] Factory" Stockton Daily Independent, Jan. 31, 1873, p.3, col.1. "Chiccory" Stockton Daily Independent, Nov. 9, 1876, p. 3, col.2. "Chiccory Culture" Stockton Daily Inde pendent, February 12, 1877, p. 3, col. 1. "Chiccory" Stockton DaIlY Independent, Oct. 26, 1877, p. 3, col.3. "Chiccory Factory" Stockton Daily Inde pendent, July 3, 1878, p. 3, col.2. "The Chiccory Factory" Daily Evening Herald, Stockton, Ca., Sept. 16, 1878, p. 3, col.2. "The Chiccory Industry" Daily Evening Herald, Dec. 5, 1878, p. 3, col.1. "Chiccory Factory, San Joaquin County Boasts of the Only-One in the State" Daily Independent (Stockton, Ca.), Au gust 18, 1883, p.3, col.3. "The Chicory Factory, the County has the Largest One in America" The Weekly Mail(Stockton, Ca.), June 4, 1892, p. 8, no.2. "Death of Carl August Bachmann" Stockton Daily Independent, Nov. 19, 1903, p. 3, col.1. "Charles Brandt Is Laid at Rest" Stock ton Evening Record, December 11, 1924, section 2, p. 19. Gilbert, F.T. History ofSan Joaquin County, Oakland, Cal.: Thompson and West, 1879, (Reproduction of Thompson and Wests History ofSan Joaquin County, California. Berkeley, California: Howell-North Books, 1968). p. 280 Page 14 Mark your calendar for September 23, 2000 CENTURY BUSINESS DINNER Honoring "ON LOCK SAM RESTAURANT" Address correction requested San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum P.O. Box 30 Lodi, CA 95241-0030 Non-Profit Organization POSTAGE PAID Penn it No. 48 Lodi, CA 95241