Harris Newmark
I believe Los Angeles is destined to become, in not many years, a world-center prominent in almost every field of endeavor. [Just] as nineteen hundred years ago the humblest Roman . . . would glow with pride when he said "I am a Roman!" so will the son of the metropolis on these shores . . . be proud to declare "I AM A CITIZEN OF LOS ANGELES!"
-- Harris
Newmark, 1915 |
Harris
Newmark (1834-1916) arrived in
Los Angeles
from
West Prussia
in 1853, learned Spanish before he learned
English in order to run his downtown merchandise and grocery business, and
began collecting his impressions of people and events in the cultural backwater
that
Los Angeles
was at the time. As one historian noted, Newmark "knew almost everyone and
knew almost everything that went on in town."
Following
an older brother, Joseph, to
California
,
Newmark made the journey from
Europe
by ship,
crossing the Isthmus of Nicaragua, arriving in San Pedro on October 25,
1853. Here he was greeted heartily by another
Los Angeles
pioneer, Phineas Banning, the father of the
Port
of
Los Angeles
. Banning,
who was building a business as a wagoneer, hauling goods in and out of San
Pedro and
Los Angeles
,
would eventually join in many business enterprises with the new
arrival.
After
working in partnership with his brother, Newmark eventually established his own
wholesale grocery business, H. Newmark and Company, in 1865, with headquarters
on Spring Street. He went on to invest in real estate, holding large
tracts in the
San Gabriel
Valley
, and once winning
a lot in what was once the "wilderness" just west of the city for $2.
He later sold the same lot for $10,000 profit. In 1875 he sold eight
thousand acres of what was then the Santa Anita Rancho to rancher E.J.
"Lucky" Baldwin. Other Newmark properties became the foundations
for the town of
Montebello
.
He married
a cousin, Sarah, in 1858. Her memorable comment upon arriving in
Los Angeles
for the first
time was: "Where's the city?" The Newmarks were parents of
eleven children; only seven of which survived.
Newmark
was a charter member of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, one of the
organizers of the first Los Angeles Board of Trade, one of the organizers of
the Los Angeles Public Library, President of the
Los Angeles
congregation of B'nai
B'rith. He was instrumental in the early years of the
Southwest
Museum
and a charter member of the California Club. Newmark’s business
acumen and real estate holdings propelled him into the front ranks of civic
leadership in turn-of-the century
Los
Angeles
. As a patriarch of the city’s Jewish
community, he endowed Jewish charities and assisted the broader community by
organizing a board of trade and founding a public library.
Late
in life, working with his sons Maurice and Marco and Pasadena
historian/researcher Perry Worden, Newmark assembled his recollections in a
landmark book, Sixty Years In Southern California: 1853-1913, a work
described by California historian and State Librarian Kevin Starr as "the
single most valuable memoir to deal with the rise of the Southland in the 19th
century.”
Newmark's
eldest son Maurice, born in 1859, was sent to
Europe
for his education and eventually took over management of his father's
commercial interests and joined him in many of his civic activities. His
youngest surviving child, Marco, was a noted local historian, and served for a
time as president of the Historical Society of Southern
California.
--Contributed
by Albert Greenstein, 1999
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