John Tracy Gaffey

John Tracy Gaffey (1860–1935) was a journalist, state and city official, real-estate speculator and investor at the turn of the 20th century in Los Angeles, California.

Gaffey

Personal

Gaffey was born on November 1, 1860,[1] in Galway, Ireland, the son of Thomas Gaffey and Ann E. Tracy. His father died when the boy was 5 years old. His oldest brother, William, became wanted by the authorities for sedition because of his beliefs regarding Irish independence, and so and his family, headed by a widow with seven children, emigrated to California in 1866-67 via the Isthmus of Panama.[2] They pioneered near Santa Cruz on a cattle and sheep ranch, later moving to San Francisco, where Gaffey went to high school and then spent a year at the University of California, Berkeley.[3][4]

He was married in St. Vibiana's Cathedral on June 1, 1887, to Arcadia Bandini, who was the granddaughter of pioneer Juan Bandini. Her mother was Esperanza de Sepulveda. They had two children, John and Margaret (Mrs. John Mell).[3][4][5]

A Catholic, Gaffey was a founder of the California Club of Los Angeles and was a member of the Bohemian Club of San Francisco and the Tuna Club of Catalina Island.[3] He was a member of the Los Angeles County Democratic Central Committee, the Federated Tax Reduction Leagues of the county and the Free Harbor League.[6][7]

Around 1904 or 1905 he moved the family from Los Angeles to San Pedro, where he built a rustic ranch house in 1906, at 1131 West Third Street. He later moved that house across the street and on the first lot he built a three-story homet, which he named Hacienda La Rambla. It was razed in 1964 for the construction of a YMCA building.[4]

Gaffey died January 9, 1935, in his home. He was survived by a son, W. Casey Gaffey of San Pedro, and a daughter, Mrs. Margaret Kilroy of Santa Monica. Burial was slated for Valley Church in Watsonville, California.[8] He left an estate valued at $236,000.[9]

Vocation

At the age of 20, Gaffey became a reporter with the Santa Cruz Courier. In 1879, he founded a short-lived newspaper called the Santa Cruz Herald. Later, he became a law clerk for the California Supreme Court. In 1892 he was manager for Stephen M. White in his successful campaign for election to the U.S. Senate by the California State Legislature.[4] In 1893, he became the first editor of the Los Angeles Herald.[8]

He was a member of the Los Angeles City Council in 1892-94 and was collector of customs in 1890-93. He had mining interests in Mexico, oil interests in Texas and real-estate holdings. He was a member of the California State Board of Equalization.[7] He played a major role in the founding of the Los Angeles Harbor in San Pedro.[6][8]

Legacy

In San Pedro, Gaffey Street was named after him, and a plaque memorializes him in the Gaffey Building, where he had his office, 333 West Sixth Streety.[4]

gollark: +>markov 258639553357676545 2
gollark: Or was it thousand? Hmmm.
gollark: +>markov 258639553357676545 2
gollark: I also uploaded several hundred digits of π into it.
gollark: +>markov 258639553357676545 2

References

  1. Guide to the John Tracy Gaffey Papers, 1884–1934, Online Archive of California, states he was born in 1859.
  2. The Los Angeles Times stated on February 20, 1925, that they sailed "around the Horn."
  3. Clare Wallace, Los Angeles Public Library Reference File, January 8, 1937, with sources as cited there
  4. Sam Gnerre, "The Man Behind San Pedro's Gaffey Street," South Bay Daily Breeze, May 17, 2014
  5. version states: "On a trip to Los Angeles in 1882 he met Dolores and Arcadia Bandini, daughters of Juan Batista Bandini, who was the grandson of pioneer Spanish California settler Jose Bandini." Sam Gnerre, "The Man Behind San Pedro's Gaffey Street," South Bay Daily Breeze, May 17, 2014
  6. "Mrs. Gaffey, Daughter of Bandini, Dies at 85
  7. Guide to the John Tracy Gaffey Papers, 1884–1934, Online Archive of California
  8. "End Comes to Gaffey," Los Angeles Times, January 10, 1935, pages A-1 and A-6
  9. "J.T. Gaffey Will Filed", Los Angeles Times, February 20, 1935, page A3]
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.