-1880_small.jpg)
[Images obtained from 'History of Sacramento County California' in
1880, published by Thompson & West, Oakland, Cal. 1880]
Sacramento
County
Biographies
Information thanks to Nancy Pratt Melton:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~npmelton/sacvale.htm
MRS. ALICE M. VALENSIN
MRS. ALICE M. VALENSIN.--Among the
prominent California women who have made a name for themselves and have added to
the honors and laurels already won by their distinguished families, may well be
included Mrs. Alice M. Valensin, a native of
Independence, Mo., and the daughter of John F. McCauley and his good wife, who
in maidenhood was Miss Caroline Wilson. Mrs. Valensin's
maternal grandmother was a
Davis, of
the famous
Davis
family to which Jefferson Davis belonged, while her grandfather, also on her
mother's side, was Thomas Wilson, a member of one of the first families to
settle in
Virginia.
He was a native of
Tennessee,
and was sent to
England
for his higher education. Later he settled at
Independence,
Mo.,
and was killed in the Mormon War. His daughter, Caroline Wilson, also a native
of
Tennessee,
grew up on her father's plantation, where he was a slave-owner, and she enjoyed
the best of educational advantages of her day. Mrs.
Valensin's father and paternal grandfather were both born in
Abingdon,
Va.
They were also planters and were of good old Dominion stock.
John F. McCauley was a veteran of the Mexican War. Before that conflict his
father had given him $10,000 and a body-servant, and he traveled throughout the
Middle West,
and at length came to
Independence,
Mo.,
where he married Miss Wilson. He came from an old Scotch family whose genealogy
reaches back into the high-lands of
Scotland,
some members of which migrated to the
United States
and settled in
Virginia;
and he had three brothers who lost their lives in the Civil War, fighting on the
Confederate side for "The Lost Cause." As a result of his activity in organizing
a company for the Mexican War, John F. McCauley was often called "Colonel," and
although this was a purely honorary title, it befitted him splendidly, as he was
a Southern gentleman of the old school. At the time he was a man of rare
executive ability and no small amount of initiative. This was well brought out
in 1852, when with several of his Mexican War comrades, he started across the
great plains for California, accompanied by his wife and infant daughter, the
subject of this review, traveling by way of the Salt Lake route, and stopping in
San Joaquin County, Cal. William Hicks, Mrs. Valensin's
step-grandfather, met this train, which included several hundred head of stock
and a number of slaves, at Salt Lake City. Mr. Hicks had
come to
California
in 1847, and had acquired a large estate in
Sacramento
County.
He had a small settlement called Hicksville,
all upon his own land; and he owned lands in
San Joaquin,
Stanislaus, and
Sonoma
Counties.
He was a close associate of General Sutter, and kept watch many a night at
Sutter's Fort, when trouble with the natives was expected, or actually had
broken out. John F. McCauley later acquired a great deal of the Hick's estate,
known at that time as one of the five largest properties in
California.
Mr. McCauley's experience in the Mexican War proved of value to him when he
started on his trip across the continent. He was prepared to deal sagaciously
and justly with the Indians. He had with him an abundance of gifts with which to
win their friendship and could also make himself easily understood; and whenever
the train was confronted with hostile savages he settled peaceably with them,
and the train passed on safely without anyone being killed.
John F. McCauley brought a large sum of money with him to
California,
and upon settling here he loaned it to the State of
California.
Later, there was an attempt to repudiate the debt, and an interesting historical
account shows Mr. McCauley's resourcefulness and strategy. To grant the payment
of the loan made by Mr. McCauley, the state legislature had to pass a bill
allowing a disbursement to that amount, but it was generally known that the
governor would veto any such bill. At the time when this measure was up in the
legislature, one of Mr. McCauley's Mexican War veterans was conducting San
Quentin prison on a lease basis. Mr. McCauley
secured this lease from his old comrade; and when the governor visited the
prison on one of his regular inspection trips, he was induced to sign the bill
for payment of the loan.
John F. McCauleu settled in
San Francisco,
and there he always continued to reside, one of the picturesque figures of the
metropolis. He was greatly criticized by the press in those early days for what
he did, but it is a matter of record that through his management of the San
Quentin penitentiary was made to pay its own expenses, for many stores and brick
buildings in
San Francisco
were built through convict labor, at his suggestion. He had acquired 10,000
acres of land, in
San Joaquin
County,
on Dry Creek and
Mokelumne
River,
in
Sacramento
County,
and also in
San Francisco.
The title to the estate in Sacramento County was finally cleared in Washington,
after being entailed by counter claims set up by holders of the old Spanish
grants which originally embraced this acreage, and then later some of the
squatters had to be evicted bodily from the estate.
Mrs. Alice M. Valensin was one of four children in
her parents' family. Two brothers, John William and Richard McCauley, are now
deceased. The other brother is George B. McCauley, of Forest Lake Ranch,
San Joaquin
County,
who also has a home in
Santa Cruz
and
Oakland,
and maintains a home at
Independence,
Mo.
He has one daughter, Caroline. Mrs. Valensin first
went to the school kept by the Sisters of St. Vincent, in
San Francisco,
and later she attended the Notre Dame Convent at
San Jose.
When the Civil War broke out, John F. McCauley, having sprung from old Southern
stock, naturally showed his sympathies for his native section, and things were
made exceedingly unpleasant for him in
San Francisco,
where he and Dr. William Scott, a Presbyterian clergyman, were hanged in effigy,
as "Southern Sympathizers." Mr. McCauley, after some difficulty, succeeded in
boarding an English vessel. and sailed with his
family for
Europe.
At that time, our subject was a little girl, with a child's enthusiasm and a
child's non-understanding; and because she sang "Dixie"
in a San Francisco Hotel, she was charged with treason and a warrant was issued
for her arrest. When confronted by the warrant officers, her father asked them
if they wished to hear the young musician sing the song, and he proceeded to
place
Alice
at the piano; and with such innocent spirit did she sing that the officers,
seeing the folly of such a silly warrant, went away laughing. During the war,
Mr. McCauley outfitted a company of some 500 men, whose purpose was to reach the
South and actively lend what aid they could to the Southerners; but although
they made several attempts to run the Federal Blockade in Texas and Arizona,
they did not all succeed in reaching their wished for goal. In
Europe,
the McCauley's made their home in
Paris;
and there our subject attended the Convent of the Sacred Heart, and in the
French capital finished her education. Grandfather McCauley lived to be nearly
one hundred years old, and both Mr. and Mrs. John F. McCauley almost reached
their ninetieth year.
While in
Europe,
the McCauleys went south into
Italy,
and at
Florence,
Miss Alice met Julio Valensin, and they were married
on
February 19,
1873. Mr.
Valensin was born in
Egypt, a
son of Moise Valensin
and Elena Del Valle Valensin, the former an Italian
banker and successful business man who had two banks, one in
England,
and the other in
Florence.
In the case of Julio's mother there was an interesting combination of Spanish,
Scotch and Italian blood; and because Julio Valensin
was what he was, the McCauley's moved in the society of the royal
family, and mingled with diplomats and scholars. Mrs.
Valensin not only traveled throughout
Europe,
but she personally drove a four-in-hand over the mountain roads of
Switzerland.
Her husband had fine horses, and he took great joy in seeing his wife handle
them. He had been educated by private tutors. In
California,
he lived on the ranch where he trained his horses; and he was the owner of
"Sidney," then the fastest trotter in the
United States.
He died in
Cleveland,
Ohio,
in 1892, while on a visit there with race-horses. Mr.
Valensin was a very handsome man, was a good linguist, and spoke English
so fluently and with such an excellent accent that one might have taken him for
an English instead of an Italian gentleman.
In 1874, Mr. and Mrs. Valensin came out to
California
on a trip, but they returned to
Italy
intending to remain. However, Mr. Valensin's passion
for trotting-horses brought him back to stay. He had purchased property at
Pleasanton,
and was an enthusiast for blooded race-horses. Mr. and Mrs.
Valensin always called the McCauley Rancho their home, and she has
resided upon the home-place ever since her return. Upon her father's death, she
received 4,000 acres of land in
Sacramento
County,
to which has been added 2,000 acres, and also 2,000 acres of range land at
Burson,
Calaveras
County.
During the life of her husband, the ranch was devoted to the raising of
race-horses; but after his death she converted the entire ranch into a cattle
and grain farm. For some time she has maintained a herd of from 1,500 to 2,000
head of cattle, and from 100 to 200 head of horses. During the "Boxer" rebellion
in
China,
she sold many head of horses to both the English and German governments.
Mrs. Valensin has one son, Pio
Valensin, who, on attaining his eighteenth year,
while still continuing his studies, assumed the management of their large
estate. He was born in Florence, on November 26, 1873, and was privately tutored
by Monsignor Capel, a noted Roman Catholic Prelate
and scholar; and on December 1, 1917, he was married at Oakland to Katherine
Koster, who was born in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany,
the daughter of Jerry and Doris (Heinz) Koster. Her
father was a sea-captain of French descent, who had
an adventurous life at sea; while her mother was of German descent and came from
a family of farmers. Her parents are living at Castroville. In 1890, the family
came to
San Francisco;
but her father soon removed to
Franklin,
in
Sacramento
County,
where he bought land and there farmed, in time becoming naturalized. He later
retired and removed to Castroville. The worthy couple had four children:
Margaret, the eldest, has become Mrs. Booth of
Florin;
then came John and Mrs. Pio
Valensin; while the youngest is Emma, of
Sacramento.
Katherine Koster Valensin
attended the
Franklin
district school, and now she supervises the educational training of their only
son, Pio Valensin, Jr.
The Valensin family are
staunch Democrats, and Pio has been often urged to
run for the legislature; but owing to his many and pressing duties on the ranch,
he has steadily refused. He has been for years past a member of the Democratic
County Central Committee. Mrs. Alice M.
Valensin is a devout member of the Roman Catholic
Church, and about as interesting a conversationalist, with her great fund of
reminiscence, as one may anywhere find. She has all sorts of stories to tell,
and not a few are in one way or another echoes of her old family days. It is
interesting to relate, for example, that Elizabeth Pia
Matthews, their colored maid, was born, thirty-four years ago, on the
Valensin ranch, and has ever since remained with
our subject.
Elizabeth
is a refined, well-educated young woman, an honor to her race as well as to the
family in which she has been reared. She is the daughter of an old pioneer
California
family, her grandparents having come to
California
as slaves, and she has always been most loyal to the
McCauleys, so long among the Matthew's best friends. Her grandmother
nursed George McCauley when he was a baby.
Sacramento County cannot fail to feel a pride in this worthy representative of
an old American family, whose annals tell again the abounding story of how a
nation once fell out, on account of a family misunderstanding, and luckily fell
into line again, since when, now for many years, it has presented to the once
skeptical world a united front of impregnable strength.
Transcribed
by Sally Kaleta.
Source: Reed, G. Walter, History of
Sacramento County,
California
With Biographical Sketches, Pages 297-299. Historic
Record Company,
Los Angeles, CA. 1923.
© 2006
Sally Kaleta.