:''For the high school named after Lick, see
James Lick High School.''

James Lick
'James Lick' (
August 25,
1796 –
October 1,
1876) was an
American carpenter,
piano builder, land baron, and patron of the sciences. At the time of his death, he was the wealthiest man in
California, and left the majority of his estate to social and scientific causes.
Early years
James Lick was born in Stumpstown (now
Fredericksburg)
Pennsylvania on
August 25,
1796. The son of a
carpenter, Lick began learning the craft at an early age. When he was twenty one, after a failed romance with
Barbara Snavely, Lick left Stumpstown for
Baltimore, Maryland, where he learned the art of piano making. He quickly mastered the skill, and moved to
New York and set up his own shop. In
1821 Lick moved to
Argentina, after learning that his pianos were being
exported to
South America.
South American years
Lick found his time in
Buenos Aires to be difficult, due to his ignorance of
Spanish and the turbulent political situation in the country. However, his business thrived and in
1825 Lick left Argentina to tour
Europe for a year. On his return trip, his ship was captured by the
Portuguese, and the passengers and crew were taken to
Montevideo as
prisoners of war. Lick escaped captivity and returned to Buenos Aires on foot.
In
1832, Lick decided to return to Stumpstown. He failed to reunite with Barbara Snavely and their son and returned to Buenos Aires. He decided the political situation was too unstable and moved to
Valparaíso,
Chile. After four years, he again moved his business, this time to
Lima,
Peru.
In
1846, Lick decided to return to
North America and, anticipating the
Mexican-American War and the future annexation of
California, he decided to settle there. However, a backlog of orders for his pianos delayed him an additional 18 months, as the Mexican workers he employed left to return to their homes and join the Mexican Army following the outbreak of war in April of that year; he finished the orders himself.
California years
Lick arrived in
San Francisco, California, in January
1848, bringing with him his tools, work bench, $30,000 in
gold, and 600 pounds (300 kg) of
chocolate. The chocolate quickly sold, and Lick convinced his neighbor in
Peru, the
confectioner Domingo Ghirardelli, to move to San Francisco, where he founded the
Ghirardelli Chocolate Company.
Upon his arrival, Lick began buying
real estate in the small village of San Francisco. The discovery of gold at
Sutter's Mill near
Sacramento a few days after Lick's arrival in the future state began the
California Gold Rush and created a housing boom in San Francisco, which grew from about one thousand residents in 1848 to over twenty thousand by
1850. Lick himself got a touch of "gold fever" and went out to mine the metal, but after a week he decided his fortune was to be made by owning land, not digging in it. Lick continued buying land in San Francisco, and also began buying farmland in and around
San Jose, where he planted
orchards and built the largest
flour mill in the state to feed the growing population in San Francisco.
In
1861, Lick began construction of a
hotel, which became known as ''Lick House'', at the intersection of Montgomery and Sutter Streets in San Francisco. The hotel had a dining room that could seat 400, based on a similar room at the palace of
Versailles. Lick House was considered the finest hotel west of the
Mississippi River. The hotel was destroyed in the fire following the
San Francisco earthquake of 1906.
Following the construction, Lick returned to his San Jose orchards. In
1874, Lick suffered a massive
stroke in the kitchen of his home in
Santa Clara. The following morning, he was found by his employee, Thomas Fraser, and taken to Lick House, where he could be better cared for. At the time of his illness, his estates, outside his considerable area in
Santa Clara County and San Francisco, included large holdings around
Lake Tahoe, a large
ranch in
Los Angeles County, and all of
Santa Catalina Island. James Lick was the richest man in California.
In the next three years, Lick spent his time determining how to dispense with his fortune. He originally wanted to build giant statues of himself and his parents, and erect a
pyramid larger than the
Great Pyramid of Giza in his own honor in Downtown San Francisco. However, through the efforts of George Davidson, President of the
California Academy of Sciences, Lick was persuaded to leave the greatest portion of his fortune to the establishment of a mountain top
observatory, with the largest, most powerful
telescope yet built by man. Lick had had an interest in astronomy since at least
1860, when he and
George Madeira, the founder of the first observatory in California, spent several nights observing. They had also met again in
1873 and Lick said that Madeira's telescopes were the only ones he had ever used. In
1875, Thomas Fraser recommended a site at the
summit of
Mount Hamilton, near San Jose. Lick approved, on the condition that Santa Clara County build a "first class" road to the site. The county agreed and the hand built road was completed by the fall of
1876.
On
October 1,
1876, Lick died in his room in Lick House, San Francisco. In
1887, his body was moved to its final resting place, under the future home of the
Great Lick Refracting Telescope.
Lick's legacy
★ Lick's will stipulated that all of his fortune should be used for the public good, including $700,000 for the building of the observatory.
★ In
1888,
Lick Observatory was completed and given to the
University of California as the Lick Astronomical Department. The Observatory was the first permanently staffed mountain top observatory in the world and housed the largest
refracting telescope in the world at that time.
★ In
1887 Lick's body was buried under the future site of the telescope, with a brass tablet bearing the inscription, "Here lies the body of James Lick."
★
James Lick Mansion in Santa Clara is a nationally registered historical landmark, and is leased at very low rates to non-profit organizations.
As of 2003 the mansion is occupied by the S.A.F.E. Place.
★ In
1884, the Lick Old Ladies Home in San Francisco was established with a grant from the Lick estate.
★ The
Conservatory of Flowers and the
statue of
Francis Scott Key in
Golden Gate Park were donated to San Francisco by Lick.
★ The Pioneer Monument in front of San Francisco's City Hall was donated by Lick to the city.
★
James Lick High School in
San Jose and James Lick Middle School,
Lick-Wilmerding High School, and the
James Lick Freeway, all in
San Francisco, are named in his honor.
★ The
Southern Pacific Railroad named a Control Point after Lick (CP Lick) on their
Coast Line route in San Jose, California. At the same location there was also once a Lick Station and Lick Branch rail line that went into San Jose's
Almaden Valley but was abandoned in the early 1980s.
★ The
Lick crater on the
Moon and the
asteroid 1951 Lick are named after him.
Lickdale, Pennsylvania, a village approximately 3 miles west of Fredericksburg, Pennsylvania (formerly Stumpstown), was named for James Lick. Lickdale was a prominent 19th century canal port along a branch of the Union Canal and contained a large commercial ice house.
A large monument to James Lick was erected by the local citizens in the community cemetery in Fredericksburg, Pennsylvania.
External links
★
University of Califonia Observatory, History of James Lick