Showing posts with label Bercut Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bercut Brothers. Show all posts

The Friendly Butcher

So what is the Severn Dairy Mural in Burlingame, CA, doing on a blog about a neighborhood in Redwood City?
Severn Lodge Dairy Mural, Burlingame, CA - waymarking.com
Naturally, there is a connection.  Firstly, its a segue from our last post on the Murals of Redwood City and mural of Friendly Acres, wherein we stressed the point that murals are not only beautiful but they bring the past alive   And secondly, the connection has everything to do with the livelihood of Harry Friend who founded the Friendly Acres neighborhood here in Redwood City.

In a small clip buried in the The Times from May 14, 1937, in the "Do you Remember Section", a tiny blurb entry is posted under "Twenty Years Ago Today".  It reads "Harry Friend and M. Silva of San Mateo and San Bruno, respectively, had purchased a herd of 149 Holstein cattle from the Severn dairy."

The Times and Daily News Leader, Burlingame, San Mateo, CA p.10, Friday 5/14/1937
The information this provided was a clue as to Harry Friend's dealings in the early decades of the 20th century.  Indeed, what was interesting about the purchase was that it clearly must have been important to be remembered by the newspapers twenty years later.

Friend had bought the cattle in 1917, which is around the time when the Severn Lodge mural is believed to have been painted.  The mural was created to advertize the Severn Dairy Creamery on California Drive, as well as the Milk Delivery company.

The purchase was also of note because it occurred at the peak of World War I,  and a month after the United States decided to join the Great War.  The average price per head, all ages, of cattle other than milk cows, was $35.92 in 1917 and sky rocketed almost 25% to $44.22 in 1919.

And Friend made the purchase not just with anyone, but with Manuel Silva, the son of the renowned rancher Custodio Silva.

Mr. [Custodio] Silva, of Silva Ranch, San Bruno, 188-? Online Archive of California - Contributing Institution: San Bruno Public Library, 
The Silvas had established themselves since the 1880s as ranchers on the Peninsula with various properties in and around the San Bruno and Millbrae areas - and were known most especially for their horse ranch close to the Tanforan thoroughbred RaceTrack.  Horses, and horse power, at the turn of the century were still the predominant mode of load pulling and transportation, everywhere, not just on farms.

A seven horse Hay Wagon cor. San Bruno Ave. & Oakdale Ave. On its way to the stock yards at Butcher Town. April 6 1928; OAC, Contributing Institution: UC Berkeley, Bancroft Library
For Harry Friend, the joint transaction with Silva for the Holsteins wasn't for dairy farming so much as for the Slaughterhouse which he operated in San Bruno.  The buying and selling of hides was an offshoot by-product venture which he also ran.

Cowboy corralling cattle at Butchertown in 1921.  Photograph dated  Jan 11 1921.
Source: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library
It turns out that Friend was a butcher by trade.  He had arrived in the U.S. on Nov 13th 1901, age 26, from Kalisz, Poland, and his arrival records at Ellis Island, indicate his occupation as butcher.  His departure records from Hamburg corroborate not only his age but also his occupation as a "Fleischergeselle", which translates literally as "Journeyman Butcher".  (Note: A journeyman is not an Apprentice, but neither is he a Master of his trade.  A journeyman, comes from the french for "journée", meaning "day",  and meant someone who was hired by the day, i.e. paid on a daily basis, and not salaried.  Typically, they would be hired or contracted out to master tradesmen to fulfill a job.)

Immediately on arrival at Ellis Island, his name would be changed to the anglicized "Harry Friend" from the German "Abraham Freund", as per the departure records from Hamburg and ship's manifest of the SS. Milano.  Thereafter, he would use his arrival date in the U.S. as his date of birth, intentionally shaving off five years from his age.  Presumably this was to improve his job prospects in his newly adopted country - in essence creating a new identity and a new life for himself and his family. 

After leaving Ellis Island and settling down in Brooklyn and Manhattan, we know from the 1905 New York City Census records that Friend was already occupied as a Butcher there.  He moved west to San Francisco with his wife, child, and younger brother Solomon, shortly after.

By 1910 the family were living in Vista Grande, which, a year later in 1911, would become known as Daly City. (Vista Grande was a refugee village which had sprung up on a hillside known as Daly's Hill on John Daly's dairy farm, where people fleeing the 1906 San Francisco earthquake began to erect semi-permanent and permanent structures.)

While living in Vista Grande, Friend was working as a self-employed hide buyer and broker.  Hides were a cash commodity and typically hide buyers were employed by the local tanneries.  Smaller tanneries would buy their raw material from reliable slaughterer brokers or receivers that they could trust.  Friend's experience as a butcher/slaughterer made him a valuable asset to many businesses that relied on the raw materials, not just hides and skins, from cattle and livestock.

He still maintained a butcher's business and in 1917, Friend is registered with a licensed slaughter house in San Bruno.

The records indicate he continued on in business as a Butcher until 1922, around his mid-40s when he took up real estate full time.  His daughter, Eva, who was also his bookkeeper ended up marrying within the trade, to Jean Bercut, of the famed Bercut Brothers.  The Bercuts emigrated from Limoges, France, in 1906, and Henri and Pierre, Jean's brothers, opened their first butcher's shop, "Grand Market" in San Francisco in 1912.  They went on to establish the nationally famous Grant Meat Market, located at 743 Market Street, at the tail of Grant Ave where it runs into Market Street.  The Bercut Bros. were known to have the finest meat market in the United States, their reputation having been made initially on boneless cuts of beef.
San Francisco Chronicle, 17 Dec 1912

They eventually relocated to Chestnut Street and in the 1960s the old Meat Market on Grant was turned into a parking lot.



References:

  1. Horse Hay wagon Image:   http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/tf4m3nb5h4/?docId=tf4m3nb5h4&layout=printable-details | 7 horse hay wagon
  2. Lead Steer Image:   http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/tf4489p21v/?query=butcher%20town&brand=calisphere - Lead Steer
  3. Custodia Silva Image:  http://www.oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt938nd5qr/?docId=kt938nd5qr&brand=oac4&layout=printable-details | - Online Archive of California ; California Digital Library
  4.  Sausalito News, Vol 37, # 27, 2 July 1921 - Much Loss in Beef Cattle | http://cdnc.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/cdnc?a=d&d=SN19210702.2.19.1#
  5. Severn Lodge Dairy Mural, Burlingame - Waymarking.com
  6. Severn Lodge - The Founding Families of Burlingame-Hillsborough blog
  7. Severn Dairy - https://burlingamememories.wordpress.com/exhibitions/severn-dairy/
  8. Henry Pike Bowie and Severn Lodge in article "Jeffer Daykin: Henry Pike Bowie & the "Daimyo" Gate" Aug 17, 2009 in  Half Moon Bay Memories & El Granada Observer, Created by June MorrallHamburg Passenger Manifest Oct 1 1901, Milano Ship, Ellis Island Foundation Passenger Search. http://libertyellisfoundation.org
  9. Cattle Brands and Licensed Slaughterers of 1918 - Showing all recorded Cattle Brands and the names and addresses of all licensed slaughterers on record in the offiÅ“ of the Cattle Protection Board of California - published by the Cattle Protection Board of California., 1919
  10. California Census and Voter Registrations


Cherchez la femme: Mrs Harry Friend

Gussie and Harry Friend
For the longest time, I had been hoping to find a photograph of Harry Friend, the developer of Friendly Acres.  I only had a photo of a street sign named after him so I was really keen on putting a face to the name.  After trawling the internet exhaustively, newspaper archives and genealogy sites, all to no avail, I decided to switch track and follow the wise adage of 'cherchez la femme'.  So I began researching his wife, Gussie, instead.

I knew that Mr and Mrs Friend had moved out of Friendly Acres to live out their retirement years in San Carlos, so I searched for Gussie Friend in San Carlos and, lo and behold, found her obituary in the San Mateo Times for November 5, 1974.

The obit was short. Her funeral was private, restricted to family only.  Mrs. Friend, 93, a native of Poland, a resident of 1525 San Carlos Avenue, had lived in San Mateo County for 65 years.  She was survived by a daughter, Miss Eva Bercut of San Francisco: two grandchildren and three great grandchildren.   Her interment was at Woodlawn Cemetery in Colma.

Woodlawn is part of the chain of cemeteries that makes up Colma city, the largest necropolis in the world.  Its also a crematorium.  And the Friends were cremated.  Their remains are together in a brass box engraved with their names and crowned with a masonic seal, locked behind a glass case.  Next to them are the remains of the rest of their family.


On the glass front case in front of every niche, the Bercut-Lust Family, Friend's great grandchildren, had taken the trouble of placing a photo of their loved ones.  He had died in 1961 and his wife thirteen years later in 1972.
 
Harry and Gussie Friend, Woodlawn Cemetery, Colma, CA
Eva and Jean Bercut, daughter and son-in-law of Harry and Gussie Friend.
Jean Bercut, husband of Eva Bercut (nee Friend), [and co-founder of the famous Bercut Brothers Meat Market of San Francisco].
Eva Friend Bercut, born 1901 - died 2002.  A centenarian with 101 years on her belt when she passed.  Wearing, in this photo, what looks like a Spanish mantilla in a very 1950s pose.

The funerary boxes for Harry Friend and his son-in-law Jean Bercut, both have masonic badges engraved on the front.  A newspaper article in the San Mateo Times of October 22 1927 confirmed that Harry Friend waa indeed a Mason who had been inducted into the Islam Temple of the Mystic Shrine in San Francisco.

At the beginning of the 20th century almost 1 in 10 men belonged to a freemason association.  The affiliation provided men who were already leaders or active in their communities with business contacts and networks which transcended cultural prejudices and superstitions.

After the devastation of the 1906 earthquake and the aftermath of the First World War of 1914-18, the Shriners civic-minded values sought to rebuild and contribute to their communities on a grand scale, building hospitals, schools and more.  While monotheistic, they were typically non-denominational, enjoying membership from many religions.  And the Bay Area, according to Jweekly.com, was "one of the least anti-semitic regions". (Harry Friend was a Prussian Jewish Ã©migré.)
 
The "Islam Temple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine" or "mosque" on 650 Geary where Harry Friend was inducted is a wonderful arabesque of a building, inspired by the Alhambra of Granada in Spain.  Built in 1918, it remained in use by the Shriners until 1972, when operational maintenance and funding needs necessitated a move to another location in the city, with the Shriners finally settling on new headquarters in San Mateo in 1994.  Their original building on Geary still stands, and is one of San Francisco's most visually interesting and architecturally stunning buildings.  Today it is used by the Alcazar Theatre.



In recognition of the anti-islamist sensitivity and political repercussions following the 9/11 tragedy, the San Francisco lodge changed its name in 2002 from Islam Temple to the Asiya Shriners of San Mateo.

On a final note, Woodlawn Cemetery in Colma, is also famously known as the  Masonic Cemetery.   In 1901, in order to make room for the building of the University of San Francisco, the remains of those who had originally been buried in the Masonic Cemetery, (1864-1901), on Masonic Street, were moved out of the city to Woodlawn Cemetery in Colma.  The tombstones of the original San Francisco plots were used as fill on the approaches to the Golden Gate Bridge.

If you pay a visit to Woodlawn Memorial park don't be surprised by the extent of Masonic insignia.  Its an interesting place to wander around on a Memorial Day afternoon, while remembering those who have gone before us.

And a fitting resting place for Harry Friend. 

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References:
  1. Newspapers.com archive:  obituary for Gussie Friend, San Mateo Times, page 31 November 5 1974.
  2. Woodlawn Cemetery, Colma, California
  3. Findagrave.com:  Search and Reference Information on Woodlawn Cemetery  
  4. Jewish Weekly News of Northern California.   Jews and Freemasons - a not so secret brotherhood:  http://www.jweekly.com/article/full/20507/jews-and-freemasons-a-not-so-secret-brotherhood/ 
  5. Patheos - http://www.patheos.com/blogs/altmuslim/2002/09/shriner_clubs_change_names_due_to_anti_islamic_sentiments/
  6. San Francisco City Guides: 650 Geary - http://www.sfcityguides.org/public_guidelines.html?srch_text=Isadora+Duncan&submit=Search&submitted2=TRUE%2F
  7. Timeshutter.com: Islam Temple AAONMS, San Francisco CA, 1910 - http://www.timeshutter.com/image/islam-temple-aaonms-san-francisco-cal
  8. SFCurbed.com; The Landmarks: #195 The Alcazar Theater on Geary Street: http://sf.curbed.com/archives/2013/12/16/the_landmarks_195_the_alcazar_theater_on_geary_street.php