Thomas Foxwell Bachelder Barn
Thomas Foxwell Bachelder Barn is a historical building in Sunol, California. The American Bag and Union Hide Company building built in 1888. he American Bag and Union Hide Company building was listed to the National Register of Historic Places on April 15, 1994. The Thomas Foxwell Bachelder Barn is a two-and-a-half story, stone building at the bottom of a hill in rural setting of Sunol. The barn was built from stones from Sinbad Creek, across the street from the barn. In the creek are still some stonecutter's marks in rocks. The stones are rough cut, with no finishing work. The agricultural building was built with are 36 inch think stone walls. The barn served the 900-acre Bachelder farm. The farm was part of the 2,108-acre Bachelder Rancho that was as subdivided in 1884. The only other remains of the farm are two stone-lined cisterns and the stone foundations of a bridge and an old house. The barn was sold to its current owners in 1975. By 1975, the barn had been vacant for years and was dilapidated, as most of the wood parts of the barn were in very poor condition or missing. At that time the barn still had it original dirt first story dirt floor. The new owner converted the 1888 barn into a home and had it seismic retrofitting. It was listed, as it one of the five most important buildings from Sunol's early years. The other buildings being: the Sunol Water Temple, Elliston, the old Congregational Church, and the Apperson House.
Thomas Foxwell Bachelder Barn | |
Location | 1011 Kilkare Rd., Sunol, California |
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Coordinates | 37.609592°N 121.895436°W |
Built | 1888 |
NRHP reference No. | 94000359[1] |
Added to NRHP | April 15, 1994 |
Bachelder was born in 1834 in Maine. In Maine, Bachelder studied law and was a lawyer in Maine. He came to in California in 1864 and practiced law in San Francisco. He slowly bought up 2,108 acres of land in Sunol along the Sinbad Creek and planted time 350 acres of orchards. Later, in the 1910s he sold the farm and returned to law in Oakland. Bachelder donated some of his land for the local Congregational Church of Sunol. In 1954, the church was painted brown and renamed The Little Brown Church of Sunol.[2] Bachelder built the town's hotel, Hazel Glen, which he sold in 1890, which burned down 1910. Bachelder built the Kilkare Road in town. In 1884, Bachelder did a subdivision of his land, thus became the founder of the City of Sunol. Nearby is Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park.[3][4][5]
See also
References
- "National Register Information System – (#94000359)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- The Little Brown Church of Sunol website
- National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Thomas Foxwell Bachelder Barn, npgallery.nps.gov
- "Help! Here Comes the Sun!". Marie Antoinette Interiors.
- "Recognized on Historic Register". February 23, 2006.