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Octavius D. Gass

Octavius Decatur "O. D." Gass (February 29, 1828 – December 10, 1924) was an American prospector, businessman, and politician. A four term member of the Arizona Territorial Legislature, he was active in the early history of Las Vegas, Nevada, and the creation of Pah-Ute County, Arizona Territory.

Octavius D. Gass
President of the Arizona Council
In office
1867–1868
Preceded byMark Aldrich
Succeeded byJohn T. Alsap
Member of the Arizona Council
In office
1866–1869
Member of the Arizona House of Representatives
In office
1865–1866
Personal details
Born
Octavius Decatur Gass

(1828-02-29)February 29, 1828
Richland County, Ohio, U.S.
DiedDecember 10, 1924(1924-12-10) (aged 96)
Bryn Mawr, California, U.S.
Resting placeHillside Cemetery, Redlands, California, U.S.
Spouse
Mary Virginia Simpson
(m. 1872)
Children6
Parent(s)John Gass
Ann McCleur
Alma materOberlin College
ProfessionPolitician, prospector, businessman

Early life edit

Gass was born to John and Ann (McCleur) Gass near Mansfield in Richland County, Ohio, on February 29, 1828.[1] He was educated in public schools. Tradition holds he attended Oberlin College but there are no school records confirming this claim.[2] His education did however provide him with a basic knowledge of Spanish and civil engineering.[3]

At the start of the California Gold Rush, Gass took a ship from Baltimore, Maryland, to California by way of Cape Horn, arriving in January 1850.[2] Upon his arrival in San Francisco, Gass earned money unloading prefabricated shelters from a ship. The wages he earned from this job served as a grubstake as be went to El Dorado County to prospect.[4] There he engaged in placer mining and developed a lifelong friendship with Fenton M. Slaughter.[5]

After a few years, and moderate success in their prospecting efforts, Gass and Slaughter moved to the small town of Los Angeles. Gass joined the local Masonic lodge on December 30, 1854, and gained full privileges on November 22, 1855. His ability to speak Spanish and deal with different cultures resulted in Gass being appointed Zanjero of Los Angeles (water steward) for a time.[5]

In addition to his official duties, Gass continued his prospecting efforts. One such endeavour involved a tin deposit in the Temescal Mountains. At the time, the United States imported all its tin, making a tin mine a very lucrative possibility. Gass joined with Slaughter, David Sexton, and several other investors in an attempt to purchase the Rancho Temescal (Serrano), on which the mineral deposit resided, but found that Abel Stearns had already bought the ranch. A scramble for land and mineral rights soon developed as word of the find spread.[6] Gass ended up with several valid claims but the 1860 United States Presidential Election and approach of the American Civil War dried up investor interest.[7] Hopes for riches from the tin deposit soon faded as legal challenges tied up his interests for the next two decades.[8]

Los Vegas Rancho edit

From Southern California, Gass moved to the El Dorado Canyon, south of modern-day Boulder City, Nevada. He continued his prospecting activities, filing eighteen claims between March 16, 1862, and December 17, 1864. Poor results prompted him to move to the area near modern-day Las Vegas.[9] During his explorations, Gass discovered an outcropping of salt and spent early 1865 working the find.[10]

In late 1865, Gass moved into the old Mormon fort at Las Vegas with Nathaniel Lewis and Lewis Cole.[11] Originally built in 1855, the fort had been abandoned in 1857.[4] Rights to the property were purchased from William Knapp. Knapp in turn had inherited the rights from his brother, Albert, who had been one of the original Mormon missionaries that built the fort.[10] Gass initially owned 160 acres (65 ha) but by 1872 had bought out his partners and owned the entire 640 acres (260 ha) ranch.[4] The name of the ranch was changed to Los Vegas Rancho to differentiate it from Las Vegas, New Mexico.[12]

The abandoned fort was in a state of general disrepair when Gass moved in.[10] He and his partners set about the process of repairing the property and turning it into a way station for travelers using the Old Spanish Trail.[4] Gass and his partners began raising cattle and horses.[13] The fields were planted initially with barley, oats, and wheat with a variety of vegetables and melons added by the second harvest. Orchards were added to produce apples, apricots, figs, and peaches.[14] To all this Gass added 75 acres (30 ha) of Mexican pink beans.[13] The local Paiute, used to mesquite beans, considered the pink beans a luxury and Gass used them in lieu of wages when he hired them to work the fields.[4] Wine from the ranch's vineyard became popular with visiting travelers.[4]

Gass became a financial backer for the nearby town of Callville, Arizona Territory[2] He envisioned the town as a river port which Mormon migrants, traveling up the Colorado River from the Gulf of California, would use on their way to Utah.[4] Gass promoted the town in newspapers and served as the town's postmaster.[15] Gass's dreams for the town never came to fruition as completion of the transcontinental railroad provided an easier means to reach Utah.[13] The town's post office was closed on June 15, 1869.[16]

His position as a businessman and landowner provided Gass with political influence within northwestern Arizona Territory.[16] He leveraged this influence and was elected in 1865 to represent Mohave County in the House of Representatives (lower house) of the 2nd Arizona Territorial Legislature.[17] Upon his arrival in Prescott, Gass discovered only nine other legislators had made the trip to the territorial capital and used the reduced numbers to his advantage.[18] The result was passage of a bill that he drafted which created Pah-Ute County from northern Mohave County and established Callville as the county seat.[19]

Nevada edit

On May 5, 1866, much of Pah-Ute county, including the area around Gass' Las Vegas Ranch was moved to Lincoln County, Nevada, by the U.S. Congress.[4] Gass initially refused to accept the change and declined to pay Nevada taxes.[20] He and his neighbors petitioned the Nevada legislature to create Las Vegas county from the southern section of Lincoln County, but their request was ignored.[4] Gass also joined with other Arizona politicians to twice complain to Congress about the boundary change.[21] The boundary change became finalized in January 1867 when the Nevada Legislature unanimously accepted the new border.[21]

Despite living in Nevada, Gass continued to represent Pah-Ute county in the Arizona Territorial Legislature for another 3 years.[19] During the 1866 session, he became a member of the council (upper house).[22] He chaired a joint committee on military and Indian affairs and served as the session's Spanish language translator.[18] Gass was elected President of the council during the 4th Arizona Territorial Legislature.[23] During the 5th Arizona Territorial Legislature, Gass represented both Mohave and Pah-Ute counties.[24] To reach the new territorial capital in Tucson, Gass and Andrew S. Gibbons rafted down the Colorado River.[25] The two men chose this route to avoid Indian attack but instead hazarded several sets of rapids in their 14-foot (4.3 m) boat.[18] Upon reaching Yuma they were delayed because a stagecoach had been attacked by Indians, killing all aboard, and a replacement driver was not immediately available. The pair arrived at the session a week late but were able to entertain other legislators with tales of their journey.[25]

Shortly after the boundary change was finalized, Lincoln County began demanding two years of back taxes from their new residents.[26] About 600 Mormon residents along the Muddy River refused to make the payment and instead abandoned their homes to move to Utah.[4] The combination of taxes and the loss of 600 regular customers was a significant financial blow to Gass.[26] In addition to the taxes, Gass needed money to deal continuing legal battles over the Temescal Tin Mine [27] Gass also saw a significant reduction in his political influence as the 600 composed much of his political base.[26] He would later become Lincoln County Justice of the Peace but never regained his previous political sway.[26]

Gass married Mary Virginia Simpson, a niece of Ulysses S. Grant, on February 24, 1872, in Pioche, Nevada.[4][28] He had met her when her caravan had stopped at his ranch in early 1871. Simpson was traveling with her sister and brother-in-law, Ann and Isaac Jennings, from Los Angeles to Arizona but had been stopped by high water on the Colorado River. Instead of continuing to Arizona, the Jennings bought some farmland near St. Thomas.[28] For close to a year, Gass had made frequent trips to St. Thomas to court Simpson.[4] Following their wedding, the couple had six children, including a set of twins.[28]

The 320 acres (130 ha) Spring ranch was added to Gass's holdings on January 22, 1878.[29] While at the time he appeared to the world as a successful rancher, which 960 acres (390 ha) and 30 employees, Gass had a large level of debt.[4] He was also beginning to worry about how he would provide an education and social opportunities to his children.[29] As early as 1868, Gass began searching for someone interested in buying his ranch.[4] In 1874 he mortgaged his property to William Knapp for $3,000.[29] To pay off this debt he borrowed $5000 in gold from Archibald Stewart in August 1879.[30] Gass had expected a good harvest that year but bad weather destroyed much of his crop.[4] Gass received a 9-month extension but was still unable to pay his debt. As a result, Stewart foreclosed on May 2, 1881.[30]

Later life edit

Gass and his family left Las Vegas in June 1881 with their personal possessions and 1,500 head of cattle. They drove the cattle to Pomona, California, and sold them to Richard Gird, who was looking for cattle to stock the Rancho Santa Ana del Chino. He then moved to near White Water, California, where he tried growing grapes. Winds and lack of water thwarted his efforts however.[29] Beginning in 1884, Gass joined several groups of prospectors exploring various locations in eastern San Bernardino County, California, and Baja California.[31]

Shortly after 1900, Gass joined his son Fenton in Bryn Mawr, California.[2] There he helped with his son's orange orchard and tended a small garden.[32] Gass died in Bryn Mawr on December 10, 1924[2] He was buried at Redlands, California's Hillside Cemetery in the Masonic Plot.[4]Gass Peak, the southernmost peak in the Las Vegas Range,[33] and Gass Avenue, a street in Downtown Las Vegas were named in his honor.[32]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Roske & Green 1988, p. 371.
  2. ^ a b c d e Goff 1996, p. 113.
  3. ^ Roske & Green 1988, pp. 371–2.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Evans, K.J. (February 7, 1999). "O.D. Gass". Las Vegas Review-Journal.
  5. ^ a b Roske & Green 1988, p. 372.
  6. ^ Roske & Green 1988, p. 374.
  7. ^ Roske & Green 1988, pp. 374–5.
  8. ^ Roske & Green 1988, p. 375.
  9. ^ Roske & Green 1988, p. 376.
  10. ^ a b c Roske & Green 1988, p. 377.
  11. ^ Roske & Green 1988, p. 377-9.
  12. ^ Dedman & Newell 2013, p. 55.
  13. ^ a b c Roske & Green 1988, p. 379.
  14. ^ Land & Land 2004, p. 27-8.
  15. ^ Roske & Green 1988, pp. 379–80.
  16. ^ a b Roske & Green 1988, p. 380.
  17. ^ Wagoner 1970, p. 506.
  18. ^ a b c Roske & Green 1988, p. 381.
  19. ^ a b Hulse 2004, p. 98.
  20. ^ Moehring & Green 2005, pp. 5–6.
  21. ^ a b Roske & Green 1988, p. 382.
  22. ^ Wagoner 1970, p. 507.
  23. ^ Wagoner 1970, p. 508.
  24. ^ Wagoner 1970, p. 509.
  25. ^ a b Wagoner 1970, p. 73.
  26. ^ a b c d Roske & Green 1988, p. 383.
  27. ^ Moehring & Green 2005, p. 6.
  28. ^ a b c Roske & Green 1988, p. 384.
  29. ^ a b c d Roske & Green 1988, p. 385.
  30. ^ a b Land & Land 2004, p. 30.
  31. ^ Roske & Green 1988, pp. 385–6.
  32. ^ a b Roske & Green 1988, p. 386.
  33. ^ Federal Writers' Project (1941). Origin of Place Names: Nevada (PDF). W.P.A. p. 15.

References edit

  • Dedman, Bill; Newell, Paul Clark Jr. (2013). Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-54556-5.
  • Goff, John S. (1996). Arizona Territorial Officials Volume VI: Members of the Legislature A-L. Cave Creek, Arizona: Black Mountain Press. OCLC 36714908.
  • Hulse, James W. (2004). The Silver State: Nevada's Heritage Reinterpreted (3rd ed.). Reno: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 0-87417-592-5.[permanent dead link]
  • Land, Barbara; Land, Myrick (2004). A Short History of Las Vegas (2nd ed.). Reno: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 0-87417-564-X.[permanent dead link]
  • Moehring, Eugene P.; Green, Michael S. (2005). Las Vegas: A Centennial History. Reno: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 0-87417-615-8.[permanent dead link]
  • Roske, Ralph J.; Green, Michael S. (Winter 1988). "Octavius Decatur Gass: Pah-Ute County Pioneer". The Journal of Arizona History. 29 (4). Arizona Historical Society: 371–90. JSTOR 41859930.
  • Wagoner, Jay J. (1970). Arizona Territory 1863-1912: A Political history. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0-8165-0176-9.

octavius, gass, octavius, decatur, gass, february, 1828, december, 1924, american, prospector, businessman, politician, four, term, member, arizona, territorial, legislature, active, early, history, vegas, nevada, creation, county, arizona, territory, presiden. Octavius Decatur O D Gass February 29 1828 December 10 1924 was an American prospector businessman and politician A four term member of the Arizona Territorial Legislature he was active in the early history of Las Vegas Nevada and the creation of Pah Ute County Arizona Territory Octavius D GassPresident of the Arizona CouncilIn office 1867 1868Preceded byMark AldrichSucceeded byJohn T AlsapMember of the Arizona CouncilIn office 1866 1869Member of the Arizona House of RepresentativesIn office 1865 1866Personal detailsBornOctavius Decatur Gass 1828 02 29 February 29 1828Richland County Ohio U S DiedDecember 10 1924 1924 12 10 aged 96 Bryn Mawr California U S Resting placeHillside Cemetery Redlands California U S SpouseMary Virginia Simpson m 1872 wbr Children6Parent s John GassAnn McCleurAlma materOberlin CollegeProfessionPolitician prospector businessman Contents 1 Early life 2 Los Vegas Rancho 3 Nevada 4 Later life 5 Notes 6 ReferencesEarly life editGass was born to John and Ann McCleur Gass near Mansfield in Richland County Ohio on February 29 1828 1 He was educated in public schools Tradition holds he attended Oberlin College but there are no school records confirming this claim 2 His education did however provide him with a basic knowledge of Spanish and civil engineering 3 At the start of the California Gold Rush Gass took a ship from Baltimore Maryland to California by way of Cape Horn arriving in January 1850 2 Upon his arrival in San Francisco Gass earned money unloading prefabricated shelters from a ship The wages he earned from this job served as a grubstake as be went to El Dorado County to prospect 4 There he engaged in placer mining and developed a lifelong friendship with Fenton M Slaughter 5 After a few years and moderate success in their prospecting efforts Gass and Slaughter moved to the small town of Los Angeles Gass joined the local Masonic lodge on December 30 1854 and gained full privileges on November 22 1855 His ability to speak Spanish and deal with different cultures resulted in Gass being appointed Zanjero of Los Angeles water steward for a time 5 In addition to his official duties Gass continued his prospecting efforts One such endeavour involved a tin deposit in the Temescal Mountains At the time the United States imported all its tin making a tin mine a very lucrative possibility Gass joined with Slaughter David Sexton and several other investors in an attempt to purchase the Rancho Temescal Serrano on which the mineral deposit resided but found that Abel Stearns had already bought the ranch A scramble for land and mineral rights soon developed as word of the find spread 6 Gass ended up with several valid claims but the 1860 United States Presidential Election and approach of the American Civil War dried up investor interest 7 Hopes for riches from the tin deposit soon faded as legal challenges tied up his interests for the next two decades 8 Los Vegas Rancho editFrom Southern California Gass moved to the El Dorado Canyon south of modern day Boulder City Nevada He continued his prospecting activities filing eighteen claims between March 16 1862 and December 17 1864 Poor results prompted him to move to the area near modern day Las Vegas 9 During his explorations Gass discovered an outcropping of salt and spent early 1865 working the find 10 In late 1865 Gass moved into the old Mormon fort at Las Vegas with Nathaniel Lewis and Lewis Cole 11 Originally built in 1855 the fort had been abandoned in 1857 4 Rights to the property were purchased from William Knapp Knapp in turn had inherited the rights from his brother Albert who had been one of the original Mormon missionaries that built the fort 10 Gass initially owned 160 acres 65 ha but by 1872 had bought out his partners and owned the entire 640 acres 260 ha ranch 4 The name of the ranch was changed to Los Vegas Rancho to differentiate it from Las Vegas New Mexico 12 The abandoned fort was in a state of general disrepair when Gass moved in 10 He and his partners set about the process of repairing the property and turning it into a way station for travelers using the Old Spanish Trail 4 Gass and his partners began raising cattle and horses 13 The fields were planted initially with barley oats and wheat with a variety of vegetables and melons added by the second harvest Orchards were added to produce apples apricots figs and peaches 14 To all this Gass added 75 acres 30 ha of Mexican pink beans 13 The local Paiute used to mesquite beans considered the pink beans a luxury and Gass used them in lieu of wages when he hired them to work the fields 4 Wine from the ranch s vineyard became popular with visiting travelers 4 Gass became a financial backer for the nearby town of Callville Arizona Territory 2 He envisioned the town as a river port which Mormon migrants traveling up the Colorado River from the Gulf of California would use on their way to Utah 4 Gass promoted the town in newspapers and served as the town s postmaster 15 Gass s dreams for the town never came to fruition as completion of the transcontinental railroad provided an easier means to reach Utah 13 The town s post office was closed on June 15 1869 16 His position as a businessman and landowner provided Gass with political influence within northwestern Arizona Territory 16 He leveraged this influence and was elected in 1865 to represent Mohave County in the House of Representatives lower house of the 2nd Arizona Territorial Legislature 17 Upon his arrival in Prescott Gass discovered only nine other legislators had made the trip to the territorial capital and used the reduced numbers to his advantage 18 The result was passage of a bill that he drafted which created Pah Ute County from northern Mohave County and established Callville as the county seat 19 Nevada editOn May 5 1866 much of Pah Ute county including the area around Gass Las Vegas Ranch was moved to Lincoln County Nevada by the U S Congress 4 Gass initially refused to accept the change and declined to pay Nevada taxes 20 He and his neighbors petitioned the Nevada legislature to create Las Vegas county from the southern section of Lincoln County but their request was ignored 4 Gass also joined with other Arizona politicians to twice complain to Congress about the boundary change 21 The boundary change became finalized in January 1867 when the Nevada Legislature unanimously accepted the new border 21 Despite living in Nevada Gass continued to represent Pah Ute county in the Arizona Territorial Legislature for another 3 years 19 During the 1866 session he became a member of the council upper house 22 He chaired a joint committee on military and Indian affairs and served as the session s Spanish language translator 18 Gass was elected President of the council during the 4th Arizona Territorial Legislature 23 During the 5th Arizona Territorial Legislature Gass represented both Mohave and Pah Ute counties 24 To reach the new territorial capital in Tucson Gass and Andrew S Gibbons rafted down the Colorado River 25 The two men chose this route to avoid Indian attack but instead hazarded several sets of rapids in their 14 foot 4 3 m boat 18 Upon reaching Yuma they were delayed because a stagecoach had been attacked by Indians killing all aboard and a replacement driver was not immediately available The pair arrived at the session a week late but were able to entertain other legislators with tales of their journey 25 Shortly after the boundary change was finalized Lincoln County began demanding two years of back taxes from their new residents 26 About 600 Mormon residents along the Muddy River refused to make the payment and instead abandoned their homes to move to Utah 4 The combination of taxes and the loss of 600 regular customers was a significant financial blow to Gass 26 In addition to the taxes Gass needed money to deal continuing legal battles over the Temescal Tin Mine 27 Gass also saw a significant reduction in his political influence as the 600 composed much of his political base 26 He would later become Lincoln County Justice of the Peace but never regained his previous political sway 26 Gass married Mary Virginia Simpson a niece of Ulysses S Grant on February 24 1872 in Pioche Nevada 4 28 He had met her when her caravan had stopped at his ranch in early 1871 Simpson was traveling with her sister and brother in law Ann and Isaac Jennings from Los Angeles to Arizona but had been stopped by high water on the Colorado River Instead of continuing to Arizona the Jennings bought some farmland near St Thomas 28 For close to a year Gass had made frequent trips to St Thomas to court Simpson 4 Following their wedding the couple had six children including a set of twins 28 The 320 acres 130 ha Spring ranch was added to Gass s holdings on January 22 1878 29 While at the time he appeared to the world as a successful rancher which 960 acres 390 ha and 30 employees Gass had a large level of debt 4 He was also beginning to worry about how he would provide an education and social opportunities to his children 29 As early as 1868 Gass began searching for someone interested in buying his ranch 4 In 1874 he mortgaged his property to William Knapp for 3 000 29 To pay off this debt he borrowed 5000 in gold from Archibald Stewart in August 1879 30 Gass had expected a good harvest that year but bad weather destroyed much of his crop 4 Gass received a 9 month extension but was still unable to pay his debt As a result Stewart foreclosed on May 2 1881 30 Later life editGass and his family left Las Vegas in June 1881 with their personal possessions and 1 500 head of cattle They drove the cattle to Pomona California and sold them to Richard Gird who was looking for cattle to stock the Rancho Santa Ana del Chino He then moved to near White Water California where he tried growing grapes Winds and lack of water thwarted his efforts however 29 Beginning in 1884 Gass joined several groups of prospectors exploring various locations in eastern San Bernardino County California and Baja California 31 Shortly after 1900 Gass joined his son Fenton in Bryn Mawr California 2 There he helped with his son s orange orchard and tended a small garden 32 Gass died in Bryn Mawr on December 10 1924 2 He was buried at Redlands California s Hillside Cemetery in the Masonic Plot 4 Gass Peak the southernmost peak in the Las Vegas Range 33 and Gass Avenue a street in Downtown Las Vegas were named in his honor 32 Notes edit Roske amp Green 1988 p 371 a b c d e Goff 1996 p 113 Roske amp Green 1988 pp 371 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Evans K J February 7 1999 O D Gass Las Vegas Review Journal a b Roske amp Green 1988 p 372 Roske amp Green 1988 p 374 Roske amp Green 1988 pp 374 5 Roske amp Green 1988 p 375 Roske amp Green 1988 p 376 a b c Roske amp Green 1988 p 377 Roske amp Green 1988 p 377 9 Dedman amp Newell 2013 p 55 a b c Roske amp Green 1988 p 379 Land amp Land 2004 p 27 8 Roske amp Green 1988 pp 379 80 a b Roske amp Green 1988 p 380 Wagoner 1970 p 506 a b c Roske amp Green 1988 p 381 a b Hulse 2004 p 98 Moehring amp Green 2005 pp 5 6 a b Roske amp Green 1988 p 382 Wagoner 1970 p 507 Wagoner 1970 p 508 Wagoner 1970 p 509 a b Wagoner 1970 p 73 a b c d Roske amp Green 1988 p 383 Moehring amp Green 2005 p 6 a b c Roske amp Green 1988 p 384 a b c d Roske amp Green 1988 p 385 a b Land amp Land 2004 p 30 Roske amp Green 1988 pp 385 6 a b Roske amp Green 1988 p 386 Federal Writers Project 1941 Origin of Place Names Nevada PDF W P A p 15 References editDedman Bill Newell Paul Clark Jr 2013 Empty Mansions The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 54556 5 Goff John S 1996 Arizona Territorial Officials Volume VI Members of the Legislature A L Cave Creek Arizona Black Mountain Press OCLC 36714908 Hulse James W 2004 The Silver State Nevada s Heritage Reinterpreted 3rd ed Reno University of Nevada Press ISBN 0 87417 592 5 permanent dead link Land Barbara Land Myrick 2004 A Short History of Las Vegas 2nd ed Reno University of Nevada Press ISBN 0 87417 564 X permanent dead link Moehring Eugene P Green Michael S 2005 Las Vegas A Centennial History Reno University of Nevada Press ISBN 0 87417 615 8 permanent dead link Roske Ralph J Green Michael S Winter 1988 Octavius Decatur Gass Pah Ute County Pioneer The Journal of Arizona History 29 4 Arizona Historical Society 371 90 JSTOR 41859930 Wagoner Jay J 1970 Arizona Territory 1863 1912 A Political history Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 0 8165 0176 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Octavius D Gass amp oldid 1189337467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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