Myron C. Lake: Difference between revisions

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===Lake’s Crossing===
===Lake’s Crossing===
Fuller's rough going failed to make a negative impression on Lake; he could see only flashing dollar signs. He was intent on transforming the little crossing into a great commercial venture.<ref>It seems safe to assume that both Fuller and Lake had prior knowledge of the coming of the railroad through the Truckee Meadows and that it appeared all but certain as early as 1862 (Rocha, p. 28; Bain, p. 111). But Fuller, being flat broke and roundly discouraged, had been blinded to the possibility of success that Lake foresaw and had the financial wherewithal to exploit.</ref> But before Lake had any real time to make significant improvements, all bridges across the Truckee River were swept away by the torrential flooding of early spring 1862. Upon rebuilding, Lake's first action was to guarantee that only he would control traffic over the new ''Lake's Crossing''. He petitioned for and won from Nevada's Territorial legislature a ten-year exclusive franchise to operate his toll bridge and road at that location. Now, no one else within a mile could replicate Lake's setup.<ref>Townley, pp. 53-54.</ref>
Fuller's rough going failed to make a negative impression on Lake; he could see only flashing dollar signs. He was intent on transforming the little crossing into a great commercial venture.<ref>It seems safe to assume that both Fuller and Lake had prior knowledge of the coming of the railroad through the Truckee Meadows and that it appeared all but certain as early as 1862 (Rocha, p. 28; Bain, p. 111). But Fuller, being flat broke and roundly discouraged, had been blinded to the possibility of success that Lake foresaw and had the financial wherewithal to exploit.</ref> But before Lake had any real time to make significant improvements, all bridges across the Truckee River were swept away by the torrential flooding of early spring 1862. Upon rebuilding, Lake's first action was to guarantee that only he would control traffic over the new ''Lake's Crossing''. He petitioned for and won from Nevada's Territorial legislature a ten-year exclusive franchise to operate his toll bridge and road at that location. Now, no one else within a mile could replicate Lake's setup, and a brief period of relaxation appeared to be in order.  In 1864, he returned briefly to Honey Lake Valley to wed Jane Conkey Bryant, whose family had been Lake's neighbors there. They married in Janesville, Calif. on September 11.<ref>Townley, pp. 53-54; Cafferata-a, pp. 30-31.</ref>


Despite his monopoly, it took Lake nearly six years until fortune dawned in the arrival of the Central Pacific Railroad (CPRR).  In the meantime, Lake's bridge withstood yet another flood in 1867 and he proceeded to invest his toll incomes to spawn important improvements: the purchase of substantial acreage (on both sides of the Truckee) destined to become Reno; a grist mill; and several additions to Fuller's once ramshackle inn.<ref>A Dec. 1868 fire levelled this structure. The new hotel, sparkling in white, 'Lake House', was ready for business in March 1869. Townley, pp. 54, 148.</ref>
Despite his monopoly, it took Lake nearly six years until fortune dawned in the arrival of the Central Pacific Railroad (CPRR).  In the meantime, Lake's bridge withstood yet another flood in 1867 and he proceeded to invest his toll incomes to spawn important improvements: the purchase of substantial acreage (on both sides of the Truckee) destined to become Reno; a grist mill; and several additions to Fuller's once ramshackle inn.<ref>A Dec. 1868 fire levelled this structure. The new hotel, sparkling in white, 'Lake House', was ready for business in March 1869. Townley, pp. 54, 148.</ref>

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Myron C. Lake

Myron Charles Lake (Feb. 1828-June 20, 1884), merchant/entrepreneur, was the hot-tempered, tight-fisted founder of Reno, Nevada. Between 1862 and 1873, Lake lorded over the town through his vast real estate holdings and monopolistic control of a vitally important toll bridge and road. He quickly assumed the posture of a stereotypical “avaricious” robber baron, and in an unhappy marriage, often resorted to domestic violence. But he also wielded a keen business acumen and in so doing, ensured that the Central Pacific Railroad during the building of the great transcontinental project would run through Reno, thereby initiating the growth and future prosperity of western Nevada.[1]


Early life

Very little is known about Lake’s early years and much of what is known remains unclear. He was born in Cayuga County, New York state, the oldest of 7 children (5 boys, 2 girls) born to Catherine Van Tassell (1803-1874) of New York state and John Lake (Aug. 24, 1799-Jan. 15, 1877), of Maine. About 1839, the family moved to Paw Paw, DeKalb County, Illinois, about 70 miles west of Chicago.[2] Lake saw service during the Mexican-American War (1846-48) as an infantry private in Illinois’ volunteer Company D, First Regiment. Following the war, he returned home to establish a farm of 320 acres, comprised of a 160-acre government land grant and his personal acquistion of the rest.[3]

By 1852, he had moved on to Rabbit Creek, Calif. to try his hand at mining;[4] five years later, he moved intrastate to Honey Lake Valley, where he built a modest ranch. Evidence indicates that, in October 1857, Lake played prominently in vigilante apprehensions of both Indians and outlaws.[5] It was here that he met Charles W. Fuller from whom Lake would, in June 1861 acquire Fuller's Crossing, a small station, road, and flimsy log bridge over the Truckee River at today's Virginia Street in exchange for Lake's meager California ranch.[6]

Lake’s Crossing

Fuller's rough going failed to make a negative impression on Lake; he could see only flashing dollar signs. He was intent on transforming the little crossing into a great commercial venture.[7] But before Lake had any real time to make significant improvements, all bridges across the Truckee River were swept away by the torrential flooding of early spring 1862. Upon rebuilding, Lake's first action was to guarantee that only he would control traffic over the new Lake's Crossing. He petitioned for and won from Nevada's Territorial legislature a ten-year exclusive franchise to operate his toll bridge and road at that location. Now, no one else within a mile could replicate Lake's setup, and a brief period of relaxation appeared to be in order. In 1864, he returned briefly to Honey Lake Valley to wed Jane Conkey Bryant, whose family had been Lake's neighbors there. They married in Janesville, Calif. on September 11.[8]

Despite his monopoly, it took Lake nearly six years until fortune dawned in the arrival of the Central Pacific Railroad (CPRR). In the meantime, Lake's bridge withstood yet another flood in 1867 and he proceeded to invest his toll incomes to spawn important improvements: the purchase of substantial acreage (on both sides of the Truckee) destined to become Reno; a grist mill; and several additions to Fuller's once ramshackle inn.[9]

Most likely, it was Lake who first contacted CPRR construction superintendent Charles Crocker with an offer to sell him land for a town site and the railroad's right-of-way if it would construct a depot at his crossing. Both parties found the prospect instantly appealing. The public first heard of the deal in late February 1868 and one month later it was sealed: the railroad would get 160 acres straddling the river for $200. And driving something of a hard bargain, Lake also insisted it include the eventual return to him of half the land north and all the land south of the Truckee, making him one of the state's richest men. CPRR personnel surveyed borders for the new town on April 1st, divided it into 25 ft. x 100 ft. parcels, named its streets (with one reserved for Lake) and about 3 weeks later, it fell to Crocker to officially rename the settlement Reno, honoring U.S. Army General Jesse Lee Reno, a Union hero of the Civil War.[10]

Dark Side

Legacy

Notes

  1. Townley, p. 146-47; Rocha, p. 28; Cafferata, pp. 25-32.
  2. John Lake was a Baptist farmer, buried next to his son in Reno's Mountain View Cemetery. In 1873, John and Catherine relocated to Reno; they moved in with Myron and Jane at their Junction House ranch (now, corner of S. Virginia Street and Peckham Lane). Townley, pp. 148, 166. For 1839 as the Illinois relocation year: J. Lake obituary, REG, Jan. 16, 1877, p. 2. Catherine Lake remained in Reno only six months before returning to Illinois because she "could not accommodate herself to the country, its people and customs." She died on Jan. 29, 1874. RC, Feb. 5, 1874, p. 2.
  3. Illinois State Archives, Springfield, Ill., Illinois Mexican War Veterans Database, accessed Nov. 30, 2008; Cafferata, p. 28.
  4. Lake's obituary in the NSJ (June 21, 1884, p. 3) gives the year as 1851. Rabbit Creek lies very near the tiny town of La Porte, in the Sierra about 65 miles west of the Truckee Meadows.
  5. As such, Lake may well have been playing a part in the state's unorganized group of vigilance committees. Zanjani, p. 99; Townley, p. 53.
  6. Fuller is said to have also thrown in $1500. His idea, ahead of Lake, was to serve miners trudging to and from the Comstock. Fuller's station made for a considerably shorter and easier crossing than the existing Stone & Gates bridge, about four miles east of his (now, the village of Glendale). But at least two bridge washouts, a bankruptcy, and competition from existing fords convinced Fuller that it was time to try something else. Cafferata, p. 29; Townley, pp. 52-53, 57, 63.
  7. It seems safe to assume that both Fuller and Lake had prior knowledge of the coming of the railroad through the Truckee Meadows and that it appeared all but certain as early as 1862 (Rocha, p. 28; Bain, p. 111). But Fuller, being flat broke and roundly discouraged, had been blinded to the possibility of success that Lake foresaw and had the financial wherewithal to exploit.
  8. Townley, pp. 53-54; Cafferata-a, pp. 30-31.
  9. A Dec. 1868 fire levelled this structure. The new hotel, sparkling in white, 'Lake House', was ready for business in March 1869. Townley, pp. 54, 148.
  10. Townley, pp. 54, 67, 70; Rocha, p. 28; Cafferata-a, pp. 31-32. One story still popular is that Crocker pulled "Reno" out of a hat filled with brief pithy names, some of which were fallen Union generals. A renaming was needed at all, some have believed, only because 'Lake's Crossing' was too lengthy to fit on the CPRR's preprinted timetables. Reno's official birthday: May 9, 1868, the day on which the railroad auctioned off 400 northside lots for as much as $1300 each (Cafferata-b). The name was actually in use at least two weeks earlier. See the San Francisco Daily Alta California, May 1, 1868, p. 1, quoting the April 27 Virginia City Daily Trespass: "The [railroad] bridge across the Truckee is soon to be completed, and in a fortnight the cars will doubtless be running to Reno (Lake's Crossing)... ." But as late as April 21, 'Argenta' ('Silver', the concoction of Crocker's brother, E.B.) was being proclaimed by the Gold Hill [Daily] News.

References

There is no single biography and even now much information remains to be collected, especially with regard to Lake's pre-Nevada life. He left no diaries or journals. And amazingly, absolutely no information exists on Lake's first marriage, which most likely occurred during the decade he spent in California. The Myron C. Lake Papers, which contain the record of his divorce proceedings and a file of correspondence, can be found at the Nevada Historical Society in Reno.

  • Ambrose, Stephen E. Nothing Like It in the World: the Men Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000).
  • Bain, David Haward. Empire Express: Building the First Transcontinental Railroad (New York: Viking Penguin, 1999).
  • Cafferata, Patricia D. a: Lake Mansion: Home to Reno's Founding Families (Reno: Eastern Slope Publisher, 2006).
b: "Reno history: Three men can be credited as city's founding fathers," RGJ, Nov. 26, 2007.
  • Newspapers: Nevada State Journal (NSJ); Reno Crescent (RC); Reno Evening Gazette (REG); Reno Gazette-Journal (RGJ).
  • Rocha, Guy Louis. “Reno’s First Robber Baron,” Nevada Magazine 40,2(March-April, 1980), pp. 28-29, 62.
  • Rowley, William D. Reno: Hub of the Washoe Country (Woodland Hills, Calif.: Windsor Publications, 1984).
  • Townley, John M. Tough Little Town on the Truckee: Reno, 1868-1900 (Reno: Great Basin Studies Center, 1983).
  • Zanjani, Sally. Devils Will Reign: How Nevada Began (Reno: Univ. of Nevada Press, 2006).
  • Zimmer, Ethel. "In a Housewife's Life--a City's History," NSJ (Sept. 7, 1958), p. 8; "Myron Lake Made a Trade and Founded a City," NSJ (Nov. 2, 1958), p. 52.