John Bautista Rogers Cooper | |
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Born | September 11, 1791 Alderney |
Died | June 2, 1872 San Francisco, California |
Occupation | Sea Captain, Landowner |
Known for | Early Monterey, California pioneer |
Spouse | Encarnacion Vallejo |
Parents | Thomas Cooper and Anne Rogers |
John Bautista Rogers Cooper (September 11, 1791, Alderney - June 2, 1872, San Francisco, California) was born in England and raised in Massachusetts. He came to California as master of the ship Rover, and was a pre-gold rush pioneer of Monterey, California. He married General Vallejo’s sister Encarnacion Vallejo and acquired extensive land holdings.
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John Bautista Rogers Cooper was born on the island of Alderney the son of Thomas Cooper and Anne Rogers. [1] He came to the United States, when a boy,with his mother. Captain Cooper was a half-brother of Thomas O. Larkin, their mother having been twice married.[2]
After moving to Boston with his mother, he traveled extensively, first attending school in Charleston and then serving as second mate on a missionary trip to the Hawaiian Islands. He came to Monterey as master of his own vessel, the trading schooner Rover, in 1823.[3]
Upon his arrival in Monterey, he made arrangements with Governor Luis Arguello to sail to China on a trade mission. After coming back, he and Arguello quarreled over what he should receive for his work. He eventually won the money that he asked for, but not without first losing his ship. Although he sold his vessel to Governor Arguello, he continued in command of her, making trips to China and elsewhere.
In 1826, he opened a general merchandise store in Monterey. Becoming acquainted with the Vallejo family, he first asked the hand in marriage of one of the daughters, Magdalena, who refused him and married Antonio del Valle. Cooper married Encarnacion Vallejo (1809 - ), older sister of General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo in 1827 and became a naturalized Mexican in 1830.
Captain Cooper continued his seafaring life for many years; eventually, however, he acquired land, and gradually quit the sea. Although from 1839 to 1844 he made many trips to the Mexican coast and to the Islands, in command of a vessel belonging to the Government called the Californian, which carried mail, prisoners, and government officials from Monterey to Mexico. In 1846 he made a voyage to Peru, and in 1849 he went as master of the Eveline to China.[4]
Cooper acquired Rancho Bolsa del Potrero y Moro Cojo in 1829. Governor José Figueroa granted him Rancho El Molino in 1833. In 1840, Cooper traded Rancho Bolsa del Potrero y Moro Cojo for Juan Alvarado's Rancho El Sur. Alvarado was a nephew of Encarnacion Vallejo Cooper. In 1840, Governor Alvarado granted him Rancho Punta de Quentin. Cooper built a mansion out at the point but didn’t spend much time there. Cooper and Pablo de la Guerra were granted Rancho Nicasio by Governor Manuel Micheltorena in 1844. He sold his interests in both Marin County ranchos in 1850.
From 1850, Captain Cooper lived with his family in Monterey, and was appointed in 1851 to the post of Monterey Harbormaster. In 1865 he moved to San Francisco, where he died in 1872.[5] Cooper's eldest daughter, Ana Maria de Guadalupe, married Herman Wohler, a German who had come to California in 1848. Cooper's daughter Amelia, married Eusebio Joseph Molera in 1875.[6]