John B. R. Cooper

John Bautista Rogers Cooper
Born John Rogers Cooper
September 11, 1791
Alderney
Died June 2, 1872
San Francisco, California
Occupation Sea Captain, Landowner
Known for Early Monterey, California pioneer
Spouse(s) Encarnacion Vallejo
Parent(s) Thomas Cooper and Anne Rogers

John Bautista Rogers Cooper (September 11, 1791, Alderney - June 2, 1872, San Francisco, California). Raised in Massachusetts in a maritime family, he came to the Mexican territory of Alta California as master of the ship Rover, and was a pioneer of Monterey, California when it was the capital of the territory. He acquired extensive land holdings in the area, prior to the Mexican-American War.

Early life

John (Juan) Bautista Rogers Cooper was born John Rogers Cooper on the English Channel island of Alderney, 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, Alta California as master of his own vessel, the trading schooner Rover, in 1823.[3]

Monterey

Upon his arrival in Monterey, Cooper made arrangements to sell the Rover to the government of newly-independent Mexico, which as yet had no ships on the Pacific Coast with which to maintain contact with Mexico. To help cash-poor California governor Luis Arguello pay him for the ship, Cooper agreed to stay on as captain and enter the lucrative China trade, twice carrying Californian and Hawaiian goods to Canton and returning with Chinese manufactured goods. Cooper and Arguello quarreled, however, over how to split the profits, and it was many years before Cooper received the payment due. Collection was made more difficult when Arguello was replaced as governor in 1825. In 1826, the Rover was sent south under a new captain, and never returned to Monterey.

No longer having a ship to sail, Cooper drew on his trade knowledge to open a general merchandise store in Monterey. Boarding with the Ignacio Vallejo family (one of whose children became General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo), and becoming acquainted with the several daughters, Cooper proposed to and was accepted by Encarnacion. After Cooper was baptised as a Roman Catholic, the couple married in 1827, and Cooper's baptismal name became Juan Bautista Rogers Cooper. His padrino (sponsor) was William Edward Petty Hartnell, a native Englishman who had had been residing in Monterey as a trader since 1822.

After passage of an 1829 law requiring permanent residents to be Mexican citizens, both Cooper and Hartnell were naturalized in 1830. Before 1829, naturalization was not strictly required but, along with conversion to Catholicism and marriage into a prominent family, helped Cooper become accepted in Monterey and obtain land grants.

Captain Cooper later returned to the seafaring life but, having acquired land, he gradually quit the sea. From 1839 to 1844 he made many trips to the Mexican coast and to the Hawaiian Islands, in command of the government-owned 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]

Help for Jedediah Smith

Being the territorial capital and port of entry meant that anyone coming to Alta California eventually had to come to Monterey to get official permission to remain. It was thus that, in 1827, Cooper found himself as host and escort for the trapper/explorer Jedediah Smith, first U.S. citizen ever to find his way to California overland. Cooper helped Smith obtain a passport so his party could continue north into Oregon.[5]

Land grants

Cooper acquired Rancho Bolsa del Potrero y Moro Cojo, in the area of present-day Castroville, California, in 1829. Another early California English-speaker, the Irishman John Milligan (or Mulligan), had a house on the rancho (labeled "Casa de Milligan" on the diseño). Cooper received a second grant in 1833, when Governor José Figueroa granted him Rancho El Molino. 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. Also in 1840, Governor Alvarado granted him Rancho Punta de Quentin, which later became the site of San Quentin State Prison. Cooper built a mansion out at the point. 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.

Final years

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.[6] 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.[7]

References

  1. Harlan Hague, David J. Langum, 1995, Thomas O. Larkin: A Life of Patriotism and Profit in Old California, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 978-0-8061-2733-0
  2. The Cooper Family
  3. Luther A. Ingersoll, 1893, Monterey-San Francisco County CA Archives Biographies, The Lewis Publishing Company.
  4. John Woolfendon and Amelie Elkinton,1983, Cooper: Juan Bautista Rogers Cooper, Boxwood Press.
  5. Woolfenden, pp35-38
  6. Captain John Rogers Cooper (1792-1872)
  7. E.J. Molera (1846-1932)
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