History Pages: 50 - Downtown expanded south in the 1880s
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The years from the mid 1870s to late 1880s saw continued growth and transformation in Santa Cruz – especially south of Cooper Street. The 1874 covered bridge provided a year-round downtown connection for the Watsonville road (part of the old mission road route). Tourism was bringing more visitors to our town than ever, now that train and steamship travel had reduced the time and effort involved. Local industries continued to prosper: lime, lumber, bituminous rock, blasting powder and others.
Following the new covered bridge opening in 1874, Front Street was extended from Cooper to Bridge Street (today's Soquel Avenue). At that new road junction, the Fair Pavilion was built in 1883. The pavilion housed autumn harvest fairs and spring rose fairs, among various other events. On New Year’s Eve 1884, the pavilion was illuminated by the first electric lights in Santa Cruz (but not the first in the County - see note 1), powered by a steam generator brought in from San Francisco.(note 2)
In 1884, the corner of Bridge Street and Pacific Avenue got an anchor building, built by the Farmers Union (photo at right). The large 2-story wood structure featured a 2nd-story 45-degee-angle projecting square bay at the street corner and a large meeting hall upstairs. Also upstairs were the offices of the Santa Cruz Surf newspaper.
Prior to construction of the Farmers Union building, the corner had been occupied by the residence of early downtown merchant J. B. Arcan. The upstairs room of the Arcan house was another meeting hall, the eponymous "Arcan's Hall". Bridge Street, before the covered bridge was built in 1874, was called Arcan Street. The Arcan house was moved toward the river to make way for the new corner building.


Farther up Pacific Avenue was the square medieval-style tower of the 1887 Masonic Hall (photo at right). In the distance, the original clock tower of the 1873 Oddfellows Building is visible farther up Pacific Avenue, as it looked before being rebuilt after an 1899 fire, with a new tower that is now the Town Clock.
Across Pacific Avenue from the Masons, one of our longest-running (and still existing) Santa Cruz businesses began in the block between Church and Walnut - Horsnyder’s Pharmacy, in 1884 (left).
New buildings between Walnut and Lincoln replaced the aging structures of the first Chinatown, whose laundries and other businesses mostly moved to the north end of Front Street. The first 1880s commercial building in that block was a move, a structure built in 1877 at the corner of Pacific and Laurel by Jackson Sylvar, the Azorean native who had previously built a saloon and residence on Mission Plaza (now Sylvar Street).

That same year, the Wilkins House hotel also opened south of Lincoln, but fared better than Sylvar’s “oyster saloon and lodging house”, expanding significantly in the 1880s (when the photo at right was taken). P. V. Wilkins had previously been proprietor of Santa Cruz House on Main (Front) Street.

At the south corner of Lincoln, Duncan House (1878) was another development effort by Duncan McPherson, publisher of the Santa Cruz Sentinel. This detail (left) from the 1886 Sanborn map shows and names the major buildings: the Fair Pavilion, Farmers Union, Duncan House and Wilkins House.
Toward the top of this map is east, with the San Lorenzo River edge indicated by "Marsh Land". At top left, Bridge Street ends at the covered bridge for which it was named.
Notes
- See Gary Griggs "Our Ocean Backyard" Wilder Ranch article re: "first electrical generating system"
- Leon Rowland, Santa Cruz: The Early Years, p. 142, "The Fair Pavilion".
- Ernest Otto, "Our Old Santa Cruz". Santa Cruz Sentinel, October 20, 1940, 8:4-6.
- For more on the buildings, see Chase, The Sidewalk Companion to Santa Cruz Architecture (Chapter Five: Downtown).