Anthony, Elihu: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 21:22, 22 November 2025

Elihu Anthony (1818-1905) came to Santa Cruz in late 1847, becoming a leading early Santa Cruz churchman, businessman, entrepreneur, and developer; and an outspoken leader of anti-Chinese sentiment. He described his earliest memories of Santa Cruz in an 1885 interview.

In 1849, Anthony and a man named Penfield built a short, steep "chute" from the bluff at what is now the end of Bay Street, to facilitate loading sacks of potatoes and other goods into small boats below. Joseph Roberts described the structure in a Dec. 13, 1884 Sentinel interview (3:4).

He was shown as a property owner on the 1866 Santa Cruz map, in "Block No. 1" (Mission Hill) of the core downtown area; and as owner of another residence in "Block No. 3" (Union Street). The narrow street connecting Union and Locust Streets next to Anthony's lot is labeled on the map as "Anthony's Alley". In 1866, Anthony built a new house "on the hill near the water works reservoir" (on the bluff at the end of today's School Street). Anthony, in partnership with F. A. Hihn, had built the reservoir and a distribution pipeline system for the downtown area (see [[.

Riptide Centennial includes a brief profile of A. B. Bennett (CE11), said to have married Anthony's daughter Louisa (1846-1922). Her grave marker, however, shows her married surname as Huntington, wife of Wilbur Huntington (second husband?). Also profiled in Riptide are Anthony's wife Sarah Van Anda Anthony CE32), and sister-in-law Jane Van Anda (CE27).