David Jacks Buys Monterey
by John Thompson
Robert Louis Stevenson's
work for the "Monterey Californian" taught him a great deal about
our area, and he decided to use that information in a proposed book "Old
And New Pacific Capitals" which he never completed. The most fascinating
character in that book was David Jacks, a rich Republican land developer who
had an iron grip on the local economy.

Stevenson wrote, "The town lands
of Monterey are all in the hands of a single man. How they came there is an
obscure, vexatious question, and rightly or wrongly, the man is hated with
a great hatred. His life has been repeatedly in danger. Not very long ago,
I was told, the stage was stopped and examined three evenings in succession
by disguised horsemen thirsting for his blood. "
Jacks arrived in Monterey
in 1850, two years after immigrating to America from his native Scotland.
After working as a clerk at Mr. Boston's House Of Gold, he became county treasurer.
As he got to know the citizens on his delinquent tax roles, he began to lend
them money to pay their taxes, using their land as collateral. When the citizens
missed loan payments he foreclosed and grabbed their land. He used legal chicanery
on a moderate scale to acquire more land, but his magnus opus was the purchase
of 30,000 acres of Monterey city lands in 1859.
Jacks and a partner,
D. R. Ashley, were the sole bidders in an almost secret auction they had arranged,
an auction which sold off nearly all the land on the Monterey Peninsula east
to the Salinas River. The news of this deal enraged the entire town, especially
since no money actually exchanged hands - Ashley claimed the city owed him
exactly that amount.
Jacks, Monterey County's
first and most infamous land developer, mostly sold his holdings in large
tracts, letting others then subdivide it. He owned most of the land north
of Carmel, but not Carmel itself. He also acquired the Chualar Ranch, south
of Salinas, in payment of a loan. Some of the homesteaders on those 8,000
rich acres had worked the soil for decades, but had no legal papers to its
ownership. When Jacks declared them "squatters" on his domain, they
joined with others to form the Squatters League Of Monterey County.
In 1872, the League wrote
Jacks "...you have been the cause of unnecessary annoyance and expense
to the settlers... Now if you don't make that account of damages to each and
every one of [us] within ten days, you son of a bitch, we will suspend your
animation between daylight and hell." The League and the City of Monterey
sued Jacks in Superior Court, but Judge Dorn in Salinas ruled that Jacks had
not actually committed any civil crime in his realty transactions. In 1903,
the California Supreme Court upheld Jacks, and in 1906 the U.S. Supreme Court
also found him innocent of any crime.
Jacks' funeral in 1909
was a huge and somber affair, but he wasn't mourned by most locals. He was,
however, grievously mourned by an adoring family. They inherited his vast
financial estate, including 70,000 acres of land. His son Will, an 1894 graduate
of Harvard Law School, then managed the Jacks Corporation and served as mayor
of Monterey from 1905 to 1910. When the Corporation disbanded in 1919, Will's
Lee, Vida, and Margaret Ann received some 10,000 acres and founded their own
realty company. All of Pebble Beach was then purchased by Del Monte Properties,
and much of the remaining lots in Pacific Grove went on the market.
Margaret Ann was the
last of the Jacks family. The fact that there were no grandchildren to inherit
the wealth was rumored to be a curse put on the family. To eradicate those
and other rumors Margaret Ann spent the rest of her life making gifts of land
to the City of Monterey. When she died in 1962 she left six million dollars
to Stanford, including her family papers, and the 307 bound volumes of her
father's correspondence and legal papers went to the Huntington Library.
Until Margaret Ann's
death everything uncomplimentary to her father's memory was part of the secret
and oral history of our area. She wanted her family to be remembered as shrewd
and clever businessmen, but she didn't want it remembered that the Jacks earned
that reputation at the expense of less fortunate citizens. |