HISTORY
| Joseph
Sims is one of the simon-pure pioneers of Sacramento county,
a man whose life has been dignified by long residence,
good works, excellent civic qualities, and devotion to
worthy ideals. He begin with almost nothing and since
coming to the west has by industry and the strength of
character gained both wealth and honorable position.
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Joseph
Sims is one of the simon-pure pioneers of Sacramento county,
a man whose life has been dignified by long residence, good
works, excellent civic qualities, and devotion to worthy ideals.
He begin with almost nothing and since coming to the west
has by industry and the strength of character gained both
wealth and honorable position.
He was
born in London, England, January 25, 1832. His parents, Samuel
J. and Elizabeth (Payne) Sims, were also of English birth,
and when Joseph was a child his father went to America and
a little later the mother followed with the family. Toronto,
Canada, was the family home, where the parents lived till
their death, when about sixty-two years of age. Joseph spent
the first thirteen years of his life there, and then went
to Buffalo, New York. He soon returned home to spend a few
more months in school before finally launching out on his
life career. He was next in New York city, having enlisted
at Fort Hamilton in the famous Stevenson regiment, the main
body of which has been sent to the Pacific coast in 1847 to
take part in the Mexican war in that quarter. The new recruits,
to the number of about two hundred, Mrs. Sims being one, embarked
at Philadelphia on the ship Isabella and made the long voyage
around the Horn. It was six months before they reached Monterey,
where they landed in 1848, and thence Company D. of which
Mrs. Sims was a member, under Captain Henry M. Nagley, was
returned by the same vessel to Lower California. Six months
were spent in campaigning in this part of Mexico, and Company
D, which retired from there on August 31, was the last body
of troops to leave the scene of war, being mustered out in
October, 1848.
Mr. Sims was thus in the Eldorado fields long
before the forty-niners reached the coast, and on being discharged
he and his partner, Charles H. Ross, engaged in mining on
Mokolumne Hill in Calaveras county. Dissatisfied there, they
left in a few weeks, and on Christmas day, 1848, were on the
Sacramento river on their way to San Francisco by way of Sutter's
Fort. During the early months of the following year he an
his partner joined a company and mined for a time on the American
river, with good success, taking out about eighty dollars
a day, but in the autumn of the same year they returned to
Sacramento county. These two men were the first actual settlers
on land along the Sacramento below Freeport, there being only
a few temporary residents in the natural grass region thereabouts.
They built a cabin, but in the following winter a great flood
devastated all the country in the vicinity of the river. In
1850 they moved back from the river to safer quarters, and
Mr. Sims and three others took up over fifteen hundred acres
of land where he resided until his death, which at one time
was the longest established resident in this part of the country.
Mr. Ross and Mr. Sims continued their partnership relations
for about ten years, and in 1860 Mr. Sims bought the former's
interests, and retained this fine body of eleven hundred acres.
This ranch was located about ten miles south of the Sacramento
city, and produced an abundance of hay, grain crops, stock
and had a fine vineyard that was a key feature of the place.
In December, 1860, Mr. Sims was married to
Miss Mary L. Moor. Mr. and Mrs. Sims were the parents of four
children.
The
Sims Family
Myrtle Sturgis Sims was a teacher in the Sloughhouse
area, both at Wilson and Rhoades schools. Later she taught
at Sierra School in Sacramento. In 3rd grade, Toby Johnson
was one of her pupils. When she moved to the Sims Ranch, she
taught a short time for Toby Johnson to fill our the term
vacated by Mr. Kramer. She held County Home Economic meetings
at her home. Neighbors gathered to do upholstering. She also
taught 4H cooking to the Franklin group of girls.
All of the Sims' family were horticulturists.
You never left their ranch without in-season fruit. Bill Sims
raised over 200 Camellias, most in redwood tubs which he made
himself. He was "Best of Show" for two years. He
always took trays of his flowers to the convalescent home
so all the patients could have them to enjoy. He helped several
young, and oldsters too, to become interested in woodwork.
Five of the Sims family graduated from the University of California,
Davis and left and endowment of $2,000,000 to the University.
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