James S. Rice Explained

James Stephen Rice
Birth Date:31 October 1846
Birth Place:Cleveland, Ohio
Nationality:American
Spouse:Coralinn Frances Barlow (1849–1919)(m. 2 Oct 1872)
Children:James Willis Rice (1873–1951)
Merrill Barlow Rice (1876–1919)
Harvey Rice, Jr. (1878–1900)
Percy Fitch Rice (1882–1954)
Death Place:Tustin, California, United States
Party:Democratic
Alma Mater:Western Reserve College BA 1866
Known For:pioneering rancher in Tustin, California
Footnotes:James Rice family papers at the University of California, Irvine

James Stephen Rice (1846–1930) was an American businessman and rancher who was a pioneering resident of Orange County, California and a civic leader in Tustin, California.[1]

Early life and education in Ohio

James Stephen Rice was born 31 October 1846 in Cleveland, Ohio to Harvey Rice (1800–1891) and Emma Maria (Fitch) Rice (1812–1889). Rice was educated in the public schools in Cleveland and attended Case Western Reserve College in Hudson, Ohio, graduating with a BA degree in classical studies in 1866. Rice married Coralinn Frances Barlow (1849–1919) of Cleveland on 2 October 1872, and they had four children. From 1866 to 1877, he was in business with his half-brother Percival Wood Rice and his brother-in-law Proctor Rollin Burnett, who were proprietors of the Rice & Burnett Company a crockery and home furnishing business in Cleveland.[2]

Life and career in California

James Stephen Rice and his family moved to Orange County, California on 18 January 1877, first residing near the head of Newport Bay in one of the former ranch houses owned by José Antonio Andres Sepúlveda (1803–1875),[3] the owner of Rancho San Joaquin. Rice began ranching by working for his brother-in-law James Irvine who had purchased the Rancho San Joaquin from Sepúlveda in 1864 and established the Irvine Ranch.

In 1878, Rice purchased a small tract of land from Peter Potts in the village of Tustin, shortly after Columbus Tustin laid out the first real estate plats, and he planted Valencia orange trees and Muscat grapes. A few years later, he purchased an additional tract of 50acres and expanded his lucrative agricultural operations. In the California real estate boom of 1886–87, he sold off all but 12acres of his land for development at $4000 per acre, allowing him to build a three-story home on his remaining property. Mrs. Coralinn Rice was a noted Orange County socialite frequently hosting performing artists including Helena Modjeska at their home in Tustin. Mrs. Coralinn Rice died in 1919.[4]

Rice was active in politics in Orange County, serving as chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee in the early 1920s. Rice died on 15 April 1930 at his home in Tustin, and buried at Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana, California.[5] [6]

The Rice family relations and genealogy

James S. Rice's eldest son James Willis Rice, who was born 24 August 1873 in Cleveland, followed his father as a rancher and fruit grower in the Tustin, California area. In about 1910 James W. Rice married Ruebel Martin, daughter of John Henry Martin, a Nevada state senator from Douglas County, Nevada, and they had two sons Harvey M. Rice (1913–1974), and James Willis Rice, Jr. (1916–1996). James W. Rice, Sr. died in 1951 in Tustin.

James S. Rice's youngest son Percy Fitch Rice who was born 25 November 1882 was an accomplished inventor who patented several devices, including an automatic paper feeding device for printing presses (1903), an automatic transmission for automobiles (1913), the push-button radio tuner (1925), the gasoline gauge for the automobile (1930) and a multiple exposure camera (1947). He lived in Orange County for most of his life, dying there on 25 May 1954.

Rice's sister, Henrietta Maria "Nettie" (Rice) Irvine (1841-1874)[7] was married to James Irvine, a San Francisco merchant and founder of the Irvine Ranch in Orange County. His brother-in-law (the brother of Coralinn), Charles Averill Barlow (1858–1927), lived in Bakersfield, California and was a U.S. Congressman from the Populist Party serving in California's 6th congressional district.

James S. Rice was a direct descendant of Edmund Rice, an English immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony, as follows:[8] [9]

External links

Archival collections

Notes and References

  1. p. 326 In: Armor, Samuel.(1921). History of Orange County, California with Biographical Sketches. Historic Record Company, Los Angeles. 1669pp.
  2. Avery, Elroy McKendree. (1918). A History of Cleveland and Its Environs. Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago & New York. 569pp.
  3. Web site: Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana . Santa Ana Historical Preservation Society . 27 March 2011 . 18 June 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190618123406/http://santaanahistory.com/articles/ranchos.html . dead .
  4. Web site: The Rice Family by Juanita Lovret . The Tustin Area Historical Society . 27 March 2011.
  5. Web site: p.3 Biography. In: Guide to the Rice Family Papers . University of California, Irvine..
  6. Web site: Stephen S. Rice at Find-a-Grave. Find-a-Grave. 9 Oct 2022.
  7. http://katiewheelerlibrary.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/wlrf002.jpg Portrait of Henrietta (Nettie) Rice (1841-1874), wife of James Irvine I
  8. [Edmund Rice (1638)]
  9. Web site: Edmund Rice descendants: First six generations. . Edmund Rice (1638) Association, Inc. . 16 March 2011.
  10. Web site: Stephen Rice (1769–1850) . Edmund Rice (1638) Association, Inc. . 6 March 2010 . 31 May 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180531094639/http://www.edmund-rice.org/era5gens/p32.htm#i25860 . dead .