Weber Point Home Explained

Weber Point Home
Weber Point Events Center
Location:Weber Point Event Center
221 N. Center Street, Stockton, California
Coordinates:37.964°N -121.278°W
Built:1850
Architect:Carlos Maria Weber
Architecture:Adobe Monterey Colonial
Designation1 Date:January 11, 1935
Designation1:California
Designation1 Number:165

Weber Point Home is a historical site in Stockton, California in San Joaquin County. The site of the former Weber Point Home is a California Historical Landmark No. 165, listed on January 11, 1935. The Weber Point Home was a built by Captain Charles M. Weber founder of Stockton. Weber was pioneer of California and built a two-story adobe-and-redwood house in 1850. At the time it was the largest house in Stockton. The house was built on the east end of the Stockton Channel. The house was surrounded by landscaped gardens built for his new wife Helen Murphy. Weber lived in the house till his death in 1881. The house was located on Center Street between Channel and Miner Street in Stockton. The Weber Point House was destroyed in a fire in 1917. The Weber Point House was the center of the 8,747 acre Mexican land grant Rancho Campo de los Franceses. The Rancho owned present day Stockton and lands south and east, most of the current San Joaquin County.[1]

History

To build the Weber Point Home, Weber purchased redwood lumber from Woodside near the Santa Cruz Mountains. Two lumber mills operated near the Santa Cruz Mountains from the mills redwood brought by oxen pulled cart to Redwood City, then at San Francisco Bay taken up the San Joaquin River and the Stockton Channel to Weber Point by barge. The Great Flood of 1862 damaged the house and it was repaired. The Great Flood of 1881 also damaged the house and it was again repaired.[2]

Weber came to in California in 1841 with the Bartleson–Bidwell Party, the first American to emigrants in covered wagon from Missouri to California. Weber joined William Gulnac, a Mexican citizen in 1842, and opened a business in San Jose. Weber became a Mexican citizen in 1845. Weber was able to acquired Gulnac's interest in El Rancho del Campo de los Franceses. Weber also profited from the California Gold Rush.[3]

The historical marker was built by California State Department of Parks and Recreation in cooperation with the Stockton City Council and Cultural Heritage Board placed on July 10, 1976, at the Weber Point Events Center. The historical marker is about 450 feet east of where the house was.[4] [5]

Weber's only daughter, Julia Weber, built a house, the Weber Cottage, next to the Weber Point Home in 1892. Her house had a connecting corridor to the Weber Point Home. The Weber Cottage was moved to San Joaquin County Historical Museum at Micke Grove Park on November 9, 1984. The Weber Cottage is the oldest wooden building in San Joaquin County. Weber's sons, Charles Weber II, Thomas, and Julia built a new two-story Victorian home on Weber Point in 1881. Some of the glass, doors and windows from 1850 adobe home were used to build the 1881 home. The home was Julia new home. Julia moved the 1881 home and the 1892 Weber Cottage in 1900 to West Lane, just north of the Calaveras River, calling it Helen’s Oaks after her mother. The site is today called Helen's Oaks Circle road.[2] [6]

Weber Point Event Center

The Weber Point Event Center is an 9.7acres open plaza and stage that is rented for city events and annual events, like: festivals, concerts, movie nights, and other of community events. Weber Point Event Center is on the east end of the Stockton Channel at 221 N. Center Street. Weber Point Event Center is managed by the City of Stockton Community Services Department. Weber Point Event Center also has: the Great Circle, step Amphitheater, children's play area, an interactive water feature, Point Amphitheater, and waterfront promenade.[7] [8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CHL # 165 Weber Point San Joaquin. www.californiahistoricallandmarks.com.
  2. Web site: Stockton’s First House: Weber Cottage – Central Valley Magazine for Women. March 1, 2023.
  3. Web site: Charles Weber and the Founding of Stockton Historical Marker. www.hmdb.org.
  4. Web site: Weber Point Historical Marker. www.hmdb.org.
  5. Web site: Weber Point Home – 1850. The Historical Marker Database . 22 August 2024.
  6. Web site: Supervisors expected to approve moving historic Weber house. Shannon Darling/News-Sentinel staff. writer. June 4, 2001. Lodinews.com.
  7. Web site: Weber Point Events Center. Visit Stockton.
  8. Web site: Weber Point Events Center - City of Stockton. www.stocktonca.gov.