Leland Stanford

Producer

Popular As Amasa Leland Stanford

Birthday March 9, 1824

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Watervliet, New York, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1893-6-21, Palo Alto, California, U.S. (69 years old)

Nationality United States

#19241 Most Popular

1720

Later ancestors settled in the eastern Mohawk Valley of central New York about 1720.

Stanford's father was a farmer of some means.

1819

Among his siblings were New York State Senator Charles Stanford (1819–1885) and Australian businessman and spiritualist Thomas Welton Stanford (1832–1918).

1824

Amasa Leland Stanford (March 9, 1824 – June 21, 1893) was an American attorney, industrialist, philanthropist, and Republican Party politician from California.

Leland Stanford was born in 1824 in what was then Watervliet, New York (now the Town of Colonie).

He was one of eight children of Josiah and Elizabeth Phillips Stanford.

1836

Stanford was raised on family farms in the Lisha Kill and Roessleville (after 1836) areas of Watervliet.

The family home in Roessleville was called Elm Grove.

Stanford attended the common school until 1836 and was tutored at home until 1839.

1841

He attended Clinton Liberal Institute, in Clinton, New York, and studied law at Cazenovia Seminary in Cazenovia, New York, in 1841 to 1845.

1845

In 1845, he entered the law office of Wheaton, Doolittle, and Hadley in Albany.

1848

After being admitted to the bar in 1848, Stanford moved with many other settlers to Port Washington, Wisconsin, where he began a law practice with Wesley Pierce.

His father presented him with a law library said to be the finest north of Milwaukee.

1850

In 1850, Stanford was nominated by the Whig Party as Washington County, Wisconsin district attorney.

1852

In 1852, having lost his law library and other property to a fire, Stanford followed his five brothers to California during the California Gold Rush.

His wife, Jane, returned temporarily to Albany and her family.

He went into business with his brothers and became the keeper of a general store for miners at Michigan City, California, later the name changed to Michigan Bluff in Placer County; later he had a wholesale house.

He served as a justice of the peace and helped organize the Sacramento Library Association, which later became the Sacramento Public Library.

1855

In 1855, he returned to Albany to join his wife, but found the pace too slow after the excitement of developing California.

1856

In 1856, he and Jane moved to Sacramento, where he engaged in mercantile pursuits on a large scale.

He was one of the four merchants known popularly as "The Big Four" (or among themselves as "the Associates"), who were the key investors in Chief Engineer Theodore Dehone Judah's plan for the Central Pacific Railroad.

1859

Stanford ran unsuccessfully for governor of California in 1859.

1861

He was an influential executive of the Central Pacific Railroad and later the Southern Pacific railroads from 1861 to 1890, giving him tremendous power in the American West and leaving a lasting impact on California.

He also played a significant role as a shareholder and executive in the early history of Pacific Life and Wells Fargo.

He was the first Republican Governor of California.

Stanford is widely considered a robber baron.

The five of them incorporated it on June 28, 1861, and Stanford was elected as its president.

The other three associates were Charles Crocker, Mark Hopkins, and Collis P. Huntington.

The Central Pacific's first locomotive, named Gov. Stanford in his honor, is preserved on static display at the California State Railroad Museum, in Sacramento.

He was nominated again in 1861 and won the election.

1862

He served as the 8th Governor of California from 1862 to 1863 and represented the state in the United States Senate from 1885 until his death in 1893.

He and his wife Jane founded Stanford University, named after their late son.

Stanford was a successful merchant and wholesaler who migrated to California during the Gold Rush and built a business empire.

Due to the Great Flood of 1862, he had to row to his inauguration in a rowboat.

He served one term, then limited to two years.

1868

While the Central Pacific was under construction, Stanford and his associates in 1868 acquired control of the Southern Pacific Railroad.

1869

As head of the railroad company that built the western portion of the "First Transcontinental Railroad" from Sacramento eastward over the Sierra Nevada mountains in California to Nevada and Utah, Stanford presided at the ceremonial driving of "Last Spike" in Promontory, Utah on May 10, 1869.

1890

Stanford was elected president of the Southern Pacific, a post he held until 1890 (except for a brief period in 1869–1870 when Tevis was acting president) when he was ousted by Collis Huntington.

1940

The Elm Grove home was razed in the 1940s.

2017

His immigrant ancestor, Thomas Stanford, settled in Charlestown, Massachusetts, in the 17th century.