Thomas Wrightington: Difference between revisions
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'''Thomas Wrightington''' (c. 1797–1853) was an early settler of [[San Diego, California]]. |
'''Thomas Wrightington''' (c. 1797–1853) was an early settler of [[San Diego, California]]. |
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Thomas Wrightington was born c. 1797 in Massachusetts. He |
Thomas Wrightington was born c. 1797 in Massachusetts. He was a shoemaker from [[Fall River, Massachusetts]] to [[San Diego]] in 1833. |
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He came with Abel Stearns on the ''Ayucucho'', while Stearns continued up the coast. |
He came with Abel Stearns on the ''Ayucucho'', while Stearns continued up the coast. |
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Wrightington was probably the second American settler in [[San Diego]], after [[Henry D. Fitch]]. |
Wrightington was probably the second American settler in [[San Diego]], after [[Henry D. Fitch]]. |
Revision as of 22:34, 22 January 2006
Thomas Wrightington (c. 1797–1853) was an early settler of San Diego, California.
Thomas Wrightington was born c. 1797 in Massachusetts. He was a shoemaker from Fall River, Massachusetts to San Diego in 1833. He came with Abel Stearns on the Ayucucho, while Stearns continued up the coast. Wrightington was probably the second American settler in San Diego, after Henry D. Fitch. Wrightington was naturalized as a Mexican citizen in 1838. He served as a volunteer in the Mexican War.
Wrightington married Juana Machado Alipas, a widower with three children and daughter of José Manuel Machado, one of the first soldiers at the Presidio of San Diego and Serafina Valdez. They had 3 sons and 1 daughter.
Juana Machado Alipas de Wrightington, along with being a wife and mother, often rode with Father Ubach into the back country to visit the Indian rancherías and to check conditions. Her neighbors called her the "Florence Nightingale of Old Town."
Wrightington served several offices under the Mexican and American governments. During 1844 and again during 1847–March 1848 he was Suplente (Substitue Justice of the Peace or Mayor) of San Diego Pueblo.
Wrightington lived in the adobe built by her wife's first husband, Damasio Alipas around 1830. Wrightington added a wing in 1852. The adobe still stands in Old Town State Historical Park, in the west corner of the town square, and is open to the public as a retail store.
Richard Henry Dana, Jr. in Two Years Before the Mast commented on first coming ashore at San Diego that
- sailor-like, [we] steered for the first grog-shop. This was a small mud building, of only one room, in which were liquors, dry and West India goods, shoes, bread, fruits, and everything which is vendible in California. It was kept by a Yankee [Thomas Wrightington], a one-eyed man, who belonged formerly to Fall River, came out to the Pacific in a whale-ship, left her at the Sandwich Islands [Hawaii] and came to California. . . the liquor was a real (12 1/2 cents) a glass.
Wrightington died 1853. According to Dana he "fell from his horse when drunk, and was found nearly eaten up by coyotes".
Wrightington's widow Juana Wrightington remained in the house until the late 1890s. A room was rented out of her house to Dr. George McKinstry for over 30 years as a physician's office, with Juana as a nurse. Her final days were spent with her daughter Serafina Israel in Coronado. Juana is buried in Calvary Cemetery (now Pioneer Park) in Mission Hills, San Diego with a headstone that reads "JUANITA WRIGHTINGTON 1814–1901".
See also
- Thomas and Juana Wrightington biography (San Diego Historical Society), from Smythe's History of San Diego
- "The Machado-Silvas Family", The Journal of San Diego History 15:1 (Winter 1969) by Rosemary Masterson
- Senora Dona Juana Machado Alipaz de Ridington [Wrightington] or translated Times Gone By in Alta California: Recollections of Senora Dona Juana Machado Alipaz de Ridington [Wrightington] (1878). Translated by Raymond S. Brandes. Reprinted in The Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly, September 1959, pp. 195-241.
- 1850 Census, San Diego, California, p. 276A