The William Adam Simmons House in Half Moon Bay derives its significance
under criteria A and C from the fact that it is one of only three
remaining residences constructed in the 1860s during an important period
of Anglo-European settlement and up-building of San Mateo County's first
major town. It is also significant under criterion C as one of two
remaining structures in Half Moon Bay to employ wooden slab wall construction.
It is significant under criterion B because of the
contributions made to the community by William Adam Simmons, its builder
and Half Moon Bay's first undertaker, and his son Frederick Alien
Simmons, who served as San Mateo County's Half Moon Bay constable and
deputy sheriff for forty years. Both father and son occupied the
Simmons family residence during the productive years of their lives.
All physical changes that have been made over time to the Simmons
property are the product of one family in its evolution and growth. The
William Adam Simons House should qualify for listing in the National
Register at the local level of significance.
Half Moon Bay was originally known as San Benito. Much of the town we know today was developed on the Mexican land grant, Rancho
Arroyo de los Pilarcitos, awarded to Candelario Miramontes in
1841. Miramontes, a soldier at the
Presidio of San Francisco was
the first Mexican citizen to occupy the area. He constructed an
adobe dwelling on the south bank of Pilarcitos Creek for his
large family and with thirty head of cattle and horses began
cultivating five acres of land.
During the War with Mexico between 1846-1848, a number of Spanish speaking families from Verb a Buena
and Mission Dolores sought the relative isolation of the San Mateo County coastside to avoid the conflict.
With the ensuing Gold Rush, others moved to San Benito to get away from the influx of Anglo/European settlers. By the
mid-1850s when the extranjeros or forigners found the fertile coastal terraces, the settlement of San Benito
consisted of about seven adobe homes, none of which remain today.
Candelario Miramontes died in 1846. By 1853 his heirs began
selling parcels from the original grant to the newcomers. The first
San Mateo County tax assessment records in 1857 show native
Caiifornians and the "foreigners" matched at nineteen each. By that
time,
San Benito had given way to the name Spanishtown, indicative of the original ethnic makeup of the population.
The Anglo/European arrivals purchased or leased farming land
in and around the settlement and began to build up the commercial
and industrial base of the community. In 1863 Estanislao Zaballa
surveyed and layed out the Spanishtown Plat, creating a gridiron
pattern on the land in the tradition of American town planning that
remains today. In spite of major difficulties in transporting
produce to market because of the rugged physical location of the
region, Spanishtown flourished and grew. The 1870 census showed
Spanishtown to be the most populous township in San Mateo County.
In 1874, the town's name was officially changed for the last
time to Half Moon Bay. By that time there was a full compliment
of general stores, hotels, and saloons a lumber yard, flour mill,
wagon & plow manufacturing facilities, blacksmith shops, a brewery
and churches.
It was in this period that William Adam Simmons arrived in
Half Moon Bay in 1864. Simmons was a native of New York State where
he was born in 1838. He came to California by way of the Isthmus of
Panama. Early census records show him as a carpenter by trade.
San Mateo County assessment files indicate that he purchased 50
acres of land near Half Moon Bay where he engaged in farming. In 1865 he
constructed the house at 751 Kelly Street. How long Simmons
continued to farm is unknown, but with the rapid development of Half
Moon
Bay his skills as a carpenter soon came into demand. The only other
identified builder in the l860's was J.W. Dawson.