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122:, soon prospecting for minerals in Arizona and New Mexico. He entered Los Angeles afterward, penniless, but found employment as a clerk in a hotel first named the Lafayette, then the Cosmopolitan and finally the St. Elmo Hotel. At that time it was owned by Kohl, Dockwiler and Fluhe, but later it became the property of Hammel and Denker.
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According to most sources, the partners then leased the United States Hotel at the corner of
Requena and Main streets in Los Angeles, in 1869. (Another source states that Hammel "and a partner named Bremerman leased the United States Hotel on February 1st from Louis Mesmer.") They kept the hotel
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Earlier, though, shortly after Denker's death, there was an auction at the ranch of "Horses, cows, heifers, milk wagons, farmer wagons, carriages, four-seated tourists' wagon and buggies, two headers, mowers, barrows . . . All the farming implements and tools; also one team of imported
118:, on October 17, 1840, a farmer's son. He began working in a shop in Brunswick, but in 1857 he sailed for New York City, where he again found employment in a store, then beginning a small business of his own. In 1863 he voyaged to San Francisco via the
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at the time as wife Louise A. and children Mary M. Lichtenberger, Antoinette
Lichtenberger, Leontine V. Denker, Isabella C. Mayer and Louis A. Denker, and two brothers and a sister. His estate was estimated informally to be about a million dollars.
279:"; these plans, though, were ruined by a drought and Hammel and Denker bought the land in the 1880s. It was noted as "a fertile stretch of over thirty-five hundred acres of valley and frostless foothill land lying between Los Angeles and
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The two men had the same attorney, J. D. Bicknell, "and upon him devolved the burden of reducing order out of chaos." The appraised value of the Hammel estate was $ 534,428.04, and that of the Denker estate was $ 338,053.
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200:] died his partner continued to administer the partnership as before until he, too, died. And even then it was a necessity almost to deal with the two estates as a single entity."
283:." They "planted bean fields to help pay taxes but their ultimate dream was establishing a North African-themed subdivision called Morocco. However, this fantasyland disappeared
220:, where he was operating the Delphi Hotel with John J. Hendrickson. It was a profitable enterprise because Havilah was then the county seat and headquarters for
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Los
Angeles and Vicinity, Containing a History of the City From Its Earliest Settlement as a Spanish Pueblo to the Closing Year of the Nineteenth Century,
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reported: "Thus passes to rest a society which started out under the most promising auspices, and after a varied career of five years gave up the ghost."
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In 1873-74 A.H. Denker was elected as a member of the Kern County Board of
Supervisors, and despite the fact that he favored retaining Havilah as the
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98:. He and Hammel, his brother-in-law, ran hotels and owned an extensive spread of agricultural property that eventually became the city of
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It was noted in 1904 that Hammel and Denker had been partners "in all their hotel and farming ventures, and when Hamel [
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was built at the northwest corner of Third and Spring streets in Los
Angeles. Only nine years later it would make way for the
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Denker was married to Louise A. Ruellan of France, sister to Marie (above), and they had five children, Marie (later Mrs.
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94:(October 17, 1840 – November 13, 1892) was a German-born American businessman and politician was a business partner of
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347:, where the soil is of heavy body," as one account put it in 1905 when the rancho was about to be put on the market.
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in 1888. One of his preoccupations one the construction of "the largest hotel in
Southern California" on
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History of Kern County, With
Biographical Sketches of the Leading Men and Women of the County . . . .,
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325:, is the principal legacy of the two brothers-in-law. Their 3,055-acre swath of land "lying between
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until "the opening of the great real-estate boom of 1886." They were also the proprietors of the
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Franklyn Hoyt, "The Los
Angeles and Pacific Railway," Electric Railway Historical Association
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in Los
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business" by Henry H. Denker, Andrew's brother, for more than thirty years.
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Sanborn 1894 map of Los
Angeles, plate 8 (right), via Library of Congress
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343:]," had "oil, plenty of water and fine high soil as well as
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His will provided for legacies to his family, identified in the
477:"Hic Jacet: And There We Laid It to Rest—Peace to Its Ashes,"
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Creamery on Hammel and Denker ranch, Beverly Hills, ca.1905
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275:"with the intention of establishing a colony for
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247:(1899) which still stands in the location now.
171:Society, which was dissolved in June 1882. The
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178:He was also one of the charter members of the
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337:to the lowest portion of the plane [
301:In 1889, Denker and Hammel donated a 30-foot
411:"Gain in Values: Hamel and Denker Estates,"
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359:Prince Edward. . . . Lunch will be served."
27:German-born American businessman (1840–1892)
507:"Hammel & Denker Building construction"
285:in 1888 when the national economy collapsed
466:Los Angeles:Historic Record Company (1914)
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132:Denker died on November 13, 1892, at the
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493:Sixty Years in Southern California,
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444:Camille Gavin and Kathy Leverett,
394:Chicago: Chapman Publishing (1901)
236:, later renamed the Cosmopolitan.
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18:Henry Hammel and Andrew H. Denker
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609:Immigrants to the United States
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307:Los Angeles and Pacific Railway
180:Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce
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561:September 21, 1905, page II-7
535:City of Beverly Hills website
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263:Edward Preuss purchased the
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511:Los Angeles Evening Express
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513:. 14 June 1890. p. 5.
446:Kern's Movers and Shakers,
241:Hammel and Denker Building
433:November 14, 1892, page 2
323:Beverly Hills, California
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265:Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas
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100:Beverly Hills, California
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72:Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas
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355:(black). The celebrated
267:in 1868 from landowners
134:Rodeo de las Aguas ranch
594:American businesspeople
576:January 4, 1893, page 8
462:Wallace Melvin Morgan,
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305:over the rancho to the
212:In 1864, Denker was in
557:"Ranch to Be Cut Up,"
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429:"A.H. Denker Dead,"
228:, and Los Angeles.
226:Visalia, California
127:Louis Lichtenberger
110:Denker was born in
92:Andrew Henry Denker
574:Los Angeles Times,
559:Los Angeles Times,
479:Los Angeles Times,
431:Los Angeles Times,
413:Los Angeles Times,
269:Benjamin D. Wilson
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357:trotting stallion
277:German immigrants
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66:(1892-11-13)
604:1892 deaths
599:1840 births
222:stage lines
218:Kern County
190:Partnership
162:Bakersfield
158:county seat
152:Memberships
588:Categories
363:References
311:flag-stops
46:1840-10-17
327:Hollywood
112:Brunswick
79:Relatives
54:Brunswick
496:page 403
345:low land
251:Ranching
331:Sherman
214:Havilah
114:, near
317:Legacy
208:Hotels
145:Herald
296:stock
292:grain
173:Times
329:and
294:and
271:and
61:Died
40:Born
340:sic
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216:in
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