iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Culture
 

The Wine Boom!

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Sarah Martin

Winemaking in California has never been an unsupervised industry. The first vines were brought to the Pacific shores by Cortez. When the ruthless conqueror of Mexico failed to find gold he decided to develop the country as an enormous vineyard. He commanded every landowner to plant, every year for five years, 1,000 vines for every 100 Indians living on his land. Years later Spain sent her high priests of civilization into the barren wilderness of Baja, California, with the understood provision that wines would be made for sacramental purposes at their mission outposts.

In 1769 Padre Junipero Serra, the beloved Franciscan, established his first mission in Alta California—Mission San Diego de Alcala. He brought vine cuttings with him, vines which originally came from Spain. They were set out around the new mission and as they flourished, more cuttings were planted in San Gabriel where sun and soil proved even more fruitful for the vines. The gnarled, twisted trunk of the first vine planted at San Gabriel still bears its annual harvest of Mission grapes. This single species planted along El Camino Real by the Franciscan priests, by its abundant yield, established California as a vine land.

The first commercial vineyard was established in Los Angeles in 1824 by one John Chapman who set out 4,000 vines. He was followed seven years later by an even more enterprising pioneer from France, Louis Vignes. His vineyard, on the site of the present Union Station in Los Angeles, was a profitable venture, providing wines and brandies not only for the young City of Angels but for the northern ports of Santa Barbara, Monterey, and San Francisco.

The big excitement, one hundred years ago when gold was discovered in California, created such a fantastic period of American history that the grape rush never received much publicity. It followed the gold rush, and quite logically. Every boom town was a market for wine and grapes. Prices were fabulous. If, many thought, good grapes could be grown in Southern California where the wines were coming from; they would probably do as well elsewhere in the State. New species, such as Chenin Blanc, were imported and they flourished equally well.

Like a thunderbolt sensational news arrived from Europe. The vineyards of France were dying of an unknown disease. California would become the vineyard of the world. Every ship sailing into the Golden Gate confirmed the tragic and wonderful news. By 1855 the boom was on. Landowners all over the State caught the wine fever. By planting a few thousand vines they could become rich, with a world market waiting. Vineyards sprang up all over California. In 1858, bearing vineyards in Los Angeles were selling for $1,000 per acre.

Boom—and then bust!

A poor crop in 1859 was followed by an equally poor harvest in 1860. The State Agricultural Society, formed in 1854, recognized that something must be done to save the young industry. Each year the Society had sent several of its members, by stagecoach and horseback, to widespread areas of vine plantings to report back on economic and agricultural conditions. The most successful vintner was a Sonoma vineyardist, Colonel Agoston Haraszthy. His success with foreign grape varieties, such as Carignane, had sent land values in the vicinity of his Buena Vista vineyard from $6 to $135 per acre.

Col. Haraszthy's achievement was by no means accidental; his entire lifetime had been spent in seeking the right place in America to make fine wines. In 1847 he planted his first vineyard in Wisconsin shortly after he arrived in this country from Hungary. Undaunted by failure there he moved to San Diego, primarily for his health. He imported more than a hundred and sixty-five different species of grapes from Europe, including Zinfandel which has now become the most widely planted grape in California.

Dissatisfied with the quality of the wine he could make there he moved north to the present site of Crystal Springs Reservoir, just south of San Francisco. Here he discovered he was too near the sea; his vines suffered from strong winds, fog, and lack of sunshine.

He made a fourth attempt, in Sonoma, after seeing the flourishing vineyards of General Vallejo in that county. With renewed inspiration he transplanted his imported cuttings and set out the Buena Vista Vineyards in Sonoma in 1856.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Sarah Martin is a freelance marketing writer based out of San Diego, CA. She specializes in the history of wine, winetasting, fine wine varietals, and particularly enjoys a fine glass of Chenin Blanc. For an amazing selection of wines, please visit http://www.wineaccess.com.

Article Tags: california [See Dictionary], vines [See Dictionary], vineyard [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on August 15, 2008 at Isnare.com
 
Rate [Ratings: 0 / 5] [Votes: 243]

Restoration (1660-1689)
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The return of the political control of England to the crown under Charles was a signal for a change in the decorative arts and culture...

Renaissance Tapestries
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The transition from the Gothic to the Renaissance period showed subjects in which details of the two periods were mixed...

Middle or Georgian Period Architecture and Decoration
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

As the wealth of the Colonies increased, there was a gradual introduction of articles of additional comfort, if not those of some luxury, and the architecture reflects these conditions in the construction of more pretentious houses with larger rooms...

Louis Seize (XVI) 1774-1793
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette succeeded to a shamed throne Out of sympathy with a licentious Court, they played child-like on the edge of a volcano...

Control of the Wine Industry
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

Prior to the eighteenth century the wine trade was in the hands of small individual merchants, and establishments on the scale of modern bodegas were entirely unknown; there was no continuity of name and no records of individual merchants have survived...

Louis Quatorze (XIV) 1643-1715
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

A few months after the death of Richelieu, Louis Xlll died, leaving his five-year-old son Louis XIV to reign for seventy-two years, first under the restraint of Mazarin, and later as absolute monarch...

History of Textiles--an Overview
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

Textile weaving is, with architecture, among the oldest of the arts, and dates from the earliest periods of history...

History of the New Movement
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

Beginning in Austria with the "Secession" in 1897, the new art movement spread immediately to Germany, became significant in interior decoration in France since the World War, and arrived in the United States after 1925...

Personalize Your Christmas Ecards
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

When you shop for traditional Christmas cards, most of them contain the same greeting You can make your greeting personal when you send Christmas ecards...

American Colonial Periods
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The arts of the early settlers of this country so accurately portray the condition of the people, their lives, and their struggle for the establishment of a stable government that a study of their social conditions allows us to imagine the forms of the various household furnishings with which they surrounded themselves...

Bordeaux and the Barbarians
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The early prosperity of Bordeaux and the fame it enjoyed under Rome’s rule was quickly destroyed when it was invaded...

The Life Insurance Business in 1868
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The world of 1868, when the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company was born, was very different from the world we know today...

The Investigation Into the Life Insurance Business
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The marked depreciation of urban real estate, farm lands, and bond values called for the rearrangement of the investment portfolio of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company...

Details of Rock Garden Construction
Submitted by: Sarah Martin

The first step in the actual construction of a rock garden is to lay it out, at least in enough detail to show its general contour, to indicate paths and so on...

Custom Embroidered Ball Caps Exactly Your Way
Submitted by: Maggie Johnson

Custom embroidered ball caps are exactly what you want to purchase when you want your group or team to stand out and be proud of who you are...

Why People Wear Custom Embroidered Baseball Caps
Submitted by: Maggie Johnson

People order and wear custom embroidered baseball caps for several reasons and occasions One person may wear several different baseball caps for belonging to different teams, or perhaps from different companies whose products they use and believe to be the best available...

Uses For Custom Embroidered Caps
Submitted by: Maggie Johnson

Custom embroidered caps are used for many different reasons and occasions Wearing custom caps has become quite fashionable...

Western Cowboy Hats the Most Authentic Name in Hat
Submitted by: Kimberly Ducado

Around 1865 , there was a modest and hired room, where John B Stetson had a hundred dollars in his pocket, he then bought the tools that he would want to be the prodigious bequest he is to this day...

Creative Holiday Gift Baskets a Wise Gift Choice
Submitted by: Stacy Carolin

Finding the perfect gift to give at Christmas can sometimes be a daunting task One of the favorites that you can rely on however is some type of gift basket...

Feng Shui - Preparation For Christmas & New Years Entertaining
Submitted by: Amy U. Goodmann

In now time flat the Christmas season will be upon us Christmas means friends and family visiting from far and wide...

Ayutthaya New Directions
Submitted by: Manora

After 1932, the power once exclusively the king's was to be shared by three major blocks: government and civil service administrators, the armed forces and a growing merchant class...

Ayutthaya New Directions Part 2
Submitted by: Manora

Economically, the establishment of the People’s Republic of China discouraged Thailand’s Chinese from sending monthly remittances and encouraged local assimilation which stimulated local growth and profits...

Buddhism: Thailand Part 4
Submitted by: Manora

A monk may leave the monkhood any time he wishes The Thai ordination is a public notice of a man’s intention to follow the Buddha’s teaching...

Christmas Food Gift Baskets the Special Gift For a Loved One
Submitted by: Stacy Carolin

Are you thinking about the perfect Christmas present and haven't yet found what you are looking for Have you searched through hundreds of stores and didn’t find anything that fits both your taste and the recipient of your gift...

5 Must-Know Tips For Personalizing Your Ketubah Text (Jewish Wedding Contract)
Submitted by: Sarah Goldberg

You're jewish and you just got engaged, so you need to think about getting a ketubah for your wedding...

Ayutthayan Economy and Lifestyle Part 3
Submitted by: Manora

Son of King Thammaraja, who held the Thai throne on Burmese sufferance, the nine-year-old Naresuan had been taken hostage to Burma after Ayutthaya’s fall...

Ayutthayan Economy And Lifestyle Part 4
Submitted by: Manora

Regular state revenues and peace allowed culture to flower as never before, and Narai’s reign was to be remembered for the establishment of friendly relations with Europeans making Ayutthaya the most cosmopolitan of cities...

Ayutthaya’s Fall, Bangkok’s Rise
Submitted by: Manora

With the exception of King Boromokot (1733-1758), during whose reign Thai monks visited Ceylon to purify Sinhalese Buddhism, Narai’s successors became increasingly ineffectual while, ominously, Burmese kings grew stronger...

Ayutthaya’s Fall, Bangkok’s Rise Part 2
Submitted by: Manora

His voracious reading convinced him that Thailand’s continued independence could best be secured by encouraging equally friendly relations with numerous Western countries...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy