
John P. Fisk, Jr.
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P. Fisk, Jr., was born in Beloit, Wis., September 11, 1857, and was educated
in the public and high schools of that city and at Beloit College, graduating
from the latter institution in the class of 1880. After leaving college
Mr. Fisk taught several years, two years of the time at Richmond, Ill.
He then took another course of study for a year and became a teacher in
the Academical Department of Beloit College. After a year and a half of
this work, during which he was too closely confined to his duties, Mr.
Fisk traveled for a time through the South, and finally came to California,
and to Riverside in November, 1885. In
March, 1887, he removed to Redlands, and commenced his business career
in this city as an agent for real estate and insurance. Soon afterward
the Union Bank building was completed, and Mr. Fisk opened in it the first
office in a permanent building in Redlands. The one room then occupied
is to day the main office, to which tow others have been added, and all
are none to large to accommodate his steadily growing business.
In December, 1890,
Mr. Fish was married to Mrs. Elizabeth H. Eddy.
A member of the Congregational church, he was one of its trustees for
a long time and until two years ago. He also took a prominent part in
furthering the work of the Redlands Y.M.C.A.;
was the first president of the organization, and has been active in securing
the erection of its fine building and in protecting its business interests.
He is also a director in the Redlands Chamber of Commerce.
Since
he first opened an office Mr. Fisk has been continuously engaged in active
business, and many important transactions have been intrusted to his management.
He has been familiar with every piece of ground, its variations in value
and its changes in ownership. Few men have had the fortune to keep track
in detail of such marvelous growth in values during so short a period
of time as Mr. Fisk has seen in the development of Redlands from almost
nothing to a city with an assessed valuation of about $3,00,000, which
means an actual value of nearly $8,000,000.
Mr. Fisk's first
important real estate transaction was the sale of the Terrace Villa Hotel,
in which he was living at the time, to Messrs. Hubbard and Lambeth. He
also sold the Barton tract of 1,150 acres to a syndicate of Los Angeles
capitalists for $300,000. He bought the sites for the depots of the two
railroads when they came into Redlands, and the sites for many of the
larger buildings. He has done a large insurance business, representing
such companies as the Equitable Life, the Ætna, the Hartford, the
Liverpool, London and Globe, the Royal of Liverpool, the Fireman's Fund
of San Francisco, the Insurance Company of North America, the German-American
of New York and many others. He has also done a great deal of business
in negotiating loans, as a notary public and as agent for property owners
living in the East. His long experience makes him an authority upon values
of real estate and stocks in Redlands and upon the horticultural, business
and industrial possibilities of the city and vicinity.
(Source:
Illustrated Redlands, 1897, p. 74.)
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