
E.I. Martin
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.
I. Martin, a prominent nurseryman of Redlands and vicinity, was born in
Page county, Iowa, April 4, 1869. He was educated in the common schools
and at a normal college, and commenced his business career in the spring
of 1887 at Shenandoah, Iowa, as a member of the firm of Martin & Welch,
nurserymen. These gentlemen rapidly increased the business that they founded,
and in 1891 bought out the stock and good will of the Mount Arbor Nursery,
which was at that time the third largest in Iowa. A year later, on account
of failing health, Mr. martin decided to change his residence, left Iowa,
and came to California in 1892 after looking over Kansas and Colorado.
He visited all sections of the state, north and south, including Los Angeles,
Pasadena, and Riverside, and finally decided upon Redlands as his future
home. Soon after his arrival, in January, 1893, he commenced to prepare
his nurseries, making a specialty of citrus stock and deciduous fruit
trees. The following spring he opened a yard in the city, near the Facts
office, on State street.
Mr. Martin now has
nurseries at Lugonia Park and on the Barton and Williams tracts in Redlands,
also at Crafton and Moreno. At the present time his is planting still
another, on Olive street, near Terracina. He does a large wholesale business
in shipping trees and cuttings out of town, and makes almost daily shipments
to the northern part of the state during the shipping season. He also
sends large consignments to Mexico and Florida and some trees to Japan.
He has made a specialty of shipping stock long distances. One shipment
sent to Mexico was delayed and had to go by slow methods of transportation,
and was therefore six weeks on the road. But the trees arrived in good
condition and were satisfactory. This experience was the more remarkable
because the trees were orange stock and were shipped in August. A shipment
of orange seed bed stock sent to Florida was twenty-two days on the road,
but the purchases wrote that they looked on arrival as though they had
just been taken from the bed. These and similar orders, successfully filled
under the disadvantage of long distances, have resulted in a marked increase
in Mr. Martin's mail-order business.
Mr. Martin was active
in politics during the recent campaign, and served as a member of the
executive committee and also as treasurer of the Redlands Bryan Club,
and as secretary of the county central committee of the People's party.
He is a member of several of the local social organizations, and is vice-chief
ranger of the Foresters.
An extensive advertiser,
Mr. Martin believes in pushing his business, and in doing so has established
a good and growing business in a remarkable short space of time. He requires
a stenographer to look after the correspondence involved in his mail-order
department during the busy season, and issues an annual catalogue. In
the winter he requires some twenty assistants and half that number all
the year.
The
above picture shows a part of E. I. Martin's Crafton nursery,
just after irrigation, showing the furrows where the water ran.
(Source:
Illustrated Redlands, 1897, p. 79.)
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