
Albert E.
Taylor
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n
a literal sense Albert Edwin Taylor has perhaps had more to do with laying
the foundations of Redlands than any other man, for he was one of the
first to arrive on the scene of the future city, and as a contractor and
bricklayer has had to do with a great many of the principal residences
and business houses. Mr. Taylor was born near Toronto, Canada, August
17, 1862, passed his early boyhood there, and then went to Toronto, where
he learned a trade as steamfitter, taking up bricklaying and contracting
after he came to Redlands. Some of his earlier business experience was
in St. Paul and Winnipeg. He came to Redlands June 12, 1882, and with
other young men went into camp on the zanja. In January, 1884, he built
the first house in the present town of Redlands, after the town plat was
filed, a building first used for a residence and afterward for a barn.
After this Mr. Taylor took many contracts for building brick blocks and
for the brick or stone foundations of many other buildings. He was foreman
on the Bear Valley dam from its commencement to its completion. Among
the principal buildings with which he was connected are the Windsor annex,
the McGinness and Phinney blocks, the annex to the McAbee block, the First
National Bank annex, the Feraud building, the first part of the High
School building, the Academy of Music, the Y.M.C.A.
building, the Hargraves block, the Cave & Reeves block, and more recently,
the brickwork for the Mitchell block, the Redlands Preserving Company's
building and the Orange Growers' Association's building. He built for
himself a brick block on the corner of State and Sixth streets. For the
past twelve years he has also been a manufacturer of cement pipe.
Mr. Taylor was married
December 20, 1884, at Los Angeles, to Miss Nellie Gowland,
a native of Brantford, Canada . They have four children, two sons and
two daughters, all born in Redlands. Mr. Taylor is an Odd Fellow, is past
master of Redlands Lodge No. 300, F. & A.M., and also a member of
the Royal Arch Chapter and the Delta Lodge of Perfection, A.& A. Scottish
Rite.
(Source:
Illustrated Redlands, 1897, pg. 92.)
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