COMMITTEE OF FIFTY (1906)

Franklin Hall, the Committee's final venue

This 'Committee of Fifty', sometimes referred to as 'Committee of Safety', 'Citizens' Committee of Fifty' or 'Relief and Restoration Committee of Law and Order', was called into existence by Mayor Eugene Schmitz during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. The Mayor invited civic leaders, entrepreneurs, newspaper men and politicians, but none of the members of the Board of Supervisors, to participate in this committee in whose hands the civil administration of San Francisco would rest. Schmitz thought it necessary to form this body to manage the crisis during the disaster, although there was no legal basis for it. It first assembled in the basement of the ruined Hall of Justice on Wednesday, April 18, at 3 p.m. By 5 p.m. the place became untenable and the Committee crossed Portsmouth Square to meet at the Plaza which in turn had to be abandoned 2 hours later. At 8 p.m. the Committee assembled at the Fairmont Hotel's ballroom, sitting along the edge of the stage and on packing cases. At this point, the 19 sub-committees were set up. Shortly after 11 p.m. they dispersed. Overnight the Fairmont Hotel burned down. On Thursday, April 19, at 6 a.m., the Committee met at the North End police station. At 11 a.m. they had to abandon the police station because of the scorching heat, and reconvened at 2 p.m. at Franklin Hall, on Fillmore Street, where they stayed for the remainder of the crisis, and became known as Temporary City Hall. At 4.30 p.m. Abe Ruef appeared there. He had not been called to be a member, but invited himself, and Mayor Schmitz accepted his offer, and he became chairman of an additional sub-committee, trying unsuccessfully to relocate the Chinese. Actually, there were more than hundred members, but they never met all together, since during the chaos members came and went as they could or would.

Contents
Members
Sub-Committees
External links
Sources
Members

On April 19, 1906, The New York Times published the first list of the members of the Committee with 49 names - it did not include the Mayor's-, which originated the name Committee of Fifty. Later, more and more people went to the meetings and here are the names of people who were mentioned by different sources as members:

Eugene Schmitz, Mayor, Chairman of the Committee of Fifty

Rufus P. Jennings, Secretary of the Committee of Fifty, executive officer of the California Promotion Committee

Frank P. Anderson

Hugo K. Asher, afterwards Delegate to Democratic National Convention from California, 1920

William Babcock, Vice-President of the The Pacific-Union Club 1897,

William J. Bartnett, chief counsel of the Western Pacific Railroad

Clement Pelham Bennett, court reporter

Maurice Block

Henry Ulysses Brandenstein, lawyer

J. Dalzell Brown

S. G. Buckbee,

H. M. Burke

Michael Casey

Albert E. Castle

Myrtle E. Cerf, California's first woman CPA

I. Choynski, Press Agent of the Committee

Oscar Cooper

R. H. Countryman

Paul Cowles

Harry Thornton Creswell, some time City and County Attorney and Police Commissioner, afterwards Delegate to Democratic National Convention from California, 1912

Henry J. Crocker, Secretary of the The Pacific-Union Club 1895-1896

R. A. Crothers, publisher of the ''San Francisco Evening Bulletin''

O. K. Cushing, lawyer

Horace Davis, ex-United States Representative

George Dillman

Jeremiah Dinan, Chief of Police

Edgar J. De Pue, President of The Pacific-Union Club 1906-1908

Michael H. de Young, owner of the ''San Francisco Chronicle''

A. B. C. Dohrman

Frank G. Drum, Treasurer of The Pacific-Union Club 1911-1914

John Sylvester Drum, attorney, afterwards President of The Mercantile Trust Company, Director of the Pacific Gas & Electric Company, and President of the American Bankers' Association

George F. Duffy

F. J. Dwyer

Garrett W. Enerney

C. W. Fay, postmaster

Tirey L. Ford, attorney for United Railroads, ex-California Attorney General

Charles S. Fee

Katharine Felton, Director of the Family Service Agency of San Francisco

John W. Ferris

★ Dr. Thomas Filben, Methodist minister

James L. Flood

T. C. Friedlander

★ Dr. Garceau

Thomas Garrett

Mark L. Gerstle

Louis T. Glass, director of telephone companies, and inventor of the Jukebox

Wellington Gregg, Jr

R. B. Hale, owner of Hale Brothers department store

★ Dr. Harris, physician

Ralph Harrison

Richard C. Harrison, attorney, partner in the law firm of Harrison & Harrison

William Greer Harrison, agent for Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Co, Liverpool

John Downey Harvey, major shareholder of Ocean Shore Railroad

I. W. Hellman

Francis J. Heney, special federal prosecutor, later the same year prosecuted Schmitz and Ruef for bribery

George A. Hensley

William F. Herrin, Chief Counsel of Southern Pacific Railroad

★ Dr. Marcus Herstein, physician

Howard Carlton Holmes, Chief Engineer of the San Francisco Dry Dock Company

J. R. Howell, Chairman of the San Francisco Real Estate Board

A. M. Hunt

★ Judge John Hunt, of the San Francisco Superior Court

D. V. Kelly

Homer King

George A. Knight

F. H. Lamb

Franklin Knight Lane, lawyer, afterwards US Secretary of the Interior

Hartland Law, manufacturer of patent medicines

Herbert E. Law, brother of Hartland Law

W. H. Leahy

John J. Lermen, attorney

Charles Loesch

H. D. Loveland

C. G. Lyman

C. H. Maddox

Frank Maestretti

Thomas Magee

John J. Mahoney

★ Rabbi A. W. Mann

John Martin

★ Dr. McGill

John McLauren

Gavin McNab

John McNaught

S. B. McNear

John F. Merrill

William H. Metson

★ Archbishop George Thomas Montgomery, coadjutor of San Francisco

Edward F. Moran, former President of the San Francisco Civil Service Commission

★ US Circuit Judge William W. Morrow, president of the San Francisco Red Cross

Irving F. Moulton

Thornwell Mullally, assistant to Patrick Calhoun, of United Railroads of San Francisco

S. G. Murphy

George A. Newhall, Secretary of The Pacific-Union Club 1896-1897, 1908

William Ford Nichols, Episcopal Bishop of California

Hermann Oelrichs, of Norddeutsche Lloyd shipping line, son-in-law of James Graham Fair

★ Father Phillip O'Ryan

Robert Park

A. H. Payson

James D. Phelan, ex-Mayor of San Francisco, predecessor of Schmitz

Albert Pissis, architect

Willis Polk, architect

Allan Pollock

Edward B. Pond, ex-Mayor of San Francisco

A. S. Porter

Harry V. Ramsdell

J. W. Raphael

James W. Reid, Secretary of The Pacific-Union Club 1899-1900

J. B. Reinstein

David Rich

Dent H. Robert

John Rogers

Abe Ruef, political boss

Hermann Schussler, hydraulic engineer

Henry T. Scott, president of Union Iron Works, and Chairman of the Board of Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company

Homer T. Scott

Frank Shea

James Shea

Samuel M. Shortridge, lawyer, brother of Clara Shortridge Foltz

George Smith

John H. Speck, realtor

Claus Spreckels, sugar magnate

Rudolph Spreckels, sugar factory owner, son of Claus Spreckels

I. Steinhart

Charles Sutro

Gustave Sutro

Andrea Svabora

Frank J. Symes, president of the Merchants' Association

Clem Tobin

Joseph S. Tobin

George Toumey

★ Rabbi Jacob Voorsanger, rabbi of Temple Emanu-El in San Francisco since 1889

John P. Young, editor of the ''San Francisco Chronicle''

Fred Ward

James Ward

William Watson

Fairfax Henry Wheelan, vice-president of the Southern Pacific Milling Co., graduated from Harvard with the class of 1880, together with Theodore Roosevelt

Benjamin Ide Wheeler, President of the University of California

Charles S. Wheeler, afterwards Alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from California, 1920

A. W. Wilson

George W. Witton

Andrew J. Wood

Thomas P. Woodward
Sub-Committees


★ Relief of the Hungry, chairman Rabbi Jacob Voorsanger

★ Housing the Homeless, chairman W. J. Bartnett; Fairfax W. Wheelan

★ Relief of Sick and Wounded, chairwoman Katharine Felton

★ Drugs and Medical Supplies, chairman Dr. Harris

★ Relief of Chinese, chairman Rev. Filben

★ Transportation of Refugees, chairman Thomas Magee

★ Citizens' Police

★ Auxiliary Fire Department

★ Restoration of Water Supply, chairman Frank P. Anderson

★ Restoration of Light and Telephones, chairman Rudolph Spreckels

★ Restoration of Fire in Dwellings, chairman Jeremiah Dinan

★ Restoration of Abattoirs

★ Resumption of Transportation, chairman Thornwall Mullally

★ Resumption of Civil Government, chairman Garett McEnerney

★ Resumption of the Judiciary, chairman Judge Charles W. Slack

★ Resumption of Retail Trade

★ Organization of Wholesalers

★ Finance, chairman James D. Phelan

★ Sanitation

★ Relocation of the Chinese, chairman Abe Ruef

★ History and Statistics, chairman Frank S. Drum

External links



[1] List of Members, (many names misspelled)

[2] List of Members published by the New York times, on April, 19

Sources



★ Gordon Thomas & Max Morgan Witts: ''The San Francisco Earthquake'' (Stein and Day, New York; Souvenir Press, London, 1971; reprinted Dell, 1972, SBN 440-07631)

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