The Palo Alto History Project
Anna Zschokke
                                                  
                                                                    170 Homer Avenue, 526 Forest Avenue
Anna Zschokke: The Mother of Palo Alto

Palo Altans have always taken great pride in their community.  Sure, every town has its boosters, but Palo
Alto residents seem to feel a true interrelationship with their neighbors and the city as a whole.  Watchful
parents keep a close eye on the public school system, preservationists keep a close eye on city landmarks,
and these days, online bloggers seem to keep a close eye on just about everything else.  Palo Altans also
give great time and money to their local institutions, especially when the benefits go to kids.    There is great
private support for government institutions like the
Children’s Theatre, Children’s Library, and of course to
the schools --- which some have called “quasi-public,” due to the enormous slice of private donations given
each year.   Furthermore, the long-standing continuance of traditions like Christmas Tree Lane, the 4th of
July Chili Cook-off and the
May Fete Parade speaks to a city that loves to come together.  While the
involvement of residents in civic affairs can be burdensome to someone trying to tear down an old house in
Professorville or making cuts in the annual school budget, there is no doubt that the protective nature of
residents is a direct result of their love for Palo Alto.  These folks really care.

Actually, this tradition of caring in our community goes back to Palo Alto’s earliest residents --- in fact, it’s
very first.  (And yes, there actually was a first resident.)  She was Anna Zschokke, a widowed German
immigrant and mother of three who first settled in a house along Homer Street.  Zschokke would go on to
become the city’s first historian, a prominent socialite and be dubbed the “Mother of the Palo Alto
Schools.”  And it turns out she was not only Palo Alto’s first resident, but one of its most generous.

In 1896, one of Palo Alto’s early weeklies, the Palo Alto Live Oak, published a “Pioneer History of the
Town of Palo Alto” as authored by Mrs. Anna Zschokke.  It would prove to be a remarkable article.  
Reprinted in the Palo Alto Times again in 1917, and scoured over throughout a century by those interested
in the town’s formative years, Zschokke’s account was a record of enormous detail.  It gave a chronological
accounting of the earliest residents’ arrivals, births and deaths, as well as construction projects, street
gratings, housing starts and on and on.  Perhaps even more importantly, her memories painted the scene of
that still unsettled Palo Alto --- A time when just 4 houses lay scattered along Embarcadero Road, when an
open shed constituted Palo Alto’s main train depot, and when a horse and buggy taxi coming from Menlo
Park could wander for hours just trying to locate some place known as “Palo Alto.”

Mrs. Zschokke had actually lived quite an eventful life before ever setting foot in Palo Alto.  Born in
Germany in 1849, she moved to America at the age of 3, later living in Indiana, Kern County and Santa
Clara.  But after the death of her husband Oscar, she took her three children on the road again --- this time
north to the new town being laid out in the shadow of the nearly-completed Stanford University.  Along with
6 other families, the Zschokkes spent many weeks camped under the trees while their houses were being
constructed.  It would be the Zschokke residence on Homer Avenue that would be ready first and when the
family trouped over the threshold, Anna Zschokke became Palo Alto’s first resident.  Still, these were lonely
days as the first families basically waited for their town to sprout up around them.  Anna recalled that in
those early months, “we overcame the loneliness of our situation by entertaining each other with tea parties
and making a celebration of every child’s birthday.  Christmas Day brought us together at one home, New
Year’s at another and Washington’s Birthday at still another.”  Palo Alto enjoyed the utmost in community
bonds in that first year.

Perhaps it was because Palo Alto was laid out astride what seemed destined to be an important university or
maybe because Anna Zschokke had an optimistic nature, but for whatever reason, she took to recording the
town’s early history with the fervent belief that it would someday be an important place.  Zschokke noted all
firsts: the first born baby (Andrew McLachlan, Jr.), the first wedding (Mrs. N Mosher and Mr. N.W.
Harper), the first Sunday services (“held under the trees near the lumber yard for we needed its planks for
seats”), and even the first accident, when “On August 30th, 1890, we had the terrible experience of Mr. L.
Gillan’s sudden death, caused by the Sunday Monterey Express running over him.”

Also recorded were the deeds of J. Hutchinson’s Palo Alto Improvement Club which was working hard to
bring essentials to a town that was growing rapidly --- from a population of 37 souls at the start of 1891 to
73 on New Year’s Eve, to 300 residents by the end of 1892, and thanks to a great emigration from
Mayfield, to 750 by the close of 1893.  A supply of water, grading of the major streets, sewerage, electric
light, street railways, water works were all on the early agenda for city improvements.  Zschokke also took
note of businesses first appearing in Palo Alto.  Just a sample --- the first book store opened by Mr. H.W.
Simkins in the old Wigle building on High Street and E.F. Weishaar ran the first grocery store located (rather
oddly) in the north room of the Palo Alto Hotel.  And Zschokke recalls the boost in city pride when the first
issue of the long-running Palo Alto Times debuted on January 3rd, 1893.

All in all, the Zschokke history provides an interesting glimpse at how a town first comes to be. As a modern
day Silicon Valley city that is now home to Facebook,
HP and IDEO, sometimes it’s hard to remember that
Palo Alto was once a dusty old western town.  Sure, there may never have been many cowboy gunslingers
ambling down University Avenue, but early Palo Alto was not so far from that iconic Western image of the
few scattered houses standing alone on a windswept prairie.

But Zchokke wasn’t just a passive observer; actually she was really more of a doer.  She displayed a
passionate drive for civic improvements --- especially when concerned with the betterment of children.  And
the degree to which she was willing to help her young town would prove remarkable.  As an increasing
number of small children moved in, Zschokke reported that “Mothers sighed over the drawback of having to
send the little ones so far as Mayfield (2 miles).”  And while Zschokke and her supporters were able to
convince the County Superintendent that building Palo Alto’s first public school would be a good idea,
Mayfield disagreed, claiming that their up-start neighbors to the north were still within their 2 mile jurisdiction.

By 1893, after measurements proved that was not quite so, Palo Altans footed the bill for a temporary
school house.  In a true show of community spirit, “all able-bodied men” were summoned to come help
erect the new two-room schoolhouse.  In 4 days it was up and ready for reading and writing.     

After a larger school was built at Webster and Channing in 1894, Zschokke became interested in the need
for a school for older boys and girls.  For a time, a high school opened in the cramped top quarters of the
elementary school, but Zschokke knew this solution was only temporary.  A problem-solver at heart, Anna
decided to try something bold.  She actually mortgaged her house, bought a lot herself, hired a contractor
and built a three room schoolhouse with good plumbing --- with help from a family trust in Switzerland.  
Taking bits of cardboard cut to scale to represent furniture, Zschokke then worked out how to make the
small structure serve as a working, if only temporary, high school.  

Her friends thought she had gone off the edge.  They tried to convince her that the plan was financially
doomed, that high school students would damage her property and that she was mortgaging away her
future.  But build it, she did.  And when she ran out of space as enrollment grew, Zschokke built another
shack behind the house to serve as a science lab.

And that little house served four years as the high school while the city procrastinated about building a real
high school on Channing.  When they did, she was able to turn the old classrooms into her new living rooms
and bedrooms.

For her extreme generosity in the early years of the city’s education, Anna Zschokke has often been called
the “Mother of the Palo Alto schools.”  From those early days of shacks and bungalows, Palo Alto’s
schools would grow to be admired across the state.  Sometimes it takes one great act of courage to better
your world and Palo Alto’s world has been bettered over and over through the years by great acts of
courage, beginning with Resident Number One.
                                                                                                                  -Matt Bowling
Anna Zschokke with sons
Arthur & Theodore, as well as
daughter Irma. (PAHA)
Looking down University
Avenue in 1893, a small
western town. (PAHA)
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Palo Alto: Then & Now
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Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of Anna Zschokke?  Post them in
our memory bank.  Thanks!
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Sources:
Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Daily News, Palo Alto Historical
Association, Palo Alto Live Oak
Anna Zschokke's pioneer
history record ed the first
grocery store on Alma Street
belonging to Emile F. Weishaar.
(PAHA)
Old Palo Alto Hotel on Alma
Street. (PAHA)
Parkinson Lumber and
Hardware is on the left side of
Emerson Street in 1893.
(PAHA)
Varian Associates today.
Early Palo Alto school-goers
had to head nearly 2 miles to
Mayfield School. (PAHA)
Downtown Palo Alto in Anna
Zschokke's time shows a very
different time. (PAHA)
Another shot of Anna
Zschokke's original house.
(PAHA)
A third look at Anna
Zschokke's house --- the first
house in Palo Alto. (PAHA)
At left is the Zschokke-financed house which served as Palo Alto's first high school until 1901. After the high school
moved to its new location on Channing Avenue, the Zschokkes used the house as a residence. Today 526 Forest
Avenue is a parking entrance to a condominium. Note: This Then & Now photo is approximate.
The original University
Avenue Railroad Depot was a
rather threadbare structure.
(PAHA)
Downtown Palo Alto in the
1890s. (PAHA)
A map of the SOFA area where Anna Zschokke's first house stood...
A view of the Anna
Zschokke's original residence,  
from the Paddleford Garage
on Homer Street.  The
building is now Whole Foods
and the location of the house
is now the parking lot across
the street. (PAHA)
Channing Avenue, the center
of education in Palo Alto in
the 19th Century.  The
elementary school is on the
left and the high school on the
right. (PAHA)
The 2 room schoolhouse built
in 4 days by the able men of
Palo Alto. (PAHA)
The original University Park
tract as subdivided by
Timothy Hopkins. (PAHA)
Another shot of the first Palo
Alto high school. (PAHA)
"Thank you for this article and pictures.  Many of these pictures I have not seen!
Anna Probst Zschokke was my great, great grandmother. She was the grandmother of my
grandfather, Fremont Older Zschokke.

Anna's deceased husband, Oscar Zschokke, was from Switzerland. The Swiss Zschokke's have
a family reunion every five years, which I've attended since 1980. Unfortunately, my Palo Alto
history of Anna is sketchy - I am deeply appreciative of your knowledge and recognition of her.
I am told that the site of the first school she built is now the PAIX - Palo Alto Internet Exchange.
Last year I learned there are two small homes still standing, which Anna's son Theodore built, on
Homer Avenue. Martin Bernstein restored and lives in one of these homes, which was also used
as a boarding house.

I was fortunate to meet the elder Garrod's who are close to 100 years old. They knew Fremont
Older when they were kids. It's like touching history."
-Shannon
Memories added by our readers: