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		<!-- NOTE about publicid, above: Replace "####" with the collection number and "Collection Name" with the collection title.-->
		<!-- ooooooooooooooooooo    FILE DESCRIPTION BEGINS HERE     ooooooooooooooooooo -->
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			<titlestmt>
				<titleproper>Guide to the Fred W. Crandall Photographs
          <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">circa 1883-1911</date>
				</titleproper>
				<titleproper type="filing">Crandall ( Fred W.) Photographs</titleproper>
				<!-- NOTE about the two titleproper tags: The first should reflect the formal title of the finding aid itself and 
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				<author>Guide prepared by Erin M. Louthen</author>
			</titlestmt>
			<publicationstmt>
				<publisher>Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History</publisher>
				<address>
					<addressline>San Jose State University</addressline>
					<addressline>Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library</addressline>
					<addressline>Special Collections 5th Floor</addressline>
					<addressline>150 E. San Fernando Street</addressline>
					<addressline>San Jose, CA 95192-0147</addressline>
					<addressline>Phone: (408) 808-2064</addressline>
					<addressline>Email: cduval@cruzio.com</addressline>
					<addressline>URL: http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/history/Resources/Sourisseau.htm</addressline>
				</address>
				<p>
					<date normal="2007" era="ce">&#xA9; 2007 </date> Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History. All rights reserved.</p>
			</publicationstmt>
		</filedesc>
		<!-- ooooooooooooooooooo     PROFILE DESCRIPTION BEGINS HERE    ooooooooooooooooooo   -->
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		<profiledesc>
			<creation>Machine-readable finding aid created by Erin M. Louthen. Machine-readable finding
        aid derived from MS Word. Date of source: 
          <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">December 2007.</date>
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        Description is in <language>English.</language>
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	<!--                             FRONT MATTER BEGINS HERE                         -->
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		<titlepage>
			<titleproper>Guide to the Fred W. Crandall Photographs

        <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">circa 1883-1911</date>
			</titleproper>
			<publisher>
        Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History
        <lb/>
        San Jose State University
      </publisher>
			<!-- NOTE about <lb /> above: the lb attribute is a line break which is an empty formatting element that forces text to start on a new line 
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        SEE: http://www.loc.gov/ead/tglib/elements/lb.html -->
			<list type="simple">
				<head>Contact Information:</head>
				<item>Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History</item>
				<item>San Jose State University</item>
				<item>Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library</item>
				<item>Special Collections 5th Floor</item>
				<item>150 E. San Fernando Street</item>
				<item>San Jose, CA 95192-0147</item>
				<item>Email: cduval@cruzio.com</item>
				<item>URL: http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/history/Resources/Sourisseau.htm</item>
			</list>
			<list type="deflist">
				<defitem>
					<label>Collection processed and guide prepared and encoded by:</label>
					<item>Erin M. Louthen</item>
				</defitem>
				<defitem>
					<label>Date Completed: </label>
					<item>December 2007</item>
				</defitem>
			</list>
			<p>&#xA9;2007. Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History. All rights reserved.</p>
		</titlepage>
	</frontmatter>
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	<!--                         ARCHIVAL DESCRIPTION BEGINS HERE                     -->
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    SEE: http://www.loc.gov/ead/tglib/elements/archdesc.html -->
	<archdesc level="collection">
		<!-- NOTE. Select one of the following for the "level" attribute: 
      collection, fonds, class, recordgrp, series, subfonds, subgrp, subseries, file item, otherlevel. 
    See: History Office Policy Manual -->
		<did>
			<head>Descriptive Summary</head>
			<unittitle encodinganalog="245" label="Title">Fred W. Crandall Photographs</unittitle>
			<!--  Provide the title of the collection but do not include the number -->
			<unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce" type="inclusive" normal="1883/1911">circa 1883-1911</unitdate>
			<!--  IMPORTANT NOTE: Change the "normal" attribute, above, to reflect date span of the collection. 
        SEE: section 3.5 "Dates" at http://www.cdlib.org/inside/diglib/guidelines/bpgead/bpgead_3.html#d0e387 -->
			<unitid label="Collection Number" countrycode="US" repositorycode="CaSjSAS">ECS01.04</unitid>
			<origination label="Creator">
				<famname encodinganalog="100" source="dacs">Fred W. Crandall Family</famname>
				</origination>
				</did>
				<!-- IMPORTANT NOTES:  
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            so a "persname" tag is used. SEE: http://www.loc.gov/ead/tglib/elements/origination.html 
            
            + Change the "encodinganalog" attribute in the "persname" tag, above, to reflect the relevant MARC21 main entry field.
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            Also note that the applicable MARC fields are listed on EAD Tag Library pages.
            
            + Enter the appropriate "rules" or "source" attribute in the tag identifying the creator ("persname" above):
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            ENTER source="lcnaf" if the main entry is available in Library of Congress Name Authority File
            ENTER source="nasat" if the main entry is available in NASA Thesaurus
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                  <corpname encodinganalog="110" source="lcnaf">Corporation listed in LCNAF</corpname>
                  <corpname encodinganalog="110" source="dacs">Corporation not listed in standard thesauri</corpname>-->

	<!--    ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION BEGINS HERE    -->
		<descgrp type="admininfo">
			<head>Administrative Information</head>
			<accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
				<head>Access</head>
				<p>Collection is open for research.</p>
			</accessrestrict>
			<acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
			<head>Acquisition Information</head>
			<p>The Fred W. Crandall Photographs were donated to the Sourisseau Academy by the Edith Corinne Smith Trust in 2006.</p>
		</acqinfo>
			<userestrict encodinganalog="540">
				<head>Publication Rights</head>
				<p>All photographs are in the public domain. For permission to use the photographs, contact the Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History.</p>
			</userestrict>
			<prefercite encodinganalog="524">
				<head>Preferred Citation</head>
				<p>[Identification of item], Fred W. Crandall Photographs, Edith C. Smith Photograph Collection, Sourisseau Academy for State and Local History, San Jose State University, San Jose, California.</p>
			</prefercite>
		</descgrp>
		<descgrp>
			<relatedmaterial>
				<head>Related Collection</head>
				<archref>
					<unittitle>
					<extref href="http://historylosgatos.org/" linktype="simple">Hooked on Los Gatos: Library and Museum History Project website.</extref>
					</unittitle>
					<repository>Los Gatos Public Library.</repository>
				</archref>
			</relatedmaterial>
		</descgrp>

		<!-- IMPORTANT NOTE: If you do NOT have a custodial history, use the grouping below from <acquinfo> to </acquinfo>.-->

		<bioghist encodinganalog="545">
			<head>Biographical Note</head>
			<p>Fred Warren Crandall was born to George Washington Crandall and Emily (Chaffee) Crandall on July 28, 1858 in Herrick, Pennsylvania. One of five children, Fred was raised a farmer’s son; however, from an early age, he aspired to join the clergy, and in the mid-1870s traveled to Irvington, California to study theology. Unfortunately, the misfortune of ill health forced him to reconsider his theological aspirations. After spending a brief time as an educator in Nebraska and Missouri from 1878 to 1883, Crandall moved to California to pursue a vocation in the ranching business.</p>
		<p>Fred Crandall entered into an agricultural, fruit-drying business partnership with William T. Rice in the mid-1880s. Over thirty years Crandall’s senior, W.T. Rice shared his partner’s farming background. Born in 1821, Rice owned nearly 600 acres of farmland in his native state of Tennessee before selling it in 1875. That same year, Rice moved with his wife to Saratoga, California, where he purchased a farm of 190 acres. Rice eventually sold much of the acreage and settled with a smaller farm consisting of thirty acres of prune and pear orchards.</p>
		<p>Located at University and Cypress Avenues in Los Gatos, the Crandall &amp; Rice fruit-drying business was in close proximity to local fruit farms such as the F.H. Hume Ranch and the A.P. Chrisman orchards. An 1880s print advertisement describes the business as a “Big Orchard Drying Establishment, Dealers in Green and Dried Fruits, and Contractors for Drying,” and lists Crandall &amp; Rice as the proprietors. The Crandall &amp; Rice establishment included a fruit dryer, a drying yard, a packing house, employed approximately twenty-five employees, and produced twenty-five tons of dried prunes per day.</p>
			<p>Around 1890, Fred Crandall married Nebraska native Josephine West, and the couple had two sons, Thomas Eugene Crandall in 1890 and Harold Fred Crandall in 1893. Three years later, Crandall became manager of the Sorosis Fruit Farm, located in Saratoga, where he worked for over ten years. From 1896 to 1906, the Crandall family lived in the farm’s stately main residence, built in 1881 by wealthy mine owner William Farrington. During the heyday of Santa Clara County’s prune growing industry in the late 1800s and early 1900s, the Sorosis Fruit Farm was recognized as a farm and business par excellence. Comprised of nearly 250 acres, much of which was devoted to prune orchards, the Sorosis Fruit Farm was well-known for the production and processing of the petite prune, a fruit popular across the United States and Europe.</p>
		<p>During Crandall’s time as manager, the Sorosis Fruit Farm was highly regarded for the decent working conditions and generous wages the business provided its employees. In addition, the farm became a place of social interaction and fellowship: tours of the farm were given and banquets were held on a regular basis for visiting professional organizations; and, under Crandall’s direction, the second level of the Sorosis fruit evaporator was converted into a community hall which was used by local residents as a gathering space. After a successful tenure as manager, Fred Crandall resigned from the Sorosis Fruit Farm in 1907, with the intention of going into business for himself.</p>
		<p>By 1930, the Crandall family made their home in Santa Cruz. Fred W. Crandall died September 4, 1941, and Josephine passed away December 3, 1952, both in Santa Cruz County.</p>
		</bioghist>
		<!-- NOTE about bioghist, above: Delete the entire bioghist section if your finding aid does not have either an administrative or a biographical history.
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      SEE: http://www.loc.gov/ead/tglib/elements/bioghist.html for examples of a more complex, nested structure of a history section. -->
		<!-- ooooooooooooooooooo     ACCESS POINTS     oooooooooooooooooooo -->
		<!-- 
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        Enter source="nasat" if the access point is available in NASA Thesaurus
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        SEE also: OAC info about rules here: http://www.cdlib.org/inside/diglib/guidelines/bpgead/bpgead_4b.html#d0e1172
      -->
		<controlaccess>
			<head>Indexing Terms</head>
			<p>The following terms may be used to index this collection.</p>
			<!-- IMPORTANT NOTE: DELETE any of the <controlaccess> elements below that are unused/inapplicable. 
      Remember, do not list the creator here unless the material is also ABOUT the creator. (e.g., In the case of the Ames Astrogram collection, 
      Ames Research Center belongs in creator and indexing fields. -->
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Personal Name</head>
				<persname role="subject" encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Crandall, Fred W., 1858-1941.</persname>
				<persname role="subject" encodinganalog="600" rules="dacs">Farrington, William.</persname>
				<persname role="subject" encodinganalog="600" rules="dacs">Rice, William T., 1821-1900.</persname>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Subjects</head>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Agriculture.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Fruit -- Drying.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Fruit growers.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Fruit trade.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Orchards.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Prune -- History.</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Ranch houses.</subject>
			</controlaccess>
			<!--  OPTIONAL, IF APPLICABLE: 
      <controlaccess encodinganalog="653">
        <head>Title</head>
        <title source="dacs">Ames Astrogram</title>
      </controlaccess>-->
			<!-- NOTE: Select controlled vocabulary terms from standard thesauri. SEE Toolbox.-->
		</controlaccess>
		<!-- ooooooooooooooooooo    SCOPE AND CONTENT BEGINS HERE     oooooooooooooooooo -->
		<scopecontent encodinganalog="520">
			<head>Scope and Content</head>
			<p>The Fred W. Crandall Photographs consist of twenty-nine images, grouped by subject matter, and chronicle approximately thirty years of Northern California agricultural history, circa 1883-1911. The photographs include such images as: Fred W. Crandall and William T. Rice’s Fruit Drying Establishment located in Los Gatos, the Sorosis Fruit Farm located in Saratoga, G.S. Rawling’s farm located in Santa Clara County, and several photographs depicting turn-of-the-century life in the town of Los Gatos, particularly those related to agriculture, commerce, and politics.</p> 
			<p> Although the creator of the majority of the photographs is unknown, some images are identified as the product of the Pacific Coast Photo and View Company of Los Gatos, and Andrew P. Hill of San Jose. In addition, many of the photographs include handwritten or typed captions describing the people, places and events captured therein.</p>
		</scopecontent>
		
		
		
		<arrangement>
			<head>Arrangement of the Fred W. Crandall Photographs</head>
			<p>This collection is arranged by photograph number and photograph subject.</p>
		</arrangement>
		
	
		
			<dsc type="combined">
				<head>Collection Contents.</head>
				
					<c01 level="otherlevel">
			<did>
						<unittitle>Crandall &amp; Rice Fruit Drying Establishment</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0784 – ecs0791a</unitid>
			</did>
						</c01>
					
						<c01 level="otherlevel">
			<did>
						<unittitle>Sorosis Fruit Farm</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0767 – ecs0769</unitid>
			</did>
						</c01>
						
						<c01 level="otherlevel">
						
			<did>
						<unittitle>Los Gatos – Various Scenes</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0770 – ecs0774</unitid>
			</did>
			
					</c01>
			
			
					<c01 level="otherlevel">
			<did>
						<unittitle>San Jose – Parade</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0775</unitid>
			</did>
			
					</c01>
					
			
					<c01 level="otherlevel">
			<did>
						<unittitle>Santa Clara County – G.S. Rawling’s Farm</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0776 – ecs0777</unitid>
			</did>
			
						</c01>
						
						
						<c01 level="otherlevel">
			
			<did>
						<unittitle>Santa Clara County – Social Events</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0778, ecs0781 – 0782</unitid>
			</did>
			
						</c01>
			
						<c01 level="otherlevel">
			<did>
						<unittitle>Santa Clara County – Blossom Time</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0783</unitid>
			</did>
			
						</c01>
			
						<c01 level="otherlevel">
			<did>
						<unittitle>Unknown Location Images</unittitle>
						<unitid>ecs0766, ecs0779 – ecs0780</unitid>
			</did>
						</c01>
						
						
						

		</dsc>
		<!-- ******************************************************* -->
		<!--              END COMBINED DESCRIPTION OPTION            -->
		<!-- ******************************************************* -->
	</archdesc>
	<!-- ********************************************* END ARCHIVAL DESCRIPTION ******************************************** -->
</ead>
