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George Treat : ウィキペディア英語版 | George Treat
George Treat (1819–1907) was an early Gold Rush-era pioneer in the Mission District, of San Francisco, a businessman, abolitionist, a member of the first Committee of Vigilance of San Francisco, and horse racing enthusiast.〔Sharpsteen, William C. (June 1941) ("Appendix B: Notes on Mission Bay and the Marshes and Creeks of the Potreros and the Bernal Rancho." ) The Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco. From the ''California Historical Society Quarterly,'' Vol. XXI, No. 2.〕 He was influential to the early physical development of the Mission District and its eventual shift to urbanization.〔 Treat was responsible for the construction and management of the Pioneer Race Course, a horse racing track built in San Francisco in 1851 and in helping with the creation of the San Francisco-San Jose Railway when he sold the land.〔 == Early life == Born in Frankfort, Maine, on April 16, 1819, the son of Joshua and Sarah (née Sweetser) Treat, he left the state of Maine in his early youth. In 1835 he settled in New Orleans and remained there until 1847, when he and his brother John Treat enlisted in the United States Army and went to Mexico shortly before the Mexican-American War ended.〔 George Treat was married on April 19, 1857, to Clarinda Littlefield, daughter of Rufus Batchelder, of Prospect, Maine. They had five children: May Benton (the late Mrs. Alexander F. Morrison), Clara Littlefield, Sara Batchelder (Mrs. George R. Child, who lives in San Francisco), Rosa, and Frank Livingston Treat.〔
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