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John Buttencourt Avila : ウィキペディア英語版
John Buttencourt Avila

John Buttencourt Avila (1865-1937) was a California farmer who has been called the father of the sweet potato industry. He was a Portuguese American who came to California as a young man, and settled in Merced County.〔 〕
== Biography ==
Avila was born 19 March 1865 on São Jorge Island in the Azores of Portugal. He immigrated from the Azores to California in 1883. Avila first worked as a laborer on local farms in Alameda County (Niles and Mission San Jose areas) for the first several years.〔 ("California" by Robert L. Santos; California State University, Stanislaus, Librarian/Archivist ) 〕 Avila then in 1888 moved to the Atwater-Buchach area in Merced County and planted a successful garden of sweet potatoes (Ipomoea batatas) from seeding stock of his country.〔〔 〕 Then he planted a field of 6 or 7 acres of sweet potatoes. Eventually, with his brother Antone, he bought a 20-acre farm field in Merced County for a $1 an acre that was flood land near the Merced River in a California valley.〔〔 Avila planted sweet potatoes there and became a pioneer sweet potato grower in Merced County. He produced over one hundred sacks of sweet potatoes per acre. As of 1905, Avila was selling his sweet potatoes to buyers in Colorado, Washington, and Oregon, and shipping out up to one hundred and forty-five railroad carloads a year.
This species of potato was originally native to Central and South America.〔 It is thought that the sweet potato was originally introduced to Europe by Christopher Columbus.〔 From Avila's original European Azore plantings of his sweet potato crop there grew a major commercial industry in the area of Atwater and Buhach, California.〔 Avila promoted the spread of sweet potato cultivation in the Sacramento Valley and San Joaquin Valley in California. The sweet potatoes that Avila introduced became popular in San Francisco eating establishments, restaurants, and hotels.〔
In 1905, Avila lived on his forty acre ranch, located northwest of the town of Merced. Ten acres were devoted to growing sweet potatoes. The remaining acreage was used for farm produce such as fruit and alfalfa for farm animals. At this same time period he had a general merchandise store in Merced. The sweet potato industry in California during the beginning of the nineteen hundreds was controlled by a group of Portuguese growers called the "Big Four" of which Ávila was one. 〔 By 1910 sweet potatoes were grown on over 2000 acres in Merced County alone,〔 and on over 5,000 acres throughout California.〔 Sweet potato growing became associated with dairy farming in the area: "''Typically a family would buy twenty to forty acres, plant sweet potatoes the first season, and later start a dairy herd."''〔
Avila was a city leader of Atwater and became a founder of the Atwater branch of the Bank of America. During 1912-13 Ávila was the supreme president of the Cult of the Holy Spirit.〔

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