Peter Josiah Barber (November 26, 1830 – January 27, 1905) was an American carpenter, architect, and prominent citizen of Santa Barbara, California. A native of Ohio, he was drawn to California during the Gold Rush in 1852 and settled in Santa Barbara in 1869, where he established himself as the city's foremost architect and served as postmaster and for two terms as mayor. His works include the Arlington Hotel, the second County Courthouse, and the original Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, as well as several private houses. As mayor, he was also responsible for public works projects, most prominently the tree-lined boulevard, now called Cabrillo Boulevard, at East Beach. Three of the buildings he designed are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Life and career
Barber was born in Nelson Township, Portage County, Ohio on November 26, 1830, and grew up in the vicinity of Windham Township, also in Portage County, 48 miles southeast of Cleveland. While in Windham, he apprenticed as a cabinetmaker, then moved to Cleveland in 1849 to work in furniture businesses there. He stayed here for about three years doing cabinet-making and carpentry before being drawn to California during the Gold Rush.[1]
In 1851, following the death of his parents, Barber left Cleveland to return to Nelson, where he
collected his share of the family property and joined a group of friends bound for California.[2] He departed from the Port of New York in February 1852 on a voyage to Panama, where he encountered 9,000 other travelers waiting to catch ships to California. He obtained passage on the ship Clarissa Andrews and spent the next 65 days sailing to San Francisco, then made his way to Marysville, California, where he and friends made attempts at gold mining for the next three years, before giving up and returning to San Francisco to become a carpenter. He gradually learned drafting skills and obtained work in the offices of architects Prosper Huerne (1820-1892) and, later, Reuben S. Clark (d. 1866), where he worked as a draftsman on the current California State Capitol building. In 1859, he married Mary J. Wheaton, with whom he had four children.[3]
Barber settled in Santa Barbara in 1869 as the town was growing from a sleepy village to a resort center. His image of a gentleman-architect attracted many of the newly rich in town, and he designed structures for major local figures such as Mortimer Cook and William Welles Hollister. Working mainly in the Italianate style, Barber's buildings were a symbol of the affluence and importance of the town's leaders. Among his several commissions in the 1870s were the Santa Barbara College, the Lincoln House (now the Upham Hotel), the second Santa Barbara County Courthouse, and the remodeling of the original Lobero Theatre. In 1874 he designed the Arlington Hotel, competing with several San Francisco architects for the commission, and it became the center of Santa Barbara's social life.[4]
Between 1874 and 1880 Barber had his own building supply service and part ownership of a lumber concern. From 1880 to 1881, and again in 1890 to 1891, Barber was the mayor of Santa Barbara, as well as Postmaster from 1882 to 1886. During his latter term as mayor he won voter approval for the bond measure that beautified Cabrillo Boulevard, named after Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, which runs along East Beach. Few buildings of his dated past 1893 can be found.[5]
An illustrated catalog of Barber's work appears in the second part of "The Santa Barbara of Peter J. Barber", by Herbert W. Andree, in Noticias, vol. 21 no. 3, fall 1975. Many of his works also appear in Andree and Young, Santa Barbara Architecture.
Gaspar Oreña House, 1990 Laguna Street (current site of Roosevelt Elementary School), 1878 (demolished 1923)[17]
Hunt-Stambach House, 821 Coronel Street, 1879.[18] This house has been moved three times, when its three former addresses were threatened by redevelopment in 1890, 1955, and 1965[19]
Thomas Dibblee House (also known as Punta del Castillo or Dibblee's Castle), the Mesa overlooking West Beach, Santa Barbara, 1887 (demolished 1932). Dibblee was the owner of Rancho San Julian and grandfather of the geologist Thomas Wilson Dibblee, Jr.[20]
Arlington Hotel Annex, West Victoria and Chapala Streets, northern corner (current site of Santa Barbara Public Market), 1887 (demolished following 1925 earthquake)
Andree, Herb, and Noel Young. Santa Barbara Architecture: from Spanish Colonial to Modern. Second edition. With photographs by Wayne McCall and an introduction by David Gebhard. Santa Barbara: Capra Press, 1980.
^Andree and Young, p. 282. For his contributions to East Beach, see also John McKinney, "East Beach Harbors a City’s Past", Los Angeles Times, 27 October 1996, accessed 25 August 2021.