Wood Builds a Lumber Company
During his first years in Michigan, Edwin took out
contracts to supply logs for a mill and to build a road north from Stanton.
Later, he established a general merchandise store to supply items needed in the
lumbering community.
In 1874, Marian’s brother, Clarence A. Thayer, joined Edwin
to help out in the store. This was the beginning of a partnership which would
last until Edwin’s death in 1917. They purchased a mill in 1875, and expanded
their lumber business over the years, becoming one of the largest lumber
producers in Michigan.
His successful business demonstrated to Edwin that great
opportunities could be found on the Pacific Coast. He made several trips
to the coast and invested heavily in fir timber in Washington.
In 1885, Edwin K. Wood was elected as Representative to the
Michigan State Legislature. About the same time, Wood sent employee, Spencer E.
Slade, to Washington and then on to San Francisco. Slade established S. E. Slade
& Company, the first office of what was to become the E.K. Wood Lumber Company.
In 1888, partner Clarence Thayer moved to San Francisco and opened a wholesale
lumberyard at the foot of Spear Street.
Business and Family Move West
In 1891, Edwin and Marian moved to Oakland. The E.K. Wood
Lumber Company was incorporated in California in 1895, with Edwin serving as
president until his death. The company prospered with large holdings in
Washington and Oregon, docks in Oakland and San Pedro, a fleet of vessels plying
its trade up and down the coast, and local yards and mills in Los Angeles,
Oakland, San Rafael, San Anselmo, Fresno, San Francisco, and Bellingham,
Washington.
The San Anselmo yard, located on San Anselmo Avenue between
Belle and Mariposa Avenues and extending to Richmond Road, was one of the
largest in Marin. When it opened in 1905, thirty men were employed and six teams
of horses hauled lumber, cement, and pipe from the freight yard at the Hub to
the mill. A railroad spur later ran directly into the yard.

The Robson Years
In April 1923, the Wood heirs, Frederick and
Walter Wood, sold the Crescent Road estate to Kernan and Geraldine Robson for
$18,500.
Kernan Robson was born
September 22, 1872 in Logan County Ohio, the second of three sons of Albert L.
Robson and Frances Harrington. He was raised on the Robson’s farm in a
clapboard-covered log cabin and educated in a one-room schoolhouse. By the time
Kernan was 18 years old, his father was totally blind. As Albert Robson’s sight
began to fail and he could no longer work the fields, he had his sons stretch
wire and rope between the house and outbuildings so that he could feel his way
to care for the farm animals. The sons did the fieldwork, clearing, plowing and
harvesting. Fannie, always in knee-high cowhide boots, tended the house, garden,
milk house and smokehouse, cared for her elderly mother-in-law, and raised her
three sons, instilling in them strong work habits. She was known in her
community for her charity and kindness.
It is this strength, work ethic, and true pioneer spirit that Kernan Robson was
to later honor in designating that his bequest to San Anselmo be called
Robson-Harrington Park. He always closed his office on the anniversary of his
mother’s death, May 1st, in devoted memory to her.
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Kernan
Robson at Harvard, 1895. |
Kernan left the farm and
received degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University and Ohio Northern University,
where he was remembered by the University’s president as one of the hardest
working students ever enrolled. He attended Harvard Divinity School for one
year, and then traveled and studied at Oxford and in Germany. He became fluent
in seven languages along the way. At his death, he left behind an unfinished
thesis on Scottish essayist and historian Thomas Carlyle.
From 1895 to 1897, Kernan was
Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of South Dakota.
He left South Dakota for San Francisco and found employment as a newspaper
reporter, then as a teacher at San Francisco’s Polytechnic High School. He soon
began to speculate in real estate. The earthquake and fire of 1906 provided
great opportunities and, by 1910, Kernan had formed a San Francisco real estate
partnership with Herman H. Sattler known as Robson & Sattler.
In 1908, Kernan married Geraldine Clark
Baggs, the only child of Montgomery Baggs and Hattie Electa Clark, who both
descended from pioneer California families. Geraldine was born in Stockton
in1882, and moved with her parents to San Francisco and then to San
Rafael. Montgomery Baggs was a marine and fire insurance broker in San
Francisco. Geraldine’s maternal grandfather, Asa Clark, was a well-known
physician in Stockton who for many years was the superintendent of the Stockton
State Mental Asylum before opening his own hospital. In a 1984 interview, the
Robson’s longtime housekeeper, Mae Orlandi, stated that Kernan had no money of
his own, that it came through the marriage to Geraldine. Kernan and Geraldine
made their home in Berkeley before purchasing the San Anselmo property.
The business partnership with Herman Sattler
ended around 1920 when Kernan’s brother, McGary, joined him in the business. The
Robson & Robson firm was prosperous with offices in the DeYoung Building at 690
Market Street.

Kernan Robson, 1930
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The Robsons were a quiet couple without any
children who became avid gardeners. They planted extensive orchards and a
vineyard. They also added all the curving brick walls which surround the estate,
using bricks salvaged from old houses acquired in the course of Mr. Robson’s
business. Stonemasons adorned the grounds with archways, fountains, and
elaborate wall niches with imported European scenes and plaques. At one time the
Robsons had four fulltime gardeners on their staff along with a contingent of
household help.
The Robsons expanded the original house.
They enclosed the second floor front porch, expanded the dining room and added a
terrace room, and added a sunroom, sleeping porch, study, and outside shower on
the second floor.

Robson House, 1967
As a young woman, Geraldine became
interested in the art and history of Asia and started collecting Japanese
netsukes (small sculptural objects, or toggles, usually worn to suspend objects
hung from the sash of a kimono). Her approach was scholarly; she researched the
story of each and recorded them in large ledger books. Her collection of 569
netsukes was willed to the University of California, where today they are housed
at the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology.
Kernan was remembered by his grandnephew,
William Lee Robson, as a caring person who shared his wide knowledge and
material wealth with those less fortunate.
Kernan Robson died on January 13, 1956 at
the age of 83. His estate was valued at approximately $5 million. Under the
terms of his will, Geraldine was provided for until her death, and bequests were
made to employees, nieces and nephews and others. Professorial chairs in
political science and government were endowed at Ohio Northern University, Ohio
Wesleyan University, and the University of California, Berkeley.
The Robson’s Bequest to San Anselmo
The house and property at 237 Crescent were
bequeathed to the San Francisco Theological Seminary for educational, health or
religious purposes or to the City of San Anselmo for use as a public park or
playground, if the Seminary declined the bequest. This bequest was to become
effective 20 years after Kernan’s death or upon Geraldine’s death. Geraldine
continued to live in the house with housekeeper Mae Orlandi until her death on
February 15, 1967.
The Seminary declined to accept the property
and it was offered to San Anselmo. In May 1968, San Anselmo formally accepted
the property, agreeing that it be used as a park or playground for children,
that it never be sold in whole or in part, or subdivided, or used for private or
commercial purposes, and that it would be named Robson-Harrington Park as a
tribute to the memory of Kernan Robson’s father and mother. Under the terms of
the Robson’s will, Mae Orlandi continued to live in the house with a small
stipend until her death in 1990.
On Sunday September 15, 1968, the estate was
opened to the public for the first time, with a welcoming address by the mayor
and guided tours of the house. San Anselmo was delighted with its new “relic.”
Budgetary Quicksand
For sixty years the estate had been
maintained by two extremely wealthy families. Now the task fell to the Town of
San Anselmo.
Immediately, the use of the park was debated
by Council and the Parks and Recreation Commission. Should dances or the serving
of alcohol be permitted? Should tennis courts and a tiny-tots playground be
constructed? A town administrator voiced concern that the property could become
“budgetary quicksand.”
Contributions were solicited for furnishings
(folding chairs and table), a fundraising dinner dance was held, and the Robson
Harrington Park Association was formed to raise money and stimulate community
interest in the new park. After Kernan Robson’s death, only the front grounds
had been maintained and now city workers cut back the overgrown gardens,
revealing forgotten paths. The house and grounds were opened to the community
in1969 and became a key part of the town’s recreation program.
In 1972, Council approved the use of funds
to improve the carriage house by rewiring, re-plumbing and repainting, but on
the night of January 5, 1974 the carriage house was destroyed by fire. It had
housed the Tiny Tots and Youth Center programs as well as other groups.
With the passage of Proposition 13 in June
1978 and the reduction of property tax revenue, Town was forced to close the
house and eliminate funds for repair and maintenance. The house had fallen into
disrepair through neglect. The Ross Valley Ecumenical Housing Association came
forward with a proposal to use the house for senior housing. Debate ensued.
A group of civic-minded residents formed a
new Robson-Harrington House Association which successfully negotiated to lease
the property for $1 per year. In exchange, the Association agreed to restore,
manage and maintain the house as a civic, educational, recreational, and
cultural center.
The Association used volunteer labor and
donated materials to preserve the house. It made the house structurally sound
and safe but lacked funds to refurbish the interior. Through a stroke of good
fortune, the house was chosen to be used by the Marin Volunteer Bureau Designers
Showcase in 1979 and the interior was restored to its former elegance.

For 25 years the Association was solely
responsible for the house and its maintenance needs. The Association secured
tenants for the 2nd
floor and a caretaker, managed weekend rentals, set fees, collected revenue and
reinvested proceeds into the house. The Recreation Department paid the
Association for the use of the house on weekdays. The Parks Department was
responsible for the routine maintenance of the grounds and park.
In 2005, the Robson-Harrington House
Association was unable to find new board members willing to take on the
considerable responsibilities. So, after having devoted itself to the
property for those many years, this exemplary civic organization disbanded and
management of the house reverted back to the town, along with some accumulated
rentals. The Recreation Department now handles rentals.
A popular part of the park is the San
Anselmo Community Garden (SACG), which includes about thirty individual fenced
plots. The SACG is an unincorporated association, operating under an agreement
with the town. Organic gardening practices are used exclusively. There is
a waiting list for membership and preference is given to San Anselmo residents.
Currently about half the members are non-residents. Under the agreement
with the town, gardeners care for permanent plantings “within the Garden’s
assigned area.” SACG holds a spring and fall workday when gardeners weed
and do some pruning in the public areas. The town cuts the lawn, waters
and generally maintains the public areas. However, with the current budget
problems, maintenance has been reduced.
Robson-Harrington Park is a unique civic
treasure. For most of 100 years, the house and grounds have been lovingly cared
for. Let’s hope that budgetary quicksand can be avoided and the Town of San
Anselmo will be able to continue to maintain this unique estate for future
generations to enjoy.