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<br />/"" <br /> <br />""""" <br />.......,.i <br /> <br />........" <br /> <br />I. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SAN MATEO/FITZPATRICK BUILDING; 2'00)-12 Broadway <br /> <br />The story of the First National Bank Building on the corner of Broadway and <br />Main Street spans a period of nearly 90 yrs. <br /> <br />Prior to the construction of this regal building in 1899, that corner saw the <br />first general store in Redwood City in 1852 (Wm. Shaw Trading Post). In 1868 <br />it was joined to the new Grand Hotel. It burned 29 yrs later. It then became <br />the site of the community bandstand until Ludwig Behrens purchased it as the <br />site for the first bank between San Francisco and San Jose. It was constructed <br />of Utah stone by A.E. Brady of San Francisco, and in January 1900 the copper <br />sheathed dome was completed. By 1910 the bank was in business. <br /> <br />Ludwig Behrens, who arrived in Redwood City in 1896, was a dedicated and <br />ambitious man. He gave of his time and efforts tirelessly to his fellow men, as <br />a prominent churchman, businessman, and civic leader. On December 23, 1923, <br />his life ended as a result of an auto accident. <br /> <br />His son, Louis Behrens, later served in his father's bank, and was a Trustee <br />of the elementary school board. He is retired and lives with his wife Clara, <br />a former Redwood City school teacher, on Edgewood Road. <br /> <br />The importance of the building and site are three-fold: <br /> <br />The historic site was on the edge of the town where water commerce was <br />important (the Redwood City creek turning basin), and it had many uses. <br /> <br />The man who is represented by the building was an important community <br />leader. (The entire town closed down for his funeral.) <br /> <br />The architectural importance of the building lies in its representation <br />of a period of romanesque architecture when allover this country civic <br />buildings emulated classical Greek and Roman structures. Very few have <br />survived. <br /> <br />The Fitzpatrick Building is a two-story, romanesque-styled building cons- <br />tructed of brick in 1862. The facade:is attractive ~an brick and is of the same <br />scale and compatible detail to the Bank of San Mateo County next door. Interior <br />drug store furnishings dating from the 1890's remain unaltered. The exterior <br />is also unaltered with a leaded stained-glass window still in place over the <br />display windows. <br /> <br />Situated in the heart of Redwood City's commercial core, this building was once <br />the location of one of the ~own's two drugstores. A.D. Walsh moved his Pioneer <br />Drugstore here in 1892 when this part of Broadway's eastern terminus was Main <br />Street. Pioneer Drugstore has its roots in the 1850's. It had several owners. <br />In 1915, Cyrus Young purchased this pharmacy from Walsh. The name was changed <br />to Young's Drugstore in that year and the new name stuck until the store closed <br />in the 1950's-regardless of the change of ownership twice in that period. The <br />store has remained vacant except for storage since that time. Space on the <br />second floor once housed a lawyer's office. <br /> <br />HISTORIC PRESERVATION ADVISORY COMMITTEE <br /> <br />Page 2 <br />