Pascal Ballade

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Pascal Ballade, also known as P. Ballade, (April 6, 1839 – December 1, 1904) was an American businessman in Los Angeles, California, and a member of the Los Angeles Common Council, the city's governing body.

He was the owner of the historic Pico House during the late 19th century, now in the El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument.

Ballade, who was of Basque descent, was born April 6, 1839, in France, and came to California during the 1850s, where he lived in San Francisco and then had a sheep-shearing business in San Juan Capistrano.[1]

His wife was Marie Mariluch of Harotcarena, Urepel, France, and their children were a son, Jean Mariluch; and two daughters, Marie A. and Antoinette Marie.[1]

He became a naturalized citizen in Monterey County on August 23, 1869.[1]

Ballade died on December 1, 1904, in Los Angeles.[1]

Career

In May 1883, Ballade opened the Alameda Foundry, with "three or four" employees, where iron work was done "of every description" and a "large number of Bouvier patent pumps are manufactured."[2] In 1883–87 he was operating a grocery storeon the southeast corner of Alameda and Aliso streets.[3]

Although the Pico House, built in 1869–70 with nearly eighty rooms, large windows, a small interior court, and a grand staircase, was once considered the most extravagant and lavish hotel in Southern California, by the time Ballade came to own it in the 1890s it had declined precipitously and was frequented by prostitutes.[4]

In 1893 he was also managing the Ballade House, of which Jean Burubeltz was the proprietor.[1]

Public service

References

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