In 1884, the California Nursery Company was established in
Niles, California (now a district in Fremont). The December 6, 1884 Pacific Rural Press announced "Nursery Enterprise.--It seems to be the time for great things in the nursery business. It is now announced that John Rock, R. D. Fox, James Hutchison, Thomas Meherin and Wm. J. Landers have associated themselves together in a nursery enterprise. A tract of 500 acres of land near Niles, Alameda county, has been purchased and leased for 15 years to the association, and improvements will begin at once. It is expected to have trees ready for delivery in the fall of 1886. Messrs. Rock & Fox will continue to sell their present stock, and will propagate no more fruit trees on their San Jose establishments but will confine their attention to ornamental growths." The property was bought from
Jonas Gilman Clark. An existing adobe building that was built around the 1830s-1840s predates the nursery and is on the National Register of Historic Place. In 1886 the Pacific Rural Press reported on their progress after almost 2 years of operation. In 1888 the Pacific Rural Press wrote about "The Nursery Business" and included several etchings of the new nursery. The year 1865 is often cited for the establishment of the California Nursery Company and has caused much confusion. Charles Burr, a longtime employee of the nursery said in 1970 that 1865 was "used as the beginning date of the California Nursery for purposes of anniversaries." and it was carried forward. Another book that was used as "proof" that the California Nursery Company started in 1865 was Pen Pictures of the "Garden of the World." However, it clearly states that John Rock and partners established the California Nursery Company in 1884 in Niles. Catalogs for "Rock's Nurseries" in the
Santa Clara Valley are available for the years 1873-1888 are available from UC Davis. Advertisements for both the California Nursery Company and Rock's Nurseries are printed in directories and newspapers at least up to 1887. At first, the nursery was a wholesaler providing
grape vines, roses, ornamentals, and
fruit trees to California's growing agricultural industry. Early on it supplied plants for the Palo Alto estate of California tycoon
Leland Stanford. Later, in addition to its wholesale business, the nursery started a retail operation with ornamental trees and plants for homes and gardens. John Rock was interested in creating new plant hybrids and worked with West Coast plant breeders like Luther Burbank. His 1888 catalog featured some 500 varieties of fruit trees, 700 ornamental shrubs, and 270 roses. By the time Rock died, his nursery had introduced more new plant varieties to California than any other. William J. Landers, insurance businessman, was associated with the nursery since its beginning. He was President at his death from "Nervous Prostration" in 1908, which he had suffered from since the 1906 fire in San Francisco. In 1918, the company announced a new trademark, a logo with a grizzly bear. According to the family, the logo was discontinued because of a conflict with Stark Brothers logo. The nursery later embraced the "Old Adobe" logo after the historic Vallejo adobe was transformed into the nursery's Guest Lodge. == The California Nursery Company and World's Fairs ==