The Milpitas Parks, Recreation, and Cultural ResourcesCommission (PRCRC) recently voted to name our city’s two newest parks, still in development, after two people who were important to our city’s developmentin very different eras and ways.
The first park is to be named after Bob McGuire. Read more about Bob McGuire Park.
The PRCRC also voted to name another, much smaller,new park in honor of Capt. Calvin Valpey.
Capt. Valpey was born in March, 1806, in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. From 1818 to 1832 he sailed the seas When not sailing the seas he turned to farming. In 1847 he sailed from Eastport, Maine, to Liverpool, England, as captain.
The same year Capt. Valpey decided to quit the sea, but was persuaded to pilot a vessel called “The Eagle” from Yarmouth to San Francisco via the Straits of Magellan. On November 9, 1850, he left Yarmouth and after five >months and nine days arrived in San Francisco<.
Once in California, Capt. Valpey spent some time in piloting boats up the Sacramento River and around the San Francisco Bay. Then with a partner, Capt. James Sinclair, he operated a trading schooner that went from Union City to San Francisco with grain and returned with supplies for miners.
Later he purchased 400 acres of land at Warm Springs Landing at sixteen dollars per acre(right next to Dixon Landing) and built some warehouses at Dixon Landing. He lived there until his death in 1880. He was married to Elizabeth Gardner Valpey (1810 –1901) and they had two daughters, Elizabeth Ann Valpey Shaw and Mary Alice Valpey Craycroft.