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Antoine Borel (December 29, 1840 – March 26, 1915) was a banker for the eponymous Borel & Co. , headquartered in San Francisco , California. He was born in Neuchâtel , Switzerland and emigrated to the United States in 1862, where he joined his brother's bank and served as a Swiss consul and director for several companies, including the Spring Valley Water Company , the California Street Cable Company , and the Bankers' Investment Company. He died following an operation in Switzerland, to where he had returned in July 1914 for health issues.

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17-479: Borel may refer to: People [ edit ] Antoine Borel (1840–1915), a Swiss-born American businessman Armand Borel (1923–2003), a Swiss mathematician Borel (author) , 18th-century French playwright Borel (1906–1967), pseudonym of the French actor Jacques Henri Cottance Émile Borel (1871–1956), a French mathematician known for his founding work in

34-912: A chapel on the edge of his property, later known as Geneva or Grace Chapel, in 1892; it later was turned over to Saint Matthews Episcopal Church in 1902, and then to the Hillbarn Theatre, a community theater organization, in 1937. Antoine Borel and his wife, Grace (née Canitrot, 1849–1923), were married in 1871 and had seven children, six of which were living at the time of his death: five daughters and one son. Borel's children and [their spouses]: Borel died on March 26, 1915, in Lausanne , Switzerland, following an intestinal operation. He had returned to Switzerland in July 1914 with members of his family for health reasons, and took up residence there after being stranded by World War I . Borel acquired

51-869: Is a hybrid made up of the California Street line, and the Hyde Street section of Cal Cable's O'Farrell, Jones & Hyde line, together with other lines already in municipal ownership. California's mild climate encouraged an innovative streetcar design first used on the California Street Cable Railroad in 1891. The cars feature an enclosed center section with open seating on each end of the car. These California type streetcars were subsequently adopted by many California electric railways, including Pacific Electric , Los Angeles Railway and San Francisco, Napa and Calistoga Railway . This article related to light rail in

68-563: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Antoine Borel Borel was born in Neuchâtel , Switzerland , to a wealthy merchant family, and completed his education in Switzerland and Germany. He emigrated to San Francisco, arriving in 1862, following his brother Alfred, who had arrived in 1855. Alfred Borel founded Borel & Co. in 1852; Antoine joined him in 1862, and

85-605: The Wells Fargo Express Company , and the Bank of California Company. Borel was a prominent philanthropist in San Mateo, California , where he had established a summer home in 1874 on the advice of their family's doctors. After a fire in 1883 which destroyed the city's public library, Borel donated land for a new library building, which subsequently was destroyed in another fire in 1887. Borel also built

102-462: The 1960s on the former Homestead site, after the completion of SR 92. The estate's small chapel had a 300 lb (140 kg) brass bell gifted in 1908 from Antoine Borel; when the chapel was torn down in December 1961 to make way for SR 92, the bell moved with the chapel's owners, Hillbarn Theatre, to Foster City. A middle school and small neighborhood park, remodeled in 2022, on

119-614: The 300-acre (120 ha) "Homestead Estate" site in 1874 for US$ 25,000 (equivalent to $ 670,000 in 2023) from the estate of François L. A. Pioche, who also was a prominent San Francisco banker. That site was west of El Camino Real near present-day SR 92 in San Mateo; Antoine Borel used it as his summer residence. After his death, it became the year-round home for the Borel family, including San Mateo County Superior Court Judge Aylett R. Cotton Jr., son of Aylett R. Cotton ;

136-514: The Bovets, who took the eastern portion, and the Cottons, who took the western. A proposal to retain the remaining buildings and gardens as a park was dismissed and they were removed relatively quickly. SR 92 runs partially along the valley formed by Borel Creek, which drains into Seal Slough . The creek was channelized and covered east of Alameda de las Pulgas after the land was acquired for

153-515: The Homestead site also are named for Borel. In 1897, Borel purchased the Château de Gorgier in Switzerland for his visits to that country. It was restored between 1897 and 1905, and after his death, remained with the Borel family until it was sold in 2001. The Borel Bank & Trust Company was founded by Harold and Ronald Fick in 1979; they are great-grandsons of Antoine Borel, and the bank

170-418: The areas of measure theory and probability Mary Grace Borel (1915–1998), American socialite Pascal Borel (born 1978), German footballer Pierre Borel , 17th-century French chemist Places [ edit ] Borel (crater) , a lunar crater, named after Émile Borel Mathematics [ edit ] Borel algebra , operating on Borel sets, named after Émile Borel, also: Borel measure ,

187-573: The business was turned over to Antoine when Alfred returned to Europe in 1898. Antoine was appointed the vice-consul of Switzerland to California and Nevada when he was 21, ascending to consul-general in 1885, a position he held until 1913. During this period, Antoine also served on the board of several companies, including the Spring Valley Water Company , the California Street Cable Company ,

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204-439: The measure on a Borel algebra Borel distribution , a discrete probability distribution, also named after Émile Borel Borel subgroup , in the theory of algebraic groups, named after Armand Borel Other uses [ edit ] Borel (surname) , a surname Etablissements Borel , an aircraft manufacturing company founded by Gabriel Borel See also [ edit ] Borrel Borrell Topics referred to by

221-412: The new freeway. It resurfaces east of the railroad tracks currently used by Caltrain . The mansion on the Homestead site was started in 1868 by Sidney V. Pringle, then sold to Pioche, who remodeled it before it was acquired by Borel with the estate. It was destroyed in a fire on June 8, 1962; at that time, it already had been scheduled for demolition. The Borel Place office development was started in

238-407: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Borel . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Borel&oldid=1224295629 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

255-426: The younger Cotton had married two of Borel's daughters. Portions of the estate were sold off in the 1920s, forming new residential subdivisions south of the original city limits. The center section of the estate was designated for the construction of SR 92 in 1961, and the Borel family won settlements totaling more than US$ 1 million, and the family decided to develop the remaining land, dividing it between

272-478: Was a long-serving cable car operator in San Francisco , founded by Leland Stanford . The company's first line opened on California Street in 1878 and is the oldest cable car line still in operation. The company remained independent until 1951, outlasting all the other commercial streetcar and cable car operators in the city. The city purchased and reopened the lines in 1952; the current cable car system

289-513: Was headquartered on the former Borel estate in San Mateo. Borel Bank & Trust was acquired by Boston Private Financial Holdings in 2001, changing its name to Boston Private Bank & Trust in September 2012. Boston Private in turn was acquired by SVB Financial Group in 2021, then auctioned in 2023 following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank . California Street Cable Railroad The California Street Cable Railroad (Cal Cable)

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