Frenchman's Tower


Frenchman's Tower is a two-story red brick structure located in Santa Clara County, California, that resembles a medieval fortification. Built in 1875, the structure was listed as a California Point of Historical Interest in 1969.
The structure was built under the direction of land owner Paulin Caperon, a native of France who had assumed the name Peter Coutts when he moved to Mayfield, California, in 1875. Coutts returned to France in 1882 without letting his California neighbors know what happened to him and ordered a bank to liquidate his Mayfield property.
Since then trespassers have carved names or initials into almost every brick of the tower within their reach. Some dates go back over 100 years. In 1970, the landowner bricked in the windows to protect the structure from vandals. Frenchman's Tower stands on Old Page Mill Road, midway between Foothill Expressway and Interstate 280, in Santa Clara County, California, within a strip of land within the borders of Palo Alto on land now owned by Stanford University.

Architecture

Frenchman's Tower was built in 1875 and has miniature crenels along the top and Gothic windows,
giving it a style similar to Medieval fortifications built hundreds of years earlier, not unlike Chindia Tower built between the 15th and 19th century. In the Middle Ages, crenels were used to
shield archers defending the structure.
The second floor held a water tank, while the first floor was used as a library. The original owner, Paulin Caperon, spent many hours in his library reading and studying. The building never had any doors, requiring entry through a window
The tower, situated near Matadero Creek, was originally connected to one of six tunnels used to provide subterranean water to his farm and to his lake. Workers had to remove tons of earth before reaching a sufficient underground water source. Bricks for the tower were made by Albert Bowman and Company from a clay deposit discovered in Mountain View in the same year that the tower was constructed.

Public interest and notability

Over the years, many different ideas and stories regarding Paulin Caperon's tower and tunnels have been told. Caperon, who also went by the alias Peter Coutts, is said to have "enjoyed mystifying his neighbors" and often helped perpetuate these stories by neither denying nor confirming the fanciful tales. These include the construction of tunnels and fortified tower to "withstand a siege by his enemies" and harboring the French Empress, neither of which were true.

Recognition

Popular news media of today sometimes casts the tower as an unsolved mystery.
Some articles show the writer's curiosity about the tower.
Jean-Baptiste Paulin Caperon was born of wealthy parents near Bordeaux France in 1822 and died in Bordeaux, France, in September 1889 at the age of
sixty-seven.
Paulin Caperon was the son of one of Napoleon's officers. He lost both parents when he was only 26 years old. He "openly criticized Napoleon III policies and opposed the Franco-Prussian War." He founded a private bank, which he sold in 1873. Because of problems in France, he left France for Brussels, Belgium,
and then went to New Orleans using identity papers of his deceased cousin Peter Coutts. He traveled to San Francisco and then to the township of Mayfield. Paulin Caperon continued using the name Peter Coutts when he arrived in Mayfield.
In 1875 he bought 1,400 acres of Rancho Rincon de San Francisquito from Jeremiah Clarke for $90,000. Caperon had a heart ailment, and his wife was an invalid. He felt concerned that he and his wife might both die, and his children might have difficulty inheriting his estate, so he took title to the land in the name of his children's
governess Eugene Cloyensen.
Caperon developed the land into a thriving stock farm
and eventually directed the construction of a tower to distribute water.
He seemed friendly but would not discuss his past.
When local residents discovered that Peter Coutts had actually purchased the land in the name of his children's governess,
the townspeople grew suspicious,
made speculations, and spread rumors about the intended purpose of the
tower.
In 1882, only eight years after his arrival, Paulin Caperon suddenly
returned to his native France
and sold the land
for the sum of $140,000 to Leland Stanford, who founded Stanford University in 1891.
Paulin Caperon eventually reacquired legal title to valuable property
he had owned in France. "Using his true identity, Caperon and his family returned to Paris in May 1883,"
and he spent the rest of his life in France.