Andrew Mattei (c. 1848 – 1931)[1] was a Swiss-Italian winemaker who immigrated to Fresno, California, where he became the owner of a large winery.[2][3]
Mattei came to Fresno County, California, in approximately 1890,[4] and founded the Mattei Winery in 1893.[2] His vineyard grew from 80 acres at its start to 1,200 acres in 1910.[2][5] By 1915, his winery was valued at ten million dollars and was reported as "among the largest in the state";[3] it became the largest in the country prior to Prohibition.[6] As well as wine, the winery also sold grape syrup and brandy.[2]
Mattei's children disliked the wine business and so, fearing his company would be dissolved after his death, Mattei commissioned a 12-story office building in Fresno to bear his name; it eventually became the Guarantee Savings Building.[7] Once again called the Mattei Building, it remains the 7th tallest building in Fresno.[8] Despite Mattei's fears, the Mattei Winery and its Mattevista Wines brand name continued to operate after the repeal of Prohibition,[9]
and lasted until 1962, when it was sold to Guild Wineries.[2]
^Sullivan (1998) reports his lifetime as 1835–1936. However, an obituary entitled "Mattei dies at 83" was published in the August 1931 issue of The California Grower; see Cribari, Al (August 1, 2001), "Look back to the future", Wine & Vines, archived from the original on August 8, 2014.
^Sullivan (1998) reports the date as 1890; however, an earlier date of 1887 is given by Clough, Charles W.; Clingan, Helen; Secrest, William B.; Temple, Bobbye Sisk (1986), Fresno County: In the 20th century, from 1900 to the 1980s, Volume 2, Panorama West Books, p. 169, ISBN9780914330974. The same 1887 date is also given by Smith, Wallace; Secrest, William B. (2004), Garden of the sun: a history of the San Joaquin Valley, 1772-1939 (2nd ed.), Linden Pub., p. 569, ISBN9780941936774.