University of California • Berkeley Presented in Memory of MERRITT DAVID ROBISON, JR. University of California • Berkeley FROM THE ROBISON COLLECTION GIVEN BY JANICE CLARK ROBISON IN MEMORY OF HER HUSBAND MERRITT DAVID ROBISON, JR. THIRD THOUSAND. Frost's Pictorial History of California. OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, FROM THE PERIOD OF THE CONQUEST BY SPAIN, TO HER OCCUPATION BY THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, CONTAINING AN ACCOUNT OF THE DISCOVERY OF THE IMMENSE GOLD MINES AND PLACERS, THE ENORMOUS POPULATION OF GOLD-SEEKERS, THE QUANTITY OF GOLD ALREADY OBTAINED, A DESCRIPTION OF HER MINERAL AND AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, WITH THRILLING ACCOUNTS OF ADVEN TURES AMONG THE MINERS. ALSO, ADVICE TO EMIGRANTS ON THE BEST ROUTES, AND THE PREPARATIONS NECESSARY TO GET THERE. TO WHICH IS ADDED A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE FORMATION OF THE GOVERNMENT AND CONSTITUTION OF THE SAID STATE. WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS. BY JOHN FROST, LL.D. AUBURN, N. Y. DERBY AND MILLER. 1851. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850, BY DERBY AND MILLER, In the Clerk's Office for the Northern District of New York. PHIL A DELPHI A.: HY GS-IRHE CHARLES. No. 9 Sansom Street. PREFACE. THE occupation of California by the people of the United States, and the discovery of its rich gold mines, form a new era in the history of the world. According to present appear ances, these events forebode a complete revolu tion in monetary and commercial affairs. The receipts of gold from California have already produced a sensible effect on the financial af fairs of our country ; and far-seeing people pre dict an entirely new state of things with respect to the relative value of money and property. Still more important effects are anticipated from the establishment of a new, rich, and en terprising State of the American Union on the shores of the Pacific. Railroads across the con tinent will soon transport the rich products of Eastern Asia, by a quick transit, to the Atlan tic cities and to Europe; and a passage to China or India, which was formerly a serious undertaking, will become a pleasant excursion. (3) 4 PREFACE. To gratify the public curiosity with respect to the history and present state of this new member of the Union, is the purpose of this volume. In preparing it, the author has passed rapidly over the early history, and dwelt chiefly on recent events, and the actual state of the country, as he considered that, by this course, utility would be more effectually consulted. In the Appendix he has introduced the con stitution of California, and some official docu ments, whose importance demanded their pre servation in a permanent form. CONTENTS CHAPTER I. GEOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE OF CALIFORNIA 7 CHAPTER n. DISCOVERY OF CALIFORNIA U CHAPTER IH. PEOM THE FIRST SETTLEMENT TO THE REVOLUTION IN MEXICO 20 CHAPTER IV. FROM THE REVOLUTION TILL THE WAR BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND MEXICO- 24 CHAPTER V. FROM THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE WAR TILL ITS CLOSE 27 CHAPTER VI. DISCOVERY OF THE GOLD PLACERS 30 CHAPTER VII. ADVENTURES OP SOME OF THB MINERS, AND INCIDENTS CONNECTED WITH MINING • • 56 CHAPTER VHI DESCRIPTION OF SOME OF THE CITIES AND TOWNS OF CALIFORNIA, BEFORE AND AFTER THE DISCOVERY OF THE GOLD MINES »• • • 87 CHAPTER IX. THB FORMATION OF A STATE GOVERNMENT 118 CHAPTER X. PRESENT STATE OF CALIFORNIA - 132 CHAPTER XL THE DIFFERENT ROUTES TO CALIFORNIA, AND THEIR RESPECTIVE CHARACTERS 181 CHAPTER XII. RECENT EVENTS C«NNECTED WITH, AND HAPPENING IN, CALIFORNIA 218 CHAPTER XIH. THE MlNERALOGICAL AND OTHER CHARACTERISTICS OF GOLD, AND THE MODE OF DIS TINGUISHING IT WHEN FOUND ; TOGETHER WITH THE ASSAY, REDUCTION, AND RE FINEMENT OF GOLD 233 (5) CONTENTS. CHAPTER XIY. ADDITIONAL RECENT ETENTS CHAPTER XT. A GENERAL VIEW OP CALIFORNIA AT THE PRESENT TIME 255 CHAPTER XVL NATURAL HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA 27 5 APPENDIX • • 887 LIST OF EMBELLISHMENTS. PRINCIPAL STREET IN SAN FRANCISCO Frontispiece ONE OF THE OLD SPANISH HOUSES IN SAN FRANCISCO 28 RANCHE IN UPPER CALIFORNIA 47 LITE IN THE DIGGINGS — SUPPER-TIME 65 SONORIANS DRY-WASHING GOLD 67 GOLD-ROCKER, WASHING-PAN, AND GOLD-BEARER 70 GOING TO A FANDANGO 79 MODE OF WASHING CLOTHES IN CALIFORNIA 86 GAMBLING SCENE IN SAN FRANCISCO 93 A SHIP'S GALLEY TURNED INTO A CAFE RESTAURANT IN SAN FRANCISCO 96 SACRAMENTO CITY 112 SAN JOSE, IN LOWER CALIFORNIA 116 MONTEREY 130 TRADING-POST IN THE MINES 176 CROSSING THE ISTHMUS < 197 MOUNTAIN SCENERY IN LOWER CALUORHIA • 504 THE HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. CHAPTER L GEOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE OF CALIFORNIA. THE territory called California is that part of North America situated on the Pacific Ocean, and extending from the 42° of north latitude southwardly to 22° 48', and from 107° longitude, west from Greenwich, to 124°. It is bounded on the north by Oregon terri tory, east by territories belonging to the United States and the Gulf of California, and on the south and west by Mexico and the Pacific Ocean. Califor nia is naturally divided into two portions ; the penin sula, called Lower California, and the territory ex tending northward from the peninsula, on the Pacific Ocean, called Upper California. The line of division between Upper and Lower California runs nearly along the 32d parallel of latitude, westward from the head of the Gulf of California. The peninsula of California is about one hundred and thirty miles in breadth, where it joins the conti nent. It extends south-eastwardly, generally dimi nishing in breadth, till it terminates in two points. The point farthest south-west is called Cape San (7) 8 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Lucas. The other, sixty miles east by north of San Lucas, is called Cape Palmo. The peninsula is about seven hundred miles long. Upper California extends, upon the Pacific, from the 32d parallel of latitude, northward to the 42d parallel, a distance of about seven hundred miles. It is separated from Oregon by a range of highlands, called the Snowy Mountains, or, by the Spaniards, the Sierra Nevada. The eastern limit of Upper Cali fornia is rather uncertain. By some it is considered as including the region watered by the Colorado River, while others limit it by the great mountain range that extends along the western side of the continent. The Californian peninsula seems to be a prolonga tion of the great western chain of mountains. It consists entirely of high, stony ridges, separated by sandy valleys, and contains very few tracts of level ground. In a general view, it might be termed an irreclaimable desert. The scarcity of rain and the small number of springs of water, with the intense heat of the sun's rays, uninterrupted in their passage, render the surface of the country almost destitute of vegetation. Yet in the small oases formed by the passage of a rivulet through a sandy defile, where irrigation is possible, the ground may be made to pro duce all the fruits of tropical climes, of the finest quality, and in great quantity. The southern portion of the peninsula contains several gold mines, which have been worked, though not to any great extent. On the Pacific side, the coast offers many excellent harbors, but the lack of fresh water near them proves an obstacle in the way of their occupation. The principal harbors are the Bay of la Magdalena, separated from the ocean by the long island of Santa HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 9 Margarita, the Bay of Sebastian Vizcaino, east of the Isle of Cedaro, Port San Bartolomd, sometimes called Turtle Bay, and Port San Quintin, a good harbor, with fresh water in the vicinity, and called by the Spanish navigators the Port of the Eleven Thousand Virgins. The great westernmost range of mountains runs northward from the peninsula, nearly parallel with the Pacific coast, to the 34th parallel of latitude, be low which is Mount San Bernardin, one of the highest peaks in California, about forty miles from the ocean. Farther northward, the space between the mountains and the coast becomes wider, and, in a few places, reaches eighty miles. The intermediate region is tra versed by lines of hills, or smaller mountains joined with the great range. The most considerable of the inferior ridges extends from Mount San Bernardin to the south side of the entrance of the Bay of San Francisco, where it is called the San Bruno Moun tains. Between this range and the coast runs the Santa Barbara range, terminating at the Cape of Pines, on the south-west side of the Bay of Monterey. Bordering on the Bay of San Francisco, on the east side, is the Bolbona ridge. Beyond these are lines of highlands which stretch from the great chain and ter minate in capes on the Pacific. There are many streams among the valleys of Upper California, some of which, in the rainy season, swell to a considerable size. But no river, except the Sacramento, falling into the Bay of San Francisco, is known to flow through the maritime range of moun tains, from the interior to the Pacific. The valleys thus watered offer abundant pasturage for cattle. The principal harbors of Upper California are those 10 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. offered by the Bays of San Francisco, Monterey, San Pedro, Santa Barbara, and San Diego. The Bay of San Francisco is one of the finest harbors in the world. The combined fleets of all the naval powers of Europe might there find safe shelter. It is surrounded by ranges of high hills, and joins the Pacific by a passage two miles wide and three in length. The other harbors can only be frequented in the fine season, and afford a very insecure shelter for vessels. San Diego is the farthest south. The bay at that place runs ten miles eastward into the land, and is separated from the ocean by a ridge of sand. Proceeding northward, about seventy miles, the Bay of San Pedro is next met. It is open to the south west winds, but sheltered from the north-west. About a hundred miles north-west of San Pedro, is the har bor of Santa Barbara. It is an open roadstead shel tered from the north and west winds, but exposed to the violence of the south-westerly storms, which pre vail during the greater part of the year. A hundred miles farther north is the Bay of Monterey. It is extensive, and lies in an indentation of the coast, somewhat semicircular. The southernmost portion is separated from the ocean by the point of land ending at the Cape of Pines. In the cove thus formed, stands the town of Monterey, for some time the capi tal of California. The harbor affords but a poor shel ter from storms. The Sacramento and San Joachim are the princi pal rivers of California, but the Sacramento alone is navigable to any extent worthy of mention. There are numerous small streams and lakes in the interior, the principal outlet of which is the Colorado River. The valleys through which these streams flow are HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 11 fertile, and afford good pasture for cattle; but the remainder of the region between the maritime and the Colorado ranges of mountains is a barren waste of sand. CHAPTER II. DISCOVERY OF CALIFORNIA. THE first exploration of the Pacific coasts of North America was made by the Spaniards, in the sixteenth century. After Hernando Cortes had completed the conquest of Mexico, he commenced exploring the ad joining seas and countries ; no doubt, with the hope of discovering lands richer than those which he had conquered, and which would afford new fields for the exercise of his daring enterprise and undaunted per severance. He employed vessels in surveying the coasts of the Mexican Gulf, and of the Atlantic more northerly. Vessels were built upon the Pacific coast for like purposes, two of which as early as 1526, were sent to the East Indies. The first expedition of the Spaniards, sent along the western coast of Mexico, was conducted by Pedro Nunez de Maldonado, an officer under Cortes. He sailed from the mouth of the Zacatula River, in July, 1528, and was six months engaged in surveying the shores from his starting-place to the mouth of the Santiago River, a hundred leagues farther north-west. The territory he visited was then called Xalisco, and inhabited by fierce tribes of men who had never been 12 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. conquered by the Mexicans. Flattering accounts of the fertility of the country and of the abundance of the precious metals in it were brought back by the ex pedition, and these served to excite the attention of the Spaniards. "When the expedition returned Cortes was in Spain, whither he had gone to have his title and powers more clearly defined. He returned in 1580 with full power to make discoveries and con quests upon the western coast of Mexico. From the opposition of his enemies, he was prevented from fit ting out an expedition before 1532. The most north ern post upon the Pacific coast, occupied by the Spaniards, was Aguatlan, beyond which the coast was little known. The expedition sent by Cortes to the north-western coast of Mexico was commanded by his kinsman, Diego Hurtado de Mendoza. It sailed from Tehuantepec in July, 1532, and consisted of two vessels.; one com manded by Diego Hurtado de Mendoza in person, and the other by Juan de Mazuela. Mendoza proceeded slowly along the shore of the continent as far as the 27° of latitude, where, his crew being mutinous, he sent back one of his vessels with the greater part of his men, and continued the voyage with the remaining vessel. Vague reports were afterwards received that Mendoza's vessel was thrown ashore somewhere to the northward, and that all on board had perished. The vessel which was sent back, was stranded near the mouth of the River Vanderas, and after the murder of the greater part of the crew, she was plundered by Nuno de Guzman, Governor of Xalisco. About the middle of the next year, Cortes received the news of the return of the vessel which Mendoza had sent back, and he immediately despatched two ships under HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 13 the command of Hernando Grijalva and Diego Be- cerra, in search of the other. These ships sailed on the 30th of September, 1533, but were soon sepa rated. Grijalva discovered the islands of St. Thomas, as he called them — a group of islands about fifty leagues from the coast. He remained there till the following spring, and then returned home. Becerra proceeded north-westward ; but his crew mutinied, and he was murdered by Fortuno Ximenes. The mutineers, under Ximenes, then steered directly west from the main land, and soon reached a coast not known to them before. They landed, and soon after Ximenes and nineteen men were killed by the na tives. The rest of the men carried the vessel over to Xalisco, where she was seize4 by Nuno de Guz man. Soon after these unlucky expeditions, Nuno de Guzman sent out several exploring parties in a north erly direction, one of which traced the western shore as far as the mouth of the Colorado, and brought back accounts of a rich and populous country and splendid cities in the interior. When Cortes became acquainted with the seizure of his vessels, a dispute arose be tween him and Nuno de Guzman, which almost led to a battle between their forces. But no action oc curred, and Cortes, having heard of the newly disco vered country, which was said to abound in the finest pearls, embarked at Chiametla, with a portion of his men, and set sail for the new land of promise. On the 3d of May, 1535, the day of the Invention of the Holy Cross, according to the Roman Catholic Calen dar, Cortes arrived in the bay where Ximenes and his fellow-mutineers had met their fate in the previous year. In honor of the day, the place was called 2 14 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Santa Cruz, and possession of it was taken in the name of the Spanish sovereign. The country claimed by Cortes for Spain, was the south-east portion of the peninsula, which was after wards called California. The bay, called by Cortes, Santa Cruz, was, perhaps, the same now known as Port La Paz, about a hundred miles from the Pacific, near the 24th parallel of latitude. Cortes landed on the shore of this bay, rocky and forbidding as it ap peared, with a hundred and thirty men, and forty horses. He then sent back two of his ships to Chia- metla, to bring over the rest of his troops. The ves sels soon returned with a portion of the troops, and being again despatched to the Mexican coast, only one of them returned. The other was wrecked on her way. Cortes then took seventy men and embarked for Xalisco, from which he returned just in time to save his troops from death by famine. A year was spent in these operations, and the troops began to grow discontented. A few pearls had been found on the coast, but the country was found to be barren, and without attractions for Spaniards. In the mean time, the wife of Cortes hearing reports of his ill success, sent a vessel to Santa Cruz, and en treated him to return. He then learned that he had been superseded in the government of New Spain by Don Antonio de Mendoza, who had already entered the capital as viceroy. Cortes returned to Mexico, and soon after, recalled the vessels and troops from Santa Cruz. The viceroy, Mendoza, had received some informa tion concerning the country north-west of Mexico, from de Cabeza-Vaca and two other Spaniards, who had wandered nine years, through forests and deserts, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 15 from Tampa Bay, Florida, until they reached Culia- can. They had received from the natives, accounts of rich and populous countries situated to the north west. Mendoza, wishing to ascertain the truth of the reports, sent two friars, according to the advice of Las Casas, to make an exploration. They were ac companied by a Moor who had crossed the continent with Caheza-Vaca and his friends, and they set out from Culiacan on the 7th of March, 1539. Soon after the departure of the friars, Cortes sent out his last expedition. It was commanded by Fran cisco de Ulloa, and consisted of three vessels, well equipped. Sailing from Acapulco, on the 8th of July 1539. Ulloa reached the Bay of Santa Cruz, after losing one of his vessels in a storm. From Santa Cruz he started to survey the coast towards the north west. He completely examined both shores of the Gulf of California, and discovered the fact of the connection of the peninsula with the main land, near the 32° of latitude. This gulf Ulloa named the Sea of Cortes. On the 18th of October, he returned to Santa Cruz, and on the 29th again sailed with the object of exploring the coasts farther west. He rounded the point now called Cape San Lucas, the southern extremity of California, and sailed along the coast towards the north. The Spaniards proceeded slowly, as they were opposed by north-western storms, and often landed and fought with the natives. In January, 1540, Ulloa reached the island under the 28th parallel of latitude, near the coast, which they named the Isle of Cedars. There he remained till April, when one of the ships, bearing the sick and accounts of the discoveries, was sent back to Mexico. The returning vessel was seized at Santiago by the 16 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. officers of the viceroy. The fate of the remaining vessel is uncertain. Some of the writers of that day asserting that he continued his voyage as far north as the 30° of latitude, and returned safely to Mexico; while one asserts that nothing more was heard of him after the return of the vessel he sent hack. In the mean time, the two friars and the Moor penetrated a considerable distance into the interior of the continent, and sent home glowing accounts of rich and delightful countries which they said they had dis covered. The inhabitants had, at first, been hostile, and had killed the Moor ; but in the end submitted to the authority of the King of Spain. Mendoza, be lieving the accounts of the friars to be strictly true, prepared an expedition for the conquest of the coun tries they described. Disputes with the different Spanish chieftains occupied some months, at the end of which Cortes returned to Spain, in disgust. Men doza despatched two bodies of troops, one by land, the other by sea, to reconnoitre the newly discovered land, and clear the way for conquest. The marine expedition was undertaken by two ships, under the command of Fernando de Alarcon, who sailed from Santiago on the 9th of May, 1540, and proceeding north-west along the coast, he reached the head of the California Gulf, in August of the same year. There he discovered the river now called the Colorado. The stream was ascended to the distance of eighty leagues, by Alarcon and some of his men, in boats ; but all their inquiries were unsatisfactorily answered, and it was determined to return to Mexico. The ves sels returned safely before the end of the year. The land forces sent, at the same time, to the north west, were composed of infantry and cavalry, and HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 17 commanded by Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, who had been appointed governor of New Gallicia, in place of Nuno de Guzman. The party left Culiacan on the 22d of April, 1540, and took their way north, follow ing the course described by the friars. They found the route which had been represented as easy, almost impassable. They made their way over mountains, and deserts, and rivers, and, in July, they reached the country called Cibola by the natives, but found it a half cultivated region, thinly inhabited by a people destitute of the wealth and civilization they had been represented as possessing. What had been represented as seven great cities, were seven small towns, rudely built. A few Aurquoises and some gold and silver supposed to be good, constituted the amount of what had been termed immense quantities of jewels, gold and silver. The Spaniards took possession of the country and wanted to remain and settle there. But Vasquez refused to acquiesce ; and after naming one of the towns he visited, Granada, he started for the north-west, in search of other countries. The region called Cibola by the inhabitants, which Vasquez visited, is the territory now called Sonora, and is situated about the head waters of the Rivers Yaqui and Gila, east of the upper portion of the Gulf of California. The movements of the Spaniards after leaving Cibola, in August, 1540, have been the subject of very vague and contradictory accounts. All that is certain is, that the greater part of the force soon returned to Mexico, and that Vasquez, with the remainder, wandered through the interior for nearly two years longer, when, being disappointed in his expectations, he returned to Mexico in 1542. In the spring of 1542, two vessels were placed under 2* 18 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the command of Juan Roderiguez Cabrillo, a Portu guese navigator of great reputation. The two vessels sailed from Navidad, a small port in Xalisco, in June, 1542. They rounded Cape San Lucas, and proceeded north-west, along the coast, as far as the 88th degree of latitude, when he was driven back, and took refuge in a harbor of one of the San Barbara islands. There Cabrillo died and the command devolved on Barto- lome Ferrelo. Ferrelo was a zealous and determined man, and he resolved to proceed with the expedition. He sailed towards the north, and on the 26th of February, reached a promontory near the 41st parallel of latitude, which he named Stormy Cape. On the 1st of March, the ships reached the 44th parallel, but they were again driven south ; and the men being almost worn out, Ferrelo resolved to go back to Mexico. He arrived at Navidad on the 14th of April, 1543. The promontory called Stormy Cape by Ferrelo, was the most northern portion of California visited by that navigator, and it is probably the same which is now called Cape Mendocino. From all accounts that they had been able to collect, the Spaniards concluded that neither rich and popu lous countries existed beneath the 40th parallel of latitude, nor was there any navigable passage between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans to be found in the same region. They, therefore, ceased to exp!6re the north-western territory for some time after the return of Ferrelo in 1543. Having thus given a somewhat detailed account of the discovery and explorations of the territory now called California, it will be sufficient to merely mention the various expeditions that visited it prior to the first regular settlement. In the spring of 1579, California HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 19 was visited by Sir Francis Drake, the English naviga tor, who landed on the shores of a bay supposed to be that of San Francisco. He formally took possession of the country in the name of Queen Elizabeth, and called it New Albion. He left California on the 22d of July, 1579. In the spring of 1596, Sebastian Viscaino, under orders from the viceroy of Mexico, attempted to plant colonies on the peninsula of Cali fornia, but the country was soon abandoned on account of the barrenness of the soil and the ferocity of the natives, Viscaino visited the coast of Upper Califor nia in 1602, and discovered and named some of the places Cabrillo had discovered and named long before. The Port San Miguel of Cabrillo was named Port San Diego ; Cape Galera was named Cape Conception, the name now borne by it ; the Port of Pines was named Port Monterey. This was the last expedition made by the Spaniards along the coast of California for more than a hundred and sixty years. Various attempts were made to establish colonies, garrisons, and fishing or trading ports, on the eastern side of the peninsula of California, during the seven teenth century, but all failed, either from the want of funds, the sterility of the country, or the hostility of the natives. The pearl fishery in the gulf was the principal bait that attracted the Spaniards, and they succeeded in obtaining a considerable quantity, some of which were very valuable. 20 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. CHAPTER III. FROM THE FIRST SETTLEMENT TO THE REVOLUTION IN MEXICO. THE first establishment of the Spaniards in Califor nia, was made by the Jesuits, in November, 1607. The settlement was called Loreto, and founded on the eastern side of the peninsula, about two hundred miles from the Pacific. On entering California, the Jesuits encountered the same obstacles which had before prevented a settlement of the country. The land was so sterile, that it scarcely yielded sustenance to the most industrious tiller, and as the settlements were all located near the sea, fishing was the resource of the settlers to make up the deficiency of food. The natives continued hostile, and killed several of the Jesuit fathers. By perseverance and kindness, the Jesuits overcame all the obstacles with which they met, and within sixty years after their entrance into Califor nia, they had established sixteen missions, extending along the eastern side of the peninsula, from Cape San Lucas to the head of the gulf. Each of these establishments consisted of a church, a fort, garrisoned by a few soldiers, and some stores and dwelling-houses, all under the control of the resident Jesuit father. Each of the missions formed the centre of a district containing several villages of converted Indians. None of the Jesuits visited the western coast of the peninsula except on one occasion, in 1716. Great exertions were made by the settlers to acquire HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 21 a knowledge of the geography, natural history and languages of the peninsula, and they appears to have been generally successful. The result of their re searches were published in Madrid, in 1757, and the work was entitled a " History of California." They surveyed the whole coast of the Gulf of California, and, in 1709, Father Kuhn, one of the Jesuit fathers, ascertained beyond doubt the connection of the penin sula with the continent, which had been denied for a century. But all the labors of the Jesuits were brought to an end in 1767. In that year, Charles III. of Spain, issued a decree, banishing members of that order from the Spanish territories ; and a strong military force, under command of Don Gasper de Portola, was despatched to California, and soon put an end to the rule of the Jesuits by tearing them from their converts. The Spanish government did not intend to abandon California. The peninsula immediately became a province of Mexico, and was provided with a civil and military government, subordinate to the viceroy of that country. The mission fell under the rule of the Dominicans, and from their mode of treatment, most of the converts soon returned to their former state of barbarism. The Spaniards soon formed establishments on the western side of the peninsula. In the spring of 1769, a number of settlers, with some soldiers and Franciscan friars, marched through the peninsula to wards San Diego. They reached the bay of San Diego after a toilsome journey, and the settlement on the shore of the bay was begun in the middle of May, 1769. An attempt was made, soon after, to establish a colony at Port Monterey ; but the party under Portola that went in search of the place, passed further 22 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. on to the bay of San Francisco, and could not retrace their steps before tHe cold weather set in, and they then returned to San Diego. The people left at San Diego had been several times attacked by the natives, and after the return of Portola's party they almost perished for want of food. But a supply arrived on the very day upon which they had agreed to abandon the place and return to Mexico. Portola again set out for Monterey, and there effected a settlement. Parties of emigrants from Mexico came to the western shore of California during the year 1770, and establish ments were made on the coast between San Diego and Monterey. The multiplication of their cattle, inde pendent of the fruits of agricultural labor, before 1775, made the settlers of Upper California able to resist the perils to which their situation exposed them. In order to give efficiency to the operations on the western coast of North America, the Spanish govern ment selected the port of San Bias, in Mexico, at the entrance of the Gulf of California, for the establish ment of arsenals, ship-yards and warehouses, and made it the centre of all operations undertaken in that quarter. A marine department was created for the special purpose of advancing the interests of, the Spaniards in the settlement of the western shore of California. By the energy displayed in managing this department the Spaniards succeeded in making eight establishments on the Pacific coast between the California peninsula and Cape Mendocino, before 1779. The most southern post was San Diego, and the most northern, San Francisco, on the great bay of the same name. The establishments were almost entirely military and missionary, the object of the Spaniards being solely the occupation of the country. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 23 The missions were under the control of the Francis cans, who, unlike the Jesuits, took little care to exert themselves in procuring information concerning the country in which they were established. Various expeditions for exploring the coast of Upper California above Cape Mendocino, were made by the Spaniards. One of these proceeded as far north as the latitude of 41 degrees, and some men were landed on the shores of a small bay, just beyond Cape Men docino, and gave the harbor the name of Port Trinidad. The small river which flows into the Pacific near the place where they landed was called Pigeon River, from the great number of those birds in the neighborhood of it. The Indians appeared to be a peaceable and industrious race, and conducted themselves towards the Spaniards in the most inoffensive manner. In the same year, 1775, Bodega, a Spanish commander, returning from a voyage extended as far north as tho 58th degree of latitude, discovered a small bay which had not previously been described, and he accordingly gave it his own name, which it still retains. This Bay of Bodega is situated a little north of the 38th degree of latitude. Few events worth recording occurred in California, during the whole period of fifty years, from the first establishment of the Spaniards on the western coast till the termination of the Mexican war of independence. An attempt of the Russians to form a settlement on the shores of the Bay of Bodego, in 1815, was met with a remonstrance from the governor of California. The remonstrance of the governor was disregarded, and his commands to quit the place disobeyed. The Rus sian agent, Kushof, denied the right of the Spaniards to the territory, and the governor being unable to 24 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. enforce his commands, the intruders kept posses sion of the ground until 1840, when they left of their own accord. CHAPTER IV. FROM THE REVOLUTION TILL THE WAR BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND MEXICO. BEFORE the commencement of the struggle for inde pendence in Mexico, the missions in California were, to some extent, fostered by the Spanish government, and supplies were sent to them regularly. But when the war began, the remittances were reduced, and the establishments soon began to decay. After the over throw of the Spanish rule, in 1822, the territory of California was divided into two portions. The penin sula was then called Lower California, and the whole of the continental territory called Upper California. When the Mexicans adopted a constitution, in 1824, each of these territories became entitled to send one representative to the National Congress. At the same time, the adult Indians who could be considered civilized, were declared citizens of the republic, and had lands given to them. This, of course, freed them from submission to the missionaries, who, thus deprived of their authority, either returned to Spain or Mexico, or took refuge in other lands. The Indians being free from restraint, soon sank to a low depth of bar barism and vice. Immediately after the overthrow of the Spanish HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 25 authorities, the ports of California began to be the resort of foreigners, principally whalers and traders from the United States. The trade in which they engaged, that of exchanging manufactured goods for the provisions, hide and tallow furnished by the natives, was at first irregular, but as it increased, it became more systematic, and mercantile houses were established in the principal ports. The Mexican government became dissatisfied with this state of things, and ordered the governor of Upper California to enforce the laws which prohibited foreigners from entering or residing in the territories of Mexico with out a special permission from the authorities. Accord ingly, in 1828, a number of American citizens were seized at San Diego, and kept in confinement until 1830. In that year, an insurrection broke out, headed by General Solis, and the captured Americans were of some assistance in suppressing it, and, in con sideration of their services, they were permitted to leave the territory. The Mexican government strove to prevent the evils expected to flow from the presence of numbers of foreigners in California, by establishing colonies of their own citizens in the territory. A number of persons were sent out from Mexico, to settle on the lands of the missions, but they never reached their destination. The administration which originated the scheme was overthrown, and the new authorities ordered the settlers to be driven back to Mexico. In 1836, the federal system was abolished by the Mexi can government, and a new constitution adopted, which destroyed all state rights, and established a central power. This was strenuously resisted in Cali fornia. The people rose, and drove the Mexican 26 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. officers from the country, declaring that they would remain independent until the federal constitution was restored. The general government issued strong pro clamations against the Californians, and sent an expe dition to re-establish its authority. But General Urrea, by whom the expedition was commanded, declared in favor of the federalists, and the inhabitants governed themselves until July, 1887, when they swore allegiance to the new constitution. Things went on quietly in California until 1842. In that year, Commodore Jones, while cruising in the Pacific, received information which led him to believe that Mexico had declared war against the United States. He determined to strike a blow at the sup posed enemy, and, accordingly, he appeared before Monterey, on the 19th of October, 1842, with the frigate United States and the sloop-of-war Cyane. He demanded the surrender of all the castles, posts, and military places, on penalty, if refused, of the visi tation of the horrors of war. The people were asto nished. A council decided that no defence could be made, and every thing was surrendered at once to the unexpected Americans. The flag of the United States was hoisted, and the commodore issued a proclamation to the Californians, inviting them to submit to the government of the United States, which would pro tect them in the exercise of their rights. The procla mation was scarcely issued, before the commodore became aware of the peaceable relations existing between the United States and Mexico, and he accord ingly restored the possession of Monterey to the authorities, and retired with his forces to his ships, just twenty-four hours after the surrender. This affair irritated the inhabitants considerably, and, no HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 27 doubt, tended to increase the ill-feeling before exist ing between Mexico and the people of the United States. CHAPTER Y. FROM THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE WAR TILL ITS CLOSE. WAR was declared by Mexico against the United States, in May, 1846. The same month, orders were transmitted to Commodore Sloat, commanding the Pacific squadron, instructing him to protect the interests of the citizens of the United States near his station, and to employ his forces to the best advantage in operations directed against the Mexican territory on the Pacific. The fleet under Commodore Sloat was the largest the Americans ever sent to that quar ter, and the men were anxious to commence active operations. Soon after receiving his first orders, the commodore was again instructed to take and keep possession of Upper California ; or, at least, of the principal ports. On the 8th of June, Commodore Sloat left Mazat- lan, in the flag-ship Savannah, and on the 2d of July, reached Monterey, in Upper California. There he found the Cyane and Levant, and learned that the Portsmouth was at San Francisco, as previously arranged. On the morning of the 7th, Captain Mer- vine was sent to demand the surrender of Monterey. The Mexican commandant replied that he was not authorized to surrender the place, but referred Com- 28 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. mo (lore Sloat to the commanding-general of Califor nia. A force of two hundred and fifty marines and sea men was immediately landed, under Captain Mervine, and they marched to the custom-house. There they hoisted the American flag amid cheers and a salute of twenty-one guns. The proclamation of Commodore Sloat was then read and posted about the town. After taking possession of Monterey, Commodore Sloat despatched a courier to the commanding-general of California, summoning him to surrender every thing under his control in the country, and assuring him of protection if he should comply. The general refused, and said he would defend the country as long as he could reckon on a single person to join his cause. A summons to surrender was also sent to the governor of Santa Barbara, but no answer was returned. Orders were despatched to Commander Montgomery, in the Portsmouth, at San Francisco, directing him to take possession of the Bay of San Francisco, and hoist the flag of the United States at Yerba Buena. On the Oth of July, the day after the receipt of his orders, Montgomery landed at Yerba Buena with seventy seamen and marines, and hoisted the American flag in the public square, amid the cheers of the people. A proclamation was then posted to the flag staff, and Montgomery addressed the people. The greater part of the seamen and marines then returned to the ship, leaving Lieutenant H. B. Watson with a small guard, formally installed as military occupant of the post. Thirty-two of the male residents of Yerba Buena were enrolled as a volunteer corps, choosing their own officers. Lieutenant Missroon was despatched with a small party of these volunteers to reconnoitre the Presidio and fort. He returned the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 29 same day, and reported that the Presidio had been abandoned, and that the fort, seven miles from the town, was dilapidated and mounted only a few old pieces of cannon. The flag of the United States had been displayed from its ramparts. On the llth, Montgomery informed Commodore Sloat that the flag of the United States was then flying at Yerba Buena, Sutter's Fort, on the Sacramento, Bodega, on the coast, and Sonoma. The inhabitants of these places appeared to be satisfied with the protection afforded them by the Americans. On the 13th of July, Commodore Sloat sent a flag to the foreigners of the pueblo of San Jose, about seventy miles from Monterey, in the interior, and appointed a justice of the peace in place of the alcaldes. On the 15th, Commodore Stockton arrived at Mon terey, in the frigate Congress ; and Commodore Sloat being in bad health, the command devolved upon Stockton, and Sloat returned home. The operations of Commodore Stockton, from the 23d of July to the 28th of August, 1846, have been rapidly sketched by himself in his despatches to the secretary of the navy. From these we condense a short account. On the 23d of July, the commodore organized the " California Battalion of Mounted Riflemen." Captain Fremont was appointed major, and Lieutenant Gil- lespie captain of the battalion. The next day, they were embarked on board the sloop-of-war Cyane, Commander Dupont, and sailed from Monterey for San Diego, in order to land south of the Mexican force, consisting of 500 men, under General Castro, well fortified at a place three miles from the city. A few days afterwards, Commodore Stockton sailed in the Congress for San' Pedro, thirty miles from Monte- 30 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. rey, and having landed, marched for the Mexican camp. When he arrived within twelve miles of the Mexicans, they fled in small parties, in different direc tions. Most of the principal officers were afterwards taken, but the mounted riflemen not getting up in time, most of the men escaped. On the 13th of August, Commodore Stockton being joined by eighty riflemen, under Major Fremont, entered the capital of California, Cuidad de los Angeles, or the "City of the Angels." Thus, in less than a month after Stockton's assuming command, the American flag was flying from every commanding position in California, conquered by three hundred and sixty men, mostly sailors. The form of government established in California, after the conquest, was as follows : The executive power was vested in a governor, holding office for four years unless sooner removed by the President of the Unit-ed States. The governor was to reside in the territory, be commander-in- chief of the army thereof, perform all the duties of a superintendent of Indian aifciirs, have a pardoning and reprieving power, com mission all persons appointed to office under the laws of said territory, and approve all laws passed, by the legislature before they took effect. There was the office of the Secretary of the Territory established, whose principal duty was to preserve all the laws and proceedings of the legislative council, and all the acts and proceedings of the governor. The legislative power was vested in the governor and a council of seven persons, who were to be appointed by the governor at first, and hold their office for two years ; afterwards they were to be elected by the people. All the laws of Mexico, and the municipal officers existing in the J HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 81 territory before the conquest, were continued until altered by the governor and council. On the 15th of August, 1846, Commodore Stockton adopted a tariff of duties on all goods imported from foreign parts, of fifteen per cent, ad valorem, and a tonnage duty of fifty cents per ton on all foreign ves sels. On the 15th of September, when the elections were held, Walter Colton, the chaplain of the frigate Congress, was elected Alcalde of Monterey. In the mean time, a newspaper called the " Californian," had been established by Messrs. Colton and Semple. This was the first newspaper issued in California. Early in September, Commodore Stockton withdrew his forces from Los Angeles, and proceeded with his squadron to San Francisco. Scarcely had he arrived when he received intelligence that all the country below Monterey was in arms and the Mexican flag again hoisted. The Californians invested the " City of the Angels," on the 23d of September. That place was guarded by thirty riflemen under Captain Gillespie, and the Californians investing it numbered 300. Finding himself overpowered, Captain Gillespie capitulated on the 30th, and thence retired with all the foreigners aboard of a sloop-of-war, and sailed for Monterey. Lieutenant Talbot, who commanded only nine men at Santa Barbara, refused to surrender, and marched out with his men, arms in hand. The frigate Savannah was sent to relieve Los Angeles, but she did not arrive till after the above events had occurred. Her crew, numbering 320 men, landed at San Pedro and marched to meet the Californians. About half way between San Pedro and Los Angeles, about fifteen miles from their ship, the sailors found the enemy drawn up on a plain. The Californians were 32 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. mounted on fine horses, and with artillery, had every advantage. The sailors were forced to retreat with a loss of five killed and six wounded. Commodore Stockton came down in the Congress to San Pedro, and then marched for the " City of the Angels," the men dragging six of the ship's guns. At the Rancho Sepulvida, a large force of the Californians was posted. Commodore Stockton sent one hundred men forward to receive the fire of the enemy and then fall back upon the main body without returning it. The main body was formed in a triangle, with the guns hid by the men. By the retreat of the advance party, the enemy were decoyed close to the main force, when the wings were extended and a deadly fire opened upon the astonished Californians. More than a hun dred were killed, the same number wounded, and their whole force routed. About a hundred prisoners were taken, many of whom were at the time on parole and had signed an obligation not to take up arms during the war. Commodore Stockton soon mounted his men and prepared for operations on shore. Skirmishes followed, and were continually occurring until January, 1847, when a decisive action occurred. General Kearny had arrived in California, after a long and painful march overland, and his co-operation was of great service to Stockton. The Americans left San Diego on the 29th of December, to march to Los Angeles. The Californians determined to meet them on their route, and decide the fate of the country in a general battle. The American force amounted to six hundred men, and was composed of detachments from the ships Congress, Savannah, Portsmouth and Cyane, aided by General Kearny, with sixty men on foot, from the HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. OO first regiment of United States dragoons, and Captain Gillespie with sixty mounted riflemen. The troops marched one hundred and ten miles in ten days, and, on the 8th of January, they found the Californians in a strong position on the high bank of the San Gabriel river, with six hundred mounted men and four pieces of artillery, prepared to dispute the passage of the river. The Americans waded through the water, dragging their guns with them, exposed to a galling fire from the enemy, without returning a shot. When they reached the opposite shore, the Californians charged upon them, but were driven back. They then charged up the bank and succeeded in driving the Californians from their post. Stockton, with his force, continued his march, and the next day, in cross ing the plains of Mesa, the enemy made another attempt to save their capital. They were concealed with their artillery in a ravine, until the Americans came within gun-shot, when they opened a brisk fire upon their right flank, and at the same time charged both their front and rear. But the guns of the Cali fornians were soon silenced, and the charge repelled. The Californians then fled, and the next morning the Americans entered Los Angeles without opposition. The loss of the Americans in killed and wounded did not exceed twenty, while that of their opponents reached between seventy and eighty. These two battles decided the contest in California. General Flores, governor and commandant-general of the Californians, as he styled himself, immediately after the Americans entered Los Angeles, made his escape and his troops dispersed. The territory be came again tranquil, and the civil government was soon in operation again in the places where it had 34 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. been interrupted by the revolt. Commodore Stockton and General Kearny having a misunderstanding about their respective powers, Colonel Fremont exercised the duties of governor and commander-in- chief of California, declining to obey the orders of General Kearny. The account of the adventures and skirmishes with which the small force of United States troops under General Kearny met, while on their march to San Diego, in Upper California, is one of the most in teresting to which the contest gave birth. The party, which consisted of one hundred men when it started from Santa Fe', reached Warner's rancho, the fron tier settlement in California, on the Sonoma route, on the 2d of December, 1846. They continued their march, and on the 5th were met by a small party of volunteers, under Captain Gillespie, sent out by Com modore Stockton to meet them, and inform them of the revolt of the Californians. The party encamped for the night at Stokes's rancho, about forty miles from San Diego. Information was received that an armed party of Californians was at San Pas- qual, three leagues from Stokes's rancho. A party of dragoons was sent out to reconnoitre, and they re turned by two o'clock on the morning of the 6th. Their information determined General Kearny to attack the Californians before daylight, and arrange ments were accordingly made. Captain Johnson was given the command of an advance party of twelve dragoons, mounted upon the best horses in possession of the party. Then followed fifty dragoons, under Captain Moore, mounted mostly on the tired mules they had ridden from Santa F£ — a distance of 1050 miles. Next came about twenty volunteers, under HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA, 35 Captain Gibson. Then followed two mountain howit zers, with dragoons to manage them, under charge of Lieutenant Davidson. The remainder of the dragoons and volunteers were placed under command of Major Swords, with orders to follow on the trail with the baggage. As the day of December 6th dawned, the enemy at San Pasqual were seen to be already in the saddle, and Captain Johnson, with his advance guard, made a furious charge upon them ; he being supported by the dragoons, the Californians at length gave way. They had kept up a continual fire from the first appearance of the dragoons, and had done considerable execution. Captain Johnson was shot dead in his first charge. The enemy were pursued by Captain Moore and his dragoons, and they retreated about half a mile, when seeing an interval between the small advance party of Captain Moore and the main force coming to his support, they rallied their whole force, and charged with their lances. For five minutes they held the ground, doing considerable execution, until the arrival of the rest of the American party, when they broke and fled. The troops of Kearny lost two captains, a lieutenant, two sergeants, two corporals, and twelve privates. Among the wounded were General Kearny, Lieutenant Warner, Captains Gillespie and Gibson, one sergeant, one bugleman, and nine privates. The Californians carried off all their wounded and dead except six. On the Tth the march was resumed, and, near San Bernardo, Kearny's advance encountered and defea-ted a small party of the Californians who had taken post on a hill. At San Bernardo, the troops remained till the morning of the llth, when they were joined by a 36 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. party of sailors and marines, under Lieutenant Gray. They then proceeded upon their march, and on the 12th, arrived at San Diego ; having thus completed a march of eleven hundred miles through an enemy's country, with but one hundred men. The force of General Kearny having joined that of Commodore Stockton, the expedition against Los Angeles, of which we have given an account in this chapter, was successfully consummated, and tranquillity restored in California. General Kearny and Commodore Stock ton returned to the United States in January, 1847, leaving Colonel Fremont to exercise the office of governor and military commandant of California. No further events of an importance worth recording occur red till the treaty of peace between the United States and Mexico. CHAPTER VI. DISCOVERY OF TEE GOLD PLACERS. BY the treaty concluded between the United States and Mexico, in 184T, the territory of Upper Califor nia became the property of the United States. Little thought the Mexican government of the value of the land they were ceding, further than its commercial importance ; and, doubtless, little thought the buyers of the territory, that its soil was pregnant with a wealth untold, and that its rivers flowed over golden beds. This territory, now belonging to the American HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 37 Union, embraces an area of 448,961 square miles. It extends along the Pacific coast, from about the thirty- second parallel of north latitude, a distance of near seven hundred miles, to the forty-second parallel, the southern boundary of Oregon. On the east, it is bounded by New Mexico. During the long period which transpired between its discovery and its cession to the United States, this vast tract of country was frequently visited by men of science, from all parts of the world. Repeated examinations were made by learned and enterprising officers and civilians ; but none of them discovered the important fact, that the mountain torrents of the Sierra Nevada were con stantly pouring down their golden sands into the valleys of the Sacramento and San Joaquin. The glittering particles twinkled beneath their feet, in the ravines which they explored, or glistened in the water courses which they forded, yet they passed them by unheeded. Not a legend or tradition was heard among the white settlers, or the aborigines, that attracted their curiosity. A nation's ransom lay within their grasp, but, strange to say, it escaped their notice — it flashed and sparkled all in vain.* The Russian American Company had a large establishment at Ross and Bodega, ninety miles north of San Francisco, founded in the year 1812 ; and factories were also established in the territory by the Hudson Bay Company. Their agents and employes ransacked the whole country west of the Sierra Nevada, or Snowy Mountain, in search of game. In 1838, Captain Sutter, formerly an officer in the Swiss * A gold placera was discovered some years ago, near the mission of San Fernando, but it was very little worked, on account of the want of water. 4 38 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Guards of Charles X., King of France, emigrated from the state of Missouri to Upper California, and obtained from the Mexican government a conditional grant of thirty leagues square of land, bounded on the west by the Sacramento river. Having purchased the stock, arms, and ammunition of the Russian establishment, he erected a dwelling and fortification on the left bank of the Sacramento, about fifty miles from its mouth, and near what was termed, in allusion to the new settlers, the American Fork. This formed the nucleus of a thriving settlement, to which Captain Sutter gave the name of New Helvetia. It is situated at the head of navigation for vessels on the Sacra mento, in latitude 38° 33' 45" north, and longitude 121° 20' 05" west. During a residence of ten years in the immediate vicinity of the recently discovered placards, or gold regions, Captain Sutter was neither the wiser nor the richer for the brilliant treasures that lay scattered around him.* In the year 1841, careful examinations of the Bay of San Francisco, and of the Sacramento River and its tributaries, were made by Lieutenant Wilkes, the commander of the Exploring Expedition ; and a party under Lieutenant Emmons, of the navy, proceeded up the valley of the Willamette, crossed the intervening highlands, and descended the Sacramento. In 1843—4, similar examinations were made by Captain, after wards Lieutenant-Colonel Fremont, of the Topogra phical Engineers, and in 1846, by Major Emory, of the same corps. None of these officers made any discoveries of minerals, although they were led to conjecture, as private individuals who had visited the * Farnham's Adventures in California.— Wilkes's Narrative of the Exploring Expedition. — Fremont's Narrative. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 39 country had done, from its volcanic formation and peculiar geological features, that they might be found to exist in considerable quantities.* As is 'often the case, chance at length accomplished what science had failed to do. In the winter of 1847—8, a Mr. Marshall commenced the construction of a saw-mill for Captain Sutler, on the north branch of the American Fork, and about fifty miles above New Helvetia, in a region abounding with pine timber. The dam and race were completed, but on attempting to put the mill in motion, it was ascertained that the tail-race was too narrow to permit the water to escape with perfect freedom. A strong current was then passed in, to wash it wider and deeper, by which a large bed of mud and gravel was thrown up at the foot of the race. Some days after this occurrence, Mr. Marshall observed a number of brilliant particles on this deposit of mud, which attracted his attention. On examining them, he became satisfied that they were gold, and communicated the fact to Captain Sutler. It was agreed between them, that the cir cumstance should not be made public for the present ; but, like the secret of Midas, it could not be concealed. The Mormon emigrants, of whom Mr. Marshall was one, were soon made acquainted with the discovery, and in a few wreeks all California was agitated with the starling information. * See Farnham's Adventures. Wilkes's and Fremont's Narratives, and Emory's Report.— In 184G, Eugenio Macnamara, a Catholic priest and Missionary, obtained a grant of a large tract of land between the San Joaquin and the Sierra Nevada, the Cosumnes and the Tulares in the vicinity of San Gabriel, from Pio Pico, governor of the Califor- nias, for the purpose of establishing upon it a large colony of Irish Catholics ; but the grant was not ratified by the Central Government, and the project was not carried into effect. There is no evidence that Father Macnamara was aware of the existence of gold in the valley of the San Joaquin. 40 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Business of every kind was neglected, and the ripened grain was left in the fields unharvested. Nearly the whole population of Upper California be came infected with the mania, and flocked to the mines. Whalers and merchant vessels entering the ports were abandoned by their crews, and the Ameri can soldiers and sailors deserted in scores. Upon the disbandment of Colonel Stevenson's regiment, most of the men made their way to the mineral regions. Within three months after the discovery, it was com puted that there were near four thousand persons, including Indians, who were mostly employed by the whites, engaged in washing for gold. Various modes were adopted to separate the metal from the sand and gravel — some making use of tin pans, others of close- woven Indian baskets, and others still, of a rude machine called the cradle, six or eight feet long, and mounted on rockers, with a coarse grate, or sieve, at one end, but open at the other. The washings were mainly confined to the low wet grounds, and the mar gins of the streams — the earth being rarely disturbed more than eighteen inches below the surface. The value of the gold dust obtained by each man, per day, is said to have ranged from ten to fifty dollars, and sometimes even to have far exceeded that. The natu ral consequence of this state of things was, that the price of labor, and, indeed, of every thing, rose imme diately from ten to twenty fold.* As may readily be conjectured, every stream and ravine in the valley of the Sacramento was soon ex plored. Gold was found on every one of its tributa- * Official Despatch of Colonel Mason, Commander of the. 10th Mili tary Department, August 17, 1848.— Letters of Thomas C. Larkin, U. S. Consul at Monterey, to the Secretary of State, June 1, and June 28, 1848. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 41 ries ; but the richest earth was discovered near the Rio de los Plumas, or Feather River,* and its branches, the Yuba and Bear rivers, and on Weber's creek, a tributary of the American Fork. Explorations were also made in the valley of the San Joaquin, which resulted in the discovery of gold on the Cosumne's and other streams, and in the ravines of the Coast Range, west of the valley, as far down as Ciudad de los Angeles. In addition to the gold mines, other important dis coveries were made in Upper California. A rich vein of quicksilver was opened at New Almaden, near Santa Clara, wrhich, with imperfect machinery, — the heat by which the metal is made to exude from the rock being applied by a very rude process, — yielded over thirty per cent. This mine — one of the principal advan tages to be derived from which will be, that the work ing of the silver mines scattered through the territory must now become profitable — is superior to those of Almaden, in Old Spain, and second only to those of Idria, near Trieste, the richest in the world. Lead mines were likewise discovered in the neigh borhood of Sonoma, and vast beds of iron ore near the American Fork, yielding from eighty-five to ninety per cent. Copper, platina, tin, sulphur, zinc, and cobalt, were discovered every where ; coal was found to exist in large quantities in the Cascade range of Oregon, of which the Sierra Nevada is a continuation ; and in the vicinity of all this mineral wealth, there * Feather River is the first considerable branch of the Sacramento below the Prairie Buttes. It has a course of about forty miles, and empties into the main river about fifteen miles above New Helvetia. Though the Sacramento is navigable for vessels only to that place, boats can pass up one hundred miles further. 42 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. are immense quarries of marble and granite, for building purposes. Colonel Mason had succeeded Colonel Fremont in the post of governor of California and military com mandant. A regiment of New York troops, under the command of Colonel Stevenson, had been ordered to California before the conclusion of the treaty of peace, and formed the principal part of the military force in the territory. Colonel Mason expressed the opinion, in his official despatch, that "there is more gold in the country drained by the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, than will pay the cost of the [late] war with Mexico a hundred times over." Should this even prove to be an exaggeration, there can be little reason to doubt, when we take into consideration all the mineral re sources of the country, that the territory of California is by far the richest acquisition made by this govern ment since its organization. The appearance of the mines, at the period of Governor Mason's visit, three months after the dis covery, he thus graphically describes : " At the urgent solicitation of many gentlemen, I delayed there [at Sutter's Fort] to participate in the first public celebration of our national anniversary at that fort, but on the 5th resumed the journey, and proceeded twenty-five miles up the American Fork to a point on it now known as the Lower Mines, or Mor mon Diggins. The hill-sides were thickly strewn with canvas tents and bush arbors ; a store was erected, and several boarding shanties in operation. The day was intensely hot, yet about two hundred men were at work in the full glare of the sun, washing for gold — some with tin pans, some with close-woven Indian HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 43 baskets, but the greater part had a rude machine, known as the cradle. This is on rockers, six or eight feet long, open at the foot, and at its head has a coarse grate, or sieve ; the bottom is rounded, with small cleats nailed across. Four men are required to work this machine ; one digs the ground in the bank close by the stream ; another carries it to the cradle and empties it on the grate ; a third gives a violent rock ing motion to the machine ; while a fourth clashes on water from the stream itself. u The sieve keeps the coarse stones from entering the cradle, the current of water washes off the earthy matter, and the gravel is gradually carried out at the foot of the machine, leaving the gold mixed with a heavy, fine black sand above the first cleats. The sand and gold, mixed together, are then drawn off through auger holes into a pan below, are dried in the sun, and afterward separated by blowing off the sand. A party of four men thus employed at the lower mines, averaged $100 a day. The Indians, and those who have nothing but pans or willow baskets, gradu ally wash out the earth and separate the gravel by hand, leaving nothing but the gold mixed with sand, which is separated in the manner before described. The gold in the lower mines is in fine bright suales, of which I send several specimens. " From the mill [where the gold was first discovered], Mr. Marshall guided me up the mountain on the opposite or north bank of the south fork, where, in the bed of small streams or ravines, now dry, a great deal of coarse gold has been found. I there saw several parties at work, all of whom were doing very well ; a great many specimens were shown me, some as heavy as four or five ounces in weight, and I send 44 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. three pieces, labeled No. 5, presented by a Mr. Spence. You will perceive that some of the specimens accom panying this, hold mechanically pieces of quartz ; that the surface is rough, and evidently moulded in the crevice of a rock. This gold cannot have been car ried far by water, but must have remained near where it was first deposited from the rock that once bound it. I inquired of many people if they had encountered the metal in its matrix, but in every instance they said they had not ; but that the gold was invariably mixed with washed gravel, or lodged in the crevices of other rocks. All bore testimony that they had found gold in greater or less quantities in the numer ous small gullies or ravines that occur in that moun tainous region. " On the 7th of July I left the mill, and crossed to a stream emptying into the American Fork, three or four miles below the saw-mill. I struck this stream <(now known as Weber's creek) at the washings of Sunol and Co. They had about thirty Indians em ployed, whom they payed in merchandise. They were getting gold of a character similar to that found in the main fork, and doubtless in sufficient quantities to satisfy them. I send you a small specimen, presented by this company, of their gold. From this point, we proceeded up the stream about eight miles, where we found a great many people and Indians — some engaged in the bed of the stream, and others in the small side valleys that put into it. These latter are exceedingly rich, and two ounces were considered an ordinary yield for a day's work. A small gutter not more than a hundred yards long, by four feet wide and two or three feet deep, was pointed out to me as the one where two men — William Daly and Parry McCoon — had, a short HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 45 time before, obtained $17,000 worth of gold. Captain Weber informed me that he knew that these two men had employed four white men and about a hundred Indians,* and that, at the end of one week's work, they paid off their party, and had left $10,000 worth of this gold. Another small ravine was shown me, from which had been taken upward of $12,000 worth of gold. Hundreds of similar ravines, to all appearances, are as yet untouched. I could not have credited these reports, had I not seen, in the abundance of the pre cious metal, evidence of their truth. " Mr. Neligh, an agent of Commodore Stockton, had been at work about three weeks in the neighbor hood, and showed me, in bags and bottles, over $2000 worth of gold ; and Mr. Lyman, a gentleman of edu cation, and worthy of every credit, said he had been engaged, with four others, with a machine, on the American Fork, just below Slitter's mill; that they worked eight days, and that his share was at the rate of fifty dollars a day; but hearing that others were doing better at Weber's place, they had removed there, and were then on the point of resuming operations. I might tell of hundreds of similar instances ; but, to illustrate how plentiful the gold was in the pockets of common laborers, I will mention a single occurrence which took place in my presence when I was at Weber's store. This store was nothing but an arbor of bushes, under which he had exposed for sale goods and groceries suited to his customers. A man came in, picked up a box of Seidlitz powders, and asked the price. Captain Weber told him it was not for sale. The man offered an ounce of gold, but Captain Weber told him it only cost fifty cents, and he did not. wish to sell it. The man then offered an ounce and a half, 46 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. when Captain Weber had to take it. The prices of all things are high, and yet Indians, who before hardly knew what a breech cloth was, can now afford to buy the most gaudy dresses. ^ The country on either side of Weber's creek is much broken up by hills, and is intersected in every direction by small streams or ravines, which contain mo/e or less gold. Those that have been worked are barely scratched ; and although thousands of ounces have been carried away, I do not consider that a seri ous impression has been made upon the whole. Every day was developing new and richer deposits ; and the only impression seemed to be, that the metal would be found in such abundance as seriously to depreciate in value. " On the 8th of July, I returned to the lower mines, and on the following day to Slitter's, where, on the 19th, I was making preparations for a visit to the Feather, Yuba, and Bear Rivers, when I received a letter from Commander A. R. Long, United States Navy, who had just arrived at San Francisco from Mazatlan with a crew for the sloop-of-war Warren, with orders to take that vessel to the squadron at La Paz. Captain Long wrote to me that the Mexican Congress had adjourned without ratifying the treaty of peace, that he had letters from Commodore Jones, and that his orders were to sail with the Warren on or before the 20th of July. In consequence of these, I determined to return to Monterey, and accordingly arrived here on the 17th of July. Before leaving Suiter's, I satisfied myself that gold existed in the bed of the Feather River, in the Yuba and Bear, and in many of the smaller streams that lie between the latter and the American Fork ; also, that it had been HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 47 found in the Cosumnes to the south of the American Fork. In each of these streams the gold is found in small scales, whereas in the intervening mountains it occurs in coarser lumps. " Mr. Sinclair, whose rancho is three miles above Sutter's, on the north side of the American, employs about fifty Indians on the north fork, not far from its junction with the main stream. He had been engaged about five weeks when I saw him, and up to that time his Indians had used simply closely woven willow baskets. His net proceeds (which I saw) were about $16jOOO worth of gold. He showed me the proceeds of his last week's work — fourteen pounds avoirdupois of clean-washed gold. " The principal store at Sutter's Fort, that of Brannan and Co., had received in payment for goods $36,000 (worth of this gold) from the 1st of May to the 10th of July. Other merchants had also made extensive sales. Large quantities of goods were daily sent forward to the mines, as the Indians, heretofore so poor and degraded, have suddenly become con sumers of the luxuries of life. I before mentioned that the greater part of the farmers and rancheros had abandoned their fields to go to the mines. This is not the case with Captain Sutter, who was carefully gathering his wheat, estimated at 40,000 bushels. Flour is already worth at Sutter's thirty-six dollars a barrel, and soon will be fifty. Unless large quantities of breadstuffs reach the country, much suffering will occur ; but as each man is now able to pay a large price, it is believed the merchants will bring from Chili and Oregon a plentiful supply for the coming winter. " The most moderate estimate I could obtain from men acquainted with the subject, was, that upward of 48 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. four thousand men were working in the gold district, ofi whom more than one-half were Indians ; and that from $80,000 to $50,000 worth of gold, if not more, was daily obtained. The entire gold district, with very few exceptions of grants made some years ago by the Mexican authorities, is on land belonging to the United States. It was a matter of serious reflec tion with me, how I could secure to the government certain rents or fees for the privilege of procuring this gold ; but upon considering the large extent of country, the character of the people engaged, and the small scattered force at my command, I resolved not to interfere, but to permit all to work freely, unless broils and crimes should call for interference. I was surprised to hear that crime of any kind was very un- frequent, and that no thefts or robberies had been committed in the gold district. " All live in tents, in bush arbors, or in the open air ; and men have frequently about their persons thousands of dollars worth of this gold, and it was to me a mat ter of surprise that so peaceful and quiet state of things should continue to exist. Conflicting claims to particular spots of ground may cause collisions, but they will be rare, as the extent of country is so great, and the gold so abundant, that for the present there is room enough for all. Still the government is entitled to rents for this land, and immediate steps should be devised to collect them, for the longer it is delayed the more difficult it will become. One plan I would suggest is, to send out from the United States survey ors with high salaries, bound to serve specified periods. " The discovery of these vast deposits of gold has entirely changed the character of Upper California. Its people, before engaged in cultivating their small HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 49 patches of ground, and guarding their herds of cattle and horses, have all gone to the mines, or are on their way thither. Laborers of every trade have left their work benches, and tradesmen their shops. Sailors desert their ships as fast as they arrive on the coast, and several - vessels have gone to sea with hardly enough hands to spread a sail. Two or three are now at anchor in San Francisco with no crew on board. Many desertions, too, have taken place from the gar risons within the influence of these mines ; twenty-six soldiers have deserted from the post of Sonoma, twenty-four from that of San Francisco, and twenty- four from Monterey. For a few days the evil appeared so threatening, that great danger existed that the gar risons would leave in a body ; and I refer you. to my orders of the 25th of July, to show the steps adopted to meet this contingency. I shall spare no exertions to apprehend and punish deserters, but I believe no time in the history of our country has presented such temptations to desert as now exist in California. " The danger of apprehension is small, and the prospect of high wages certain ; pay and bounties are trifles, as laboring men at the mines can now earn in one day more than double a soldier's pay and allow ances for a month, and even the pay of a lieutenant or captain cannot hire a servant. A carpenter or mechanic would not listen to an offer of less than fifteen or twenty dollars a day. Could any combina tion of affairs try a man's fidelity more than this ? I really think some extraordinary mark of favor should be given to those soldiers who remain faithful to their flag throughout this tempting crisis. "Many private letters have gone to the United States, giving accounts of the vast quantity of gold 50 HISTOKT OF CALIFORNIA. recently discovered, and it maybe a matter of surprise why I have made no report on this subject at an earlier date. The reason is, that I could not bring myself to believe the reports that I heard of the wealth of the gold district until I visited it myself. I have no hesitation now in saying that there is more gold in the country drained by the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers than will pay the cost of the present war with Mexico a hundred times over. No capital is required to obtain this gold, as the laboring man wants nothing but his pick and shovel and tin pan, with which to dig and wash the gravel ; and many frequently pick gold out of the crevices of the rocks with their butcher knives, in pieces of from one to six ounces. " Mr. Dye, a gentleman residing in Monterey, and worthy of every credit, has just returned from Feather River. He tells me that the company to which he belonged worked seven weeks and two days, with an average of fifty Indians (washers,) and that their gross product was two hundred and seventy-three pounds of gold. His share (one seventh,) after paying all expenses, is about thirty-seven pounds, which he brought with him and exhibited in Monterey. I see no laboring man from the mines who does not show his two, three, or four pounds of gold. A soldier of the artillery company returned here a few days ago from the mines, having been absent on furlough twenty days. He made by trading and working, during that time, $1500. During these twenty days he was travelling ten or eleven days, leaving but a week in which he made a sum of money greater than he re ceives in pay, clothes, and rations, during a whole enlistment of five years. These statements appear incredible, but they are true. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 51 " Gold is also believed to exist on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada ; and when at the mines, I was informed by an intelligent Mormon that it had been found near the Great Salt Lake by some of his frater nity. Nearly all the Mormons are leaving California to go to the Salt Lake, and this they surely would not do unless they were sure of finding gold there in the same abundance as they now do on the Sacramento. " The gold * placer' near the mission of San Fer nando has long been known, but has been little wrought for want of water. This is a spur which puts off from the Sierra Nevada (see Fremont's map,) the same in which the present mines occur. There is, therefore, every reason to believe, that in the intervening spaces, of five hundred miles (entirely unexplored) there must be many hidden and rich deposits. The 4 placer' gold is now substituted as the currency of this country; in trade it passes freely at $16 per ounce ; as an article of commerce its value is not yet fixed. The only purchase I made was of the specimen No. 7, which I got of Mr. Neligh at $12 the ounce. That is about the present cash value in the country, although it has been sold for less. The great demand for goods and provisions, made by this sudden development of wealth, has increased the amount of commerce at San Fran cisco very much, and it will continue to increase." The Californian, published at San Francisco on the 14th of August, furnishes the following interesting account of the Gold Region : " It was our intention to present our readers with a description of the extensive gold, silver, and iron mines, recently discovered in the Sierra Nevada, together with some other important items, for the good of the people, but we are compelled to defer it for a future 52 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. number. Our prices current, many valuable commu nications, our marine journal, and other important matters, have also been crowded out. But to enable our distant readers to draw some idea of the extent of the gold mine, we will confine our remarks to a few facts. The country from the Ajuba to the San Joaquin rivers, a distance of about one hundred and twenty miles, and from the base toward the summit of the mountains, as far as Snow Hill, about seventy miles, has been explored, and gold found on every part. There are now probably 3000 people, including Indians, engaged collecting gold. The amount collected by each man who works, ranges from $10 to $850 per day. The publisher of this paper, while on a tour alone to the mining district, collected, with the aid of a shovel, pick and tin pan, about twenty inches in diameter, from $44 to $128 a day — averaging $100. The gross amount collected will probably exceed $600,000, of which amount our merchants have re ceived about $250,000 worth for goods sold ; all within the short space of eight weeks. The largest piece of gold known to be found weighed four pounds. " Labor has ever been high in California, but pre vious to the discovery of the placera gold, the rates ranged from $1 to $3 per day. Since that epoch common labor cannot be obtained, and if to be had, for no less price than fifty cents per hour, and that the most common. Carpenters and other mechanics have been offered $15 a day, but it has been flatly refused. Many of our enterprising citizens were largely engaged in building, and others wish to commence on dwellings, warehouses, and the like, but all have had to suspend for the laclt of that all important class of community, the working men." HISTOHY OF CALIFORNIA. 53 The following extracts from the published journal of a physician in California, give accounts of the recep tion of the news of the gold discovery in San Fran cisco, with its consequent effects. " May 8th. — Captain Fulsom called at Sweeting's to-day. He had seen a man this morning, who reported that he had just come from a river called the American Fork, about one hundred miles in the interior, where he had been gold washing. Captain Fulsom saw the gold he had with him ; it was about twenty-three ounces weight, and in small flakes. The man stated that he was eight days getting it, but Captain Fulsom hardly believed this. He says that he saw some of this gold a few weeks since, and thought it was only 6 mica,' but good judges have pronounced it to be genuine metal. He talks, however, of paying a visit to the place where it is reported to come from. After he was gone, Bradley stated that the Sacramento settlements, which Malcolm wished to visit, were in the neighborhood of the American Fork, and that we might go there together ; he thought the distance was only one hundred and twenty miles. " May 10th. — Yesterday and to-day nothing has been talked of but the new gold < placer,' as people call it. It seems that four other men had accompanied the person Captain Fulsom saw yesterday, and that they had each realized a large quantity of gold. They left the ' diggings' on the American Fork, (which it seems is the Rio de los Americanos, a tributary to the Sacramento) about a week ago, and stopped a day or two at Sutter's Fort, a few miles this side of the dig gings, on their way ; from there they had travelled by boat to San Francisco. The gold they brought has been examined by the first Alcalde here, and by 54 HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. all the merchants in the place. Bradley showed us a lump weighing a quarter of an ounce, which he had bought of one of the men, and for which he gave him three dollars and a half. I have no doubt in my own mind about its being genuine gold. Several parties, we hear, are already made up to visit the diggings ; and, according to the newspaper here, a number of people have actually started off with shovels, mattocks, and pans, to dig the gold themselves. It is not likely, however, that this will be allowed, for Captain Fulsom has already written to Colonel Mason about taking possession of the mine on behalf of the government, it being, as he says, on public land. " May Vlih. — This place is now in a perfect furor of excitement ; all the work-people have struck. Walking through the town to-day, I observed that laborers were employed only upon about half-a-dozen of the fifty new buildings which were in the course of being run up. The majority of the mechanics at this place are making preparations for moving off to the mines, and several hundred people of all classes — lawyers, store-keepers, merchants, &c., — are bitten with the fever ; in fact, there is a regular gold mania springing up. I counted no less than eighteen houses which were closed, the owners having left." The mania continued to increase, and within a few months all the principal towns were nearly emptied of their population. Gold was the universal object, and splendid and rapid fortune the universal hope. No occupation seemed to offer such a prospect as that of digging gold, and, accordingly, those who were not able to bear the fatigues of such work, or were at the head of any sort of business in the different towns, had to pay enormous prices for the labor of subordinates HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 55 who performed the meanest services. The prices of all agricultural and manufactured products became treble the previous rates. Soon came the first waves of the tide of emigration that was to flood the placers of the gold region. The first influx CDnsisted of Mexicans of the province of Sonoma, Chilians, and some few Chinese. These, principally took possession of the southern mines, or those on the San Joaquin and its tributaries. Some few stopped at San Francisco, and secured lots of ground which they knew would become very valuable in a short time, and erected temporary stores and dwellings. This gave the impulse to the progress of the town, and it soon advanced rapidly in size and population. Then came the emigration from the Atlantic States of the Union, and the whole territory felt the progressive and enterprising spirit of the gold- seekers. The Americans generally took possession of the mines upon the northern tributaries of the Sacramento River ; but as their numbers increased they pushed towards the southern mines, and frequent collisions with the foreigners were the consequence. Finally, a great number of the latter were compelled to leave the country. 56 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. CHAPTER VII. CONNECTED WITH MINING. THE adventures of the eager gold-seekers in the region of their hopes, among the washings and the diggings of the placers, cannot but be interesting. The toil to which the men have to submit if they would obtain any thing like a satisfaction to their desires, is of a very irksome character. In the summer season, the heat is intense, and the principal part of the labor of washing and digging must be performed exposed to the full blaze of the sun. In the " dry diggings," the miners suffer greatly from the want of water. Most of the provisions having to be transported from the towns on the Sacramento and San Joaquin, soon grow unwholesome from exposure to the sultry air of the day and the damp air of the night. This diet, conjointly with the exposure of the miners, tends to produce intermittent fever and dysentery. The miners generally reside in huts of a rude construction, or in canvas tents, which afford but poor protection from the changes of the weather. The most prominent man in the neighborhood of the " diggins," is Captain Sutter, the Daniel Boone of that part of the country. He was formerly an officer in the Swiss guards of Charles X. of France. After the revolution of 1830, in that country, he camo to the United States. Emigrating to California, he obtained a grant of land from the Mexican govern- HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 57 ment, and founded the settlement known as Slitter's Fort. Upon his land, the first discovery of the rich ness of the soil was made, and his house and the settlement around it has been, ever since, the resort of persons going to and from the placers, and a depot for provisions ^nd articles used by the miners. Stores and workshops have been established, and a consider able amount of business is transacted there. Captain Sutter is held in very great respect by the people of the settlement and those stopping at his house on the road to the placers. Several versions of the account of the discovery of the gold mines have been circu lated, but the true one, in the Captain's own words, is given in a work recently published.* The account is here inserted, both on account of the interest con nected with the discovery, and in order to correct wrong versions of the matter. "I was sitting one afternoon," said the Captain, "just after my siesta, engaged, by-the-bye, in writing a letter to a relation of mine at Lucerne, when I was interrupted by Mr. Marshall — a gentleman with whom I had frequent business transactions — bursting hur riedly into the room. From the unusual agitation in his manner, I imagined that something serious had occurred, and, as we involuntarily do in this part of the world, I at once glanced to see if my rifle was in its proper place. You should know that the mere appearance of Mr. Marshall at that moment in the fort was quite enough to surprise me, as he had but two days before left the place to make some altera tions in a mill for sawing pine planks, which he had just run up for me, some miles higher up the Ameri- * Four Months Among the Gold Finders of California, by J. Tyr- whit Brooks, M. D. 58 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. canos. When he had recovered himself a little, he told me that, however great my surprise might be at his unexpected reappearance, it would be much greater when I heard the intelligence he had come to bring me. i Intelligence,' he added, 'which, if properly profited by, would put both of us in possession of un heard-of wealth — millions and millions of dollars, in fact.' I frankly own, when I heard this, that I thought something had touched Marshall's brain, when sud denly all my misgivings were put an end to by his flinging on the table a handful of scales of pure virgin gold. I was fairly thunderstruck, and asked him to explain what all this meant, when he went on to say, that, according to my instructions, he had thrown the mill-wheel out of gear, to let the whole body of the water in the dam find a passage through the tail-race, which was previously too narrow to allow the water to run off in sufficient quantity, whereby the wheel was pre vented from efficiently performing its work. By this alteration the narrow channel was considerably en larged, and a mass of sand and gravel carried off by the force of the torrent. Early in the morning after this took place, he (Mr. Marshall) was walking along the left bank of the stream, when he perceived some thing which he at first took for a piece of opal — a clear transparent stone, very common here — glittering on one of the spots laid bare by the sudden crumbling away of the bank. lie paid no attention to this ; but while he was giving directions to the workmen, having observed several similar glittering fragments, his curiosity was so far excited, that he stooped down and picked one of them up. 'Do you know,' said Mr. Marshall to me, * I positively debated within myself two or three times whether I should take the trouble HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 59 to bend my back to pick up one of the pieces, and had decided on not doing so, when, further on, another glittering morsel caught my eye — the largest of the pieces now before you. I condescended to pick it up, and to my astonishment found that it was a thin scale of what appears to be pure gold.' He then gathered some twenty or thirty similar pieces, which on exami nation convinced him that his suppositions were right. His first impression was, that this gold had been lost or buried there by some early Indian tribe — perhaps some of those mysterious inhabitants of the West, of whom we have no account, but who dwelt on this con tinent centuries ago, and built those cities and tem ples, the ruins of which are scattered about these solitary wilds. On proceeding, however, to examine the neighboring soil, he discovered that it was more or less auriferous. This at once decided him. He mounted his horse, and rode down to me as fast as it would carry him, with the news. "At the conclusion of Mr. Marshall's account," continued Captain Sutler, "and when I had convinced myself, from the specimens he had brought with him, that it was not exaggerated, I felt as much excited as himself. I eagerly inquired if he had shown the gold to the work-people at the mill, and was glad to hear that he had not spoken to a single person about it. We agreed," said the Captain, smiling, " not to men tion the circumstance to any one, and arranged to set off early the next day for the mill. On our arrival, just before sundown, we poked the sand about in various places, and before long succeeded in collecting between us, more than an ounce of gold, mixed up with a good deal of sand. I stayed at Mr. Marshall's that night, and the next day we proceeded some little 60 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. distance up the South Fork, and found that gold existed along the whole course, not only in the bed of the main stream, where the water had subsided, but in every little dried-up creek and ravine. Indeed, I think it is more plentiful in the^e latter places, for I myself, with nothing more than a small knife, picked out from a dry gorge, a little way up the mountain, a solid lump of gold which weighed nearly an ounce and a half. " On our return to the mill, we were astonished by the work-people coming up to us in a body, and show ing us small flakes of gold similar to those we had ourselves procured. Marshall tried to laugh the mat ter off with them, and to persuade them that what they had found was only some shining mineral of trifling value ; but one of the Indians, who had worked at the gold mine in the neighborhood of La Paz, in Lower California, cried out, l Oro ! oro !' We were disap pointed enough at this discovery, and supposed that the work-people had been watching our movements, although we thought we had taken every precaution against being observed by them. I heard, afterwards, that one of them, a sly Kentuckian, had dogged us about, and that, looking on the ground to see if he could discover what we were in search of, he had lighted on some flakes of gold himself. " The next day I rode back to the Fort, organized a laboring party, set the carpenters to work on a few necessary matters, and the next day, accompanied them to a point of the Fork, where they encamped for the night. By the following morning I had a party of fifty Indians fairly at work. The way we first managed was to shovel the soil into small buckets, or into some of our famous Indian baskets ; then wash HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 61 all the light earth out, and pick away the stones ; after this, we dried the sand on pieces of canvas, and with long reeds blew away all but the gold. I have now some rude machines in use, and upwards of one hundred men employed, chiefly Indians, who are well fed, and who are allowed whisky three times a day. " The report soon spread. Some of the gold was sent to San Francisco, and crowds of people flocked to the diggings. Added to this, a large emigrant party of Mormons entered California across the Rocky Mountains, just as the aft'air was first made known. They halted at once, and set to work on a spot some thirty miles from here, where a few of them still re main. When I was last up to the diggings, there were full eight hundred men at work, at one place and another, with perhaps something like three hundred more passing backwards and forwards between here and the mines. I at first imagined that the gold would soon be exhausted by such crowds of seekers, but subsequent observations have convinced me that it will take many years to bring about such a result, even with ten times the present number of people employed. "What surprises me," continued the Captain, "is, that this country should have been visited by so many scientific men, and that not one of them should have ever stumbled upon the treasures ; that scores of keen-eyed trappers should have crossed this valley in every direction, and tribes of Indians have dwelt in it for centuries, and yet that this gold should have never been discovered. I myself have passed the very spot above a hundred times during the last ten years, but was just as blind as the rest of them, so I must not wonder at the discovery not having been made earlier." 6 62 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. The plan of operations adopted by most of the miners who were not Indians or Californians, was to form bands of three, five or ten, under the command of one of the number, whose name the party took, and by which it was afterwards known. Some larger companies were formed in the United States, and repaired to California, and their operations were of course, on a more extensive scale ; they having all the necessary equipments of gold-washers and miners. Written rules were generally drawn up for the govern ment of the parties, varying in particulars according to the peculiar views of the framers. These rules provided for the modus operandi of procuring the gold, supplying the party with necessaries, attending to the sick, and the division of the fruits of their labor. One of the most frequented placers of California is called the Stanislaus mine, situated near the Stanis laus River. It was one of the first places worked to any extent by the gold-seekers, but not satisfying the expectations of some of the most greedy, it has since been partially abandoned. A description of this mine, and of the living and operations of its workers in the winter of 1848-49, will give a good general idea of the toils and privations endured by the early gold-seekers in that region, and, also, of their mode of procuring the precious metal at most of the mines. We extract from a recently published work, distinguished for minuteness of detail and accuracy of description.* " The mine was a deep ravine, embosomed amidst lofty hills, surmounted by, and covered with pine, and having, in the bottom itself, abundance of rock, mud, and sand. Halliday and I encamped at the very * Personal Adventures in Upper and Lower California, by William Redmond Ryan. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 63 lowest part of the ravine, at a little distance from Don Emanuel's party ; a steep rock which towered above our heads affording us shelter, and a huge, flat stone beneath our feet promising a fair substitute for a dry bed. Here then we stretched our macheers and blankets, and arranged our saddles and bags, so as to make ourselves as comfortable and warm as possible, although, in spite of our precautions and contrivances, and of a tolerably good fire, our encampment was bitterly cold, and we lay exposed to a heavy dew. We had given up our horses into the charge of the Indians, and I saw to their being safely placed in the cavallardj whilst Halliday went to chop wood ; a task I was too weak to perform. I cannot say we slept ; we might more correctly be said to have had a long and most uncomfortable doze, and when morning broke, we were shivering with cold, and shook the dew in a shower from our clothes. I consulted with my companion, and urged upon him the prudence of our setting to work to construct ourselves a sort of log cabin ; otherwise I felt certain, from the experience of the past night, our sojourn at the mines would be likely to prove fatal to one or both of us. He was, however, far too eager to try his fortune at digging to listen to my proposal, at which he even smiled, probably at the bare idea of weather, privation, or toil, being able to affect his powerful frame. I saw him presently depart up the ravine, shouldering a pick, and glancing now and then at his knife, whilst I pro ceeded in search of materials for constructing a tem porary place of shelter. " As my strength was unequal to the task of felling timber, I endeavored to procure four poles, intending to sink them into the ground, and to stretch on the 64 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. top of them a bed-tick I had reserved for the purpose. The contrivance was a sorry one at the best, but shelter was indispensable; and great was my disap pointment — though I procured the timber after a pain ful search — to find that the rocks presented an insu perable obstacle to my employing it as I intended. My efforts to sink the poles proved utterly futile, and I was at last compelled to renounce the attempt in despair. I then packed up our goods into as close a compass as possible ; and, having requested one of the Spaniards in Don Emanuel's party to keep watch over them, departed to explore the ravine. " Within a few paces of our encampment there was a large area of ground, probably half a mile square, the surface of which consisted of dark soil and slate, and was indented with innumerable holes of every possible dimension, from six inches to as many feet or more, wide and deep. In all of these lay abundance of water, of which large quantities are to be found a little beneath the surface, the ravine being supplied with it in great abundance by the rains that pour down from the hills during the wet season. To the extreme right of our camp, the ground assumed a more rocky character ; and, from the vast deposit of stagnant water, did not seem to offer many attractions to the miners. Yet there was scarcely a spot in any of these places where the crow-bar, the pick, or the jack-knife, had not been busy: evidence that the whole locality must have been extremely rich in the precious metal, or it would not have been so thoroughly worked. " In crossing the ravine, I was obliged to leap from one mound of earth to another, to avoid plunging ancle-deep in mud and water. It was wholly deserted LIFE AT THE "DIGGINGS," SUPPER TIME. HISTORY OF CALIFOKNIA. 65 in this part, though formerly so much frequented ; and, with the exception of a few traders, who, having taken up their station here when times were good, had not yet made arrangements for removing to a more pro ductive place, not a soul was to be seen. " I walked on until I reached the trading-post of Mr. Anderson, formerly our interpreter in the Lower Country, whom I felt delighted to meet with again. His shed was situated in one of the dampest parts of the mine, and consisted of a few upright poles, tra versed by cross-pieces, and covered in with raw hides and leaves, but yet much exposed at the sides to the wind and the weather. He had a few barrels of flour and biscuit, which he retailed at two dollars a pound ; for he made no difference between the price of the raw and the prepared material. The flour would go further, it was true ; but then the biscuit required no cooking on the part of the miner, whose time was literally money, and whose interest therefore it was to economize it in every possible manner. . He also sold unprepared coffee and sugar at six Yankee shillings a pound ; dried beef at one dollar and a half ; and pork, which was regarded as a great delicacy here, at two dollars for the same weight. The various articles of which his stock-in-trade consisted he had brought all the way from Monterey at considerable labor and expense ; but, by the exercise of extraordinary tact, perseverance, and industry, he had succeeded in esta blishing a flourishing business. " I discovered, however, that he possessed another resource — by which his gains were marvellously in creased — in the services of seven or eight Indians, whom he kept constantly at work, in the rear of his shed, digging gold, and whose labor he remunerated 6* 66 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. with provisions, and occasional presents of articles of trifling value to him, but highly esteemed by the Indians. They were watched by an American over seer, who was employed by him, to assist in the general business, particularly in slaughtering; for, as beef was scarce, he used to send his man in quest of cows and oxen ; which he killed, cut up, salted and dried, in his shed, and watching the most favorable moment for the operation — namely, when meat could not bo procured at the ' diggins' — never failed to realize his own price for it. " Proceeding higher up the ravine, I observed a large tent erected on the slope of a hill, within a few yards of the bottom, where the gold is usually found. It was surrounded by a trench, the clay from which, as it was dug up, had apparently been thrown out against the canvas, forming a kind of embankment, rendering it at once water and weather-proof. I ven tured into it, encountering on my way an immense piece of raw beef, suspended from the ridge-pole. Upon some stones in front, inclosing a small fire, stood a frying-pan, filled with rich looking beef collops, that set my mouth watering, and severely tested my honesty ; for, although acorns are all very well in their way, and serve to stay the cravings of the stomach for awhile, I did not find my appetite any the less sharp, notwithstanding the quantity I had eaten. But I resisted the temptation, and penetrated further into the tent. At one side of it lay a crow-bar, and an old saddle that had seen rough service ; yet not a soul appeared, and my eyes were again ogling the collops, whilst an inward voice whispered how impru dent it was to leave them frizzling there, when, all at once, a little man, in a < hickory shirt,' with his face -f 80NOBIAN8 DRY-WASHING GOLD. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 67 all bedaubed with pot-black and grease, darted out of some dark corner, flourishing in one hand a long bowie knife, and in the other three by no means delicate slices of fat pork, which he at once dropped into the frying-pan, stooping down on one knee, and becoming immediately absorbed in watching the interesting culinary process then going on in it. " I came up next with a group of three Sonomeans, or inhabitants of Sonoma, busily engaged on a small sandy flat — the only one I had observed — at the bot tom of the ravine. There was no water near, although I noticed several holes which had evidently been sunk in quest of it. These men were actively pursuing a process that is termed * dry-washing/ One was shovelling up the sand into a large cloth, stretched out upon the ground, and which, when it was tolerably well covered, he took up by the corners, and shook until the pebbles and larger particles of stone and dirt came to the surface. These he brushed away care fully with his hand, repeating the process of shaking and clearing until the residue was sufficiently fine for the next operation. This was performed by the other men, wrho, depositing the sand in large bowls hewn out of a solid block of wood, which they held in their hands, dexterously cast the contents up before them, about four feet into the air, catching the sand again very cleverly, and blowing at it as it descended. This process being repeated, the sand gradually disap peared, and from two to three ounces of pure gold remained at the bottom of the bowl. Easy as the operation appeared to me to be, I learned, upon in quiry, that to perform it * successfully required the nicest management, the greatest perseverance, and especially robust lungs. The men I saw had lighted 68 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. upon a productive sand ; but very often, indeed, those who adopt this mode of gold washing toil long at bar ren soil before they discover the uselessness of labor ing thus arduously. " I noticed, that although the largest proportion of the gold obtained in this manner presented the appear ance of a fine powder, it was interspersed, here and there, with large scales of the precious deposit, and with a few solid lumps. The metal was of a dingy hue, and, at a cursory view, might easily have been mistaken for particles of yellow clay, or laminae of stone of the same color. The Sonomeans placed the product of their labor in buckskin bags, which were hung around their necks, and carefully concealed inside of their shirts. They work in this fashion at the mines in their own country ; but I doubt if any other than a native constitution could very long bear up against the peculiar labor of ' dry-washing' in such a climate and under such difficult circumstances. I felt half tempted to try the process myself, for the surface of this sandy bed was literally sparkling with innumerable particles of the finest gold, triturated to a polish by the running of the waters — as I conjec tured ; but I soon discovered how fruitless my efforts would be. Had I possessed any chemical agents at hand, however, I might soon have exhausted the bed of its precious contents, and should, doubtless, have realized an immense weight of the metal of the very purest quality. " I may as well mention here, that of the various new machines manufactured and sent out to Califor nia for the purpose of digging and washing gold, the great majority have been found quite useless. There are two or three of them, however, that have been HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 69 employed with great success. I have made a sketch of those most in use amongst the diggers, as my readers may feel desirous of acquainting themselves with the latest improvements introduced in the art of mining, as practised in this country. They consist, in the first place, of the washing-rocker, or i cradle/ which has, in numerous instances, formed the model for ruder machines, constructed by the miners them selves, whilst in the mountains. The lid, at the bottom of which lie the holes through which the gold and soil pass, is fastened by hinges at the back, in order that it may be raised up, the more readily to throw off, from time to time, the stones that accumulate. Three men are required to work this rocker with success, and there are few processes in which a smaller num ber could operate without extraordinary labor. One person throws the soil upon the lid, another pours on the water, whilst a third is engaged in rocking the cradle by the handle attached to it for the purpose. In this way these men keep each other constantly employed ; and, indeed, this cradle, like its prototype, has often proved the bond of union between individuals who would otherwise have separated, for this simple reason, that one man could not work it half so profit ably alone. The cross pieces, observable at the bot tom, serve to intercept the gold as it flows towards the smaller end of the machine, whilst the dirt is carried off by the admixture with the water produced by the continual 'rocking.' As the earth becomes thoroughly dissolved, the gold naturally gravitates to the bottom ; and thus it is impossible for any but the very finest particles of the ore to escape. " The second machine, in importance, is the gold- borer. It is particularly useful in examining the 70 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. bottom of streams, and consists of a short conical cylinder at the end of a long handle, containing inside, at its lower extremity, a valve, arranged so as to admit the earth and gold, and prevent their escaping when the receptacle is full. This instrument is used in the same manner as an augur. The third machine, the pan, is also of late introduction, but has been found rather too deep for the purpose for which it is intended. "Notwithstanding the success which seemed to attend the labors of the Sonomeans, I subsequently discovered that the entire quanity of gold thus painfully obtained, disappeared at the gambling-stalls. They were generally clad most wretchedly, many of them wearing nothing more than a dirty shirt, a pair of light pantaloons, and the wide sombrero peculiar to the inhabitants of this country and Mexico. Some few sported a serapa, but they were men of superior native rank, of which this garment is a distinctive character istic. " Continuing my route up the ravine, I met a man named Corrigan, galloping along with two fine horses, one of which he was leading. He stopped as soon as he recognized me, and we were soon engaged in a very interesting conversation respecting the doings at the 'diggins.' The substance of his information was, that he had made a great deal of money at the mines by digging, but infinitely more by speculation. He thought of buying a ranch£, marrying, and settling down. He was then going to seek for pasture for his horses ; and, bidding me a hasty good-bye, galloped off, and soon disappeared. " As I advanced, the ground became drier and more eandy, rock and slate of various kinds abounding; HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 71 some quite soft and friable, yielding readily to the pickaxe or the crowbar ; and, in other places, so hard as to resist the utmost strength of the miners. Several of the diggers were persevcringly exploring the locali ties where the rotten sorts of slate were found in the largest quantities, and I saw them pick out a good deal of gold with their jack-knives. Their principal aim was to discover what they termed 'a pocket,' which is nothing more than a crevice between the blocks of slate, into which a deposit of gold has been washed by the heavy rains from the higher districts, and which, soon accumulating, swell into rapid tor rents, which rush down these ravines with extraor dinary swiftness and force, sweeping every thing before them. " There did not appear to be many mining parties at the Stanislaus at this particular period, for the encampments were generally from two to five miles apart, the space between them increasing the higher you advanced towards the mountains, to the foot of which the ravine extended — altogether, a distance of many miles. The lower part of the mine, I concluded from this fact, to be by far the richer, simply from- the circumstance I have mentioned ; richer, compara tively, because here the deposits of gold are more easily found and extracted; not richer, in reality, as the metal must exist in immense quantities in the upper regions, from which it is washed down by the rains and floods into the lower districts. The virgin deposit would, doubtless, be difficult to come at ; but, if sought after at all, that it is to be sought in the mountains and high lands, I feel persuaded. " I turned back, after prosecuting my excursion until the ravine became almost too rocky to allow me 72 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. to proceed, and until I saw that the ' diggins' dimin ished materially in number. On clambering the hills at the side, I beheld abundance of pines, oak, cedar, and palm ; but no grass, nor vegetation of any other kind, save prickly shrubs, with here and there a patch of extremely dry moss. On my way back, I passed several tents and huts erected by the miners, all of the very poorest and most wretched description. " I found Van Anker's party at dinner, in front of their tent. Van showed me a leathern bag, contain ing several pounds' weight of very pure gold, and which was carelessly tossed about from one to the other for examination. It was the produce of his morning's work, he having fortunately struck upon a large pocket. " On inquiring whether, as there existed such strong temptation, robberies were not very frequent, I was informed, that, although thefts had occurred, yet, generally speaking, the miners dwelt in no distrust of one another, and left thousands of dollars' worth in gold dust in their tents whilst they were absent dig ging. They all felt, intuitively, that honesty was literally the best policy, and a determination to punish robbery seemed to have been come to by all as a measure essential to the security and welfare of the mining community, independent of any question of principle. " Gambling and drinking were carried on, I found, to a most demoralizing extent. Brandy and cham pagne, whenever they were brought to the 'diggins,' realized enormous prices, varying from sixteen to twenty dollars a bottle ; and some of the men would, after accumulating some hundred dollars, squander the whole in purchasing these beverages. Believing the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 73 supply of gold to be inexhaustible, they persisted in this reckless course, and discovered only when it be came too late to redeem their error, that even here gold cannot always be procured. They went on until the placers failed to yield, and were then reduced to great extremities. " The miners were by no means averse to lending * dust' to those who required it, notwithstanding that the lenders often experienced some difficulty in getting back the advance. One of Van's party, for instance, lent another six ounces of gold, which not being returned at the stipulated period, nor for some time afterwards, he dunned his debtor at every meal, until the latter, who had quietly submitted to the importu nity, begged him to * just wait ten minutes, and time it.' He shouldered his pickaxe, as he said this, and going out of the shed, returned within the time, bring ing back more than sufficient to liquidate the debt. This little incident created much amusement." The whole of the gold region lies between the San Joachin and Sacramento Rivers and the California range of mountains. The principal mines are the Towallomie, the Stanislaus, the Macalamo, the Merced, Fremont's Diggings, or Mariposa, the Calaveras, the Macassime, the South, Middle, and North Forks, Bear Creek, Yuba, Feather River, and the Sacra mento. The mines are nothing more than so many ravines, which run across from the range of mountains, and are flooded by the torrents which pour down from the upper region during 'the rainy season, and which have been supposed to bring the gold down with them. The Macalamo Dry Diggings is considered one of the richest placers in the gold region. It is a long ravine, the soil of which is red, and sometimes blueish 7 74 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. in places, sand predominating. The blue clay is thought to be the richest by the diggers. The sides of the ravine are so steep and irregular, that the miners are troubled to find resting places of a night. The gold taken out of this mine runs large ; the average size of the lumps being that of a pea. Pieces have been taken out of it that weighed above two pounds. Instances of robbery and murder have not been few in the gold region, as might be conjectured from a know ledge of the motley character of the miners, and the temptations offered to avaricious spirits. Yet, all things considered, the number of instances will not appear so very extraordinary. Lynch law, the only resort of the wronged in pocket, or the friends of the murdered, exercised its terrible power, and tended to prevent the crimes that would, otherwise, have been frequent. An instance of this summary justice we here relate, to illustrate the means by which the miners protected their lives arid property. "A sailor, a deserter from the Ohio, took it into his head, one night, to rob one of the volunteers, who had set up a drinking store. He had already got two bags, containing about five thousand dollars' worth of gold ; but, not satisfied with them, grasped at a third, half full of dollars in silver. The jingling of the coin awoke the owner, who, springing up, gave the alarm, and, after a hot pursuit, the thief was captured, and bound to a tree until morning. At about nine, a jury of twelve miners sat to consider the case, a volunteer named Nutman officiating for Judge Lynch. Of course, he was found guilty, and sentenced to be hanged ; but, some opposition being raised to depriving him of life, and a milder punishment suggested ; it was finally determined that he should receive a hundred HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 75 lashes on his bare back, have his ears cut off, and his head shaved, so that he might be every where recog nized in the mining districts. This sentence gave general satisfaction. The poor wretch was at once fastened by his hands to the branch of a tree, and the fellows proceeded to shave his head, whilst some sailors of the party set to work manufacturing cats. His feet were then tied together to the foot of the tree, and when his head had been shaved, a doctor lopped off his ears. He bled a good deal ; but, when the blood was staunched, they set to flogging him, and they didn't spare him either. After this, they kicked him out. " Well, he went off, and when he was about half a mile away, stole a mule, and rode over to the < Cala- veras' diggins, where the animal was claimed by the owner. He was thereupon tried for mule-stealing, and sentenced to receive another flogging ; but when the miners came to strip him, they found his back so shockingly cut up, that they took compassion on him, and contented themselves with driving him out of the district, where he never appeared again." During the summer season, when exposure and labor in the mines, together with unwholesome food, produce a great prevalence of fever and dysentery, the native Californians make use of a singular remedy. It is called the temascal ; being a sort of hot air bath, shaped something like a sentry-box. It is built of wicker-work, and afterwards plastered with mud until it becomes air tight. The mode of application of this remedy is as follows : — A large fire is built close up to the door of the structure — a narrow aperture, just large enough for a man to squeeze through. This is allowed to burn itself out, having while burning, 76 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. heated to a very high degree the air in the interior of the box. Into this the patient screws himself, and there remains until a profuse perspiration is produced, which is checked suddenly by a plunge into the chilly waters of the river. This is of the nature of a Thomp- sonian remedy. The absorbing interest with which the gold-seekers proceed in their work is admirably depicted by one of the adventurers, in a book published after his return.* "Arriving on the -Jar, the scene presented to us was new indeed, and not more extraordinary than impressive. Some with long-handled shovels, delved among clumps of bushes, or by the side of large rocks, never raising their eyes for an instant ; others with pick and shovel worked among stone and gravel, or with trowels searched under banks and roots of trees, where, if rewarded with small lumps of gold, the eye shone brighter for an instant, when the search was immediately and more ardently resumed. At the edge of the stream, or knee deep and waist deep in water, as cold as melted ice and snow could make it, some were washing gold with tin pans or the common cradle rocker, while the rays of the sun were pouring down on their heads, with an intensity exceeding any thing we ever experienced at home, though it was but the middle of April. " The thirst for gold and the labor of acquisition overruled all else, and totally absorbed every faculty. Complete silence reigned among the miners ; they addressed not a word to each other, and seemed averse to all conversation. All the sympathies of common * Sights in the Gold Region, or Scenes by the Way, by Theodore T. Johnson. HISTOHY OF CALIFORNIA. 77 humanity, all the finer and noble attributes of our nature seemed lost, buried beneath the soil they were eagerly delving, or swept away with the rushing waters that revealed the shining treasure." This extract is suggestive of considerable reflection. The same amount of attention given to any pursuit must produce results equally as satisfactory as that given to gold-seeking. But gold carries with it such obvious enjoyments to the grosser minds, that the pursuit of it alone can attract their attention sufficiently to effect any thing considerable. Could the pure enjoyments connected with the practice of virtue be made as obvious to all minds, the result would be something at which the philanthropist might rejoice. The extremes of heat and cold, during the summer, in the valleys and canons of the gold region, are very remarkable. From nine o'clock in the morning till five in the afternoon, the heat is almost intolerable. The sun's rays pour down through an atmosphere clear and dry, and their power is increased by reflec tion from the sides of the canons and mountains, and from the surface of the streams. During the night, the air becomes so cold as to render blankets very serviceable. This is caused by the waters of the different streams rising during the night, their volume being increased by the melting of the snows of the Sierra Nevada, by the heat of the previous day. Thousands of Indians, belonging to the Snake, Shoshonee, and Crow tribes, are at work at the mines. They are generally employed by some of the wealthy white men, and are paid in provisions and a sort of liquor made from California grapes, ' called pisco. What money or gold they get for themselves is spent in gambling — a vice to which they are most excessively 78 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. addicted. Instances are not few of their having staked the produce of their labor during some weeks subsequent to the game. Many of the Indians desire no other pay than as much pisco as they can drink, with a little acorn bread. The native Californians form a goodly proportion of the gold-seekers. Many of the men are accom panied by their wives, who are attended by Indian girls. The graceful Spanish costume of the Califor nians adds quite a feature to the busy scene at the mines. There may be seen the long, lank forms of the Yankees, with their wide white trousers and straw hats ; the half-naked Indians ; the native born Cali fornians, with their dusky visages and lustrous black eyes. The latter are generally clad in a short, tight jacket, with lace trimming, and velvet breeches, with a silk sash fastened round the waist. With regard to the appearance of the women, and, also, for the sake of the description of one of the evening entertainments in the gold region, we quote from a recent tourist, to whom we have been indebted before.* " The appearance of tho women is graceful and coquettish. Their petticoats, short enough to display in most instances a well-turned ankle, are richly laced and embroidered, and striped and flounced with gaudy colors, of which scarlet seems to have the prefer ence. Their tresses hang in luxuriant plaits down their backs ; and in all the little accessories of dress, such as earrings, necklaces, &c., the costumo is very rich. Its distinguishing feature, however, is the reboso, a sort of scarf, generally made of cotton, which answers to the mantilla of Old Spain. It is * Four Months Among the Gold Finders of California, by J. Tyr- whit Brooks, M. D. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 79 worn in many different and graceful fashions — some times twined round the waist and shoulders ; at others, hanging in pretty festoons about the figure, but always disposed with that indescribable degree of coquettish grace which Spanish women have been for ages allowed to possess in the management of the fan and the mantilla. Since these arrivals, almost every evening a fandango is got up on the green, before some of the tents. The term fandango, though origin ally signifying a peculiar kind of dance, seemed to bo used here for an evening's dancing entertainment, in which many different pas are introduced. I was pre sent at a fandango a few nights ago, when a couple of performers were dancing ' el jarabe,' which seemed to consist chiefly of a series of monotonous toe and heel movements on the ground. The motions of the foot were, however, wonderfully rapid, and always in exact time to the music. But at these entertainments the waltz seems to be the standing dish. It is danced with numerous very intricate figures, to which however, all the Califorriians appear quite au fait. Men and women alike waltz beautifully, with an easy, graceful swinging motion. "It is quite a treat, after a hard day's work, to go at nightfall to one of these fandangos. The merry notes of the guitar and the violin announce them to all comers ; and a motley enough looking crowd, every member of which is pufiing away at a cigar, forms an applauding circle around the dancers, who smoke like all the rest. One cannot help being struck by the picturesque costume and graceful movements of the performers, who appear to dance not only with their legs, but with all their hearts and souls. During the interval between the dances, 80 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. coffee is consumed by the senoras, and the coffee with something stronger by the senors ; so that, as the night advances, the merriment gets, if not ' fast and furious,' at least animated and imposing." The dangers which the adventurers are subjected to encounter are often increased by the hostility of the Indians. These, however, only molest those who are daring enough to frequent the outskirts of the gold region. There the Indians are treacherous, and will attack small parties, even after smoking the pipe of peace with them. Their principal weapons are bows and arrows ; for though many of them have guns in their possession, the scarcity of ammunition prevents them from using them to any purpose. The following description of an encounter with them by a small party, encamped in the valley of the Bear River, then seldom frequented by white men, will give an idea of their mode of attack : " We were just on the point of returning to the camp to dinner, when Bowling, who was standing near some sage bushes at the upper part of the ravine, heard a rustling among them, and on moving in the direction of the noise saw an Indian stealthily creeping along, who, as soon as he perceived he was discovered, discharged an arrow, which just missed its mark, but lacerated, and that rather severely, Dowling's ear. The savage immediately set up a most terrific whoop, and ran off, but tumbled before he could draw another arrow from his quiver, while Dowling, rushing for ward, buried his mattock in the head of his fallen foe, killing him instantaneously. " At this moment we heard the crack of a rifle in the direction of the camp, which, with the Indian's whoop at the same moment, completely bewildered us. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 81 Every man, however, seized his rifle, and Bowling, hastening towards us, told us of what had just occurred. All was still for the next few moments, and I mounted a little hill to reconnoitre. Suddenly I saw a troop of Indians, the foremost of them on horseback, approach ing at full speed; I hastily returned to my companions, and we sought shelter in a little dell, determined to await there, and resist the attack, for it was evident that the savages' intentions were any thing but pacific. " It was a moment of breathless excitement. We heard the tramp, tramp of the horses coming on towards us, but as yet, they and their riders were concealed from our view. I confess I trembled vio lently, not exactly with fear, although I expected that a few moments would see us all scalped by our savage assailants. It was the suddenness of the danger which startled me, and made rny heart throb violently ; but at that moment, just as I was reproaching myself with the want of courage, a terrific yell rung through the air at a short distance from us, and forty or fifty war like Indians appeared in sight. My whole frame was nerved in an instant, and when a shower of arrows flew amongst us, I was the first man to answer it with a rifle-shot, which brought one of the foremost Indians off his horse to the ground. I instantly reloaded, but in the mean while the rifles of my companions had been doing good service. We had taken up our position behind a row of willow trees which skirted the banks of a narrow stream, and hero we were protected in a great measure from the arrows of our assailants, which were in most cases turned aside by the branches. A second volley of rifle-shots soon followed the first ; and while we were reloading, and the smoke had slightly cleared away, I could see that we had spread 82 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. consternation in the ranks of the Indian warriors, and that they were gathering up their wounded prepara tory to retiring. I had my eye on an old man, who had just leaped from his horse. My finger was on the trigger, when I saw him coolly advance, and, taking one of his wounded companions, who had heen shot through the leg, in his arms, place him on a horse, then mounting his own, and catching hold of the other animal's bridle, gallop off at full speed. Although I knew full well that if the fortune of the day had gone against us, these savages would not have spared a single man of our party, still I could not find it in my heart to fire on the old chief, and he carried off his wounded comrade in safety. " In a few minutes the hill-sides were clear, and when we emerged from our shelter, all that was visible of the troop of warriors was three of them weltering in their blood, a bow or two, and some empty quivers, and a few scattered feathers and tomahawks, lying on the ground." The grizzly bear is also one of the terrors encoun tered by the gold-seekers. This animal grows to the size of four feet in height and six in length. It is one of the most ferocious animals of North America. Mules and cattle of various kinds, and even men, are attacked by it, and its great strength generally enables it to come off with its prey. Great quickness and courage are absolute essentials of those who hunt these animals, or encounter them accidentally. An adven ture of two or three gold-seekers, on their road to the mines, accidentally meeting with a grizzly bear, is thus shortly detailed in the journal of a returned adventurer.* * Six Months in the Gold Mines, by E. Gould Buffum. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 83 " About half way from the rancheria a loud bray ing, followed by a fierce growl, attracted our attention, and in a few moments a frightened mule, closely pur sued by an enormous grizzly bear, descended the hill-side within forty yards of where we stood leaning on our rifles. As the bear reached the road, Iliggins', with his usual quickness and intrepidity, fired, and an unearthly yell from the now infuriated animal told with what effect. The mule in the interval had crossed the road, and was now scampering away over the plains, and Bruin, finding himself robbed of his prey, turned upon us. I levelled my rifle and gave him the contents with hearty good will, but the wounds he had received only served to exasperate the monster, who now made towards us with rapid strides. Deeming prudence the better part of valor, we ran with all con venient speed in the direction of the camp, within a hundred yards of which my foot became entangled in the underbrush, and I fell headlong upon the earth. In another instant I should have fallen a victim to old Bruin's rage, but a well-directed ball from my companion's rifle entered his brain and arrested his career. The whole party now came to our assistance and soon despatched Mr. Grizzly. Dragging him to camp, we made a hearty supper from his fat ribs, and, as I had probably been the more frightened of the two, I claimed as an indemnity his skin, which pro tected me afterward from the damp ground many a cold night. He was a monstrous fellow, measuring nearly four feet in height, and six in length, and a stroke from his huge paw would, had he caught us, have entirely dissipated the golden dreams of Higgins and myself." The same writer gives quite a graphic description 84 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. of an attack of the scourge of the miners, the disease called scurvy. He says : " I was again dreaming of fortune and success, when my hopes were blasted by an attack of a terrible scourge that wrought destruction through the northern mines during the winter of 1848. I allude to the land scurvy. The exposed and unaccustomed life of two- thirds of the miners, and their entire subsistence upon salt meat, without any mixture of vegetable matter, had produced this disease, which was experienced more or less by one-half of the miners within my knowledge. Its symptoms and progress may not be uninteresting. It was first noticed in the 'Dry Diggings,' where, about the middle of February, many persons were rendered unable to walk by swellings of the lower limbs, and severe pains in them. It was at first sup posed to be rheumatism, and was treated as such. But it withstood the most powerful applications used in that complaint, and was finally decided to be scurvy. So long as the circumstances which caused it continued, the disease made rapid progress. Many, who could obtain no vegetables, or vegetable acids, lingered out a miserable existence and died, — while others, fortu nate enough to reach the settlements, where potatoes and acids could be procured, recovered. I noticed its first attack upon myself by swelling and bleeding of the gums, which was followed by a swelling of both legs below the knee, which rendered me unable to walk ; and for three weeks I was laid up in my tent, obliged to feed upon the very articles that had caused the disease, and growing daily weaker, without any reasonable prospect of relief. There were, at that time, about eight hundred persons at work on the river, and hoping to get some medicine, I despatched one of HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 85 my companions one morning, with instructions to procure me, if possible, a dose of salts, and to pay for it any price that should be asked. He returned at night with the consoling news that he had failed, having found only two persons who had brought the article with them, and they refused to sell it at any price. " I was almost in despair; with only a blanket be tween myself and the damp, cold earth, and a thin canvas to protect me from the burning sun by day, and the heavy dews by night, I lay day after day enduring the most intense suffering fnom pain in my limbs, which were now becoming more swollen, and were turning completely black. Above me rose those formidable hills which I must ascend ere I could obtain relief. I believe I should have died, had not accident discovered the best remedy that could have been produced. In the second week of my illness, one of our party, in descending the hill on which he had been deer hunting, found near its base, and strewn along the foot-track, a quantity of beans which sprouted from the ground, and were in leaf. Some one, in descending the hill with a bag of them on his back, had probably dropped them. My companion gathered a quantity and brought them into camp. I bad them boiled, and lived entirely on them for several days, at the same time using a decoction of the bark of the spruce tree. These seemed to operate magically ; and in a week after commencing the use of them, I found myself able to walk, — and as soon as my strength was partially restored, I ascended the hill, and with two companions walked into Culoma ; and by living prin cipally upon a vegetable diet, which I procured by paying three dollars per pound for potatoes, in a very short time I recovered." 8 i _ . ^ 86 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Thus life in the gold region is made up of variety and contrast. Sometimes the diggers and washers pass weeks busily engaged at their toilsome occupation, without the monotony of the time and scene being disturbed. Again, adventures and exciting incidents will be plentiful and various. At one time, pleasant weather and fandangos offer easy enjoyment ; at another, extremes of weather, hard work, and bad food render the life of the miner almost intolerable. Frequently, the gold-seeker chances to meet spots that yield ample reward for his toil; and often he works beneath the fierce rays of a broiling sun, while his legs are in chilly water, and his day's toil scarce yields more than enough to pay for his living. The trading-posts, situated at and near the mines, do a far more certain and an equally profitable business. They are generally the establishments of shrewd, speculat ing Yankees, who know what sort of labor is requisite to make a gold-seeker successful, and prefer to trust to the profits of bargaining in provisions and mining necessaries for gold. That the country is pregnant with an enormous quantity of the precious metal is unquestionable. But that severe and weakening labor, together with tough constitutions, are indispensable requisites for pro curing it, scarcely admits of a doubt. Very few spend any considerable time in working at the " diggings," who do not suffer from exposure, and lose a portion of their constitutional stability. So far, all attempts at the construction of machines for washing the gold from the sand, have been of little avail. Machines have been invented and carried out to the gold region by some of the numerous companies, which, upon trial, have soon been abandoned for the " cradle," and HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 87 common wash pan ; but still, the field for invention is open, and the labor now necessary for procuring the gold is susceptible of considerable diminution. Of course, the means of transporting provisions and other necessaries to the mines are constantly improving, as the country is becoming settled ; and thus, one great source of privation and disease is rapidly diminishing. CHAPTER VIII. DESCRIPTION OF SOME OF THE CITIES AND TOWNS OF CALIFORNIA, BEFORE AND AFTER THE DISCOVERY OF THE GOLD MINES. AT the time of the discovery of the existence of gold in the region of the Sacramento, San Francisco was a very inconsiderable town. As soon as the news of the discovery was spread among its inhabitants, it became almost deserted. Indeed, at one time, there was only seven male inhabitants left in the town. The site of the present city of San Francisco was not then occupied by more than fifty houses in all. These were occupied by a few foreign merchants and some native Californians. The houses were rudely con structed, the principal materials being adobe's, or un- burnt bricks. They were generally one story high, and most of them were erected near the beach ; while at the rear of the "town," was a sandy plain terminated by a range of hills. But as soon as the news of the gold discovery reached the United States, and other countries, companies for mining purposes were imme- 88 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. diately formed, and emigrants soon crowded every route to the " Land of Promise." Then San Francisco began to be the great receptacle of the emigrants and the merchandise of various kinds necessary for their maintenance. The following is a very complete pic ture of the city after the spreading of the gold news, and the flood of emigration had commenced. " Numberless vessels, mostly from the United States, filled the bay, in front of San Francisco, many of them being deserted by their crews, and unable to procure others to take their places. On landing, I had to clamber up a steep hill, on the top of which, and opposite to where I stood, was a large wooden house, two stories high, and scarcely half finished. In the rear of this, rose another and a steeper hill, whose slopes were covered with a multiplicity of tents. To my right, ran a sort of steep, or precipice, defended by sundry pieces of cannon, which commanded the entrance to the harbor. I next came to the ' Point,' and, crossing it, found myself within the town. " The first objects that attracted my notice were several canvas houses, measuring from ten to forty feet square, some being grog-shops, others eating establishments, and the larger set apart as warehouses, or places of storage. The proprietors of the latter were making enormous sums by the accommodation their tents afforded to the hundreds of travellers who were arriving every day from different parts, and who, being extremely embarrassed as to what they should do with their luggage, were heartily glad to find any safe place to store it in, and content to pay for the convenience. " The spectacle which the beach presented from a convenient opening, whence I could comprise the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 89 whole at a glance, was singularly interesting and curious. A crowd of individuals, in motley garb, and of every variety of race, might be seen pressing eagerly upward towards the town, jostling and pushing one another, in their anxiety to be first, yet looking eagerly about them, as If to familiarize themselves at once with the country of their adoption. Here were dandies from the United States and from France, picking their steps mincingly, as they strove to keep pace with the sturdy fellows who carried their luggage ; their beaver hats, fashionable frock-coats, irreproachable and well- strapped pantaloons, exciting the derisive remarks of the spectators, the majority of them ' old Californians,' whose rough labor at the * diggins' had taught them to estimate such niaiseries at their proper value. By their side stalked the stately and dignified Spaniard, covered with his broad-brimmed, low-crowned sombrero, and gracefully enveloped in his ample serapa, set off by a bright scarlet sash. He turns neither to the right nor to the left, nor heeds the crowd about him, but keeps on the even tenor of his way — though even he has occasionally to jump for it — presenting, in his demeanor and costume, a striking contrast to the more bustling activity of the Yankees, who are elbow ing every one, in their anxiety to go a-head. A lot of shopboys, too — mere lads, as spruce and neatly attired as though they had just stepped out of some fashionable emporium, mingle with the rest, and, as they enter the town, strike up the popular parody — 1 Oh, California. That's the land for me ! I'm bound for the Sacramento, with The wash-bowl on my knee.' And presently, their brother-adventurers, excited 90 HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. by hopes of the wildest kind, join vociferously in chorus, in the exuberance of their joy. "A group of Englishmen, muscular in form, and honest in feature, are chaffering with the keen-witted Yankee porters for the carriage of their luggage. There is an air of dogged resolution about them, that plainly indicates they will not submit to what they evidently consider an imposition. Such a sum for so slender a service ! Well, then, they can carry their baggage themselves: so they will; and, quickly shouldering it, some depart in the track of the rest, whilst two or three remain behind, to watch what is left, until their friends return. They are manifestly well known to one another, and seem to be almost intimate ; the voyage has made them friends. " Here come a number of Chilians and Peruvians, and a goodly number of natives from the Sandwich Islands. A couple of Irishmen, too ! I know them by their vivacity, and by the odd trick they have of getting into every body's way ; to say nothing of their broad, merry faces. Their property is in common, it seems; for they have only one small pack between them. "Here come ten or a dozen plainly but comfortably dressed mechanics ; hard-working men they seem, and just the sort of persons to make their way in a coun try where the artisan occupies his proper position, and where honest toil — and dishonest, too, sometimes — is almost certain to reap a harvest. Far differently will you fare, and far preferable, too, will be your lot, in regions where privation is the rule, to that of many amongst your numerous fellow-travellers, unaccus tomed as they are to laborious occupations — with frames immured to fatigue, and constitutions unha- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 91 bituated to scanty fare, to exposure to heat and cold, and wet and sudden changes ! Whilst you arc succeed ing in your object, they will grow wearied, disappointed, and home-sick, and long to be back again on the theatre of their former struggles. " The human stream ceases not to flow from the vessels in the harbor ; no sooner is one boat-load disposed of than another arrives, and so on, until the town is gorged with new-comers, who, after a few days' sojourn, to recruit their strength, after the fatigues of a long and irksome voyage, depart, and are seen no more for months; many, perhaps, never to return. Very few of this vast multitude deserve the epithet of poor. , To get here at all requires money ; and to maintain one's self after getting here, the emigrant must have some little means. " The majority of the emigrants are men occupying a respectable station in society ; some are even distinguished in their calling ; but the eager desire of making a fortune in a hurry has induced them to throw up good employments and comfortable homes ; to leave friends, relatives, connexions, wife, children, and familiar associations, to embark their strength, intelligence, and activity, in this venture. All is bustle where they have landed : boats going to and fro ; rafts slowly discharging their cumbrous loads ; porters anxiously and interestedly civil ; all excited ; all bent on gain ; ships innumerable in the bay ; mountains around ; a clear, blue sky above ; and the bright waters dancing in the sun, until they touch the horizon in the distance, blending their brightness with his golden track. " I walked on until I came up to a group of men, who, like myself, were looking on the busy scene 92 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. before us with no small degree of interest. I recog nized amongst them two of the volunteers, with whom I forthwith claimed acquaintance. The whole party had come from the mines, as was easily to be seen from their appearance, which was something the worse for wear, their countenances being weather- beaten and bronzed by exposure ; whilst their attire, consisting of buckskin coats, leather leggings, and broad-brimmed hats, denoted the sort of labor in which they had been recently engaged. I learned from them, in the course of a subsequent conversation, that they had all of them been successful at the i dig gings.' One of the number had made, or i picked,' two thousand dollars, and the rest, from that to nine thousand dollars each, within the space of a few months. With this, however, they were far from satisfied, most of them being determined to realize a large fortune before they quitted the cpuntry ; for not one of them seemed to have the remotest intention of settling. " The party had come down from the mines to make purchases, and to enjoy a little recreation. They were admirable specimens of their class — hardy in appear ance and rough in demeanor ; but shrewd, withal, and toil-enduring. For the moment, their conversation turned upon the prospects of the newly-landed emigrants — for I should have stated that there were one or two arrivals in the harbor — and they were unsparing of their remarks upon such of the new comers as by their dress, or any physical peculiarity, offered a fair target for their witticisms, which were not less pointed than coarse. " The discovery of the gold mines, has done at once for San Francisco what it was reasonable to HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 03 anticipate time only could have effected ; and its pro gress in importance has far outstripped the most sanguine expectations which could be based upon any hypothesis hazarded on the strength of its admirable position and facilities for trade. Nevertheless, its growth seems -unnatural ; and, looking at it as I saw it then, it left on my mind the impression of instability, so marvellous was it to gaze upon a city of tents, wood, and canvas, starting up thus suddenly, forming but a halting-place to the thousands who visited it ; having for citizens a large majority of gamblers and specula tors ; and presenting of civilization but the rudest outline, and some of its worst vices. It was impossible, indeed, for an observer to contemplate San Francisco, at this particular period of its history, and not to feel that every thing about it savored of transition A storm or a fire must have destroyed the whole in a few hours ; for every house, shed, or tent, had manifestly been constructed merely to serve the end of the actual occupier ; they were all adapted for trading, but riot a convenience or a comfort appertained to them, to indicate a desire or an intention of settlement. Every day brought new-comers, and added to the number of ephemeral structures which crowded the hill-sides. Mechanics of every description of calling were at work, earnestly, busily, and cheerfully ; and, whichever way I turned, there was bustle and activity ; yet, withal, I felt that such a state of things was unsound, because resting on what was essentially speculative, and I doubted not but a great, change must come before the city could be regarded as substantially advancing. Comprised at a glance, it presented no other ap pearance save that of a confused crowd of tenements, of every variety of construction ; some high, some 94 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. low, perched upon tlie steep hills, or buried in the deep valleys — but still tents and canvas every where and any where, their numbers defying calcula tion, their structure and position all analysis. There existed neither wells nor ponds within a very consider able distance ; and what struck me as most singular, being aware that the Spaniards had a mission here, there was no sign of a church. I subsequently ascer tained that the site of the Mission of Dolores, about five miles distant, had been preferred by the Spaniards, and that divine service was performed there still. '* As I proceeded along the road leading into the principal street of the city, I was uncomfortably re minded that it would soon become necessary for me to select a place where I could procure refreshment ; and in connexion with this necessity, arose another consideration no less important, namely, where I should lodge ? .There was no other mode of solving the diffi culty, save by an exploration of the localities ; accord ingly, I kept these objects in view, whilst I also grati fied my curiosity by continuing my perambulations. " In this same road, but nearer to the entrance of the main street than I should say was, under any cir cumstances, altogether pleasant, stood the correl of the Washington Market, being a spacious area of ground, inclosed with stakes, over which were stretched raw hides. Owing to the large number of cattle slaugh tered here for the use of the inhabitants, the odor from this place was insufferable, and I quickened my pace until my olfactory organs became sensible of a purer atmosphere. " I turned into the principal street, and soon came up to the market itself, which is a wooden house, about thirty feet square, kept by an American. To my HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 95 right, as I advanced, -were some stores and hotels, and a confectioner's shop of remarkably neat and clean appearance : these were all one story, wooden buildings. One of the hotels was appropriately desig nated as i The Colonnade.' It was kept by a volun teer named Huxley, and differed from every similar establishment in the town, inasmuch as the proprietor allowed neither gambling nor drunkenness on his premises. To this the * Gotham Saloon,' a little fur ther on, offered a perfect contrast, for here there were several monte rooms and a large bowling-alley, where persons who had a taste for the latter amusement might indulge in their favorite pastime for a dollar a game. This saloon was likewise kept by two volun teers, as was also the confectioner's by a fourth ; so that three of the most noted houses in the town were rented by men, who, a few months before, scarcely pos sessed any thing save their enterprise and their indus try, but who were now on the high road to opulence. The more credit was due to them, and others of their brethren whom fortune had similarly favored, because, at first, they had deep-rooted prejudices to encounter, which prudence and perseverance only could have enabled them to overcome. "I came next to the Square, or l Plaza,' on one side of which, and fronting it, stood the ' Miner's Bank/ established by a Mr. Wright, a keen specula tor, who had secured possession of a large extent of landed property, which he was turning to the very best account. On the left of the Plaza, I noticed a spacious-looking wooden building, two stories high, called the ' Parker House ;' but the handsome piazza in front caused me to hesitate on the threshold ; for I apprehended — and not without reason — that, even in 96 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. California, appearances must be paid for ; as, there fore, my purse was not overstocked, I prudently sought a more modest establishment. " I passed another hotel, similar to this one, but not quite so large, and came presently to a low wooden house, of most unattractive and unprepossessing ex terior, which was dignified by the name of the ' Cafe Francais.' As this seemed likely to suit my present convenience, and to promise a scale of prices on a par with its external appearance, I entered boldly, and seated myself at the dining-table. I noticed, as I went in, that, notwithstanding the poverty without, there was abundance within; the counter being literally overcharged with French pastry, a variety of ingenious culinary preparations, and some foreign liquors. " After I had finished my repast, consisting of a beef-steak, two eggs, and a couple of cups of coffee, I prepared to depart. I specify the items of which my repast was made up, because of the price I paid for them — namely, two dollars and a half. I was informed, on hazarding an observation respecting the amount, that the charges were excessively moderate, anything in the shape of a dinner being usually charged one dollar and fifty cents ; half a dollar each for the eggs, which were extras, was only a reasonable price for such luxuries, as they frequently sold for double. I considered the information thus obtained to be cheap, of its kind, and went away with a mental reservation not to eat any more eggs in California, unless they were of another description than the golden ones. " As I repassed the 'Parker House,' the hotel, par excellence, of San Francisco, I went in, knowing that, like all similar establishments, there were the usual amusements going on within. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 97 " This is not only the largest, but the handsomest building in San Francisco ; and, having been con structed at enormous expense, and entirely on specula tion, a concurrence of fortunate circumstances alone, such as had followed upon the discovery of the gold mines, could have insured its prosperity. It was now one of the most frequented, fashionable, and firmly established hotels in the country ; and, in so far as it presented a model to the builders and settlers in the town, was a signal illustration of the shrewdness and enterprise of the Yankee character, and a standing credit to the projectors and proprietors. " It is built entirely of wood, and contains two very spacious principal rooms ; the one a dining-room, the other set apart for billiards. Besides these, there are three saloons of lesser dimensions, especially devoted to gambling, and two well supplied bars — one below, to the right of the entry, the other in the billiard- room. The portion of the hotel that is not set apart for the usual offices and conveniences is divided off into innumerable chambers, which are occupied by the superior classes of emigrants — lawyers, doctors, money- brokers, cum multis aliis. " The saloon contains two very handsome billiard- tables, which are constantly occupied by players, chiefly Americans, some of them of first-rate excel lence. The charge was a dollar per game of a hundred, and they wero no sooner vacated by one party than another came in. " The establishment contained nine gambling-tables, which were crowded day and night, by the citizens and the miners ; many of the latter staking very large sums upon the turn of a card. The stakes, however, varied from twenty-five cents to five thousand dollars ; 98 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. and the excitement of some of the losers was frequently fearful to contemplate,. Some who gained largely prudently withdrew ; and I was informed that, a few days previously to my arrival, a new-comer from the States, who was bound for the mines, having come into the s.aloon, and tried his fortune at the monte tables, luckily made twenty thousand dollars, with which he returned home, by the steamer, two days afterwards. "The < Golden Eagle/ (I'Aguila d'Oro) is another gambling establishment, situated in one of the streets leading into the Plaza. It is a canvas house, about fifty feet square, fitted up with the requisites for play, and let out by the proprietor at the rate of fifteen hundred dollars a month. Every available spot around the tables was crowded to inconvenience by persons who were engaged deeply in the game, the majority standing up and watching the chances with counte nances betokening the greatest excitement. " I now proceeded to the City Hotel, a large but somewhat antiquated building, constructed of adobe7 after the Spanish fashion, but hybridized by American improvements. The interior was even more insuffer able than the El Dorado, in respect of the boisterous- ness of its frequenters. In the first room that I entered were five gambling-tables, doing a ' smashing business' — a term employed, somewhat in contradic tion to its import, to denote prosperity. The majority of the players were Americans and other foreigners, intermixed with a goodly number of Spaniards of the lowest order. There was the same excitement, the same recklessness, and the same trickery here, as at the other gambling saloons, only infinitely more noise an.d smoke, and swearing and inebriety. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 99 " Here I met with another of the volunteers, who proposing a walk, we went out together, and proceeded to the Plaza, I found a good many old acquaintances set up in business at this spot ; one, who had been a captain, had recently turned money-broker, and now kept an office for the exchange of coin and gold-dust, having entered into partnership with a highly respect able and agreeable individual, of active business habits, who promised to prove a great acquisition to the con cern. "We soon reached a low, long, adobe building, situated at the upper side of the square, and which my companion told me was the Custom House. To the right of the Plaza stood the Saint Charles's Hotel, a wooden edifice covered in with canvas, and the Peytona House, an establishment of a similar description, in both of which we did not fail to find the usual games carried on. " The streets leading down to the water-side contain comparatively few hotels or eating-houses, they being chiefly wood and canvas trading-stores. I observed amongst them several newly opened auction and com mission-rooms, where goods were being put up, recom mended and knocked down in true Yankee style. An immense number of wooden frame-houses in course of erection met our view in every direction ; and upon remarking that many of them appeared to have been purposely left incomplete, I ascertained that this arose from the extreme difficulty of procuring lumber, which, on account of its scarcity, occasionally fetched an in credibly high price. A good deal of it is brought from Oregon, and some from South America. Many of the larger houses, but far inferior, notwithstanding, to such of the same kind as could easily be procured 100 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. in New York at a rental of from 300 to 400 dollars a-year, cost here at least 10,000 dollars to build tliem, the lots on which they were erected being valued at sums varying from 30,000 to 50,000 dollars, according to the locality. Many spots of ground, just large enough for a small trading-house or a tent to stand upon, let at from 1200 to 2000 dollars. " Amongst the various emigrants who daily flocked into the city — for each day brought its fresh arrivals — were numerous Chinese, and a very considerable number of Frenchmen, from the Sandwhich Islands and from South America. The former had been consigned, with houses and merchandise, to certain Americans in San Francisco, to whom they were bound by contract, as laborers, to work at a scale of wages very far below the average paid to mechanics and others generally. The houses they brought with them from China, and which they set up where they were wanted, were infinitely superior and more sub stantial than those erected by the Yankees, being built chiefly of logs of wood, or scantling, from six to eight inches in thickness, placed one on the top of the other, to form the front, rear, and sides ; whilst the roofs were constructed on an equally simple and inge nious plan, and were remarkable for durability. " These Chinese had all the air of men likely to prove good citizens, being quiet, inoffensive, and par ticularly industrious. I once went into an eating- house, kept by one of these people, and was astonished at the neat arrangement and cleanliness of the place, the excellence of the table, and moderate charges. It was styled the 4 Canton Restaurant ;' and so thoroughly Chinese was it in its appointments, and in the manner of service, that one might have easily fancied one's HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 101 self in the heart of the Celestial Empire. The bar keeper — though he spoke excellent English — was a Chinese, as were also the attendants. Every article that was sold, even of the most trifling kind, was set down, in Chinese characters, as it was disposed of; it being the duty of one of the waiters to attend to this department. This he did very cleverly and quickly, having a sheet of paper for the purpose, on which the article and the price were noted down in Chinese characters, by means of a long, thin brush, moistened in a solution of Indian or Chinese ink. As I had always been given to understand that these people were of dirty habits, I feel it only right to state that I was delighted with the cleanliness of this place, and am gratified to be able to bear testimony to the injustice of such a sweeping assertion. "As for the French, they seemed entirely out of their element in this Yankee town ; and this circum stance is not to be wondered at, when the climate and the habits of the people are taken into consideration, and also the strange deficiencies they must have observed in the ordinary intercourse of life between the citizens, so different from the polished address, common even amongst the peasantry in their rudest villages ; to say nothing of the difficulty of carrying on business amongst a people whose language they did not understand. But their universal goal was the mines ; and to the mines they went, with very few exceptions. " Speaking of them reminds me of a ' CafS Restau rant, in San Francisco, kept by a very civil French man, and situated on the way to the Point. I mention it, because I one day made here the most uncomfort able repast it had ever been my lot to sit down to. 9* 102 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Yet this was not owing to any lack of attention on the part of the proprietor, to any inferiority in the quality of his provisions, or to any deficiency of culinary skill in their preparation ; but simply to the prevalence of the pest to which I have already alluded as invading my own tent, namely, the dust. The house was built chiefly of wood, and had a canvas roof, but this was insufficient to keep out the impalpable particles with which the air was charged, and which settled upon and insinuated themselves into every article in the place. There was dust on the counter, on the shelves, on the seats, on the decanters, and in them ; on the tables, in the salt, on my beef-steak, and in my cofiee. There was dust on the polite landlord's cheeks, and in his amiable wife's eyes, which she was wiping with the corner of a dusty apron. I hurried my meal, and was paying my score, when I caught sight of my own face in a dusty-looking and dust-covered glass near the bar, and saw that I too had become covered with it, rny entire person being literally encrusted with a coat of powder, from which I experienced considerable difficulty in cleansing myself. " Notwithstanding all I had seen of San Francisco, there yet existed here a world apart, that I should never have dreamed of, but for my being one day called upon to act upon a jury appointed to sit in inquest over a person who had died there. This place was called the ' Happy Valley.' " Previously to our repairing thither, we attended at the court-house, to take the usual oath. Proceed ing then through the lower part of the town, we reached the beach, along which, by the water-side, we walked for a distance of three miles — up to our ancles in mud and sand — until we came to a spot where there i • — ^_J HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 103 •were innumerable tents pitched, of all sizes, forms, and descriptions, forming an irregular line stretching along the shore for about two miles. " The ground was, of course, low, damp, and muddy ; and the niost-unmistakeable evidences of discomfort, misery, and sickness, met our view on every side, for the locality was one of the unwholesomest in the vicinity of the town. Yet here, to avoid the payment of enormous ground-rents, and at the same time to combine the ad vantage of cheap living, were encamped the major portion of the most recently arrived emi grants, and, amongst the rest, those of the ship Brooklyn, on one of the passengers of which the in quest was about to be held. "This, then, was the 'Happy Valley ;' a term no doubt applied to it in derision, taking into considera tion the squalor, the discomfort, the filth, the misery, and the distress that were rife there. "I am satisfied that much of the crime and lawless ness that is prevalent in California — particularly in towns like San Francisco, where the ruder sex are congregated exclusively and in large multitudes — is attributable to the want of the humanizing presence of women. In San Francisco there were about ten thousand males, and scarcely a hundred females ; for, although in many parts of California the latter out number the former, the national prejudice against color was too strong for legitimate amalgamation to take place." Such was San Francisco soon after the discovery of the riches of the Sacramento region. From an insignificant settlement, sometimes the resort of whaling-vessels, and of a few traders, it was quickly transferred into a city, with an extensive and con- 104 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. stantly increasing commerce. In its streets and squares, erected where, just before, was a desert plain, people of almost every nation were seen busily engaged in traffic, or preparing for departure to the gold region. It seemed the work of the enchanter. Although, like San Francisco, Monterey was almost deserted by its inhabitants upon the receipt of informa tion of the gold discovery, it soon began to give signs of improvement. The bay, upon the shore of which the town is located, is more exposed to the swell of the sea, and to the north-west storms, than the Bay of San Francisco, and therefore the harbor is inferior. Yet Monterey received a considerable share of the tide of emigration. Those who stopped there were gener ally persons who intended to make a permanent settlement, and engage in mercantile pursuits ; and, therefore, though the increase of the town was not so rapid as that of San Francisco, it carried with it more denotements of stability. The town is situated on a short bend near the en trance of the bay, upon its southern side. The point of land which partly protects its harbor from the sea is called Point Pinos. A very neat and pretty appear ance is presented by the houses of the native Califor- nians, which are generally constructed of adobes and white-plastered. Those of the Americans are easily distinguished by their being built of logs and planks, and presenting a more substantial, but rougher appear ance. The town is surrounded by hills, covered with lofty pine trees. Upon a height which overlooks the town and harbor, a fort was built by the Americans during the war with Mexico, and a military force con tinued there till after the treaty of peace. The country in the neighborhood of Monterey is HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 105 fertile, and yields ample reward to the agriculturist. There would, therefore, be no lack of supplies of pro visions, but for the indolence of the Californians, owning the different ranches in the surrounding coun try. From this cause, great scarcity of provisions of all kinds is often the result. Notwithstanding the additions made by Yankee enterprise and innovation, the general manners and customs of the inhabitants of Monterey retain all their old Spanish character ; and some of the customs of the natives, particularly their amusements, are heartily joined in by the more susceptible of the new-comers. The fandango and the serenade with the guitar, still hold their sway as freely and as undisturbed as in old Spain. The win ters are severely felt here. The rain causes torrents of water to pour down from the hills in the rear of the town, deluging the principal streets, and rendering their passage almost impossible. During this period, the only resort of the inhabitants for passing away the time is the vice of gambling, in which they early become adepts. This gambling propensity, noticed among the Californians, induced a considerable num ber of the initiated to emigrate from the United States, and Monterey received a goodly proportion of them. Such an increase of the population, however, could not be considered desirable. Upon the whole, though in a less degree, the effect of the golden attractions of California could be seen at Monterey as at San Fran-cisco. Though it did not spring at once from a small settlement to a large city, it was considerably improved, and in 1849, it numbered more than a thousand inhabitants. A short distance south of Monterey, is the town of Santa Barbara. Its situation is one of the most 106 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. beautiful in California. It is built upon a plain ten miles in extent. In front is a broad bay, having a smooth beach of nearly thirty miles in extent. On the right, towards the water, is a lofty eminence rising nearly a thousand feet. Directly back of the town is a range of almost impassable hills, running in a diago nal direction. There is no harbor in the bay, and vessels are obliged to anchor in an open roadstead; and when the south-east winds prevail, they are in constant peril. The progress of the town was not much affected by the gold mania. But though it offers no attractions for mercantile or gold digging purposes, it has others which will, no doubt, make it a favorite place of resi dence. In 1849, it contained about one hundred and fifty houses, built of adobes, and all one story in height. The town is celebrated for being the residence of the aristocracy of California, and for its beautiful women. Its inhabitants are principally rancheros, who visit their ranches two or three times in a year to see to the marking and killing of their cattle, and then spend the remainder of the year in the town, enjoying life as much as possible. Indolence is the general vice. A horse to ride, plenty to eat, and cigaros to smoke constitute their summum bonum. Santa Barbara is more celebrated for its fandangos than any other town on the coast. These are open to all coiners, and constitute the general pastime of an even ing. The climate is mild and spring-like, and, inde pendent of the attractions in the town, the surrounding country offers many of the most beautiful rides in California. About a mile in the rear of the town, at the top of a gentle slope, is the mission of Santa Barbara, with its old, white walls and cross-mounted HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 107 spires. The presiding priest of California resides there, and a number of the converted Indians still remain and cultivate the surrounding soil. The mis sion is in a better condition than any other in the country. Ciudad de los Angeles, or the City of the Angels, is situated a hundred and ten miles south of Santa Barbara, at the end of an immense plain, extending from the city twenty-five miles, to San Pedro, its port. This is the garden spot of California. Before the discovery of the gold mines, the City of the Angels was the largest town in the country. It contains about two thousand inhabitants, most of whom are wealthy rancJieros, who dwell there to cultivate the grape. As in all the towns of California, the houses are con structed of adobes and covered with asphaltum, which is found in great quantities near the town. The northern section is laid out in streets, and is occupied by the trading citizens ; the southern section is made up of gardens, vinyards and orchards, which are made extremely productive by irrigating the soil with the water of a large stream running through them. Many acres of ground are covered with vines, which, being trimmed every year, are kept about six feet in height. In the fall of the year, these vines arc burdened with rich clusters of grapes ; and, in addition to these, great quantities of fruit of various kinds arc raised. The surrounding country abounds with game of all kinds. In the rainy season, millions of ducks and geese cover the plains between Los Angeles and San Pedro, while the neighboring hills abound with quails, doer, elk, and antelope. The vineyards produce such quantities of grapes, that many thousand barrels of v.lne and aguardiente — the brandy of the country — 108 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. are annually manufactured. The wine is of various kinds ; some of it being equal to the best produced in Europe.* The inhabitants of the City of the Angels, being generally of the wealthy class of Californians, have always strongly adhered to the institutions of Mexico. They offered the most strenuous resistance to the American forces at the time of the conquest of Cali fornia, but were vanquished in two battles, and the city taken. All the customs and amusements peculiar to the Spaniards and the countries which they colo nized, are here in full vogue. Music, dancing, sing ing, slaughtering cattle, or gambling, are the usual pastimes of the inhabitants. Yet, with these trifling occupations, attachment to the Roman Catholic church and a careful observance of its ceremonies, is charac teristic of all. Upon the tolling of the bell, gaming, swearing, dancing — every thing is stopped while the prescribed prayer is muttered, and then all go on as before. Though Los Angeles did not experience any increase of population consequent upon the flood of emigration to California, its delightful climate and its fertile soil are gradually procuring it such consideration as will doubtless lead to the filling up of the surrounding country. San Diego is the most southern town of Upper California. It is situated on the coast, three miles north of the line separating Upper and Lower Califor nia. The harbor is inferior only to that of San Fran cisco. It is perfectly sheltered by land from the gales at all seasons of the year. Vessels can lie within a cable's length of the beach, there being no surf run ning upon it. The town is situated about three miles HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 109 from the beach, and is about the same size as Santa Barbara. It is a place of far greater facilities and promise, however, than the last mentioned town. San Diego has always been the most important depot for hides, upon the coast ; and there is no doubt that an extensive inland trade will be carried on between it and the towns in the interior, as the region of the Colorado and the Gila becomes settled. Since the conquest of Upper California and the discovery of the gold, the progress of the town has been rapid. From being an inconsiderable settlement sustained princi pally by a mission, which had early been established there, it has become a town of great commercial promise. The climate being mild and pleasant, and the surrounding country abounding in game and adapted for grazing, thus making provisions abundant, San Diego is a very desirable place of residence. The town of San Josd is situated in a fertile valley,, near the most southern extremity of the Bay of San Francisco. On the south of the town runs a small stream, and the place is surrounded by plains, afford ing fine pasturage. Being situated on the direct route from the southern ports to the gold mines, San Jose' received a considerable stimulus from their dis covery. A profitable trade was soon established, and the town improved very rapidly. It is now a town of about four thousand inhabitants, and the increase still continues rapid. In a greater degree than any of tho older towns of California, it has all the evidence of a thriving and progressive place. The greater part of the buildings are constructed in a style which shows the inroads of the taste of the people from the Atlantic States. A number of Mormons settled here at an early period, and built a great many neat wooden 10 110 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. houses and cottages, which contrast favorably with the heavy old adobes residences of the native inhabit ants. Flour and saw-mills have been erected, but the scarcity of water is severely felt by their pro prietors. San Jose* in respect to climate and general abun dance of 'the necessaries and luxuries of life, is one of the most desirable places of residence in California. Though situated a short distance inland, and thus deprived of the facilities wiiich contributed to the rapid growth of San Francisco, the fertile plain sur rounding it, and the increase of the inland trade and travel will draw to the town and its neighborhood a thriving, business population. /The old mission of San Josd is situated about ten miles from the town. The establishment and the grounds belonging to it are in a state of decay. The population there is about three hundred in number, most of whom are Indians, and all of them in a degraded condition. The emigration to the gold region caused many towns to spring up, as if by magic, in its neighborhood, and on the route to it from San Francisco. These were principally the stopping places of the gold-seekers, or the seat of a trade in provisions and articles manu factured in the States and transported thither. Some of these towns have become of a size sufficient to war rant the assertion that they will soon rival the cities of the Atlantic coast of the United States. The pro gress of these places is aided by the enormous price of real estate in San Francisco. One of the most promising of the new town 3 is called Benicia. It is situated on the Strait of Carquinez, thirty-live miles north of San Francisco. The strait forms the entrance of Suisan into Pablo Bay. The HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Ill site of Benicia is a gentle slope, which, descending to the water, becomes almost a plain. Vessels of the first class can lie at anchor at its bank, and discharge their cargoes, and the harbor is safe from violent winds. The town has been made the head-quarters of the Pacific division of the United States army, and a site for a navy-yard has been selected by Commodore Jones. The marks of governmental favor show in what estima tion the position of Benicia is held. The town was laid out in 1848, by Robert Semple and Thomas 0; Larkin. Early in 1850, lots were selling at very high rates, and the population numbered more than a thousand persons. Between Benicia and Sacramento city, several towns have been laid out, all in very favorable positions. The principal are — Martinez, on the southern shore of the strait of Carquinez, nearly opposite Benicia ; New York of the Pacific, at the junction of the River San Joaquin with the Bay of Suisan; Suisan, on the west bank of the Sacramento, at a distance of eighty miles from San Francisco. Next to San Francisco, Sacramento is the largest city in California. It is situated on the eastern bank of the Sacramento River, one hundred miles from San Francisco, and sixty-five from Suisan Bay. It is located on a beautiful plain, which is not elevated more than ten or twelve feet above the river at low water. This being insufficient to protect it from the rise of the waters of the river, several disastrous floods have occurred during the existence of the city. Up to this point, the river is navigable for large class steamers. Ships drawing not more than twelve feet of water may go up that far at all seasons ; and, besides these commercial advantages, Sacramento is the natural f 112 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. trading depot for the richest portion of the mining regions. Where the city of Sacramento now stands, at the time of the gold discovery, there stood, " solitary and alone," a small fort. This formed the nucleus, about which, at the commencement of the rush of emigra tion, the town soon sprang into existence. Its increase has been almost as rapid as that of San Francisco. During the rainy season of the early part of 1850, the population numbered somewhere between twenty and thirty thousand. But at that poriod, a consider able portion of the gold-diggers made Sacramento and the other towns in the neighborhood of the mines, their resort, to escape the severity of spending the season at the open and exposed valleys of the gold region. The city is regularly laid out, but its appear ance evidences the rapidity of its erection. The greater number of the houses and stores in the neigh borhood of the river are constructed of wood, while the outskirts, particularly upon the south, are occupied by the tents of the constantly-arriving overland emi grants. Before the commencement of the last rainy season, the number of these emigrants reached two or three thousand. They squatted upon the vacant lots which had been surveyed and sold to other persons. This caused a considerable agitation in the town, which continued till the disastrous flood swept both the par ties off the ground, and thus left the field clear for another commencement. Sacramento is the grand receptacle of the overland emigration, and this, com bined with its commercial facilities, will continue to give the city a superiority over the majority of the other places in California. Adjoining Sacramento city, is the town of Sutter. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. as 113 It is situated on the highest and healthiest ground on the river. It is not, like Sacramento, subject to an annual overflow. The town was originally laid out by Captain Sutter and others ; and is owned by Hon. John McDougall, Lieutenant-Governor of California, and Captain Sutter. It has a thriving business popula tion, and its position, and the fertility of the neigh boring country will soon make it a place of import ance. Stockton is to the southern portion of the gold region what Sacramento is to the northern. It is situated upon a slough, or a succession of sloughs, con taining the back waters formed by the junction of the San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers. It is about fifty miles from the mouth of the San Joaquin, and one hundred from San Francisco. The ground upon which it is situated is high and is not subject to over flow. Vessels drawing nine feet water can ascend the San Joaquin as far as Stockton, and discharge their cargoes on the bank. In the latter part of 1848, the town was laid out and a frame building erected by Charles M. Weber. In eight months from that time, it contained a population of about two thousand per manent residents, and a large number of temporary residents, on their road to the mines. Communication is with San Francisco by means of steamboats and launches, and the commerce of the town is constantly increasing. Other towns exist — on paper — in the neighborhood of San Francisco and the gold region, and, doubtless, they will, in the course of time, become settled by a thriving, go-ahead population from the Atlantic States. Land speculation in California is as profitable a business as gold-digging — and less toilsome. Many of 10* 114 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the shrewd ones, who early took advantage of this " tide in the affairs of men," have already reached the goal of their hopes, an independent fortune. Those who saw how things would turn out, and purchased land in the neighborhood of the region which promised to receive the principal current of the emigration to California, found themselves wealthy in the short space of a few months. The great influx of emigrants to Upper California has brought the subject of the settlement of the penin sula into consideration. There is but little doubt that Lower California will, sooner or later, become the property of the United States, and then its settlement and progress will be rapid. The coast upon the gulf affords many excellent harbors, and the mountainous region of the interior gives abundant evidence of mineral wealth, as far as it has been explored. Several silver mines have been opened in different places, the principal of which are at San Antonio, between La Paz and Cape San Lucas. Near Loretto, the first settlement in California, extensive copper mines have been opened, and lead and iron abound in all direc tions. The pearl fishery of the gulf has already yielded an enormous wealth, having been prosecuted from the time of the discovery of the peninsula. The fishing season lasts from May till November, and more than a hundred vessels are yearly engaged in the business. These resources, despite the general unfitness of the country for agricultural purposes, will soon attract their full share of consideration, and cause an influx of emigrants and adventurers from the United States and other countries. Some portions of the country are susceptible of irrigation, and might thus be rendered fit for cultivation. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 115 The principal port of Lower California is La Paz, situated near the mouth of the gulf. The bay on the shore of which the town is located, is of great extent and beauty, and possesses a large number of rich pearl oyster-beds — the pearl fishery having at one time supplied the chief article of traffic on this part of the coast. The country around the bay is elevated and picturesque, though rugged; the soil being com posed principally of rock and sand, wildly and irre gularly covered with the most prickly species of stunted bushes and shrubs of sunburnt hue. The town of La Paz is neatly built and presents a pretty appearance. The streets are lined with willow trees, and these meeting overhead, form a delicious shade during the heat of the day. The houses are all con structed of adobes, plastered white, and thatched with the leaves of the palm tree. The beach is lined with palms, cocoa-nut, fig and tamarind trees. La Paz was taken by the American volunteers during the war with Mexico, and considerable destruction of the orchards, gardens and houses of the town was the consequence. The harbor offers great advantages for a naval station, and such, doubtless, it will become. San Jose*, the most southern town of Lower Cali fornia, is situated about half-way between Cape San Lucas and Cape Palmo, on a sort of desert plain, extending from the beautiful valley of San Josd to the ocean. It is located about three miles from the beach, and is one of the strangest creations in the shape of a town imaginable. The heavy rains and freshets which occur in the wet season, in this region, render every elevation in valuable as a preservative against the dangers of sud den inundations ; hence all the houses are built upon 116 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. steeps, rocks, and hillocks, necessarily irrespective of order ; so that, even in the most densely populated districts, barren hills, as yet unoccupied by dwellings, are frequently to be met with, with deep hollows in every part, converting mere visits into positive enter prises, in most instances both tedious and disagreeable. To these great natural disadvantages, the indolence of the inhabitants has added others, their common practice being to dig for adobe clay at the nearest convenient spot, namely, for the most part, opposite their own doors ; thus, one would imagine that the site of the whole town had been visited and disturbed by a succession of miniature earthquakes, which, whilst they had left the houses themselves unshaken, had heaved and perched them up in the most uncomfort able positions, and in the most inaccessible places. In the very centre of the principal street, which appears to have once upon a time been level, are three or four immense clay-pits, serving as a receptacle for dead dogs, cats, bones, vegetable refuse, and, in a word, every description of rubbish and nuisance a very dirty population can convey to or discharge in them. But a description of the town would be incomplete without adding that it is dotted about in these hollows, and in the sand-holes in the rocks, with patches of thorn, brush, and cacti, forming a singular yet refresh ing contrast with the general barrenness of the region itself, the whole being surrounded by a bleak moun tainous range, which increases in elevation until it blends with the clear sky, far in the distance. The principal, indeed the only regular street in the town, is wide and long, the houses being con structed of adobes and cane, thatched with palm leaves. It is blocked up at the remoter end by the fort, which HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 117 stands upon a wide foundation of rock of considerable elevation ; various portions of the adobS walls con necting the crags having been pierced, so as to allow artillery to be trained through the embrasures, whilst, in other parts, there are numerous loop-holes for musketry. There are some very awkward cavities amongst these rocks, produced by digging for clay for the adobe work. The fort is flat-roofed and para- petted, having portholes for cannon; and below, in the very centre of the building, occupying about a third of its entire length, runs a thick wall, forming a cres cent, well mounted with heavy guns. At the end of this crescent, between it and the front wall, is the entrance to the fort — a mere aperture, barely wide enough to allow of one man's passing in. These defences proved to be of great advantage to a small party of Americans that landed at San Jose*, during the war between the United States and Mexico, and were compelled to take shelter in the old quartel, or barracks. There they were surrounded by the Californians, and stood a siege of several weeks', Buffering incredible hardships. The population of San Jose" numbers about three thousand, the majority being semi-Indians, or the pure descendants of the Mexicans. There is little promise of any considerable increase in the size of the town, owing to the natural disadvan tages of situation. The other towns of Lower California are — San Antonio, in the neighborhood of an extensive silver mine, which has been worked for a long time with considerable profit ; Loreto, on the gulf coast, about two hundred miles north of La Paz ; San Domingo and Todos Santos, on the Pacific coast. The latter town is situated on the bay of the same name, and is 118 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the most northerly part of Lower California. The church and mission buildings at this place are the largest and most imposing structures of the kind in Lower California. The church has a handsome front and a lofty steeple. The mission is the residence of the head of the church in Lower California. There is every reason to believe, that, when the richer por tions of Upper California begin to get a little crowded, the tide of emigration will be turned to the south, and the ports of the peninsula will become of great com mercial importance. Then, if not before, the country will become the property of the United States, either by way of purchase, or after the manner of Texas. CHAPTER IX. THE FORMATION OF A STATE GOVERNMENT. THE state of things which induced the people of California to form a state government deserves to be fully set forth. Their condition was without prece dent in history ; and from a statement of that condi tion, it will be seen that the framing of a constitution and the organization of a state government was the only resource of the Californians. The representations of the report of Thomas Butler King to the govern ment of the United States will not be contradicted, and these we insert. " The discovery of the gold mines had attracted a very large number of citizens of the United States to HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 119 to that territory, who had never been accustomed to any other than American law, administered by Ameri can courts. There they found their rights of property and person subject to the uncertain, and frequently most oppressive, operation of. laws written in a lan guage they did not understand, and founded on prin ciples, in many respects, new to them. They complained that the alcaldes, or judges, most of whom had been appointed or elected before the immigration had com menced, were not lawyers by education or profession ; and, being Americans, they were, of course, unac quainted with the laws of Mexico, or the principles of the civil law on which they are founded. "As our own laws, except for the collection of revenue, the transmission of the mails, and establish ment of postoffices, had not been extended over that territory, the laws of Mexico, as they existed at thp conclusion of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, regu lating the relations of the inhabitants of California with each other, necessarily remained in force ;* yet, there was not a single volume containing those laws, as far as I know or believe, in the whole territory, except, perhaps, in the governor's office at Monterey. " The magistrates, therefore, could not procure them, and the administration of justice was, neces sarily, as unequal and fluctuating as the opinions of the judges were conflicting and variable. "There were no fee-bills to regulate costs; and, consequently, the most cruel exactions, in many in stances, were practised. " The greatest confusion prevailed respecting titles to property, and the decision of suits involving the * See American Insurance Company, et al. vs. Canter, 1st Peters' Supreme Court Reports, 542. 120 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. most important rights, and very large sums of money depended upon the dictum of the judge. " The sale of the territory by Mexico to the United States had necessarily cut off or dissolved the laws regulating the granting or procuring titles to land ; and, as our own land-laws had not been extended over it, the people were compelled to receive such titles as were offered to them, without the means of ascertain ing whether they were valid or not. " Litigation was so expensive and precarious that injustice and oppression were frequently endured, rather than resort to so uncertain a remedy. " Towns and cities were springing into existence ; many of them without charters or any legal right to organize municipal authorities, or to tax property or the citizens for the establishment of a police, the erection of prisons, or providing any of those means for the protection of life and property which are so necessary in all civil communities, and especially among a people mostly strangers to each other. " Nearly one million and a half of dollars had been paid into the custom-house, as duties on imported goods, before our revenue laws had been extended over the country; and the people complained bitterly that they were thus heavily taxed without being pro vided with a government for their protection, or laws which they could understand, or allowed the right to be represented in the councils of the nation. " While anxiously waiting the action of Congress, oppressed and embarrassed by this state of affairs, and feeling the pressing necessity of applying such reme dies as were in their power, and circumstances seemed to justify, they resolved to substitute laws of their own HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 121 for the existing system, and to establish tribunals for their proper and faithful administration. "In obedience, therefore, to the extraordinary exigencies of their condition, the people of the city of San Francisco elected members to form a legislature, and clothed them with full powers to pass laws. " The communities of Sonoma and of Sacramento city followed the example. " Thus were three legislative bodies organized ; the two most distant being only one hundred and thirty miles apart. " Other movements of the kind were threatened, and doubtless would have followed, in other sections of the territory, had they not been arrested by the formation of a State government. " While the people of California were looking to Congress for a territorial government, it was quite evident that such an organization was daily becoming less suited to their condition, which was entirely differ ent from that of any of the territories out of which the new States of the Union had been formed. " Those territories had been at first slowly and sparsely peopled by a few hunters and farmers, who penetrated the wilderness, or traversed the prairies, in search of game or a new home ; and, when thus gradually their population warranted it, a government was provided for them. They, however, had no foreign commerce, nor any thing beyond the ordinary pursuits of agriculture, and the various branches of business which usually accompany it, to induce immigration within their borders. Several years were required to give them sufficient population and wealth to place them in a condition to require, or enable them to sup port, a State government. 11 122 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. "Not so with California. The discovery of the vast metallic and mineral wealth in her mountains had, already attracted to her, in the space of twelve months, more than one hundred thousand people. An exten sive commerce had sprung up with China, the ports of Mexico on the Pacific, Chilij and Australia. " Hundreds of vessels from the Atlantic ports of the Union, freighted with our manufactures and agricultural products, and filled with our fellow-citi zens, had arrived, or were on their passage round Cape Horn ; so that, in the month of June last, (1849) there were more than three hundred sea-going vessels in the port of San Francisco. " California has a border on the Pacific of ten de grees of latitude, and several important harbors which have never been surveyed; nor is there a buoy, a beacon, a lighthouse, or a fortification, on the whole coast. " There are no docks for the repair of national or mercantile vessels nearer than New York, a distance of some twenty thousand miles round Cape Horn. " All these things, together with the proper regula tions for the gold region, the quicksilver mines, the survey and disposition of the public lands, the adjust ment of land titles, the establishment of a mint and of marine hospitals, required the immediate formation of a more perfect civil government than California then had, and the fostering care of Congress and the Executive. " California had, as it were by magic, become a State of great wealth and power. One short year had given her a commercial importance but little inferior to that of the most powerful of the old States. She had passed her minority at a single bound, and HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 123 might justly be regarded as fully entitled to take her place as an equal among her sisters of the Union* " When, therefore, the reality became known to the people of that territory that the government had done nothing to relieve them from the evils and embarrass ments under which they were suffering, and seeing no probability of any change on the subject which divided Congress, they adopted, with most unexampled una nimity and promptitude, the only course which lay open to them — the immediate formation of a State government. " They were induced to take this atep not only for the reason that it promised the most speedy remedy for present difficulties, but because the great and rapidly growing interests of the territory demanded it ; and all reflecting men saw, at a glance, that it ought not to be any longer, and could not, under any circumstances, be much longer postponed. " They not only considered themselves best qualified, but that they had the right to decide, as far as they were concerned, the embarrassing question which was shaking the Union to its centre, and had thus far deprived them of a regularly organized civil govern ment. They believed that, in forming a constitution, they had a right to establish or prohibit slavery, and that, in their action as a State, they would be sustained by the North and the South. " In taking this step, they proceeded with all the regularity which has ever characterized the American people in discharging the great and important duties of self-government. " The steamer in which I was a passenger did not etop at Monterey ; I therefore did not see General Riley, nor had I any communication with him until 10 124 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. about the middle of the month, when he came to San Francisco. A few days after my arrival, his procla mation calling a Convention to form a State constitu tion, dated the third of June, was received. "The people acted in compliance with what they believed to be the views of Congress, and conformably to the recommendations of the proclamation ; and pro ceeded, on the day appointed, to elect members to a Convention for the purpose of forming a constitution, to be regularly submitted to the people for their ratifi cation or rejection, and, if approved, to be presented to Congress, with a prayer for the admission of Cali fornia, as a State, into the Union." According to the recommendation of General Riley, the civil governor of California, an election of delegates to form a Convention was held on the 1st of August, 1849. The number of delegates to be elected was thirty-seven. General Riley, General Smith, and Thomas Butler King, used every means to stimulate the people to hold the preparatory meetings, and they were generally successful. But in some districts scarcely any move was made until a few days before the election. In one or two instances, the election was not held upon the day appointed ; but the Con vention nevertheless admitted the delegates elected in such cases. The Convention was to meet on the 1st of Septem ber, at Monterey ; but it did not get regularly organ ized until the 4th of that month, when Dr. Robert Semple, of the Sonoma district, was chosen president. The proportion of the native Californian members to the American was about equal to that of the popula tion. Among the members was Captain John Sutter, the pioneer settler of California, General Yalleja and HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 125 Antonio Pico, who had both been distinguished men in California, before the conquest. The body, as a whole, commanded respect, as being dignified and intellectual. The Declaration of Rights was the first measure adopted by the Convention. Its sections being general and liberal in their character, were nearly all adopted by a unanimous vote. The clause prohibiting the existence of slavery was the unanimous sentiment of the Convention. The Constitution will be found in another part of this work, and we will not here recapitu late its provisions. It combines the best features of the Constitutions of the States east of the Rocky Moun tains, and is in most respects similar to that of the State of New York. The most exciting questions discussed were, a clause prohibiting the entrance of free people of color into the State, the boundary line, and the great seal of the State. The first, the clause prohibiting the entrance of free people of color into the State, passed first reading, but was subsequently rejected by a large majority. The question of suffrage occa sioned some discussion, widely differing opinions being entertained by the members. An article was adopted by the Convention, excluding Indians and negroes, with their descendants, from the privilege of voting; but it was subsequently modified by a proviso, which gave the Legislature power of admitting Indians, :>r the descendants of Indians to the right of suffrage by a two-thirds concurrent vote. Under this provi sion, some of the most wealthy and influential Califor- nians are excluded from voting until permitted by the Legislature. The boundary question, which came up towards the 11* 126 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. close of the Convention, was the most exciting theme. The point of dispute was the eastern boundary line. The Pacific formed the natural boundary on the west ; the parallel of 42 degrees, the boundary on the north, and the Mexican line, run in conformity with the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the boundary on the south. The discussion, reconsideration and voting upon the various propositions occupied nearly two days. Finally, the line detailed in the Constitution was adopted. The discussion upon the adoption of the Great Seal for the State was amusing. Eight or ten designs were offered, and the members from the different districts were all anxious to have their particular district repre sented. The choice finally fell upon one offered by a Major Garnett. The principal figure is Minerva, with spear and shield, emblematic of the manner in which California was born, full-grown, into the confederacy. At her feet crouches the grizzly bear. Before him is the wheat-sheaf and vine, illustrating the agricultural products of the country. Near them is the miner, with his implements. In the distance is the Bay of San Francisco, and beyond that, the Sierra Nevada, over which appears the word " Eureka." The closing scenes of the Convention are described in graphic and vivid colors by one who was an eye-witness to them, and recorded them upon the spot.* " The members met this morning at the usual hour, to perform the last duty that remained to them — that of signing the Constitution. They were all in the happiest humor, and the morning was so bright and balmy that no one seemed disposed to call an organi- • Bayard Taylor, El Dorado, or Adventures in the Path of Empire. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 127 zation. Mr. Semple was sick, and Mr. Steuart, of San Francisco, therefore called the meeting to order by moving Captain Slitter's appointment in his place. The chair was taken by the old pioneer, and the mem bers took their seats around the sides of the hall, which still retained the pine-trees and banners, left from last night's decorations. The windows and doors were open, and a delightful breeze came in from the bay, whose blue waters sparkled in the distance. The view from the balcony in front was bright and inspiring. The town below — the shipping in the harbor — the pine-covered hills behind — were mellowed by the blue October haze, but there was no cloud in the sky, and I could plainly see, on the northern horizon, the mountains of Santa Cruz and the Sierra de Gavilan. " After the minutes had been read, the Committee appointed to draw up an Address to the people of California, was called upon to report, and Mr. Steuart, Chairman, read the Address. Its tone and sentiment met with universal approval, and it was adopted with out a dissenting voice. A resolution was then offered to pay Lieutenant Hamilton, who is now engaged in engrossing the Constitution upon parchment, the sum of $500 for his labor. This magnificent price, proba bly the highest ever paid for a similar service, is on a par with all things else in California. As this was their last session, the members were not disposed to find fault with it, especially when it was stated by one of them that Lieutenant Hamilton had written day and night to have it ready, and was still working upon it, though with a lame and swollen hand. The sheet for the signer's names was ready, and the Con vention decided to adjourn for half an hour and then meet for the purpose of signing. 128 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. "I amused myself during the interval bj walking about the town. Every body knew that the Conven tion was about closing, and it was generally under stood that Captain Burton had loaded the guns at the fort, and would fire a salute of thirty-one guns at the proper moment. The citizens, therefore, as well as the members, were in an excited mood. Monterey never before looked so bright, so happy, so full of pleasant expectation. " About one o'clock the Convention met again ; few of the members, indeed, had left the hall. Mr. Sem- ple, though in feeble health, called them to order, and, after having voted General Riley a salary of $10,000, and Mr. Halleck, Secretary of State, $6000 a year, from the commencement of their respective offices, they proceeded to affix their names to the completed Constitution. At this moment a signal was given ; the American colors ran up the flag-staff in front of the government buildings, and streamed out on the air. A second afterward the first gun boomed from the fort, and its stirring echoes came back from one hill after another, till they were lost in the distance. "All the native enthusiasm of Captain Sutter's Swiss blood was aroused ; he was the old soldier again. He sprang from his seat, and, waving his hand around his head, as if swinging a sword, exclaimed ; ' Gentle men, this is the happiest day of my life. It makes me glad to hear those cannon : they remind me of the time when I was a soldier. Yes, I am glad to hear them — this is a great day for California !' Then, recollecting himself, he sat down, the tears streaming from his eyes. The members with one accord, gave three tumultuous cheers, which were heard from one end of the town to the other, As the signing went HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 129 on, gun followed gun from the fort, the echoes rever berating grandly around the bay, till finally, as the loud ring of the thirty-first was heard, there was a shout : ' That's for California !' and every one joined in giving three times three for the new star added to our Confederation. " There was one handsome act I must not omit to mention. The captain of the English bark Volunteer, of Sidney, Australia, lying in the harbor, sent on shore in the morning for an American flag. When the first gun was heard, a line of colors ran fluttering up to the spars, the stars and stripes flying triumphantly from the main-top. The compliment was the more marked, as some of the American vessels neglected to give any token of recognition to the event of the day. " The Constitution having been signed and the Con vention dissolved, the members proceeded in a body to the house of General Riley. The visit was evidently unexpected by the old veteran. When he made his appearance, Captain Sutter stepped forward, and having shaken him by the hand, drew himself into an erect attitude, raised one hand to his breast as if he were making a report to his commanding officer on the field of battle, and addressed him as follows : " l GENERAL : I have been appointed by the dele gates, elected by the people of California to form a Constitution, to address you in their names and in behalf of the whole people of California, and express the thanks of the Convention for the aid and coopera tion they have received from you in the discharge of the responsible duty of creating a State government. And, sir, the Convention, as you will perceive from the official records, duly appreciates the great and important services you have rendered to our common 130 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. country, and especially to the people of California, and entertains the confident belief that you will receive from the whole of the people of the United States, when you retire from your official duties here, that verdict so grateful to the heart of the patriot : < Well done, thou good and faithful servant.' " General Biley was visibly affected by this mark of respect, no less appropriate than well deserved on his part. The tears in his eyes, and the plain, blunt sincerity of his voice and manner, went to the heart of every one present. l Gentlemen,' he said, ( I never made a speech in my life. I am a soldier — but I can feel; and I do feel deeply the honor you have this day conferred upon me. Gentlemen, this is a prouder day to me than that on which my soldiers cheered me on the field of Contreras. I tha,nk you all from my heart. I am satisfied now that the people have done right in selecting delegates to frame a Con stitution. They have chosen a body of men upon whom our country may look with pride ; you have framed a Constitution worthy of California. And I have no fear for California while her people choose their representatives so wisely. Gentlemen, I con gratulate you upon the successful conclusion of your arduous labors ; and I wish you all happiness and prosperity.' " The General was here interrupted with three hearty cheers which the members gave him, as Governor of California, followed by three more, l as a gallant soldier, and worthy of his country's glory.' He then con cluded in the following words : * I have but one thing to add, gentlemen, and that is, that my success in the affairs of California is mainly owing to the efficient aid rendered me by Captain Halleck, the Secretary HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 131 of State. He has stood by me in all emergencies. To him I have always appealed when at a loss myself; and he has never failed me.' " This recognition of Captain Halleck's talents and the signal service he has rendered to our authorities here, since the conquest, was peculiarly just and appro priate. It was so felt by the members, and they responded with equal warmth of feeling by giving three enthusiastic cheers for the Secretary of State. They then took their leave, many of them being anxious to start this afternoon for their various places of resi dence. All were in a happy and satisfied mood, and none less so than the native members. Pedrorena declared that this was the most fortunate day in the history of California. Even Carillo, in the beginning one of our most zealous opponents, displayed a genuine zeal for the Constitution, which he helped to frame under the laws of our republic." The elections for the various officers under the new Constitution took place on the 13th of November, 1849. Peter II. Burnett was chosen Governor, and John McDougall, Lieutenant-Governor. George W. Wright and Edward Gilbert were chosen to fill the posts of representatives in Congress. The first State Legislature met at the capital, the pueblo de San Josd, on the 15th of December, and elected John C. Fremont and Wm. M. Gwin, Senators to Congress. Every branch of the civil government went at once into operation, and admission into the Union as a State seems all that is necessary to complete the settle ment of affairs in California. 132 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. CHAPTER X. POPULATION, CLIMATE, PRODUCTIONS, &C. WITH regard to the population, climate, soil, pro ductions, &c., we extract from Mr. King's Report, as giving the most reliable and complete information. " Humboldt, in his < Essay on New Spain,' states the population of Upper California, in 1802, to have consisted of Converted Indians, . . . 15,562 Other classes, .... 1,300 16,862 " Alexander Forbes, in his * History of Upper and Lower California,' published in London, in 1839, states the number of converted Indians in the former to have been, in 1831, . . . 18,683 Of all other classes, at ... 4,342 23,025 " He expresses the opinion that this number had not varied much up to 1885, and the probability is, there was very little increase in the white population until the emigrants from the United States began to enter the country in 1838. " They increased from year to year, so that, in 1846, Colonel Fremont had little difficulty in calling to his standard some five hundred fighting men. " At the close of the war with Mexico, it was sup posed that there were, including discharged volunteers, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 133 from ten to fifteen thousand Americans and Califor- nians, exclusive of converted Indians, in the territory. The immigration of American citizens in 1849, up to the 1st of January last, was estimated at eighty thou sand — of foreigners, twenty thousand. " The population of California may, therefore, be safely set down at 115,000 at the commencement of the present year. " It is quite impossible to form any thing like an accurate estimate of the number of Indians in the ter ritory. Since the commencement of the war, and especially since the discovery of gold in the mountains, their numbers at the missions, and in the valleys near the coast, have very much diminished. In fact, the whole race seems to be rapidly disappearing. " The remains of a vast number of villages in all the valleys of the Sierra Nevada, and among the foot hills of that range of mountains, show that at no dis tant day there must have been a numerous population, where there is not now an Indian to be seen. There are a few still retained in the service of the old Cali- fornians, but these do riot amount to more than a few thousand in the whole territory. It is said there are large numbers of them in the mountains and valleys about the head-waters of the San Joaquin, along the western base of the Sierra, and in the northern part of the territory, and that they are hostile. A number of Americans were killed by them during the last summer, in attempting to penetrate high up the rivers in search of gold ; they also drove one or two parties from Trinity River. They have, in several instances, attacked parties coming from or returning to Oregon, in the section of country which the lamented Captain Warner was examining when he was killed. 12 134 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. " It is quite impossible to form any estimate of the number of these mountain Indians. Some suppose there are as many as three hundred thousand in the territory, but I should not be inclined to believe that there can be one-third of that number. It is quite evident that they are hostile, and that they ought to be chastised for the murders already committed. " The small . bands with whom I met, scattered through the lower portions of the foot-hills of the Sierra, and in the valleys between them and the coast, seemed to be almost the lowest grade of human beings. They live chiefly on acorns, roots, insects, and the kernel of « the pine burr ; occasionally, they catch fish and game. They use the bow and arrow, but are said to be too lazy and effeminate to make successful hun ters. They do not appear to have the slightest incli nation to cultivate the soil, nor do they even attempt it — as far as I could obtain information — except when they are induced to enter the service of the white inhabitants. They have never pretended to hold any interest in the soil, nor have they been treated by the Spanish or American immigrants as possessing any. " The Mexican government never treated with them for the purchase of land, or the relinquishment of any claim to it whatever. They are lazy, idle to the last degree, and, although they are said to be willing to give their services to any one who will provide them with blankets, beef, and bread, it is with much diffi culty they can be made to perform labor enough to reward their employers for these very limited means of comfort. " Formerly, at the missions, those who were brought up and instructed by the priests mad[e very good ser vants. Many of these now attached to families seem HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 135 to be faithful and intelligent. But those who are at all in a wild and uncultivated state are most degraded objects of filth and idleness. " It is possible that government might, by collecting them together, teach them, in some degree, the arts and habits of civilization ; but, if we may judge of the future from the past, they will disappear from the face of the earth as the settlements of the whites extend •over the country. A very considerable military force will be necessary, however, to protect the emigrants in the northern and southern portions of the territory." So much for the population of California at the commencement of the present year, (1850.) By its close, it is highly probable, the number will reach two hundred thousand, exclusive of the Indians. Such a population, composed, for the most part, of those who are impregnated with the active, {Progressive spirit of the American people, will undoubtedly conduct Cali fornia to a brilliant position among the stars of the republic. With regard to the climate of the country, various conflicting statements have been promulgated, which arises from the visits of those who make the statements having been made to different portions of the country, and stating the climate of a portion as the climate of the whole. Mr. King's Report fur nishes the most accurate account of the changes of the temperature, and the state of the atmosphere throughout the year, together with an explanation of their causes. He says — " I come now to consider the climate. The climate of California is so remarkable in its periodical changes, and for the long continuance of the wet and dry sea sons, dividing, as they do, the year into about two two equal parts, which have a most peculiar influence 136 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. on the labor applied to agriculture and the products of the soil, and, in fact, connect themselves so insepa rably with all the interests of the country, that I deem it proper briefly to mention the causes which produce these changes, and which, it will be seen, as this report proceeds, must exercise a controlling influence on the commercial prosperity and resources of the country. "It is a well-established theory, that the currents of air under which the earth passes in its diurnal revolutions, follow the line of the sun's greatest attrac tion. These currents of air are drawn towards this line from great distances on each side of it ; and, as the earth revolves from west to east, they blow from, north-east and south-east, meeting, and, of course, causing a calm, on the line. " Thus, when the sun is directly, in common par lance, over the equator, in the month of March, these currents of air blow from some distance north of the Tropic of Cancer, and south of the Tropic of Capri corn, in an oblique direction towards this line of the sun's greatest attraction, and forming what are known as the north-east and south-east trade winds. " As the earth, in its path round the sun, gradually brings the line of attraction north, in summer, these currents of air are carried with it ; so that about the middle of May the current from the north-east has extended as far as the 38th or 39th degree of north latitude, and by the twentieth of JUDO, the period of the sun's greatest northern inclination, to the northern portions of California and the southern section of Oregon. " Those north-east winds, in their progress across the continent, towards the Pacific Ocean, pass over the snow-capped ridges of the Kocky Mountains and HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 1ST the Sierra Nevada, and are, of course, deprived of all the moisture which can be extracted from them by the low temperature of those regions of eternal snow, and consequently no moisture can be precipitated from them, in the form of dew or rain, in a higher tempera ture than that to which they have been subjected. They, therefore, pass over the hills and plains of California, where the temperature is very high in summer, in a very dry state ; and, so far from being charged with moisture, they absorb, like a sponge, all that the atmosphere and surface of the earth can yield, until both become, apparently, perfectly dry. " This process commences, as I have said, when the line of the sun's greatest attraction comes north in summer, bringing with it these vast atmospheric movements, and, on their approach, produce the dry season in California ; which, governed by these laws, continues until some time after the sun repasses the Equator in September, when, about the middle of November, the climate being relieved from these north east currents of air, the south-west winds set in from the ocean charged with moisture — the rains commence and continue to fall, not constantly, as some persons have represented, but with sufficient frequency to designate the period of their continuance, from about the middle of November until the middle of May, in the latitude of San Francisco, as the wet season. " It follows, as a matter of course, that the dry season commences first, and continues longest in the southern portions of the territory, and that the climate of the northern part is influenced in a much less degree, by the causes which I have mentioned, than any other section of the country. Consequently, we find that, as low down as latitude 39°, rains are suffi- 11 138 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. ciently frequent in summer to render irrigation quite unnecessary to the perfect maturity of any crop which is suited to the soil and climate. " There is an extensive ocean current of cold water, which comes from the northern regions of the Pacific, or, perhaps, from the Arctic, and flows along the coast of California. It comes charged with, and emits in its progress, cold air, which appears in the form of fog when it comes in contact with a higher tempera ture on the American coast, as the gulf-stream of the Atlantic exhales vapor when it meets, in any part of its progress, a lower temperature. This current has not been surveyed, and, therefore, its source, tempera ture, velocity, width, and course, have not been accu rately ascertained. " It is believed, by Lieutenant Maury, on what he considers sufficient evidence — and no higher authority can be cited — that this current comes from the coasts of China and Japan, flows northwardly to the penin sula of Kamtschatka, and, making a circuit to the eastward, strikes the American coast in about latitude 41° or 42°. It passes thence southwardly, and finally loses itself in the tropics. " Below latitude thirty-nine, and west of the foot hills of the Sierra Nevada, the forests of California are limited to some scattering groves of oak in the valleys and along the borders of the streams, and of red wood on the ridges and in the gorges of the hills — sometimes extending into the plains. Some of the hills are covered with dwarf shrubs, which may be used as fuel. With these exceptions, the whole territory presents a surface without trees or shrub bery. It is covered, however, with various species of grass, and, for many miles from the coast, with HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 139 wild oats, which, in the valleys, grow most luxuriantly. These grasses and oats mature and ripen early in the dry season, and soon cease to protect' the soil from the scorching rays of the sun. As the summer ad vances, the moisture in the atmosphere and the earth, to a considerable depth, soon becomes exhausted ; and the radiation of heat, from the extensive naked plains and hill-sides, is very great. " The cold, dry currents of air from the north-east, after passing the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada, descend to the Pacific, and absorb the moist ure of the atmosphere, to a great distance from the land. The cold air from the mountains, and that which accompanies the great ocean current from the north-west, thus become united ; and vast banks of fog are generated, which, when driven by the wind, has a penetrating, or cutting, effect on the human skin, much more uncomfortable than would be felt in the humid atmosphere of the Atlantic, at a much lower temperature. " As the sun rises from day to day, week after week, and month after month, in unclouded brightness dur ing the dry season, and pours down its unbroken rays on the dry, unprotected surface of the country, the heat becomes so much greater inland than it is on the ocean, that an under-current of cold air, bringing the fog with it, rushes over the coast range of hills, and through their numerous passes, towards the interior. "Every day, as the heat, inland, attains a sufficient temperature, the cold, dry wind from the ocean com mences to blow. This is usually from eleven to one o'clock ; and, as the day advances, the wind increases and continues to blow till late at night. When the vacuum is filled, or the equilibrium of the atmosphere 140 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. restored, the wind ceases ; a perfect calm prevails until about the same hour the following day, when the same process commences and progresses as be fore ; and these phenomena are of daily occurrence, with few exceptions, throughout the dry season. " These cold winds and fogs render the climate at San Francisco, and all along the coast of California, except the extreme southern portion of it, probably more uncomfortable, to those not accustomed to it, in summer than in winter. "A few miles inland, where the heat of the sun modifies and softens the wind from the ocean, the climate is moderate and delightful. The heat, in the middle of the day, is not so great as to retard labor or render exercise in the open air uncomfortable. The nights are cool and pleasant. This description of climate prevails in all the valleys along the coast range, and extends throughout the country, north and south, as far eastward as the valley of the Sacramento and San Joaquin. In this vast plain, the sea-breeze loses its influence, and the degree of heat in the middle of the day, during the summer months, is much greater than is known on the Atlantic coast in the same latitudes. It is dry, however, and probably not more oppressive. On the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada, and especially in the deep ravines of the streams, the thermometer frequently ranges from 110° to 115° in the shade, during three or four hours of the day, say from eleven until three o'clock. In the evening, as the sun declines, the radiation of heat ceases. The cool, dry atmosphere from the mountains spreads over the whole country, and renders the nights cool and invigorating. "I have been kindly furnished, by Surgeon-General HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 141 Lawson, U. S. Army, with thermometrical observa tions, taken at the following places in California, viz : At San Francisco, by Assistant-Surgeon W. C. Parker, for six: months, embracing the last quarter of 1847 and the first quarter of 1848. The monthly mean temperature was as follows : October, 57°; November, 49°; December, 50°; January, 49°; February, 50°; March, 51°. " At Monterey, in latitude 36° 38' north and longi tude 121° west, on the coast, about one degree and a half south of San Francisco, by Assistant-Surgeon W. S. King, for seven months, from May to Novem ber inclusive. The monthly mean temperature was : May, 56°; June, 59°; July, 62°; August, 59°; Sep tember, 58°; October, 60°; November, 56°. " At Los Angeles, latitude 34° 7', longitude west 118° 7', by Assistant-Surgeon John S. Griffin, for ten months, from June, 1847, to March, 1848, inclu sive. The monthly mean temperature was : June, 73°; July, 74°; August, 75°; September, 75°; October, 69°; November, 59°; December, 60°; January, 58°; February, 55°; March, 58°. This place is about forty miles from the coast. " At San Diego, latitude 32° 45', longitude west 117° 11', by Assistant-Surgeon J. D. Summers, for the following three months of 1849, viz : July, monthly mean temperature, 73°; August 75°; Sep tember, 70°. " At Suttersville, on the Sacramento River, latitude 38° 32' north, longitude west 121° 34', by Assistant- Surgeon R. Murray, for the following months of 1849: July, monthly mean temperature, 73°; August, 70°; September, 65°; October, 65°. " These observations show a remarkably high tempe- 142 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. rature at San Francisco during the six months from October to March inclusive; a variation of only eight degrees in the monthly mean, and a mean temperature for the six months of 51 degrees. " At Monterey, we find the mean monthly tempera ture of the seven months to have been 58°. If we take the three summer months, the mean heat was 60°. The mean of the three winter months was a little over 49°; showing a mean difference, on that part of the coast, of only 11° between summer and winter. " The mean temperature of San Francisco, for the three winter months, was precisely the same as at Monterey — a little over 49°. "As these cities are only one degree and a half distant from each other, and both situated near the ocean, the temperature at both, in summer, may very reasonably be supposed to be as nearly similar as the thermometer shows it to be in winter. " The mean temperature of July, August, and Sep tember, at San Diego, only 3° 53' south of Monterey, was 72°. The mean temperature of the same months at Monterey was a little over 59°; showing a mean difference of 13°. " This would seem to indicate that the cold ocean current is thrown off from the southern part of the coast by Point Conception, and the islands south of it ; and consequently its influence on the climate of San Diego is much less than at Monterey and San Francisco. " At Los Angeles, 40 miles distant from the coast, the mean temperature of the three months was 74°; of the three autumn months, 67°; of the three winter months, 57°. "At Suttersville, about one hundred and thirty HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 143 miles from the ocean, and four degrees north of Los Angeles, the mean temperature of August, Septem ber, and October, was 67°. The mean temperature of the same months at Monterey was 59°; showing a difference of 8° between the sea-coast and the interior, on nearly the same parallel of latitude. A much greater difference would undoubtedly appear, if we had observations for the spring and summer months of Suttersville and the gold mines. " These variations in the climate of California ac count for the various and conflicting opinions and statements respecting it. " A stranger arriving at San Francisco in summer is annoyed by the cold winds and fogs, and pronounces the climate intolerable. A few months will modify, if not banish his dislike, and he will not fail to ap preciate the beneficial effects of a cool, bracing atmo sphere. Those who approach California overland, through the passes of the mountains, find the heat of summer, in the middle of the day, greater than they have been accustomed to, and, therefore, may com plain of it. Those who take up their residence in the valleys which are situated between the great plain of the Sacramento and San Joaquin and the coast range of hills, find the climate, especially in the dry season, as healthful and pleasant as it is possible for any climate to be which possesses sufficient heat to mature the ce real grains and edible roots of the temperate zone. " The division of the year into two distinct seasons — dry and wet — impresses those who have been ac customed to the variable climate of the Atlantic States unfavorably. The dry appearance of the country in summer, and the difficulty of moving about 144 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. in winter, seem to impose serious difficulties in the way of agricultural prosperity, while the many and decided advantages resulting from the mildness of winter, and the bright, clear weather of summer, are not appreciated. These will appear when I come to speak of the productions of California. We ought not to be surprised at the dislike which the immigrants frequently express to the climate. Tt is so unlike that from which they come, that they cannot readily appreciate its advantages, or become reconciled to its extremes of dry and wet. " If a native of California were to go to New England in winter, and see the ground frozen and covered with snow, the streams with ice, and find himself in a temperature many degrees colder than he had ever felt before, he would probably be as much surprised that people could or would live in so in hospitable a region, as any immigrant ever has been at what he has seen or felt in California. " So much are our opinions influenced by early im pressions, the vicissitudes of the seasons with which we are familiar, love of country, home, and kindred, that we ought never to hazard a hasty opinion when we come in contact with circumstances entirely differ ent from those to which we have all our lives been accustomed." These remarks explain the reason of the diversity of opinion expressed by persons who have visited California, in a very satisfactory manner. The Italian, climate of Los Angeles has received the praises of nearly all who have visited that city or its neighbor hood. The theinometrical observations detailed in the above account seem to prove that much of the un favorable opinions expressed concerning the climate is HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 145 the result of hasty judgment, and a dislike of that which is different from that to which we have been used. The soil of California has also been the subject of various and conflicting statements. Many of those who have spent some months in the country, and re turned to publish their hastily gathered observations, either set down the soil as totally unfit for agricultural purposes, or, having been located in some garden spot the great portion of their time of residence there, pro nounce it unsurpassed for richness and fertility. As Mr. King visited California with the sole object of making accurate observations upon the territory and its resources, the statements of the character of the soil which are given in his report will carry greater weight than any other. He says — " The valleys which are situated parallel to the coast range, and those which extend eastwardly in all directions among the hills, towards the great plain of the Sacramento, are of unsurpassed fertility. " They have a deep black alluvial soil, which has the appearance of having been deposited when they were covered with water. This idea is strengthened by the fact that the rising grounds on the borders of these valleys, and many hills of moderate elevation, have a soil precisely like that of the adjoining plains. " This soil is so porous that it remains perfectly un broken by gullies, notwithstanding the great quantity of water which falls in it annually during the wet season. The land in the northern part of the terri tory, on the Trinity and other rivers, and on the bor ders of Clear Lake, as far as it has been examined, is said to be remarkably fertile. "The great valley of the Sacramento and San 13 146 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. Joaquin has evidently been, at somo remote period, the bed of a lake ; and those rivers, which drain it, present the appearance of having cut their channels through the alluvial deposit after it had been formed. In fact, it is not possible that they could have been instrumental in forming the plain through which they pass. Their head-waters come from the extreme ends of the valley, north and south ; and, were it not for the supply of water received from the streams which flow into them from the Sierra Nevada, their beds would be almost, if not quite, dry in the summer months. The soil is very rich, and, with a proper system of drainage and embankment, would, undoubt edly, be capable of producing any crop, except sugar cane, now cultivated in the Atlantic States of the Union. " There are many beautiful valleys and rich hill sides among the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada, which, when the profits of labor in mining shall be reduced so as to cause its application to agriculture, will pro bably support a large population. There is said to be a rich belt of well-timbered and watered country extending the whole length of the gold region between it and the Sierra Nevada, some twenty miles in width. There is no information sufficiently accurate respect ing the eastern slope of the great snowy range to enable us to form any opinion of its general character or soil. Some of its valleys have been visited by miners, who represent them as equal to any portion of the country to the westward of it. "The great valley of the Colorado, situated between the Sierra Madre and the Sierra Nevada, is but little known. It is inhabited by numerous tribes of savages, who manifest the most decided hostility towards the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 147 whites, and have hitherto prevented any explorations of their country, and do not permit emigrants to pass through it. Therefore, parties from Santa F£, on their way to California, are compelled to make a cir cuit of near a thousand miles northward to the Salt Lake, or about the same distance southward fry the route of the Gila. Although this valley is little known, there are indications that it is fertile and valuable. " The name of the river * Colorado' is descriptive of its waters ; they are as deeply colored as those of the Missouri or Red River, while those of the Gila, which we know flows through barren lands, are clear. "It would seem impossible for a large river to col lect sediment enough in a sandy, barren soil, to color its waters so deeply as to give it a name among those who first discovered and have since visited its shores. The probability, therefore, is, that this river flows through an alluvial valley of great fertility, which has never been explored. This conjecture is strengthened by the fact that the Indians who inhabit it are hostile, and oppose, as far as they can, all persons who attempt to enter or explore it. This has been their uniform course of conduct respecting all portions of the conti nent which have been fertile, abounding in game and the spontaneous productions of the earth. "As this valley is situated in the direct route from Santa Fe' to California, its thorough exploration be comes a matter of very great importance, especially as it is highly probable that the elevated regions to the north of it, covered with snow during most of the year, will force the line of the great national railway to the Pacific through some portion of it. " The soil I have described, situated west of the Sierra Nevada, and embracing the plain of the Sacra- 148 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. mento and San Joaquin, covers an area, as nearly as I can estimate, of between fifty and sixty thousand square miles, and would, under a proper system of cultivation, be capable of supporting a population* equal to that of Ohio or New York at the present time." If this account be accurate, the soil of California will yield a rich reward to the agriculturist, and be come a strong attraction to permanent settlers, who are willing to trust to the more certain returns for labor spent in tilling it. It is agriculture, undoubtedly, which must give stability to the increase of the coun try, and, whatever may be the value of the gold mines, furnish California with her substantial wealth. Few cities or towns ever had a permanent prosperity which had not a neighboring country fit for agricultural purposes. The quantity and quality of the present productions of California, other than her mineral wealth, is an important subject for inquiry. Previous to the dis covery of the gold, the exportable products consisted almost exclusively of hides and tallow ; the inhabitants paying more attention to the raising of horses and cattle than to the cultivation of the soil. The reason is found in the general characteristic of the Califor- nians — indolence. Horses were raised to gratify their passion for riding ; and cattle, because they afforded a subsistence at a very small cost of labor. As to what are, and what, by the character of the soil and climate, might be, the products of California, and how the wants of the people are to be supplied, we quote Mr. King's remarks : " Beef cattle, delivered on the navigable waters of the Bay of San Francisco, are now worth from $20 to HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 149 $30 per head; horses, formerly worth from §5 to $10, are now valued at $60 to $150. The destruc tion of cattle for their hides and tallow has now entirely ceased, in consequence of tho demand for beef. This demand, will, of course, increase with the population ; and it would seem that, in a very few years, there will be none to supply the market. "If we estimate the number of cattle now in Cali fornia at 500,000 head, which is believed to be about the number, and the population at 120,000 for the year 1850 — a low estimate — and suppose it to increase one hundred thousand per annum, there will be in the Territory or State, in 1854, five hundred and twenty thousand people. " If we adopt the estimate of those well acquainted with the demand, of half a beef, on an average, to each inhabitant, it appears there will be a consump tion, in 1850, of 60,000 head; in 1851, of 110,000; in 1852, of 160,000 ; in 1853, of 210,000 ; in 1854, of 260,000— making an aggregate of 800,000, which would absorb all the present stock, with its natural increase. " This is a very important matter, as connected with the amount of supply which that country will ultimately require from the Atlantic States of the Union. There is no other country on earth which has, or will ever possess, the means of supplying so great a demand. " It is now a well-established fact among the immi grants to California, that oxen possess greater powers of endurance than mules or horses ; that they will perform the distance with loaded wagons in less time, and come in at the end of the journey in better con dition. " Cows are now driven in considerable numbers 150 HISTORY OS1 CALIFORNIA. from Missouri, and the time cannot be far distant when cattle from the Western States will be driven annually by tens of thousands to supply this new market. "If California increases in population as fast as the most moderate estimate would lead us to believe, it will not be five years before she will require more than one hundred thousand head of beef cattle per annum, from some quarter, to supply the wants of her people. " It must not be supposed that salt provisions may supply this vast demand. Those who have attempted to live on such food, during the dry season, have been attacked with scurvy and other cutaneous diseases, of which many have died. " There is no climate in the world where fresh meat and vegetables are more essential to human health. In fact, they are indispensable. " It must not be inferred that cattle driven across the plains and mountains, from the Western States, will be fit for beef on their arrival in California. But one winter and spring, on the luxuriant pastures of that country, will put them in a condition which would render them acceptable in any Atlantic market. " These grazing grounds are extensive enough to support five times as many cattle as may be annually required ; therefore, there will be no scarcity of food for them. "I am acquainted with a drover who left California in December last, with the intention of bringing in ten thousand sheep from New Mexico. This shows that the flocks and herds east of the Rocky Mountains are looked to already as the source from which the markets on the Pacific are to be supplied. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 151 " The climate and soil of California are well suited to the growth of wheat, barley, rye, and oats. The temperature along the coast is too cool for the success ful culture of maize as a field crop. The fact that oats, the species which is cultivated in the Atlantic States, are annually self-sowed and produced on all the plains and hills along the coast, and as far inland as the sea-breeze has a marked influence on the climate, is sufficient proof that all the cereal grains may be successfully cultivated without the aid of irrigation. " It is quite true that this auxiliary was extensively employed at the missions, and undoubtedly increased the product of all crops to which it was applied, as it will in any country on earth if skilfully used. This does not prove, however, that it was essentially neces sary to the production of an ample reward to the husbandman. The experience of all the old inhabit ants is sufficient evidence of this. If their imperfect mode of culture secured satisfactory returns, it is reasonable to presume that a more perfect system would produce much greater results. There is abun dant evidence to prove that, in the rich alluvial valleys, wheat and barley have produced from forty to sixty bushels from one bushel of seed, without irrigation. " Irish potatoes, turnips, onions, in fact all the edible roots known and cultivated in the Atlantic States, are produced in great perfection. In all the valleys east of the coast range of hills, the climate is sufficiently warm to mature crops of Indian corn, rice, and pro bably tobacco. " The cultivation of the grape has attracted much attention at the missions, among the residents of towns, and the rural population, and been attended •with much success, wherever it has been attempted. 152 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. The dry season secures the fruit from those diseases which are so fatal in the Atlantic States, and it attains very great perfection. " The wine made from it is of excellent quality, very palatable, and can be produced in any quantity. The grapes are delicious, and produced with very little labor. When taken from the vines in bunches, and suspended in a dry room by the stems, they become partially dry, retain their flavor, and remain several weeks, perhaps months, without decay. " Apples, pears, and peaches are cultivated with facility, and there is no reason to doubt that all the fruits of the Atlantic States can be produced in great plenty and perfection. " The grasses are very luxuriant and nutritious, affording excellent pasture. The oats, which spring up the whole length of the sea-coast, and from forty to sixty miles inland, render the cultivation of that crop entirely unnecessary, and yield a very great quantity of nutritious food for horses, cattle, and sheep. The dry season matures, and I may say cures, these grasses and oats, so that they remain in an excellent state of preservation during the summer and autumn, and afford an ample supply of forage. While the whole surface of the country appears parched, and vegetation destroyed, the numerous flocks and herds which roam over it continue in excellent condition. " Although the mildness of the winter months, and the fertility of the soil, secure to California very decided agricultural advantages, it is admitted that irrigation would be of very great importance, and necessarily increase the products of the soil, in quan tity and variety, during the greater part of the dry HIST 0 II Y OF CALIFORNIA. 153 season. It should, therefore, be encouraged by government, in the survey and disposition of the public lands, as far as practicable. " The farmer- derives some very important benefits from the dry season. His crops in harvest time are never injured by rain ; he can with perfect confidence permit them to remain in his fields as long after they have been gathered as his convenience may require ; he has no fears that they will be injured by wet or unfavorable weather. Hence it is that many who have long been accustomed to that climate prefer it to the changeable weather east of the Rocky Mountains, " As already stated, the forests of California, south of latitude 39°, and west of the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada, are limited to detached, scattering groves of oak in the valleys, and of red wood on the ridges and on the gorges of the hills. " It can be of no practical use to speculate on the causes which have denuded so large an extent of coun try, further than to ascertain whether the soil is or is not favorable to the growth of forest trees. " When the dry season sets in, the entire surface is covered with a luxuriant growth of grass and oats, which, as the summer advances, become perfectly dry. The remains of all dead trees and shrubs also become dry. These materials, therefore, are very combustible, and usually take fire in the latter part of summer and beginning of autumn, which commonly passes over the whole country, destroying, in its course, the young shrubs and trees. In fact, it seems to be the same process which has destroyed or prevented the growth of forest trees on the prairies of the Western States, and not any quality in the soil unfriendly to their growth. 12 154 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. " The absence of timber and the continuance of the dry season are apt to be regarded by farmers, on first going into the country, as irremediable defects, and as presenting obstacles, almost insurmountable, to the successful progress of agriculture. A little experience will modify these opinions. "It is soon ascertained that the soil will produce abundantly without manure ; that flocks and herds sustain themselves through the winter without being fed at the farm-yard, and, consequently, no labor is necessary to provide forage for them ; that ditches are easily dug, which present very good barriers for the protection of crops, until live fences can be planted, and have time to grow. Forest trees may be planted with little labor, and in very few years attain a suffi cient size for building and fencing purposes. Time may be usefully employed in sowing various grain and root crops during the wet or winter season. There is no weather cold enough to destroy root crops, and, therefore, it is not necessary to gather them. They can be used or sold from the field where they grow. The labor, therefore, required in most of the old States to fell the forests, clear the land of rubbish, and prepare it for seed, may here be applied to other objects. " All these things, together with the perfect security of all crops in harvest time, from injury ~by wet weather, are probably sufficient to meet any expense which may be incurred in irrigation, or caused, for a time, by a scanty supply of timber. " In the northern part of the territory, above lati tude 39°, and on the hills which rise from the great p\ain of the Sacramento and San Joaquin to the foot of the Sierra Nevada, the forests of timber are beau- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 155 tiful and extensive, and would, if brought into use, be sufficiently productive to supply the wants of the southern and western portions of the State." It is not to be- expected that the labor and attention necessary for the improvement of the soil will be given to that object, so long as the continued discovery of gold and other metals promise an easy road to wealth. Many who were prosperously engaged in agricultural employments, in the most fertile regions, have abandoned it, lured by the golden bait, and shouldered the pick and shovel to try their luck or perseverance at gold digging. The gardens and the vineyards of Los Angeles have been deserted for the barren hills and ravines where the precious dust abounds. In this state of things, California must become an extensive market for the products of the Atlantic States of the Union. The extent and value of the public domain, and the validity of the titles to various tracts of land in California, will, doubtless, be the cause of much liti gation and disturbance, as the country becomes more thickly settled. The relation in which the claimants of land granted to them under the Mexican government, stand towards the government of the United States, is clearly and fully set forth by Mr. King, in his Cali fornia report. He says — " It is not known whether the Jesuits who founded the .mission, or their successors the Franciscans, ever did, or do now, hold any title from the Spanish crown to the lands which they occupied. Nor has any in vestigation been made to ascertain how far those titles, if they ever existed, have been invalidated by the acts of the priests, or the decrees of the Mexican government. 156 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. a A superficial view of the matter would be very apt to lead to the supposition that the Jesuits, so cele brated for wisdom and cunning, would not fail .to secure that which, at that time, would probably have been obtained by merely asking for it — a royal decree, granting to them all the lands they might require in that remote country for ecclesiastical purposes. There have been some intimations to that effect, but nothing is distinctly known. These missions embrace within their limits some of the most valuable lands in the Territory, and it is very important that it should be ascertained whether they belong to the Government, or may be justly claimed by individals. " Most of the land fit for cultivation, south of lati tude 39°, and west of the valley of the Sacramento and San Joaquin, is claimed under what purport to be grants from the Mexican government. " On most of these grants, the minerals and metals are reserved to the government : conditions were coupled with many of them which have not been com plied with. In others, the boundaries described em brace two or three times as much land as the grant conveys. " The Mexican law required all grants made by the provincial government, with few exceptions, to be confirmed by the supreme government. The great distance which separated them, and the unfrequent'or difficult means of communication, made a compliance with the law so expensive and tardy that it came to be almost disregarded. " There were other causes which led to this neglect. " Previous to the treaty with Mexico and the immi gration of American citizens to that country, land was not regarded as of much value, except for grazing HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 15T purposes. There was room enough for all. There fore, the claimants or proprietors did not molest one another, or inquire into the validity of titles. " These extensive grants are described by natural boundaries, such as mountains, bays, and promontories, which, in many instances, might allow of a variation of several miles in the establishment of a corner with chain and compass. " By the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the United States purchased all the rights and interests of Mexico to and in California. This purchase not only embraced all the lands which had not been granted 1)y Mexico, but all the reserved minerals and metals, and also reversionary rights which might accrue to Mexico from a want of compliance on the part of the grantees with the conditions of their grants, or a want of perfection in the grants. " It will be perceived that this is a subject of very great importance, not only to the people of California, but to the United States, and calls for prompt and efficient action on the part of the Government. It is believed that the appointment of competent commis sioners, fully empowered to investigate these titles, in a spirit of kindness towards the claimants, with power to confirm such titles as justice may seem to demand, or with instructions to report their proceed ings and awards to Congress, for confirmation or rejection, will be the best and perhaps the only satis factory mode of adjusting this complex and difficult question." He also makes the following observations and re commendations concerning the extent and value of the land, to which the title of the government is un questionable, and the best mode of improving it. 14 158 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. " The lands in the northern part of the Territory, above the 39°, have not been explored or granted. They are supposed to embrace an area of about twenty millions of acres, a large portion of which is doubt less valuable for its timber and soil. " Comparatively few grants have been obtained in the great valley of the Sacramento and San Joaquin. " This vast tract, therefore, containing, as is esti mated, from twelve to fifteen millions of acres, belongs mostly to the Government. South of this valley, and west of the Colorado, within the limits of California, as indicated in her Constitution, there are said to be extensive tracts of valuable, unappropriated land ; and, on investigation, it will probably appear that there are many of them in detached bodies, which have not been granted. " I do not speak of the gold region, embracing the entire foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada, some five hundred miles long and sixty miles broad, in connec tion with the public domain, which may be embraced in the general land system for sale and settlement, for reasons which will be hereafter assigned. "The survey of the public lands on a system suited to the interests of the country is a matter of very great importance. In the inhabited portions of the Territory, the boundaries of Mexican grants, running as they do in all directions, will render the system of surveys by parallels of latitude and longitude quite impracticable. " In all parts of the country, irrigation is desirable, and its benefits should be secured, as far as possible, by suitable surveys and legal regulations. Most of the valleys are watered by streams sufficiently large to be rendered very useful. It would, therefore, seem HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 159 wise to lay off the land in conformity to the course of the hills and streams which bound and drain the valleys. "A system,, of drainage, which would also secure irrigation, is absolutely necessary to give value to the great plain of the Sacramento and San Joaquin. This valley is so extensive and level that, if the rivers passing through it were never to overflow their banks, the rain which falls in winter would render the greater portion of it unfit for cultivation. The foundation of such a system can only be established in the survey and sale of the land. " This can be done by laying out canals and drains, at suitable distances, and in proper directions, and by leaving ivide margins to the rivers, that they may have plenty of room to increase their channels when their ivaters shall be confined within them by embankments. " It would be well also to regulate the price of these lands, so as to meet, in . some degree, the ex pense of draining them. " This system would, when agriculture shall become a pursuit in California, make this valley one of the most beautiful and productive portions of the Union." With regard to the present state of the commerce and of the commercial resources of California, it is observed, that her resources are confined almost entirely to the metallic wealth of the country, and that such a state of things would seem unfavorable to an extensive commercial intercourse. Undoubtedly, this metallic wealth of itself, could not long maintain an extensive commerce with the various nations of the earth. But when the mineral wealth begins to be developed, as it soon will, there will be no lack of 160 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. return freights for vessels arriving with supplies. The quicksilver mines already yield an enormous profit, and will soon be extensively worked. Respect ing the present state of the commerce of the country, extent of her resources, and facilities of communica tion with the Atlantic States of the Union, and other countries, Mr. King's Report furnishes the following account — " Gold is the product of the country, and is imme diately available, in an uncoined state, for all the purposes of exchange. It is not there, as in other countries, where the productions of the earth and of art are sent to markets — foreign or domestic — to be exchanged for the precious metals, or other articles of value. There, gold not only supplies the medium of domestic trade, but of foreign commerce. " At first view, this state of things would seem to be unfavorable to an extensive intercourse with other parts of the world, because of the want of return freights of home production for the vast number of vessels which will arrive with supplies. " These vessels, however, making no calculations on return cargoes, will estimate the entire profits of the voyage on their outward freights, and become, on their arrival, willing carriers for a comparatively small consideration. " This tendency in the course of trade, it would seem, must make San Francisco a warehouse for the supply, to a certain extent, of all the ports of the Pacific, American, Asiatic, and the Islands. " Almost every article now exported by them finds a ready market in California, and the establishment of a mint will bring there also the silver bullion, amounting to more than ten millions per annum, from HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 161 the west coast of Mexico, and, perhaps, ultimately from Chili and Peru, to be assayed and coined. " Vessels bound round Cape Horn, with cargoes for markets on the_ American coast of the Pa-cine, can, by taking advantage of the south-east trade winds, and 'standing broad-oif the Cape,' make the voyage to San Francisco in as short a time as they can to Valparaiso, or any port south of California. Vessels have sailed from our Atlantic ports to San Francisco in less than one hundred days, and they have been, in more than one instance, over one hundred and twenty days in going from Panama to San Francisco. " This astonishing difference in time and distance was caused by the course of the winds, and the gulf- stream of the Pacific, mentioned in my remarks on the climate of California. " The vessels from our Atlantic ports took advan tage of the winds by steering from the Cape as far into the Pacific as to be enabled to take a course west of the gulf-stream in sailing northward, thus availing themselves first of the south-east, then of the north east < trades,' and avoiding opposing currents. "The vessels from Panama were kept back by calms, adverse winds, and currents. It will be per ceived, therefore, that there can be no inducement for vessels bound round Cape Horn, with mixed or assorted cargoes, to stop at Valparaiso, Callao, Guaya quil, or any port on the west coast, because the ex ports of all those places will seek a market at San Francisco ; and their supply of merchandise, as return freight, will be delivered at less expense than it can be by vessels direct from Atlantic ports, American or European. This tendency of trade to concentrate at San Francisco will be aided by the course of exchange. 162 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. " Gold dust is worth but $17 per ounce in Chili. It is worth §18 at the United States mint. If, there fore, a merchant of Valparaiso has ten thousand ounces in San Francisco, received in payment for lumber, barley, flour, or other produce, and desires an invoice of goods from the United States or Europe, he will gain $10,000 at the outset by sending his gold to New York, besides saving something on the freight arid insurance, and at least one month's interest. " The countries on the west coast of America have no exports which find a market in China, or other parts of Asia. San Francisco will, therefore, become not only the mart of these exports, but also of the products and manufactures of India, required in ex change for them, which must be paid for, principally, in gold coin or gold dust. Neither gold coin nor gold dust will answer as a remittance to China. Gold, in China, is not currency in any shape, nor is it received in payment of import duties, or taxes on land, or on the industry of the people. " The value of pure gold in China is not far from $14 the ounce. Hence, the importer of manufactures and products of India into San Francisco will remit the gold coin or dust direct to New York, for invest ment in sterling bills on London. These bills will be sent to London, and placed to the credit of the firm in China from whom the merchandise has been received, and who, on learning of the remittance having gone forward to their agents, will draw a six months' sight bill for the amount, which will sell in China at the rate of four shillings and two pence or three pence per dollar. " I have a statement before me from one of the HISTOKY OP CALIFORNIA. 163 most eminent, merchants and bankers of New York, who was for many years engaged extensively in the India trade, which shows that the profit or gain on ten thousand ounces of gold, thus remitted, would be $33,434 44 And that the loss on the same quantity, sent direct to China, would be . 15,600 00 Total difference in profit and loss in favor of the remittance to New York, . $50,034 44 " It will thus be perceived that nature has so arranged the winds and currents of the Pacific, and disposed of her vast treasures in the hills and moun tains of California, as to give to the harbor of San Francisco the control of the commerce of that ocean, as far as it may be connected with the west coast of America. "Important as the commerce of the Pacific un doubtedly is, and will be, to California, it cannot now, nor will it ever compare in magnitude and value to the domestic trade between her and the older States of the Union. " Two years ago, California did not probably con tain more than fifteen thousand people. That portion of it which has since been so wonderfully peopled by American citizens was, comparatively, without inhabi tants, without resources, and not supplied with the common comforts of shelter afforded by a forest country. "Notwithstanding the great distances immigrants have been compelled to travel to reach the territory, more than one hundred thousand have overcome all difficulties and spread themselves over its hills and plains. They have been supplied from distances as 164 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. great as they themselves have passed with not only the necessaries, but the comforts and many of the luxuries of life. Houses have been imported from China, Chili, and the Atlantic States of the Union. All the materials required in building cities and towns have been added to the wants of a people so numerous, destitute, and remote from the sources of supply. " These wants will exist as long as immigration con tinues to flow into the country, and labor employed in collecting gold shall be more profitable than its appli cation to agriculture, the mechanic arts, and the great variety of pursuits which are fostered and sustained in other civilized communities. " This may be shown by mentioning the prices of a few articles. Last summer and autumn, lumber was sold in San Francisco at $300 to $400 per thousand feet. At Stockton and Sacramento City, at $500 to §600. At these prices, it could be made in the terri tory, and many persons were engaged in the business. I perceive, by recent accounts, that the price had fallen at San Francisco to $75. At this price, it cannot be made where labor is from $10 to $15 per day; and the difficulties attending its manufacture are much greater than in the Atlantic States. Lumber can be delivered in our large lumber markets for an average of the various qualities of $16, and freighted to San Francisco for $24, making $40 per thousand feet. This price would cause the manufacture of it in California to be abandoned. We may add $20 per thousand, to meet any increase of price in the article itself, or in the freight, and the result would be the same. " It is probable that the demand, for several years HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 165 to come, will not be less than twenty millions of feet per annum, which, at $40 per thousand, will be $800,000. "When California comes to have a population of 200,000, which she will have before the close of the present year, she will require nearly half a million barrels of flour from some quarter, and no country can supply it so good and cheap as the old States of the Union. Including freight arid insurance, this may be set down as an item of about $5,000,000. The article of clothing, allowing $20 to each person, would be $4,000,000. w There is no pretension to accuracy in these items, and they may be estimated too high ; but it is quite as probable they are too low. ""We have no data on which to found a calculation of what the value of the trade between the States east of the Rocky Mountains and California will be during the current year. I will venture the opinion, how ever, that it will not fall short of twenty-five millions of dollars. It may go far beyond that sum. At present, I can conceive no cause which will retard or diminish immigration. " If the movement shall continue five years, our commerce with that territory may reach one hundred millions per annum. This is doubtless a startling sum ; but it must be borne in mind that we have to build cities and towns, supply machinery for mining, coal for domestic purposes, and steam navigation, and all the multifarious articles used in providing the com forts and luxuries of life, for half a million of people, who will have transferred themselves to a country which is to produce, comparatively, nothing except minerals and the precious metals, and whose pursuits 166 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. enable them to purchase, at any cost, whatever may be necessary for their purposes. " It is difficult to imagine or calculate the effect which will be produced on all the industrial pursuits of the people of the Old States of the Union, by this withdrawal from them of half a million of pro ducers, who, in their new homes and new pursuits, will give existence to a commerce almost equal in value to our foreign trade. Let no one, therefore, suppose he is not interested in the welfare of Cali fornia. As well may he believe his interests would not be influenced by closing our ports and cutting off intercourse with all the world. " The distance round Cape Horn is so great that bread-stuffs and many other articles of food deterio rate, and many others are so perishable in their nature that they would decay on the passage. This would be the case particularly with all kinds of vegetables and undried fruits. Until some more speedy mode of communication shall be established by which pro duce can be transferred, the farmers and planters of the old States will not realize the full value of this new market on the Pacific. " Many other important interests wrill be kept back, especially the consumption of coal. The American steamers, now on that ocean, those on their way there, and others shortly to be sent out, will con sume not far from one hundred thousand tons of coal per annum. The scarcity of wood in California will bring coal into general use as fuel, as soon as it can be obtained at reasonable prices. Suppose there may be, three years hence, forty thousand houses, which shall consume five tons each per annum. This, with the steamers, would be a consumption of three hundred HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 167 thousand tons. If delivered at $20 per ton, it would compete successfully with the coal from Vancouver's Island and New Holland, and amount to $6,000,000. " The construction of a railroad across the Isthmus of Panama would secure the market for those articles against all competition. " Some idea may be formed of the demand for them from the prices paid in San Francisco last autumn. Coal was sold at $60 to $100 per ton ; potatoes $16 per bushel ; turnips and onions for 25 to 62J cents each ; eggs from $10 to $12 per dozen. " The distance from Chagres to New York has recently been run in seven days. The same speed would carry a steamboat from Panama to San Fran cisco in ten days. Allow three days to convey freight across the Isthmus, on a railway, and both passengers and freight will be conveyed from New York to San Francisco in twenty days. " This celerity of movement would secure for American produce the entire market of California. Sailing vessels may be successfully employed between our Atlantic and gulf ports and the terminus of the railway on this side of the Isthmus ; and propellers from Panama to San Francisco. These latter vessels will be found peculiarly suited to that trade ; they can use their steam through the calms of the Bay of Panama, and against head-winds and currents going north, and their sails with favorable winds and cur rents coming south. " These modes of conveyance, in connection with the railroad across the Isthmus, would be sufficiently expeditious and economical to turn the tide of com merce, between the Atlantic and Pacific States of the Union, into that channel. The tendency of our 168 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. commerce on the Pacific to promote the employment of ocean steamers is of much importance as connected with the defence of our extensive line of coast from latitude 32° to 49°, the protection of the whale fishery, and other branches of trade on that ocean. The establishment of a line of heavy steamers to China would promote all these objects ; increase our intercourse with that country, and probably be the means of opening communications with Japan. Money wisely employed in promoting these objects, it is believed, would add more to the power and prosperity of the country than its expenditure on any general system of fortification at the present prices of labor and materials. There is one point, however, of such vast importance that no time should be lost in taking the necessary steps to render it perfectly impregnable — that is, the entrance to the harbor of San Francisco. On the strength of the works which may be erected to defend that passage will depend the safety of Cali fornia in time of war with a maritime power. Permit a hostile fleet to cast anchor in the harbor of San Francisco, and the country would be virtually con quered. " The coast has not been surveyed, nor has its out line been correctly ascertained. There are many rocks above and below the water-line, and small islands not mentioned or indicated on any chart, which render navigation near the land, especially at night, extremely dangerous. " An accurate survey of the coast, to commence at the most important points, the construction of light houses, and the placing of buoys in proper positions, are objects of much importance, and, it is not doubted, will attract the early attention of Government." HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 169 We come now to that which has Luilt up so rapidly this empire of the Pacific — the metallic and mineral wealth of California. As to the extent of the region, and indications of the existence of the gold, together with the attendant geological formations, the state ments of Mr. King's report will not be, nor have not been, gainsayed ; but as to the origin of the gold, whether in combination with quartz, or mixed with the sands of the ravines raid streams, various opinions have been expressed by these who have spent consi derable time in working and observing the different formations. That due weight may be given to both of the principal theories, we extract the observation and opinion of a person who favors the idea of the gold having been scattered over the country, by a tremendous volcanic eruption. "The gold found in every placer in California bears the most indubitable marks of having, at some time, been in a molten state. In many parts it is closely intermixed with quartz, into which it has evi dently been injected while in a state of fusion ; and I have myself seen many pieces of gold completely coated with a bLick cement that resembled the lava of a volcano. The variety of form, which the placer gold of California has assumed, is in itself sufficient evidence of the fact, that it has been thrown over the surface while in a melted state. The earliest compa risons of the California gold were to pieces of molten lead dropped into water. The whole territory of the gold region bears the plainest and most distinct marks of being volcanic. The soil is of a red, brick color, in many places entirely barren, and covered with a flinty rock, or pebble, entirely parched in the summer, and during the rainy season becoming a perfect mire. The 15 13 170 HISTORY OF CALIFOKNIA. formation of the hills, the succession of gorges, the entire absence of fertility in many portions, distinctly exhibit the result of a great up-heaving during past times. But there is one phenomenon in the mining region which defies all geological research founded upon any other premises than volcanic formation. Throughout the whole territory, so generally that it has become an indication of the presence of gold, a white slate rock is found, and is the principal kind of rock in the mining region. This rock, instead of lying as slate rock does in other portions of the earth, in horizontal strata, is perpendicular, or nearly so ; seeming to have been torn up from its very bed and left in this position. On the banks of the Middle Fork are several excavations, which can only be ac counted for upon the supposition, that they were at some time volcanic craters. There is one of these on the mountain side, about five miles below the " Big Bar ;" from which, running down to the base of the mountains, is a wide gorge entirely destitute of ver dure, while the earth around it is covered with shrub bery. This, I am fully convinced, was the bed of the lava stream that was thrown up from the crater ; and in searching for gold at the very foot of it, I found several pieces entirely covered with the black cement or lava, of which I have previously spoken. From all these evidences, I am fully satisfied that at some early date in the world's history, by some tremendous volcanic eruption, or by a succession of them, gold, which was existing in the form of ore, mixed with quartz rock, was fused and separated from its sur rounding substances, and scattered through every plain, hill, and valley, over an immense territory. By its own gravity, and the continual washing of the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 171 rains, it sank into the earth until it reached a rock, or hard, impenetrable clay. It still continued wash ing and sliding down the hill-side, until it reached the rivers or ravines, and in the former was washed along with its current until it settled in some secure place in their beds, or was deposited upon their banks ; and in the latter rested among the crevices of rocks."* The following from Mr. King's report, presents the opposite theory, with its evidence in full. The two accounts are at variance both in regard to fact and theory. But that of Mr. King, who enjoyed every facility of obtaining information from observation, and from the statements of intelligent miners, is considered most reliable, in respect to matters of fact, and, there fore, of more dependence in forming a theory. He says — " The principal formation, or substratum, in these hills, is talcose slate; the superstratum, sometimes penetrating to a great depth, is quartz. This, how ever, does not cover the entire face of the country, but extends in large bodies in various directions — is found in masses and small fragments on the surface, and seen along the ravines and in the mountains, overhanging the rivers, and in the hill-sides in its original beds. It crops out in the valleys and on the tops of the hills, and forms a striking feature of the entire country over which it extends. From innumer able evidences and indications, it has come to be the universally admitted opinion, among the miners and intelligent men who have examined this region, that the gold, whether in detached particles and pieces, or in veins, was created in combination with the quartz. Six Months in the Gold Mines, by E. Gould Buffum. 172 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Gold is not found on the surface of the country presenting the appearance of having been thrown up and scattered in all directions by volcanic action. It is only found in particular localities, and attended by peculiar circumstances and indications. It is found in the bars and shoals of the rivers ; in ravines, and in what are called the ' dry diggings.' " The rivers, in forming their channels, or breaking their way through the hills, have come in contact with the quartz containing the gold veins, and by constant attrition cut the gold into fine flakes and dust, and it is found among the sand and gravel of their beds at those places where the swiftness of the current re duces it, in the dry season, to the narrowest possible limits, and where a wide margin is, consequently, left on each side, over which the water rushes, during the wet season, with great force. " As the velocity of some streams is greater than that of others, so is the gold found in fine or coarse particles, apparently corresponding to the degree of attrition to which it has been exposed. The water from the hills and upper valleys, in finding its way to the river, has cut deep ravines, and, wherever it has come in contact with the quartz, has dissolved or crumbled it in pieces. " In the dry season, these channels are mostly with out water, and gold is found in the beds and margins of many of them in large quantities, but in a much coarser state than in the rivers ; owing, undoubtedly, to the moderate flow and temporary continuances of the current, which has reduced it to smooth shapes, not unlike pebbles, but has not had sufficient force to cut it into flakes or dust. " The dry diggings are places where quartz contain- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 173 ing gold lias cropped out, and been disintegrated, crumbled to fragments, pebbles, and dust, by the action of water and the atmosphere. The gold has been left as it was made, in all imaginable shapes ; in pieces of all sizes, from one grain to several pounds in weight. The evidences that it was created in combination with quartz are too numerous and striking to admit of doubt or cavil. They are found in com bination in large quantities. " A very large proportion of the pieces of gold found in these situations have more or less quartz ad hering to them. In many specimens, they are so com bined .they cannot be separated without reducing the whole mass to powder, and subjecting it to the action of quicksilver. " This gold, not having been exposed to the attrition of a strong current of water, retains, in a great degree, its original conformation. " These diggings, in some places, spread over val leys of considerable extent, which have the appear ance of an alluvion, formed by washings from the ad joining hills, of decomposed quartz and slate earth, and vegetable matter. " In addition to these facts, it is, beyond doubt, true that several vein-mines have been discovered in the quartz, from which numerous specimens have been taken, showing the minute connection between the gold and the rock, and indicating a value hitherto unknown in gold-mining. " These veins do not present the appearance of places where gold may have been lodged by some violent eruption. It is combined with the quartz, in all imaginable forms and degrees of richness. " The rivers present very striking, and, it would 15* 174 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. seem, conclusive evidence respecting the quantity of gold remaining undiscovered in the quartz veins. It is not probable that the gold in the dry diggings, and that in the rivers — the former in lumps, the latter in dust — was created by different processes. That which is found in the rivers has undoubtedly been cut or worn from the veins in the rock, with which their currents have come in contact. All of them appear to be equally rich. This is shown by the fact that a laboring man may collect nearly as much in one river as he can in another. They intersect and cut through the gold region, running from east to west at irregu lar distances of fifteen to twenty, and perhaps some of them thirty, miles apart. " Hence it appears that the gold veins are equally rich in all parts of that most remarkable section of country. Were it wanting, there are further proofs of this in the ravines and dry diggings, which uni formly confirm what nature so plainly shows in the rivers." It is an interesting inquiry — what was the amount of the golden treasure collected during the years 1848 and '49 ? The satisfaction of this inquiry will enable us to form some faint conception of the value of the gold region, and the dependence which may be placed upon its yield for a commercial return. Premising that the gold was first discovered in May, 1848, and that intelligence of it was not received in the United States till late in the following autumn, Mr. King, in his report, proceeds in making an estimate of the quantity accumulated till the close of 1849 : "No immigration into the mines could, therefore, have taken place from the old States in that year. The number of miners was, consequently, limited to HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 175 the population of the territory, some five hundred men from Oregon — Mexicans, and other foreigners, who happened to be in the country, or came into it during the summer and autumn — and the Indians, who were employed by or sold their gold to the whites. " It is supposed there were not far from five thou sand men employed in collecting gold during that sea son. If we suppose they obtained an average of one thousand dollars each — which is regarded by well informed persons as a low estimate — the aggregate amount will be $5,000,000. " Information of this discovery spread in all direc tions during the following winter ; and, on the com mencement of the dry season in 1849, people came into the territory from all quarters — from Chili, Peru, and other States on the Pacific coast of South Ame rica; from the west coast of Mexico, the Sandwich Islands, China, and New Holland. " The immigration from the United States came in last, if we except those who crossed the Isthmus of Panama, and went up the coast in steamers, and a few who sailed early on the voyage round Cape Horn. " The American immigration did not come in by sea, in much force, until July and August, and that overland did not begin to arrive until the last of Au gust and first of September. The Chilenos and Mexi cans were early in the country. In the month of July, it was supposed there were fifteen thousand foreigners in the mines. At a place called Sonorariian Camp, it was believed there were at least ten thousand Mexi cans. They had quite a city of tents, booths, and log-cabins ; hotels, restaurants, stores, and shops of all descriptions, furnished whatever money could pro cure. Ice was brought from the Sierra, and ice- 176 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. creams added to numerous other luxuries, An in- closure made of the trunks and branches of trees, and lined with cotton cloth, served as a sort of am phitheatre for bull-fights. Other amusements, charac teristic of the Mexicans, were to bo seen in all direc tions. " The foreigners resorted principally to the southern mines, which gave them a great superiority in nume rical force over the Americans, and enabled them to take possession of some of the richest in that part of the country. In the early part of the season, the Americans were mostly employed on the forks of the American, and on Bear, Uba, and Feather Rivers. As their numbers increased, they spread themselves over the southern mines, and collisions were threat ened between them and the foreigners. The latter, however, for some cause, either fear, or having satis fied their cupidity, or both, began to leave the mines late in August, and by the end of September many of them were out of the country. " It is not probable that, during the first part of the season, there were more than five or six thousand Americans in the mines. This would swell the whole number, including foreigners, to about twenty thou sand the beginning of September. This period em braced about half the season, during which gold may be successfully collected in the rivers. " Very particular and extensive inquiries respect ing the daily earnings and acquisitions of the miners lead to the opinion that they averaged an ounce per day. This is believed by many to be a low estimate ; but, from the best information I was able to procure, I am of opinion it approaches very near actual re sults. The half of the season, up to the 1st of Sep- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 177 tember, would give sixty-five working days, and to each laborer, at §16 per ounce, §1,040. If, there fore we assume §1,000 as the average collected by each laborer, we shall probably not go beyond the mark. " This would give an aggregate of §20,000,000 for the first half of the season— §15,000,000 of which was probably collected by foreigners. During the last half of the season, the number of foreigners was very much diminished, and, perhaps, did not exceed five thousand. At this time, the American immigra tion had come in by land and sea, and the number of our fellow-citizens in the mines had, as was estimated, increased to between forty and fifty thousand. They were most of them inexperienced in mining, and it is probable the results of their labors were not so great as has been estimated for the first part of the season, and experienced miners. Assuming that the average of half an ounce per day ought to be considered as reasonable, it would give an aggregate of about §20,000,000. If from this we deduct one-fourth on account of the early commencement of the wet sea son, we have an estimate of §15,000,000 ; at least five of which was collected by foreigners, who pos sessed many advantages from their experience in mining and knowledge of the country. " These estimates give, as the result of the opera tions in the mines for 1848 and 1849, the round sum of §40,000,000 ; one-half of which was probably col lected and carried out of the country by foreigners. From the best information I could obtain, I am led to believe that at least §20,000,000 of the §40,000,000 were taken from the rivers, and that their richness has not been sensibly diminished, except in a few locations, which had early attracted large bodies of 173 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. miners. This amount has principally been taken from the northern rivers, or those which empty into the Sacramento ; the southern rivers, or those which flow into the San Joaquin, having been, compara tively, but little resorted to until near the close of the last season. These rivers are, however, believed by those who have visited them, to be richer in the pre cious metal than those in the northern part of the gold region." Adopting the hypothesis that the gold found in these streams had been cut or worn away from the veins in the quartz through which they have force:! their way, and considering the fact that they are all equally productive, we may conjecture what a vast amount of treasure remains undisturbed in the veins which run through the masses of rock over a space of forty or fifty miles wide, and near five hun dred miles long. Such an estimate would almost defy our belief ; yet, if the hypothesis is true, there is no reason to doubt that the value of the gold which that region will yield, is almost beyond calculation. The quicksilver mines of California are believed to be numerous, extensive, and very valuable. The largest and most profitable one yet opened is situated near San Josd, and belongs to, or is claimed by, Mr. Forbes, of Tepic, in Mexico. The cinnabar ore, which produces the quicksilver, is easily procured, and machinery has been put in operation, which enables the proprietor to make an extensive profit. The value of the quicksilver mines, by being so near the gold region, is considerably increased ; quicksilver being almost indispensable in gold mining. Extensive beds of silver, iron, and copper ores are believed to exist in the territory, but their existence HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 1T9 and value is not accurately ascertained, the allure ments held out by the continued success of the gold- miners and the continued discovery of new and profit able placers being too strong to permit any sqarch for the baser, but more useful metals. Respecting the propriety of the establishment of a mint in California, Mr. King makes the following observations — " I have already alluded to the propriety of estab lishing a mint in California. This is important in many respects. At this time, there is not coin in the country to supply a currency. Much difficulty is experienced in procuring enough to pay the duties on imported goods. The common circulating medium is, therefore, gold dust, which is sold at $15 50 to $16 per ounce. In the mines, it is frequently sold much lower. The miners, the laboring men, are the sufferers from this state of things. "Those who purchase and ship gold to the Atlantic States make large profits : lut those who dig lose ^vhat others make. "I have estimated that there will be $50,000,000 collected during the current year. At §16 per ounce, that sum will weigh 3,125,000 ounces. " Gold, at the United States mint, is worth §18 per ounce, making a difference in value on that quan tity, between San Francisco and New York, of $6,250,000, which would be saved to the miners, by the establishment of a mint. " I have also suggested its importance as a means of promoting and increasing our trade with the west coast of Mexico and South America. "It is not doubted that the construction of a rail way across the Isthmus of Panama, and, perhaps, the establishment of other lines of communication between 180 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the two oceans, will give to the. products and manu factures of the older States of the Union command of the market of California to the exclusion, in a great degree, of those of the west coast. "A mint will, therefore, become of the utmost importance, to give such marketable value to silver bullion as to enable the merchants of those countries to keep up and increase the intercourse with our prin cipal ports on the Pacific. "The silver bullion shipped to Europe from the west coast of Mexico amounts to more than ten millions of dollars per annum. From the countries on the west coast of South America, probably an equal quantity. That from Mexico goes to pay for European importations into her ports on the Atlantic side. " A market at San Francisco for this bullion will be the means of substituting American and Chinese fabrics for those of European manufacture in all those countries. This will greatly increase the trade between China and California." A bill for the establishment of a mint at San Francisco was introduced into Congress, during the present session, (1849-50) and passed both houses ; thus securing to California the advantages mentioned in the above extract, by Mr. King. We have thus given a complete description of California, in respect to population, climate, soil, productions, commercial resources, and metallic and mineral wealth, as accurate and comprehensive as the most authentic sources could furnish, or as could be ascertained at the present time. Although the terri tory already contains a large population and has pro duced a great amount of treasure in the short dura- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 181 tion of its existence ; although it is already a large State, which- has sprung into existence, as it may be termed, there is every evidence that this is but the " beginning of the end." "The greatest is behind." To what such commercial facilities, mineral and metal lic resources, and an active and progressive population will conduct California, it is easy to imagine. They will build up a State, which, although the member of a confederacy, will be powerful enough to maintain itself, independent of the aid to be derived from the Union. Its ports will be the resort of the vessels of all nations, and its valleys and hill-sides will become the homes of an agricultural population, reaping the rich reward of their toil. Canals and railroads, the children of enterprise, will soon intersect the territory, transport the riches of one section to another, and increase the social communication of the inhabitants. Such a State will add greatly to the power of the confederated republic, and form an additional stimulus to the rapid filling up of the vast territory situated between California and her sister States. CHAPTER XL THE DIFFERENT ROUTES TO CALIFORNIA, AND THEIR RESPECTIVE CHARACTERS. THE various routes taken by the emigrants to Cali fornia have afforded almost as much matter for discus sion as the territory itself. The shortest and most travelled route is that by way of the Isthmus of 16 182 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Panama ; and of this we shall first give a description, with recommendations to travellers, and the experi ence of some who have taken that route to the " land of promise." Both steam and sailing vessels are constantly en gaged in carrying freight and passengers from the principal ports of the Atlantic States to Chagres, the principal port on the eastern coast of the Isthmus. Tickets which will carry passengers to Chagres, and, after crossing the Isthmus, from Panama to San Fran cisco, can be purchased in New York, from whence to Chagres, the passage generally occupies about eight days, and has been accomplished in seven. The harbor of Chagres is a small but good one, for vessels of less than two hundred tons burden. It is protected by hills on all sides and towards the ocean, by a beet ling cliff, jutting out into the sea, on the summit of which is the ancient and somewhat dilapidated castle of San Lorenzo. At the base of this cliff is the chan nel which forms an entrance to the town. Ignorance of this fact caused the wreck of several of the vessels which went from the United States to Chagres soon after the receipt of the news of the gold discovery. The following is a description of Chagres and its inhabitants in the early part of 1849. It has since improved considerably, on account of the travel across the Isthmus. " The first thing which struck our wondering gaze on entering Cliagrcs, was its bee-hive appearance. It is a strange, fantastic, and oddish-looking town, situ ated in a deep, dark hollow or cove. It consists of some forty or fifty huts, with pointed palm-thatched roofs, and reed Avails. Nor were the innumerable buzzards which were flying about or resting on the HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 183 houses, together with the energetic gesticulation of the natives when in conversation, as we drew near, at all calculated to lessen the picturesque eilcct of a first view. The surrounding, country w.is any thing but devoid of interest and beauty. All had a strange, equatorial look ; while the green hills around, clothed with rich tropical verdure, and the graceful and shadowy palm and cocoanut, with other strange fan tastic trees, together with the ruins of the large old Spanish castle, on the heights above the town, gave to the scenery a very beautiful and picturesque aspect. " Most of us were soon ashore and rambling through the town. We landed at the beach, on some logs, which, during the rainy season, are nemsary to pre serve the pedestrian from a quagmire, in the midst of dense foliage that was here luxuriant to the water's edge, surrounded by about thirty canoes and some forty or fifty huge black fellows, mostly in the garb in which nature arrayed them. We passed on beneath a burning sun, which in the shade brought the ther mometer to 90° of Fahrenheit. A majority of the natives are black, but somo are of a deep copper or mulatto color. The thick lips and woolly head of the African ; the high cheek-bones, straight hair, and dogged look of the Indian ; and the more chisled fea tures and finely expressive eyes of the Spaniard, are all here, though often so blended, that it is difficult to say to which race they chiefly owe their origin. In truth they are a mongrel race, but generally have the most magnificent, large, dark, expressive eyes I have ever seen. These, when in conversation, which is almost continual, they use to some purpose, while the incessant rapid clatter of their tongues, and their yiolent gesticulations* and grimaces, are often quite 11 184 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. ludicrous. The females, some of whom have rather pretty faces, and particularly fine eyes, were dressed out in the most tawdry finery, with divers furbelows, flounces, and ruffles, encircling the shoulders, where the dress begins, and terminating somewhere about or below the knee. Some of the younger ones were entirely model artiste, at least so far as their clothing was concerned, but the forms of most were rather indifferent. Many were sitting or lounging about the doors or in the cabins, eating tamarinds, oranges, and other fruit, surrounded by hairless dogs, pigs, naked children, turkey-buzzards, and some other little live stock, forming altogether quite a congruous and homo geneous mixture. " In a country like this, where the temperature is so nearly alike throughout the year, there is a natural tendency to indolence and sloth, and it is remarkable what an influence the climate exerts on the character of the people. Here nature with a bounteous hand spontaneously fructifies the earth, and the natives, with few wants to supply, pluck the fruit and are satisfied ; and with few necessities for enterprise and industry, such is their love of indolence, that all the charms of existence appear to consist in dreaming away life in quiet and repose. Basking beneath a tropical sun, or listlessly reclining on nature's downy couch, days — years — are passed in drowsy languor and supine sloth. " But the influx of men from rougher climes and bleaker regions will probably exercise a salutary influ ence, by showing them the advantages of industry and patient toil. Already they begin to perceive this, to some extent, and though such dear lovers of money, that in closing a bargain they will jabber their HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 185 patois, or bad Spanish, with uncouth gesticulations, for half a day, the majority of them are unwilling to make any extra bodily effort to procure it ; but when per suaded by liberal offers to undertake a task, it is astonishing with what dogged perseverance they will often pursue it, what weights they can support, and what toil they can endure."* It is recommended that passengers from the States should remain as short a time in Chagres as possible. The exhalations from its malarious atmosphere are extremely prejudicial to the health of the new-comer. From Chagres, the travellers proceed in canoes up the Chagres river, to Gorgona, a distance of about fifty miles, or eight miles further, to Cruces. The canoes are mostly owned by the natives, and the greatest care is necessary to get them to keep their agreement. The usual plan by which their services are secured, is this : A bargain is made with the owner of the canoe, stipulating for the necessary captain and poles- men, and then some of the party going up the river in the canoe, take possession of it, and maintain it, while one goes before the alcalde, and pays the whole amount agreed upon, taking a receipt in Spanish. This pre caution is rendered necessary \ the proprietor of the canoe returning the money to those who engaged it, on finding he can obtain a greater price from others. At the present time, vessels, steam and sailing, are being constructed at Chagres, for the passage up the river, the increase of the Isthmus travel rendering it both necessary and profitable. The beauty of the country through which the Chagres river flows has been the theme of frequent praise. Its banks are filled with all the luxuriant •• Diary of a Physician in California, by James L. Tyson, M. D. 16* 186 HISTOKY OP CALIFORNIA. verdure which tropical climes produce. The tama rind, the date, the pomegranate, the plantain, the banana, the cocoanut, the lime, -the citron, and the pine apple, arc abundant. Flowers of every hue send forth their fragrance upon the air, rendering its sweet ness delightful to the senses. Orange groves are numerous, and the fruit is as plentiful as the apple of the Southern States of the Union. Mountains, hills, and valleys diversify the prospect, while the ear is filled with the melodious notes of thousands of birds, native of the tropics, their music contrasting with the discordant noise of the parrots, mackaws, and chat tering monkeys. Such a scene is worth the travel to the Isthmus, and the toils sometimes endured in cross ing it. Several small towns and ranches are scattered along the banks of the river. The first is Gatun, ten or twelve miles above Chagres. About ten miles further is Dos Hermano; further on, Puro Blanco, and PalenquiM last, about two-thirds of the way to Gorgona. These are stopping places for the canoes, where refreshments and supplies can be procured. At night, parties that land are compelled to build fires to keep off the wild beasts and venomous ser pents, which abound in the neighborhood .of the river, and to disperse the myriads of insects with which the air teems. Alligators of a large size, are to be seen lying on the banks in the day time, basking in the sun. Above Palenquilla are some powerful currents, which it requires considerable toil to move against. The river is in some places a half a mile wide, and in others, not more than thirty yards. The boatmen are exceedingly indolent, and require constant driving and coaxing to keep them moving; but sometimes, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 1ST when they are prevailed upon to go to work, they will exhibit an endurance and perseverance almost aston ishing. They have been frequently known to work at the poles, pushing the boat along, for twenty-four hours, without rest. The difficulty of ascending the Chagres river, may be appreciated, when it is stated, that although Gorgon a is only fifty miles from the town of Ohagres, it frequently occupies as high as forty hours for the canoes to reach that place. Stop pages are, of course, numerous, both on account of the tiring of the boatmen and for refreshment. " Gorgona is located upon a bend of the river, from which a fine view of the river and valley is ob tained. The valley is here about five miles wide, the mountains rising from it in successive ranges, and with increasing elevations. It is an admirable loca tion for a town, and must become one of considerable importance — especially should it be on the route of the proposed railroad across the Isthmus. It has a far better appearance than Chagres ; the streets are laid out with some pretensions to regularity. It is the head of canoe navigation, and steamboats of light draft can approach it. The dwellings or huts are of a better class than those at Chagres ; they have an un finished Catholic church that looks rude and ragged, but nevertheless, it is a church. The carrying trade is now almost the only business pursued by its inha bitants ; what they did before the gold of California began to invite a swarm of adventurers across the Isthmus, to the town is more than can be divined. Theirs must have been as near a pastoral or primitive life, as any that can be seen in our day. The soil is teeming with the evidences of its richness — inviting the hand of man to its cultivation, by showing what 188 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. it is capable of doing without it — but it is undis turbed, save in a few stinted spots of less size than our ordinary kitchen gardens. All else is left to spontaneous production. They have herds of cattle ; these, with game, flesh, fish, and fowl, easily pro cured, must have been their principal sustenance. But it is with them as with the rest of the world, w^ants increase with the facilities for gratifying them. They are rapidly changing their habits since they have an opportunity to earn money and luxuries, that they have been strangers to, are brought within their means and their reach. During the dry season, which lasts from December till June, the road from Gorgona to Panama is gene rally preferred ; at other times, the canoes proceed up the river about eight miles, to the town of Cruces, and take the road leading from that place to Panama. Each of these routes shall receive our consideration, and their respective advantages and disadvantages be set forth. It is advisable, that travellers should rest as short a time as possible at Gorgona, as accommoda tions are of very poor character. Mules and a small species of mustang are easily obtained, but the mule is far preferable. Some travellers find it a great relief to walk a part of the distance, and, with that intention, parties hire mules or horses in the propor tion of two to every three travellers. The baggage will have to be placed under the charge of the native muleteers, but, from their observed habits of filching wherever they get a chance, it is advisable not to trust them out of sight. There are several places upon the route where refreshments can be procured ; but most of the travellers start at daylight from Gor gona, and push directly through to Panama, in one HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 189 day. This is the best mode of proceeding, if the fatigue is found to be endurable ; for it is above all things important that in such a climate too great fatigue should be avoided. The following account of a journey to Panama by way of the Gorgona road, and descriptions of the road is from a recently pub lished narrative : "We arose from cot and hammock, flea-bitten, and but little refreshed, though ready to start on what we deemed our perilous journey across the Isthmus. Hour after hour elapsed, till the most pleasant part of the day was gone, and the sun shone with torrid fervor ; but still our mules were not ready, our host keeping them back, as we afterwards learned, to obtain a higher rate. Annoyed beyond endurance at the delay, and the tardy movements of the worthless set around us, we scoured the town, and at length suc ceeded in obtaining four miserable-looking little ani mals at eight dollars a-piece. Another was still wanting, and, by an offer of ten dollars, I at length succeeded in getting a tolerably good one. Though so wretched in appearance, we found these animals capable of great endurance. " Glad that the vexatious and irritating events of the morning, which the cupidity and dogged laziness of these slothful mongrels had produced, were happily ended, we hastily swallowed a cup of bad coffee, handed by a damsel nearly nude, and mounting our Rosinantes, we started at a brisk canter, beneath a broiling sun, while our guido, all stripped and on foot, trotted off in advance. " For the first mile, the way was very pleasant over a nearly level plain, at the termination of which there were stronger indications of rougher riding, for we 190 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. soon began to descend a nearly perpendicular preci pice, the only pass, down which was a narrow mule- way, where, step by step, these animals had worn a passage, over rocks, loose stones, sand and mud. We at length reached the bottom of the ravine, and, cross ing a brook, which in some parts was a wide and deep chasm, we commenced a toilsome ascent on the oppo site side, over a similar pathway, surrounded by scenery of wild and unknown plants and trees, on the mountain and glen, through whose dense foliage a breath could scarcely penetrate. The fervent atmo sphere produced an almost stifling sensation, while the deathlike silence that reigned throughout, disturbed only by the audible footfall of our animals, as we slowly wound around the tortuous ascent, made the journey peculiarly toilsome and solitary. " For the first few miles I followed closely at the heels of our guide, and would often pause and turn to examine the apparently almost impassable route I had traversed, watch the progress of the rest of the party, and wonder at the security with which their cautiously- stepping and sagacious animals would gradually over come seemingly insurmountable obstacles. These mustangs and mules, early trained to travel ' in the wild mountain track,' are capable of great endurance, and certainly possess much more knowledge than most of their riders, when exercised upon what they consider the safest and surest stepping-place, and best mode of proceeding. I urged mine repeatedly, to make him choose a path, which to all appearance was preferable to his own, but to no purpose. He would turn half round, and in a slow, solemn way, put his nose to the ground, and looking keenly about the place, would cautiously put one foot forward, then another, then a HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 191 third and a fourth, when, poised on all drawn under him, and close together, he would have a better oppor tunity for further inspection, winch having satisfactorily accomplished, another equally deliberate and cautious step would be made as before, down what, to all appearance, was an impracticable route, and so on, until the difficulty was overcome. Finding that he knew so much better than I did, how, where, and when he ought to travel, I invariably threw the reins to him, when hazardous passes or other obstacles were to be surmounted. The result was always fortunate. One or two of the party, however, were satisfied that 'horses should not have their own way,' and whipped and spurred theirs to such an extent, to compel com pliance with their better judgment, that the issue was as I had anticipated. One was thrown over his horse's head into a mud puddle, and the other, with horse and all, stuck fast in a quagmire, from which it was not easy to extricate him. Should these lines ever meet the eye of those worthy gentlemen, I trust they will pardon the liberty I have taken in recording here their feats of muleship. It is true that mine stumbled on some loose stones once or twice, in descending hills, and my efforts alone with the reins saved both him and me from a fall ; but for unmistakeable judgment in traversing these perilous mountain-passes, I must admit he proved himself the better of the two. " Thus we trudged on, often over difficult, and some times dangerous ways. Occasionally we would have to go up or down, as the case might be, for nearly half a mile at one time, through a chasm or sluice, probably worn in the mountains by the torrents of water that descend during the rainy season. These gully-holes are often ten and fifteen feet deep through- 192 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. out their entire extent, and the passes are so narrow, as barely to admit of one horse or mule passing through at a time ; the rider, to avoid a severe contu sion, or probably a broken limb, in turning the sharp angles, being compelled to place his feet as near the animal's head as possible, and in this manner he can ride in perfect safety, though some little management is requisite to maintain an equilibrium. Before enter ing these defiles, the muleteers shout at the top of their voices, and stop for a short time, continuing the shouting as they advance, to apprize others at the opposite extremity of the pass, that the way is already occupied. This is necessary and important, for if two on horseback were to meet in one of these narrow but crooked paths, the scene between the Quaker and Dandy would have to be re-enacted, for many news papers would have to be read, and many segars smoked, before either could turn out of the way for his neighbor. " Continuing on, we passed two or three Jiackalas, or huts, by the way, and after several brief but pleasant stoppages at the various brooks and mountain-rills, we at length came out on a beautiful undulating meadow, where picturesque villas and shadowy trees decked the verdant plain, and soon thereafter the towers of Panama were in view. The sun was just setting as we entered the suburbs, and a flood of purple glory rested on the sky, reflected back by the sparkling waters of the Pacific, which brought the distant mountains into bolder relief, and cast a deeper shadow through the twilight groves. Half an hour's ride over the paved street, brought us to the city, which we entered at the * Gorgona gate,' passing through a heavy stone arch- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 193 way, supporting a cupola, in which hangs the alarm bell mounted by a cross."* Such is the character of the Gorgona road to Pana ma. With regard to the Crucis road, we may observe that it is a common practice, for most of those who take the Gorgona road in going to Panama, on their return, to take the Crucis road, no doubt hoping that the difficulties and toil to be encountered are less than those they know are to be met with upon the other. The following account of a return journey by way of the Crucis road, with the full character of the route, is given in the journal of a returned adventurer. " I had passed three days in Panama ; and, feeling desirous of continuing my journey, I had no sooner concluded this arrangement, than I got my mule sad dled, and my box and carpet-bag packed in the regular Isthmus fashion. The mule I obtained, like most of his fellows, was little better than a mere skeleton ; but still it was the best I could procure, and I was fain to content myself with it. Some of my friends endeavored to persuade me that it was better to pro ceed on foot ; but I knew the muddy and stony nature of the road, and thought it infinitely more comfortable to ride a slow animal than subject myself to the suffer ings that I must experience from these inconveniences. " The negro, I had hired, brought to my hotel a long frame of bamboo, with a sort of basket at the end, into which he crammed my luggage. This frame had two straps fastened to the upper part of it, through one of which he slipped his arm, whilst he passed the other over his left shoulder, and attached it under the latter to the frame which was now on his back. This contrivance not only effectually * Diary of a Physician in California, by James L. Tyson, M. D. 17 194 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. secures the load in its place, but protects the shoulders of the bearer from the continual friction they would otherwise undergo. " A large party had preceded me ; but I felt no anxiety to overtake it, as there was little or no danger of my encountering violence on the route. I was armed with a good revolving pistol, in the event of any thing of the sort presenting itself; so that, all things considered, I was just as well pleased to be left to my own society. " I proceeded on my route with my sable attendant, and found the commencement pleasant enough travel ling, the road for some distance being paved with large and regularly cut stone. This, however, soon terminated in abundance of sand ; the route still con tinuing dry, and comparatively easy to what I had expected to find it. Soon after we had quitted the paved road, the negro stopped and asked my permis sion to take a few things to his family, who lived in a small hut to our left. Apprehensive that he was meditating an escape with my luggage, I replied that I had no objection, provided he would leave his basket in my care. He accordingly took the frame off his back, and, separating a small bundle contain ing provisions from my baggage, he took his departure. I took care, however, to keep him in sight and saw him enter a wretched-looking bamboo-hut at a little distance from the route. He remained absent a con siderable time ; and, having paid him half his wages in advance, according to the usual custom with these people, who are exceedingly distrustful, I began to fear that he was about to desert me, and therefore called out lustily, until at last I saw him reluctantly emerge from the hut, and make his way towards ine. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 195 These negroes being constantly in the habit of desert ing travellers on the route, and stealing their bag gage whenever the opportunity presents itself, I was particularly careful not to lose sight of my attendant. " A few miles further on, I again found myself on a stone road, said to have been paved by Cortes to facilitate the passage of his troops from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast ; and, although I have travelled rougher and steeper routes in Lower California, I can not say that I have ever encountered such a combina tion of petty difficulties and annoyances. The road is, for the greater part, barely wide enough to admit of one mule passing with its packs, the sides forming steep embankments, composed chiefly of rich clay, but, in many places, of large rocks, through which a passage had evidently been cut with great labor. But little of the country can be seen on either side, owing to the height of these embankments ; but now and then the traveller obtains a glimpse of dense thickets, and occasionally of undulating hills, the summits of which are covered with a deep perennial green. The recent rains having poured in torrents down the steep sides of the road, every cavity and crevice was filled with water and mud. Owing to the nature of the soil, and the constant traffic across the route from the time it was originally cut through, innumerable stones and flags had sunk considerably below the level of their original position ; whilst a few had retained their places, as if to serve as step ping-stones to the traveller over the wet and mud. It is a task of incessant and wearying exertion, how ever, even for those who are mounted on mules, to avoid floundering into some of these pitfalls and quag mires at every step they make. 196 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. " The mules themselves are, as I have already stated, so worn-out, and broken-down, that it requires the utmost vigilance and care on the part of their riders to prevent them dropping, and precipitating them into the mire. In order to guard as much as possible against this contingency, whenever ladies travel this route, they are obliged to discard the side-saddle, and resort to a less feminine style of equitation. I overtook a party of about twenty persons on the road, amongst whom was a married lady on her way to the States ; and I watched her rather curiously, to observe how she got over the difficulties that beset her. Being fortified with that article of male attire, the figurative possession of which is said to denote domestic ascen dency, she thought it incumbent upon her, I suppose, to display all the courage and nerve that should properly be encased in it. Several times, when I fancied that both she and her mule were on the point of being capsized, she recovered herself with ad mirable presence of mind, and seemed to enjoy the risk exceedingly. "As to myself, I floundered on as well as I could with a mule tottering beneath me from sheer exhaus tion, and sinking every minute up to his knees in mud. It seemed to me that we were making little or no progress ; and I became thoroughly tired and dis heartened. I do not know any temptation, however powerful, that would again induce me to encounter the never-ending series of difficulties and annoyances that laid in wait for me at every step ; and I must candidly own, that even the force of female example, of which I had so merry a specimen before me, did not at all shame me into a less impatient endurance of them. CROSSING THE ISTHMUS. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 197 " The negroes whom I met on their way to and from Panama excited my astonishment, from the amount of physical exertion which they seemed capable of undergoing. With their legs and feet bare, and nothing but a cloth around their loins, they car ried enormous burdens on their backs, stepping from stone to stone with wonderful strength and dexterity. These poor creatures must lead the most wretched and laborious of all the painful modes of existence to which their race is condemned ; and not even long habit, or their peculiar physical construction, can di vest it of its distressing character in the eyes of a stranger. They all bear, on their hard and wrinkled faces, the stamp of overtaxed strength ; but they seemed content with their lot, and will, doubtless, regret the formation of a better route, as tending to depreciate the value of their services. Notwithstand ing the toilsome and laborious nature of their occupa tions, however, the carriers of Panama are the hardi est and most muscular race to be seen here ; for the rest of the population, both white and black, are of comparatively sickly and diminutive appearance. " Moving gomewhat like a ship in a storm, rising and sinking alternately at stern and bow, surmounting first one huge stone, then a deep mud hole, then another stone, and then a small lake, my mule and my self at last reached Crucis in the evening, the whole distance traversed not being above twenty miles."* The town of Crucis is a place very similar to Gor- gona, but not so large. The houses are built of cane and plastered with mud. No attention is given to arrangement, and but a small portion is so constructed • Personal Adventures in California, by W. Redmond Ryan. 15 198 IIISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. as to bear any resemblance to a street. The climate is unhealthy, and travellers from the United States make as short a stay there as possible. Doubtless, with the increase of travel, the character of the town and its accommodations will improve ; but the heat and humidity of the atmosphere, particularly just after the rainy season, cause a great deal of injury to the health of people from the United States, and will prevent any considerable settlement of Anglo-Saxons in the town. Panama, the terminus of the varied and difficult route across the Isthmus, is situated on the shore of an extensive and beautiful bay. It contains about eight thousand inhabitants, most of whom are negroes. Being one of the old Spanish towns, upon the decline of the Spanish power, the place fell into decay. The houses are generally of stone or brick, two and three stories in height, whitewashed or covered with a coat of plaster, and are invariably surrounded by a bal cony protected from sun and rain by the roofs of the houses extending over them. The town is regularly arranged, the strait and narrow streets intersecting each other at right angles. The substantial character of the buildings as well as the evidences of neglect and decay, strike the traveller at the same time. A wall was built by the Spaniards, around the portion of the town nearest the bay, but at least one half of the population reside beyond its limits, and it is in a dilapidated state. A 'venerable, decayed, but still imposing cathedral ; a grand plaza, or open common — a general characteristic of Spanish built towns ; several churches, partly in ruins; the ruins of the College of Jesuits, which cover a large extent, and of two monasteries, of which the walls and bells alone HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 199 remain ; and the frowning walls and towers of the battery, fronting the bay, are the principal features of the town of Panama. Since the commencement of the emigration to California, a number of Ameri cans have established hotels and eating-houses in the town, and good accommodations are, therefore, to be obtained by travellers. The atmosphere at Panama is particularly injurious to people from the northern climes, and great care must be taken by travellers during their stay at that place. It is best to avoid eating fruit altogether ; but, if indulged in, it should be in very inconsiderable quantities. Exposure to the mid-day sun is a fre quent cause of sickness among the travellers, tind should be avoided, as well as exposure to the rain. During the rainy season, the vomito is often prevalent among the inhabitants of Panama, and is generally a fatal disease; but there is a great deal less travel across the Isthmus during that season, on account of the sickliness of the climate and the difficulties of the route. A sort of bilious fever and dysentery are the most common forms of disease among travellers from the north ; but both may be avoided by proper care. From Panama, steamships of superior size and accommodation, convey passengers to San Francisco. Starting from the front of the city, the beautiful bay, with its semi-circular shores skirted with green foliage and inclosed with high mountains, and the lofty islands of Flamingo, Perico, Taboga, and others, present themselves to the view. At the island of Ta boga, all the vessels that come into the bay obtain their supplies, and the Pacific Mail Steamship Com pany have established their depot for coal, &c., on its shores. After obtaining all the necessary supplies, 200 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the steamship moves out of the bay, rounding Point Mala. The voyage upon the Pacific, with all its variety of incident and scenery, then commences. The principal annoyance of travellers is the almost intolerable heat of the sun and furnaces of the steam ship united. Water-spouts and different species of whale are frequent sights. North of the Gulf of Te- huantepec, the steamer nears the land, and the bold mountain coast of Mexico breaks upon the view, and, at night, the passengers enjoy a view of the glaring light produced by the burning volcano of Colima ; though the volcano itself is but imperfectly seen, being at the distance of ninety miles from the vessel. Soon after this fades from the view, the islands off the town of San Bias appear, and an immense white rock, isolated from the sea, serving as a lighthouse to ships steering for the port. At San Bias, the steamships remain some time, to obtain supplies of coal, fresh fruits, and provisions. These indispensables having been procured, the vessel proceeds upon her voyage. Cape Corientes next appears, and, soon afterwards, the entrance to the Gulf of California is approached ; and then, Cape San Lucas, the extreme southern point of California, with its mountains and rocky shores, is hailed by the traveller as the first portion of the "promised land" that greets his sight. Passing along the western coast of the peninsula, the island and bay of Magdalcna appear, with shores three or four thousand feet above the sea. Next, the towering ridges of Cerros Isles are passed, and the bold, rocky shores of the peninsula are in continual view. The change of the temperature of the air is generally keenly felt by those who do not take care to provide against it. Within a few days after leaving Panama, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 201 the thermometer falls from 95° to 55°, and such a change must have an injurious effect, if additional clothing is not put on to meet it. The first portion of Upper California, or the "Golden Land," which presents itself to the voy agers, is the Ceronados, two high, round-topped rocks off the port of San Diego. Then the beautiful, semi circular harbor is entered, and if wanting, supplies are obtained from the town. From the harbor of San Diego, the vessel proceeds along the coast of Califor nia, and the towering peaks of the coast range of mountains, engage the attention. The high pro montory of St. Vincent is passed, and then the open bay of Monterey is entered, and passengers are either let off the steamer or taken aboard as necessity may occasion. From Monterey the steamer keeps along the coast, and mountainous shores alone meet the view, until tho voyagers come in sight of the Faral- lones, two large detached rocks at the southern side of the entrance to the bay of San Francisco. Then the Golden Gate, as the strait or entrance is called, is entered by the steamer, and the perpendicular cliffs and hills upon each shore afford matter for wonder. The strait is about three miles long, and from one to two miles broad. As the vessel reaches its terminus, the great bay of San Francisco opens to the view, looking like a miniature ocean. Bird Island, Wood Island, Angel Island, with the beautiful little bay of Sancelito, successively meet the gaze, and very soon the steamer is anchored, having reached her destina tion. Such is the Isthmus route to the "gold re gion." It is the shortest route, or the one which oc cupies the least time in traversing, presents great 202 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. variety, and upon the whole, its beauties and plea sures outnumber the difficulties and annoyances. THE OVERLAND ROUTE. WE now proceed to give the general character and direction of that which is considered the best land route to California, and which is the most travelled by emigrants. The principal advantage possessed by this route may be stated in a few words. It is the shortest route to the bay of San Francisco and the gold region. The Indians upon the route are friendly and very few acts of hostility have been committed. The trail is plain and good where there are no physical obstructions. To these must be added the certainty of the emigrants reaching their place of destination, in good season ; which will not exist, if new and un explored routes are attempted. The greatest cala mities and sufferings have been endured by those who have either taken an entirely different route, or de viated from the line which we will describe. Advice concerning the time of starting, preparations, &c., will be interspersed in the description. The starting point, and the general rendezvous for emigrants, is the town of Independence, Missouri, sit uated about six miles from the Missouri River, on the south side of it. This town has been, for many years, the principal outfitting point for the Santa Fe traders, and contains about two thousand inhabitants. Emi grants should be at the starting place by the 20th of April, and start upon their journey as soon thereafter as the grass will. permit. The outfit of companies of emigrants would be too tedious to mention, and as it varies considerably, from differences of means and taste, a description would hardly be accurate. But HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 203 there are certain things which are indispensable to those who take this route, and these we will mention. With respect to wagons and teams, the lightest wagon that can be constructed of sufficient strength to carry 2,500 pounds weight, is the vehicle most desirable. This can be drawn by three or four yokes of oxen, or six mules ; oxen are usually employed for this purpose. Pack mules can only be employed by parties of men ; but the journey can be made in great deal less time with mules than with oxen. The provisions taken by the companies, consist mainly of flour, bacon, coffee, and sugar ; besides these indispensables, there is rice, crackers, salt, pepper, and other luxuries of light weight. As to the quantity necessary, that may be determined by considering the length of the route and the average number of miles which the emigrants travel per day. From Independence to the first set tlement in California, which is near the gold region, it is about two thousand and fifty miles — to San Fran cisco, 2,290 miles. Oxen teams travel about fifteen miles per day upon an average. At that rate, it would require one hundred and thirty-one days to reach the first settlement in California. Allowance should be made for stoppages by accident. Every man should be provided with a good rifle, a pair of pistols, with a quantity of ammunition, and a bowie knife and hatchet, in his belt. A set of carpenter's tools is also necessary. Starting from Independence, and travelling a few miles over a good road, the first prairie opens upon the view. This is called the Blue Prairie, and pre sents a surface undulating and clothed with rich ver dure. In crossing this prairie, violent storms often overtake the emigrants, and to those who have not been accustomed to it, the scene during the storm is 204 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. terrifically grand. Fourteen miles travel upon the prairie brings the emigrants to the "Blue Creek," which is fordable, except after a heavy rain. Ford ing the creek and crossing the timbered bottom of the stream, another magnificent prairie is entered, which is beyond the Missouri line, and within the Indian ter ritory. Sixteen miles travel over this beautiful plain brings the emigrant to Indian Creek, the banks of which usually serve for a place of encampment. The prairie offers the best pasturage for cattle ; but con stant watching is necessary to keep them from stray ing away and returning to the settlements. From Indian Creek, the emigrants proceed across the prairie, along the Santa Fe trail, for about fifteen miles, and then leave it, turning off to the right hand. Cross ing several deep ravines, which are very difficult of passage in rainy weather, the emigrants arrive on the banks of the Werkarusa Creek. This is another favorite place of encampment, groves of trees being on each side of it. From this creek, the route is over the high-rolling prairie, upon a smooth and hard trail. The want of water is the only annoyance that is ex perienced by the travellers, and a long day's journey is necessary to bring them to the nearest creek — a branch of the Kansas River. The banks of the creek are steep, and considerable toil is requisite to cross it. The crossing of the Kansas River is the next diffi culty to be met. There is a regular ferry about five miles from where the emigrants cross the tributary creek. At that place the river is never more than two hundred yards wide, even after heavy rains. The wagons are placed in boats, owned by the Indians, and transported to the opposite shore for the sum of one dollar per load. The oxen and horses 'are com- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 205 pelled to swim across. Following the trail for about three miles, a place of encampment, on the banks of Soldier Creek, is reached. The soil in the neighbor hood of the Kansas is luxuriantly productive, and the most refreshing verdure meets the eye along the trails from that river to Soldier Creek. The route is then pursued over a flat plain — boggy in some places — for several miles, till another creek is reached, the banks of which are steep, and this, as in other cases, make its crossing a matter of great toil. The trail then runs over a high, undulating country, pre senting every variety of scenery, as far as Black Paint Creek, near which are two Kansas Indian vil lages. The Kansas are a friendly tribe, and if they were not, they are not powerful enough to attack large parties of emigrants. They are somewhat disposed to pilfer whatever they can conveniently, and require close watching. After crossing the creek, the trail is followed through a fertile valley, across Hurricane Creek, which is somewhat difficult of passage, and then over an open and rolling prairie, broken by small branches and ravines. Many places, convenient for encamping, are to be found on the route, some of which have springs of pure cold water. Farther on, the ground becomes more broken, and Vermilion Creek, a large and rapid stream, is reached. Its banks are steep, and its fording very toilsome and difficult. Between this creek and the Big Blue, there is neither wood nor water to be obtained, and therefore, it is cus tomary for the emigrants to fill their casks at this place. The ground between the two streams, a dis tance of ten miles, is more broken than any upon the former part'of the route, and on arriving at the 18 206 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Big Blue, a steep descent is made to the low, bottom lands near the river. The usual width of the Big Blue is about a hundred yards, at which time alone it is fordable. It becomes much swollen by heavy- rains, and very, rapid in its current. Arising from the bottom of the Big Blue River, the emigrants are again upon the high and undulating prairie. Every variety of scenery is presented to the view, and springs of water, issuing from the cliffy banks of the small branches and ravines, and shaded by groves of trees offer many places for rest and re freshment. Fourteen miles from the Big Blue, one of its tributaries, exceedingly difficult to cross with large wagons and teams, is met with. After passing it, the trail runs over a smooth inclined plane for the distance of twelve miles, to another encamping place for emigrants, upon the banks of a small creek. From that creek there is a gradual ascent for the dis tance of about fourteen miles, and then a beautiful valley, through which flows a small stream, meets the eye of the wearied emigrants, and offers groves of oak to serve for places of rest. Then there is another gradual ascent, through a country which is more sandy and less fertile than any met with upon the former part of the route, for more than twenty miles. The Little Blue is then reached, and the train con tinues along up the banks of the stream for the dis tance of about fifty miles ; the road being dry and firm, except in a few ravines. The trail then diverges from the stream to the right, ascending over the bluffs, into the high table land of the prairie, and continues to ascend gradually until the bluffs overlook ing the valley of the Platte River, are reached. The soil along this part of the trail is sandy, and the grass HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 20T rather scarce ; but water can be obtained at several places. The Platte River is about one hundred and fifty yards in breadth where the trail reaches it. The current is sluggish and turbid, and the water is very shallow. The trail continues along the banks of the river, the course of which is nearly from west to east, and the road is all that could be wished for travelling. The bluffs which skirt the valley present considerable variety, and as the route is continued, they become more elevated and broken. The soil of the valley becomes less fertile and the vegetation is thin and short. After traversing the valley of the Platte for the distance of one hundred and thirty miles, the trail crosses the river and continues along the north ern bank of the south fork for about twelve miles, when it diverges from the stream to pass over the prairie to the north fork. The distance from the south to the north fork of the Platte, by the emigrant trail, is about twenty-two miles, without water. The country between the two streams is high and rolling. The soil is poor, the grass short, and no trees or shrubs are visible. The trail descends into the valley of the north fork of the Platte, through a pass known as Ash Hollow. There is but one steep or difficult place for wagons in the pass, and in the valley will be found a spring of pure cool water. At this place, there is a sort of post office, where letters are left by emigrants, with requests that they shall be taken to the States by those who pass this way. For several miles from Ash Hollow the trail passes over a sandy soil, which is very soft, but which after wards becomes firmer. The scenery then presents the aspect of barrenness and desolation. Sand and 208 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. rocks are all that meet the view for many miles. The landscape then assumes a greener and more refresh ing appearance, and groves of trees relieve the emi grants from pursuing their way any farther during the day. Farther on, the well-known landmark, called the " Chimney Rock," which can be seen at a great distance, is met by the emigrants. It is composed of soft rock, and is several hundred feet high. The scenery in the neighbourhood of the rock is very remarkable and picturesque. There are a number of rocky elevations which present the appearance of vast temples and pyramids, with domes and spires partially in ruins. Over a sandy soil, the trail is pursued for about twenty miles, the surrounding scenery being of the most sublime and singular char acter. Near a remarkable rocky conformation, called u Scott's Bluff," the trail leaves the river, and runs over a smooth valley in the rear of the bluff. It there ascends to the top of the dividing ridge, from which the Rocky Mountains can be seen. Descending from the ridge, it passes over a barren country, broken by deep chasms and ravines, for about twelve miles, when Horse Creek is reached. From that creek, the trail is followed to the Platte River, where a place for encampment is found, though the grass is very in different. Continuing for several miles through a barren country, the trail is followed to " Fort Ber nard," a small building, rudely constructed of logs, used as a trading-post. Eight miles farther on, is Fort Laramie, or Fort John, as it is sometimes called. This fort has been the principal trading-post of the American Fur Company. It is situated in the Lara mie River, near its junction with the Platte, and is six hundred and seventy-two miles from Independence. HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. 209 The building is quadrangular, and is constructed of adobe, or sun-dried bricks. Its walls are surmounted by watch-towers and its gate is defended by two brass swivels. From Fort Laramie, the trail continues on through a broken country, to the Platte River, a distance of twenty miles. Crossing a small creek which empties into the Platte, it proceeds through the dry bed of one of its branches, over a deep sand for six or eight miles, and reaches the summit of a high ridge. From thence it descends into a narrow valley, through which flows a small stream of pure water. Another ridge of hills is then ascended, and a wild, desolate, but picturesque scene is presented to the view. Nu merous lofty mountain peaks, barren rocks, and a vast prospect of low conical hills are the principal features. Through a country, the principal features of which are of this description, the trail is followed, and the monotony of the journey is only relieved by an occa sional stoppage at a refreshing spring of water. The trail gradually ascends towards the summit of the Rocky Mountains, and the country becomes more broken and sterile, till it reaches Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Platte. There the grass and water are good, and the wood is abundant. The country exhibits every indication of fertility upon the trail lead ing from Beaver Creek, and pure and limpid streams are frequent, until the Platte River is again struck and followed upon its southern bank, for the distance of about eighteen miles. The river is then forded, and the trail ascends the high bluffs overlooking the valley, and proceeds over several miles of table-land till the valley of the Platte is again reached. At this point, the trail finally leaves the Platte, and, 18* 210 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. ascending the bluffs on the right, passes over an arid plain diversified with immense piles of rocks, deep ravines and chasms, and presenting a wide-spread sterility and desolation, for the distance of forty miles. Water is to be obtained in very small quanti ties and at few places on this part of the trail, and, therefore a scarcity should be provided for before leaving the Platte. At the end of that distance, the trail descends into a small valley, where spring water can be obtained and some refreshing shade. Ascend ing from this valley, the trail gradually ascends to the summit of a dividing ridge, from which a view of the Sweetwater River Mountains can be obtained. De scending from the ridge, a small stream, the grassy banks of which serve for an encampment, is soon reached. Farther on is a well-known landmark among the mountains, called Independence Hock. It is an isolated elevation, composed of masses of rock, about one hundred feet in height, and a mile in circum ference, standing near the northern bend of the Sweet- water River, and between the ranges of mountains which border the valley of that stream. The trail proceeds up the Sweetwater River, and passes a remarkable fissure in the Rocky Mountain wall, which is called the Devil's Gate. The fissure is about thirty feet in breadth, and the perpendicular walls on each side of the channel of the stream which flows through it, are nearly three hundred feet high. The trail leaves the river about twelve miles from where it first strikes it, and then returns to it after traversing about sixteen miles. It again diverges from the river and crosses a broken and arid plain, which presents but few signs of vegetation. Passing through a gap between two ranges of granite mountains, the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 211 first view of the Wind River Mountains is obtained. The trail then proceeds through a narrow valley several miles in length, the surface of which is white with an alkaline efflorescence, and then returns to the Sweetwater River. Continuing up the valley of the Sweetwater, occasionally leaving the bank of the stream and passing over the rolling and barren table lands, it crosses two small creeks which present good places for encampment. Several miles farther on, the trail crosses the Sweetwater River, and then leaves it finally, making a gradual ascent to the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains, or the dividing ridge which separate the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific. After the summit of the ridge is reached, the trail passes two or three miles over a level surface, and then descends to the spring, well known to emigrants as the "Pacific Spring." The water from this spring is emptied into the Colorado River of the West, which river empties into the Gulf of California. This Pacific Spring is two miles west of the South Pass, and nine hundred and eighty-three miles from Independence, Missouri. From the Pacific Spring, the trail passes over an arid, undulating plain, in a west-by-north course, for about twenty-eight miles, when the " Little Sandy" River, a branch of the Green or Colorado River, pre sents itself, and furnishes the first water after leaving Pacific Spring. From the Little Sandy River, the trail passes over a plain of white sand or clay, and within twelve miles reaches the Big Sandy River, and passes along it for about eighteen miles, and then strikes off and crosses the Green River, or Colorado of the West. This river is shallow and only about seventy yards broad. The trail then continues down 212 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the Green River a short distance, and then, making a right angle, ascends the bluffs bordering the valley of the stream, in nearly a west course. The country then becomes still more broken and barren, and the trail ascends gradually to the summit of a ridge, from, which it descends to the banks of the Black Fork, a tributary of the Green River. This Black Fork is crossed several times upon the route, but is not more than sixty yards wide and is very shallow. The trail leaves it to cut off the bends and then returns to it. The scenery along this part of the route is interesting, but the soil is frightfully sterile. Diverging from the stream the trail passes over a barren plain with no vegetation upon it except the wild sage, so common even in the most sterile country, and then passes through a bottom of grass, offering a good place for an encampment. Near this place is Fort Bridgcr, a small trading- post established by a Mr. Bridger. The buildings are two or three rudely constructed log cabins, and they are situated in a handsome fertile bottom, on the banks of a small stream. This fort is about eleven hun dred miles from Independence, Missouri. From i^ort Bridger, many parties anxious to explore the country, take the route by way of the south end of the great Salt Lake. But the scarcity of water and the other difficulties encountered in crossing the sterile plains and the great Salt Desert should be sufficient to deter emigrants with families from taking that direction. Oxen could not travel fast enough from one watering- place to another, Jfnd must necessarily perish from thirst. Besides, the route is but poorly denned, and may be wandered from very easily. The trail of the old route, and the one taken by HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 213 most of the emigrants, leaves Fort Bridger, and pur sues a north-westerly course, through the Bear River valley, which it leaves at a remarkable landmark called Sheep Rock, and crossing a dividing ridge reaches Fort Hall, by the valley of the Portneaf River. This fort was established by the Hudson Bay Company, and it is the seat of a considerable trade in furs with the Indians and trappers. From Fort Hall the trail continues on till it reaches the valley of Mary's River. There a tolerably fertile soil and refreshing vegetation greets the eye of the travel- worn emigrant. The trail crosses the river five or six times in as many miles, in order to take advantage of the narrow bottoms made by the windings of the stream. The bottom is skirted bj" very high ranges of mountains to where the trail leaves it, and turning to the right ascends over low, gravelly hills. Descend ing from the summit of a ridge of hills, it passes through a valley where good grass and water can be obtained — the valley containing several springs of pure cold water. Emerging from this valley through a narrow gap, the trail passes into another still more extensive, and pursues a south-westerly direction for about twenty miles, keeping near the margin of Mary's River. A succession of low hills are crossed, and another valley is reached. During the journey through these valleys, the emigrants are exposed to the fiery rays of the sun, and the hot winds from the desert are very oppressive. The trail then follows the course of the river in a direction nearly north-west, through valleys, or plains of great extent, and mountainous defiles, occasionally following a bend of the river towards the south-west. The greater portion of these valleys is barren, but there are frequent fertile spots 16 214 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. near the boiling springs. The only Indians met on this part of the route are the diggers, and they do not possess the power to do much harm, if they even were hostile; but they are friendly. The want of water is the principal annoyance. Passing over the desolate valleys and hills that border Mary's River, the trail descends into a large circular basin, in which a place for encamping is found, but with little water. From this basin, it crosses some considerable elevations and then a totally barren plain ten miles wide. Beyond this, water and grass of tolerable quality are soon found ; and there, if possible, a supply should be obtained sufficient to last for a long day's journey. Rounding the base of a mountain, the trail takes a south-west course, across a totally barren plain. No sign of the river, or the existence of any water is exhibited. Near the southern edge of the plain, which is twenty miles in extent, some pools of standing water are found, and the place is known as the " Sink of Mary's River." From these pools to the Truckee, or Salmon Trout River, the distance is forty-five miles. The trail is followed over the hills of ashy earth, in which the mules often sink to their bellies, and over a ground destitute of any vegetation, except occasional clumps of wild sage. A ridge of mountains is then ascended by an easy inclined plain, and a view of the distant range of Sierra Nevada is obtained on reaching the summit. The intervening valley presents as barren a prospect as the country immediately preceding it. Descending into it, numerous boiling springs are found, which often serve to delude the thirsty emigrants. But by damming up the streams which flow from them, the water may be cooled, and, although impregnated with HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 215 salt, sulphur, and magnesia, it may quench the thirst. The phenomenon of mirage is frequently presented to the view of the emigrants, and it very often assumes the appearance of things unknown to that desert region, such as lakes, cascades, and foaming and tumbling waters. About twelve miles from the springs, a ridge of sandy hills, running across the valley, is ascended, and then an elevated plain of about ten miles in extent is crossed by the trail. Over this plain the travelling is very laborious — the sand being very deep. But at length the Truckee River is reached, and water, grass and trees, larger than any upon the former part of the route for five hundred miles preceding, greet the wearied and thirsty emigrant. The Truckee River is about fifty feet in breadth with a shallow but rapid current of clear water. The bottom land is exceedingly fertile, and game is some times to be obtained in its neighborhood. The trail crosses the Truckee very frequently, in its winding course, but the country being agreeable, this is not considered toilsome by the emigrant, after traversing the barren plains in the vicinity of Mary's River. The course of the Truckee is nearly from the south-west to the north-east, and in some places it passes between very high mountains, affording scarcely room for tra vellers to pass. Sometimes the trail is followed through fertile valleys and then over barren hills and rocky passes till the summit of a gap in the moun tains is reached, and a pleasant valley opens to the view, offering a fine place for encampment. The trail then turns to the left, and proceeds in a southerly direction, crossing the Truckee several times, until the Truckee Lake breaks upon^he view. This small 216 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. sheet of water is surrounded by lofty mountains, ex cept upon the side where its outlet flows from it. The trail strikes the shore of the lake at its eastern end, and continues around its north-eastern side over a very difficult, boggy road. Having reached the upper end of the lakes, the trail leaves the shore on the right hand, ascends over some rocky hills, and, cross ing some deep ravines and swampy ground, arrives at the base of the crest of the Sierra Nevada. Then comes the ascent of the steep pass — a work of diffi culty and danger. The mules are compelled to leap from crag to crag, and, when heavily laden, are often precipitated backward in climbing the almost perpen dicular rocks. Having attained the summit of the pass, the view is inexpressibly grand and comprehensive. A mile journey upon the top of the mountain brings the tra veller to a small lake, surrounded by good grass, which is often used as a place of encampment. Leav ing the lake on the right hand, the trail descends over the rocky ground for a few miles, and then enters a beautiful valley about five miles long. Through this valley, which is called the Yuba valley, by the emi grants, flows the Yuba River, a tributary of the Feather Elver, and the scene of considerable gold digging and washing. This is the commencement of the gold region, and after their journey through the wilderness, here the emigrants greet the "promised land." From this point to Sacramento city, the great terminus of the overland emigration, it is about sixty miles ; but the trading post of Yuba, Johnson's ranche, Vernon, and the other posts, offer convenient intermediate resting places. We have thus sketched the general character of the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 217 principal overland route to California, and have fol lowed the trail of the emigrant over all the difficul ties and obstacles which present themselves upon the route. That there are portions of the journey which are productive of considerable suffering, and which demand stout hearts and strong constitutions to meet them, is not to be doubted. But they -are few com pared with the dangers to be encountered by deviat ing from the particular trail whose course we have followed. The want of water is the principal source of annoyance towards the lake part of the route, but this occurs in few places. The longest distance to be travelled without finding water, is about forty-five miles — from the " Sink" of Mary's River to Truckee River, and this may be prepared for. It is a matter of great importance, that the delay upon the route should be as little as possible. Great suffering and many deaths have been caused by delaying too long at different camping places. It should be made an urgent duty to get over as much ground every day as possible, and to keep in the old trail. The overland route which we have sketched, and the route by way of Chagres and Panama, are the two routes by which most of the California emigrations had proceeded ; but there are others projected, and some have been followed. Many persons have proceeded to California through Mexico ; but the difficulty and delay in the matter of passports, and the opposition of the ; Mexicans to armed parties of another country passing their territory, must prove weighty objections to any such route. Another has been projected, and will probably be opened. It is a route across the ter ritory of Nicaragua, in Central America. This will be the shortest and most convenient route to the gold 19 218 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. region, and will absorb the greater portion of the travel thither ; but the overland route will always be taken by those who have been accustomed to a coun try life, or have a thirst for adventure. It presents the greatest variety of scenery — some of it of a cha racter not to be seen elsewhere ; and affords oppor tunities for studying nature in all her visible forms ; and, though attended with toils and dangers, which will daunt the feeble, it possesses the strongest at tractions for the lovers of variety, and the hardy ad venturer who has confidence in his own powers of endurance. CHAPTER XII. RECENT EVENTS. BELIEVING that every event which in any way affects the interests or welfare of California is im portant to those who have watched her progress and have been astonished at her rapid rise, we will in this and a subsequent chapter, bring the narrative up to the time of issuing this work. The city of San Francisco, in the midst of her progress and prosperity, has been twice visited by the destroying element of fire. The first calamity of this kind occurred on the morning of the 25th of Decem ber, 1849. The fire consumed all that portion of the city on and near the plaza, involving a loss, at Califor nia prices, of over a million of dollars. Fortunately, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 219 it was the rainy season. If the fire had occurred during the dry season, and the prevalence of the furious gales, the whole city, composed, as it was, of canvas tents and wooden houses, must have been destroyed. The event did not materially affect the progress of the city ; for the burnt district was entirely rebuilt within twenty days. The second great fire occurred on the night of the 4th of May, 1850. It broke out in the United States Hotel, situated on the plaza, or Portsmouth Square — the very heart of the city. The flames soon spread to the adjoining buildings, and several of the principal hotels were destroyed. Nothing could stop the pro gress of the fire but the tearing down of a whole block of houses on one of the streets leading from the Square, Five entire blocks of the business portion of the city were destroyed — involving a loss of about a million of dollars. To show the amount of enter prise and energy existing in San Francisco, no better opportunity is afforded than to look at the state of things in that city, ten days after the fire. We extract from the Alta Californian of the 15th of May, the following remarks : "TiiE BURNED DISTRICT. — Intimately as we are acquainted with the predominant spirit of energy and enterprise of our city, we have almost wondered at the rapidity with which the burned district is being again built up. It exceeds the speed with which the work was accomplished after the December fire. Already, in Portsmouth Square, the Bella Union and St. Charles, houses of public resort, are opened and hourly thronged. In Washington Street, two dry goods stores, 'La Amarilla' and Juan Cima's, are opened and stocked, and on both sides of the way 220 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. buildings are nearly completed, and will be ready for occupation by the latter end of this week. In fact, the ruins are more than half covered over, and except that the neAV edifices are not of so elegant a character or so substantially built, even, as previously, they will present a handsome appearance. " The fact of the business season having now fairly commenced, and the necessity of being alive to take advantage of it, has materially accelerated operations. The present busy hum created by the industrious mechanic, will soon give way to the usual activity and bustle of mercantile trade, and ere the departure of the next steamer a casual observer would be scarcely able to realize the devastation of the 4th inst. Not withstanding the immense amount of property de stroyed, which was not at all over-estimated, business has not been so generally depressed, even momenta rily, as it was feared and anticipated. Our community have risen again to the surface of the waters with cork-like buoyancy, and the sad and gloomy faces of the early part of last week have brightened by the prosperous hopes anticipated in the future. Never was calamity taken with more fortitude and philosophy than in this city. And if to win success is but to deserve, then those who have suffered will meet with their just reward. Nil desperandum seems to be the popular motto, amalgamated with the David Crocket principle, enlarged and improved. We are satisfied that nothing can retard or check the prosperity, rapid growth, advancement and importance of this, the prin cipal city and seaport of the Pacific coast. Vive San Francisco !" The annexed extract from the Message of the Mayor of San Francisco gives an idea of the quantity of HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 221 disease and destitution in that city. No doubt San Francisco is the grand receptacle for all who become diseased in any way at the mines or other places in the interior ; and this may serve to account for the extraordinary statements contained in the Message — " During the last nine months, an expense of eighty thousand dollars has been incurred for the support of the sick and destitute, who have been thrown penniless upon our shores, and found friendless and homeless in our streets, and for the burial of those who have died without sufficient means to defray the expenses of interment. If these enormous expenditures are con tinued, (and it is evident from the rapid growth of the population, that they must seriously increase, unless some new system is adopted,) it will readily be per ceived that a very large portion of the revenue of the city will be absorbed in defraying the expenses of the hospital department alone. Something therefore must speedily be done to remedy this great drain upon the public purse." As an indication of the vast increase of the com merce of San Francisco, it is stated that, in six days in the month of May, 1850, there arrived at that port seventy-six vessels, freighted with cargoes to find a market there. Several large steamboats have been put upon the Sacramento and the Bay of San Fran cisco, and they are reaping extraordinary profits. The trip from San Francisco to Sacramento City was, a few years ago, a work of some days, but it is now per formed in less than nine hours. The reports from the mines continue to be of the most favorable character. Gold has been discovered upon Trinity River, about two hundred miles north of Sacramento City, and the digging has proved to be 222 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. equal to that of any of the other placers. The mouth of the river, which empties into Trinity Bay, has been surveyed, and, being considered a very good harbor, a town has been projected, to be situated upon the shore at the mouth of the river. Rich diggings have been opened near Mariposa, and on one occasion, a mass of gold and quartz, weighing fifty pounds, was taken from them, and sold for sixteen hundred dollars. Several important discoveries have been made on the Mokulumne River. Out of one hole, three men, in two days, took the sum of four thousand dollars. It is thought that more bullion will be obtained during the dry season of the present year, 1850, than has been received since the commencement of the gold-digging. This seems to falsify the predictions of some persons, that the gold region would be speedily exhausted. The following is an account of some bloody trans actions upon the North Fork of the American River. We extract it from the Pacific News of May 15th, 1850:— " About two weeks ago, a party of Indians came stealthily upon a few miners who were sleeping after their work was over in their tents on the North Fork, some twenty miles above Auburn. Before the Indians gave any warning to the whites of their presence, they killed two, wounded another, and then succeeded in making their escape. -On Friday of last week, a trader, who was travelling with his team, was sur rounded by Indians when about fifteen miles above Auburn. The arrows from their bows took effect up on his person, and he only saved his life by a preci pitous flight. They carried off his coat which he left in his wagon, with $600 worth of gold dust in the pocket. They also robbed his wagon of several valu- HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 223 able articles. Upon receiving news of this attack at Auburn, a number of men set out on horseback, in pursuit of the Indians. They overtook them in a valley not far -from Auburn, and found a large party of them drawn up to meet them. The Indians were armed with bows and arrows and had one gun. The whites attacked them, and soon put them to flight. The Indians left a considerable number of dead be hind them, and it is supposed that they carried off many more. Two of the whites were wounded with the arrows of the Indians, but not fatally. "It is believed by many of the miners that there are white men among the Indians, inciting them to hostilities. It is pretty certain that a German doctor has been leading them on in their attacks. A meet ing was held at Auburn, last Monday evening, to raise a company of volunteers for the purpose of scouring the country, and making war upon the Indians wherever found, so long as they maintain a hostile position, and a number of men were enrolled." A portion of the Indians of the eastern part of California have always manifested their hostility to the whites, and have taken numerous occasions to wreak their vengeance upon those whom they consider the invaders of their country. But the pursuit of such a course will only hasten their own destruction. They are in no condition to contend with the whites, and their proper course would be to conciliate those whom they cannot resist. The following account of an exterminating expedition against the Indians is from the Alta Californian of the first of June. To our thinking, the punishment far exceeded the offence, and the officer who gave the order for extermination, is culpable in a high degree. 224 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. " We have received particulars of the recent slaugh ter of a large body of Clear Lake Indians by an expe dition sent out against them from the United States garrisons at Sonoma and Benecia. The tribe that incurred this terrible punishment, comprises the natives of Sonoma and Napa valleys, and has maintained, in general undisturbed peaceful relations with the white settlers of that section of California. Last summer, however, a stubborn family Indian offered an indignity to the wife of one Kelsey, who had resided in the country some nine years, for which he was taken be fore a magistrate and sentenced to receive one hundred lashes. After this punishment, on the same day, we are informed Kelsey, sought the wretched offender, and laid him dead at his feet, shooting him in the presence of several gentlemen, who remonstrated with him on the barbarity of the deed. This man Kelsey was afterwards murdered, as was also a brother-in- law, by the Indians of the neighborhood. Since then repeated acts of violence have been visited upon the natives, and our readers will remember the accounts which we published a few months since, of outrages committed in Sonoma and Napa, by a party of despe rate white men. The Indians were driven to the mountains, and subsequently made depredatory incur sions upon their old masters, driving away cattle, and indulging their natural propensity to steal. Com plaints were made, — doubtless the accounts of their conduct highly colored, — to the garrisons of Benecia and Sonoma, and on the 1st of the month an expedi tion was fitted out against them, composed of a detach ment of infantry, and a company of dragoons, under command of Lieutenant Davidson, (seventy-five in all,) HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 225 with orders to proceed against the Clear Lake Indians, and exterminate, if possible, the tribe. " The troops arrived in the vicinity of the lake, and came unexpectedly upon a body of Indians num bering between two and three hundred. They imme diately surrounded them, and as the Indians raised a shout of defiance and attempted escape, poured in a destructive fire indiscriminately upon men, women, and children. 'They fell,' says our informant, ' as grass before the sweep of the scythe.' Little or no resist ance was encountered, and the work of butchery was of short duration. The shrieks of the slaughtered victims died away, the roar of muskets then ceased, and stretched lifeless upon the sod of their native valley were the bleeding bodies of these Indians — nor sex, nor age was spared; it was the order of extermination fearfully obeyed. The troops re turned to the stations, and quiet is for the present restored." Here is the account of more Indian troubles. " FIGHT WITH THE SACRAMENTO INDIANS. — TREA TY. — In consequence of depredations of the Indians of the Sacramento valley and outrages committed by them, General Thomas J. Green, 1st Division, State Militia, ordered out two companies of Mounted Volunteers, under command of Captain Allgiers and Captain Charles Hoyt, and marched from Oro, on the 17th of May, in the direction of Deer Creek. On the same day Lieutenant Bell, of Captain A.'s company, with ten men, encountered a large number of Indians, killed five, and took six prisoners. " On the 18th the command scoured the country in the region of Deer Creek and Bear River. On the 19th, the trail to Colonel Holt's mill, where he was 226 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. murdered, was taken, the villages found to be deserted, and the white settlement abandoned. " On the 20th, the Indians, two or three hundred stron^1, were discovered within two miles of Bear o' River, upon an elevated conical hill. An engagement took place, in which eleven Indians were killed and a number wounded. About fifty of the state volunteers were engaged. None were killed, but Captain Hoyt, Lieutenant Lewis, and Mr. Russell were wounded. Major Frederick Emory (brother of Major Emory, United States Topographical Engineers of the bound ary Commission,) was accidentally shot through the thigh with a rifle ball. He was aid-de-camp to General T. J. Green. " On the 25th, the Indian Chiefs Weimer, Buckler, and Pooliel, came in, by permission, and entered into a treaty of peace between the three tribes, severally represented, and the State of California and Govern ment of the United States. The treaty is sensible and comprehensive." In the following, among other interesting intelli gence, will be found an account of that which was expected long before it occurred — the resistance of some of the numerous body of foreign gold-seekers to the tax imposed upon them. The license tax is certainly a just one ; but the foreigners presumed upon their number and strength, that they had power sufficient to resist its imposition. The easy exci tability of the Americans, upon any subject connected with their own soil is well known ; and it is exceeding ly strange that a serious collision did not take place. We extract from the Alta Californian, of June 1st, 1850. The Alta Californian has letters from Stockton to HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 227 May 22d. On the Tuolumne, but little gold digging has been effected since last fall along the banks. The gold is under water, and preparations were making by companies to dam the streams to get at it. This work has been actively going on for five or six months. There is want of men at this kind of work, and eight or ten dollars a day is readily obtained. The dig gings at Jamestown, Sonora, &c., have been partially deserted on account of new diggings discovered at Co lumbia, three miles from Sonora, at the last accounts some two thousand persons had collected there, and town lots were selling at high prices. Sonora is growing very rapidly, being in the centre of an extensive mining region. It is likely to be next to Stockton in size and importance. Discoveries of rich placers have been made in its vicinity lately ; some of the richest holes at Columbia are thirty, forty, and fifty feet deep. A serious difiiculty has broken out at Sonora. A number of foreigners refused to comply with the law taxing them for the privilege of working the mines. A time was fixed by the collector to summon a posse of American citizens to prevent them from working. The day previous to the time fixed, the foreigners paraded with guns, &c., and rein forcements of Americans were sent for from the neighboring towns. A letter from Stockton, dated May 22d, adds : " In the evening, the sheriff, Mr. Work, was ac costed by a Mexican, who asked him if he was not an officer, or the officer who intended to enforce the pay ment of the license. On replying that he was, the Mexican made an attempt to stab him, when a person standing by, named Clark, with a single stroke of a bowie knife, nearly severed his head from his body. 228 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Thirty armed Americans soon arrived from Mormon Gulch, and the whole American population were on the alert all night. " At last accounts there were two or three hundred Americans at Sonora, under arms, and others were hourly arriving. On Monday the excitement had somewhat abated. Hundreds of the Mexicans and Chileans were packing up and leaving for Stockton. Many of them disclaimed having had any intention of resorting to arms, and all were evidently more or less frightened at the aspect of affairs. It appears that the Mexicans who took part in the disturbance, were led on by some hot-headed Frenchman, lately arrived from France, of the Red Republican order. They found, however, that the majority of the Span iards were not disposed to join them, and it is sup posed that the whole affair will blow over without any very serious consequences. The affair will probably be a severe blow to business, for the present, in So- nora." The Stockton Times has a letter from Sonora, giv ing the details of this difficulty. The foreigners said they were willing to pay four or five dollars per month, but that the amount demanded was utterly beyond their power to pay. They made this statement at an interview with the Governor. The letter goes on as follows : "During the discussion, an American who wished to get out of the crowd, began elbowing his way from the place where he stood, when a Mexican or Chilian, in front of him, drew a pistol. In a moment a dozen revolvers were out, and a precipitate retreat was made by the foreigners. No shot was fired, but the Mexi- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 229 cans were alarmed, and the town was cleared in five minutes. Our peace now seemed threatened by about five thousand men outside, and no inconsiderable alarm was created in town. The citizens armed them selves, and expresses were sent to Mormon Creek and Sullivan's Diggings, from which places about five hundred well armed Americans arrived, and marched through the streets with guns and rifles on their shoulders. The demonstration was sufficient ; the crowds in the vicinity soon dispersed, and quiet was restored. The only thing to be feared, is the mis guided zeal of our own citizens, who although gene rally sympathizing with the discontent occasioned by the unjust tax, are incensed that the foreigners should presume to take the law into their own hands, and may not be willing to allow the affair to rest where it is. A serious affray took place this afternoon, in which a Mexican was seriously wounded. • A man was noticed parading the streets with two or three pistols and a knife in his belt ; the man was intoxicated, and the sheriff arrested him, or rather took his arms from him. While in the act, a Mexican came up behind and made a stab at the officer with a large knife. The murderous intent was frustrated by a bystander, who, with a bowie knife, struck the man, wounding him severely. Mr. Work, the sheriff, was happily un touched. This state of affairs, if allowed to last, will ruin the prosperity of the whole southern mines, and your own town of Stockton will be the first to suffer thereby. Monday, May 20. — A guard was kept up all last 20 17 230 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. night, but every thing was quiet, and as I said yester day, I believe the danger, if any was to be appre hended, had passed away. But the excitable feelings of the hundreds of Americans now under arms had to be indulged, and hearing that a camp, mostly com posed of foreigners, situated about seven miles from Sonora, had mounted Mexican, Chilian, and French flags, (what truth there is in the report, I know not,) they have started out this morning to avenge the in sult, and chastise the temerity of the " greasers" and "outsiders." I sincerely trust there will be good sense enough in the party to refrain from wanton ag gression. Gov. Burnett has sent Hon. John Bidwell and Judge H. A. Schoolcraft in charge of the block of stone con tributed by California to the Washington Monument. It is thus described : " This block of gold-bearing quartz, is from the Mariposa diggings, near Fremont's mines, and weighs about one hundred and twenty-five pounds. In shape it is irregular, approaching a square, its sides varying from eighteen to twenty inches in length. It averages in thickness nine inches — across its face diagonally it is twenty-one inches by measurement. Very little gold is perceptible to the naked eye, but it is estimated to contain about eighty dollars worth." Since the above events were recorded, another most disastrous fire has occurred in the city of San Fran cisco. It broke out in the Sacramento House, situated in the wealthiest portion of the city, on the 17th of June, 1850, at eight o'clock, A. M., and in the short space of three hours, about two-thirds of the wealthiest district was consumed. The shipping in the harbor HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 231 was only saved by the greatest exertion. The entire loss is estimated at from three to four millions of dollars. This event occurring so soon after the pre vious fire, has had a depressing and gloomy effect upon the business operations, not only of San Francisco, but of Sacramento City also. Many of the heaviest trading houses have been entirely ruined ; and others brought to the verge of it. Several individuals, includ ing the Mayor of the city, distinguished themselves by their noble and generous exertions to arrest the progress of the fire and save property. The emigration to California by way of the over land route is six times as great during the present year as it was in 1849. The last company left Coun cil Bluffs, on the 15th of June. They brought up the rear of near four thousand wagons, ten or twelve thousand persons, and about twenty thousand head of horses and cattle. The continued success of the gold- diggers and the extraordinary prospect in regard to the quantity that will be obtained during the mining season of 1850, serves to keep up the excitement and to allure the emigrant to the golden land. There is a prospect that the seat of government of California will be removed from San Jose' to the pro posed new city of Vallejo, about twenty miles above San Francisco, near the Straits of Carquinez, and at the junction of the Napa and San Pablo Bays. The new city has already been surveyed, and a company of influential capitalists organized, with the determination to "go ahead," whether the capital is or is not established at this point. The site no doubt presents many advantages for a large commercial city, not possessed by San Francisco. The distance from 232 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. the "Golden Gates," (as the entrance from the Pacific to the succession of bays connected with the harbor of San Francisco is termed) is about the same as San Francisco. The harbor is one of the safest and most commodious in the world, and the commissioners appointed by the general government to make surveys and decide upon the best location, have to recommend Mare's Island, half a mile from Vallejo, as the naval depot of the United States in California. The climate of Vallejo is delightful, and the place is never sub jected to those strong and cold northerly winds which render San Francisco so disagreeable as a residence and so dangerous as a commercial city. There is plenty of marble for building purposes in the immediate vicinity of Vallejo, and plenty of limestone at a con venient distance, and easily obtainable. The new city will command a most beautiful view of San Pablo Bay and of the country adjacent, and the Napa valley (through which the Napa River flows, and near the mouth of which the city is located,) and the Sonoma valley in the vicinity are among the most fertile in California. Near Vallejo are also mineral springs, possessing similar properties, and said to equal the celebrated Congress Springs at Saratoga. HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. 283 CHAPTER XIII. THE MINERALOGICAL AND OTHER CHARACTERISTICS OF GOLD, AND THE MODE OF DISTINGUISHING IT WHEN FOUND; TOGETHER WITH THE ASSAY, REDUCTION, AND REFINEMENT OF GOLD. FOR the purpose of presenting all that is connected with that precious metal, that has built up a state within a few years, and of making the reader fully acquainted with all that is necessary for the gold- seeker to know, we will now describe, in some detail, the natural history, character of gold, and the mode of determining its presence and value. Gold invariably exhibits something of the peculiar yellow color which it is known to possess in a pure state ; but this color is modified by various metals with which it may be mixed. Thus it may be described as having various shades of gold-yellow ; occasionally approaching silver- white, occasionally resembling brass-yellow of every degree of intensity, and even verging on steel-gray in some specimens from South America. The lustre of gold is highly metallic and shining, and owing to the small amount of oxidation at its sur face, it preserves its shining lustre even after long exposure in contact with other substances. Thus the shining particles are often seen in sand when the quantity is barely sufficient to repay the cost of work ing, notwithstanding the value of the metal. Even 20* 234 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. however, if the surface is dull, the true color and appear ance are easily restored by rubbing, and when polished it takes a very vivid lustre, which is preserved for a long time in the atmosphere. Although in the division which has been intro duced into gold-yellow, brass-yellow, and grayish- yellow, native gold seems with some slight modifica tions to agree with the geological relations of its varieties, yet this mode of arrangement deserves little serious notice. The gold-yellow varieties comprise the specimens of the highest gold-yellow colors, though there are some among them which have rather a pale color ; they include most of the crystals and of the imitative shapes, in fact the greater part of the species itself. The brass-yellow native gold is confined to some of the regular and imitative shapes of a pale color (which is generally called brass-yellow,) and, as it is said, of a less specific gravity than the preceding one ; but this does not seem to have ever been ascer tained by direct experiment. The grayish-yellow native gold occurs only in those small flat grains which are mixed with the native platina, and possess a yellow color a little inclining to gray ; they are said to have the greatest specific gravity of them all. The real foundation of this distribution seems to be the opinion that the first are the purest, the second mixed with a little silver, and the third with platina. It is not known whether the latter admixture really takes place, but it is certain that several varieties of gold-yellow native gold contain an admixture of silver.* In color and lustre, inexperienced persons might mistake various substances for gold ; these are chiefly * Mobs' Mineralogy, by Haidinger, vol. ii. p. 438. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 235 Iron and copper pyrites, but from them it may be readily distinguished, being softer than steel and very malleable ; whereas iron pyrites is harder than steel, and copper pyrites is not malleable ; for although the latter mineral yields easily to the point of a knife, it crumbles when we attempt to cut or hammer it, whereas gold may be separated in thin slices, or beaten out into thin plates by the hammer. There can thus be no possible difficulty in distinguishing these various minerals in a native state, even with nothing but an ordinary steel knife. From any other minerals, as mica, whose presence has also misled some persons, gold is easily known by very simple experiments with a pair of scales, or even by careful washing with water, for gold being much heavier than any other substance found with it (except platina and one or two extremely rare metals,) will always fall first to the bottom, if shaken in water with mud, while mica will generally be the last material to fall. This is the case, however fine or few the particles of either mineral may be. Gold therefore can be distinguished by its relative weight or specific gravity, and by its relative hardness, from other bodies which resemble it. . It is described generally as soft, completely malleable and flexible, but more accurately as softer than iron, copper or silver, but harder than tin or lead. It is useful to know facts of this kind, as a simple experiment that can be made with instruments at hand, is often more valuable than a much more accurate examination requiring materials not immediately available. Thus if it is found that a specimen (perhaps a small scale or spangle) is readily scratched by silver, copper or iron, and scratches tin and lead, it may, if of the right 236 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. color and sinking rapidly in water, be fairly assumed to be gold. The weight of gold," as of all substances, it is con venient to estimate relatively, and in comparison with the weight of an equal volume of water. The relative weight, or specific gravity, as it is called, of gold, is remarkably high, the lightest varieties being twelve times heavier than water, and pure gold nineteen times. This is expressed by saying that the specific gravity of native gold is 12 — 19, and the number determined by comparing the weight of the mineral in water and air. As the value of gold depends almost entirely on its specific gravity, and this test, therefore, is of the greatest practical importance, it will not be out of place if we here explain some very simple apparatus for the determination of this point. If the specimen then is large enough to be sus pended conveniently by a thread, weigh it first in air by a fine balance, expressing the result in grains, and taking care previously to remove dust or loosely adher ing particles. Then suspend it by a horsehair from the scale-pan (it is convenient to have a hook attached to it for this purpose,) and thus suspended, immerse it and re-weigh it in water, taking care that it is covered on all sides by at least half an inch of water, and carefully brushing off with a feather any bubbles of air that adhere to the surface. The results may then be noted as follows : — Weight of substanco in the air in grains . . . . Deduct weight of ditto in water Differ en ce . This result gives the weight of a bulk of water HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 237 equal to that of the specimen, and by dividing the weight of the specimen in air by this number, the specific gravity is obtained. weight of substance in air Specific gravity— weight of equal bulk of water If, however, the substance is in the form of fine sand, or very small lumps, it is better, after weighing it carefully, to take a small dry phial furnished with a stopper ; counterpoise this phial accurately in the weight-scale by shot or strips of lead, then fill it com pletely with pure water, taking care that no bubbles of air are left in, and weigh the quantity of water it contains : afterwards empty the bottle and dry it inside. Next fill the bottle about two-thirds full of the powder to be examined, weigh this and record the weight. Then fill the bottle once more with water, taking care, as before, that all bubbles are expelled and none of the powder washed out. Once more weigh it. We have then to make the following calculation : Weight of powder and water in grains = Deduct weight of powder alone = Difference (weight of water left in bottle) = "Weight of bottle full of water in grains = Weight of water left in bottle = Difference (weight of water displaced by, and equal in bulk to, powder) The specific gravity ^ °f P0wder in air weight of water displaced. It may be useful to know the specific gravity of various substances at all resembling gold in weight or 238 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. appearance, and we therefore append the following short table. The specific gravity of water is assumed to be unity : — Osmium .... 21| Platinum . . . 19 \ — 22 not hammered. Iridium .... 18T7ff Gold 15|— 19£ ditto Mercury . . . . 13 \ Palladium . . . HT7ff Lead 11* Rhodium . . . lOf Silver 10 Copper .... 7|— 8 Brass . . . . 8| Lead ore (galena) 7^ Copper pyrites . 5 Iron pyrites . . 4 Diamond . . . 3£ Sand .... 2f— 3 By the help of this table the value of auriferous sand may also be in some degree estimated, since, as will be seen, the specific gravity of most of the sands is under 3, while that of the most impure gold is 12 ; so that if the specific gravity of the sands them selves, when experimented on, is much greater than that of ordinary sand, it is likely that the excess will be for the most part gold, in a district otherwise known to be auriferous : the greater the specific gravity, too, the greater probability there is, of this being the cause. It may also be worth while to mention here, that the specific gravity of those pepitas or lumps of gold which present a fine yellow color varies generally from 14-Sjj to 18T8jj ; but when much paler they may range as low * A very rough estimate of the value of specimens of native gold may be obtained by multiplying the specific gravity by 4 ; the result gives the value in shillings nearly. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 239 as 12J, which is that of a mineral called electrum, which will be described presently, and which is a mix- ttire of silver and gold. When a piece of gold is broken (which is not done without difficulty — greater in proportion to its purity,) the fractured edges are very uneven and torn, exhibit ing a peculiar fibrous appearance, known to mineralo gists as ufine hackly." This fracture indicates that the mineral is torn asunder and not really broken, and is a proof of considerable toughness. The form in which gold is found is various. It is sometimes crystalline, in eight or twelve-sided regular figures, passing into cubes, but the crystals are gene rally small and rare. In case of such crystals being found, it is well worth knowing that they possess a value as mineral specimens far beyond that of the gold which they contain. More frequently the metal is found in lumps or grains, called by the Spaniards pepitas, varying in size from that of a pin's head to masses weighing, as has been already mentioned, nearly one hundred pounds troy. The term pepita is only applied to grains of some magnitude, and the most common limits of size are from that of a small pin's head to that of a nut or gooseberry. When much smaller and still rounded, they are called gold dust, and when flattened, scales or span gles. In nature, and when seen in veins of quartz, gold often occurs foliated, or* in leafy expansions of extreme thinness, or in branchy (dendritic) forms, probably made up of minute crystals. It is in the form of very minute grains that the metal is generally disseminated through rocks and auriferous ores of various metals, and these are reduced according to 240 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. circumstances in methods that will be alluded to in a future chapter. In pepitas and small grains it is car ried down by streams and deposited in their beds, the pepitas being usually most abundant where there is reason to suppose considerable disintegration of the surface, and where the action of denuding causes to a great extent is evident. The coast of Africa and the rivers of Europe are examples of the former case, while the Siberian deposits and those of California would appear to belong to the latter. The following are examples of the constituent parts of various specimens of gold obtained from different gold districts, and will form a useful guide for com parison. Table showing the Composition of Native Gold.* Locality. Gold. Silver. Copper. Iron. Auriferous sand of Schabrowski, near Kathe- ) 98-76 94-41 94-00 93-78 92-47 92-00 89-35 86-97 83-85 82-40 64-52 60.08 0-16 5-23 5-85 5-94 7-27 8-00 10-65 10-53 16.15 17-60 35-48 38-38 0-35 0-39 0-08 0.06 0.33 0-05 0.04 0-08 Boruschka, near Nijny-Tagilsk, Siberia (Rose)- • • BeresovsK, si Dcna ( Kosej oCTota (Jx>u^sinf,auit) ^ Gold of .Senegal (Darcet) Auriferous sand, Nijny-Tagilsk, Siberia (Rose) • • Mine of Sinarowski in the Altai (Rose) The gold from California, according to the assay of Mr. Warwick of New York, yields 89*58 per cent, pure gold, and is therefore, about equal to that ob tained from the washings of Miask (the richest district in Western Siberia, and that producing the largest pepitas,) and superior, as the assayer remarks, to the gold dust from Senegal. There is a remarkable mixture of native gold with * Abridged from Dufresnoy's " Mineralogie." HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 241 silver occasionally found in Siberia, and known under the name of electrum. Its color is pale brass-yellow, passing into silver-white. It occurs in small plates and imperfect cubes, and possesses many of the charac ters of gold, but it consists only of 64 per cent, of that metal, and 36 per cent, silver. It is at once known by its low specific gravity, which does not exceed 12. Other mixtures of gold are (1) a rJwdium-gold found in Mexico, and containing 34 to 43 per cent, of rhodium, having a specific gravity of 15J — 16-8, and a clear, dirty yellow color ; and (2) a palladium-gold (containing 9.85 per cent, palladium, and 4*17 per cent, silver) found in Brazil and elsewhere in South America, in small crystalline grains of pale yellow color. The auriferous ores of tellurium, including silver, have hitherto only been found in Transylvania. Their color is steel-gray, and they tarnish on exposure- The variety called graphic-gold, or graphic tellurium, consists of about 60 per cent, of tellurium, 30 per cent, gold, and 10 per cent, silver, and is worked chiefly as an ore of gold. Another variety, "yellow gold glance," yields somewhat less tellurium, gold and silver, and as much as 20 per cent, of lead. Having now explained at some length the more manifest characteristics of gold, namely, its color, hardness, and specific gravity, it is necessary, before explaining the mode of separating it from associated minerals, that we should here give some account of the behavior of this metal under the blowpipe, and when exposed to simple cheinicaj tests. The assay of gold and its accurate analysis, we postpone for the present. The method of blowpipe analysis, although exceed ingly useful, is not absolutely necessary in the case 21 242 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. of gold, because of the many readier ways of deter mining the metal, but it seems advisable to state the appearances presented. All the varieties are readily fusible into a globule, which when the gold is pure, is unaltered by the continuance of the heat. In this respect it differs entirely from iron and copper pyrites, which, on being exposed to the flame, give off sulphur fumes and undergo considerable change. In the case of gold containing other metals, these, with the ex ception of silver, may generally be got rid of by con tinuing the heat in the exterior flame with the addi tion of a little nitre. Before the oxy-hydrogen blow pipe, the metal is volatilized in the form of a purple oxide. Gold is not acted on by any of the acids alone. When exposed to the mixture of nitric with hydro chloric acid (in the proportion of one part nitric to four of hydrochloric) called aqua regia, it dissolves without residue, the solution giving a purple precipitate with protochloride of tin, and a brown precipitate with pro- tosulphate of iron. Electrum, the mixture of silver with gold above alluded to, is only partially soluble in aqua regia, giving a residue of chloride of silver. The solution is acted on by protosulphate of iron, as already explained. The following simple mode of detecting attempts at imposition in gold dust is worthy of being recorded in this place. Place a little gold dust in a glass tube or earthen ware saucer, and pour nitric acid upon it; then hold the glass or saucer over a flame, or upon a few embers, until red flames (nitric vapors) arise; if it be pure gold, the liquid will not become discolored ; but if pyrites or brass-filings should have been mixed HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 243 with it, the acid will become turbid, green, and black, discharging bubbles of gas. After the ebullition has ceased, the residue should be washed with water, and acid again poured upon it, when the same effect may be observed, but in a less degree ; and if the experi ment be repeated till all effervescence ceases, it will finally leave the gold dust pure. CHAPTER XIV. ADDITIONAL RECENT EVENTS. THE history of the laws of a State affords the best idea of its social condition — present and prospective ; for they are framed from the necessity of circumstances and the demands of the inhabitants. We may, there fore, see the condition and the progress of the Cali- fornians in their legislative transactions. The California Legislature adjourned on the 22d April. They have passed a law creating a State assayer, until a mint be established in California. Among the one hundred and forty-three acts and joint resolutions passed, we notice the following : To incorporate the cities of Benecia, San Diego, San Jose, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sonoma, and Santa Barbara, and a general act for the incorporation of cities ; concerning the State revenue, etc, and its man agement ; creating loans temporarily, appropriations, and other fiscal acts ; relating to the appointment of pilots, regulating the duties of harbor masters, declar ing certain rivers, etc., navigable, creating health 244 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. officers for San Francisco, creating a marine hospital, regulating quarantine at San Francisco, providing for the inspection of steamboats ; subdividing the State into counties, establishing county seats and providing for the complete organization of all the counties ; or ganizing the supreme court, providing for the early pub lication of the laws, organizing district courts through out the State, establishing a municipal court in San Francisco, abolishing all laws in force in the State, ex cept such as were passed by this Legislature, adopting the common law, regulating the interest of money, public ferries, notaries public, jails and jailers, limited partnerships, roads and highways, public elec tions, volunteer companies, wills, militia, liens of mechanics and others, descents and distributions, bills of exchange and promissory notes, constables, coro ners, guardians, fraudulent conveyances and contracts, the rights of husband and wife, incorporation of col leges, marriages, auctioneers, government and protec tion of the Indians, settlement of the estates of de ceased persons, proceedings against debtor by attach ment ; creating the office of State assayer, melter and refiner of gold, to regulate Senatorial and As sembly districts, prescribing the mode of maintaining and defending possessory actions on lands belonging to the United States ; to prevent the importation of convicts ; for the better regulation of the mines and the government of foreign miners, the national Washington monument, pay of chaplain, the Pacific railway, and concerning grants of land by the General Govern ment to commissioned officers who served in the late war with Mexico. Here we have all the machinery necessary for the full regulation of a large, commercial, agricultural, manu- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 245 facturing, and mining community. The session of the Legislature must have been laborious, indeed ; but the members have acquitted themselves of their ar duous duties rapidly and well. One great measure adopted by the Legislature was the substitution of the common law for the uncertain civil law which existed in California when ceded to the United States. The whole legal administration will now conform to that of most of the other States of the Union. The provisions in the Constitution for the purpose of edu cation, have been nobly carried out by an act for tho incorporation of colleges. Agriculture in California appears to be improving, and as it is getting to be as profitable as any thing else, it is attracting increased attention. Boxes of garden seeds which had cost nine dollars, have been sold for one hundred dollars, and scythes which cost three dollars, sold for forty-five dollars. The seeds which were sent around Cape Horn, were almost use less, while those which went over the Isthmus, her metically scaled, came up first. One man near San Jose, has made fifty thousand dollars by raising pota toes. What toil in digging and washing gold would be necessary to realize that amount ! Among the recent mining incidents, the following is remarkable : — Last winter, three men accidentally struck upon a rich deposit of gold, in a gulch about twelve miles from Knight's Ferry, on the Stanislaus River, and four or five miles back from it. They worked this vein with great success, managing to keep it a secret, until an Indian, wandering through the locality, discovered the secret, and communicated it to his tribe. The next day, several hundred Indians fell to work, with the same success ; but as they spent 21* 246 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. their earnings in gambling and drinking at night, they incautiously let out the secret, and it spread among the whites. The latter, without scruple, took possession of the ground, and set the Indians adrift. An alcalde was elected, the ground staked off, and allotted to the several claimants. This gulch, although rifled of its richest treasures, afforded good digging for a large number of persons, for some weeks, many carrying away, when the water failed, a thousand dollars and upwards, as the result of their labors. The three discoverers of the gulch, took away with them about forty pounds of gold to each man, all scraped up in the short space of seven weeks. Imitation lumps of gold have been made and brought into circulation in California. The State Assayer states that above forty specimens have been brought to his notice. They are generally in size from four to five ounces to a pound in weight — quartz, and every thing else necessary to make them look right, properly intermixed. It has been definitely settled that gold does exist in the vicinity of San Jose'. Specimens have been taken to San Francisco. Several artesian wells have been constructed at San Francisco, since the second great fire, and it is thought that others will soon add to the comfort and conve nience of the people of that city. The want of good water for drinking purposes, has been the most serious objection to San Francisco as a place of residence ; and additional incentive to exertion in the matter is furnished by the constant apprehension of destructive fires.* * The Alia Californian, of the 1st of May, 1850, furnishes us with an interesting account of the origin and meaning of the names of HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 247 Coal has been discovered in California, in various places, and is reported to abound in considerable quantities in the neighborhood of San Francisco. Every day developes some new wealth of this land of places in the new State. We have elsewhere alluded to the name California, as being derived from calwnte and fornalla, two Spanish words, together signifying hot furnace. Pueblo de los Angeles— City of the Angels. So named from the fer tility of the soil, the geniality of the climate, &c. San Diego, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, San Francisco, were all originally Catholic missionary stations and were so named by the priests. Monterey signifies literally king of forests, and was so called in honor of Count Monterey, as well as from the neighboring forest of massive pines and other trees. Contra Costa, the name of a county, signifies opposite coast, from its being opposite San Francisco. Mount Diablo, which is in this county, was named from the following circumstance : In 1806 a military expedition from San Francisco inarched against the tribe "Bolgones," who were encamped at the foot of the mount ; the Indians were prepared to receive the expedition, and a hot en gagement ensued in the large hollow fronting the western side of the mount. As the victory was about to be decided in favor of the Indians, an unknown personage, decorated with the most extraordinary plu mage, and making divers movements, suddenly appeared near the combatants. The Indians were victorious, and the incognitio (Puy) departed toward the mount. The defeated soldiers, on ascertaining that the spirit went through the same ceremony daily and at all hours, named the mount "Diablo," in allusion to its mysterious inhabitant, that continued thus to make his strange appearance, until the tribe was subdued by the troops in command of Lieutenant Gabriel Mo- raga, in a second campaign of the same year. In the aboriginal tongue "Puy" signifies "Evil Spirit;" in Spanish it means Diablo, and Devil in the Anglo-American language. Calaveras signifies skulls, and the creek thus styled was named from the fact of three thousand skulls having been found lying on its banks by its early discoverers. They were the remnants of a great battle be tween the Indians. Tuolumne, which has been spelt so many different ways in the letters from California, is a corruption of the Indian word " talma- lamme," a. cluster of stone wigwams. Mariposa means butterfly. The river was so named in 1807, by a hunting party of Califomians, from the fact of their encampment there having been surrounded by myriads of most gorgeous butterflies. Solano was so named after a celebrated Catholic missionary. Yolo is a corruption of the Indian word " Yoloy,"and means a place abounding witJi rushes. 248 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. treasure, and we regard the discovery of the abundance of coal as in the highest degree important to the resi dents of California. Even amid the news of the extraordinary yield of the gold region during the present year, 1850, when a single vessel, in one trip, brings $2,000,000 worth of gold dust to the United States, we can pause to notice the discovery of the more useful substances. The Trinity River and Humboldt Harbor, in the north-western part of California, have lately become a resort for the superfluous population of the Sacramento and San Joaquin regions. The harbor is pronounced a very good one, and the discovery of abundance of gold on the branches of Trinity River, will, doubtless, contribute to the building of a large town upon its shores. In the middle of June, there was much excitement in San Francisco, caused by the reported discovery of a gold lake, among the mountains between the South Fork of Feather River and the Yuba. One man was said to have got §7000 in four days, and a party of ten Kanakas were reported to have got $75,000 in a Marin was so designated after a great Indian chief, who made war so desperately against the Spaniards. Sonoma is an Indian word, signifying valley of the moon. The In dians so named the valley in which the present town of that title is situated. Napa was the name of the Indian tribe who inhabited the valley of the same name. Mendocino was so named after the first Viceroy of Mexico. Yuba, a corruption of " uba," originally alluded to the immense quantities of vines which shaded the river. Suite is a French word signifying hill, and was given by a party of hunters from the Hudson Bay Company to a range of high hills in the valley of the Sacramento. From thence the county is named. Coluse county was so called after an Indian tribe of which it was the name. Shalta county is so styled after an Indian tribe also. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 249 week. A vast number of people were by this means attracted to the sources of 'the Feather and Yuba Rivers, and though they found the lake story a hoax of a vile character, they found tolerably fair diggings, which would console them for their disappointment. The following extract from the Placer Times of the 17th of July, 1850, under the head of " Great Discoveries of Gold — Gold Lake," will afford the reader a lively conception of the degree of excitement caused in California by every new announcement of a newly discovered locality abounding in gold : " We were inclined to give only an average degree of credit to stories that have reached us during the past few days, of the unprecedented richness which this locality has developed. A few moments passed in Marysville on Saturday, convinced us that there is much more show of reality in this last eureka report, than usually attaches to the like. In a year's experi ence of local excitements from the same cause, we have seen none equal to what now prevails in that town. It has visited all the inhabitants indiscrimi nately, lawyers, doctors and judges, traders, teamsters, mechanics and gamblers. Our readers know we are the last to justify the circulation of unfounded or exaggerated reports, but we deem it right to conceal nothing of what may prove (for aught that we can see to the contrary) one of the most astounding discoveries in the modern history of diggings. The specimens brought into Marysville are of a value from $1600 down. Ten ounces is reported as no unusual yield to a panfull, and the first party of sixty, which started out under the guidance of one who had returned suc cessful, were assured that they would not get less than $500 each per day. We were told that the previous 250 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. morning two hundred had left the town with a full supply of provisions and four hundred mules. Those who could not go were hiring others in their stead. The length of the journey and the quantity of provi sions required, there being no stores in the region, rendered an outfit rather expensive. Mules and horses had doubled in value, and $400 were considered no more than enough to furnish a proper start. The distance to Gold Lake was first reported two hundred miles ; the best informed, however, say that it is but little more than half of that. It lies at a very considerable elevation among the mountains that divide the waters of the South Fork of Feather from those of the north branch of the Yuba. The direction from Marysville is a little north of east. The story has of course spread ere this far and wide among the miners high up on the Feather and Yuba, and the spot will be as crowded as all other good places are, ere the tardy adventurer from this region could reach it. The region of the Gold Lake wonders is a new one, however, and lies between what are established to be diggings of unsurpassed richness. It is our belief that it is better for one who has got some initia tion into the gold mysteries, (if there be any,) not to be content in old ' used up' localities, but to push along to the great field yet unexplored; and that, though the search be long and laborious, the big lift is ulti mately pretty sure for those who are patient and per severing. The same paper of July 18th, contains additional particulars, having a tendency to add plausibility to the reports. Among other things, a man by the name of McLelland came into Marysville on the 17th, with $7000, the result of four days' labor at Gold Lake. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 251 Whatever may be the truth of the reports, there is no doubt of one thing — the whole population of Marys- ville and its vicinity have become infected by the news, and are taking up their march thitherwards in crowds. The Transcript speaks rather doubtingly on the subject ; it says — " The reports come as a general thing, through teamsters and other persons whose interest it is to give as favorable accounts as possible. The statements are very conflicting." To this we may add the statement of a gentleman who reached this city from Marysville, direct, on Tuesday night. The excitement, he says, is great; but no one could give any definite information of the locality or of its productiveness. Yet all seemed to think there was no doubt in the matter, and as many as could get away were starting, or getting ready to push for the new El Dorado. Upon his way down, on board the boat, he conversed with a man who professed to have explored that region lately, although he did not claim to know where Gold Lake was. But between the North Fork of the Yuba and Feather Rivers, at the foot of the great chain of mountains, he reported a series of lakes of various dimensions, and " two thousand people," prospecting all about. The snow was very deep — " six feet" — and but little gold. The following extract from the Placer Times, is the most positive information within our knowledge. On the arrival of the " Lawrence," yesterday, from Marysville, we received more news of the Gold Lake excitement, now prevailing in those parts. It pro mises to spare no one. Many who would not be understood to have yielded to it, seek, under various pretences, to get away — some pleading business in other quarters of the mines j others desiring the recrea- 252 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. tion of a country jaunt. It is reported that, up to Thursday last, two thousand persons had taken up their journey; that many who were working good claims, and had made considerable progress, were deserting them for the new discovery. Mules and horses were almost impossible to be obtained. A supply from this quarter was expected daily, and most anxiously awaited. Although the truth of the report rest on the authority of but two or three who have returned from Gold Lake, yet but few are found who doubt their marvellous revelations. The first man who came into Marysville took out a party of forty as guide, on condition they paid him one hundred dollars each if his story was verified, and offering his life as a forfeit for any deception. " This party, it is understood, came near losing their way, from the difficulty the guide found in retracing his path, after the snow had melted. Fortunately, however, they encountered another man, who was on his way returning, and he showed the track. The second person has since left with a much larger party, who are to give him two hundred dollars each, and the same forfeit is provided. The spot is described as very difficult of approach, and it is feared that many will lose their way. A party of ten Kanakas are reported to have wintered at Gold Lake, subsist ing chiefly on the flesh of their animals. They are said to have taken out about $75,000 the first week. The lake is not large, and, after the wet season ceases, has no outlet ; at present, however, the water runs over the basin, and finds its way into the North Fork of Feather River. At a lower stage, it admits of easy drainage, and the undertaking is already pro jected. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 253 "Of course the most extravagant anticipations are founded on the result of this work, induced by the yield from the borders of the lake which have already been realized. _The " placer" proper is very limited, and little encouragement is given as to the character of the surrounding country; indeed, it is probably entirely unexplored, as the region lies about as far up among the snows as the most adventurous have yet penetrated." The Yuba River is destined to be thoroughly rifled of its wealth. Three miles above the new town of Lina, a company has turned the river from its course, and made it run through a lateral slough. Prospect ing of the bed has proved very satisfactory, and the shares in the company's stock have sold at a high rate. As was apprehended, various difficulties have oc curred between the owners of land at Sacramento City, and a large number of squatters upon it. The ground was bought and surveyed, and the title to ownership was perfect. But the number of emigrants who arrive at Sacramento at particular seasons forces them to encamp outside of the regularly built town, and when thus encamped, they consider themselves as settlers, and are unwilling to give up possession of the ground. The power of the law has been called into requisition several times to eject these squatters. The emigrants to California by way of the Great Salt Lake route have endured terrible hardships during the present year. The rigors of the season, and the want of water, have been but secondary matters. The Indians, always unfriendly, have been particularly hostile, and several battles between them and the emi grants have taken place. In one of the battles, thirty Indians were killed, while the whites had several 22 254 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. wounded, but none killed. It is supposed that the assailants belonged to the Utahs. The Salt Lake City is the great refuge of the belated emigrants upon that route, arid the Mormons are hospitable to all who visit them for shelter, or for mere curiosity. The great body of the emigrants continue to take the old route, which we have elsewhere described, and find that it is the safest and shortest of the land routes. Judging from the statements of the number of emigrants who have passed Fort Laramie this sea son, we should say, that the route could scarcely be called a wilderness, when it is impossible to travel thirty miles without meeting with parties and families of whites. Part of this tide of emigration will flow to Oregon, no doubt, on account of the fertile lands to be there obtained ; but the golden land will get the bulk of it. In a recent tour through the region bordering on Moqueleme River, in California, a couple of gentle men from Stockton, discovered a cave or grotto of great extent. They found that it contained large quantities of stalactite, and saw evidences of gold. The Indians who accompanied the gentlemen were horror stricken at their audacity, when they entered a cave which tradition said no man returned from alive. The skeleton of a human being was found at some distance from the opening. An event has occurred which will no doubt exercise a great influence on California affairs. This is the discovery of the existence of abundance of gold in Oregon territory. The discovery created great ex citement through the various cities and towns of Oregon, and the northern towns of California. That which is exhibited, shows an entirely different charac- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 255 ter to any of that dug in the mines of California. It contains large quantities of platina, and is said to be of a richer character. The mines just discovered are situated about two hundred miles from Oregon City. The consequences of this discovery may be easily ap prehended. Oregon will secure a larger share of the emigration from the Atlantic States than she had before, and her progress will be rapid, for her soil and climate render the country an attractive place of re sidence. But will the progress of California be less rapid in consequence of this? We think not. The united attractions of the two territories will operate for the benefit of both, and only tend to increase the quantity of emigration. CHAPTER XV. A GENERAL VIEW OF CALIFORNIA AT THE PRESENT TIME. WE have followed the narrative of the events in the history of California up to the present time. We have traced her progress from her first settlement up to the time when she appears as a sovereign republican State ; and we have seen the effects of her vast metallic wealth working wonders in a short space of time. We have seen her towns before and after the gold discovery, and marked the contrast ; and we have seen her territory become thickly peopled, and her resources developed in a space of time which other territories less favored, would require for an infancy. We have also considered her soil, climate, productions, and population, and exhibited each subject as fully as 256 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. our information warranted. But in order to give a clear conception of the general character of Califor nia and her resources and capabilities, and to enable the reader to obtain an idea of the bright future to which she is destined, we have concluded to add another chapter upon the general state of things there at the present time. California is now a State — in organization at least, if not in being a member of the Union. The country has become thoroughly American in its government and laws. A Constitution is adopted as a State organi zation, which bears the impress of enlightened senti ment and just principles. The most liberal provisions have been made in that instrument for the grand end of public education. The power and capability of the people to rule themselves has been recognized in the matter of electing nearly all the officers of the govern ment — including the judges of the various courts over which the State has control. The Legislature, in the course of a laborious session, has abolished the old civil law which ruled the country under the Mexican govern ment, and continued after the acquisition of the terri tory by the United States, and have substituted the com mon law of England and many of the States in the Union. In taking this step, they were actuated by sound policy. Few of those who were subjected to be tried, or to have their suits decided by the rules of this civil code were aware of the nature of these rules' ; and from their crude and unintelligible charac ter, it would have been a long time before they could have been fully or certainly informed. The old com mon law is that to whose rules they have conformed in the older States, and which is better suited to their habits and principles of action. HISTORY OF CALIFOUXM. 2S7 But with her complete State organization, Caiifo; ma has applied for admission into the Union, and from yarious causes, without reason, as we conceive, has not yet been admitted to her claim. This delay, continued through a long session of Congress, has somewhat irritated the Californians, who are anxiously watching the doings of Congress. The state of feeling on the subject is clearly stated in one of the California papers ; and it is worthy of attention. We extract it. "SHALL CALIFORNIA BE ADMITTED? — We desire once more to state calmly and firmly the grievances under which the State of California labors, in order that Congress, in her hesitation, which may terminate in an open refusal to admit us as equal sharers in the benefits, as we are of the burdens of the general government, may not act in ignorance of the true state of feeling existing here upon a point so vital to our future. " California feels that she has been made the sport of gambling politicians long enough. This is the uni versal sentiment of one hundred thousand citizens of this State, expecting daily reinforcements which will swell the number to an aggregate of two hundred and fifty thousand before the second session of the present Congress. She feels that such a mass of men, born under the flag of the Union, have a right to some of the privileges which they were taught to suppose it typified. She feels that she has no right to be taxed and not protected — to be taxed, and not represented, to be taxed, and nothing but taxed. Nothing else has been done for her. We hear of no Indian agent in the country. American citizens are slaughtered weekly if not daily by savages on our border. An agent of the Postoffice Depart ment has been sent here, but his power to put into 22* 258 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. successful operation a thorough mail system, com mensurate with the wants of the people, has been effectually crippled from the want of an appropriation to meet the necessary expenses. We are without admiralty courts ; yet the interests of the commerce of the Pacific are centring in the Bay of San Fran cisco. We are paying millions into the treasury of the United States yearly. Our custom-house is thronged daily with captains and consignees of vessels, paying government dues, which eventually come from the pockets of the citizens of the whole State ; yet there is hardly a possibility that one dollar in a thousand will ever be expended for our benefit. " This state of things is unnatural — too much so for a quiet endurance, unless stern necessity is at the bottom. Were there any reason why we should be i treated thus, we could patiently suffer on. But there is none. And now a sentiment is fast gaining ground here, that it is the intention of Congress — or a portion of Congress, to throw us back upon a territorial organi zation. It may not be amiss to state that California, under no circumstances, will give up her State organi zation. She has just escaped from the crudities and unintelligibilities of the Mexican code. Under it, she would still belaboring, had the action of Congress been awaited. Neither to this state of vassalage to institu tions foreign to the habits and education of her citizens, nor to a second vassalage of territorial government under Congress, will she submit now. She knows her interests too well for this. If we are driven to take matters into our own keeping, the responsibility rests not upon us, neither should the odium, if any attaches. Should Congress ever come to its senses, and do what naked justice demanded months ago, California will ever be HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 259 ready and proud to form one of the States of the Union ; but it is asking too much that she should offer herself a willing sacrifice on the altar of demagogues." This is strongly and firmly said ; and we hope that it will exercise some influence on those to whose atten tion it is directed. Nothing can be more unjust in politics than taxation without a due compensation of protection and of law. There is scarcely any pros pect, however, that California will be required to go back to a territorial organization. Such a request would be absurd in the highest degree, and none but ultras recommend it. Whether California be admitted into the Union at the present session of Congress, or not, we may con sider her Constitution and many of her laws necessary for carrying out the provisions of the Constitution, as fixed and operative. "We have then, in a knowledge of their laws, a view of the character of society in California, in many particulars, but there are others which require further observation. One feature strikes the observer at first glance. It is the variety of nation which marks the population of the principal cities of California. There may be seen the rapid, yet prudent Yankee, with a sharp eye to the main chance, and a ready comprehension of the consequences of a bargain or a speculation; the cool, slow, and heavy-moving Englishman, wishing to be sure of his game, and, therefore, late in grasping for it ; the lively and sociable Frenchman, contrasting appearances and manners with things in Paris ; the coarse-looking German, with a lively conception of the wealth of the country, and a deep consideration of the means of grasping a goodly share of it ; the half-Spanish native of California, with his love of indolence, and easy of satisfaction ; the 260 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Chilian, with the ferocity and the cowardice of the descendants of the Spaniards, and loving fandangoes and riding horses, as intensely as the Calif ornians ; the Chinese, with dirty, but industrious habits, and the native Indians — a mean, degraded specimen of that noble race that once were lords of the American forests. At the present time, it is a matter of doubt, whether the Americans or the foreigners predominate in the population of California. It is certain that the former have things pretty much their own way in the various cities and in the mines. But that may be from a want of unity of action among the foreigners. The habits and modes of life belonging to the Ameri cans are generally prevalent in the cities ; but in the smaller and older towns, the native Californians con duct every thing in the old Spanish mode. The differ ence between the society of Los Angeles and Sacra mento City, is wide, and affords a good contrast be tween the restless, enterprising, utilitarian spirit of the Americans, and the indolent, pleasure-loving spirit of the Californians. With the Americans, in the cities where they are in the majority, business is the uppermost consideration upon all occasions, and profit and loss, and chances of obtaining a competency, the constant subject of thought. With the Californians, the enjoyment of the present, which alone is theirs, is at all times a matter of prime importance ; and gambling, drinking, dancing,- guitar-playing, and riding on horseback, are the principal sources of their plea sures. Which of these modes of passing away life is the most philosophical, we leave to the speculative. But it is apparent in California, that the energy of the American character is exercising a great influence on the descendants of the Spaniards. Their spirit is HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 261 infectious. In some of the towns upon the coast, one half of the buildings are occupied by persons who have emigrated from the Eastern States; and the contrast between their log and brick houses, and the adobe houses of the Californians, is singular, and seems as if the old dead looking trunk of the tree had suddenly sent out new branches full of life and freshness. All the vices consequent upon a heterogeneous population, suddenly thrown together and stimulated to an extraordinary degree of activity, have fully ex hibited themselves in California. Nearly every body in the mining regions carries deadly weapons of some sort, and with the promptings of avarice, and the ex citement of passion, many shocking, secret murders, and many open, revengeful encounters are continually occurring. The practice of carrying deadly weapons can only be abolished when a stronger feeling of security, induced by a confidence in the protection of the laws, shall take the place of constant dread. The mining population is of as mixed a character as that in the commercial cities ; and national jealousies will occur occasionally. The elation consequent upon suc cessful gold digging and speculating, leads to excess in drinking and gambling, and these lead to frequent quarrels and deadly encounters. The remedy for these things is only to be found in the reaction to which a few years will lead, when the power of the law shall be supreme throughout the gold region. The principal thing which has contributed in some degree to influence the prospect and the labors of the miners, is the government tax upon the foreigners who wish to work upon the public lands in digging and washing gold. The tax is certainly a just one, 19 262 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. but many are of opinion that it is .too high. A lighter tax would more readily receive the assent of the mass of foreigners ; but whether it is not just that they should pay a tax of eight dollars for every ounce of of gold they ohtain from the land of others, is another question. The greater portion of the gold region belongs to the government, and was paid for by the government. The people of the United States should, therefore, have the sole right to occupy it ; and it is but just, that those people of foreign nations who wish to reap a profit from it either by digging gold or culti vating the ground, should pay for the use of it. The effect of the tax is, that those who must pay it, either must give up mining or work harder to reap sufficient profit. In either case, the country is benefited. The mining region is constantly increasing in ex tent. The placers first worked still yield a profit suffi cient to reward the gold seeker for his labor, and the frequent discovery of new ones by parties prospect ing, keeps up the heat of excitement. The region is constantly extending towards the north. The vicinity of Trinity River is the most northern part of Cali fornia where gold is obtained in any considerable quantity, and the source of the San Joaquin, is the most southern. The entire region embraced between these two points is known to abound in the precious metal, and is traversed by the gold " prospectors." Of the gold obtained, a great quantity — a third, at least, remains in the country. Another is carried out of California by the foreigners, and the remainder is sent to the Atlantic States of the Union. This is but a rough estimate ; but it seems warranted by the facts of the number of foreigners in the country, and the necessary current money of the residents. Cer- HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 263 tain it is, that were we to judge of the quantity of gold obtained in California, by the amount received in the United Spates, we would fall far too short of the truth. The growth of the commerce of California neces sarily carries with it the growth of all those cities and towns which have any commercial advantages, or which are connected with the various ports. Not only has San Francisco constantly in her harbor a tremendous fleet of merchant vessels from all parts of the world, pouring into her lap the commodities neces sary to a new country and a rapid building city, and Sacramento, the commerce of the mines continually passing through it, but all the towns along the coast have felt the impulse, and have become the seat of a traffic of some sort. San Diego, Santa Barbara, San Pedro, and Monterey, are all commercial ports, which havo become the resort of those traders who wish to escape the crowd of competitors to be met with at the more northern towns, and to have a pleasant place of residence besides. Los Angeles, twenty-five miles from the port of San Pedro is the centre of an ex tensive inland trade, and from its being a delightful place of residence, will .contribute to the building up of San Pedro in a greater degree than the commerce of San Pedro can influence it. At present, San Francisco is a city of about thirty thousand inhabitants, and in spite of the repeated visitations of the calamity of destructive fire, it has suffered no stoppage in its rapid progress. On the contrary, these fires seem to give a new impulse to the energy and enterprise of its inhabitants, and, by im pressing upon them the utility of building their houses and stores of the more substantial brick, to have 264 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. been of permanent benefit. Like the water of a rapid river, which, meeting with a serious obstacle in its course, is checked for the moment and then, having gathered new strength, surmounts the barrier and springs forward with renewed energy, San Francisco has pursued her course. The late fire, decidedly the most disastrous the new city has experienced, produced for awhile a general stand in business. But the go- aheadative principle was too strong for a continuance of a stagnation ; and all the sufferers -set about doing their utmost to retrieve their fortunes. Success must wait upon such persevering energy. Sacramento City is fast treading upon the heels of her commercial sister city. Improvements are con stantly being made to the appearance of the city and the comfort of its inhabitants. A levee is in course of construction, which, it is thought, will effectually protect the city from being flooded during the season of the rise of the river. The overland emigration of which Sacramento is the goal, contributes to swell the population rapidly ; and, during the rainy season, the greater portion of the population of the northern mines flock into the city for refuge till the digging Beason commences. Stockton, Benicia, San Josd, and Sutter are each increasing the number of their residents and their trade very fast. The first is the depot of the south ern mines ; the second, the military and naval station, chosen by the government officers ; the third is the capital of the State ; the last is a thriving town, near Sacramento, but in a better situation. One of the most interesting features of California is the number of the missions in various parts of the State. They are and will continue to be interesting, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 265 because of their age, and the self-denying and ener getic labors with which they are connected. They were the centres, established by a few Catholic priests, from which the rays of enlightenment and civilized enjoyment were spread to the native Indians of Cali fornia. Each mission was a little principality, with many leagues of land attached, with some thousand head of cattle, and all the neighboring Indians sub ject to the control of the padre, and cultivating the land for their own and the padre's benefit. In 1800, these missions were sixteen in number, and three only have been added since that time. They are named and located as follows : — San Rafael and San Fran cisco Solano, north of San Francisco Bay ; Dolores, near San Francisco ; Santa Clara and San Jose', near Pueblo San Josd ; San Juan, Santa Cruz and Carmel, near Monterey ; Soledad, San Antonio, and San Miguel, in the valley of Salina River ; San Luis Obispo, La Purisima, Santa Ynez, Santa Barbara, and San Buenaventura, near Santa Barbara ; San Gabriel and San Fernando, near Los Angeles ; and San Luis Rey, San Juan Capistrano and San Diego, on the coast, south of Los Angeles. The wealth and power of these missions have fled, and they are all, more or less, in a state of decay. The Indians who were prospering under the care of the priests have either taken refuge in the mountains or linger about the old mission buildings, in a de graded and ignorant state. The immense quantity of land which was once attached to them has been taken from them from time to time, and now they but seem the ruins of former greatness. The beauty of the country surrounding those of the missions which are still existing, and the picturesque appearance of 23 266 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. those which are in ruins make them well worthy a visit to the lover of the antiquated. The usual attendant of the American enterprise, the printing press, has found its way to California, to contribute to the information and convenience of the people. Several papers are in extensive circulation in the cities and towns, and projects for others have been formed. The principal are the Alia Oalifornian, the Pacific News, the Courier, and the Placer Times. The three first are published in San Francisco, and the last at Sacramento. The want of facilities for transportation must be severely felt in the interior settlements of California. Steam vessels of the swiftest and most commodious character are the means of easy communication and transportation between San Francisco and the towns on Suisan Bay and the Sacramento, as far as Sacra mento City. Communication by the same means will doubtless, soon be established between the different ports on the coast. But railroads and canals are requisites for increasing the social communication and drawing the people of all parts of the State more closely together. These, however, will not be long in demand, after the State has been admitted into the Union. The companies for such purposes will feel secure in their charter, and receive assistance from the government. There is nothing more efficacious in binding a people together and maintaining peace and harmony of action, than the mechanical facility of communication. The Atlantic States of the Union afford plentiful illustration and evidence of this asser tion. Mark the differences of habit and sentiment in those States, where the means of intercourse between the inhabitants are comparatively few and far between. QISTOEY OP CALIFORNIA. 267 The interests of the different sections of a large State are of course, dissimilar, and produce the widest separation of feeling and opinion, which cannot be harmonized without the facilities of intercourse afford ed by railroads and canals. In no State are there greater means of communication between the people of the different sections, than in Massachusetts ; and in no State is there a more harmonious action in the Legislative department of the government. Let the railroads and canals be so constructed in California as soon as possible, and the effect will be the same. We have elsewhere mentioned and characterized the different harbors of California. There has been one other surveyed and pronounced excellent, and the beginning of a town made upon its shores. This is called Humboldt, after the distinguished traveller. It is about one hundred and seventy-five miles north of San Francisco. The river formerly called Pigeon, but now Trinity, empties into it. The harbor is sheltered from the south-west winds, but is exposed to the north west. The north-west winds prevail from November till March, and are severe ; but the south-west winds during the remainder of the year, are violent, and the harbor that is sheltered from them is considered a good one. The Indians who inhabit a large portion of Califor nia, have been, and will be, the subject of considerable trouble to the white residents. It is a matter of the first importance for their safety, and that of the Indians themselves, that agents should be sent among them, with power to negotiate and settle all claims made by them and disputes arising between them and the whites, else, a destructive war will be the con sequence. They should be induced to relinquish their 268 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. claims to the soil of California as far as the Sierra Nevada, and receive due compensation therefor. But for the want of properly constituted agents from the government, they have been either driven from their old haunts by the mountaineers and other settlers, or remain amongst the whites to be a constant source of trouble. The Shosonees, or Snakes, are the most numerous tribe to be found within the limits of the State, but there are others which are more warlike and untameable. They have all suffered considerably from the aggressions of the white emigrants, and their attacks upon individuals and parties are but the promptings of revenge, which should be taken into consideration. Lately, a war of extermination against the whole number of certain tribes was commenced on account of the doings of one or two of them. Few of them are provided with better weapons than bows and arrows, and, of course, they can make but a poor resistance to the rifles of the white men. In illustra tion of the treatment of the Indians, we quote an account of the doings of a war party against them, described in the work of a California tourist : — " A few days before our arrival in the mines, five men from Oregon, named Robinson, Thompson, English, Johnson, and Wood, were murdered by Indians while engaged in gold digging. Having but one rifle, they imprudently left it in their tent. This the Indians some thirty or forty in number, first secured, and then commenced their attack with bows and arrows. The Oregonians defended themselves some time, repeatedly driving the Indians with no other weapons than the stones they found on the bar where they were at work, but upon reaching the edge of the lary they were each time obliged again to retreat. At length three of HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 269 them, stuck full of arrows, were exhausted with loss of blood and overcome ; while the other two attempted to escape by crossing the fork, one succeeding in reaching the other side, but both finally meeting the fate of the others. One of the warriors of the tribe who participated in these murders was afterwards taken prisoner, and furnishing the above narration, his life was spared on condition that he should guide the whites to their rancheria. " Accordingly, on the 16th of April, a war party was made up of about twenty young mountaineers, mostly Oregon men, and including also the young Greenwoods. Well mounted, and equipped with the enormous gingling California spurs, they rode up to Old Greenwood's for a review from the old man pre paratory to starting. Each man carried besides his, inseparable rifle, a long Spanish knife usually mounted with silver, and stuck in the folds of his deerskin leg gings ; and many were also provided with a brace of pistols or bowie knife, worn in the red Mexican sash around the waist. Old Greenwood shouted ' Mind the scalps and squaws for me, and be sure you bring 'em all in, boys,' and away they went, at a thundering lope, eager for revenge." The day afterwards, the party returned. They were preceded by a party of Peruvians and- Chilians, with a number of their peones, or slaves. " Following closely this motley group, came on foot a body of about sixty California Indians. Warriors and boys, squaws with papooses tied on boards and slung at the back, all were prisoners. Clustered to gether like sheep driven to the slaughter, they hastened through the gorge with uncertain steps, the perspira tion rolling off their faces now pale with fright. Many 23* 270 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. of them were quite naked, and the men and boys especially, looked more like ourang-outangs than human beings. " In flank and rear rode the war party, which had left the Culloma Valley two days previous. Every man's rifle lay across the pommel of his saddle, and dangling at both sides hung several reeking scalps. Among them was a dashing young mountaineer named John Ross, who had two scalps for his share, and sticking in his sash was the red-sheathed bowie knife, which the writer had sold him a few days previous for an ounce of gold dust. Used previously to sever the rinds of pork, or shovel in rice and frijoles, it had now been ' wool gathering' or collecting wigs for old Green wood's fancy stores. "'Well done, boys," shouted Grover, 'you have given it to them this time ; now, what's the news ?' In reply to this inquiry, we learned that the captured Indian had led them the night before according to promise, to their raricheria, on Weber's Creek, where some of them showing fight and others attempting escape, they were fired upon and some twenty to thirty were killed. Their chief fought until shot the third time, rising each time to his knees and discharging his arrows, Ross finally killing, cutting off his head and scalping him. Their rancheria was then searched and burned ; the Indians delivering up the papers of the Oregon men, obtained at the time of their murder, and confessing that they had afterwards burned their bodies to ashes on the mountains. ^ The subsequent facts were related to the writer by his highly esteemed friend, Mr. Donald Grant, a native of bonnie Scotland, who was one of our party to the mines, and an eye witness to the scene ; not HISTORY OE CALIFORNIA. 271 having left on his return to San Francisco till the following day. " Arriving in the Culloma valley with their prison ers, the mountaineers and miners had a grand revel and jollification to celebrate their achievement. During the day most of the prisoners were released, but a few squaws and seven warriors were retained. The latter were questioned and examined relative to their parti cipation in the murder of the Oregonians. Nothing being elicited to prove their guilt, it was nevertheless determined that they should die ; because being bad looking and strong warriors, it was believed they were participators in the murders. Accordingly the con sumption of champaigne and brandy continued till sunset. At that hour the seven Indians were brought forth, and knowing well their fate, one of them put up his hand as a signal, and all leaped along the valley in rapid flight. Quick as thought the rifles began to crack in every direction, while old Greenwood raving around his cabin remonstrated at the deed, tossed his arms aloft with violent denunciation ; and stooping down gathered the dust in his palms, and sprinkled it on his head, swearing he was innocent of their blood. Meantime, John Greenwood stood beside the old man in stoic silence, too brave to participate in the massacre, but too much of a crow to utter his disapproval. But frantic with excitement the others thought only of revenge, and the balls whistling in every direction laid five of the warriors dead in the valley and mortally wounding another, only one escaping unscathed. The dying rays of the sun deserting the bloody scene, yet lingered on the mountain top, and the smoke of the discharge rolled in thick volume, like a pall over the corpses of the slain, while that solitary warrior turned 272 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. from his distant height, to gaze after his companicns, a moment in vain. But his heart quivered with ven geance, and the thin white locks of the old man in the valley, still mingled with the gray twilight, like the sackcloth and ashes of despair. " And this is what they call fighting the Indians ! A few days before only, we saw a young mountaineer wild with rage, threaten the life of an American who had ventured to suggest, that the murders committed by these Indians were provoked by many previous murders by the whites, and that they should be avenged by the death of the guilty among the Indians, and not by an indiscriminate slaughter." We cannot think highly of the civilization of the white men who take such unmerciful and indiscriminate revenge as this. Such ar"e not the means to gain the Indians over to a peace. Revenge only breeds revenge ; and those who commit such slaughter in retaliation for the murder of one or two men must look to the consequences. The great body of the travel to California is at present by way of the Isthmus of Panama ; but those who intend to settle permanently in the State, and who will increase the real population of it, take the overland route from Independence, Missouri. The shortest and best route for commercial purposes will soon be opened across Nicaragua. This will have many advantages over the old Isthmus route, but will not cause that one to be abandoned altogether. Chagres has become somewhat Americanized, and so have Gorgona, Cruces, and Panama. Travel has been some what facilitated by the addition of American boats on the Chagres River, and the provision of the mountain mules for the rough road to Panama, in sufficient HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 273 number to lower the price of travel and decrease the delay. The facilities of intercourse between California and the States east of the Rocky Mountains will tend to cement her to the Union by all the ties of trade and mutual interest. The people of that State, being at so great a distance from the rest of the States, would seem to be alien to them in interest, and, therefore, that an independent government would contribute most to their prosperity. But mechanical influences — the telegraph — the railroad and the steam vessel — annihilate distance, and will be the means of attaching the Californians to the confederacy. In her union with the other States, there is her strength. She will add much to their wealth and power, but her free institutions — entirely American, require the support of the confederacy which produced them — at least, until the State has reach.ed her maturity. What will be the future California is a question which admits of a ready answer. If she retains her present boundaries, with her extensive sea coast, and her progress bears any proportion to that since the conquest, in fifty years — it is a warranted conclusion — the State will surpass any of those upon the Atlantic coast. For, what State has such united commercial facilities and vast resources? Where are such in ternal wealth and such splendid harbors to be found united ? It is probable, however, that the State may be divided, after the population has reached a suffi cient number. It is the opinion of some of the mem bers of the present Congress, that there is too much sea coast for one State to possess, and that has been made an objection to her admission into the Union, with her present boundaries. But it is of little weight at 274 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. this time. After the State has existed a few years, the utility of such a division as is proposed will be manifest or disproved. In the mean time, let Cali fornia be admitted into the Union as her people have created her, and then she will have every thing neces sary for her to go on in the fulfilment of a glorious destiny. The gold discoveries in New Mexico and Oregon will have but a slight influence on California affairs. Yet for that slight influence, they deserve to be men tioned. The recent discoveries -in New Mexico, would seem to indicate that the El Dorado of the early Spanish voyagers has been found, and nearly in the place to which their attention was directed by the Indians. A late number of the Houston Telegraph, " That preparations are in progress in all parts of the State, for a grand expedition to the gold region that has been discovered in New Mexico, not far from the ruins of the celebrated city of Grand Quivira. Gold mines have been found all along the great chain of mountains extending from the sources of the Ar kansas and Platte Rivers, by Santa Fe, to the Puerto. Immense excavations are shown along the feet of these mountains, and the ruins of vast cities indicate that these mines were once worked by millions of people. The geographical formations of this region are so similar to those of the gold regions of California, that they appear to be identical, and contain similar de posits of the precious metals. These facts have been made known throughout Texas, and the Tele graph would not be surprised to find that the emi gration to the gold region of Texas, in the ensuing autumn, should exceed the emigration to California. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 275 The "consummation devoutly to be wished" has been attained. California has at length been admitted to take her place as a star of the confederated repub lic. The bill for that object passed the House of Representatives on the 7th of September, 1850, by a vote of yeas, one hundred and fifty, nays fifty-six. It had previously passed the Senate by a no less decisive majority. The announcement of the passage of the bill was received with the greatest enthusiasm by its friends, and considerable excitement upon the part of its opponents. The most constant exertions were made by members from the Southern States to defeat the bill by adjournment and by numerous amendments, but they were unavailing. California triumphed. CHAPTER XVI. NATURAL HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. A DESCRIPTION or history of California would scarcely be complete without some account of the animal and vegetable life, native to the country ; and, happily, the information upon the subject is copious and accurate. The travels and the observations of Fremont, Emory and others, have developed com pletely the character aud extent of the Californian vegetable kingdom, and some features of it, particu larly the great pine forests, have been the theme of general admiration among the tourists. Respecting the various species of beast, bird, fish and reptile, that belong to the country, we have not so full or 276 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. exact information; but sufficient to make the subject interesting, and to satisfy the desire for general in formation. We shall begin with the animal kingdom. The Grisly Bear, Ursus FeroXj is the largest, most formidable and most ferocious animal in the country — and, indeed, in North America. Numerous and almost incredible stories are related of its great strength and courage. Specimens are to be met with measuring four feet in height, and weighing from five hundred to one thousand pounds. Unlike the other kinds of bear, this species never climbs trees. His habits are solitary, and although a terrible foe to meet, he seldom becomes the aggressor against man. When his favorite flesh is not to be obtained, he will eat vermin, berries, and roots, in digging for which he frequently overturns fallen timber which a yoke of oxen could scarcely move. On account of the irnper- BLACK BEAR. fection of their weapons, the Indians seldom venture to attack this animal ; and whenever one is killed by them, the occasion becomes a matter of great rejoic ing, and the fortunate victor becomes a man of conse- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 277 quence at once. The flesh of the grisly bear is by no means food to be despised, and the skin forms a comfortable couch for the hunter. Besides the Grisly Bear, there are other species of the bear race to be found in California. The common Black Bear is two well known to need a description. The American barren ground bear, is of a lighter color than the common bear, and in its habits, espe cially in regard to its food, it resembles, in a great degree, the brown bear of Norway. It feeds princi pally upon fish. The great Polar Bear often makes his appearance on the extreme northern coast of Cali fornia, but cannot be considered as a California animal. POLAR BEAR. The Glutton, or Wolverine, which partakes of the nature of the bear, the fox, and the weasel, is well known to the beaver trappers, by the constant annoy ance to which it subjects them, in devouring their baits, and destroying their traps. It is a savage, sullen creature, and though not formidable to man, it preys upon small animals, and even the deer. Stories are frequently told of the manner in which the wolve rine entraps the deer, and makes them his prey — by 24 278 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. climbing to a branch of a tree, and letting down moss, upon which the victim comes to feed, and is im mediately mounted by the Glutton, which never ceases its hold until the lacerated deer falls to the ground. THE WOLF. Several species of Wolf are found in California, and in some parts they are very numerous. The Common Wolf, the Gray Wolf, Dusky Wolf, Black Wolf, and the Prairie Wolf all abound in different portions of the country. Of Foxes, the most common is the American Red Fox (Canis Fulvus). The Red Fox has a much finer brush than the European, and is altogether a larger animal. The fur of the body is full, long, soft, and of a bright rufous brown ; the skin is therefore valued as an article of trade, and about eight thousand are annually imported into England from the fur coun tries, where the animal is very abundant, especially in the wooded parts. It is not, however, confined to the colder latitudes ; its range, in fact, extends throughout the whole of the United States. In habits and manners the Red Fox agrees with our common Reynard, but possesses neither the same wind nor the same vigor and power of endurance. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 279 " It runs," says Dr. Richardson, " for about a hundred yards with a great swiftness, but its strength is exhausted in the first burst, and it is soon overtaken by a wolf or a mounted huntsman." Foxes of various gradations of color, termed Cross Foxes, are common in the fur countries of North America. These are considered by Dr. Richardson, and most naturalists, to be varieties of the Red Fox, and such is the opinion of the native hunters, than whom none are more like ly to possess accurate knowledge on such points. The ordinary Cross Fox is distinguished by a gray far mingled with black, which latter color prevails over the shoulders. A rarer and more valuable variety is the Black or Silver Fox (Oanis Fulvus, var. argen- tatus). Dr. Richardson states that seldom more than four or five of this variety are taken in a season at one post, though the hunters no sooner find out the haunts of one than they use every art to catch it, because its fur fetches six times the price of any other fur produced in North America. This fox is some times found of a rich, deep, glossy black, the tip of the tail alone being white ; in general, however, it is silvered over (" sable silvered "), the end of each of the long hairs of the fur being white, producing a beautiful appearance. The Racoon (Procyon Lotor) is found in California. As this animal, though often mentioned, is not often seen, we will describe its habits. In size, and in the colors of its fur, it bears some resemblance to the foxes, but this resemblance does not extend far ; the hairs are white in the middle, and black at the roots and the points, which produces a kind of gray re sembling that which covers what are called the black and silver foxes ; the tail is deep russet, surrounded 280 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. by four or five rings of black ; the under parts of the body are whitish, and so are the feet and the face, with the exception of a black band, which begins near the eye, and extends down the side of the neck ; the claws have more the character of digging than of pre hensile claws ; the soles of the feet are furnished with five elastic tubercles upon each, one near the heel, one at the base of the thumb of the first toe and of the last toe, and the remaining one between the basis of the two middle ones, which toes are longer than any of the others ; notwithstanding that it is partially digitigrade, and does not apply the whole length of the foot at every plant, the racoon is rather a clumsy walker, and their gait may be described as being heavy compared with the true digitigrade animals, though it is light as compared with that of the bears. They can readily stand erect on their hind feet, and lay hold with their fore ones ; but this operation of grasping is not performed by the contracting of one paw, but by pressing both together. They do not possess the same pliability in the internal part of the fingers as the quadrumana, but, by clasping both paws together, they can, by this means, carry their food to their mouth. The animals have a habit of plunging their food in water, and then rolling it be tween their paws, before they devour it. Their sight is very delicate, and they have great difficulty in distinguishing objects in the bright sunshine, or any other strong light. In the daytime they generally remain inactive, seated on their posteriors, with the head reclining between the thighs, thus presenting the appearance of a ball; but, in the night, they evince considerable activity in roaming abroad in quest of their food, which consists of worms, insects, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 281 fruits, and the roots of plants. They move about in all directions on the surface of the earth, searching the most minute and unfrequented holes and corners in quest of these ; and they also climb trees with great dexterity, for the purpose, no doubt, of robbing and plundering the nests of birds. They are particularly fond of drinking water, which they do by sucking it up into the mouth, and there is no necessary of life on which they seem to set greater value, or to relish more. They are said to frequent the banks of rivers and the sea-shore, for the purpose of catching mol- lusca and fishes, which are their most favourite food. They are very delicate in the sense of smelling, but their organs of hearing are very imperfect. Their appearance resembles the bears more than any other of the carnassiers. Their generally fat condition of body, together with the thickness of fur with which they are clothed, gives them a clumsy rotundity of form. They have an extremely tufted tail, but it does not appear to be employed for any particular purpose in the economy of the animal. They are by no means difficult to tame — soon become familiar — and seem to court caresses ; but they do not seem to possess the quality of attachment to their master, or the docility to obey his commands. In order to pre vent them from escaping, it is necessary to keep them chained up ; for, though captivity softens their nature to a considerable extent, they never seem to yield up that spirit of independence which they possess in the wild state. The American Badger (Meles Salvadoirce) is found in the northern part of California. It burrows in the sand and is particularly strong in the fore-feet. It is 282 HIBTOBY OF CALIFORNIA. different in aspect and habits from the Badger of Europe. THE BADGEK. The Common Weasel (Mustela Vulgaris) and the Ermine (Mustela Erminia) are both common in Cali fornia, as also the Mink (Mustela Vison), the Marten (Mustela Maries), and the Skunk, (Mephitis Ameri cana). They are well, though not very agreeably known, in all parts of the American continent. THE SKUNK. Among the animals of the cat kind found in California, are the Northern Lynx (Felis Canadensis), Branded Lynx (Felis fasciata\ Red Lynx (Felis rufa) and the Puma, or (Cougar Felis concolor); often called by the inhabitants, says Farnham, the lion. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 283 THE PUMA. The Puma is found both in South and in North America, probably with some varieties of color ; and if we are to credit some of the anecdotes which are related of it, we should be apt to consider it as a more formidable animal in the colder latitudes than in the warmer. This is certainly contrary to the natural analogies of the genus ; and some of the anecdotes are, besides, such as cannot easily be brought within the range even of possibility. It has, for instance, been gravely said, that the Puma has been known to carry the body of a man that it had killed up into a tree. Now, in the first place, it has not been very satisfactorily ascertained that the Puma is a climber of trees, even when it is not loaded ; in the second place, if this were ascertained, it would be an argu ment against the killing of man, for the tree-cats are chiefly catchers of birds, squirrels, and monkeys ; and, in the third place, notwithstanding all the mar vels that have been told of lions and tigers, there is no feat at all comparable with this told of either of them. We have heard a similar story of a common brown bear carrying the body of a horse along a single tree which lay across a wide and deep ravine, in the Scandinavian forests, but we never supposed that the tale was meant to be believed, and the feel- 284 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. ing with regard to this feat of the Puma is much of the same kind. The more prohable accounts represent the Puma as attacking only the weaker animals, and as hoarding or burying its food ; and pumas, when tamed, can be made to play with substances in the same way as young cats, only they are more indolent, and their motions not so graceful. It is well ascertained that the Puma is very easily tamed, and that, if it is fed, it shows not the least disposition to attack any animal, but shows considerable affection for those who are at tentive to it. Its general manners are more like those of the domestic cat than, perhaps, any others of the genus, more so even than the wild cat of Europe, which is often, though it would seem erroneously, con sidered as the parent stock of the domestic. The Puma watches for birds in the same manner, and with the same action of the body, as the domestic cat, and like that animal, it purrs when caressed. Mr. Farnham says, that on the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, as well as on many parts of the coast, the common plain Seal, (Phoca Vitellina) is found, and on the same rivers the Musk Rat (Fiber ZibetTiicus) is often met with. The Beaver (Oastor Fiber), ijS another of the Cali- fornian animals, which is much sought on account of the value of its fur. In an economical point of view, the Beaver is a very valuable animal. The fur is more glossy and beautiful than almost any other of the same fineness : it takes a rich black color, without having its gloss in the least destroyed ; it wears well, and is not much subject to injury from rain ; and it very readily unites into a strong, though light and flexible fabric, by the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 285 THE BEAVER. operation called felting. Hats are put together by that operation, unless very inferior ones, in which glue is applied in supplement, which of course spots the hat, and refreshes with its unctuous droppings the head of the wearer during rain ; and the fur of the beaver has those qualities which render a much better material for hats than any other which is known. Accordingly it was very early used for this purpose; and so exclusively used, when hats were fewer and beavers more numerous, that both the English and the Latin name of the animal became synonymous for the article of dress. At one period it was deemed necessary to enact statutes for prevent ing the admixture of any other material with the fur of beavers in the manufacture of hats ; and at that time the hat outlasted the wearer, and could be washed in the same manner as a piece of woollen cloth ; but in more modern times, owing partly to the great decrease in the number of beavers, and partly to the increased demand for hats, the article is so ex pensive that no hat is made entirely of beaver. The body is formed of wool, and that is plated over with beaver, which is worked fully through the body, or " felt," in good hats, but only very partially in infe- 286 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. rior ones. A shower takes the beaver off the latter ; and it is not very long in wearing bare, and showing the felt in the former. The skin of the beaver is also used in the manu facture of gloves, and sometimes in that of shoes, though in the latter case the shoe, like the bad hat, requires a little glue to make it saleable. Even the gloves are of very inferior quality, as the skin is thick and very rough and loose in the texture ; so that if it were not for the fur, the Beavers would not be de prived of their lives for the sake of their skins. There is another part of the beaver which is used in medicine, though not so largely at present as for merly. It is a peculiarly unctuous product, secreted by a follicle immediately under the tail of the animal. It has a very disagreeable smell, and nauseous taste, but it was once in high request as an antispasmodic, and also as producing an important and specific action on the uterine system. It is still retained in the Pharmacopoeia, under the name of castoreum, or castor. It is not our province to examine its virtues as a drug; but we may observe that it was introduced into medicine at a time when nostrums were held as being beneficial, very much in proportion as they were nasty ; and to what extent this may be the case still, is also without our province. In consequence of these uses in the arts, the Beaver has been hunted with great assiduity ; and some idea of the total quantity killed in all parts which Beavers inhabit may be obtained from the fact that, in the year 1808, there were 126,927 taken to England, from Canada alone. Many stratagems are resorted to for the capture HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 287 of an animal so much in request, but we shall notice these very briefly. The skin of the cub-beaver is more highly prized than that of older animals, as being darker and more glossy ; the winter season is preferred for capturing them, on account of the superiority of their coat at that time. There are various means employed in taking them. One of the ways in which they are captured is, by boring a number of holes in the ice, when they are driven from their habitations, which are then destroyed. They remain under water a short time (as they are incapable of remaining in that element for any very protracted period,) then by rising to the surface where the ice is broken, they are easily taken. At these times many of them retreat to the holes in the banks, where they lodge in sum mer ; but these vaults are soon discovered by expe rienced hunters, by striking on the ice with chisels, and they select such spots for their openings as they know will readily lead to the capture of their victims, and they are seldom mistaken. Another way in which they are taken is, to cut the ice both above and below their dwellings, nets are then thrown across, and the animals are driven from their abodes and compelled to enter the nets. It is usual, in summer, to take them in their houses, by what is called staking them. To effect this purpose the hunters first make an opening in the roof, in order to discover the exact position of the angle, and having adapted a number of stakes to the opening, so as to completely blockade it, they cover in the top, and leave the stakes on one side ready for use. This done, they drive the Beavers, by means of dogs, from all parts- of the pond or river ; and when the affrighted and hunted animals have sue- 288 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. ceeded in reaching their homes, they again put up their stakes before the door-way, take off the tempo rary covering from the roof, and either take them in a living state, or spear them in their habitations. When they inhabit a sheet of water, which is merely kept up by a dam, they are still more readily taken, by letting off the water, and leaving their huts quite dry. The gun is also sometimes, though not very generally, used; and log-traps, baited with poplar sticks, are now and then made use of to commit havoc among them. THE MOOSE. The Moose or Elk (Cervus Aloes) is found in Cali fornia. This animal is the largest of his genus, being higher at the shoulders than the horse ; its horns weigh sometimes near fifty pounds ; accordingly, to HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 289 bear this heavy weight, its neck is short and strong, taking away much of the elegance of proportion so generally predominant in the deer ; but when it is asserted that the elk wants beauty or majesty, the opinion can be entertained by those only who have seen the female, the young, or the mere stuffed speci mens ; for we who have had the opportunity of view ing the animal in all the glory of his full-grown horns, amid the scenery of his own wilderness, no animal could appear more majestic or more imposing. It is, however, the aggregate of his appearance which pro duces this effect; for when the proportions of its structure are considered in detail, they certainly will seem destitute of that harmony of parts which in the imagination produces the feeling of beauty. The head, measuring above two feet in length, is narrow and clumsily shaped by the swelling upon the upper part of the nose and nostrils ; the eye is proportion ally small and sunk ; the ears long, hairy, and asinine ; the neck and withers are surmounted by a heavy mane, and the throat furnished with long coarse hair, and in younger specimens encumbered with a pendu lous gland ; these give altogether an uncouth charac ter to this part of the animal. Its body, however, is round, compact, and short; the tail not more than four inches long, and the legs, though very long, are remarkably clean and firm ; this length of limbs and the overhanging lips, have caused the ancients to fancy that it grazed walking backwards. The hair of the animal is coarse and angular, breaking if bent. The Elk is an inhabitant of northern latitudes ; in Europe between the fifty-third and sixty-fifth degrees, making a part of Prussia, Poland, Sweden, Norway, 25 290 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Finland, Lapland, and Russia. In Asia it is found farther south, from thirty-five to beyond the fiftieth, spreading over Tartary, and abounding in Japan, if indeed the denomination of Elk is not misstated for that of Rusa, or an undescribed species. In America it resides between the forty-fourth and fifty-third de grees, round the great lakes, and over the whole of Canada and New Brunswick. Its movements are rather heavy, and the shoul ders being higher than the croup it does not gallop, but shuffles or ambles along, its joints cracking at every step with a sound heard to some distance. In creasing its speed, the hind feet straddle to avoid treading on its fore-heels, tossing the head and shoul ders like a horse about to break from a trot to a gallop. It does not leap, but steps without effort over a fallen tree, a gate, or a split fence. During its progress it holds the nose up, so as to lay the horns horizontally back. This attitude prevents it seeing the ground distinctly, and as the weight is carried very high upon his elevated legs, it is said sometimes to trip by treading on its fore-heels or otherwise, and occasionally to give itself a heavy fall. It is probably owing to this occurence that the Elk was believed by the ancients and the vulgar to have frequent attacks of epilepsy, and to be obliged to smell its hoof before it could recover ; hence the Teutonic name of eleud (miserable), and the reputa tion especially of the fore hoofs as a specific against the disease. During the winter months, the Elk resides chiefly in hilly woods, in snowy weather seeking the covers, and in clear the open spaces. In summer it frequents swamps on the borders of lakes, often going deep into HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. 291 the water to escape the sting of gnats, &c., and to feed without stooping. Its usual food in winter con sists of the buds and bark of button-wood, spruce, and juniper pines, birch and maple, and under the snow it seeks stink wood (Anagyris fcetidd) and mosses, but this is always with difficulty, for then it is obliged to spread the fore legs, or even it is said to kneel. The branches of trees it turns down with the horns very dexterously ; but to get at the ground we have been assured by Huron and the Canadian hunters, when the snow has fallen only a foot or two in depth, that the herd; led by an old male, shovel it back, and throw it over their heads, the snow falling on either side, as it slides from the inclined planes of the back of their horns ; meantime the fore feet of all are equally en gaged in striking it from under them. During a part of the year, the herd consists of an old female, two adult females, two young females, and two young males ; but during the snowy periods, at least in America, one or more adult males are certainly among them, very old males alone keeping aloof un til the rutting season, unless the winter be very severe. Several of these families keep near each other, and in very cold weather they seek cover together, and remain closely pressed against each other, or trot in a circle till they have beaten the snow down. When the rutting period commences, which is about the be ginning of September, the old males seek the females, and expel the young, who are obliged to keep aloof while the animals remain in heat. At this time they will swim rivers in pursuit of the females, or after them to remain concealed in some of the Lake Islands. The males are then very pugnacious ; they bellow of ten and sink in flesh. The gravid females bring forth 292 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. about the middle of May, at first one, but ordinarily two calves, of a brown red color. These are so simple and void of fear that in the first months they are easily taken, and if in the water, where they wil lingly go to avoid the flies, they will suffer persons in a canoe to come up to them and take them by the head without appearing in the least frightened. The dags, prickets, or incipient antlers are the first year not more than an inch in length ; the second, they rise to a foot ; the third, they are forked ; and the fourth, they assume six snags and are somewhat flattened ; tho, fifth year the blade is still small, but their expansion from that time forward is uniform, though it does not appear that the number of snags ever exceed twenty-eight. In a very large specimen — there were twenty- two, the length, from the head to the tip twenty-seven inches, and from tip to tip across the horns three feet six ; the two lower snags on either side separated by a deep indenture ; the weight about thirty-three pounds. Old Elks shed their horns in January and February, and, if lean from a severe winter, in March ; the younger later, till the month of May. They are again completely restored in the former by the end of June, and in the latter in August. Several other species of deer are found in Cali fornia. Among others are the Large Eared Deer (Oervus Macrotis). This is a species, resembling the Virginian and Mexican deer, and also in some respects the Wapiti ; but according to the descriptions of Harlan and Say, it is different. The upper part is light reddish brown, and the sides and fore part of the nose ash color; the back intermixed with blackish tipped hairs, which form a distinct line on the neck HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 293 near the head; tail reddish-cinereous black at the tip ; this part is somewhat compressed, and almost THE LARGE EARED DEER. naked beneath ; the hoofs are shorter and wider than those of the Virginian Deer, and more like those of the Wapiti ; the horns slightly grooved and tubercu- lated at base with a similar antler, as in the Virginian ; the beam less curved forwards, is bifurcated near the summit, again divided, the anterior of the second bi- furcatipn being somewhat longer than the posterior ; the ears very long, extend to the principal bifurca tion, about half the length of the whole horn ; the lateral incisor teeth are larger in proportion to the intermediate than in the Virginian ; eyelashes black ; lachrymal apertures also larger, and the hair coarser, and undulated, and compressed like that of the Wa- 5* 294 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. piti. The species is found in the most remote north western territories of the United States, and from the context of this description it appears evident that the Guazupuco Deer is nearest allied to it, and that the Guazuti and the Virginian are clearly of the same group. THE LOXG-TAILED DEER. The Long-tailed Deer (Cervus Macrourus) is an other California animal. This species is described as being larger than the Red Deer or Stag of Europe, darker in color on the upper part, and having the bel ly white, the tail, from which it gets its specific name, different from that of most species of deer, is about eighteen inches in length, black on the upper part, but with broad white margins, and carried erect when HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 295 the animal runs. The horns arc short and altogether of small size and flattened, but not palmated. The Pronghorn Antelope (Antilope Furcifur) is another beautiful species of deer found in California. It is found chiefly in the mountain regions, where it is often seen to tantalize the hunter by its extreme shy ness and its great agility. :5P& ~^* — -'"' (j^ST- =c-..-.w*.-^u-^ PRONGHORN ANTELOPE. The Argali Ovis Moritanoe is found in California, is sometimes called the Rocky Mountain Sheep. By some the goat of the Rocky Mountains has been confounded with this animal ; and it has also been called an antelope, though it is neither the one nor the other, but truly and properly a goat. The characters of this species, or probably variety (for it really seems that, notwithstanding all the diversities of the genus (his, whether in the wild or the cultivated state, there 296 HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. ARGALI. is no well made out distinction more broad than that of variety,) are very apparent, and at once prevent any possibility of confounding it either with the ante lopes or the goats, though of course, as all sheep do, it approximates more closely to the latter of these than to the former. The body is remarkable for its thick ness and roundness in proportion to its length ; the legs are very long ; the outline of the forehead, seen in profile, is nearly straight ; and the muzzle is almost exactly tha,t of the common sheep. The horns of the male are very thick and large ; they advance in front of the eyes, and form nearly an entire turn of a spiral. They are flattened laterally like those of the domestic ram, and have similar transverse furrows and ridges. These furrows and ridges are very conspicu ous on the basal half of the length of the horn, but much less so on the terminal half; and of the three lateral faces the front one is the largest. The horns of the female are much more slender than those of the male ; they are compressed, nearly straight, and with out furrows ; there are, in some instances, plates or folds of skin under the throat, especially in the male ; HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 297 the tail is very short in both sexes ; the color in sum mer is generally grayish fawn, with a reddish or yellowish line down the back, and a large patch of the same color -on the buttocks; and the under part, and the insides of the legs are either russet, yellowish, or of a white sand color ; in winter the color of the upper part is more reddish, and the throat and breast are more inclining to white ; but the patch on the buttocks remains much the same at all seasons. These animals are found in little flocks, of about twenty or thirty in each, on the Rocky Mountains, and extending southward as far as California. Several naturalists have expressed their conviction that the mouflon of the south of Europe, the Argali of Asia, and the wild sheep of America, are only climatal varieties of one great species, to which they have given the name of "mountain sheep ;" but whether this is or is not positively the fact, we have no means of ascertain ing. Probability is in favor of it, however, and the more so that, among the domesticated sheep, which we have every reason to believe are all originally of the same stock, whatever that stock may have been, there are differences of external appearance fully greater than any which are to be met with among the wild ones ; and we believe that, in the whole genus, there are no differences but external ones. Some further confusion and uncertainty is produced among these wild sheep by the conduct of the keepers of museums, who have filled these with horns and other scraps, not having any history, and which have, in consequence, been referred to places where they are not to be found. The great puzzle in the history of this genus, however, is the proneness which it has to break into varieties, not only in different countries, 298 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. but in the same country, and even in the same flock. There are, however, other two species or varieties which are worthy of notice, though even they do not settle, or tend to settle, the question of common origin. The Bison (Bos Americanus) is extremely rare now in California, though supposed to have been com mon in former times. BISON. Like its congener the aurochs, the American Bison is of powerful frame, and exceeds in bulk the ordinary race of cattle, -its height at the fore-quarters being upwards of six feet, and its weight from twelve to fifteen hundred weight, and sometimes much more. The head is huge, ponderous, and carried low; the withers are massive and elevated ; the eyes are small HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 299 and their expression is ferocious ; the horns are small and black. The neck, withers, and chest, are covered with a profusion of long shaggy hair, contributing to render the appearance of the animal wild and terrific ; the hinder quarters are clothed with shorter wool. The general color is umber brown, acquiring a rusty tint in winter. Endowed with the sense of smell in great perfection, wary and fierce, the Bison asso ciates in large herds conducted by one or two old bulls, whose motions the rest appear to follow ; but herds of bulls also live separately. Their food consists of grass and rank herbage, to obtain which in winter they scrape away the snow with their feet. On the approach of an enemy the herd immediately takes to flight ; but if one be wounded, the life of the hunter is placed in great jeopardy, for turning ift a moment, it rushes on its assailant with headlong impetuosity and with determined resolution. Several fatal instances might be cited in which the hunter has perished from want of caution in attacking this formidable beast, and many hairbreadth escapes are on record. In defending itself from a dog the Bison strikes violently with its fore-feet and easily keeps its annoy ing foe at bay. The flesh of this animal is accounted excellent, the tongue and hump, or flesh on the top of the withers, being especial delicacies. The chase of the Bison is therefore assiduously carried on, both by the natives and the Europeans. The Bison swims well, and during the heats of sum mer vast herds make their way to shady rivulets, streams, and pools, in which they delight to plunge and bathe. Herds of twenty thousand, crossing rivers upwards of a mile in breadth, have been seen, as 300 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Lewis and Clarke inform us, or darkening the plains on their passage to fresh feeding-grounds. Salt springs, or saline morasses, or salt-licks, are great attractions to this animal, and at all seasons are visited by numerous herds. These, however, are incessantly thinned by the hunters, and the time is not probably far distant when the American Bison will be as rare and as limited in its extent of range as the aurochs of Lithuania. At certain seasons of the year the bulls engage in terrible conflicts, and rush furiously upon man, or any other animal which ventures near them. With the exception of man, the most formidable enemy against which the Bison has to contend is the huge grisly bear, and before this dreaded monster the strongest bull goes down. It appears that the Bison will breed with the ordi nary race of domestic cattle, against which the aurochs displays the greatest antipathy, though in one respect the latter approaches nearer to the common ox than does the Bison ; we allude to the number of ribs, which are thirteen in the ox on each side, fourteen in the aurochs, and fifteen in the Bison. The Sea Otter (Lutra Marina), so renowned for its valuable fur, is found on the coast, and the Land Otter (Lutra Brasiliensis) in the rivers. The Sea-Otter is a native of the north-west coast of America, from California to latitude 60°, and of the opposite coast of Asia, from the Yellow Sea to the north of Kamtchatka and the intermediate islands. Its fur, which is of a black color, sometimes chestnut- brown, and occasionally even yellow, is soft, full, and beautiful, and is an object of commerce, being pro- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 301 cured by the Russians for the Chinese market, where it sells for a high price. This animal haunts sea-washed rocks, and lives mostly in the water, where it procures its food, which consists of fish, and, as is indicated by the character of the teeth, which are evidently formed for bruising hard substances, shelled mollusks, and Crustacea. In summer the Sea-Otter often ascends the rivers to the inland lakes. The female produces on land a single cub. The average length of this species is three feet, exclusive of the tail, which measures about ten inches. There are several species of rats, mice, marmots, and squirrels in California. Mr. Farnham informs us that the Pouched Rat (Pecudostonia lursarium\ and the small marmot (Arctomys Beecheyi), are found in California, the latter being very plentiful in the plains near San Francisco and Monterey, burrowing in the ground and carrying in its capacious chest pouches, a store of nuts, corn, and acorns. There are several other varieties of the Arctomys, such as the Prairie Marmot (Arctomys ludovicianus\ and the Woodchuck, (Arctomys Monax^) the latter is found in the Atlantic States. It does not inhabit the very cold places of America, but rather the central and southern parts of the United States, and perhaps places further to the south ; for Catesby styles it "the Bahama rabbit." In the United States it is called the ground hog, and various other local names, none of which are very applicable. Its color is rusty brown, rather darker on the flanks than on the middle of the back ; a portion round the muzzle is bluish gray, and the tail is black. Among the animals of the squirrel kind enumerated 26 302 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. WOODCHUCK. by Mr. Famham, are the Gray Squirrel, (jSciune* Cinereus,) the Xrreat-tailed Squirrel (Sciurus macron- veus\ the Flying Squirrel, the Striped Squirrel, and the Black Squirrel (Sciurus niger.) The last is a beautiful species sometimes found in the Atlantic States. Its face is described as being in general black, but with some white markings very differently placed in different individuals. In some the nose is white, in others the feet ; in others, again, the tip of the tail ; yet, again, there is a white collar round the neck ; and these markings may all appear in the same individual, or any number of them may appear in any of the combinations which they can form*. These circum- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 303 THE BLACK SQUIRREL. stances render the history of the species uncertain ; but it appears, if a distinct species, to be pretty widely spread, for it has been obtained in the States and also in Mexico. It is described as being a much more social animal than the gray squirrel. Of the Hare there are several fine species, one weighing from eight to twelve pounds, which Mr. Farnham supposes to be the Lepus glacialis ; another is the Prairie Hare (Lepus Virginianus), and the 304 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Little Hare (Lepus princeps), only six inches in length. Among the more remarkable birds of California, are the following : THE CONDOR. The Condor (Vulture condor) is the celebrated vulture of America, of whose size, strength, and daring, so many marvellous tales have been told, that had there been any such animals as elephants in South America, it is highly probable that we should have had an account by " eye-witnesses," of the Condor flying clear over Chimborazo with an elephant in its claws. We HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 305 have no room to go into its history, and it is not necessary, as it may be found any where, since Hum- boldt brought it within reason and reasonable dimen sions. It is only a little larger than the mountain vulture of the Alps, and its habits are nearly the same ; but the appendages to the naked part of the bird bring it more within the present section. The color is. blackish, with great part of the wings ash, and the collar on the neck silky and white. The male has one large carunculated membrane above the bill, and another below; but these are wanting in the female. The female is nearly of a uniform grayish brown ; and the young in their first plumage are ash brown, and without the collar of feathers upon the neck. Even after all the exaggerations are discounted, the Condor is a bird of no small interest. It is the most lofty-dwelling bird of the whole class ; and the regions of storm and earthquake which it inhabits are of themselves well calculated to give it a very peculiar importance. Cathartus are the vultures of North America, some of which have occasionally been confounded with the Condor ; and, though none of them are equal to that bird in story, they rival, if not exceed it, in size and in power. We cannot go into the details of all the species, of which there are several ; and therefore we shall give a few particulars of one as a specimen. C alif or nian Vulture, (Cathartus vulturinus.) This is a very large bird, about four feet and a half in length, and nearly ten feet in the stretch of the wings. It inhabits North America to the westward of the Stony Mountains, and is particularly abundant in the lower valley of the Columbia. It is a woodland bird, and does not appear to inhabit very high latitudes, 26* 806 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. though, like the vultures of the eastern hemisphere, it is more northerly in the summer than in the winter. Their general color is brown, without any very decided markings ; they nestle in the thick woods, choosing the tallest pines in the wildest and most inaccessible parts of the mountain valleys. The nest is composed of sticks and coarse grass, and the pair occupy it for many years in succession. The eggs are two, of a jet black color, nearly round, and about the size of those of a goose. The hatching time is about the first of June, and the incubation lasts about thirty days. The young are at first covered with whitish down, and five or six weeks elapse before they are able to quit the nest. Where these birds inhabit is truly a Vulture's coun try, as the turns of the seasons are particularly violent both on land and at sea. Many land animals are beaten down by the rains, or overtaken by the swell ing rivers ; and when the storm abates, the wreck both of the land and the water is great. This is in discriminately eaten by the vultures, which make common prize both of fishes and of land animals, and heed not much how far they may be gone in putrefac tion. Their senses are keen, especially their sense of sight, and we shall not enter upon the disputed keenness of the sense of smell in vultures, which, to say the best, appears to have been most gratuitously exaggerated. When on the reconnoitre, or tracking the progress of a wounded animal, they fly very high ; and, though there may not be one in sight when it falls, the carcass of a large animal speedily attracts a number of vultures ; and they come to a recent car case just as readily as to a tainted one, to that which does not smell with the same readiness as to that HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 307 CALIFORNIA VULTURE. which does, and this is against the common notion of the acuteness of their scent. Indeed the foetid dis tillation from their own nostrils is a pretty strong argument against their smelling power ; a man with his nose constantly bathed in assafoetida would not be in the best condition for finding roses by the scent. " Their voracity," says the lamented David Douglas, " is almost insatiable, and they are extremely ungene rous, suffering no other animal to approach them while feeding. After eating they become so sluggish and indolent as to remain in the same place, until urged by hunger to go in quest of another repast. At such times they perch on decayed trees, with their heads so much retracted as to be with difficulty observed through the long, loose, lanceolate feathers of the collar ; the wings at the same time hang down over the feet. This position they invariably preserve 308 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. in dewy mornings, or after rains. Except after eating, or while guarding their nest, they are so excessively wary that the hunter can scarcely ever approach sufficiently near for even buck-shot to take effect on them, the fulness of the plumage affording them a double chance of escaping uninjured. Their flight is slow, steady, and particularly graceful, gliding along with scarcely any apparent motion of the wings, the tips of which are curved upward in flying. They are seen in greatest numbers, and soar highest before hurricanes and thunder-storms. Their quills are used by the hunters as tubes for tobacco-pipes." TURKEY BUZZARD, OR TURKEY VULTURE. The Turkey Vulture (Oathartus aura) is another American species of smaller size, and more generally distributed. It is about two feet and a half in length, and six feet in the expanse of the wings. The upper parts are nearly black, with some white markings, and the lower parts sooty brown. They are common in the United States, but leave the northern ones in the winter. The Black Vulture (Oathartus atratus) is a darker HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 309 and smaller species ; and so familiar that it frequents the towns, and plies as a scavenger in the streets, in which office it is protected by the inhabitants. It is about two feet 'two inches in length, and four feet four inches in the stretch of the wings. The general color is dull black, with some white on the insidcs of the primary quills. It is a dull and sluggish bird, and the smell of it is peculiarly offensive. The Golden Eagle (Aquila Chrysaetos,) is one of the most powerful of the eagle tribe. Its feathers are much prized by the Indians as ornaments, and are attached to their pipes or calumets, whence they call the bird the Calumet Eagle. It is seen on the coast and in the woods and mountainous parts of California. The following are nearly the average external characters of the female Golden Eagle, which is the more powerful bird, and therefore the typical one, at that age when the colors expressive of youth have disappeared, and those of old age have not come on : — Tip of the bill and the claws black ; basal part of the bill bluish ; naked skin or cere at the base of the bill, and toes, which are the only naked parts of the feet, yellow ; irides of the eyes bright orange brown, inclining to yellow ; crown of the head and nape of the neck bright orange brown ; sometimes, in birds which have passed a certain age, margined with white, which becomes broader as age increases. The feathers on the neck narrow, pointed, and very distinct, bristling out from each other when the bird is in a state of excitement ; chin and throat rich dark brown, passing gradually into pale reddish brown on the under part, in which it terminates in the vent feathers, and feathers on the tarsi, the latter being slender and very much produced ; upper part deep orange brown, 22 310 HISTORY Off CALIFORNIA. GOLDEN EAGLE. margin rather paler, which gives a bold relief to the individual feathers ; coverts of the wings nearly the secondary quills clouded with various shades same of brown ; and primary quills black. Tail purplish brown, barred across with blackish brown, and having a broad line of the same across the extremity. The feathers are all remarkable for the firmness of their texture, and their profusion in the eagle feather, which HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 311 BALD EAGLE. gives them something of the same appearance as if they were imbricated scales. The Bald Eagle (Aquila leucocephalm.) As this bird is certainly much more characteristic of North America than of any other part of the world, and, as it is there a bird of the greatest interest, we should be doing it injustice if we attempted to describe it in any other language than that of Wilson : — " This distinguished bird," says this equally distinguished naturalist, "as he is the most beautiful of his tribe in this part of tho world, and the adopted emblem of our country, is entitled to particular notice. The cele brated cataract of Niagara is a noted place of resort 812 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. for the Bald Eagle, as well on account of the fish pro cured there, as for the numerous carcasses of squirrels, deer, bears, and various other animals, that, in their attempts to cross the river above the Falls, have been dragged into the current, and precipitated down that tremendous gulf, where, among the rocks that bound the rapids below, they furnish a rich repast for the vulture, the raven, and the Bald Eagle, the subject of the present account. Formed by nature for braving the severest cold ; feeding equally on the produce of the sea, and of the land ; possessing powers of flight capable of outstripping even the tempests themselves ; unawed by any thing but man ; and, from the ethereal heights to which it soars, looking abroad at one glance, on an immeasurable expanse of forests, fields, lakes, and ocean, deep below him, he appears indifferent to the little localities of change of seasons ; as in a few minutes he can pass from summer to winter, from the lower to the higher regions of the atmosphere, the abode of eternal cold, and from thence descend, at will, to the torrid or the artic regions of the earth. He is, therefore, found at all seasons in the countries he inhabits ; but prefers such places as have been men tioned above, from the great partiality he has for fish. "In procuring these, he displays in a very singular manner the genius and energy of his character, which is fierce, contemplative, daring, and tyranical ; attri butes not exerted but on particular occasions, but, when put forth, overpowering all opposition. Elevated on the high dead limb of some gigantic tree, that commands a wide view of the neighboring shore, and ocean, he seems calmly to contemplate the motions of the various feathered tribes that pursue their busy avocations below ; the snow white gulls slowly win- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 313 nowing the air ; the busy tringge coursing along the sands ; trains of ducks streaming over the surface ; silent and watchful cranes, intent and wading ; clamor ous crows ; and .all the winged multitudes that subsist by the bounty of this vast liquid magazine of nature. High over all these hovers one whose action instantly arrests his whole attention. By his wide curvature of wing, and sudden suspension in air, he knows him to be the fish hawk, settling over some devoted victim of the deep. His eye kindles at the sight, and, balanc ing himself, with half-opened wings, on the branch, he watches the result. Down, rapid as an arrow from heaven, descends the distant object of his attention, the roar of its wings reaching the ear as it disappears in the deep, making the surges foam around. At this moment, the eager looks of the Eagle are all ardor ; and, levelling his neck for flight, he sees the fish hawk once more emerge, struggling with his prey, and mounting in the air with screams of exultation. This is the signal for our hero, who, launching in the air, instantly gives chase, and soon gains on the fish hawk ; each exerts his utmost to mount above the other, displaying in these rencontres the most elegant and sublime aerial evolutions. The unencumbered Eagle rapidly advances, and is just on the point of reaching his opponent, when, with a sudden scream, probably of despair and honest execration, the latter drops his fish : the Eagle, poising himself for a moment, as if to take a more certain aim, descends like a whirlwind, snatches it in his grasp ere it reaches the water, and bears his ill-gotten booty silently away to the woods." The Fish Hawk (Aquila Halicetd) referred to above, inhabits the coast and many parts of the inte rior of this country. The flight of this bird is easy 27 314 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. THE FISH HAWK. and graceful, and its plunge, when sweeping down to its finny prey, inconceivably rapid. Audubon says that it never strikes at a fish leaping out of the water. In the Gulf of Mexico, where these birds are numer ous, :' and where shoals of flying-fish are continually emerging from the sea to escape the pursuit of the dolphins, he observed that the Fish-hawks never made a sweep at them, but would at once plunge after them, or other fish, while swimming in their usual mode near the surface. When it plunges into the water in pur suit of a fish, it sometimes proceeds deep enough to disappear for an instant, throwing the water around into foam ; on rising, it mounts a few yards into the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 315 air, shakes off the spray, and flies off to its nest with its booty, or to an accustomed tree, there to satisfy its appetite, when, without longer repose, it again launches into the air, and sails circling at a great height over tHe waters. The nest of the Fish-hawk is built in a tree, and consists of a mass of sticks, seaweed, grass, turf, &c., and being repaired every year, is sometimes a fair cartload. Among the interstices of the materials, other birds are permitted to nidify, and several pairs of grakles, or crow-blackbirds, may be often seen tak ing up their abode around the margin and sides of the structure, " like humble vassals round the castle of their chief," laying their eggs, rearing their yoiing, and living together in the utmost harmony. The Fish-hawk breeds in May ; and both parents are devoted to their young, defending them from any assailant with indomitable resolution, and using both beak and talons with terrible effect. The young are generally three in number. The Peregrine Falcon (Falco Peregrinus). This bird so famous as having been used in the princely sport of hawking in old times, is found in this country. Mr. Selby, in his British Ornithology, gives an in stance of great daring in a Falcon. " In exercising my dogs upon the moors previous to the commence ment of the shooting season, I observed a large bird of the hawk genus hovering at a distance, which up on approaching I knew to be a Peregrine Falcon. Its attention was now drawn towards the dogs, and it ac companied them while they beat the surrounding ground. Upon their having found and sprung a brood of grouse, the falcon immediately gave chase and struck a young bird before they had proceeded far 316 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. THE PEREGRINE FALCON. upon the wing. My shouts and rapid advance pre vented it from securing its prey. The issue of this attempt, however, did not deter the Falcon from watch ing our subsequent movements ; another opportunity soon offering, it again gave chase, and struck down two birds by two rapidly repeated blows, one of which it secured and bore off in triumph." The flight of this Falcon when pursuing its quarry is astonishingly rapid. Montagu has reckoned it at one hundred and fifty miles an hour ; and Colonel Thornton, an expert falconer, estimated the flight of one in pursuit of a snipe to have been nine miles in eleven minutes, with out including the frequent turnings. Audubon, in his " Birds of America," states that he has seen this Fal con come at the report of a gun, and carry off a teal not thirty steps distant from the sportsman who had killed it, " with a daring assurance as surprising as unexpected." This singular aptitude in the wild bird to join men HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 317 and dogs in their pursuit of game, availing itself of their assistance, shows at once the little trouble com paratively speaking, requisite for reclaiming and train ing it. A knowledge of the service rendered by dogs and men in putting up game, thereby giving it the opportunity of striking it, is intuitive. In disposition it is confident and docile; and with patience, kind treatment, and proper management, its training is soon effected. The Peregrine Falcon, breeds on the ledges of pre cipitous rocks, laying four eggs, of a reddish brown color, with darker blotches and variegations. The Fen Falcon (Falco Islandicus) is large, strong, exceedingly compact and very firm in its plumage. The male bird is about twenty two inches long, and the stretch of its wings about four feet. The female is still larger. This bird is found in Upper California. Among other birds of the Falcon tribe are the Sparrow Hawk, (Falco Sparverius), Pigeon Hawk, (Falco Columbarius\ and the Gos Hawk (Accipiter Columbarius). There are several species of the Owl in California. Among these is the Hawk Owl (Strix Funerea), a remarkable species which forms the connecting link between the falcons and the hawks. This bird preys on small birds, and sometimes follows the hunter like a falcon and boldly siezes the wounded game as it flutters on the ground. He also feeds on mice, squir rels, and insects. Sometimes the Hawk Owls are observed to hover round the camp fires of the natives in quest of any offal or rejected game. The Virginian Horned Owl (Bubo Virginiarius), common in the United States and the fur countries, is found here. The flight of this bird is elevated, 27* 318 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. HAWK OWL. rapid, and graceful. It sails with apparent ease in large circles, and rises and descends without the least difficulty, by merely inclining its wings or its tail as it passes through the air. Now and then it glides silently close over the earth with incomparable ve locity, and drops as if shot dead on the prey beneath. At other times it suddenly alights on the top of a fence, stake, or dead stump, and utters a shriek so horrid, that the woods around echo to its dismal sound. During the utterance of the deep gurgling HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 319 VIRGINIAN HORNED OWL. cries so well described by Wilson, it moves its body, and particularly its head, in various grotesque ways, and at intervals violently snaps its bill. Its food consists of various gallinaceous birds, half-grown tur keys, domestic poultry of all kinds, ducks, grouse, hares, opossums, and squirrels ; and whenever chance throws a dead fish on the shore, this Bird feeds on it 320 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. with peculiar avidity. The Virginian Horned Owl is very powerful, and equally spirited. Mallards, gui nea-fowl, and common fowls fall an easy prey, and are carried off in its talons to the depths of the woods. When wounded, says Audubon, it exhibits a revenge ful tenacity of spiritj scarcely surpassed by the noblest of the eagle tribe ; disdaining to scramble away, it faces its enemy with undaunted courage, protruding its powerful talons, and snapping its bill. Its large goggle eyes open and shut in quick succession ; and the feathers of its ' body are puffed up, and swell out its apparent bulk to nearly double the natural size. In some districts it is a great nuisance to the settler, making sad havoc among his stock of poultry. Among some of the Indian nations a sort of reverential horror is entertained towards this bird, and the priests and conjurers have adopted it as the symbol of their office, carrying about with them a stuffed specimen with glass eyes, which excites general awe. This bird usually constructs a bulky nest in the forked branch of a tree, composed externally of crooked sticks, and lined with coarse grass and feathers. The eggs are three or four in number, and of a dull white. The Mottled Owl (Strix noevia), a small, hand some species known as the Little Screech Owl, inhabits California and Oregon as well as the Atlantic States. They feed on small birds, beetles, crickets, and other insects, build in hollow trees, and utter most dismal shrieks in the late summer and autumn evenings, keep ing up the din till midnight. Mr. Farnham mentions the Great Snow Owl (Strix Nictoea), and the Burrow ing Owl (Strix Cunicularia) which inhabits the HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. 321 THE MOTTLED OWL. burrows of the Prairie Marmot. This bird is thus described by L. Bonaparte. " In the trans-Mississippian territories of the United States the Burrowing Owl resides exclusively in the villages of the marmot or prairie dog, whose excava tions are so commodious as to render it unnecessary that our bird should dig for himself, as he is said to do in other parts of the world where no burrowing animals exist. These villages are very numerous, and variable in their extent, sometimes covering only a few acres, and at others spreading over the surface of the country for miles together. They are com posed of slightly elevated mounds, having the form of a truncated cone, about two feet in width at base, and seldom rising as high as eighteen inches above the surface of the soil. The entrance is placed either 322 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. at the top or on the side, and the whole mound is beat en down externally, especially at the summit, re sembling a much-used footpath. "From the entrance, the passage into the mound descends vertically for one or two feet, and is thence continued obliquely downwards, until it terminates in an apartment, within which the industrious marmot constructs, on the approach of the cold season, a com fortable cell for his winter's sleep. This cell, which is composed of fine dry grass, is globular in form, with an opening at top capable of admitting the fin ger ; and the whole is so firmly compacted, that it might, without injury, be rolled over the floor. " In all the prairie-dog villages the Burrowing Owl is seen moving briskly about, or else in small flocks scattered among the mounds, and at a distance it may be mistaken for the marmot itself when sit ting erect. They manifest but little timidity, and allow themselves to be approached sufficiently close for shooting ; but if alarmed, some or all of them soar away or settle down again at a short distance ; if further disturbed, their flight is continued until they are no longer in view, or they descend into their dwellings, whence they are difficult to dislodge. " The burrows into which these Owls have been seen to descend, on the plains of the River Platte (a tributary to the Missouri), where they are most nume rous, were evidently excavated either by the mar mot, whence it has been inferred by Say that they were common though unfriendly residents of the same habitation, or that our Owl was the sole occupant of a burrow acquired by the right of conquest. That the latter idea is correct was clearly presented by the ruinous condition of the burrows tenanted by the Owl, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 323 while the neat and well-preserved mansion of the mar mot showed the active care of a skilful and industri ous owner. We have no evidence that the Owl and marmot habitually resort to one hurrow ; yet we are well assured by Pike and others that a common dan ger often drives them into the same excavation, where lizards and rattlesnakes also enter for concealment and safety. The Owl observed by Vicillot in St. Do mingo digs itself a burrow two feet in depth, at the bottom of which its eggs are deposited on a bed of moss, herb-stalks, and dried roots. " The note of our bird is strikingly similar to the cry of the marmot, which sounds like cheh, cheh, pronounced several times in rapid succession ; and were it not that the Burrowing Owls of the West In dies, where no marmots exist, utter the same sound, it might be inferred that the marmot was the unin tentional tutor to the young owl: this cry is only uttered as the bird begins its flight. The food of the bird we are describing appears to consist entirely of insects, as, on examination of its stomach, nothing but parts of their hard wing-cases were found." The American Shrike, or Butcher Bird (Lanius Septentrionalis\ is found here. His principal food is large insects, such as grasshoppers, crickets, and spiders, sometimes impaling them on thorns, possibly as a lure to smaller birds, which he sometimes attacks and tears in' pieces with his sharp hooked bill. He is noted also for his imitative powers as a songster ; but his usual note is discordant and hoarse. There are several species of the Fly Catcher. Among others, the well known King Bird, or Tyrant Ply Catcher, (Muscicapa Tyrannus.) Among smaller American birds, the most pugnacious and intrepid. 324 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. AMERICAN SHRIKE. On this bird, Nuttall has the following remarks : " In a natural state he takes his station on the top of an apple tree, a stake, or a tall weed, and betwixt the amusement of his sqeuaking twitter, employs him self in darting after his insect food. Occasionally he is seen hovering over the field, with beating wing, almost like a hawk, surveying the ground or herbage for grasshoppers, which are a favorite diet. At other times they may be observed in small companies flick ering over still waters in the same employment, the gratification of appetite. Now and then, during the heat of summer, they are seen to dip and bathe, in the watery mirror, and with this washing, drying, and pluming, they appear to be both gratified and amused. During the season of their sojourn, the pair are often seen moving about in company, with a rapid quiver- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 325 KING BIRD. ing of the wings, and a continued tremulous shrieking twitter. Their energetic and amusing motions are most commonly performed in warm and fine weather, and continue, with little interruption, until towards the end of August. " One of the most remarkable traits in the charac ter of the King Bird, is the courage and affection which he displays for his mate and young ; for on his first arrival he is rather timid, and readily dodges before the swallow and purple marten. Indeed, at this season I have seen the spotted sandpipers drive 28 23 S26 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. away a pair of King Birds, because they happened to approach the premises of her nest. But he now becomes, on this important occasion, so tenacious of his rights as readily to commence the attack against all his feathered enemies, and he passes several months of the summer in a scene of almost perpetual contest, and not overrating his hostile powers, he generally finds means to come off with impunity. Eagles, hawks, crows, jays, and in short every bird which excites his suspicion, by their intentional or ac cidental approach, are attacked with skill and courage ; he dives upon the heads and backs of the larger in truders, who become so annoyed and tormented as willingly to make a precipitate retreat. He pursues his foes sometimes for a mile ; and at length, assured of conquest, he returns to his prominent watch-ground, again quivering his wings in gratulation, and rapidly uttering his shrill and triumphant notes. He is, therefore, the friend of the farmer, as the scourge of the pilferers and plunderers of his crop and barn yard. But that he might not be perfectly harmless, he has sometimes a propensity for feeding on the valuable tenants of the bee hive ; for these he watches, and exultingly twitters at the prospect of success, as they wing their way engaged in busy employment; his quick-sighted eyes now follow them, until one, more suitable than the rest, becomes his favorite mark. This selected victim is by some farmers believed to be a drone rather than the stinging neutral worker. The selective discernment of the eyes of this bird has often amused me ; berries of different kinds, held to my domestic King Bird, however similar, were re jected or snatched, as they suited his instinct, with the nicest discrimination." HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 327 AMERICAN ROBIN. The American Robin ( Turdus migratorius) is found in California and Oregon. " From the petulant and reiterated chirp so com monly uttered by the Robin, when surprised or irri tated, the Indians of Hudson Bay, call him, from this note, Pee-pee-tshu. They often, also, utter a loud echoing, 'kh 'kh 'M, and sometimes chirp in a high or slender tone when alarmed, and with an affec tation of anger sharply flirt the tail and ends of the wings. They raise several broods in a season, and considerable numbers flock together in the latter end of summer and autumn. When feeding on cherries, poke, sassafras, and sour-gum berries, they are so intent as to be easily approached, and shot down in numbers ; and when fat, are justly esteemed for food, and often brought to market. In the spring they fre- 328 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. quently descend to the ground in quest of worms and insects, which then constitute their principal support. " They are commonly brought up in the cage, and seem very docile and content. They sing well, readily learn to imitate lively parts of tunes, and some have been taught to pipe forth psalms even to so dull and solemn a measure as that of " Old Hundred /" They acquire also a considerable taste for mimickry, imitat ing the notes of most of the birds around them, such as the blue bird, pewee, whip-poor-will, and others. On being approached with the finger, they usually make some show of anger, by cracking and snapping the bill. At times they become very tame, and will go in and out of the house with domestic confidence, feel uneasy when left alone, and on such occasions, have sometimes the sagacity of calling attention by articulating endearing words, as, pretty, pretty, &c., connecting, apparently with these expressions, their general import of attentive blandishment. They be come almost naked in the moulting season, in which they appear to suffer considerably, yet have been known to survive for seventeen years or upwards. The rufous color of the breast becomes deeper in those birds which thus live in confinement. Their principal song is in the morning, and commences before sunrise, at which time it is very loud, full and emphatic. " This bird, according to Richardson, inhabits every part of the fur countries. Nests of the Robin are found as high as the 67th parallel ; and from the reports of travellers it is known to visit the north west coast of America. It arrives in the Missouri (in lat. 41J°,) from the eastward, on the llth of April ; and in the course of its northerly movement, visits Severn River, in Hudson Bay, about a fort- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 329 night later. On the 7th of May, in 1827, it was seen at Fort Chepewyan, in lat. 58f °, and in the distant parallel of 65°, at Fort Franklin, on the 20th of that month. In the -54th degree, they begin to hatch by the end of May ; but 11 degrees farther to the north, they do not commence incubation until the llth of June. The snow even then partially covers the ground ; but there are, in those latitudes, abundance of the berries of the alpine arbutus, crow-berry, (IBmpetrum nigrum^) whortle-berry and cow-berry, (Vaccinium uliginosum, and V. Vitis idoea^ besides those of some other plants, which, after having been frozen up all the winter, are exposed, on the melting of the snow, again to view, full of juice, and retain ing their original flavor. Dr. Richardson remarks, that the notes of the Robin " resemble those of the common thrush (Turdus musicus), but are not so loud. Within the Arctic circle the woods are silent in the bright light of noon-day, but towards midnight, when the sun travels near the horizon, and the shades of the forest are lengthened, the concert commences, and continues till six or seven in the morning. Even in those remote regions, the mistake of those natu ralists who have asserted that the feathered tribes of America are void of harmony might be fully dis proved. Indeed, the transition is so sudden from the perfect repose, the death-like silence of an arctic winter, to the animated bustle of summer ; the trees spread their foliage with such magic rapidity, and every succeeding morning opens with such agreeable accessions of feathered songsters to swell the chorus — their plumage as gay and unimpaired as when they enlivened the deep-green forests of tropical climes, that the return of a northern spring excites in the 28* 330 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. mind a deep feeling of the beauties of the season, a sense of the bounty and providence of the Supreme Being, which is cheaply purchased by the tedium of nine months winter. The most verdant lawns and cultivated glades of Europe, the most beautiful pro ductions of art, fail in producing that exhilaration and joyous buoyancy of mind which we have expe rienced in treading the wilds of Arctic America, when their snowy covering has just been replaced by an infant but vigorous vegetation.' " THE CAT BIRD. The Cat Bird (Mimus Felivox) is found in various parts of California. This quaint and familiar song ster passes the winter in the southern extremities of the United States, and along the coast of Mexico, from whence, as early as February, they arrive in HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 33X Georgia. About the middle of April they are first seen in Pennsylvania, and at length leisurely approach this part of New England, by the close of the first or beginning of the second week in May. They con tinue their migration also to Canada; where they proceed into the fur-countries as far as the 45th parallel, arriving on the banks of the Saskatchewan, about the close of May. They are said also to in habit Kamtschatka, and consequently penetrate very far to the north. Throughout this extent, and to the territory of the Mississippi, they likewise pass the period of incubation and rearing their young. They remain in New England till about the middle of Octo ber, at which time the young feed principally upon wild berries. The Cat-Bird often tunes his cheerful song before the break of day, hopping from bush to bush, with great agility after his insect prey, while yet scarcely distinguishable amidst the dusky shadows of the dawn. The notes of different individuals vary considerably, so that sometimes his song, in sweetness and compass, is scarcely at all inferior to that of the ferruginous thrush. A quaintness, however, prevails in all his efforts, and his song is frequently made up of short and blended imitations of other birds, given however, with great emphasis, melody, and variety of tone; and, like the nightingale, invading the hours of re pose, in the late twilight of a summer's evening, when scarce another note is heard, but the hum of the drowsy beetle, his music attains its full effect, and often rises and falls with all the swell and studied cadence of finished harmony. During the heat of the day, or laie in the morning, the variety of his 332 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. song declines, or he pursues his employment in silence and retirement. Of the other birds of the Thrush genus, the Brown Thrush, (Orpheus JRufua), the Varied Thrush (Tur- dus Nsevius), very similar to the American robin, the Wood Thrush ( Turdus Mustelinus), the Dwarf Thrush (Turdus Nanus), Wilson's Thrush ( Wilsonii\ and the Western Thrush (Turdus Cestulatus\ have all been observed by Mr. Townsend and others in Oregon and California. Of the Sylvicola there are several species in this region, such as the Myrtle Bird, (Sylvicola coronata,) Audubon's Warbler (Sylvicola Auduboni), and the Summer Yellow Bird, (Sylvicola destiva.) On the geographical distribution of this bird Mr. Nuttall has the following remarks : SUMMER YELLOW BIRD. This very common and brilliant summer species is found in all parts of the American continent from the confines of the arctic circle to Florida and Texas, as HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 333 well as Oregon and the Rocky Mountains, where it spends the mild season. About the middle of March, I already heard their song amidst the early blooming thickets and leafy woods of the Altamaha ; but they do not arrive in Pennsylvania and this part of New England before the 1st of May. About the close of August in the northern, and by the middle of Septem ber in the central States of the Union, or as soon as their second brood are capable of joining the migrating host, they disappear, probably in the twilight, and wing their way by easy stages to their tropical desti nation, passing through Louisiana in October, and appearing at length, about Vera Cruz, from whence they spread their numerous host through tropical America to Guiana, Cayenne, St. Domingo, and other of the larger contiguous islands of the West Indies. Mr. Nuttall also places in California and Oregon, the Blue Mountain Warbler (Sylvicola montana), the Hermit Warbler (Sylvicola Occidentalis), Townsend's Warbler, (Sylvicola Townsendi,) and that sweet songster, the Maryland Yellow Throat, (Trichas Marylandica.) He says in relation to the Yellow Throat : This common and familiar species extends its sum mer migrations from Florida to Nova Scotia, arriving in Pennsylvania towards the middle of April, and in this part of New England about the first week in May. They return to the south in September ; a few strag glers of the young, however, may be seen to the first week in October, and though some may remain and winter in the Southern States, it is more probable that the main body retire at this season into the in terior of tropical America ; as they were seen late in . autumn, around Vera Cruz, by the naturalist and 334 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. YELLOW THROAT. traveller Mr. Bullock. Early in the month of March, however, I heard this species singing in the forests of West Florida. They also exist in the territory of Oregon, where Mr. Townsend obtained specimens. We met with them on Lewis's River, of the Shoshonee in the centre of the Rocky Mountain chain. The Maryland Yellow Throat, with cheerful devoted- ness to the great object of his summer migration, the attachments and cares of his species, passes his time near some shady rill of water, amidst briers, brambles, alders, and such other shrubbery as grow in low and watery situations. Unambitious to be seen, he seldom ascends above the tops of the underwood, where he dwells busily employed in collecting the insects on which he feeds. After these, like the wren, he darts into the deepest thicket, and threads his devious way through erery opening ; he searches around the stems, examines beneath the leaves, and raising himself on his peculiarly pale and slender legs, peeps into each crevice in order to seize by surprise his tiny lurking prey. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 335 SHORE LARK. Among the different species of Larks found in Cali fornia, the most beautiful is the Shore Lark, (Alauda Alpestris.) This beautiful species, says Nuttall, is common to the north of both the old and new continent, but, as in some other instances already remarked, the Shore Lark extends its migrations much further over America than over Europe and Asia. Our bird was met with in the Arctic regions by the late adventurous voyagers, and Mr. Bullock saw them in the winter around the city of Mexico, so that in their migrations over this continent they spread themselves across the whole habitable northern hemisphere to the very equator ; while in Europe, according to the careful observations of Temminck, they are unknown to the south of Ger many. Pallas met with these birds round Lake Baikal and on the Wolga, in the 53d degree of latitude. Westward they have also been seen in the interior of the United States, along the shores of the Missouri. Inseparable in all their movements, like the hen 336 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. and her fostered chickens, they roost together in a close ring or company, by the mere edge of some sheltering weed or tuft of grass on the dry and gravelly ground ; and, thickly and warmly clad, they abide the frost and the storm with hardy indifference. They fly rather high and loose, in scattered companies, and follow no regular time of migration, but move onward only as their present resources begin to fail. They are usually fat, esteemed as food, and are frequently seen exposed for sale in our markets. Their diet, as usual, consists of various kinds of seeds which still remain on the grass and weeds they frequent, and they swallow a considerable portion of gravel to assist their digestion. They also collect the eggs and larvae of insects when they fall in their way. The Snow Bunting (Emberiza nivalis), and the Red-winged Blackbird or Troopial (Icterus phoeni- ceus^ are found in various parts of California. The Red-winged Troopial in summer inhabits the whole of North America from Nova Scotia to Mexico, and is found in the interior from the 53d degree across the whole continent to the shores of the Pacific and along the coast as far as California. They are migra tory north of Maryland, but pass the winter and sum mer in great numbers in all the southern States, frequenting chiefly the settlements and rice and corn fields, towards the sea-coast, where they move about like blackening clouds, rising suddenly at times with a noise like thunder, and exhibiting amidst the broad shadows of their funeral plumage, the bright flashing of the vermilion with which their wings are so singu larly decorated. After whirling and waving a little distance, like the starling, they descend as a torrent, and darkening the branches of the trees by their num- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 337 RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD. bers, they commence a general concert that may be heard for more than two miles. This music seems to be something betwixt chattering and warbling ; jing ling liquid notes like those of the bobolink with their peculiar kong-quer-ree and bob a lee, o-bob a lee ; then complaining chirps, jars, and sounds like saw- filing, or the motion of a sign-board on its rusty hinge, the whole constituting a novel and sometimes grand chorus of discord and harmony, in which the perform ers, seem in good earnest, and bristle up their feathers, as if inclined, at least, to make up in quantity what their show of music may lack in quality. When their food begins to fail in the fields, they assemble with the purple grakles, very familiarly around the corn-cribs and in the barn-yards, greedily and dexterously gleaning up every thing within their reach. In the month of March, Mr. Bullock found them very numerous and bold near the city of Mexico, 29 338 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. where they followed mules to steal a tithe of their barley. The Whitewinged Crowbill (Loxia Leucoptera\ is found in the pine and hemlock forests, subsisting on the seeds obtained from the pine cones. THE RAVEN. The Raven (Oorvus Cor ax), common to both conti nents is found here. Though spread over the whole world, says Nuttall, Ravens are rarely ever birds of passage, enduring the winters even of the arctic circle, or the warmth of Mexico, St. Domingo, and Madagas car. They are particularly attached to the rocky eyries where they have been bred and paired. Through out the year they are observed together in nearly equal numbers, and they never entirely abandon this HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 839 adopted home. If they descend into the plain, it is to collect subsistence ; but they resort to the low grounds more in winter than summer, as they avoid the heat and dislike to wander from their cool retreats. They never roost in the woods like crows; and have sufficient sagacity to choose in their rocky retreats a situation defended from the winds of the north, com monly under the natural vault formed by an extend ing ledge or cavity of the rock. Here they retire during the night in companies of fifteen to twenty. They perch upon the bushes which grow straggling in the clefts of the rocks ; but they form their nests in the rocky crevices, or in the holes of the mouldering walls, at the summits of ruined towers ; and sometimes upon the high branches of large and solitary trees. After they have paired, their fidelity appears to con tinue through life. The male expresses his attachment by a particular strain of croaking, and they are often observed caressing by approaching their bills, with as much semblance of affection as the truest turtle doves. The Crow (Corvus corone) is also abundant in Ca lifornia. The Magpie (Corvus pica) is a California bird. This bird, says Nuttall, is much more common in Europe than in America, being confined in this coun try to the northern regions, and to the plains and table lands or steppes of the Rocky Mountains west of the Mississippi. Thence they continue to the banks of the Columbia, and on the opposite side of northern and temperate Asia, are found in Kams- chatka, Japan, and China. They are sometimes met with as far down the Missouri as Boonsborouo-h in the o severity of winter, driven from the western wilder ness, only by the imperious calls of hunger. In 340 HISTOBY OF CALIFORNIA. THE MAGPIE. summer they are so rare, even in the Missouri terri tory, that from March to October, and from St. Louis to the trading house at the Mandans, a distance by the river of sixteen hundred miles, a party of near seventy men, attended by constant hunters, never met with a single Pie, nor were any appearances of their nests any where visible. Eleven hundred miles up the Arkansas, and more than one thousand up the Red River, countries which. I visited in summer, never pre sented a specimen of this otherwise familiar and rov ing bird. The season of incubation with the Ameri can Pies, so different from their familiar habits in the old continent, is passed, no doubt, in the wooded re cesses of the Rocky Mountains, which abound with berries and acorns, and with small birds and their eggs. They are known to make so great a destruc tion among the eggs of grouse, pheasants, partridges, and even among young chickens, in many parts of HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 341 Europe, as to be proscribed by law, and destroyed for the premium justly set upon their heads. The ab sence of food and shelter for their nests in summer, suitable for the Magpie, on the vast prairies of the Arkansas andlVlissouri, particularly in the dry deserts at the base of the Rocky Mountains, will probably continue as a perpetual barrier to the eastern migra tions of this mischievous species, whose means of flight and travelling are still more circumscribed than those of the common crow. They consequently ex perience annually, in the terrible vicissitudes of cli mate incident to the countries they inhabit; like the Esquimaux of the Arctic regions, either a feast or a famine, and are rendered so bold and voracious by want, that in the vicinity of the northern Andes, towards New Mexico, Colonel Pike was visited by them in the month of December, in latitude 41°, while the thermometer was at the dreadful line of IV0 below zero, on the scale of Reaumur. They now assembled round the miserable party in great numbers for the purpose of picking the sore backs of their perishing horses, and, like the vulture of Prometheus, they did not await the death of the subjects they tor mented, but fed upon them still living, till their flesh was raw and bleeding. They were so bold and familiar as to alight on the men's arms, and eat flesh out of their hands.* To the party of Lewis and Clark, the Magpies were also very familiar and voracious, so that they penetrated into their tents, and without ceremony, like the harpies of Virgil, snatched the meat even from the dishes, preferring the chance of any death * Pike's Journal, p. 170. 29* 24 342 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. BLUE JAY. to that of hunger. They were also frequent attend ants on the hunters, and while these were engaged in dressing and skinning their game, the Pies would venture to seize the meat suspended within a foot or two of their heads. The Blue Jay (Garrulus cristatus) and the (Grarru- lus Stelleri) according to Farnham, are quite common. Of the Woodpeckers, the ( Oolaptes Mexicanus), and the Flicker or Golden- winged Woodpecker, (Oolaptes auratus), are the only ones found in California. The latter breeds and inhabits throughout North America, from Labrador and the remotest wooded regions of the fur countries to Florida, being partially migratory only from Canada and the Northern States, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 343 FLICKER. proceeding to the south in October, and returning north in April. From the great numbers seen in the Southern States in winter, it is evident that the prin cipal part of the species migrate thither from the North and West to pass the inclement season, which naturally deprives them of the means of acquiring their usual sustenance. At this time also they feed much on winter berries, such as those of the sumach, smilax, and misseltoe. In the Middle States, some of these birds find the means of support through the most in clement months of the winter. In New England, they reappear about the beginning of April, soon after which they commence to pair and build ; for this pur- 344 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. pose they often make choice of the trunk of a decayed apple or forest tree, at different heights from the ground. When an accidental cavity is not conveniently found, confident in the formidable means provided them by nature, with no other aid than the bill, they have been known to make a winding burrow through a solid oak for fifteen inches in length. At this labor, for the greater security and privacy, they continue till late in the evening, and may be heard dealing blows as loud and successive as if aided by the tools of the carpenter. Mr. Farnham says that he saw but two species of Humming Birds in California. One of these, the Trochilus rufus, he describes as a delicate, splendid little creature, less than the common species, and the most perfect gem in nature. When glancing through the trees it resembles the flash of a large ruby. The Northern Humming Bird ( Trochilus colubris) is the other kind noticed by Mr. Farnham. This wonderfully diminutive and brilliant bird, says Nuttall, is the only one of an American genus, of more than one hundred species, which ventures beyond the limit of tropical climates. Its approaches towards the north are regulated by the advances of the season. Fed on the honeyed sweets of flowers, it is an exclusive attendant on the varied bounties of Flora. By the 10th to the 20th of March, it is already seen in the mild forests of Louisiana, and the warmer maritime districts of Georgia, where the embowering and fra grant Grelsemium (Carolina Jessamine), the twin- leaved Bignonia, and the white-robed Mylocarium, with a host of daily expanding flowers, invite our little sylvan guest to the retreats he had reluctantly for saken. Desultory in his movements, roving only HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 345 NORTHERN HUMMING BIRD. through the region of blooming sweets, his visits to the Northern States are delayed to the month of May. Still later, as if determined that no flower shall "blush unseen, or waste its sweetness on the desert air," our little sylph., on wings as rapid as the wind, at once launches without hesitation into the flowery wilderness which borders on the arctic circle. Accord ing to Richardson, this species frequents the fur coun tries up to the 57th parallel, and Mr. Drummond found a nest of the Humming Bird near the sources of Elk River in the remote interior of the north, and we met with it on Lewis's River of the Shoshone, in the latter part of July. Of Swallows, Mr. Farnham mentions the Cliff 346 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. THE BARN SWALLOW. Swallow (Hirundo Lunifrons\ the Bank Swallow (Hirundo riparia\ and the Barn Swallow (Hirundo Americana.} Of this bird Mr. Nuttall says : Their northern migration extends to the sources of the Mississippi, the Rocky Mountains, and the fur countries, where distant from the habitations of man they inhabit caves, particularly those in the limestone rocks. They retire from Massachusetts about the 18th of September, and are observed, in the same month and in October, passing over the peninsula of Florida on their way to tropical America, where they probably pass the winter. I have seen a straggling pair in this vicinity even on the 15th of October. In the months of January and February the common Chimney Swallow of Europe has been observed to moult, by Mr. Pearson of London, and Mr. Natterer of Vienna ; with the latter they survived in cages, to HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 347 which they are easily reconciled, for eight or nine years, and showed no propensity to torpidity. The fleetness with which they move, and the peculiarity of their insect fate, are circumstances which would impel a prompt transition to more favorable climates. Acci dental fits of torpidity, like those which occasionally and transiently take place with the Humming Bird, have undoubtedly happened to Swallows, without proving any thing against the general migrating instinct of the species. The Kingfisher (Aleedo Alcyon), is very common on the banks of the rivers and water-courses of California. The Night Hawk (Caprimulgus Virginianus), is also common. RUFFED GROUSE. Mr. Farnham says that there is probably no coun try in the world which produces so many varieties of the Grouse, and in so great numbers as California. The Great Cock of the Plains (Tetrao Urophasianus), second only in size and beauty to the cock of the woods of Europe, is plentiful in Northern California. He is thirty inches long, nearly four feet in extent, and weighs from seven to ten pounds. The Dusky 348 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Grouse ( Tetrao Olscurus\ less than the preceding in size, and the Rock Grouse (Tetrao rupestris), is also common in the mountainous regions. Also the Ruffed Grouse (Tetrao umbellas), called in the South ern States, Pheasant, and in the Northern States, the Partridge, is found here. The White-tailed Grouse (Tetrao Leucurus), is common in different places, as also the Pinnated Grouse (Tetrao cupido^) called the Prairie Hen, of which species the male has a singular wing-like appendage to the neck. PINNATED GROUSE. There are also several species of the Quail in Cali fornia. Of the common Quail, called in the Middle States the Partridge (Ortyx Virginana), Nuttallsays: The Partridge of America, exceedingly prolific, has extended its colonies from the inclement coasts of New England and the western plains of Missouri to the mild latitudes of Mexico and Honduras. In Jamaica, where it has long been introduced and natu ralized, the inhabitants distinguish it as the Partridge, an appellation sufficiently prevalent in various parts HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 349 QUAIL. of the United States. At the north, this species is rarely seen to the extremity of New Hampshire, and this limit, no doubt, is determined by the length and severity of the winters which prevail in this rigorous climate. They seldom migrate, except to short dis tances, in quest of food, and consequently, often perish beneath deep drifts of snow, so that their existence is rendered impossible in the arctic winters of our high- latitudes. Indeed, sometimes they have been so thinned in this part of the country, that sportsmen, acquainted with their local attachments, have been known to introduce them into places for breeding and to prevent their threatened extermination. So seden tary are the habits of this interesting bird, that until the flock is wholly routed by the unfeeling hunter, they continue faithfully attached to the neighborhood of the spot where they have been raised and supported. Besides this species there are several which appear 30 350 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. CALIFORNIA QUAIL. to be peculiar to California. The California Crested Quail (Lopliortyx CaUfornica), is thus noticed by Nuttall : This species, discovered by Menzies, is wholly con fined to the west side of the northern Andes, and is common throughout the provinces of Upper California, and the territory of the Oregon. In small flocks and pairs they are abundant in Upper California, and are sometimes so gentle and confidant, as to show but little alarm when approached. Its manners are very similar to those of the common American Partridge. The males in spring are often seen perched on low bushes, where they utter for hours their peculiar almost crowing call, and in the same quaint voice with its eastern prototype. A day or two after my arrival at Monterey in Cali fornia, in the evening, returning from a walk, I heard, as I thought, some Indians or boys calling out in a loud strain ; but soon found that this cry was answered at small distances like the crowing of fowls. It was, in fact, the call of the Tufted Californian Quail, "k'h, k'h Jc'h Jc'h." About the middle of April, in the plains round the port of St. Diego, this species was very abundant ; and every now and then in the day, the male, perched on some low bush or hillock, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 351 was heard calling out, rather quickly, ~ke Jcai Jcoo, Tc'kaiJcoo, which was usually answered by some other males, to the right and left, who were within hearing. At this time they were paired. About the middle of the day, we sometimes surprised small flocks basking and scratching in the shade of the bushes. Mr. Townsend met with small coveys of the Plumed Quail (Lopliortyx Plumiferd), in the woods near the Columbia River. It is probably more common in Upper California; and Douglas's Crested Quail (Lopliortyx Douglasi), and the elegant crested Quail Lopliortyx elegans, have both been found in Upper California. The bays, inlets, and rivers, says Mr. Farnham, are well stocked with different species of water birds, and the low lands near the outlets of some of the streams on the Pacific coast actually swarm with geese, widgeons, teal, cranes, curlews, ^snipes, and various other waders and swimmers. The Wild Swan (Cygnus ferus\ is the largest of these water birds. They are by far the largest of the web-footed water-fowl, and their plumage throughout is of the purest white. The neck is not more remark able for its extreme length than for its majestic per sonation of the line of beauty ; its bill, slightly hooked at the point, of a black color, without a tubercle, is all of an equal breadth, only higher than it is wide at the base ; the feet are black. The young, pale ash color. The male is upwards of five feet in length, and more than eight in the expanse of its wings ; its usual weight averages from twenty to twenty-five pounds, and sometimes it will even reach thirty ; the female is smaller in size. In former days, swans as well as peacocks were served up at the tables of the great ; 352 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. WILD SWAN. but both have now disappeared from our feasts, and are retained only for their beauty, their flesh at best being dry and hard when the birds are full-grown ; yet cygnets are still occasionally used, but certainly more for show than taste, as they are not at all comparable to a good barn-yard chicken. The swan is a long- lived bird, but it is disputed whether the traditionary accounts which allot it a term of more than a century be correct ; about half that period may perhaps be its legitimate boundary. The Swan lives almostentirely upon the water, and feeds chiefly upon aquatic plants, yet varying its vegetable diet with frogs and insects. The Trumpeter Swan (Oygnm buccinator], is more common. It is from this kind that the bulk of the swan-skins imported by the Hudson Bay Company are obtained. Douglas mentions a third kind equal in HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 353 size to the common swan, and of a bluish-gray color on the back and white on the belly. Mr. Farnham gives the following species of geese. The Laughing Goose (Anser albifrons), the Snow Goose (Anser hypoboreus), the Common Wild Goose (Anser Canadensis\ and the Brant Goose (Anser bernacla.) THE COMMON WILD GOOSE. The Common Wild Goose, or Canada Goose, is larger than the tame goose, and slender in its make. The back and upper parts of the body are brown, with white spots; the head and neck black, with a conspicuous white patch on the throat and lower part of the cheeks ; the bill is black and the feet lead colored. It is not, however, confined to Canada, but extends its migrations from the southernmost borders of the United States to the most northern points that 30* 354 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. have been reached by man ; and they are marked by the swiftness of their flight, and the height to which they soar : " Vainly the fowler's eye, Might mark thy distant flight, to do thee wrong; As darkly painted on the crimson sky. Thy figure floats along. " Seek'st thou the plashy brink, Of weedy lake, or merge of river wide ; Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chaffed ocean side ; " There is a Power, whose care Teaches thy way along the pathless coast, The desert and illimitable air, Lone wandering, but not lost. " Thou'rt gone ! thy abyss of heaven Hath swallowed up thy form!" If few, they fly in one line, but if numerous, in two, converging to a point like the letter A turned upside down, and they are always led by an old ex perienced gander. They make their appearance in Hudson Bay in spring, going north, where great quantities are taken, and salted for a winter's store ; and on their return in winter, they are killed and frozen up for fresh provisions. They are easily domesticated, and readily pair with the common gray goose ; but their wings must be cut to prevent their absconding, for on the approach of spring they are always observed to become restless and uneasy, fre quently looking up into the air, making attempts to fly away, and hailing every flock of their wild brethren that passes over their heads, who always ac knowledge and return the salute. The Barnacle Goose, or Brant Goose, is common to the northern regions of both continents, emigrat ing to more temperate climates in autumn and winter. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 355 BRANT GOOSE. The most ridiculous fables have 'been invented con cerning the origin of this bird, which was long be lieved to be the produce of a kind of shells, hence called conchoe anatiferoe, found on certain trees on the coast of Scotland and the Orkneys, or on the rotten timber of decayed ships. Abundance of authority for this absurd fiction may be found in the old books of natural history. The White Pelican (Pelicanus Onocrotalus\ is sometimes seen on various parts of the coast. This bird is as large as a swan, measuring, when fully grown, from five to six feet from the point of its bill to the tip of its tail. Its bill, which stretches to six teen or eighteen inches, and two or three in breadth, forms the distinguishing singularity of this bird. The upper mandible is quite flat, with a small red hook at the point ; the under consists of two pieces united at 356 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. THE WHITE PELICAN. the tip, between which is placed a large dilatable pouch, of a light straw color, that extends down the fore part of the neck, and is capable of containing, when extended, fifteen quarts liquid measure, and serving the double purpose of a reservoir and provision bag, for in this the parent fetches both food and water to its young. The neck has somewhat of the curva ture of the swan, but without its majestic bearing, and is covered with a short close down ; the head is bare in front, and flesh-colored, but on the back part has a tuft of feathers falling down on the neck. The body is large ; the wings of a moderate size, extremely light in their bony structure, and capable of receiving a large quantity of air, which enables it to soar higli and continue long on the wing ; the legs are short, and HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 35T bare above the knee. In an adult bird, the plumage is almost entirely white, excepting the quill feathers, which are black ; but as it advances in age, it becomes tinged with light red or yellow. The White Pelican is found on the sea-shore, and on the banks of lakes or great rivers, in almost every part of the Old World, with the exception of the arctic regions. In the year 1663, a straggler was shot in England at Horsey Fen. It feeds on fish ; and when a single bird is in search of prey, it wheels round and round at the height of fifteen or twenty feet, and as soon as it perceives a fish, darts upon it with inconceivable rapidity : should it miss, it rises, and again repeats the manoeuvre, till it succeeds ; and, as soon as caught, it is consigned to its bag, till it accumulates a sufficient store to satisfy its voracity, with which it retires to some neighboring rock or tree to eat and digest at leisure, and to sleep till the call of hunger stimulate it to fresh exertion. Sometimes, according to Buffon, they assemble in large flocks, and exhibit no small ingenuity in collecting and securing an abundant meal. This they accomplish by forming a circular line, and gradually narrowing the inclosure, till the fishes are driven within a limited space ; then, upon a given signal, they all plunge into the water at once, fill their wallets, and return loaded to land to satiate their gluttony. It builds in rocks, or in marshy and unfrequented places in low islands and lakes, and lays two or three white eggs. It is affectionate and attentive to its young, and from feed ing it out of its pouch originated the fable of its piercing its breast and feeding them with its blood. Off the Pacific coast may be seen the Albatross, or Man-of-War Bird, (Diomeda exulans\ the biggest of all aquatic birds, frequently larger than a swan, and 25 358 HISTOIIY OF CALIFORNIA. THE ALBATROSS. has a wide range upon the ocean, both within and without the tropics. It has a large strong yellow bill, terminated by a stout hook on the upper mandible; the plumage is white, the back and wings marked with black lines, and the feet a carnation red ; it has only three toes, webbed. It is a very voracious bird, and commits great depredations on the salmon, which are found in shoals at the mouths of rivers in these coun tries ; and it is the greatest enemy of the flying-fish, when forced to seek refuge in the air from the pursuit of its destroyers in the sea ; nor are its ravages con fined to the finny tribes — it makes a prey likewise of the smaller water-fowl, when it can contrive to surprise them. In return, however, it finds powerful antago nists in the sea eagle, and the skua gull, especially HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 359 after it has gorged itself and become heavy, when it sometimes pays the penalty of its gluttonizing. On the shores of South America, about the end of Sep tember, it builds a,nest of earth upon the ground, from one to three feet high, and lays a number of eggs, four and a half inches long, which are eaten by the natives ; its flesh is hard and dry, but it also is used for food. Its voice is said to resemble the braying of an ass. The Sanderling Plover (Tringa arenaria\ is often seen on the coast. The numerous flocks keep a low circling course along the strand, at times, uttering a SANDERLING PLOVER. slender and rather plaintive whistle, nearly like that of the smaller sandpipers. On alighting, the little active troop, waiting the opportunity, scatter them selves about in the rear of the retiring surge, the succeeding wave then again urges the busy gleaners Sb'O HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. before it, when they appear like a little pigmy army passing through their military evolutions ; and at this time the wily sportsman, seizing his opportunity, spreads destruction among their timid ranks ; and so little are they aware of the nature of the attack, that, after making a few aerial meanders, the survivors pursue their busy avocations with as little apparent concern as at the first. The breeding place of the Sanderling, in common with many other wading, and aquatic birds, is in the remote and desolate regions of the north, since they appear to be obliged to quit those countries in America a little after the middle of August. According to Mr. Hutchins, they breed on the coast of Hudson Bay, as low as the 55th parallel ; and he remarks that they construct, in the marshes, a rude nest of grass, laying four dusky eggs, spotted with black, on which they begin to sit about the middle of June. The Common or Golden Plover (Charadrius plu- vialis), is also found on this coast. Indeed the Com mon Plover is, according to the season of the year, met with in almost every part of the world, particu larly in Asia and Europe, from Kamtschatka to China, as well as in the South Sea Islands ; and on the present continent from Arctic America, where it breeds, to the Falkland Islands ; it is also seen in the interior, at least as far as Missouri. They breed in Siberia, and in the northern parts of Great Britain, but not in France or Italy, where they are also common. At such times, they select the high and secluded moun tains sheltered by the heath, where, without much attempt at a nest, they deposit about four, or some times five eggs of a pale olive color, marked with blackish spots. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 361 GOLDEN PLOVER. They arrive on the coast of the Middle and Northern States in spring and early autumn. Near to Nantas- ket and Chelsea beach, they are seen, on their return from their inclement natal regions in the north, by the close of August, and the young remain in the vicinity till the middle of October, or later, according to the state of the weather. They live principally upon land insects, or the larvae and worms they meet with in the saline marshes, and appear very fond of grass hoppers. About the time of their departure they are, early in a morning, seen sometimes assembled by thousands, but they all begin to disperse as the sun rises, and at length disappear high in the air for the season. They usually associate, however, in small flocks and families, and when alarmed, while on the wing, or giving their, call to those who are feeding around them, they have a wild, shrill and whistling note, and are at most times timid, watchful, and diffi- 362 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. cult to approach. Though they continue associated in numbers for common safety during the day, they disperse in the evening, and repose apart from each other. At daybreak, however, the feeling of solitude again returns, and the early sentinel no sooner gives the shrill and well known call than they all assemble in their usual company. At this time, they are often caught in great numbers by the fowler, with the assist ance of a clap-net, stretched before dawn, in front of the place they have selected to pass the night. The fowlers now surrounding the spot, prostrate themselves on the ground when the call is heard, and as soon as the birds are collected together, they rise up from ambush, and by shouts, and the throwing up of sticks in the air, succeed so far in intimidating the Plovers that they lower their flight, and thus striking against the net, it falls upon them. In this, and most other countries, their flesh, in the autumn, and particularly that of the young birds, is esteemed as a delicacy, and often exposed for sale in the markets of the principal towns. The Cinereous Coot (Fulica Americana) appears here among the water birds. This bird, says Nuttall, is found in almost every part of the continent, from the grassy lakes that skirt the Saskatchewan plains, in the 55th parallel, to the reedy lagoons of East Florida, and the marshes of Jamaica. To the West, the species seems to inhabit the waters of the Columbia, in the remote territory of Oregon. Mr. Say observed them also in the lower part of Missouri, and in Long's Expedition, they were seen in Lake Winnipique (lat. 42°), on the 7th of June. Mr. Swainson has also received specimens from the distant table-land of Mexico. We may, therefore, conclude almost with certainty, that the Coot of HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 363 CINEREOUS COOT. America, indifferent to climate, dwells and breeds in every part of the North American continent, over a range of probably more than fifty degrees of latitude ! Nocturnal in their habits, and dispersing themselves far and wide over every water solitude, they appear, in many places, to have disappeared for the season, until the numbers, swelled by their prolific broods, and im pelled at the approach of winter to migrate for food, now begin to show themselves in the lakes, pools, and estuaries in the vicinity of the sea, from which they gradually recede towards the south, as the severity of the season compels them, being unable to subsist amidst the ice. In this way they proceed, accumu lating in numbers as they advance, so that in the in undated and marshy tracts of Florida, particularly along the banks of the San Juan, they are seen in winter, congregated in vast and noisy flocks. In the milder latitudes, their whole migrations will be limited to a traverse from the interior to the vicinity of the 364 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. THE WIDGEON. sea, while those which visit the wilderness of Upper Canada, where they are abundant in the summer, will probably migrate from twenty-five to thirty degrees every spring and autumn. The Widgeon, or Bald-Pate (Anas Americana) is another California game bird. The Widgeon, or Bald-Pate, is a frequent attend ant on the canvas-back, and often profits by this asso ciation. The former, not being commonly in the habit of diving for subsistence, or merely from caprice, watches the motions of its industrious neighbor, and as soon as the canvas-back rises with the favorite root on which they both greedily feed, the Bald-Pate snatches the morsel and makes off with his booty. They are always very alert and lively, feeding and swimming out into the ponds and rivers at all hours of the day, but are extremely watchful, sheltering in coves and behind the land, and on the slighest attempt to steal upon them, immediately row out into the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 365 AMERICAN TEAL. stream beyond gun-shot, and then only take to wing when much disturbed. The American Teal (Anas creccaj) is another valu able game fowl. They are commonly seen on the pools, in close com panies of ten or twelve together, frequenting the rivers and unfrozen springs in winter, where they subsist on aquatic plants. They fly very swiftly, and utter a sort of whistling cry. The Teal breeds in the fens, continuing in the temperate parts of Europe the whole year. It conceals its nest among the bulrushes, con structing it of their stalks, and lining it with feathers ; it rests also sometimes on the surface on the water, so as to rise and fall with the flood. The eggs are about ten or twelve, of a soiled white, indistinctly marked with brown spots. The female takes the whole man- 31* 366 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. agement of incubation ; the males, at this time, seem to leave them and associate by themselves in com panies. Another interesting specimen of the duck is the Golden Eye (Fuligula C languid.) The Golden Eye* is a common inhabitant of the boreal regions of both continents, from whence it migrates in small flocks at the approach of winter, accompanying the velvet, surf duck, and scoter, in their desultory route in quest of subsistence. On their way, soon after the commencement of their adventurous voyage, they visit the shores of Hudson Bay, and their congenial lakes in the interior, on which they linger, feeding on tender and small shell-fish, until debarred by the in vasion of frost. They breed in all parts of the deso late and remote fur countries in great numbers, frequenting the rivers and fresh-water lakes, on whose borders they pass the period of reproduction, making a rude nest of grass, and protecting the necessary warmth of their eggs by a layer of feathers or down plucked from the breast. According to Linnaeus it lays from seven to ten white eggs, which it often con ceals and protects with its nest in hollow trees. And Skioldebrand adds, that in common with the velvet duck, it breeds abundantly in Lapland, on the banks of the Tornea, within the Arctic circle, and nearly to the northern extremity of Europe. The inhabitants, for the value of the eggs, take the trouble to accom modate these useful and almost domestic birds, by attaching hollowed pieces of wood to the stunted pine trees in which they ordinarily breed. They extend their summer residence as far as Northern * Nuttall. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 36T Asia and Greenland, yet in Europe some pairs are observed to propagate even in temperate coun tries. Although furnished with a remarkably complicated trachea in the male, and the name clangula, we can not learn that they ever possess any audible voice. When flushed they rise in silence, and we then only hear, instead of a cry or a quack, the very percep tible and noisy whistling of their short and laboring wings, for which reason they are here sometimes called by our gunners the Brass-Eyed Whistlers. In their native haunts they are by no means shy, allow ing the sportsman to make a near approach, as if conscious at the same time of their impunity from ordinary peril, for no sooner do they perceive the flash of the gun, or hear the twang of the bow, than they dive with a dexterity which sets the sportsman at defiance, and they continue it so long and with such remarkable success that the aboriginal natives have nick-named them as conjuring or " spirit ducks." The food of the Golden Eye, for which they are often seen diving, consists of shell-fish, fry, small rep tiles, insects, small Crustacea, and tender marine plants. In and near fresh waters they feed on fluvia- tile vegetables, such as the roots of JSquisetums, and some species of Polygonum. Their flesh, particu larly that of the young, is generally well flavored, though inferior to that of several other kinds of ducks. The Rocky Mountain Golden Eye (Clangula Bar- rovii), also occurs in these regions. The habits of this species, so nearly related to the preceding, are said to be wholly similar. It has hitherto been found only in the valleys of the Rocky Mountains. Besides the permanent difference in the bill, this species is 368 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. THE HARLEQUIN DUCK. further distinguished by the purer color of its dorsal plumage, and the smaller portion of white on its wing and scapulars. Its long flank feathers are also much more broadly bordered all round with black.* The Harlequin Duck (Fuligula Histrionica) is common to both continents. This singularly marked and beautiful species is almost a constant resident of the hyperboreal regions of the northern hemisphere, from which it migrates but short distances towards more temperate latitudes, and is as in Europe a rare and almost accidental visiter as far as the Middle States of the Union. It is however more frequent in Eastern Europe up to Greenland ; and common from Lake Baikal to Kamtschatka. Now and then it is killed in Scotland and the Orkneys. Dr. Richardson found it to be a rare bird in the fur countries, haunt ing eddies under cascades, and rapid streams, where it dwells and breeds apart from all other ducks. In Kamtschatka it affects the same retired and remark- * Nuttali. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 369 able romantic situations; like the alpine cinclus, it seeks out the most rocky and agitated torrents, in such situations it has been seen in the rivulets of Hud son Bay, as much as ninety miles inland from the sea ; here it seeks out its appropriate fare of spawn, shell-fish and the larvse of aquatic or fluviatile insects. On the low bushy and shady banks of these streams it constructs its nest, which contains from twelve to fourteen pure white eggs. On the margins of fresh water ponds in Labrador Mr. Audubon also observed this species, and he remarks, that instead of rearing their young in the same situations chosen for breeding, as with the velvet and surf duck, it conducts its brood to the sea as soon as they are hatched. Its flight is high and swift ; and it swims and dives with the ut most dexterity. So great is its confidence in the security of its most natural element, that on the re port of a gun over the water, it instantly quits its flight and dives at once with the celerity of thought. It is said to be clamorous, and that its voice is a sort of whistle; the anatomy of the trachea is however, unknown, and it is not said whether this sibilation be really produced from the throat or the wings, as is the latter case in the common clangula or golden eye. Driven from their solitary resorts in the interior by the invasion of frost, they are now seen out at sea engaged in obtaining a different mode of subsistence. Amidst these icy barriers they still continue to endure the rigors of winter, continually receding farther out to sea, or making limited and almost accidental visits to milder regions. When discovered, they display the utmost vigilance, and instantly take to wing. It is considered to be a game superior in flavor to the common wild duck. From the singular and beautiful 370 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. crescent-shaped lines and marks which ornament its neck and breast it has probably come by the dignified appellation of lord, among the fishers of Newfound land. It is here too rare to have acquired any par ticular name.* THE LONG-TAILED DUCK. The Long-Tailed Duck (Fuligula Crlacialis) is often seen among the water birds on the Pacific shores. This elegant and noisy duck, known so generally in the Southern States by the nickname of ' South- Southerly/ from its note, and, in most other parts by the appellation of ' Old Squaws' or < Old Wives,' is an Arctic inhabitant of both continents, and abounds in the glacial seas of America, where it is seen com monly associated with the eider, surf, black and other ducks of congenial habits, who invariably prefer the •Nuttall. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 371 frail but, to them, productive dominion of the sea to the land or its more peaceful waters. So strong is the predilection of this species for its frigid natal climes and their icy barriers,* that it is seen to linger in the north as long as the existence of any open water can be ascertained ; when the critical moment of departure, at length approaches, common wants and general feeling begin so far to prevail as to unite the scattered families into numerous flocks. They now proceed towards the south, and making a halt on the shores and inland lakes round Hudson Bay, remain until again reluctantly driven towards milder climes. They are the last birds of passage that take leave of the fur countries. Familiar with cold, and only driven to migrate for food, in the latter end of August, when already a thin crust of ice is seen forming in the night over the still surface of the Arctic Sea, the female Harelda is observed ingeni ously breaking a way with her wings for the egress of her young brood. According to the state of the weather we conse quently observe the variable arrival of these birds. In October they generally pay us a visit, the old al ready clad in the more dazzling garb of winter. The young sometimes seek out the shelter of the fresh water ponds, but the old keep out at sea. No place in the Union so abounds with these gabblers as the Bay of Chesapeake. They are lively, restless and gregarious in all their movements, and fly, dive, and swim with unrivalled dexterity ; and subsist chiefly upon small shell-fish, and marine plants, particularly the zostera or grass-wrack. Late in the evening, or • Nuttall. 372 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. early in the morning, towards spring more particu larly, vast flocks are seen in the bays and sheltered inlets, and in calm and foggy weather we hear the loud and blended nasal call reiterated for hours from the motley multitude. There is something in the sound like the honk of the goose, and as far as words can ex press a subject so uncouth, it resembles the guttural syllables 'ogh ough egh, and then 'ogli ogli ogTi ougli eghj given in a ludicrous drawling tone ; but still with all the accompaniments of scene and season, this humble harbinger of spring, obeying the feelings of nature, and pouring forth his final ditty before his departure to the distant north, conspire with the novelty of the call, to please rather than disgust those happy few who may be willing " to find good in every thing." This peculiar cry, is well known to the aboriginal sons of the forest, and among the Crees the species is called " Hah-lia-way -," so much like the syllables I have given above, that many might imagine my additions no more than a version of the same. The Velvet Duck ( Fuligula fusca) is another beau tiful species of this genus. The Velvet Duck is common to the northern regions of both continents, where it retires late in the spring to pass the period of reproduction. Like the preced ing, they live principally upon the sea and its pro ductions, diving often in broken water for shell-fish and other marine bodies. They breed along the Arctic coast and around Hudson Bay and Labrador, retiring inland for the purpose ; nesting contiguous to small fresh-water pools in the shelter of juniper or pine bushes, laying from eight to ten white eggs, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 373 VELVET DUCK. which the female closely covers with her elastic feather. The young are attended by the female only, who remains with her brood in these seclusions until they are nearly ready to fly. She also makes a show of defending them, and the young themselves often by their great alertness in diving escape the attacks of their enemies. They arc abundant in the Orkneys and Hebrides, as well as in Norway, Sweden and Lap land; and are common in some parts of Siberia and Kamtschatka. Near Kengis, on the banks of the Tornea in Lapland, a little beyond the 67th parallel, Skioldebrand remarked them nesting in trees, particu larly pines, accompanied by the golden eye (Fuligula clanglua). The inhabitants, he also adds, knowing the 32 26 374 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. trouble they have in forming their nests, attach hol lowed pieces of wood to the trees for their conve nience ; and in recompense receive a quantity of their eggs, which supply the place of those of the common fowl, no longer found to endure the severity of these hyperboreal climates. On the commencement of incubation, the males leave the land and again assemble together in flocks out at sea. In the moulting season, which soon after takes place among these seceding birds, the natives at Ochotska to the number of fifty or more, in the same manner as the Indians of the Bay of Fundy, taking advantage of the flood tide, drive the whole flock before them up the river, in canoes, and as soon as the water ebbs, they despatch them with clubs in such numbers that each individual often comes in for twenty or thirty to his share. The Velvet Duck is said to return late to its breed ing quarters in Sweden, the eggs being sometimes found fresh as late as the beginning of July. In April they are seen, in cloudy weather more particularly, proceeding steadily on the wing in large flocks towards their northern destination. At these times they fly low in an irregular angular phalanx, making a straight course just outside of the land, and are perfectly silent and intent on their voyage. In the spring of 1831, I saw them thus migrating by thousands, though not more than twelve to twenty associate in any one flock. They proceed in all probability to the very extremity of the Union, in the course of the winter, are very abundant in the Bay of Chesapeake, being usually accompanied by the scoters, and are taken sometimes in the same nets with- them. With the other dark HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 375 species of this subgenus they are here known by the appellation of Coots, and these are distinguished by the name of the White-Winged kind. Whether from their nocturnal habits or what other cause, I cannot pretend to say, when they have been seen in Fresh Pond, which they sometimes visit, at least the young, their heads have been observed nodding, as though they were oppressed by sleep ; and we sometimes here have a saying of being as sleepy as a Coot. The flesh of the old bird is strong, dark, and sedgy, yet they are much sought after in this quarter, and often exposed for sale in the market, particularly the young birds whose flavor is more tolerable. They arrive in New England from the north about the close of Sep tember, and according to Richardson, spend some time on the coasts of Hudson Bay and the lakes of the interior previous to their departure for the south.* The Cormorant (Phalacrocorax carlo). This uncouth and gluttonous bird is plentiful on the rocky shores of Great Britain, Holland, France, and Germany. On the shores of the Caspian they are sometimes seen in vast flocks, and are frequent on Lake Baikal. They inhabit China, the coast of the Cape of Good Hope, and are common in the Philippine Islands, New Holland, New Zealand, and other neighboring regions. At Nootka Sound, and in Kamtschatka they have been observed by various navigators ; and are found in North America, from Hudson Bay and Labrador, to the coasts of Carolina and Georgia. They are not however common in the central parts of the United States, though they penetrate into the interior as far as the Missouri River. They breed, and are *Nuttall. 376 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. CORMORANT. seen in the vicinity of Boston on bare and rocky islands, nearly throughout the year, and in all places appear shy, retiring and sedentary, enduring the most severe weather with impunity, and only removing sea wards or south in the depth of winter for the purpose of acquiring food. Mr. Aububon found them breeding on the ledges of almost inaccessible rocks at Grand Manan Isle, in the Bay of Fundy. Their eggs are three to five, white, roughened with a calcareous in crustation, and small for the size of the bird. They appear very wary and shy, and feed their young with HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 377 great assiduity, whose voice at this time resembles the hissing of snakes. The Cormorant is a very dexterous and voracious fisher, committing great havoc when it visits pools and lakes ; but it almost constantly resides on the sea shores, and is seldom seen inland. Swimming beneath the water with the velocity of a dart in the air, and remaining a long time submerged, its prey scarcely ever escapes, and it almost 'always rises with a fish in its bill, to swallow which it employs the expedient of tossing it into the air, and dexterously catches the head in its descent, so that the fins lie flat, and thus favor the passage down the throat ; the small pouch at the same time stretches so as to admit the whole body of the fish, which is often very large in propor tion to the neck, and it there remains undergoing a preparatory digestion previous to its passage into the lower part of the stomach. In some countries, as in China, and formerly in England, the dexterity of the Cormorant in fishing was turned to profit ; for, by buckling a ring about the lower part of the neck, to prevent deglutition, and accustoming it to return with its acquisitions in the bill to its master, it was made a useful and domestic fisher. On the rivers of China, Cormorants, thus fixed, are perched on the prows of boats, and at a signal made by striking the water with an oar, they instantly plunge, and soon emerge with a fish, which is taken from them ; and this toil continued till its master is satisfied, he looses the collar, and finishes the task by allowing it to fish for itself. But it is only hunger which gives activity to the Cormorant ; when glutted with its meal, which is soon acquired, it relaxes into its native indolence, and dozes away the 32* 378 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA, i SEA BOTTEREL. greatest part of its time in gluttonous inebriety, perched in solitude on naked and insulated or inacces sible rocks to which it prudently retires for greater safety from the intrusion of enemies. The Turnstone, or Sea Dotterel, (Strepsilus inter- pres) is also a visiter in California. This singular marine bird is not only common to the whole northern hemisphere, but extends its colo nies even to Senegal and the Cape of Good Hope, in the southern half of the globe. Their favorite breed ing resorts are, however, confined to the inclement re gions of the north, to which they are in no haste to return, but linger along the coast in the temperate climates for several months, before they attain to the remote and desolate shores of their nativity. Their southern progress in America, is in all probability continued as far as the tropics, since their race even extends itself into the other hemisphere. Buffon, in fact, figures a specimen of the young bird from Cay enne. In New Jersey, according to Wilson, they HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 379 arrive in the month of April, and there linger until June, very soon after which they are seen at their breeding quarters, on the shores of Hudson Bay, and along the desolate strand of the Arctic Sea, where they have been met with by the northern navigators, as far as the 75th parallel. They already begin to depart from these remote boreal regions in August, in which month, and even towards the close of July, I have seen young birds for sale in the market of Bos ton. They visit the shores of Great Britain also about the same time, arriving thence probably from the Arctic shores of Siberia. Five or six weeks later, they are observed to visit the borders of the Delaware, and proceed onward to the south as the weather increases in coldness. The most southern summer residence of this species known, if Mr. Flem ing be correct, is the Scottish isle of Zetland. They are also said to inhabit the isles of the Baltic during summer. In a mere depression of the sand or gravel, along the sea coast, it is said to drop its eggs, which are four in number, and according to Mr. Hutchins, are of an olive green, spotted with blackish brown. It is naturally of a wild and solitary disposition, coursing along the shore by pairs, or in small families which have been bred together. In the months of May and June, in New Jersey, they almost wholly feed upon the spawn of the king-crab, or horse-foot, (Monoculus polyphemus, LIN.) which affords them and other animals an abundant and almost inex haustible supply. We could easily extend this list of the quadrupeds and birds of California much further ; but we have already shown that the country abounds in game as 380 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. well as in the various other objects of interest which form the study of the zoologist. All writers agree that the waters of California abound in fish in a most extraordinary degree. Num berless varieties of sea fish literally swarm off the coast, and the rivers abound in valuable kinds suitable for the table. Shell fish are also abundant ; oysters, the pearl shell, already referred to, clams and several species of the haliotis are found. Salmon which are SALMON. known to\be so abundant in the Columbia River, are not less so in the San Joaquin and Sacramento. Two or three thousand, according to Farnham, are some times taken in a day. The Indians take them in a basket of wicker work like a lobster basket, as they pass up the rivers in the spring. They are also very skilful in spearing them. The fish are preserved by drying and salting. STURGEON. The Sturgeon (Accipenser transmontanus\ is found in the large rivers eight or ten feet in length, and weighing five hundred pounds. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 381 In the Bay of Monterey there are great numbers of the Mackerel and a fish similar to the Sarduie. Por poises are. seen playing and spouting in the bays, and the whale is found off the coast. PORPOISE. Mr. Farnham enumerates among the fishes, the halibut, skate, turbot, and bonito. But these of course form but a very small part of that immense variety which are found on the coast where the fish of the tropical regions are mingled with those which people the waters of the north. In the plants and trees of California there is a visible field for the future explorations of the botanist. In the vegetable as in the animal kingdom, we find the products of various latitudes from the tropics to the arctic regions all mingled together. Several varieties of the pine are found, the most remarkable of which is the Pinus Douglasii, first described by Douglas. In the mountains about the Bay of San Francisco, the Colorado River, and other parts of Upper California specimens of this tree are found two hundred and forty feet high, the bases of whose trunks are nearly sixty feet in circumference. The trunk, says Farnham, is quite destitute of branches until above more than half the altitude, when they grow outward and upward 382 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. in such a manner as to give the top the form of an inverted pyramid. From the ends of the branches hang the cones or seed-vessels, from twelve to fifteen inches in length, and egg-shaped. The seeds are as large as a good-sized bean, and furnish a common arti cle of food to the Indians, who collect large quantities of them in the autumn, and pound them into a kind of cake, which is baked on heated stones. The wood is very fine-grained, and contains a great quantity of resin. The Pinus Sabinii, P. Lambertiana, P. noblis, and P. resinosa, are also fine species, though less in size than their gigantic relative. The former is, how ever, a large tree, being often found one hundred and ten feet high, and from ten to twelve in diameter. Among the elevated plains of Upper California it grows quite plentifully, as also on the low hills, near the coast, where it attains a larger size. The natives frequently build their fires against these trees to save the trouble of collecting fuel. By this means, also, a sweet gum is made to exude from the trunk, which serves them for sugar. Mr. Farnham also mentions among the trees of California, the White Oak, Live Oak, Maple, Ash, Beech, and Chestnut. The flowering shrubs and plants of California are very numerous. Mr. Farnham says : It is impossible to give a full description of the flowering shrubs and plants of Upper California, so great is their variety and beauty. We have only space to notice a few of the most conspicuous. A species of Raspberry, Ribes speciosum, is one of the most elegant flowering shrubs of the country. It is exceedingly abundant in some localities, and, with its HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 383 long crimson stamens and its deep green leaves, pre sents an appearance truly lovely. The flowers bloom early in spring. The fruit I have not seen. In many places are found several species of Mimulus, one of which is from three to four feet in height, and is a very showy plant. This country also has numerous species of Phlox and Heuchera, and innumerable quantities of Epilobium, Enothera or Primrose, Pentstemon, Xapaver or Poppy, Delphinium, and Salvia. A species of lily also grows here, the roots of which are eaten by the natives. The Scilla escu- lenta grows along the whole coast of Upper California. This is called by the natives " QuamasJi" and the root forms a very common article of food. To prepare this for eating, a hole is made in the ground, and a number of stones placed in it, on which a fire is kindled, and kept burning until they are made hot, when the fire is extinguished, and the roots wrapped in straw, leaves, and moss, and placed upon them. They are well roasted in a few hours ; and are then taken off and hung up to dry. This root is also some times pounded and made into cakes, which are pre served for future use. The taste is sweet, and rather agreeable ; but if eaten too freely, they are apt to produce diarrhoea. This plant is most abundant on the banks of rivers and on lowlands by the margins of forests ; in which localities are also found several species of Pyrola, Caprifolium, and Lupinus, which sometimes cover an immense extent of land. The Arbutus is also abundant in similar situations. The large species, A. procera, is a fine shrub, frequently attaining a growth which entitles it to be called a tree. The A. uva ursi is found in almost every part of the colder sections of the country, and its berries are fre- 384 BISTORT OF CALIFORNIA. quently eaten by the natives, and even by travellers. A very useful plant to the natives is the Helonias tenax, the fibres of which are stronger than any hemp. Cords made of this are used by the Indians for the purpose of snaring deer and other animals ; and one the thickness of the little finger is so strong as not to be broken by the largest elk. The Gooseberry grows in Upper California, and bears plentifully. The sand-hills and moors are covered with a great variety of Syngenesious plants, and on the more fertile and humid soil grows a gaudy- flowered Currant-bush and a pretty species of Honey suckle. Perhaps the most remarkable shrub here is the Yedra, a poisonous plant, which, however, affects some particular constitutions only. By contact with the skin, it produces tumors and violent inflammation. It is a slender shrub, preferring cool and shady places, and bearing a trefoil crenated leaf. Two roots — the plants of which I have not seen — are used by the natives for soap ; these are called Amole and Samate. On the rocky coast south of Monterey are immense collections of sea-weed — Fucus pyrifornis — which are said to have gathered there in such abundance, as to have saved several vessels from splitting on the rocks, when driven on them by the tempest. A resident in California writing to a member of Congress, thus speaks of the vegetable productions and appearance of the country. I know you will ask me for reasons for this. Apart from the gold, and the people who have, are coming, and will come, to possess it, I can give you one, and you not having seen for yourself cannot appreciate the truth of my remarks. All I can do is to ask you to rely upon my assertion, which in its terms falls HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 385 short of what the reality would appear to you were you here. Our country is a continued succession of mighty mountain ranges, perpetually snow-capped, and peopled with the grisly bear, between which high and lofty mountains are deep, beautiful, fertile and luxuriant valleys, which have no superiors and few parallels in America, either for richness of soil or beauty of landscape. Wheat, barley, oats, &c., grow here finer than in any State in the Union. The grains are generally produced without irrigation ; but with irri gation, you can have a succession of two or three crops a year. Our coldest weather does not exceed that of New Orleans, never seeing more than a slight white frost, while for six months of the year you can see from where you stand, at any time, the terrible snow storm raging on the mountain tops, while the landscape at your feet is covered with Flora's most lovely variety of flowers. Our valleys are mostly prairies, with timber enough for fires and fences, but none for lumber. The latter is to be had in the moun tains. The gigantic trees down in Maine are mere bushes to our pines, redwood, hemlock, spruce, and firs, from three hundred to five hundred feet in height, and twenty, nay, up to thirty feet in diameter — >as straight and tapering from the root to the top (the latter only as big as your finger) as if they had been turned in a lathe by a skilful mechanic. Such forests, both as to timber and extent ! — You cannot realize the idea I wish to convey. I once helped to fell some of these gigantic trees, with my own hands, to make fire to keep from freezing, while in a terrible storm of fourteen days and nights, exposed to all its furies, without any covering but the skies. When we at last reached the Sacramento valley, the contrast 33 386 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. was indescribable — it was one extended flower-bed and grass-plat ! Of the mineral riches of California we have already given so full an account in the previous chapters of this work, that it is unnecessary to advert to it in this connexion. In justice to Mr. Farnham, however, we cannot omit to quote a passage from his excellent work " Life, Adventures, and Travels in California," published before the discovery of the gold mines, in which the future destiny of California is distinctly foretold. "No doubt is entertained by those best acquainted with the Californias, that they will become, when science shall be applied in the development in their wealth, one of the richest mineral provinces in America. This belief is much strengthened by the fact, that the Indians, whenever they choose, can bring into the settlements large quantities of these ores, which they either find on the surface, or pry from the crevices of the rocks with sharpened sticks, bones, or hunting knives. They cannot be induced to show the whites where they obtain these, on account of an old tradi tional superstition, that if they should do so, they would immediately die." APPENDIX. APPENDIX A. CONSTITUTION OF CALIFORNIA. PROCLAMATION TO THE PEOPLE OF CALIFORNIA. THE delegates of the people assembled in Conven tion, have formed a constitution, which is now pre sented for your ratification. The time and manner of voting on this constitution, and of holding the first general election, are clearly set forth in the sche dule. The whole subject is, therefore, left for your unbiassed and deliberate consideration. The Prefect (or person exercising the functions of that office) of each district, will designate the places for opening the polls, and give due notice of the elec tion, in accordance with the provisions of the consti tution and schedule. The people are now called upon to form a govern ment for themselves, and to designate such officers as they desire, to make and execute the laws. That their choice may be wisely made, and that the govern- 387 388 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. ment so organized may secure the permanent welfare and happiness of the people of the new State, is the sincere and earnest wish of the present Executive, who, if the constitution be ratified, will, with pleasure, surrender his powers to whomsoever the people may designate as his successor. Given at Monterey, California, this 12th day of October, A. D., 1849, (Signed) B. RILEY, Brevet Brig. General, U. S. A., and Governor of California. (Official) II. W. HALLECK, Brevet Captain and Secretary of State. WE THE PEOPLE OF CALIFORNIA, GRATEFUL TO AL MIGHTY GOD FOR OUR FREEDOM, IN ORDER TO SECURE ITS BLESSINGS, DO ESTABLISH THIS CON STITUTION : — ARTICLE I. DECLARATION OF RIGHTS. SEC. 1. All men are by nature free and indepen dent, and have certain inalienable rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness. SEC. 2. All political power is inherent in the peo ple. Government is instituted for the protection, se curity, and benefit of the people ; and they have the right to alter or reform the same, whenever the pub lic good may require it. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 389 SEC. 3. The right of trial by jury shall be secured to all, and remain inviolate for ever ; but a jury trial may be waived by the parties, in all civil cases, in the manner to be prescribed by law. SEC. 4. The free exercise and enjoyment of reli gious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference, shall for ever be allowed in this State ; and no person shall be rendered incompetent to be a witness on account of his opinions on matters of reli gious belief; but the liberty of conscience, hereby secured, shall not be so construed as to excuse acts of licentiousness, or justify practices inconsistent with the peace or safety of this State. SEC. 5. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when, in cases of rebel lion or invasion, the public safety may require ita suspension. SEC. 6. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor shall cruel or unusual punishments be inflicted, nor shall witnesses be un reasonably detained. SEC. 7. All persons shall be bailable, by sufficient sureties : unless for capital offences, when the proof is evident or the presumption great. SEC. 8. No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime (except in cases of impeachment, and in cases of militia when in ac tual servicej and the land and naval forces in time of war, or which this State may keep with the consent of Congress in time of peace, and in cases of petit larceny under the regulation of the Legislature,) un less on presentment or indictment of a grand jury ; . and in any trial in any court whatever, the party ac cused shall be allowed to appear and defend in person 33* 27 390 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. and with counsel, as in civil actions. No person shall be subject to be twice put in jeopardy for the same offence ; nor shall he be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law ; nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation. SEC. 9. Every citizen may freely speak, write, and publish his sentiments on all subjects, being respon sible for the abuse of that right ; and no law shall be passed to restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of the press. In all criminal prosecutions on indict ments for libels, the truth may be given in evidence to the jury ; and if it shall appear to the jury that the matter charged as libellous is true, and was pub lished with good motives and for justifiable ends, the party shall be acquitted : and the jury shall have the right to determine the law and the fact. SEC. 10. The people shall have the right freely to assemble together, to consult for the common good, to instruct their representatives, and to petition the legis lature for redress of grievances. SEC. 11. All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation. SEC. 12. The military shall be subordinate to the civil power. No standing army shall be kept up by this State in time of peace ; and in time of war no appropriation for a standing army shall be for a longer time than two years. SEC. 13. No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house, without the consent of the owner ; nor in time of war, except in the manner to be prescribed by law. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 391 SEC. 14. Representation shall be apportioned ac cording to population. SEC. 15. No person shall be imprisoned for debt in any civil action on mesne or final process, unless in cases of fraud"; and no person shall be imprisoned for a milita fine in time of peace. SEC. 16. No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, shall ever be passed. SEC. 17. Foreigners who are, or who may here after become, bona fide residents of this State, shall enjoy the same rights in respect to the possession, en joyment, and inheritance of property, as native born citizens. SEC. 18. Neither slavery., nor involuntary servi tude, unless for the punishment of crimes, shall ever be tolerated in this State. SEC. 19. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against un reasonable seizures and searches, shall not be violated ; and no warrant shall issue but on probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, particularly describ ing the place to be searched, and the persons and things to be seized. SEC. 20. Treason against the State shall consist only in levying war against it, adhering to its enemies, or giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason, unless on the evidence of two witnesses to the same overt act, or confession in open court. SEC. 21. This enumeration of rights shall not be construed to impair or deny others retained by the people. 392 HISTOEY OP CALIFOKNIA. ARTICLE II. EIGHT OF SUFFEAGE. SEC. 1. Every white male citizen of the United States, and every white male citizen of Mexico, who shall have elected to become a citizen of the United States, under the treaty of peace exchanged and rati fied at Queretaro, on the 30th day of May, 1848, of the age of twenty-one years, who shall have been a resident of the State six months next preceding the election, and the county or district in which he claims his vote thirty days, shall be entitled to vote at all elections which are now or hereafter may be autho rized by law : Provided, that nothing herein contained shall be construed to prevent the Legislature, by a two-thirds concurrent vote, from admitting to the right of suffrage, Indians or the descendants of Indians, in such special cases as such a proportion of the legis lative body may deem just and proper. SEC. 2. Electors shall, on all cases except treason, felony, or breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest on the days of the election, during their attendance at such election, going to and returning therefrom. SEC. 3. No elector shall be obliged to perform militia duty on the day of election, except in time of war or public danger. SEC. 4. For the purpose of voting, no person shall be deemed to have gained or lost a residence by rea son of his presence or absence while employed in the service of the United States ; nor while engaged in the navigation of the waters of this State, or of the United States, or of the high seas ; nor while a student of any seminary of learning ; nor while kept at any HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 393 almshouse, or other asylum, at public expense; nor •while confined in any public prison. SEC. 5. No idiot or insane person, or person con victed of any infamous crime, shall be entitled to the privileges of an elector. SEC. 6. All elections by the people shall be by ballot. ARTICLE III. DISTRIBUTION OF POWERS. The powers of the government of the State of Cali fornia shall be divided into three separate depart ments : the Legislature, the Executive, and Judicial ; and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments, shall exercise any functions appertaining to either of the others ; except in the cases hereinafter expressly directed or permitted. ARTICLE IV. LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENT. SEC. 1. The legislative power of this State shall be vested in a Senate and Assembly, which shall be designated the Legislature of the State of California, and the enacting clause of every law shall be as fol lows : " The people of the State of California, repre sented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows." SEC. 2. The sessions of the Legislature shall be annual, and shall commence on the first Monday of January, next ensuing the election of its members ; unless the Governor of the State shall, in the interim, convene the Legislature by proclamation. SEC. 3. The members of the Assembly shall be 394 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. chosen annually, by the qualified electors of their respective districts, on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, unless otherwise ordered by the Legislature, and their term of office shall be one year. SEC. 4. Senators and Members of Assembly shall be duly qualified electors in the respective counties and districts which they represent. SEC. 5. Senators shall be chosen for the term of two years, at the same time and places as Members of Assembly ; and no person shall be a Member of the Senate or Assembly, who has not been a citizen and inhabitant of the State one year, and of the country or district for which he shall be chosen six months next before his election. SEC. 6. The number of Senators shall not be less than one third, nor more than one half, of that of the Members of Assembly ; and at the first session of the Legislature after this Constitution takes effect, the Senators shall be divided by lot as equally as may be, into two classes ; the seats of the Senators of the first class shall be vacated at the expiration of the first year, so that one half shall be chosen annually. Sec. 7. When the number of Senators is increased, they shall be apportioned by lot, so as to keep the two classes as nearly equal in number as possible. Sec. 8. Each house shall choose its own officers, and judge of the qualifications, elections, and returns of its own members. SEC. 9. A majority of each house shall constitute a quorum to do business; but a smaller number may adjourn from day to day, and may compel the attend ance of absent members, in such manner, and under such penalties as each house may provide. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 395 SEC. 10. Each house shall determine the rules of its own proceedings, and may with the concurrence of two-thirds of all the members elected, expel a member. SEC. 11. Each house shall keep a journal of its own proceedings, and publish the same ; and the yeas and nays of the members of either house, on any question, shall, at the desire of any three members present, be entered on the journal. SEC. 12. Members of the Legislature shall, in all cases except treason, felony, and breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest, and they shall not be subject to any civil process during the session of the Legisla ture, nor for fifteen days next before the commence ment and after the termination of each session. SEC. 13. When vacancies occur in either house, the Governor, or the person exercising the functions of the Governor, shall issue writs of election to fill such vacancies. SEC. 14. The doors of each house shall be open, except on such occasions as in the opinion of the house may require secrecy. SEC. 15. Neither house shall, without the consent of the other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other place than that in which they may be sitting. SEC. 16. Any bill may originate in either house of the Legislature, and all bills passed by one house may be amended in the other. SEC. IT. Every bill which may have passed the Legislature, shall, before it becomes a law, be pre sented to the Governor. If he approve it, he shall sign it ; but if not, he shall return it, with his objec tions, to the house in which it originated, which shall enter the same upon the journal, and proceed to re- 396 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. consider it. If, after such reconsideration, it again pass both houses, by yeas and nays, by a majority of two-thirds of the members of each house present, it shall become a law, notwithstanding the Governor's objections. If any bill shall not be returned within ten days after it shall have been presented to him, (Sunday excepted,) the same shall be a law, in like manner as if he had signed it, unless the Legislature, by adjournment, prevent such return. SEC. 18. The Assembly shall have the sole power of impeachment ; and all impeachments shall be tried by the jSenate. When sitting for that purpose, the Senators shall be upon oath or affirmation ; and no person shall be convicted without the concurrence of two-thirds of the members present. SEC. 19. The Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, Se cretary of State, Comptroller, Treasurer, Attorney- General, Surveyor-General, Justices of the Supreme Court, and Judges of the District Courts, shall be liable to impeachment for any misdemeanor in office ; but judgment in such cases shall extend only to re moval from office, and disqualification to hold any office of honor, trust or profit, under the State ; but the party convicted, or acquitted, shall nevertheless be liable to indictment, trial and punishment, according to law. All other civil officers shall be tried for mis demeanors in office, in such manner as the Legislature may provide. SEC. 20. No Senator or member of Assembly shall, during the term for which he shall have been elected, be appointed to any civil office of profit, under this State, which shall have been created, or the emolu ments of which shall have been increased, during such HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 39T term, except such office as may be filled by elections by the people. SEC. 21. No person holding any lucrative office under the United States, or any other power, shall be eligible to any civil office of profit, under this State > provided, that officers in the militia, to which there is attached no annual salary, or local officers and post masters whose compensation does not exceed five hundred dollars per annum, shall not be deemed lucra tive. SEC. 22. No person who shall be convicted of the embezzlement or defalcation of the public funds of this State, shall ever be eligible to any office of honor, trust, or profit, under the State ; and the Legislature shall, as soon as practicable, pass a law providing for the punishment of such embezzlement, or defalcation, as a felony. SEC. 23. No money shall be drawn from the Trea sury but in consequence of appropriations made by law. An accurate statement of the receipts and ex penditures of the public moneys shall be attached to, and published with, the laws, at every regular session of the Legislature. SEC. 24. The members of the Legislature shall receive for their services, a compensation to be fixed by law, and paid out of the public treasury ; but no increase of the compensation shall take effect during the term for which the members of either house shall have been elected. SEC. 25. Every law enacted by the Legislature, shall embrace but one object, and that shall be ex pressed in the title ; and no law shall be revised, or amended, by reference to its title ; but in such case, 34 398 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. the act revised, or section amended, shall be re- enacted and published at length. SEC. 26. No divorce shall be granted by the Legis lature. SEC. 27. No lottery shall be authorized by this State, nor shall the sale of lottery tickets' be allowed. SEC. 28. The enumeration of the inhabitants of this State shall be taken, under the direction of the Legis lature, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-two, and one thousand eight hundred and fifty- five, and at the end of every ten years thereafter ; and these enumerations, together with the census that may be taken, under the direction of the Congress of the United States, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty, and every subsequent ten years, shall serve as the basis of representation in both houses of the Legislature. SEC. 29. The number of Senators and Members of Assembly, shall, at the first session of the Legislature, holden after the enumeration herein provided for are made, be fixed by the Legislature, and apportioned among the several counties and districts to be esta blished by law, according to the number of white in habitants. The number of Members of Assembly shall not be less than twenty-four, nor more than thirty-six, until the number of inhabitants within this State shall amount to one hundred thousand: and after that period, at such ratio that the whole number of Members of Assembly shall never be less than thirty, nor more than eighty. SEC. 30. When a congressional, senatorial, or assembly district, shall be composed of two or more counties, it shall not be separated by any county be longing to another district ; and no county shall be HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 399 divided, in forming a congressional, senatorial, or assembly district. SEC. 31. Corporations may be formed under gene ral laws, but shall not be created by special act, ex cept for municipal purposes. All general laws and special acts passed pursuant to this section may be altered from time to time, or repealed. SEC. 32. Dues from corporations shall be secured by such individual liability of the corporators, and other means, as may be prescribed by law. SEC. 33. The term corporations, as used in this article, shall be construed to include all associations and joint-stock companies, having any of the powers or privileges of corporations not possessed by indivi duals or partnerships. And all corporations shall have the right to sue, and shall be subject to be sued, in all courts, in like cases as natural persons. SEC. 34. The Legislature shall have no power to to pass any act granting any charter for banking pur poses ; but associations may be formed under general laws, for the deposit of gold and silver ; but no such association shall make, issue, or put in circulation, any bill, check, tickets, certificate, promissory note, or other paper, or the paper of any bank, to circulate as money. SEC. 35. The Legislature of this State shall pro hibit, by law, any person or persons, association, com pany, or corporation, from exercising the privileges of banking, or creating paper to circulate as money. SEC. 36. Each stockholder of a corporation, or joint-stock association, shall be individually and per sonally liable for his proportion of all its debts and liabilities. SEC. 37. It shall be the duty of the Legislature to 400 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power of taxation, as sessment, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit, so as to prevent abuses in assess ments, and in contracting debts, by such municipal corporations. SEC. 38. In all elections by the Legislature, the members thereof shall vote viva voce, and the votes shall be entered on the journal. ARTICLE V. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT. SEC. 1. The supreme executive power of this State shall be vested in a chief magistrate, who shall be styled the Governor of the State of California. SEC. 2. The Governor shall be elected by the qualified electors, at the time and places of voting for Members of Assembly, and shall hold his office two years from the time of his installation, and until his successor .shall be qualified. SEC. 3. No person shall be eligible to the office of Governor (except at the first election) who has not been a citizen of the United States and a resident of this State two years next preceding the election, and attained the age of twenty-five years at the time of said election. SEC. 4. The returns of every election for Governor shall be sealed up and transmitted to the seat of gov ernment, directed to the Speaker of the Assembly, who shall, during the first week of the session, open and publish them in presence of both houses of the Legislature. The person having the highest number of votes shall be Governor ; but in case any two or HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 401 more have an equal and the highest number of votes, the Legislature shaJ by joint-vote of both houses, choose one of said persons, so having an equal and the highest number of rotes, for Governor. SEC. 5. The Governor shall be commander-in-chief of the militia, the army, and navy of this State. SEC. 6. He shall transact all executive business with the officers of government, civil and military, and may require information in writing from the officers of the executive department, upon any subject relating to the duties of the respective offices. SEC. 7. He shall see that the laws are faithfully executed. SEC. 8. When any office shall, from any cause, be come vacant, and no mode is provided by the constitu tion and laws for filling such vacancy, the Governor shall have power to fill such vacancy by granting a commission, which shall expire at the end of the next session of the Legislature, or at the next election by the people. SEC. 9. He may, on extraordinary occasions, con vene the Legislature by proclamation, and shall state to both houses, when assembled, the purpose for which they shall have been convened. SEC. 10. He shall communicate by message to the Legislature, at every session, the condition of the State, and recommend such matters as he shall deem expedient. SEC. 11. in case of a disagreement between the two houses, with respect to the time of adjournment, the Governor shall have power to adjourn the Legis lature to such time as he may think proper; Provided it be not beyond the time fixed for the meeting of the next Legislature. 34* 402 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. SEC. 12. No person shall, while holding any office under the United States, or this State, exercise the office of Governor, except as hereinafter expressly provided. SEC. 13. The Governor shall have the power to grant reprieves and pardons after conviction, for all offences except treason, and cases of impeachment, upon such conditions, and with such restrictions and limitations, as he may think proper, subject to such regulations as may be provided by law relative to the manner of applying for pardons. Upon conviction for treason he shall have the power to suspend the execution of the sentence until the case shall be re ported to the Legislature at its next meeting, when the Legislature shall either pardon, direct the execu tion of the sentence, or grant a further reprieve. He shall communicate to the Legislature, at the begin ning of every session, every case of reprieve, or par don granted, stating the name of the convict, the crime of which he was convicted, the sentence and its date, and the date of the pardon or reprieve. SEC. 14. There shall be a seal of this State, which shall be kept by the Governor, and used by him officially, and it shall be called "The Great Seal of the State of California." SEC. 15. All grants and commissions shall be in the name and by the authority of the people of the State of California, sealed with the great seal of the State, signed by the Governor, and countersigned by the Secretary of State. SEC. 16. A Lieutenant-Governor shall be elected at the same time and place, and in the same manner as the Governor ; and his term of office, and his qua lifications, shall also be the same. He shall be Pre- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 403 sident of the Senate, but shall only have a casting vote therein. If, during a vacancy of the office of Governor, the Lieutenant-GAvernor shall be im peached, displaced, resign, die, or become incapable of performing ihe duties of his office, or be absent from the State, the President of the Senate shall act as Governor, until the vacancy be filled, or the dis ability shall cease. SEC. 17. In case of the impeachment of the Go- vernor, or his removal from office, death, inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, resignation or absence from the State, the powers and duties of the office shall devolve upon the Lieutenant- Governor for the residue of the term, or until the disability shall cease. But when the Governor shall, with the consent of the Legislature, be out of the State in time of war, at the head of any military force thereof, he shall continue commander-in-chief of all the military forces of the State. SEC. 18. A Secretary of State, a Comptroller, a Treasurer, an Attorney-General and Surveyor-Gene ral, shall be chosen in the manner provided in this Constitution ; and the term of office, and eligibility of each, shall be the same as are prescribed for the Governor and Lieutenant-Governor. SEC. 19. The Secretary of State shall be appointed by the Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. He shall keep a fair record of the official acts of the Legislature and Executive Departments of the Government; and shall, when required, lay the same, and all matters relative there to, before either branch of the Legislature : and shall perform such other duties as shall be assigned him by law. 404 HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. SEC. 20. The Comptroller, Treasurer, Attorney- General and Surveyor-General, shall be chosen by joint vote of the two Houses of the Legislature, at their first session under this Constitution, and there after shall be elected at the same time and places, and in the same manner, as the Governor and Lieu- tenant-Governor. SEC. 21. The Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, Se cretary of State, Comptroller, Treasurer, Attorney- General, and Surveyor-General, shall each at stated times during their continuance in office, receive for their services a compensation, which shall not be in creased or diminished during the term for which they shall have been elected ; but neither of these officers shall receive for his own use any fees for the perform ance of his official duties. ARTICLE VI. JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT. SEC. 1. The judicial power of this State shall be vested in a Supreme Court, in District Courts, in County Courts, and in Justices of the Peace. The Legislature may also establish such municipal and other inferior courts as may be deemed necessary. SEC. 2. The Supreme Court shall consist of a Chief Justice, and two Associate Justices, any two of whom shall constitute a quorum. SEC. 3. The Justices of the Supreme Court shall be elected at the general election, 'by the qualified electors of the State, and shall hold their office for the term of six years from the first day of January next after their election ; provided that the Legisla- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 405 ture shall, at its first meeting, elect a Chief Justice and two Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, by joint vote of both houses, and so classify them that one shall go out of office every two years. After the first election, the senior Justice in commission shall be the Chief Justice. SEC. 4. The Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction in all cases when the matter in dispute exceeds two hundred dollars, when the legality of any tax, toll, or impost, or municipal fine is in ques tion : and in all criminal cases amounting to felony, or questions of law alone. And the said court and each of the Justices thereof, as well as all district and county judges, shall have power to issue writs of ha beas corpus, at the instance of any person held in actual custody. They shall also have power to issue all other writs and process necessary to the exercise of the appellate jurisdiction, and shall be conserva tors of the peace throughout the State. SEC. 5. The State shall be divided by the first Legislature into a convenient number of districts, subject to such alteration from time to time as the public good may require ; for each of which a district judge shall be appointed by the joint vote of the legislature, at its first meeting, who shall hold his office for two years from the first day of January next after his election ; after which, said judges shall be elected by the qualified electors of their respective districts, at the general election, and shall hold their office for the term of six years. SEC. 6. The District Courts shall have original jurisdiction, in law and equity, in all civil cases where the amount in dispute exceeds two hundred dollars, exclusive of interest. In all criminal cases not other- 28 406 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. wise provided for, and in all issues of fact joined in the probate courts, their jurisdiction shall be unlimited. SEC. 7. The Legislature shall provide for the elec tion, by the people, of a Clerk of the Supreme Court, and County Clerks, District Attorneys, Sheriffs, Coro ners, and other necessary officers ; and shall fix by law their duties and compensation. County Clerks shall be, ex-officio, Clerks of the District Courts in and for their respective counties. SEC. 8. There shall be elected in each of the or ganized counties of this State, one County Judge who shall hold his office for four years. He shall hold the County Court, and perform the duties of Surrogate, or Probate Judge. The County Judge, with two Justices of the Peace, to be designated ac cording to law, shall hold courts of sessions, with such criminal jurisdiction as the Legislature shall pre scribe, and he shall perform such other duties as shall be required by law. SEC. 9. The County Courts shall have such juris diction, in cases arising in Justices Courts, and in spe cial cases, as the Legislature may prescribe, but shall have no original civil jurisdiction, except in such spe cial cases. SEC. 10. The times and places of holding the terms of the Supreme Court, and the general and spe cial terms of the District Courts within the several districts, shall be provided for by law. SEC. 11. No judicial officer, except a Justice of the Peace, shall receive to his own use, any fees, or per quisites of office. SEC. 12. The Legislature shall provide for the speedy publication of all statute laws, and of such judicial decisions as it may deem expedient ; and all HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 40T laws and judicial decisions shall be free for publica tion by any person. SEC. 13. Tribunals for conciliation may be esta blished, with such powers and duties as may be pre scribed by law; but such tribunals shall have no power to render judgment to be obligatory on the parties, except they voluntarily submit their matters in difference, and agree to abide the judgment, or assent thereto in the presence of such tribunal, in such cases as shall be prescribed by law. SEC. 14. The Legislature shall determine the num ber of Justices of the Peace, to be elected in each county, city, town, and incorporated village of the State, and fix by law their powers, duties, and respon sibilities. It shall also determine in what cases appeals may be made from Justices' Courts to the County Court. SEC. 15. The Justices of the Supreme Court, and • Judges of the District Court, shall severally, at stated times during their continuance in office, receive for their services a compensation, to be paid out of the treasury, which shall not be increased or diminished during the term for which they shall have been elected. The County Judges shall also severally, at stated times, receive for their services a compensation to be paid out of the county treasury of their respective counties, which shall not be increased or diminished during the term for which they shall have been elected. SEC. 16. The Justices of the Supreme Court and District Judges shall be ineligible to any other office, during the term for which they shall have been elected. SEC. 17. Judges shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, but may state the testimony and declare the law. 408 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. SEC. 18. The style of all process shall be " The People of the State of California;" all the prosecu tions shall be conducted in the name and by the autho rity of the same. ARTICLE VII. MILITIA. SEC. 1. The Legislature shall provide by law, for organizing and disciplining the militia, in such manner as they shall deem expedient, not incompatible with the constitution and laws of the United States. SEC. 2. Officers of the militia shall be elected, or appointed, in such manner as the Legislature shall from time to time direct ; and shall be commissioned by the Governor. SEC. 3. The Governor shall have power to call forth the militia, to execute the laws of the State, to sup press insurrections, and repel invasions. ARTICLE VIII. STATE DEBTS. The Legislature shall not in any manner create any debt or debts, liability or liabilities, which shall singly, or in the aggregate, with any previous debts or liabili ties exceed the sum of three hundred thousand dollars, except in case of war, to repel invasion, or suppress insurrection, unless the same, shall be authorized by some law for some single object or work, to be distinctly specified therein, which law shall provide ways and means, exclusive of loans, for the payment of the interest of such debt or liability, as it falls due, and also pay and discharge the principal of such debt or HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 409 liability within twenty years from the time of the contracting thereof, and shall be irrepealable until the principal and interest thereon shall be paid and dis charged ; but no such law shall take effect until, at a general election, it shall have been submitted to the people, and have received a majority of all the votes cast for and against it at such election ; and all money raised by authority of such law shall be applied only to the specific object therein stated, or to the payment of the debt thereby created ; and such law shall be published in at least one newspaper in each judicial district, if one be published therein, throughout the State, for three months next preceding the election at which it is submitted to the people. ARTICLE IX. EDUCATION. SEC. 1. The Legislature shall provide for the elec tion, by the people, of a Superintendent of Public Instruction, who shall hold his office for three years, and whose duties shall be prescribed by law, and who shall receive such compensation as the Legislature may direct. SEC. 2. The Legislature shall encourage, by all suit able means, the promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral and agricultural improvement. The proceeds of all lands that may be granted by the United States to this State for the support of schools, which may be sold or disposed of, and the five hundred thousand acres of land granted to the new States, under an act of Congress distributing the proceeds of the public lands among the several States of the Union, approved A. D. 1841 ; and all estates of deceased persons who 35 410 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. may have died without leaving a will, or heir, and also such per cent, as may be granted by Congress on the sale of lands in this State, shall be and remain a perpetual fund, the interest of which, together with all the rents of the unsold lands, and such other means as the Legislature may provide, shall be inviolably appropriated to the support of Common Schools throughout the State. SEC. 3. The Legislature shall provide for a system of Common Schools, by which a school shall be kept up and supported in each district at least three months in every year : and any school district neglecting to keep up and support such a school, may be deprived of its proportion of the interest of the public fund during such neglect. SEC. 4. The Legislature shall take measures for the protection, improvement, or other disposition of such lands as have been, or may hereafter be, reserved or granted by the United States, or any person or per sons to this State for the use of a University ; and the funds accruing from the rents or sale of such lands, or from any other source, for the purpose aforesaid, shall be and remain a permanent fund, the interest of which shall be applied to the support of said university, with such branches as the public convenience may demand for the promotion of literature, the arts and sciences, as may be authorized by the terms of such grant. And it shall be the duty of the Legislature, as soon as may be, to provide effectual means for the improve ment and permanent security of the funds of said University. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 411 ARTICLE X. MODE OF AMENDING AND REVISING THE CONSTITUTION. SEC. 1. Any amendment or amendments to this Constitution may be proposed in the Senate or Assem bly ; and if the same shall be agreed to by a majority of the members elected to each of the two houses, such proposed amendment or amendments shall be entered on their journals, with the yeas and nays taken thereon, and referred to the Legislature then next to be chosen, and shall be published for three months next preced ing the time of making such choice. And if, in the Legislature next chosen, as aforesaid, such proposed amendment or amendments shall be agreed to by a majority of all the members elected to each house, then it shall be the duty of the Legislature to submit such proposed amendment or amendments to the people, in such manner, and at such time, as the Legislature shall prescribe ; and if the people shall approve and ratify such amendment or amendments, by a majority of the electors qualified to vote for members of the Legisla ture voting thereon, such amendment or amendments o shall become part of the Constitution. SEC. 2, And if, at any time, two-thirds of the Senate 'and Assembly shall think it necessary to revise and change this entire Constitution, they shall recommend to the electors, at the next election for members of the Legislature, to vote for or against the convention ; and if it shall appear that a majority of the electors voting at such election have voted in favor of calling a convention, the Legislature shall, at its next session, provide by law for calling a convention, to be holden 412 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. within six months after the passage of such law ; and such convention shall consist of a number of members not less than that of both branches of the Legislature. ARTICLE XL MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS. SEC. 1. The first session of the Legislature shall be held at the Pueblo de San Jose, which place shall be the permanent seat of government, until removed by law ; provided, however, that two-thirds of all the members elected to each house of the Legislature shall concur in the passage of such law. SEC. 2. Any citizen of this State who shall, after the adoption of this Constitution, fight a duel with deadly weapons, or send or accept a challenge to fight a duel with deadly weapons, either within the State or out of it ; or who shall act as second, or knowingly aid or assist in any manner those thus offending, shall not be allowed to hold any office of profit, or to enjoy the right of suffrage under this Constitution. SEC. 3. Members of the Legislature, and all officers, executive, and judicial, except such inferior officers as may be by law exempted, shall, before they enter on the duties of their respective offices, take and sub scribe the following oath or affirmation. " I do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be,) that I will support the Constitution of the United States, and the Constitution of the State of California: and that I will faithfully discharge the duties of the office of , according to the best of my ability." And no other oath, declaration, or test, shall be required as a qualification for any office or public trust. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 413 SEC. 4. The Legislature shall establish a system of county and town governments, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable, throughout the State. SEC. 5. The Legislature shall have power to pro vide for the election of a board of supervisors in each county ; and these supervisors shall, jointly and indi vidually, perform such duties as may be prescribed by law. SEC. 6. All officers whose election or appointment is not provided for by this constitution, and all officers whose offices may hereafter be created by law, shall be elected by the people, or appointed as the Legisla ture may direct. SEC. 7. When the duration of any office is not pro vided for by this constitution, it may be declared by law ; and of not so declared, such office shall be held during the pleasure of the authority making the ap pointment; nor shall the duration of any office, not fixed by this constitution, ever exceed four years. SEC. 8. The fiscal year shall commence on the first day of July. SEC. 9. Each county, town, city, and incorporated village, shall make provision for the support of its own officers, subject to such restrictions and regula tions as the Legislature may prescribe. SEC. 10. The credit of the State shall not in any manner be given or loaned to, or in aid of, any indi vidual, association, or corporation; nor shall the State, directly or indirectly, become a stockholder in any association or corporation. SEC. 11. Suits may be brought against the State, in such manner, and in such courts, as shall be directed by law. SEC. 12. No contract of marriage, if otherwise 35* 414 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. duly made, shall be invalidated, for want of confor mity to the requirements of any religious sect. SEC. 13. Taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State. All property, in this State, shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascer tained as directed by law; but assessors and collectors of town, county, and State taxes, shall be elected by the qualified electors of the district, county, or town, in which the property taxed for State, county, or town purposes is situated. SEC. 14. All property, both real and personal, of the wife, owned or claimed by her before marriage, and that acquired afterwards by gift, devise, or descent, shall be her separate property; and laws shall be passed more clearly defining the rights of the wife, in relation as well to her separate property, as to that held in common with her husband. Laws shall also be passed providing for the restoration of the wife's separate property. SEC. 15. The Legislature shall protect by law, from forced sale, a certain portoin of the homestead and other property of all heads of families. SEC. 16. No perpetuities shall be allowed, except for eleemosynary purposes. SEC. 17. Every person shall be disqualified from holding any office of profit in this State, who shall have been convicted of having given or offered a bribe, to procure his election or appointment. SEC. 18. Laws shall be made to exclude from office, serving on juries, and from the right of suffrage, those who shall hereafter be convicted of bribery, perjury, forgery, or other high crimes. The privilege of free suffrage shall be supported by laws regulating elec tions, and prohibiting, under adequate penalties, all HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 415 undue influence thereon, from power, bribery, tumult, or other improper practice. SEC. 19. Absence from this State on business of the State, or of the United States, shall not affect the question or residence of any person. SBC. 20. A plurality of the votes given at any elec tion .shall constitute a choice, where not otherwise directed in this constitution. SEC. 21. All laws, decrees, regulations and provi sions, which from their nature require publication, shall be published in English and Spanish. ARTICLE XII. BOUNDARY. The boundary of the State of California shall be as follows : — Commencing at the point of intersection of the 42d degree of north latitude with the 120th degree of longitude west from Greenwich, and running south on the line of said 120th degree of west longitude until it intersects the 39th degree of north latitude ; thence running in a straight line in a south-easterly direction to the River Colorado, at a point where it intersects the 35th degree of north latitude ; thence down the middle of the channel of said river, to the boundary line between the United States and Mexico, as esta blished by the treaty of May 30th, 1848 ; thence run ning west and along said boundary line to the Pacific Ocean, and extending therein three English miles ; thence running in a north-westerly direction, and follow ing the direction of the Pacific coast to the 42d degree of north latitude ; thence on the line of said 42d degree of north latitude to the place of beginning. 416 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Also all the islands, harbors and bays, along and adjacent to the Pacific coast. SCHEDULE. SEC. 1. All rights, prosecutions, claims and con tracts, as well of individuals as of bodies corporate, and all laws in force at the time of the adoption of this Constitution, and not inconsistent therewith, until altered or repealed by the Legislature, shall continue as if the same had not been adopted. SEC. 2. The Legislature shall provide for the re moval of all causes which may be pending when this Constitution goes into effect, to courts created by the same. SEC. 3. In order that no inconvenience may result to the public service, from the taking effect of this Constitution, no office shall be superseded thereby, nor the laws relative to the duties of the several officers be changed, until the entering into office of the new officers to be appointed under this Constitution. SEC. 4. The provisions of this Constitution con cerning the term of residence necessary to enable persons to hold certain offices therein mentioned, shall not be held to apply to officers chosen by the people at the first election, or by the Legislature at its first session. SEC. 5. Every citizen of California, declared a le gal voter by this Constitution, and every citizen of the United States, a resident of this State on the day of election, shall be entitled to vote at the first general election under this Constitution, and on the question of the adoption thereof. SEC. 6. This Constitution shall be submitted to the people, for their ratification or rejection, at the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 417 general election to be held on Tuesday, the thirteenth day of November naxt. The Executive of the exist ing government of California is hereby requested to issue a proclamation to the people, directing the Pre fects of the several districts, or in case of vacancy, the Sub-Prefects, or senior Judge of First Instance, to cause such election to be held, on the day afore said, in their respective districts. The election shall be conducted in the manner which was prescribed for the election of delegates to this convention, except that the Prefect, Sub-Prefect, or senior Judge of First Instance ordering such election in each district, shall have power to designate any additional number of places for opening the polls, and that, in every place of hold ing the election, a regular poll-list shall be kept by the judges and inspectors of election. It shall also be the duty of these judges and inspectors of election, on the day aforesaid, to receive the votes of the electors qualified to vote at such election. Each voter shall express his opinion, by depositing in the ballot-box a ticket, whereon shall be written, or printed " For the Constitution," or " Against the Constitution," or some such words as will distinctly convey the inten tion of the voter. These Judges and Inspectors shall also receive the votes for the several officers to be voted for at the said election, as herein provided. At the close of the election, the judges and inspec tors shall carefully count each ballot, and forthwith make duplicate returns thereof to the Prefect, Sub- Prefect, or senior Judge of First Instance, as the case may be, of their respective districts ; and said Prefect, Sub-Prefect, or senior Judge of First Instance shall transmit one of the same, by the most safe and rapid conveyance, to the Secretary of State. Upon 418 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the receipt of said returns, or on the tenth day of December next, if the returns be not sooner received, it shall be the duty of a board of canvassers, to con sist of the Secretary of State, one of the Judges of the Superior Court, the Prefect, Judge of First In stance, and an Alcalde of the District of Monterey, or any three of the aforementioned officers, in the presence of all who shall choose to attend, to compare the votes given at said election, and to immediately publish an abstract of the same in one or more of the newspapers of California. And the Executive will also, immediately after ascertaining that the Consti tution has been ratified by the people, make proclama tion of the fact; and thenceforth this Consitution shall be ordained and established as the Constitution of California. SEC. 7. If this Constitution shall be ratified by the people of California, the Executive of the existing government is hereby requested, immediately after the same shall be ascertained, in the manner herein directed, to cause a fair copy thereof to be forwarded to the President of the United States, in order that he may lay it before the Congress of the United States. SEC. 8. At the general election aforesaid, viz: the thirteenth day of November next, there shall be elected a Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, mem bers of the Legislature, and also two members of Congress. SEC. 9. If this constitution shall be ratified by the people of California, the Legislature shall assemble at the seat of government, on the fifteenth day of December next, and in order to complete the organi zation of that body, the Senate shall elect a Presi- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 419 dent pro tempore, until the Lieutenant-Governor shall be installed into office. SEC. 10. On the organization of the Legislature, it shall be the duty of the Secretary of State, to lay before each house a copy of the abstract made by the board of canvassers, and, if called for, the original returns of election, in order that each house may judge of the correctness of the report of said board of can vassers. SEC. 11. The Legislature, at its first session, shall elect such officers as may be ordered by this Constitu tion, to be elected by that body, and within four days after its organization, proceed to elect two Senators to the Congress of the United States. But no law passed by this Legislature shall take effect until signed by the Governor, after his installation into office. SEC. 12. The Senators and Representatives to the Congress of the United States, elected by the Le gislature and people of California, as herein directed, shall be furnished with certified copies of this Consti tution, when ratified, which they shall lay before the Congress of the United States, requesting, in the name of the people of California, the admission of the State of California into the American Union. SEC. 13. All officers of this State, other than mem bers of the Legislature, shall be installed into office on the fifteenth day of December next, or as soon thereafter as practicable. SEC. 14. Until the Legislature shall divide the State into counties, and senatorial and assembly dis tricts, as directed by this Constitution, the following shall be the apportionment of the two houses of the Legislature, viz : the districts of San Diego and Los Angeles shall jointly elect two senators ; the districts 420 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. of Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo shall jointly elect one senator ; the district of Monterey, one sena tor ; the district of San Jose, one senator ; the district of San Francisco, two senators ; the district of Sonoma, one senator ; the district of Sacramento, four senators ; and the district of San Joaquin, four senators : — And the district of San Diego shall elect one member of assembly; the district of Los Angeles, two members of assembly ; the district of Santa Bar bara, two members of assembly ; the district of San Luis ObispOj one member of assembly ; the district of Monterey, two members of assembly ; the district of San Jose, three members of assembly ; the district of San Francisco, five members of assembly ; the district of Sonoma, two members of assembly ; the district of Sacramento, nine members of assembly ; and the district of San Joaquin, nine members of assembly. SEC. 15. Until the Legislature shall otherwise di rect, in accordance with the provisions of this Consti tution, the salary of the Governor shall be ten thousand dollars per annum ; and the salary of the Lieutenant- Governor shall be double the pay of a state senator ; and the pay of members of the Legislature shall be sixteen dollars per diem, while in attendance, and sixteen dollars for every twenty miles travel by the usual route from their residences, to the place of hold ing the session of the Legislature, and in returning therefrom. And the Legislature shall fix the salaries of all officers, other than those elected by the people, at the first election. SEC. 16. The limitation of the powers of the Le gislature, contained in article 8th of this Constitution, tution, shall not extend to the first Legislature elected HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 421 under the same, which is hereby authorized to nego tiate for such amount as may be necessary to pay the expenses of the State government. R. SEMPLE, President of the Convention and Delegate from Benecia. WM. G. MARCY, Secretary. J. Aram, C. T. Botts, E. Brown, J. A. Carillo, J. M. Covarrubias, E. 0. Crosby, P. De La Guerra, L. Dent, M. Dominguez, K. H. Dimmick, A. J. Ellis, S. C. Foster, E. Gilbert, W. M. Gwinn, H. W. Halleck, Julian Hanks, L. W. Hastings, Henry Hill, J. Hobson, J. McH. Hollingsworth, J. D. Hoppe, • J. M. Jones, T. 0. Larkin. Francis J. Lippitt, B. S. Lippincott, M. M. Me Carver, John McDougal, B. F. Moore, Myron Norton, P. Ord, Miguel Pedrorena, A. M. Pico, R. M. Price, Hugo Reed, Jacinto Rodriguez, Pedro Sansevaine, W. E. Shannon, W. S. Sherwood, J. R. Snyder, A. Stearns, W. M. Steuart, J. A. Sutter, Henry A. Tefft, S. L. Vermule, M. G. Vallejo, J. Walker, 0. M. Wozencraft 29 422 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. B. ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE OF CALIFORNIA. The undersigned, delegates to a convention autho rized to form a Constitution for the State of California, having, to the best of their ability, discharged the high trust committed to them, respectfully submit the accompanying plan of government for your approval. Acknowledging the great fundamental principles, that all political power is inherent in the people, and that government is instituted for the protection, security and benefit of the people, the Constitution presented for your consideration is intended only to give such organic powers to the several departments of the pro posed government, as shall be necessary for its efficient administration : and while it is believed no power has been given, which is not thus essentially necessary, the convention deem individual rights, as well as public liberty, are amply secured, by the people still retain ing not only the great conservative power of free choice and election of all officers, agents, and repre sentatives, but the unalienable right to alter or reform their government, whenever the public good may require. Although born in different climes, coming from differ ent States, imbued with local feelings, and educated, perhaps, with predilections for peculiar institutions, laws, and customs, the delegates assembled in conven tion as Californians, and carried on their deliberations in a spirit of amity, compromise, and mutual conces sion for the public weal. It cannot be denied that a difference of opinion was entertained in the convention, as to the policy and HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 423 expediency of several measures embodied in the Con stitution ; but looking to the great interests of the State of California, the peace, happiness, and pros perity of the whole people, — individual opinions were freely surrendered to the will of the majority, and, with one voice, we respectfully but earnestly recom mend to our fellow citizens the adoption of the Con stitution which we have the honor to submit. In establishing a boundary for the State, the con vention conformed, as near as was deemed practicable and expedient, to great natural landmarks, so as to bring into a union all those who should be included by mutual interest, mutual wants, and mutual dependence. No portion of territory is included, the inhabitants of which were not or might not have been legitimately represented in the convention, under the authority by which it was convened ; and in unanimously resolving to exclude slavery from the State of California, the great principle has been maintained, that to the people of each State and Territory, alone, belongs the right to establish such municipal regulations, and to decide such questions as affect their own peace, prosperity and happiness. A free people, in the enjoyment of an elective government, capable of securing their civil, religious, and political rights, may rest assured these inestimable privileges can never be wrested from them, so long as they keep a watchful eye on the operations of their government, and hold to strict accountability those to whom power is delegated. No people were ever yet enslaved, who knew and dared maintain the co-relative rights and obligations of free and independent citizens. A knowledge of the laws — their moral force and effi cacy, thus becomes an essential element of freedom, 424 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. and makes public education of primary importance. In this view, the Constitution of California provides for, and guarantees in the most ample manner, the establishment of common schools, seminaries and col leges, so as to extend the blessings of education throughout the land, and secure its advantages to the present and future generations. Under the peculiar circumstances in which California becomes a State — with an unexampled increase of a population coming from every part of the world, speaking various lan guages, and imbued with different feelings and preju dices, no form of government, no system of laws, can be expected to meet with immediate and unanimous assent. It is to be remembered, moreover, that a con siderable portion of our fellow-citizens are natives of Old Spain, Californians, and those who have volun tarily relinquished the rights of Mexicans to enjoy those of American citizens. Long accustomed to a different form of government, regarding the rights of person and of property as interwoven with ancient usages and time-honored customs, they may not at once see the advantages of the proposed new govern ment, or yield an immediate approval of new laws, however salutary their provisions, or conducive to the general welfare. But it is confidently believed, when the government as now proposed shall have gone into successful operation, when each department thereof shall move on harmoniously in its appropriate and respective sphere, when laws, based on the eternal principles of equity and justice, shall be established, when every citizen of California, shall find himself Becure in life, liberty, and property — all will unite in the cordial support of institutions, which are not only the pride and boast of every true-hearted citizen of the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 425 Union, but have gone forth, a guiding light to every people groping through the gloom of religious super stition or political fanaticism — institutions, which even now, while all Europe is agitated with the convulsive efforts of nations battling for liberty, have become the mark and model of government for every people who would hold themselves free, sovereign, and independent. With this brief exposition of the views and opinions of the convention, the undersigned submit the Constitu tion and plan of government for your approval. They earnestly recommend it to your calm and deliberate consideration, and especially do they most respectfully urge on every voter to attend the polls. The putting into operation of a government which shall establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of civil, religious, and political liberty, should be an object of the deepest solicitude to every true-hearted citizen, and the consummation of his dearest wishes. The price of liberty is eternal vigilance, and thus it is not only the privilege but the duty of every voter to vote his sentiments. No freeman of this land who values his birthright, and would transmit unimpaired to his children an inheritance so rich in glory and honor, will refuse to give one day to the service of his country. Let every qualified voter go early to the polls, and give his free vote at the election ap pointed to be held on Tuesday, the 13th day of Novem ber next, not only that a full and fair expression of the public voice may be had, for or against a constitu tion intended to secure the peace, happiness and prosperity of the whole people, but that their numeri cal and political strength may be made manifest, and the world see by what majority of freemen California, 36* 426 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. the bright star of the West, claims a place in the diadem of that glorious republic, formed by the Union of thirty-one sovereign States. (Signed) Josepk Aram, Chas. T. Botts, Elam Brown, Jose Anto. Carillo, Jose M. Covarrubias, Elisha 0. Crosby, Lewis Dent, Manuel Dominguez, K. H. Dimmick, A. J. Ellis, Stephen G. Foster, Pablo De La Guerra, Benj. S. Lippincott, M. M. McCarver, John McDougal, Benj. F. Moore, Myron Norton, P. Ord, Miguel De Pedrorena, Rodman M. Price, Antonio M. Pico, Jacinto Rodrigues, Hugh Reed, John A Sutter, Edw. Gilbert, Wm. M. Gwin, Julian Hanks, Henry Hill, J. D. Hoppe, Joseph Hobson, H. W. Halleck, L. W. Hastings, J. McH. Hollingsworth, Jas. McHall Jones, Thomas 0. Larkin, Francis J. Lippitt, Jacob R. Snyder, W. Scott Sherwood, Wm. C. Shannon, Pedro Sansevain, Abel Stearns, W. M. Steuart, R. Semple, Henry A Tefft, M. G. Vallejo, Thos. L. Vermule, Joel P. Walker, 0. M. Wozencraft. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 427 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, Transmitting information in answer to a resolution of the House of the 3lst of December, 1849, on the subject of California and New Mexico. To THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES, — I transmit to the House of Repre sentatives, in answer to a resolution of that body passed on the 81st of December last, the accompany ing reports of heads of departments, which contain all the official information in the possession of the Executive asked for by the resolution. On coming into office, I found the military com mandant of the department of California exercising the functions of civil governor in that Territory ; and left, as I was, to act under the treaty of Guada- lupe Hidalgo, without the aid of any legislative pro vision establishing a government in that Territory, I thought it not best to disturb that arrangement, made under my predecessor, until Congress should take some action on that subject. I therefore did not interfere with the powers of the military commandant, who continued to exercise the functions of civil governor as before ; but I made no such appointment, conferred no such authority, and have allowed no increased compensation to the commandant for his services. With a view to the faithful execution of the treaty, so far as lay in the power of the Executive, and to enable Congress to act, at the present session, with as 428 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA full knowledge and as little difficulty as possible, on all matters of interest in these Territories, I sent tlio honorable Thomas Butler King as bearer of despatches to California, and certain officers to California and New Mexico, whose duties are particularly defined in the accompanying letters of instruction addressed to them severally by the proper departments. I did not hesitate to express to the people of those Territories my desire that each Territory should, if prepared to comply with the requisitions of the Consti tution of the United States, form a plan of a State Constitution and submit the same to Congress, with a prayer for admission into the Union as a State ; but I did not anticipate, suggest, or authorize the establish ment of any such government without the assent of Congress ; nor did I authorize any government agent or officer to interfere with or exercise any influence or control over the election of delegates, or over any convention, in making or modifying their domestic institutions, or any of the provisions of their proposed Constitution. On the contrary, the instructions given by my orders were, that all measures of domestic policy adopted by the people of California must originate solely with themselves ; that while the Exe cutive of the United States was desirous to protect them in the formation of any government republican in its character, to be at the proper time, submitted to Congress, yet it was to be distinctly understood that the plan of such a government must, at the same time, be the result of their own deliberate choice, and originate with themselves, without the interference of the Executive. I am unable to give any information as to laws passed by any supposed government in California, or HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. 429 of any census taken in cither of the Territories men tioned in the resolution, as I have no information on those subjects. As already stated, I have not disturbed the ar rangements which I found had existed under my predecessor. In advising an early application by the people of these Territories for admission as States, I was actu ated principally by an earnest desire to afford to the wisdom and patriotism of Congress the opportunity of avoiding occasions of bitter and angry dissensions among the people of the United States. Under the Constitution, every State has the right of establishing, and, from time to time, altering its municipal laws and domestic institutions, independent ly of every other State and of the general govern ment ; subject only to the prohibitions and guaranties expressly set forth in the Constitution of the United States. The subjects thus left exclusively to the respective States were not designed or expected to become topics of national agitation. Still, as, under the Constitution, Congress has power to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the Territories of the United States, every new acquisition of terri tory has led to. discussions on the question whether the system of involuntary servitude which prevails in many of the States should or should not be prohibited in that Territory. The periods of excitement from this cause which have heretofore occurred have been safely passed ; but during the interval, of whatever length, which may elapse before the admission of the Territories ceded by Mexico as States, it appears probable that similar excitement will prevail to an undue extent. 430 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Under these circumstances, I thought, and still think, that it was my duty to endeavor to put it in the power of Congress, by the admission of California and New Mexico as States, to remove all occasion for the unnecessary agitation of the public mind. It is understood that the people of the western part of California have formed a plan of a State Constitu tion, and will soon submit the same to the judgment of Congress, and apply for admission as a State. This course on their part, though in accordance with, was not adopted exclusively in consequence of, any expression of my wishes inasmuch as measures tending to this end had been promoted by the officers sent there by my predecessor, and were already in active progress of execution before any communica tion from me reached California. If the proposed Constitution shall, when submitted to Congress, be found to be in compliance with the requisitions of the Constitution of the United States, I earnestly recom mend that it may receive the sanction of Congress. The part of California not included in the proposed State of that name is believed to be uninhabited, ex cept in a settlement of our countrymen in the vicinity of Salt Lake. A claim has been advanced by the State of Texas to a very large portion of the most populous district of New Mexico. If the people of New Mexico had formed a plan of a State government for that Terri tory as ceded by the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and had been admitted by Congress as a State, our Constitution would have afforded the means of obtain ing an adjustment of the question of boundary with Texas by a judicial decision. At present, however, no judicial tribunal has the power of deciding that HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 431 question, and it remains for Congress to devise some mode for its adjustment. Meanwhile, I submit to Con gress the question whether it would be expedient, before such adjustment, to establish a territorial government, which, by including the district so claimed, would practically decide the question ad versely to the State of Texas, or, by excluding it, would decide it in her favor. In my opinion, such a course would not be expedient, especially as the peo ple of this Territory still enjoy the benefit and pro tection of their municipal laws, originally derived from Mexico, and have a military force stationed there to protect them against the Indians. It is un doubtedly true that the property, lives, liberties, and religion of the people of New Mexico are better pro tected than they ever were before the treaty of cession. Should Congress, when California shall present her self for incorporation into the Union, annex a condi tion to her admission as a State affecting her domes tic institutions, contrary to the wishes of her people, and even compel her temporarily, to comply with it, yet the State, could change her Constitution at any time after admission, when to her it should seem expedient. Any attempt to deny to the people of the State the right of self-government, in a matter which peculiarly affects themselves, will infallibly be re garded by them as an invasion of their rights ; and, upon the principles laid down in our own Declaration of Independence, they will certainly be sustained by the g^eat mass of the American people. To assert that they are a conquered people, and must, as a State, submit to the will of their conquerors in this regard, will meet with no cordial response among American freemen. Great numbers of them are na- 432 HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. tivc citizens of the United States not inferior to the rest of our countrymen in intelligence and patriotism ; and no language of menace, to restrain them in the exercise of an undoubted right, guarantied to them by the treaty of cession itself, shall ever be uttered by me, or encouraged and sustained by persons acting under my authority. It is to be expected that, in the residue of the Territory ceded to us by Mexico, the people residing there will, at the time of their incor poration into the Union as a State, settle all questions of domestic policy to suit themselves. No material inconvenience will result from the want, for a short period, of a government established by Congress over that part of the Territory which lies eastward of the new State of California ; and the reasons for my opinion that New Mexico will, at no very distant pe riod, ask for admission into the Union, are founded on un-official information, which, I suppose, is common to all who have cared to make inquiries on that subject. Seeing, then, that the question which now excites such painful sensations in the country will, in the end, certainly be settled by the silent effect of causes inde pendent of the action of Congress, I again submit to your wisdom the policy recommended in my annual message, of awaiting the salutary operation of those causes, believing that we shall thus avoid the creation of geographical parties, and secure the harmony of feeling so necessary to the beneficial action of our political system. Connected as the Union is with the remembrance of past happiness, the sense of present blessings, and the hope of future peace and prosperity, every dictate of wisdom, every feeling of duty, and every emotion of patriotism, tend to inspire fidelity and devotion to it, and admonish us cautiously to avoid HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 433 any unnecessary controversy which can either en danger it or impair its strength, the chief element of which is to be found in the regard and affection of the people for each other. Z. TAYLOR. WASHINGTON CITY, D. C., January 21st, 1850. D. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT OF CALIFORNIA, Monterey, August 80, 1849. GENERAL : — I have the honor to transmit, herewith, copies of civil papers and letters issued by me since my despatch of June 30, and to continue my report on the civil affairs of this country from this date. Accompanied by Captain Halleck, Secretary of State for California, and Major Canby, Captain \Yes- cott, and Lieutenant Derby, of my military staff, I left this place on the 5th July for the purpose of in specting the military posts in the interior, and of learning from personal observation the actual state of affairs in the mineral regions, and also of allaying, so far as I could, the hostile feeling which was said to exist between the Americans and foreigners who were working in the gold placers. My report on the state of the troops and a more detailed account of my tour will be forwarded with my military papers. Passing the mission of San Juan Bautista, we crossed the coast range of mountains near the ranche of Senor Pacheco, and struck the San Joaquin River near the mouth of the Merced; and, after visiting Major Miller's camp on the Stanislaus, we proceeded to examine the principal placers on the tributaries of 37 434 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. that river and of the Tuolumne. These washings or diggings have been among the richest and most pro ductive* in California. They are situated within a circuit of some twelve or fifteen miles, and are known as Jamestown, Wood's Creek, Sonoranian Camp, Sullivan's Creek, Curtis's Creek, French Creek, Carson's Creek, and Aiigelo Creek. Some of these have become places of consi derable business, particularly the Sonoranian Camp, which presents the appearance of a city of canvas houses. Passing the Stanislaus River in the mountains, we proceeded to Major Kingsbury's camp near the mouth of the American River, crossing in our route the Calaveras, Moquelume, Seco, and Cosumnes Rivers; all of which have rich washings near their sources, and on their bars and islands. From Major Kings bury's camp we ascended the American River to Cul- lamo Hills, where the first placer was discovered by Captain Sutter's employees in the spring of 1848. From Cullamo we crossed the country to Stockton, a new town on an estero some distance above the mouth of the San Joaquin, and thence proceeded to Colonel Cazey's camp at the straits of Carquinnes ; returning via San Francisco to Monterey, which place we reached on the afternoon of the 9th instant. We found the country at this season dry and parched by the sun, the heat of which became very great the moment we crossed the coast range of moun tains. The thermometer ranges as high as 113° Fah. in the shade, and above 140° Fah. in tlie sun. A great portion of the valley of the Joaquin is so barren as scarcely to afford subsistence for our animals, and can never be of much value for agricultural purposes. There, however, is, some excellent land on the east HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 435 side of that river, bordering its large tributaries. A considerable portion of the valleys of the Moquelume, Seco, Cosumnes, and American Pavers is also well adapted to agriculture; and the broad plains lying between them furnish abundant pasture for raising stock. But the amount of good arable land, as com pared with the extent of country which we passed over, is small, and I am inclined to believe that the richness and extreme fertility of certain localities have led to erroneous conclusions respecting the general character of the country. Certain it is, that while there may be found sufficient arable lands to support, if well cultivated, a numerous population, here is also a very great extent of rough and moun tainous country and sandy and barren plains which are of little value. The great difficulty to be en countered in agricultural pursuits in some portions of California is the want of water for irrigation; but possibly this difficulty may be overcome in part by resorting to artesian wells. If so, much of the public land which is now unsaleable may be brought into market, and the settlement of the country greatly ac celerated. I would, therefore, suggest whether it may not be advisable for our government to direct some experiments to be made at the public expense in sinking wells of this character, for even if unsuccess ful as a means of irrigation, their construction will greatly assist in determining the geological character of the country. At present nearly all agricultural labors are suspended in the general scramble for gold ; but the enormous prices paid for fruit and vegetables in the towns will undoubtedly induce many, during the coming year, to turn their attention to the cultiva tion of the soil. The failure on the part of Congress, 436 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. at its last session, to authorize the sale of public lands in California, has proved detrimental to the agricul tural interest of the country. A large number of those who have recently emi grated to California are desirous to locate themselves permanently in the country, and to cultivate the soil, but the uncertainty which exists with respect to the validity of land titles in California, and to what actu ally constitutes the public domain, serves as a serious check to the forming of new agricultural settlements ; moreover, speculators are purchasing up fraudulent and invalid titles to large tracts of the public domain, and selling them off in parcels, and at enormous profits, to those who have recently arrived in the country, and who are necessarily ignorant of the real state of the case. All the mission lands in California were secu larized, or made government property, by a law of Mexico, dated August 17th, 1833, and the territorial government of California, under the authority of the Mexican laws, leased and sold a portion of these lands and mission property. Another portion of this pro perty, however, still remained unsold when the Ameri cans took possession of the country, and it has since been left in the hands of government agents for pre servation. Erroneously supposing that these lands are subject to pre-emption laws, some of the recent emi grants have attempted to settle upon them. But I cannot deem myself justifiable in permitting this, for I do not conceive that lands which have been under cultivation for half a century, and now belong to government, can be subject to the pre-emption claims of private individuals, in the same manner as the uncultivated lands of the public domain. It is, however, important for the interest of the country that HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. 437 these mission lands be brought into market with the least possible delay, and also that provision be made by law for the settlement and sale of other public lands in California. And as disputes are almost daily occur ring between _ individuals respecting the extent of their several claims, and the validity of their titles, 1 would urge upon our government the necessity of immediately taking measures for the speedy and final settlement of these titles upon principles of equity and justice. This is absolutely essential for the peace and prosperity of the country. For information connected with this subject, I beg leave to call attention, to the report of Captain Hal- leek, Secretary of State for California, which was forwarded to Washington by my predecessor, in the early part of April last. Before leaving Monterey I heard numerous rumors of irregularities and crimes among those working in the placers ; but, on visiting the mining regions, I was agreeably surprised to learn that every thing was quite the reverse from what had been represented, and that order and regularity were preserved through out almost the entire extent of the mineral districts. In each little settlement, or tented town, the miners have elected their local alcaldes and constables, whose judicial decisions and official acts are sustained by the people, and enforced with much regularity and energy. It is true, that in a few instances certain local ques tions have produced temporary excitements and diffi culties, but none of these have been of a very important character, or led to serious results. Alcaldes have probably in some cases, and under peculiar circum stances, exercised judicial powers which were never conferred upon them by law ; but the general result 37* 30 438 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. has been favorable to the preservation of order and the dispensation of justice. The old placers are still exceedingly productive, and new ones are almost daily discovered in the smaller streams running from the western slope of the Sierra Nevada into the great valleys of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers. I am satisfied, however, from personal observation, that very exaggerated accounts have been sent to the United States respecting the ease with which the precious metal is extracted from the earth, and that many who come to this country with the expectation of acquiring sudden wealth, with little or no labor, will be sadly disappointed. It is true that the reward of labor in the mines is very high ; but it should not be forgotten that gold digging and gold washing in that climate require strong constitutions and great physical exertions, and very few need expect to acquire for tunes by working the placers, without severe labor and fixed habits of industry and temperance. The yield of different localities is, of course, very different, some of the placers being exceedingly rich, while the product of others is scarcely sufficient to pay the expenses of working. But I think the general averages per diem, for those actually employed in washing for gold, will not vary much from an ounce or an ounce and a half per man ; some make much jnore than that sum, while those who are less fortunate fall much short of it. The actual number of persons working the placers will not vary much from ten thousand. The entire population now in the mining district is much greater than that number ; but many are engaged in mercantile pursuits and in transporting goods and provisions, while others employ much of their time in HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 439 "prospecting," or looking for newer and richer locali ties. I also found that the reports which had reached me of hostilities between Americans and foreigners, in the mining districts, were greatly exaggerated, and that, with a few individual exceptions, every thing had remained quiet and orderly. In some of the northern placers a party of Americans and Europeans, urged on by political aspirants, who seem willing to endanger the peace and tranquillity of the country, in order to promote their own personal interest, have assumed the authority to order all Mexicans and South Americans from that part of the territory. Their orders were quietly submitted to by the foreigners, a portion of whom removed to the mines further south, where the American population manifested a very decided dispo sition to afford them protection should they be further molested. The more intelligent and thinking portion of Americans regard this measure as illegal and inju dicious, and will discountenance any repetition of movements so well calculated to disturb the public tranquillity, and to create bitter and exasperated feel ings, where it is evidently our policy to cultivate those of the most friendly character. Some of the English, Irish, and German emigrants, in the northern placers, assisted in this movement against the Mexicans, Peru vians, and Chilians, and probably exerted themselves much more than any of our own citizens to create a prejudice and excitement against the Spanish race. They were probably actuated by pecuniary interest. The great influx of people from the southern portion of this continent was diminishing the price of labor in the towns near the northern rivers, and the large number of pack animals brought from Lower Califor- 440 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. nia and Sonora was producing a corresponding reduc tion in the expenses of transportation. For example, the price of a pack mule in some parts of the mining districts a few months ago was about $500, whereas they can now be purchased for less than $150. The cost of transportation from the principal landing on the San Joaquin River to the Sonoranian camp was $75 per hundred, whereas at the present time it is only about $7. This has reduced the prices of provisions in the placers one and two hundred per cent. Some of the merchants who had large stocks of goods in the mines, and those who were engaged in transportation at the prices formerly paid, have suffered by the change, and it is natural that they should feel incensed against that class of foreigners who have contributed most to effect it. But it is thought by others that the great majority of the laborers and consumers in the mining districts have been benefited by this change, and that it would be injurious to the prosperity of the country to restore things to their former state by the expulsion and pro hibition of foreigners from the mines. Americans, by their superior intelligence and shrewdness in business, generally contrive to turn to their own benefit the earnings of the Mexicans, Chilians, and Peruvians in this country, and any measure of exclusiveness which is calculated to diminish the productive labor of California would be of exceed ingly doubtful policy. When applied to by the different parties for my opinion on the question of expelling foreigners, I have uniformly told them that no persons, native Americans or foreigners, have any legal right to dig gold in the HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 441 public lands ; but that, until the government of the United States should act in the matter, they would not be molested in their pursuits ; that I could not countenance any class of men in their attempts to monopolize the "working of the mines, and that all questions touching the temporary right of individuals to work in particular localities, of which they were in actual possession, should be left to the decision of the local judicial authorities. I cannot close my remarks on this subject without again calling the attention of government to the importance of establishing a mint in California at the earliest moment. This measure is called for by every consideration of natural policy and of justice to the mercantile mining population of California. General Kearny, during his administration of affairs in this country, appointed, by virtue of his authority as governor of California, two sub-Indian agents, who have ever since been continued in office, and their services found of great utility in preserving harmony among the wild tribes, and in regulating their inter course with the whites. They have been paid from the " civil fund" very moderate salaries, which will be continued until arri vals of agents regularly appointed by the general government. Notwithstanding every effort on the part of those agents and of the officers of the army here, it has not been possible at all times to prevent aggression on the part of the whites, or to restrain the Indians from avenging these injuries in their own way. In the month of April last, the agent in the Sacra mento valley reported that a body of Oregonians and 442 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. mountaineers had committed most horrible barbarities on the defenceless Indians in that vicinity. Those cruel and inhuman proceedings, added, per haps, to the execution of a number of chiefs some year and a half since by a military force sent into the San Joaquin valley by my predecessor, (the facts of which were reported to Washington at the time,) have neces sarily produced a hostile feeling on the part of the natives, and several small parties of whites, who, in their pursuit of gold, ventured too far into the Indian country, have been killed. My correspondence with the Indian agents and military officers established in the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys will inform you of the measures taken to prevent a repetition of these difficulties. > I would respectfully recommend that at least three sub-Indian agents be appointed for this country, and stationed in the valleys of the Sacramento and San Joaquin. These agents should receive ample pay in order to enable them to defray the expenses of living in that part of the country, and should be men of the highest moral character ; for otherwise they would not resist the temptation to engage in illicit trade with the natives, or to employ them for the individual benefit of the agents in washing for gold. The election called by me for the 1st instant was held on that day, and has been attended with the most happy results. Every district has elected its local officers, and appointed delegates to meet in general convention at this place on the 1st proximo, to form a State Con stitution or plan of territorial government, which will be submitted to the people for their ratification, and HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 443 transmitted to Washington for the action of Con gress. Most of the local and judicial officers named in my proclamation of the 3d of June, have already entered upon their duties, and the interest which was taken by the people in every part of the country in this election, and the zeal manifested by those elected and appointed to office, afford strong hopes that the exist ing government will be able to preserve order and secure the administration of justice until a new one shall be put into regular and successful operation. In my former despatch I mentioned that the civil officers of the existing government would be paid their regular salaries from the "civil funds," which had been formed, under the direction of the governor of California, mainly out of the proceeds of the temporary custom-houses established by my predecessors on this coast. v It will also be necessary to use a portion of this fund in the immediate construction of jails for the security of civil prisoners. The want of such jails has already led to the most serious inconveniencies ; prisoners have so frequently effected their escape, that, on several occasions, the people have risen in masses and executed criminals immediately after trial, and without waiting for the due fulfilment of all the requisitions of the laws. In many cases it has been found necessary to confine civil prisoners on board vessels of war, and in the guard-houses of the garrison ; but in towns, at a dis tance from the coast and the military posts, the diffi culty of retaining prisoners in custody has led, in some instances, to immediate and summary executions. This evil calls for an immediate remedy, which will 444 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. be afforded, so far as the means at my disposal will admit. I beg leave, in this place, to add a few remarks on the use which has been, and will continue to be, made of this "civil fund." In the instructions from Washington to General Kearny, in 1846, for his guidance in California, the establishment of port regulations on this coast was assigned to the commander of the Pacific squadron, while it was said " the appointment of temporary col lectors at the several ports appertains to the civil governor of the province." It was also directed that the duties at the custom houses be used for the support of the necessary officers of the civil government. This division of duties, and this disposition of the proceeds of the customs were continued during the whole war. On the receipt of the Treasury Department regu lations respecting the collection of military contri butions in Mexico, officers of the army and navy were made collectors at some of the ports, but at others the civil collectors appointed by the Governor of California were retained. At the close of the war, Governor Mason, for rea sons already communicated, determined to continue the collection of revenue in the country, on the au thority which had previously been- given to him, until Congress should act in the matter, or orders to the contrary be received from Washington. He, there fore, as governor of California, again appointed civil collectors in the ports where military officers had tem porarily performed those duties, and collected the customs on all foreign goods, in accordance with the provisions of the tariff of 1846, while the commander HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 445 of the Pacific squadron continued tho direction of all matters relating to port regulations. A double necessity impelled the governor to this course. The country, was in pressing need of these foreign goods, and Congress had established no port of entry on this coast. The want of a more complete organization of the existing civil government was daily increasing, and, as Congress had made no provisions for supporting a government in this country, it was absolutely necessary to create a fund for that purpose from the duties col lected on these foreign goods. It is true that there were no laws authorizing the collection of these duties ; but at the same time the laws forbade the landing of the goods till the duties were paid. Gov ernor Mason, therefore, had no alternative but to pursue the course which he adopted. He immediately communicated to Washington his action in the case ; and as the receipt of his despatch was acknowledged without any dissent being expressed, it must be pre sumed that his course met the approbation of the government. When I assumed command in this country as civil governor, I was directed to receive these communications and instructions from Governor Mason, for my guidance in the administration of the civil affairs of this Territory. I have accordingly continued the collection of the revenue, and added the proceeds to the " civil fund," using that fund for the necessary expenses of the civil government. The expenses of employing civil officers in this country are very great ; and as I have no authority to lay taxes, this fund forms my only means of carrying on the government. The necessity of employing these officers, and of paying them the full salaries authorized by law under the existing state of affairs, is too ol>- 446 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. vious to require comment. I have pledged myself to pay these salaries from the "civil fund," unless for bidden to do so by direct orders from Washington ; and that pledge will be fulfilled. This " civil fund" was commenced in the early part of 1847, and has been formed and used in the manner pointed out in the early instructions to the governor of the Terri tory. This money has been collected and disbursed by the " Governor of California" and by those ap pointed by him in virtue of his office. He is, there fore, the person responsible for this money, both to the government and to the parties from whom it is collected, and it can be expended only on his orders. None of the military departments of the army, nor any army officer simply in virtue of his commission, can have any control, direct or indirect, over it. It is true that some of this money has, from time to time, as the wants of the service required, been transferred to the different military departments ; but this transfer was in the form of a loan, and the money so trans ferred will be returned to the " civil fund" as soon as arrangements can be made for that purpose. The in creased expenditures for the support ef the existing government will soon render the restoration absolutely necessary ; especially as the transfer of the custom houses to the regular collectors appointed by the general government, will now cut off all further means of supplying the civil treasury. These collectors have not yet arrived, but are daily expected. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, BENNET RILEY, Brevet Brig. Gen. U. S. Army, and Governor of California. Major-General R. JONES, Adjutant-General of the Army, Washington,!). 0. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 447 The following official despatch of General Persifor F. Smith, contains an opinion of the position of San Francisco totally different from that of the numerous California tourists. It is a valuable opinion, never theless, and led to the selection of the town of Bcnicia, on the Straits of Karquinez, as a military and naval station. HEADQUARTERS THIRD DIVISION, San Francisco, April 5, 1849. GENERAL : — Since my last communication no troops have arrived to change the strength of the force here ; but the steam transport Edith arrived on the 21st of March, and reports that the transports Iowa and Massachusetts, the former having General Riley with a part of the 2d infantry, and the latter having the command of artillery for Oregon on board, left Val paraiso about the 8th of February. The former is expected here every day, and the Edith is held in readiness to convey the troops south to the position they are to occupy. There will be great difficulty in establishing and maintaining a post at the mouth of the Gila, until more knowledge is acquired of the naviga tion of the head of the gulf of California and the lower part of the Colorado. Transportation by land from San Diego is impossible for large quantities of stores. In the gulf, the winds blow in the winter almost invariably from the northward ; and in the summer, when they come occasionally from southward, it is in violent gales, with severe squalls and thun der, rendering it very dangerous to be in the gulf then. In other words, it is always difficult to 448 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. rim up the gulf, but almost always easy to run south. These circumstances render the employment of steam vessels very advantageous. If the navigation of the gulf permits the Edith to be used, she will answer, having both sails and steam. If she draws too much water, others, of lighter draught could be procured. I mention this now, as the boundary commission will commence their labors on this end of the line, and will be on the Gila next season. I should have ob served that the Colorado is supposed to be navigable only for boats drawing three or four feet. I see no reason for posting troops on any other point out of reach of the ports on the Pacific. The Indians in the interior do not make it necessary, and it would be useless to place them near the mines to maintain order there. Nothing but the establishment of a regular civil government, to be carried on by those most interested in the existence of good order, will answer that end. Such detachments as go to the southern part of the Territory will accordingly be placed, as heretofore mentioned, in healthy arid convenient positions, and those on this bay at such points as will combine good climate, convenience of supply, and facility of move ment. I propose, when such a point is found, to have removed all the public stores there, both from this place and Monterey, leaving the heavy ordnance and stores. The town of San Francisco is no way fitted for military or commercial purposes; there is no harbor, a bad landing-place, bad water, no supplies of pro visions, an inclement climate, and it is cut off from the rest of the country, except by a long circuit around the southern extremity of the bay. In time HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 449 of war, enemies' troops could be landed for many miles south of the entrance of the bay on the sea beach, and thus cut it off by a short line across the peninsula on which it stands. There are points on the bay, more inland, having good harbors and land ings, good water, and open to the whole country in rear, and accessible without difficulty to ships of the largest class. One of these should be the point at which the future depots should be established ; and I propose to go to-morrow in the Edith, in company with Commodore Jones and other officers of the army and navy, to examine tbe straits of Karquinez, said to combine most advantages. I hope to return and report the result of our examination before the next mail boat leaves, (on Monday, 9th,) but at any rate by the succeeding boat, a few days afterwards. I hope that in fixing the port of entry, capital, or other public places, the law will leave to the President the selection; otherwise, private interests already involved in speculation here, will, by misrepresenta tion, lead to a very bad choice. If Congress has not provided by law for the govern ment of this Territory, or its admission as a State, I would be very glad that the government would official ly promulgate its views as to the civil authority now exercised here. Some important questions of law, involving both life and property, are now depending ; and judges and jurors, without experience in these difficult questions, are called upon to act under great responsibility. It appears to be the opinion of merchants in many of the ports of the Pacific — and they allege in sup port of it the advice of some of our consuls — that in virtue of the circular of the Secretary of the Treasury 38* 450 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. of October 30; as the Treasury Department could not collect duties on imports in California, their goods, though dutiable, could be imported without paying duty. I have held that this was not the construction proper to be given to the circular, but only that the law had not provided the means of collecting duties here, that law being still in force which prohibits cer tain goods being introduced into the United States, unless they pay duties as prescribed ; that conse quently no dutiable goods can be landed in California unless they shall have paid their duties elsewhere — the effect of which would be, that they could not be ad mitted at all from foreign ports. Under the circumstances, which showed a very hard case, I thought it proper that the parties should be allowed to deposit the amount of duties and land the goods ; but, lest this should be construed as giving them a right for the future, and as the president may think proper to put an end to this indulgence, I have addressed a circular to all our consuls on these seas, warning them of this possibility — a copy of which is inclosed. I was directed, when coming here, by the Secretary of War, to do all I could to facilitate the arrival of the civil officers of government in Oregon, as the public service required their presence there. The steamer in which we came here could go no farther north, and there was no possible way of those gentle men getting there, except on a small vessel about sail ing, on which there were no accommodations. Commodore Jones kindly sent carpenters from the fleet to put up some berths, and on General Adair's (the collector's) representation, that no bedding could be procured, I directed the quartermaster to issue him HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 451 the necessary number of blankets for the voyage, and take his receipt for them. I respectfully ask that this may be approved, and the amount charged to General Adair. The quartermaster could not tell him the price of the blankets when he took them. As the rainy season has ended, people are again repairing to the mines. New discoveries farther south are said to have been made ; and it is now pretty certain that the whole slope of the Sierra Ne vada, comprised within the head waters of the San Joaquin to the south and those of the Sacramento to the north, contains gold. These two rivers, forming, as it were, a bracket, join to enter the bay of San Francisco ; and their tributaries from the east, in their beds, expose the deposits of gold as they descend from the mountains. It is on the banks and branches of these streams that adventurers are now at work ; but some excavations elsewhere, to a depth equal to that worn by the creeks, have disclosed quantities simi lar to those most generally found. There appears to be a line parallel to the summit of the main ridge, and some distance down the slope, at which the pro duct of gold is at its maximum ; but whether this be from the quantity deposited, or from the different position, as relates to the surface, or from the diffi culty of working it, I have not the means of knowing. The gold is found in small particles : the largest I have seen, but such are rare, weighs seventy-one ounces troy. The appearance invariably is as though it had been spurted up when melted through crevices and fissures in drops, which have often the form of the leaves and gravel on which they have fallen. I speak of this as an appearance, not as a theory or hypothesis. The extent ascertained within which gold is thus found is 452 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. at least four hundred miles long by forty wide ; in al most every part of which, where the surface is de pressed by the beds of rivers, gold has been obtained without digging more than ten feet below the surface, and very seldom that much. It is impossible to furnish any grounds for estima ting the number of people engaged in mining, or the amount they have produced. Persons engaged in trading with the miners say they amount to about ten thousand, but I cannot say with what reason. They can better judge of the amount produced, wThich the lowest estimate places at $4,000,000. More than three thousand persons have been added to the miners up to this time, — chiefly from Mexico and South America. When the mines were first discovered, all the ports of South America on the Pacific, and of the Sand wich islands, sent the merchandise collected and stored there to be sold here. They realized enormous profits, before any competition from our eastern States could meet them ; and these goods were generally owned by European houses, who thus became possessed of the first fruits of the mines, which were shipped to Eu rope on their account; and it is thus that so little gold has reached the United States. When the merchandise now on its way from our At lantic States arrives, and is sold, the current will set that way ; but the profits will be much diminished by competition, and still more by the enormous expenses here for labor, storage, &c. These are almost incredi ble ; the ordinary wages for the poorest laborer is $6 per day ; many receive $10. The extent and richness of the gold region have not been exaggerated ; and the exorbitant prices paid HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 453 for labor, rent, and subsistence, have hardly been fully set forth. But all the estimates of the amount actually produced are but mere suppositions, which may surpass or may fall short of the truth. I have already directed that the men to whom their commanding officers may give short leaves of absence may be employed by the quartermasters at the usual rates here. This will be an encouragement to the men and an advantage to the public service, as labor is hard to get. But I doubt the propriety of yielding to the current of gold-seeking, and allowing large bodies of the men to go to the mines. It may be permitted to reward good conduct, as any other indul gence is; but to make it general, would be either to acknowledge the right of the men to modify their obligations as they please, or to confess our inability to enforce their fulfilment. For the sake of principle and preciseness, it would be better to adhere to what is right now, though the effect here in this particular instance would be the desertion of the men. I am, with respect, your obedient servant, PERSIFOR F. SMITH, Brevet Major- General, commanding 3d Division, Brigadier-General R. JONES, Adjutant- General* 31 464 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. APPENDIX F. / The following despatch contains instructions to Gen eral Kearny concerning the conquest of California, contained in a despatch from the Secretary of War, marked confidential. But a portion of these instruc tions were carried out, in consequence of the antici pation of the conquest by Commodore Stockton and Colonel Fremont. [Confidential] WAR DEPARTMENT, Washington, June 3, 1846. SIR : I herewith send you a copy of my letter to the governor of Missouri for an additional force of one thousand mounted men. The object of thus adding to the force under your command is not, as you will perceive, fully set forth in that letter, for the reason that it is deemed prudent that it should not, at this time, become a matter of public notoriety; but to you it is proper and neces sary that it should be stated. It has been decided by the President to be of the greatest importance in the pending war with Mexico to ^take the earliest possession of Upper California. An expedition with that view is hereby ordered, and you are designated to command it. To enable you to be in sufficient force to conduct it successfully, this additional force of a thousand mounted men has been provided, to follow you in the direction of Santa Fe, to be under your orders or the officer you may leave in command at Santa Fe. It cannot be determined how far this additional force will be behind that designed for the Santa Fe HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 455 expedition, but it will not probably be more than a few weeks. When you arrive at Santa Fe with the force already called, and shall have taken possession: of it, you may find yourselves in a condition to garri son it with a small part of your command (as the additional force will soon be at that place), and with the remainder press forward to California. In that case you will make such arrangements as to being followed by the reinforcement before mentioned, as in your judgment may be deemed safe and prudent. I need not say to you that in case you conquer Santa Fe, (and with it will be included the department or state of New Mexico), it will be important to provide for retaining safe possession of it. Should you deem it prudent to have still more troops for the accom plishment of the objects herein designated, you will lose no time in communicating your opinion on that point, and all others connected with the enterprise, to this department. Indeed, you are hereby authorized to make a direct requisition for it upon the governor of Missouri. It is known that a large body of Mormon emigrants are en route to California for the purpose of settling in that country. You are desired to use all proper means to have a good understanding with them, to the end that the United States may have their co operation in taking possession of and holding that country. It has been suggested here that many of these Mormons would willingly enter into the service of the United States, and aid us in our expedition against California. You are hereby authorized to muster into service such as can be induced to volun teer ; not, however, to a number exceeding one-third of your entire force. Should they enter the service 456 HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. they will be paid as other volunteers, and you can allow them to designate, so far as it can be properly done, the persons to act as officers thereof. It is under stood that a considerable number of American citizens are now settled on the Sacramento River, near Suiter's establishment, called " Nueva Helvetia," who are well disposed towards the United States. Should you, on your arrival in the country, find this to be the true state of things there, you are authorized to organize and receive into the service of the United States such portion of these citizens as you may think useful to aid you to hold the possession of the coun try. You will in that case allow them, so far as you shall judge proper, to select their own offi cers. A large discretionary power is invested in you in regard to these matters, as well as to all others, in relation to the expeditions confided to your command. The choice of routes by which you will enter Cali fornia will be left to your better knowledge and ampler means of getting accurate information. We are assured that a southern route (called the caravan route, by which the wild horses are brought from that country into New Mexico) is practicable, and it is suggested as not improbable that it can be passed over in the winter months, or at least late in autumn. It is hoped that this information may prove to be correct. In regard to the routes, the practicability of pro curing needful supplies for men and animals, and transporting baggage, is a point to be well considered. Should the President be disappointed in his cherished hope that you will be able to reach the interior of Upper California before winter, you are then desired HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 457 to make the best arrangement you can for sustaining your forces during the winter, and for an early move ment in the spring. Though it is very desirable that the expedition should reach California this season, (and the President does not doubt you will make every possible effort to accomplish this object), yet if, in your judgment, it cannot be undertaken with a reasonable prospect of success, you will defer it, as above suggested, until spring. You are left unembarrassed by any specific directions in this matter. It is expected that the naval forces of the United States which are now, or will soon be in the Pacific, will be in possession of all the towns on the seacoast, and will co-operate with you in the conquest of Cali fornia. Arms, ordnance, munitions of war, and pro visions to be used in that country, will be sent by sea to our squadron in the Pacific for the use of the land forces. Should you conquer and take possession of New Mexico and Upper California, or considerable places in either, you will establish temporary civil govern ments therein — abolishing all arbitrary restrictions that may exist, so far as it may be done with safety. In performing this duty, it would be wise and prudent to continue in their employment all such of the exist ing officers as are known to be friendly to the United States, and will take the oath of allegiance to them. The duties at the custom-house ought at once to be reduced to such a rate as may be barely sufficient to maintain the necessary officers, without yielding any revenue to the government. You may assure the people of those provinces, that it is the wish and de sign of the United States to provide for them a free 39 458 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. government with the least possible delay, similar to that which exists in our territories. They will then be called on to exercise the rights of freemen in electing their own representatives to the territorial legislature. It is foreseen that what relates to the civil government will be a difficult and unpleasant part of your duty, and much must necessarily be left to your own discretion. In your whole conduct you will act in such a manner as best to conciliate the in habitants and render them friendly to the United States. It is desirable that the usual trade between the citizens of the United States and the Mexican pro vinces should be continued, as far as practicable, under the changed condition of things between the two countries. In consequence of extending your expedition into California, it may be proper that you should increase your supply for goods to be distributed as presents to the Indians. The United States super intendent of Indian affairs at St. Louis will, aid you in procuring these goods. You will be furnished with a proclamation in the Spanish language, to be issued by you and circulated among the Mexican people on your entering into or approaching their country. You will use your utmost endeavors to have the pledges and promises therein contained carried out to the utmost extent. I am directed by the President to say that the rank of brevet brigadier-general will be conferred on you as soon as you commence your movement towards California, and sent round to you by sea or over the country, or to the care of the commandant of our squadron in the Pacific. In that way cannon, arms, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 459 ammunition, and supplies for the land forces will be sent to you. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, W. L. MARCY, Secretary of War. Colonel S. W. KEARNY. Fort Leavenworthy Missouri. APPENDIX G. The particulars of the conquest of tipper Cali fornia, as well as the suppression of the insurrections, we have already given in substance as they are in the despatches of General Kearny and Commodore Stock ton. But we have said nothing of the transactions in the Peninsula, as that afterwards was surrendered to Mexico. All that is interesting in the conquest of Lower California, will be found in the following despatches from the commander of the New York regiment of volunteers, which with a number of marines were the only troops employed in that quar ter. We premise, that, after the United States marines had taken San Jose', the natives rose, and they were reduced to the necessity of taking refuge in an old fort, or cuartel, in the town. BARRACKS, LOWER CALIFORNIA, San Jose, February 20, 1848. SIR: I continue my report from the 22d ultimo, from which time my force consisted of twenty-seven marines and fifteen seamen, of whom five were on the sick report, besides some twenty volunteers, Califor- nians, who at least served to swell the numbers. From 460 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. that date the enemy were continually in sight of us, intercepting all communication with the interior, and driving off all the cattle from the neighborhood. A party of our men who went out to endeavor to obtain cattle, were driven in and narrowly escaped being cut off. We succeeded in obtaining a few cows, however, which were very necessary to us in the reduced state of our provisions, as, in addition to our garrison, we were obliged, in humanity, to sustain some fifty women and children of the poor, who sought our protection in the greatest distress. I found it necessary, as soon as our fresh be-ef was consumed, to put all hands on half allowance of salt provisions. We had no bread. On the 4th of February, the enemy closed around us more, and commenced firing upon all who showed themselves at our port-holes, or above the parapets. On the morning of the 6th the enemy ap peared to be a little scattered, a considerable force being seen riding about some distance from the town, and at the same time a strong party of them posted at the lower end of the street were keeping up an annoying fire upon us. I judged this a favorable opportunity to make a sortie upon them, and taking twenty-five men with me, closed with them and dis lodged them, driving them into the hills without the loss of a man on our part, and returned to the cuartel. On the morning of the 7th it was reported to me that the enemy had broken into the houses on the main street, and there was some property exposed which might be secured. I took a party of men and went down and brought up a number of articles belonging to the Californians, who were in the cuartel ; some distant firing took place, but no injury was sustained. On the same day, hearing there were some stores of HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 461 rice and tobacco in a house some three hundred yards down the main street, I determined upon an effort to obtain them, and sallied out with thirty men : these were immediately fired upon from several different quarters, and some fighting ensued, resulting in the death of one of my volunteers — --shot through the heart. We charged down the end of the street, and drove the enemy to the cover of a cornfield at the outside of the town, where they were considerably reinforced, and recommenced a hot fire ; but we were enabled to save a part of the articles which we were in search of, though we found that the enemy had an ticipated us in this object, having forced the building from the rear. On the afternoon of the following day, Ritchie's schooner, having provisions for us from La Paz, came in sight and anchored, but a canoe which was enticed toward the shore by a white fiag displayed by the enemy, was fired upon, and the schooner immediately got under way. On the 10th the enemy had entire possession of the town : they had perforated with port-holes all the ad jacent houses and walls, occupying the church, and, hoisting their flag on Galindo's house, ninety yards dis tant, held a high and commanding position, which ex posed our back yard and the kitchen to a raking fire, which from this time forth was almost incessant from all quarters upon us, the least exposure of person creat ing a target for fifty simultaneous shots. The enemy appeared to have some excellent rifles, among other arms ; and some of them proved themselves tolerably sharp shooters, sending their balls continually through our port-holes. On the llth the fire was warm, but on our .part it was rarely that we could get a sight of them. In the afternoon of this day we had to lament 39* 462 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. the death of Passed Midshipman McLanahan, attached to the United States ship Gyane ; a ball striking him in the right side of the neck, a little below the thyroid cartilage, lodged in the left shoulder. He died in about two hours. He was a young officer of great promise, energetic, of much forethought for his age, and brave to temerity. All lamented his untimely fate, and all bear willing testimony to his worth. On the morning of the 12th, at daylight, we dis covered that the enemy had thrown up a breastwork upon the sand, about one hundred and fifty yards to the north-east of the cuartel, and entirely command ing our watering place. We fired several round shot at it, with little effect. We succeeded in getting in being in strong force, and kept a close watch upon us. Their force was over three hundred, speaking within bounds. I immediately commenced digging a well in the rear of Mott's house, which is the lowest ground. I found that we had to go through rock, and judged we should have to dig about twenty feet. I thought it imprudent to blast, as the enemy, suspecting our intention, would throw every obstacle in our way. The men worked cheerfully on this and the succeeding day against all difficulties. Our situation was becom- •/ o ing now an imminently critical one, having with the greatest economy but four days' water. On the 14th we continued digging for water. We found that the enemy had thrown up a second breastwork more to the westward, giving them a cross-fire upon our water ing place : there was a continual fire kept up upon the cuartel during the day. At three o'clock, 30 minutes P. M., a sail was reported in sight, which proved to be the United Ship Cyane. She anchored after sun- HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 463 down. It was of course a joyful sight to us to see friends so near; but I was apprehensive that they •could render us but little assistance, the enemy being so vastly superior in numbers. The enemy continued their firing upon us during the night. On the 15th at day-light, we became aware that the Cyane was landing men. They soon commenced their advance, which for a few moments was opposed only by a scattering fire ; then the enemy opened upon them in earnest. They had concentrated nearly their entire force near San Vincente. We saw the flash of musketry through all the hills above the village. There was the odds of three to one against our friends. Steadily they came on, giving back the enemy's fire as they advanced. There was still a party of the enemy occupying the town, firing upon us. I took thirty men, and sallied out upon them, drove them from cover, killed one and wounded several of them, and marched out to join the Cyane's men, who, with Captain Dupont at their head, had now drawn quite near to us. There were small detached parties of the enemy still hover ing about them, and firing at them, but the main body of the enemy had been broken, and retired to " Las Animas," distant two miles. The march of the Cyane's men to our relief, through an enemy so vastly their superior in numbers, well mounted and possess ing every advantage in knowledge of the ground, was certainly an intrepid exploit, as creditably performed as it was skilfully and boldly planned, and reflects the greatest honor on all concerned. It resulted most fortunately for us in our harassed situation. They had but four wounded; this cannot be termed any thing but the most remarkably good luck, considering the severe fire that this heroic little band were ex- 464 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. posed to. The loss of the enemy we have not posi tively ascertained: we hear of thirteen killed, with certainty, and general report says thirty-five ; wounded not known. Of the total loss of the enemy in their attack upon the cuartel, I cannot speak with certainty; we have found several graves, and know of a number wounded, one of whom we have in the cuartel a prisoner. I suppose their total loss to be not far from fifteen killed, and many wounded ; I am sure it could not be les$ than this. Our own total loss was three killed and four slightly wounded. After the death of Passed Midshipman McLanahan, there remained but one officer to my assistance, Passed Midshipman George A. Stevens, to whom, for his coolness and indefatigable zeal at a time when so much devolved upon him, I am most happy to accord the highest credit; and at the same time I must honorably mention the conduct of a volunteer, Eu gene Gillespie, Esq., who, although suffering from ill ness, never deserted his post, and was with me in the sortie of the 7th. The non-commissioned officers and men went through privation, unceasing watchfulness, and danger, without a murmur. I cannot express too highly my satisfaction in their conduct. Captain Dupont immediately upon his arrival here, becoming aware of our situation as regards provisions, took mea sures for our supply. The day after the battle of San Vincente he despatched a train, which brought us by hand (the enemy having driven off all the mules and horses) a quantity of stores and articles of which we stood most in need, among the rest, bread, and has since been unceasing in his exertions for our relief. I cannot too earnestly express the obligations which we are under HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 465 for the prompt and efficient assistance which Captain Dupont, his officers, and crew have rendered us. I am, sir, respectfully, your obedient servant, CHAS. HEYWOOD. Lieutenant U. S. Navy, conig., San Jose. Lieut. Col. HENRY S. BURTON, U. S. Army, comg. troops in Lower California. W. T. SHERMAN, First Lieutenant Sd Artillery, A. A. A. General. H. UNITED STATES BARRACKS, La Paz, California, April 13, 1848. SIR : I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of March 1, 1848, and to report the arrival of the army storeship " Isabella" at this place on the 22d of March, 1848, with Captain Naglee's company (D) New York volunteers, and one hundred and fourteen recruits for the detachment of New York volunteers stationed at this place. The rescue of the prisoners of war on the 15th ultimo caused great excitement among the enemy, and tended very much to disorganize their forces, and the import ant arrival of the- reinforcements to my command determined me to take the field as soon as possible ; accordingly, I left this place on the morning of the 26th instant with two hundred and seventeen officers and men; Lieutenant Halleck, United States en gineers, acting chief of staff, and Passed Midshipman Duncan, United States navy, temporarily attached to the mounted portion of Captain Naglee's command. 466 HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. The afternoon of the 27th, a party of fifteen men captured, in San Antonio, Pineda, the commander of the Mexican forces, with his secretary, Serrano. The morning of the 29th, having received informa tion that the enemy had concentrated their forces in Todos Santos, we pressed on with all speed, fearing they might evade us, by retreating towards Magdalena Bay. The morning of the 30th, about ten o'clock, having received accurate information respecting the e*hemy, Captain Naglee with forty-five mounted men was despatched to intercept the road leading from Todos Santos to Magdalena Bay, and, if practicable, to attack the enemy in the rear at the same time our main body made its attack in front. The road leading from Todos Santos to La Paz, for some distance before reaching the first named place, passes through a dense growth of chaparral, (very favorable for an ambush), and in this the enemy made their arrangements to receive us. We left the road about five miles from Todos Santos and marched along a ridge of high land on the north side of the river, having full view of the enemy's operations. They then took possession of a commanding hill directly in our route, between three and four miles from Todos Santos, with their Indians in front. Com panies A and B, under the direction of Lieutenant Halleck, were deployed as skirmishers in such a man ner as to expose the enemy to a cross-fire. The enemy opened their fire at long distance, but our force ad vanced steadily, reserving their fire until within good musket range, when it was delivered with great effect, and the enemy retreated very rapidly, after a short but sharp engagement. At this time, Captain Naglee being near Todos Santos, and hearing the firing, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 46T attacked the enemy in rear, and after a severe action completed their dispersion. Our men and horses being too much fatigued by their long march to pursue the scattered enemy, we marched on to Todos San tos. The loss of the enemy in this engagement cannot be ascertained with any accuracy ; we know of ten killed and eight wounded. Our loss was nothing ; one man and the horse of Acting Lieutenant Scott were slightly wounded, the enemy, as usual, firing too high. Our officers and men fully sustained the character they won on the 16th and 27th of November last. My warmest thanks are due to Lieutenant Halleck, for his assistance as chief of staff, and I present him particularly to the notice of the colonel commanding, for the able manner in which he led on the attack on the 30th ultimo. Captain Naglee also deserves particular notice for the energetic and successful manner in which he ful filled his instructions. On the 31st ultimo, Captain Naglee, with fifty mounted men of his company, was ordered to pursue the enemy in the direction of Magdalena Bay. He returned to La Paz on the 12th instant, having pur sued the enemy very closely, capturing five prisoners and some arms. Lieutenant Halleck started for San Jose' with a party of mounted men, consisting of one officer and twenty-five non-commissioned officers and privates, on the 5th instant, for the purpose of communicating with Captain Dupont, commanding United States sloop-of-war Cyane. He returned here on the llth instant, having captured ten prisoners on his march, and taken a number of arms. 468 HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. From him I learn that the naval force at San Jose* have thirty odd prisoners, and among others " Mau- ricio Castro," the self-styled political chief of Lower California. Lieutenant Selden, with a party from the Cyane, made a most opportune march on Santiago, where he captured a number of the enemy who had fled from the field of Todos Santos. Castro, who commanded the enemy's forces in the action of the 30th, was arrested near Maria Flores by the civil authorities and delivered up to Lieutenant Selden. During the stay of our main body at Todos Santos fourteen prisoners were captured; among them two eons of the reverend padre Gabriel Gonzales, officers of the Mexican forces. We left Todos Santos on the 5th instant, and arrived at this place on the 7th. The result of this short campaign has been the complete defeat and dispersion of the enemy's forces. We have captured their chief and six officers, and one hundred and three non-commissioned officers and privates ; and others are daily presenting themselves to the civil authorities in different parts of the country. The captured arms have been given to those ran- cheros known to be friendly to the interests of the United States, for their protection. I am, sir, with much respect, your obedient servant, HENRY S. BURTON, Lieutenant Colonel New York Volunteers. Lieutenant W. T. SHERMAN, Act. Ass. Adjt. Gen. Tenth Mil Dep. W. T. SHERMAN, First Lieut. 3d Artillery A. A. A. G-eneral. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 469 APPENDIX I. The following despatch from Governor Mason, gives an account of the state of affairs in Upper California, in October, 1847 : HEADQUARTERS TENTH MILITARY DEPARTMENT, Monterey, California, October 7, 1847. SIR : I returned from San Francisco yesterday, and found here Mr. Toler, with despatches from Washing ton, the receipt of which I have the honor to acknow ledge. I am also informed by Commodore Shubrick that the sloop-of-war Preble is ready to sail for Panama, with Passed Midshipman Wilson as bearer of despatches for the United States. I therefore avail myself of the opportunity to send you my letter of the 18th of September, with its several packages, and now have to communicate the result of my visit to San Francisco. I found the town flourishing and prosperous, with a busy, industrious population of Americans, and refer you to the copies of my military correspondence for the steps adopted to give them a good town government. The Bay of San Francisco, you are well aware, is a spacious, elegant harbor, susceptible of the most per fect defence ; but as yet nothing has been done towards fortifying it, or even placing any of the heavy guns in position at the old fort. It is found almost impossible to get much work out of the volunteers ; and all that I can now expect of the two companies of Major Hardie's command will be to improve their quarters at the old presidio. This they are at present engaged upon, using lumber made at the horse saw mill, under direction of the assistant quartermaster, 40 32 470 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Captain Folsom. All this labor is done by the volun teers, so that the improvements will be macle at very little expense to the government. The price of lum ber at San Francisco is $50 per M. ; but Captain Folsom says that he has it sawed and delivered, by the labor of the volunteers and his own machinery, at about $16. The mill is placed in the timber known as the Red Woods, near the mission of San Rafael, on the west and north sides of the bay, where any amount can be had. If the government design to erect per manent structures to any extent in this country, it would be advisable to send out a steam engine, with all the necessary frames and iron-work to adapt it to immediate use in connexion with the saw and grist mills now in possession of the quartermaster's depart ment here. The site at present selected by Captain Folsom is well adapted, as easy water communication is had with the San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers as well as the parts of the country south of San Francisco. At San Francisco I found all the powder, arms, accoutrements, and perishable ordnance property well stored in a building prepared for the purpose at the presidio barracks ; but the guns, mortars, carriages, shot, and shells are in the town in the open air, pro tected by paint alone. The great difficulty of hauling such articles over the rugged hills between the town and presidio will prevent their being hauled to the latter place this season. I did design to continue my tour of inspection to Sonoma and the Sacramento River, but was recalled by hearing of the arrival of the bearer of despatches at Monterey. When on my way up to San Francisco, I was over taken by Captain Brown, of the Mormon battalion, HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 471 who had arrived from Fort Hall, where he had left his detachment of the battalion, to come to California to report to me in person. He brought a muster-roll of his detachment, with a power of attorney from all its members to draw their pay ; and as the battalion itself had been discharged on the 16th of July, Pay master Rich paid to Captain Brown the money due the detachment up to that date, according to the rank they bore upon the muster-rolls upon which the batta lion had been mustered out of service. Captain Brown started immediately for Fort Hall, at which place and in the valley of Bear River he said the whole Mormon emigration intended to pass the winter. He reported that he had met Captain Hunt, late of the Mormon battalion, who was on his way to meet the emigrants and bring into the country this winter, if possible, a battalion according to the terms offered in my letter to him of the 16th of August, a copy of which you will find among the military correspondence of the department. In my letter I offered Captain Hunt the command of the battalion with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, with an adjutant; but I find, by the orders lately received, that a battalion of four companies is only entitled to a major arid acting adjutant. I will notify Captain Hunt of this change at as early a moment as I can communicate with him. I am pleased to find by the despatches that in this matter I have antici pated the wish of the, department. Last season there was a great scarcity of provisions on the coast of California ; but when the stores are received that are now on their way, there will be an ample supply for the coming winter. The crops in this country have been very fine .this season, and at 472 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. present wheat is plenty and cheap at San Francisco. Beef is also plenty. Beans can be purchased at the southern ports, and sugar imported from the Sand wich Islands ; but for all other subsistence stores we are dependent upon the South American ports or those of the United States. I have directed Captain Marcy, acting commissary of subsistence at this post, to supply the chief of his department with the market price of all kinds of provisions, with such other facts as may enable his department to act with the proper economy. The want of good clothing for the regulars and volunteers is already felt in California ; and unless a supply has already been despatched, many of the garrisons will be without shoes and proper clothing this winter. The price of such articles here is so exorbitant as to place them beyond the reach of the soldiers. The volunteer clothing brought by Sutler Haight has already been disposed of to citizens and soldiers, and there are no means of his renewing the supply except by sending to the United States. Justice to the soldier demands that he either be comfortably clad by the government, or that it should be within his power to clothe himself on the allowance provided for that purpose by law. I respectfully recommend, if it has not already been done, that a large supply of infantry undress winter clothing be sent immediately to this country, to be distributed, so as to enable each volunteer to purchase for his own immediate use at cost prices. No summer clothing is needed, as the climate is too severe, sum mer and winter. Such articles as good blankets, cloth overcoats, caps, jackets, overalls, stockings, and shoes, with stout shirts and drawers, are the only ones that will ever be needed here. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 473 General orders No. 10, of 1847, promotes Lieute nant Loeser, third artillery, and orders him to join his company. I regret that at this moment his services cannot be spared, and I am compelled to retain him on duty with company F, third artillery, because the absence of Captain Tompkins, the death of Lieutenant Minor, and Lieutenant Sherman being detached as acting assistant adjutant general, has reduced the number of officers of that company to but two — Lieutenants Ord and Loeser. I trust that the two companies of regulars in this country will be kept with a full supply of officers, that an officer, upon being promoted, may be enabled to join the army in the field, and participate in the active operations to which he looks for distinction and experience. Captain H. M. Naglee, seventh New York volun teers, with a strong detachment of his company, is now absent in pursuit of Indians in the valley of the San Joaquin. He has with him Lieutenant Burton's company of California volunteers, which is expected to return to Monterey before the end of this month ; in which case I shall cause it to be mustered out of service, and discharged on the 31st day of October. Again I have to report the death, by sickness, of an officer of my command — Lieutenant C. C. Ander son, seventh New York volunteers, who contracted a fever when on duty at Fort Sacramento, and died in consequence at San Francisco on the 13th of Septem ber. He was buried with military honors by the troops at San Francisco, under direction of Major Hardie. This death reduces the number of officers in Captain Brackett's company, seventh regiment New York volunteers, to one captain and one second lieutenant. Commodore Shubrick will sail for the west coast of 40* 474 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. Mexico from this harbor next week ; and having made application to me, I have directed Lieutenant Halleck, of the engineer corps, to accompany him, and shall give Lieutenant Colonel Burton, in command at La Paz, Lower California, authority to accompany Com modore Shubrick, should the latter design an attack upon any point or points of the west coast of Mexico, with orders, of course, to resume his position at La Paz as soon as the object is accomplished for which his command is desired. NOTE. — Colonel Burton will be directed to leave a sufficient number of men at La Paz to keep the flag flying. It affords me much pleasure to assure the depart ment that the most perfect harmony subsists between the members of the naval and land forces on this coast, and that the most friendly intercourse is kept up between the officers. I have had frequent occasion myself to ask assistance of Commodores Biddle and Shubrick, and my requests have been granted with promptness and politeness ; and in return I have afforded them all the assistance in my power. Our consultations have been frequent and perfectly harmo nious, resulting, I hope, in the advancement of the common cause of our country. I have the honor to be, your most obedient servant, R. B. MASON, Oolonel 1st Dragoons, Commanding. To General R. JONES, Adjutant- General, Washington, D. 0. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 475 APPENDIX J. We have already given the substance of Governor Mason's despatch to the government, giving an ac count of the gold discovery and a visit to the placers. There is, therefore, no necessity for inserting that official document. The appearance in Upper Cali fornia, in July 1848, of Don Pio Pico, the former gov ernor of the territory, gave rise to serious apprehen sions of another insurrection. The despatch of Col. Stephenson, the commander of the garrison at Los Angeles, to Colonel Mason, contains an account of the matter, together with a description of the ex-governor. HEADQUARTERS SOUTHERN MILITARY DISTRICT, Los Angeles, California, July 20, 1848. SIR : By the last mail I informed you of the ar rival of Don Pio Pico in this district. I subsequently learned that he had passed through San Diego with out presenting himself to Captain Shannon, or in any manner reporting his arrival. Immediately after his arrival, rumors reached me of conversations had by him with his countrymen, in which he stated that he had returned with full powers to resume his guberna torial functions, and that he had only to exhibit his cre dentials to you to have the civil government turned over to him. I found the people becoming very much excited, and some rather disposed to be imprudent. I sent for Jose Ant. Carrillo and some others in the town, who were giving currency to these reports, and informed them that I should hold them responsible for any imprudent or indiscreet act of their country men, and that, at the first appearance of any dis respect to the American authorities, I should arrest and confine them in the guard-house. This had the 476 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. effect to check all excitement here ; but as Don Pio removed up the country, the same excitement began to spread among the rancheros. In the mean time, his brother Andreas informed me that he, Don Pio, would come in and report to me in person in a few days, as soon as he had recovered from the fatigue of his journey. On Saturday, the 15th instant, he reached the ranch of an Englishman named Work man, some eighteen miles from here. This man has ever been hostile to the American cause and interest, and is just the man to advise Pico not to come in and report to me. On Sunday and Monday I was advised that many Californians had visited Pico at Workman's, and that the same story had been told them of his having re turned to resume his gubernatorial functions, &c., and also that he should not report to me, but go direct to San Fernando, from whence he would communicate with you. The moment I became satisfied that he intended to adopt this course, I issued an order (copy inclosed) requiring him to report to me immediately in person. I sent my adjutant with a detachment of men to the ranch of Workman to deliver to Don Pio in person a copy of this order, with instructions to bring him in by force, in case he refused or even hesitated to obey. The adjutant returned here at twelve o'clock on Monday with information that the Don had left for San Fernando. I immediately de spatched Lieutenant Davidson with a detachment of dragoons and a copy of the order, with instructions similar to those given Adjutant Bonny castle. About five o'clock on Tuesday morning I received a visit from a gentleman named Reed, living at the mission of San Gabriel, who informed me that Don Pio Pica HISTOKY OP CALIFORNIA. 477 had arrived at his house quite late in the evening of Monday, on his way to San Fernando. Reed inquired if he did not intend reporting to me in person ; he answered in the negative ; when Reed assured him, if he attempted to pass my post without reporting, I would cause him to be arrested, and that he was aware of my being displeased at his passing through San Diego without reporting to the commandant of that post. Don Pio Pico, upon receiving this infor mation, became alarmed, and requested Reed to come in and see me, to say he intended no disrespect, and would come and report at any hour I would name. Reed is a highly respectable man, and has ever been friendly to the American cause ; and I gave him a copy of the order I had issued in regard to Don Pio, requesting him to deliver it, and say to Don Pio, he could come in at any hour he chose, within twenty- four hours. Accordingly about eight P. M., the same evening, the ex-governor came in. He was unaccom panied even by a servant, evidently desiring it should not be known he was in town. I received him kicdly, told him I had no desire to treat him harshly, but that the American authorities must be respected, and if he had not come in I should certainly have arrested him. He informed me that he left Guaynas on the 22d of May, crossed to Mulige, which he left for California on June third, and arrived at San Diego, July sixth. He says that when he left Guaynas nothing had been heard of the action of the Mexican Congress upon the treaty, but it was generally supposed it would be ratified. He says the Mexican government did not answer any of his communications ; and the moment he saw the armistice published in a newspaper, he determined to return home, as he supposed he could 478 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. return with credit, under the stipulations of the armistice. He brings with him no other authority for his return, and says he desires to live peaceably, and attend to his private affairs. He denies ever having said that he came back with powers to resume his gubernatorial functions, and that he rebuked such of his friends as he had seen for their last attempt at a revolution, and advises that they remain quiet and obey the laws, as no part of the people of the con quered Mexican territory have been treated as kindly as the Californians have been by the American au thorities. He thanked me for my personal kindness to his family and countrymen in general, and said if I would permit him he would go to San Fernando, from whence he would answer that part of my order which required a written communication from him. I gave him permission to leave, and offered him an escort, which he thanked me for, but declined. Don Pio Pico is about five feet seven inches high, corpu lent, very dark, with strongly-marked African fea tures ; he is, no doubt, an amiable, kind hearted man, who has ever been the tool of knaves ; he does not appear to possess more intelligence than the rancheros generally do; he can sign his name, but I am in formed he cannot write a connected letter ; hence, as he informed me, he would be compelled to send for his former secretary before he could answer my order or communicate with you, which he advised me he intended doing. I have promised to take charge of and forward any communication he may choose to make you. He left town on Wednesday morning very early, as obscurely as he had entered it ; and those who advised him to assume the bombastic tone he did upon his first arrival, have done him irreparable injury, HISTOKY OF CALIFORNIA. 479 for he is now ridiculed by many who before enter tained a high respect for him. I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obe dient servant, J. D. STEVENSON, Colonel \st New York Regiment, commanding S. M. District. Colonel R. B. MASON, 1st U. Dragoons, Governor of California. P. S. — Since writing the above, I have received the inclosed note from Don Pio Pico, inclosing a commu nication to your excellency. In the note of Don Pio to me, you will perceive that he is no sooner arrived at San Fernando than he claims to have returned to California as its Mexican governor, to carry out the provisions of the armistice. I shall not answer his note until I have heard from you ; but I shall keep an eye on him, and if I find he is preaching sedition, I will bring him in here at short notice. J. D. STEVENSON, Colonel, commanding, W. T. SHERMAN, First Lieutenant Sd Artillery, A. A. A. General* APPENDIX K. On the 13th of April, 1849, Colonel Mason at his own request, was relieved from the post of Governor of California, and Brigadier-General Riley took his place. The despatch of that officer, dated 30th of June, following his assuming the duties of his post, is important, as containing an account of the state of feeling in California, upon the subject of the laws at 480 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. that time in force, and the difficulties with various as semblies elected in the northern part of the terri tories. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT OF CALIFORNIA, Monterey, June 30, 1849. GENERAL : I have the honor to transmit herewith copies of all civil correspondence and papers since the 13th of April last, at which time I relieved Colo nel Mason from his duties as Governor of California. It was (with the advice of Colonel Mason) my in tention, on assuming the direction of civil affairs in this country, to complete the organization of the exist ing government ; at the same time to call a convention for forming a State Constitution, or plan of territorial government, to be submitted to Congress for its appro val. But on further consultation it was deemed best to postpone all action on this subject, until I could ascertain what had been done in Congress. On the first instant I received reliable information by the steamer "Edith" that that body had adjourned with out organizing any territorial government for this country ; and accordingly, on the 3d instant I issued my proclamation to the people of California, defining what was understood to be the legal position of affairs here, and pointing out the course it was deemed ad visable to pursue in order to procure a new political organization better adapted to the character and present condition of the country. The course indi cated in my proclamation will be adopted by the people, almost unanimously, and there is now little or no doubt that the convention will meet on the first of September next and form a State Constitution, to be submitted to Congress in the early part of the coming session. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 481 A few prefer a territorial organization, but I think a majority will be in favor of a State government, so as to avoid all further difficulties respecting the ques tion of slavery. This question will probably be sub mitted, together with the Constitution, to a direct vote of the people, in order that the wishes of the people of California may be clearly and fully expressed. Of course, the Constitution or plan of territorial govern ment formed by this convention can have no legal force till approved by Congress. On the receipt of the treaty of peace with Mexico, doubt was entertained by a portion of the people here respecting what constituted the legal government and laws of the country. A few contended that all government and all laws in California were at an end, and that therefore the people, in their sovereign capacity, might make such government and laws as they should deem proper. Accordingly, in two of the northern districts, local legislative assemblies were organized, and laws enacted for the government of the people of these districts. The members of the Sonoma assembly, however, soon became convinced of their error, and that body was dissolved. But in San Francisco the assembly continued its sessions, making laws, creating and filling offices, imposing and collecting taxes, without the authority and in violation of law, and finally went so far as to abolish the office of alcalde, whose records and papers were seized and forcibly removed from his custody. On receiving official information of these facts, I issued my procla mation of the 4th instant. Since then I have made a personal visit to San Francisco, and find that the more respectable members of the so-called district assembly are convinced of the impropriety of the 41 482 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. course pursued b j that body, and in a very short time I think all the difficulties will be amicably arranged. These difficulties arose in part from a misapprehen sion as to what constituted the legal government of the country, and in part from the unpopularity of the first alcalde of that district, against whom serious charges had been made. Unfortunately, there was at the time no legal tribunal for investigating these charges ; and, there being no other magistrate in that district, I could not, with propriety, remove him from office. A new election, however, will soon be held to supply his place; and on the organization of the "superior court," the charges against him can be properly investigated. The publication of a portion of the instructions received from Washington respecting the government of this country, and the disposition manifested by the authorities here to enforce the existing laws, have done much to remove the erroneous opinions which were for a time entertained by a portion of the people of California. The civil government of this country has been, and will continue to be, administered on the principle laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States, viz: on the transfer of the ceded territory, it has never been held that the relations of the inhabitants with each other undergo any change. Their relations with their former sovereign are dis solved, and new relations are created between them and the government which has acquired their territory. The mere act which transfers their country transfers the allegiance of those who remain in it ; and the law which may be denominated political is necessarily changed, although that which regulates the intercourse and general conduct of individuals remains in force HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 483 until altered by the newly-created power of the State. The treaty is the law of the land, and admits the inhabitants of [California] to the enjoyment of the privileges, rights, and immunities of citizens of the United States. It is unnecessary to inquire whether this is not their condition, independent of stipulation. They do not, however, participate in political power ; they do not share in the government till [California] shall become a State. In the mean time, [California] continues to be a territory of the United States, governed by virtue of that clause of the constitution which empowers Congress to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory and other property belonging to the United States. When we take into consideration the great mass of floating population of the United States and of other countries — people of all nations, kindreds and tongues — which has been suddenly thrown into this country, it must be acknowledged that every thing has, thus far, remained remarkably quiet, and that the amount of crime has been much less than might, under the circumstances, have reasonably been expected. It is to be feared, however, that during the coming winter, when large numbers of the miners collect in the towns, public order may be occasionally disturbed. But it is believed that in the mean time a more complete organi zation of the existing government will be effected, so as to enable the authorities to enforce the laws with greater regularity and efficiency. Rumors have reached me that there is no very amicable feeling existing between the Americans and foreigners in the gold regions, and that the former are disposed to forcibly expel the latter from the placer 484 HISTORY OF CALIFOKNIA. districts. I shall soon visit the valleys of the Sacra mento and San Joaquin, and hope to be able to report upon the true state of affairs there by the August steamer. As Congress has declined passing any laws restricting the working of the placers, I shall not deem myself authorized to interfere in this matter, any further than may be necessary to preserve the public tranquillity. Indeed there is much reason to believe that Congress has pursued the best policy, under the circumstances, in leaving the placers open to all; for it would be exceedingly difficult to enforce any regula tions not absolutely required by the necessity of the case, and it is more than probable that any attempt at this time to rent out the mineral lands, or to tax their products, would involve a great expense, and it is quite possible that such an attempt would lead to very serious difficulties. Of the large numbers who have been attracted to this country by the flattering prospect of sudden wealth, and with the intention of returning to their former homes to enjoy their gains, many foreigners as well as Americans are becoming established in business, and will make California their permanent place of residence. It is therefore well worthy of serious consideration whether the present system may not prove equally beneficial with that of a more exclusive policy. It certainly conduces much towards developing the resources of the country, ex tending its commerce, and rapidly augmenting its wealth and population. As soon as I have made a personal examination of the gold regions, I shall be prepared to .express my views on this subject ; but I cannot omit the present occasion to urge upon the government the importance of establishing a mint in California, with the least possible delay. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 485 Information, not official, has been received, that the revenue laws of the United States have been extended over this country, and that a collector and deputies may soon be expected to take charge of the collection of revenue in -this district. On their arrival, all cus tom-houses and custom-house property will be turned over to them, and the temporary collectors employed by my predecessor and by myself will be discharged. The moneys collected during and since the war, under the direction of the governor of California, and not required for defraying the expenses of the civil govern ment, will be kept as a separate and distinct fund, subject to the disposition of Congress. The grounds upon which this revenue has been collected since the declaration of peace, are fully stated in a letter to the collector of San Francisco, dated the 24th of February last. It may be proper to add, that the course pur sued by my predecessor was rendered absolutely necessary by the peculiar circumstances of the case. The wants of the country rendered it imperative upon him to permit the landing of foreign .goods in this territory ; and had this been done without the collec tion of duties, large amounts of dutiable goods would have been placed in depot on this coast, to the mani fest injury of the revenue and prejudice to our own merchants. The importers have sold their goods at such prices as to cover the duties paid, and still leave them enormous profits ; and to now return these duties to the importers would be a virtual gift, without in any way benefitting the people of California. But, to expend this money in objects of public utility in the country, would confer a lasting benefit upon all. I would therefore recommend that such portions of these moneys as may be left, after defraying the 41* 33 486 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. expenses of the existing civil government, be given to California as a " school fund," to be exclusively devo ted to purposes of education. No difficulty has been experienced in enforcing the tariff of 1846, and the re venue has been collected at a very moderate expense, considering the peculiar circumstances of the times. All officers of the civil government of California will be paid out of the "civil fund" arising from the customs, the salaries fixed by law, and I would recom mend that those officers of the army and navy who have been employed as collectors and receivers of customs in California, both during and since the war, be allowed a fair per centage on the money which they have collected and disbursed. Two and a half per cent, on the amount collected, with the restriction contained in section 2 of the Act of March 3, 1849, is deemed a fair allowance for collecting these customs, and two and a half per cent, on the amount actually expended is deemed ample compensation for keeping and accounting for the same. It would be more just and proper to make the allowance for the actual ex penditures than for receiving and keeping these moneys ; because, if the reversed rule were established, officers who have received large sums, and within a few days transferred them to others, with no other trouble than merely passing receipts, would be entitled to a higher pay than those who have had all the trouble of expending this money in small sums, and in keeping and rendering accounts of these expenditures. As soon as these "civil funds" can be collected from the officers now holding them, it is proposed to place them in the hands of some officer, or other responsible person, who will act as treasurer for the civil government, with a fixed compensation for his HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 487 services. On the arrival of the regular collector and deputies, appointed according to law, a full statement will be made of all the moneys which have been col lected in California, and the papers and accounts con nected with the expenditure of this civil fund will be sent to Washington, as heretofore, in order that all officers who shall receive or expend the same may be held to a strict accountability. I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, B. RILEY, Brevet Brig. Gf-en. U. S. A., and Governor of Cali fornia. Major-General R. JONES, Adjutant G-eneral of the Army, Washington,!). 0. APPENDIX L. Governor Riley took occasion to make an excursion through the gold regions, soon after his affairs with the assemblies were disposed off. A reconnoisance of the valleys of the Sacramento and San Joaquin was made, and particular care given to the matter of es tablishing military posts for defending the miners and others from the attacks of the Indians. After his re turn to Monterey, the following despatch was sent to the headquarters of the United States army. The subject of the Indian troubles receives especial consideration. HEADQUARTERS TENTH MILITARY DEPARTMENT, Monterey, California, August 30, 1849. COLONEL : I found, on my return to this place from a reconnoissance of a portion of the valleys of San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers, general orders No. 1 488 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. from the headquarters of the army ; and, as I cannot have copied in season for transmission by the steamer of the 1st proximo the military correspondence at these headquarters, I respectfully submit, for the in formation of the commander-in-chief, a brief summary of reports heretofore made in relation to military affairs in this department. My attention was directed, on my arrival in this country, to the unparalleled excitement in relation to the mineral regions ; the imminent danger that our troops, as they arrived, would desert to the "placers," and, instead of giving protection to the parties, and aid in the preservation of order and tranquillity ,«would themselves become the very worst element of dis order ; the great extent of Indian frontier to be guarded, and the difficulties then apprehended from the unsettled state of affairs in the mining districts. An attentive consideration of these subjects impressed me with the opinion that the policy most likely to prove advantageous to the service, would be the con centration of all, the troops serving in this department, except the necessary guards for the depots at one or more points in the immediate vicinity of the gold regions, from whence a portion of them might be per mitted to visit the placers for the purpose of working them for their own benefit — the remainder to be held embodied in a proper state of discipline, in readiness for any emergency that might occur. After the ex piration of the furlough of the first class, a second class to be furloughed, and so in succession with the remainder ; the troops stationed at points so distant from the mines, that they could not be furloughed, to *be relieved by exchange with commands that have been more favorably situated. The practice of grant- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 489 ing furloughs, adopted at some of the posts in this country, with the sanction of the former department commander, had succeeded well, and the infor-mation received about the time of my arrival from the south ern part of this department confirmed me in the opinion previously entertained, that the mania for gold- hunting would exist, in its most exaggerated form, at points most remote from the placers. I accordingly, immediately after relieving Colonel Mason in the command of the department, recommended the adop tion of the policy above indicated. It is a matter of regret, that the emergencies of the service have been such that it could not be carried out to the extent re commended ; for the experience of the past four months has convinced me that it is the only course that can be adopted, with reasonable hope of success, until the state of affairs in this country is materially changed. In addition to the mere question of expe diency, Indian difficulties that were then occurring, and the threatening danger of a proximate collision between the different classes at work in the gold re gion, made it highly important that a -strong military force should be established in the immediate vicinity of the mining region. For the disposition of the troops in the department, and the measures taken to prevent desertions, &c., I respectfully refer to department order and special orders forwarded to you by this mail. These furnish you with a history of the operations in the department since my assumption of the command. The present disposition of the troops is the same as indicated in orders No. 16, except that company A, 2d infantry, re-inforced by details from other companies — in all, four officers and eighty men — has been detached, un- L 490 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. der instructions from the commander of the division, as an escort for Captain Warner, topographical engi neers, and company E, 1st dragoons, when en route for the station, was diverted from that route, for the purpose of securing the perpetrators of some murders committed by Indians on or near Los Reyes River. The difficulties apprehended from a collision be tween the different classes of the mining population have not yet occurred in the form which it was feared they would assume, and at present I do not apprehend any serious difficulty from that source. Some serious Indian disturbances have occurred on the American fork of the Sacramento, and a few isolated murders have occurred at other points ; but at the date of the last report from the frontier, every thing was quiet. The Indians of the Sierra Nevada, although in a great number, are of a degraded class, and are divided into so many different tribes, or rancherias, speaking differ ent languages, that any combination on their part is scarcely to be apprehended. Their depredations heretofore have been confined generally to horse-steal ing, and only occasionally have murders been com mitted by them. These, however, have been made the pretence, by the whites in their neighborhood, for the commission of outrages of the most aggravated character — in one or two cases involving in an indis criminate massacre the wild Indians of the Sierra and the tame Indians of the ranchos. The command ers of detachments serving on the Indian frontiers are instructed to prevent any authorized interference with the Indians by the whites, and to support the Indian agents of their districts in the exercise of their appro priate duties. From the character of the mining population, and the nature of their occupations, unless HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 491 a strong military force be maintained on that frontier, it will be impossible to prevent the commission of out rages upon the Indians ; and they, in turn, will be avenged by murders committed upon isolated parties of whites. Unfortunately, the eagerness with which gold is sought after by detached parties of miners, gives many opportunities for the commission of such outrages. To seek after and apprehend the perpe trators in cases of this kind, a mounted force is abso lutely necessary ; and, although great difficulty will be experienced in obtaining forage and replacing horses that may be disabled, its services are so indis pensably necessary, that I greatly regret my inability to supply more than one company on the Indian fron tier until after the company now on duty with the commissioner of the boundary survey is relieved. I have heretofore called the attention of the War Department and the division commander to the in sufficiency of the force assigned to this department by general order No. 49 of 1848. As it may not be possible, with the present military establishment, to order any additional force to this country without the action of Congress, I respectfully invite the attention of the commanding general to the views heretofore expressed on this subject. A topographical sketch of a portion of this department is herewith inclosed, upon which I have indicated the positions or neigh borhoods in which I deem it important that troops should be established. The amount and character of the force required in my report to division headquar ters, of June 11, is also inclosed. The embarrassments under which the service has labored will be so readily appreciated at home, that it is unnecessary to refer to them here except to say 492 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. that, great as these embarrassments have been, they have been greatly increased by the want of line and staff officers. In consequence of the extraordinary prices of labor, and the consequent enormous expenditures in this coun try, young officers of the line should not be, injustice to the service and themselves, as they have unnecessarily been, encumbered, in addition to their company duties, with money and property responsibilities to a very great amount. Experienced officers of the quarter master's department are required at San Francisco, San Diego, and with the commands on the upper Sa cramento and San Joaquin Rivers. I have now but one officer, Captain Kane, of that department, under my control ; and he is necessarily detained at depart ment headquarters in the preparation of my estimates for the services of the ensuing year. Quarters must soon be erected at several of the posts in this depart ment ; and I cannot spare line officers for this duty, without destroying their efficiency with their compa nies, even were it proper to do so. There are no topo graphical engineers on duty in this department, and, in consequence of the want, I have been able to per form very little of the duty devolved upon me by the lllth paragraph general orders No. 49, of 1848. A reconnoissance of a portion of the valleys of the Sacra mento and San Joaquin Rivers, undertaken for the purpose of determining the position to be occupied, as recommended in my report to division headquarters of April 16, to the War Department of the 25th of the same month, has strengthened my opinion of the importance of giving the country a most thorough examination before any military posts are permanently located in the interior. The whole district of country HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 493 lying between the coast range and the Sierra Nevada is exceedingly sickly at certain seasons of the year. The common timber of the country (oak) is not fit for building purposes ; and I was greatly disappointed in finding that south of the Sacramento River, pine fit for lumber exists only on the spur of the mountains in small quantities, and in places difficult of access. Stone, as a building material is scarce ; and at several of the points where it may be desirable to establish military posts, grain for forage is out of the question, and grass can only be found in exceedingly limited quantities. I expressed a hope in my despatches to the War Department of June 30, that I would be able to make an examination of the country along the western slope of the Sierra Nevada, from the source of the San Joaquin to the southern boundary of Cali fornia ; but the season is now so far advanced that I fear I shall not be able to accomplish more than the determination of a position to be occupied in the neighborhood of Los Reyes River. It is of great im- importance that this point should be determined as soon as possible ; for the new discoveries of gold constantly being made in that direction, are at tracting thither a large portion of the mining population. The rapidly increasing population of the northern placers is gradually forcing the Indians to the south, and congregating them on the waters of the Lake Buena Yista, (Tula.) This position should be occupied, if possible, before the miners have become established in Los Reyes and the neighboring rivers ; and the necessary examinations and arrangements will be made as soon as it is possible to do so. Since my application (April 25) for officers of the quartermaster's department was made, two officers of 42 494 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. that corps, Majors Allen and Fitzgerald, whom I. had supposed would be available for duty in this depart ment, have been permanently separated from it ; and the number then applied for should be increased by two. Two of the medical officers in this department are now prostrated by disease ; and as their places cannot be supplied here, there should be at least three in this department, in addition to those actually required for duty at the different posts in the department, to meet emergencies of this kind. The ordnance depots at Monterey and San Fran cisco are under the charge of military store-keepers. It is important, for the preservation of this property in a serviceable condition, that they should be under the supervision of an experienced ordnance officer. With the exception of the assistant quartermaster above referred to, the officers above enumerated have heretofore been applied for ; but as none have been reported to me, I will state in detail what officers are absolutely required with this command : Four officers of the quartermaster's department in addition to Captain Kane now on duty here : Two topographical engineers : Three additional medical officers : One officer of the ordnance department : One officer of the subsistence department. The irregular communication with some of the in terior posts, creates a good deal of embarrassment by delaying the department returns. In consequence of this I am unable to furnish a later return than for June. The transport Mary and Adeline, with com panies A and F, 2d infantry, reached San Francisco on the 8th ultimo. The detachment of dragoons, on HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA. 495 their march to the department with the collector of this district and the Arkansas emigrants, have not yet arrived. During the months of July and August, so far as reports have been received, there were but few desertions, except from the company detailed for the escort of Captain Warner, topographical engineers ; thirty-four men, more than half the whole number reported, have deserted from this company. The entire force in the department at this time does not probably exceed six hundred and fifty, (aggregate ;) and consequently more than four hundred recruits are now required to fill up these companies to the standard authorized for this department. A detailed report of my reconnoissance in the val leys of the San Joaquin and Sacramento will be for warded by the next steamer. I have delayed it in order to embody in it information in regard to the country in the neighborhood of the Tula, which I am in the daily expectation of receiving. The want of company officers is very much felt ; and I request that authority may be given me to break up the companies whose captains are permanently absent, transferring the officers to other companies, as their services may be needed. I have the honor to be, very respectfully, colonel, your obedient servant, B. EILEY, Brevet Brigadier-General U. S. Army, commanding. Lieut. Col. W. G. FREEMAN, Assistant Adjutant General U. jS. Army, Headquarters of the Army, New York. HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. APPENDIX M. In the early part of 1848, Lieut. H. W. Halleck, of the Engineers, was ordered to make a reconnoi- sance of the coast of Lower California, with reference to the location of works of military defence. In his report to Colonel Mason, after giving a general de scription of the coast and harbors, and proposing a system of military defence, he submits some remarks upon the commercial and military importance of the peninsula. The whole report is interesting, and fur nishes the most correct information upon the subject of the reconnoisance. It will form an interesting conclusion to a work which has been principally devoted to a description and history of Upper Cali fornia. LA PAZ, April 12, 1848. Sm : In compliance with the instructions of the commanding general of the department to make *a " reconnoisance of the coast of California, with refer ence to the location of works of military defence," I reported in my last upon so much as relates to the upper province, and I now submit a few remarks on the military defence of the peninsula of Lower Cali fornia. I. General description of the coast and harbors. — The principal ports of the coast of Lower California, visited by whaling and merchant vessels, are San Quintin, Magdalena, San Jose, La Paz, Escondido, near Loreto,) and Mulige. — There are some other points which vessels occasionally touch for supplies and at trade, but they are comparatively of little commercial HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 497 or military importance. The port of San Quintin, in latitude thirty degrees twenty-three minutes, is re presented as affording a secure anchorage for vessels of every description, and to be sufficiently commo dious for the .reception of a numerous fleet. The ex tensive bay of Magdalena has acquired considerable notoriety from its being resorted to every winter by large numbers of whaling vessels. Its size gives it the character of an inland sea, its waters being navi gable for the distance of more than a hundred miles. It furnishes several places of safe and commodious anchorage. The bay of San Jose, near Cape Saint Lucas, is much frequented by coasting vessels, and occasionally visited by whalers and men-of-war. Be ing the outlet of a fertile valley, extending some forty or fifty miles into the interior, it is probably the best place in the peninsula for supplying shipping with water and fresh provisions. It is, however, a mere roadstead, affording no protection whatever dur ing the season of southeasters. La Paz is the seat of government and the principal port of Lower California, and its extensive bay affords excellent places of anchorage for vessels of any size, and is sufficiently commodious for the most numerous fleets. The principal pearl fisheries are in this immediate vicinity, and also the most valuable mining districts. It is the outlet of the fertile valley of the Todos Santos, and of the produce of the whole country between Santiago and Loreto. The cove or estero, opposite the town of La Paz, fur nishes spacious and safe anchorage, which may be reached by vessels drawing not more than eighteen or twenty feet of water ; and the cove of Pichilingue, at the south-eastern extremity of the bay, and about 42* 498 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. six miles from the town, affords an excellent anchor age for vessels of any size ; but the inner bay can be reached only by small merchant vessels. The bar, however, between the two is only a few yards in ex- 'tent ; and if the importance of the place should ever justify it, the channel might be made deeper without difficulty or great expense. The adjacent country being barren and mountainous, and the roads to the interior exceedingly difficult, this place can never be the outlet of much agricultural produce. But as the island of Carmen, nearly opposite the entrance to this bay, contains an almost inexhaustible supply of salt, very easy of access, it is possible that the trade in this article may eventually give considerable im portance to the port of Escondido. The bay of Mulige contains several places of an chorage, but none of them are deemed safe for large vessels, or even from small vessels, at all seasons of the year. There are also several other parts in the gulf farther north which are occasionally visited by- coasting vessels, but it is not known that any of them are likely to be of much commercial importance. II. Proposed system of defence. — It is not sup posed that, under existing circumstances, any military post will be necessary on the western coast of the peninsula ; nor is it probable that, for many years, any place there will become of sufficient importance to justify the construction of military works for its defence. It is true that the whale fishery on this coast has become-, from the amount of shipping en gaged in it, an object of the highest consideration ; but our having ports of refuge at San Francisco or San Diego, and at La Paz, strong enough to resist a naval coup de main, will, it is believed, afford sufficient HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 499 security to these whalers in case of a war with a maritime power. On our arrival here in October last, it was deemed desirable to establish a small military post at San Jose, for the" double purpose of giving protection to the friendly inhabitants against a band of Mexican freebooters who had crossed the gulf from Guaynas to Mulige and Loreto, and of preventing the further introduction of men and munitions from the opposite coast. The old mission building was found well adapted to the purpose in view, and with a few repairs and improvements served as an admirable pro tection for the little garrison in the several attacks which it afterwards sustained from greatly superior forces. It will probably be necessary to continue this post during the war with Mexico, or at least so long as there is any danger of the enemy's sending troops from the opposite coast to again disturb the tranquillity of the peninsula ; but it is not deemed ad visable to establish at this place any works of perma nent defence, the character of the port not being such as to warrant expenditures for this purpose. The defences of the cuartel or mission building are deemed sufficient for all purposes of temporary occupation. Should the war with Mexico continue, and the naval forces be again withdrawn from the gulf, it may be necessary to establish temporarily a small military post at Mulige ; but no permanent garrison will be required either at that place or Escondido, unless, perhaps, hereafter the commercial importance of the latter port should justify such a measure. La Paz is, therefore, the only port in Lower Cali fornia which it will be necessary, for the present, to occupy with a permanent military force, or to secure 500 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. by means of fortifications. For temporary pur poses, the site of the old cuartel is well suited for the construction of defensive barracks, inas much as it commands the town, and may readily be secured against an attack from the side. The buildings at present occupied as barracks are not judiciously located. A permanent work on Punta Colorada will completely close the entrance to Pichilingue cove, and its heavy guns will reach the entrance to the channel of La Paz ; but to give the requisite security to the latter, a small battery will be necessary on Punta Prieta. The topographical fea tures of both these points are favorable for the con struction of small fortifications. Stone of good quality for building purposes is found in the imme diate vicinity, and good lime may be procured at the distance of only a few miles. Quarries have been opened in the " Calaveras," and the stone, though soft and easily worked, is found to be in this climate of a very durable character. La Paz is not difficult to defend against a naval attack, and the proposed fortifications may be constructed in a short time and without a very large expenditure of money. The com mercial character of the place, its military import ance as connected with the defence of the peninsula, its great value as a naval depot and port of refuge for our commercial and military marine in case of war with any naval power, will, it is believed, fully justify the expenditures necessary for securing this port against a maritime attack. III. Commercial and military importance of Lower California. — Thus far in my report I have proceeded on the supposition that it is the intention of our gov ernment to retain the whole of California in any HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 501 treaty of peace with Mexico ; but doubts have re cently been expressed on the policy of retaining this peninsula, on account of its being of little or no value to the United States. As the guerrilla forces which were sent over from Mexico the past summer, during the absence of our squadron from this coast, to regain possession of Lower California, and force the inhabit ants to their allegiance to the Mexican government, have been defeated and completely dispersed, leaving our own troops in undisputed possession of the terri tory, nothing but a conviction of the utter worthlc-ss- ness of the country could now induce our government to consent to its abandonment. On this subject I beg leave to add a few remarks : The peninsula of California lies between twenty- two degrees fifty minutes and thirty-two degrees thirty minutes north latitude, being about seven hundred miles in length, and varying from fifty to one hundred miles in breadth. An irregular chain or broken ridge of mountains extend from Cape St. Lucas -to the frontiers of Upper California, with spurs running off on eaqh side to the gulf and ocean. Between these spurs are numerous broad plains covered with stunted trees, and during the rainy months with a thin but nutri- cious grass. In the dry season this grass is parched up like hay, but from its nutricious character it affords abundant food for the herds of cattle and horses which constitute the principal wealth of rancheros. The dryness of the soil prevent the growth of trees of any considerable magnitude, except on the borders of a few mountain streams. This timber, though far from being plentiful, is exceedingly durable and much esteemed in ship-building. The greatest height of the mountains is estimated five thousand feet ; many of 34 502 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. them are piles of mere broken rocks, while others are covered with grass, shrubbery, and small trees. The plains are sandy and mostly unproductive — not, how ever, from any natural barrenness in the soil, but from a deficiency of water. There are but few durable streams in the whole country, and streams of good water are extremely scarce. But in the plains and most of the dry beds of rivers water can be obtained by digging wells only a few feet in depth; and wherever irrigation has been resorted to by means of these wells, the produce of the soil, from its remark able fertility, has abundantly rewarded the labor of the agriculturist. Much of this soil is of volcanic origin, having been washed from the mountains by the action of heavy rains, and the produce extracted by means of irrigation from these apparently barren and un- prolific sands is something most marvellous. The general aspect of the country on the coast is exceed ingly barren and forbidding, but I have seen no in stance where the soil is properly cultivated that the labor bestowed on it is not well rewarded. The growth of vegetation is exceedingly rapid, and the soil and climate are such as to produce nearly all the tropical fruits in great perfection. But the inhabit ants are disinclined to agriculture, and most of them live indolent and roving lives, subsisting principally upon their herds. Notwithstanding the unfavorable character of the country, it is capable, in the hands of an industrious and agricultural people, of support ing a population much more numerous than the pre sent. In the time of the missions, when very small portions of the soil were cultivated, and even these but rudely, by the Indians, the four districts of San Jose, Santiago, San Antonio, and Todos Santos con- HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 503 tained a population of thirty-five thousand souls, whereas, the present population of the same districts is only seven thousand. The agricultural products of Lower California are maize, sugarcane, potatoes, dates, figs, grapes, quin ces, lemons, and olives, A considerable quantity of hides, beef, cheese, soap, sugar, figs, raisins, &c., is annually exported to Mexico and Upper California, flour and merchandise being received in exchange. The vegetable market of Mazatlan is also in part supplied from the valley of San Jose*. But the value of Lower California does not result from its being either a grazing or agricultural country. Its fisheries, mines, commerce, and the influence of its geographical position, are matters of much higher importance than its agricultural productions. The whole coast of the peninsula abounds with fish ; clams and oysters are found in great plenty and of every variety. The islands of the gulf abound with seal, and the whaling grounds on the Pacific coast are of great value. During the past year Magdalena bay alone has, at one time, contained as many as twenty-eight sail, all engaged in this fishery. The pearl fishery is also exceedingly valuable. Formerly, when it was conducted with system and regularity, the annual produce of a single vessel with thirty or forty divers, between the months of July and October, usually amounted to about $60,000 ; and now, badly as the fishery is conducted, the annual exportation of pearls amounts to between forty and fifty thousand dollars. Tortoise and pearl shells are also articles of exportation. Lower California contains valuable mines of gold, silver, copper, and lead ; but, for the want of capital, 504 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. very few of these are worked, and this in the rudest manner possible. Nevertheless, the labor expended on them is well rewarded ; and there can be no doubt that with capital and suitable means they would yield very handsome profits. The salt mines on Carmen island are capable of supplying the whole coast of Mexico and California; already the duties on this article amount to a considerable sum. The commerce of the peninsula is now very limited, being principally confined to a coasting trade with the ports of Mexico. The whole population of the country is but little more than ten thousand, and the annual imports and exports are estimated at $300,000. But in our hands this commerce, freed from the ab surd restrictions imposed by Mexico, will soon receive a very great extension. La Paz will become the prin cipal depot of American goods for the western coast of Mexico ; and in a few years most foreign goods in tended for this coast will also be deposited in the warehouses of Lower California, to be transferred to the ports of Mexico at such times and in such quanti ties as the demands of the market may require. In the present variable state of Mexican trade, resulting from an irregular and fluctuating tariff, which differs for each port and changes with every change of general or state administration, it is frequently neces sary to transfer vessels with their cargoes from one port to another, or to keep them for weeks at sea, standing off and on, so as to enable the agents to arrange the rate of duties at the custom-house before landing the cargoes. Sometimes the consignees are obliged to send their vessels to the Sandwich islands or Valparaiso until a change of administration will enable them to avoid the exorbitant demands of some MOUNTAIN SCENERY LOWER CALIFORNIA. HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. 505 petty governor or collector of customs. Moreover, the principal commercial ports of this coast (Mazatlan and San Bias) are inaccessible to merchant vessels for four months of each year, and during that time are visited only~ by small coasters. But, with Lower California in our possession, merchant vessels of whatever character, at all seasons and in all winds, can find a refuge in La Paz, and their cargoes despatched in such quantities and to such points of the opposite coast as circumstances may justify. This place in a few years will be what Mazatlan now is, and Mazatlan experience the fate of San Bias and Acapulco. The importance, however, of this port results mainly from its geographical position, and the influence it is likely to exert as a military and naval depot upon our commercial interests in the Pacific. The port of San Francisco, in Upper California, should be well fortified, and every care taken to make it a harbor of refuge for our merchant and military marine, in case of a maritime war ; but it must be remembered that that place is nearly fifteen hundred miles from the nearest port of Mexico, and that it is very far north of some of the best whaling grounds in the Paci fic, and too distant to afford much protection to our commerce with Central America, although its position gives it a controlling influence over the commerce of Sandwich Islands, Upper California, and Oregon. In the same way a well-fortified naval station at La Paz, from its immediate proximity to the coast of Mexico, would have a most beneficial influence on our commercial and whaling interest in this part of the Pacific. The great value, in time of maritime war, of such key points as La Paz, and the commanding 43 506 HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. influence exercised by them in the protection of com merce, have become settled principles in military defence ; and England shows her appreciation of their truth, and the wisdom of her own policy, in establish ing stations and points like St. Helena, Cape of Good Hope, Gibraltar, Malta, Corfu, and Bermuda. Again, the growing commerce of California and Oregon, and the political importance of our posses sions on the Pacific, render it necessary that we should have some means of rapid communication between them and the seat of government at Washington. This communication must be effected by the isthmus of Panama or of Tehuantepec. In either case steam ers bound to Upper California and the Columbia River must have one or more intermediate depots of fuel; and in time of war it is important that these depots be established in our own rather than in a hostile ter ritory. A glance at the map will show that La Paz is nearly equidistant from the extremities of this line ; and that Tehuantepec, La Paz, and San Francisco divide into four equal parts the whole distance from Panama to Oregon. Moreover, as this ocean is pecu liarly suited to steam navigation, a large part of the commerce of the Pacific must eventually be carried on in steam vessels ; and in all probability not many years will elapse before a portion of our naval force in these waters is of the same character. Under this supposition, the importance of our possessing some naval depot and harbor of refuge and repair south of Upper California is too manifest to require argument or illustration. But whatever may be thought of the value of this peninsula or of the gulf as a natural boundary between us and Mexico, instead of an imaginary line drawn HISTORY OP CALIFORNIA. 507 from the Colorado to the Pacific, thus separating a kindred people, and exposing the governments of the two territories to continual collisions, the propriety of retaining Lower California is, in my opinion, now no longer an open question. When this country was first taken possession of by the forces of the United States, the people were promised the protection of our govern ment against Mexico, and guarantied the rights secured by our Constitution; and in November, 1847, they were assured by the commander-in-chief of the Paci fic squadron,, (with the approbation of the Secretary of the Navy,) that this territory would be permanent ly retained by the American government ; and again, by the President of the United States, in his annual message of December, 1847, that it " should never be given up to Mexico." Acting under these assur ances, all the most respectable people of the territory not only refused to take part with the Mexican forces which were sent to attempt the recapture of that country from the Americans, but many of them actually took up arms in our defence, and rendered most valuable services in ridding the peninsula of the guerrilla hordes sent over from Mexico for the purpose of effecting our expulsion. In this conflict, some who thus sided with us lost their lives, many their property, and all have exposed themselves to the vengeance of the Mexican government. But these losses and dangers they have willingly encountered, in the hope of ob taining the better government of the United States. They have regarded these promises as made in good faith, and have been guided in their conduct by the assurances thus held out to them by the agents of the American government ; and now, for the United States to voluntarily surrender this country to the 508 HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. republic of Mexico, and leave these Californians ex posed to the loss of life and confiscation of property, for having sided with us, under the assurances thus held out to them, would not only be in itself a breach of national faith, but would make us appear in the eyes of the world guilty of the most deliberate and cruel deception. H. WAGER HALLECK. Lieutenant of Engineers. Colonel R. B. MASON, Commanding Tenth Military Department. VALUABLE BOOKS, PUBLISHED BY DERBY & MILLER AUBURN, N". Y. The Life of John Quincy Adams, Sixth President of the United States, including the Eulogy on his death, by Hon. Wm. H. Seward, with portrait, 12mo., muslin The Life of the Empress Josephine, First wife of Napoleon, by P. C. Headley, with portrait, 12mo., muslin . The Women of the Bible, Being Historical and descriptive sketches of the Women of the Bible, from Eve of the Old, to the Marys of' the New Testament ; by Rev. P. C. Headiey, illustrated, 1 vol., unh'orm with " Headley 's Sacred Mountains," muslin... The American Fruit Culturist, Containing directions for the propagation and culture of Fruit Trees, in the Nursery, Orchard and Garden, wilh descriptions of the principal varieties cultivated in the United Spates, with 300 engravings ; by John J. Thomas, L2mo., muslin. . . Life of Major General Zachary Taylor, Twelfth President of the United Stales, by II. Montgomery, with a steel portrait and ^0 engravings, fine paper, large 12mo., ~re vised and brought down to his inauguration, Damped gilt muslin, 20th edition History of the War with Mexico, From the commencement of hostilities with the United States, to the Rati fication of Peace, embracing detailed accounts of the brilliant achievements of Generals Taylor, Scott, Worth, Twiggs, Kearney, and others, by J. S. Jenkins, 514 pages, large 12mo., 10 illustrations, gilt back, muslin.. Life of General Andrew Jackson, Seventh President of the United States, by J. S. Jenkins, new edition revised and enlarged, fine paper and plates, l'2mo., muslin . .. The Generals of the last War with Great Britain, With portraits of Generals Brown? Macornb, Scott, Jackson, Harrison, and Gaines, by John S. Jenkins, 4th edition, muslin gilt, 12mo., 407 pages Golden Steps for the Young, To Usefulness, Respectability and Happiness, being a series of Lectures to the young of both sexes, by John Mather Austin, author of " Voice to Youth," ttc.. l'2mo., with steel frontispiece, muslin, Indian Captives, Or Life in the Wigwam, Being true narratives of captive? who have been carried away by the Indians, from the frontier settlements of the U. S., from the earliest period to the present time, by Samuel G. Drake, 12mo., muslin The, Lives of Mary and Martha, Mother arul wife of Washington, by Margaret C. Conkling, portrait, 18mo., The Missionary Offering, A memorial of Christ's Messengers in heathen lands, dedicated to Dr. Judson, 8 engravings, I2mo., muslin . Life and Essays of Benjamin Franklin, ISmo., muslin. The New Cleri's Assistant, Or Book of Practical Forma, containing numerous precedents and forms, for ordinary business transaction:-?, with New Constitution, by J. S. Jenkin 4th edition revised, large octavo, law sheep *%* Booksellers and Agents supplied at very liberal discounts. BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY DERBY & MILLER. Headley's Women of the Bible : Historical and descriptive sketches of the Women of the Bible, as maidens, wives, and mothers ; from Eve of the Old, to the Marys of the New Testament: by Rev. P. C. Headley, in one 12mo volume, illustrated— uniform with "Headley's Sacred Mountains." The author of this work possesses enough traits of resemblance to the author of the Sacred Mountains, to leave no doubt of his right to the name of Headley. There is much of that spirited descriptive power, which has made the elder brother a popular favorite, and gives promise of a successful career on his own account. The sketches are brief, and embody all the historic incidents recorded of them.— New York Evangelist. A younger brother of J. T. Headley is the author of this beautiful volume. It will probably have a larger circulation than the splendid work issued last fall by the Messrs. Appleton, being better adapled for the general reader, in form and price, while it is ornamental enough for the centre table. It contains nineteen descriptive biographical sketches, arranged in chronological order, including nearly all the distinguished women of the sacred annals, arid forming an outline of Scripture history. The illustrations are from original designs, and are numerous and appro priate. No ordinary powers of imagination and expression are shown in the vivi( and picturesque descriptions ; and the fine portraiiures of character rivet thi interest, and set forth the Scripture delineations in a stronger light. In this respec. the book has no rival, for no other is so complete, following so closely at the same time, the sacred narrative. We hope it is but an earnest of other works from the pen of its gifted author — Home Journal. We were so struck with the title of this work, and the prepossessing appearance of its typography, that we have so far departed from the usual course adopted in like cases, as to read carefully the work in hand, before recommending it to our readers. And we are prepared to say, that a more attractive volume has not fallen in our way for a long time. It is made up of brief historical and descriptive eulogiea of the most remarkable females of a most extraordinary era in the world's history. The author has appropriated very much of the poetry and romance of the Bible, in the sketches he has given of nineteen women, who have come down to us through their peculiar merits, embalmed in sacred inspiration. Whoever reads the story of Sarah, the beautiful Hebrew maiden, the admiration of the Chaldean shepherds and the pride of her kindred ; or of Rebecca, whom the " faithful steward of Abraham " journeyed to the land of Nahor and selected as the bride of Isaac, and who, it is eaid, "was very fair to look upon ;" or of Rachel, the beautiful shepherdess who tended her father's flocks in the valley of Haran ; or of Merriam, Deborah, Jeptha'a Daughter, Delilah, Ruth, Queen of Sheba, the Shunamite, Esther, Elizabeth, Virgin Mary, Dorcas, and others — will read a story far more interesting and attractive than any romance or novel. Every young lady in town should read this work ; and we will venture to say that they will do so if they but once get hold of it, for it is a book that cannot be laid aside. — Oswego Times. BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY DERBY