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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ History of California, by Helen Elliot Bandini
+ </title>
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+
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's History of California, by Helen Elliott Bandini
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: History of California
+
+Author: Helen Elliott Bandini
+
+
+Release Date: March, 2005 [EBook #7778]
+This file was first posted on May 16, 2003
+Last Updated: October 31, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by David A. Schwan
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Helen Elliot Bandini
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h4>
+ Illustrated By Roy J. Warren <br /> <br /> B. Cal. W. P. 16
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> Preface </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> History of California </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> Chapter I. &mdash; The Land and the Name </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> Chapter II. &mdash; The Story of the Indians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> Chapter III. &mdash; &ldquo;The Secret of the Strait&rdquo;
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> Chapter IV. &mdash; The Cross of Santa Fe </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> Chapter V. &mdash; Pastoral Days </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> Chapter VI. &mdash; The Footsteps of the Stranger
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> Chapter VII. &mdash; At the Touch of King Midas
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> Chapter VIII. &mdash; The Great Stampede </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> Chapter IX. &mdash; The Birth of the Golden Baby
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> Chapter X. &mdash; The Signal Gun and the Steel
+ Trail </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> Chapter XI. &mdash; That Which Followed After
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> Chapter XII. &mdash; &ldquo;The Groves Were God&rsquo;s First
+ Temples&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> Chapter XIII. &mdash; To All that Sow the Time of
+ Harvest Should be Given </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> Chapter XIV. &mdash; The Golden Apples of the
+ Hesperides </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> Chapter XV. &mdash; California&rsquo;s other
+ Contributions to the World&rsquo;s Bill of Fare </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> Chapter XVI. &mdash; The Hidden Treasures of
+ Mother Earth </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> Chapter XVII. &mdash; From La Escuela of Spanish
+ California to the Schools of the Twentieth </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> Chapter XVIII. &mdash; Statistics </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> Counties of California </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_LIST"> List of Governors </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_BIBL"> Bibliography </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> Index </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Preface
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This book is an attempt to present the history of California in so simple
+ and interesting a way that children may read it with pleasure. It does not
+ confine itself to the history of one section or period, but tells the
+ story of all the principal events from the Indian occupancy through the
+ Spanish and Mission days, the excitement of the gold discovery, the birth
+ of the state, down to the latest events of yesterday and to-day. Several
+ chapters, also, are devoted to the development of California&rsquo;s great
+ industries. The work is designed not only for children, but also for older
+ people interested in the story of California, including the tourists who
+ visit the state by the thousand every year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For her information the writer has depended almost entirely upon source
+ material, seldom making use of a secondary work. Her connection with the
+ old Spanish families has opened to her unusual advantages for the study of
+ old manuscripts and for the gathering of recollections of historical
+ events which she has taken from the lips of aged Spanish residents, always
+ verifying a statement before using it. She has, also, from long
+ familiarity with the Spanish-speaking people, been able to interpret truly
+ the life of the Spanish and Mission period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The illustrator of the history, Mr. Roy J. Warren, has made a careful
+ study of the manuscript, chapter by chapter. He has also been a faithful
+ student of California and her conditions; his illustrations are,
+ therefore, in perfect touch with the text and are as true to facts as the
+ history itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thanks of the author are due not only to a host of writers from whom
+ she has gained valuable assistance, and some of whose names are among
+ those in the references at the end of the book, but to others to whom
+ further acknowledgment is due. First of these is Professor H. Morse
+ Stephens, whose suggestions from the inception of the work until its
+ completion have been of incalculable advantage, and whose generous offer
+ to read the proof sheets crowns long months of friendly interest.
+ Secondly, the author is indebted to the faithful and constant supervision
+ of her sister, Miss Agnes Elliott of the Los Angeles State Normal School,
+ without whose wide experience as a teacher of history and economics the
+ work could never have reached its present plane. The author also offers
+ her thanks to Mr. Charles F. Lummis, to whom not only she but all students
+ of California history must ever be indebted; to Mrs. Mary M. Coman, Miss
+ Isabel Frazee, to the officers of the various state departments,
+ especially Mr. Lewis E. Aubrey, State Mineralogist, and Mr. Thomas J. Kirk
+ and his assistant Mr. Job Wood of the educational department; to Miss
+ Nellie Rust, Librarian of the Pasadena City Library, and her corps of
+ accommodating and intelligent assistants, and to the librarians of the Los
+ Angeles City Library and State Normal School.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passages from the Century Magazine quoted in Chapters V-IX are
+ inserted by express permission of the publishers, the Century Company.
+ Acknowledgment is due, also, to the publishers of the Overland Monthly for
+ courtesy in permitting the use of copyright material; and to D. Appleton
+ &amp; Co. for permission to insert selections from Sherman&rsquo;s Memoirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ History of California
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter I. &mdash; The Land and the Name
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Once upon a time, about four hundred years ago, there was published in old
+ Spain a novel which soon became unusually popular. The successful story of
+ those days was one which caught the fancy of the men, was read by them,
+ discussed at their gatherings, and often carried with them when they went
+ to the wars or in search of adventures. This particular story would not
+ interest readers of to-day save for this passage: &ldquo;Know that on the right
+ hand of the Indies there is an island called California, very near the
+ Terrestrial Paradise, and it is peopled by black women who live after the
+ fashion of Amazons. This island is the strongest in the world, with its
+ steep rocks and great cliffs, and there is no metal in the island but
+ gold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no doubt that some bold explorer, crossing over from Spain to
+ Mexico and enlisting under the leadership of the gallant Cortez, sailed
+ the unknown South Sea (the Pacific) and gave to the new land discovered by
+ one of Cortez&rsquo;s pilots the name of the golden island in this favorite
+ story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This land, thought to be an island, is now known to us as the peninsula of
+ Lower California. The name first appeared in 1542 on the map of Domingo
+ Castillo, and was soon applied to all the land claimed by Spain from Cape
+ San Lucas up the coast as far north as 44ΒΌ, which was probably a little
+ higher than any Spanish explorer had ever sailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Francis Drake,&rdquo; says the old chronicle, &ldquo;was the first Englishman to
+ sail on the back side of America,&rdquo; and from that time until now California
+ has been considered the back door of the country. This was natural because
+ the first settlements in the United States were along the Atlantic
+ seacoast. The people who came from England kept their faces turned
+ eastward, looking to the Mother Country for help, and watching Europe, and
+ later England herself, as a quarter from which danger might come, as
+ indeed it did in the war of the Revolution and that of 1812.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the last few years, however, various events have happened to change
+ this attitude. Through its success in the late Spanish war the United
+ States gained confidence in its own powers, while the people of the old
+ world began to realize that the young republic of the western hemisphere,
+ since it did not hesitate to make war in the interests of humanity, would
+ not be apt to allow its own rights to be imposed upon. The coming of the
+ Philippine and Hawaiian Islands under the protection of the United States,
+ the Russo-Japanese war, which opened the eyes of the world to the strength
+ of Japan and the wisdom of securing its trade, and the action of the
+ United States in undertaking the building of the Panama Canal, are
+ indications that the Pacific will in the future support a commerce the
+ greatness of which we of to-day cannot estimate. With danger from European
+ interference no longer pressing closely upon the nation, President
+ Roosevelt in 1907 took a decided step in recognizing the importance of the
+ Pacific when he sent to that coast so large a number of the most modern
+ vessels of the navy. In fact, the nation may now be said to have faced
+ about, California becoming the front door of our country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is well, then, to ask ourselves what we know about the state which is
+ to form part of the reception room of one of the leading nations of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a long strip of territory, bounded on one side by the ocean so well
+ named Pacific, which gives freshness and moisture to the ever-blowing
+ westerly winds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side is a mountain range, one thousand miles long, with many
+ of its peaks covered with perpetual snow, holding in its lofty arms
+ hundreds of ice-cold lakes, its sides timbered with the most wonderful
+ forests of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few regions of the same size have so great a range of altitude as
+ California, some portions of its desert lands being below sea level, while
+ several of its mountains are over ten thousand feet in height. In its
+ climate, too, there are wide differences as regards heat and cold,
+ although its coast lands, whether north or south, are much more temperate
+ than the corresponding latitudes on the Atlantic coast. The difference in
+ the climate of the northern and southern portions of the state is more
+ marked in the matter of moisture. Most of the storms of California have
+ their beginning out in the North Pacific Ocean. They travel in a
+ southeasterly direction, striking the coast far to the north in summer,
+ but in winter extending hundreds of miles farther south. During November,
+ December, January, and February they often reach as far south as the
+ Mexican line. Then, only, does southern California have rain. The water
+ necessary for use in the summer time is gained by irrigation from the
+ mountain streams, which are supplied largely from the melting snows on the
+ Sierras.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The home lands of the state may be divided into two portions: the
+ beautiful border country rising from the Pacific in alternate valleys and
+ low rolling foothills to the edge of the Coast Range; and the great
+ central valley or basin, which lies like a vast pocket almost entirely
+ encircled by mountains the high Sierras on the east, on the west the low
+ Coast Range. Two large rivers with their tributaries drain this valley:
+ the San Joaquin, flowing from the south; and the Sacramento, flowing from
+ the north. Joining near the center of the state, they cut their way
+ through the narrow passage, the Strait of Carquinez, and casting their
+ waters into the beautiful Bay of San Francisco, finally reach the ocean
+ through the Golden Gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down from the Sierras, mighty glaciers carried the soil for this central
+ valley, grinding and pulverizing it as it was rolled slowly along. Many
+ years this process continued. The rain, washing the mountain sides,
+ brought its tribute in the rich soil and decayed vegetation of the higher
+ region, until a natural seed bed was formed, where there can be raised in
+ abundance a wonderful variety of plants and trees. In the coast valleys
+ the soil is alluvial, the fine washing of mountain rocks; this is mixed in
+ some places with a warmer, firmer loam and in others with a gravelly soil,
+ which is the best known for orange raising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state owes much to her mountains, for not only have they contributed
+ to her fertile soil, but they hold in their rocky slopes the gold and
+ silver mines which have transformed the whole region from an unknown
+ wilderness to a land renowned for its riches and beauty. They lift their
+ lofty peaks high in the air like mighty strongholds, and, shutting out the
+ desert winds, catch the clouds as they sail in from the ocean, making them
+ pay heavy tribute in fertilizing rain to the favored land below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The climate, which of all the precious possessions of California is the
+ most valuable, is best described by Bret Harte in the lines, &ldquo;Half a year
+ of clouds and flowers; half a year of dust and sky.&rdquo; Either half is
+ enjoyable, for in the summer, or dry season, fogs or delightful westerly
+ winds soon moderate a heated spell, and in nearly all parts of the state
+ the nights are cool; while the rainy, or winter season, changes to balmy
+ springtime as soon as the storm is over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a large portion of the state the climate is such that the inhabitants
+ may spend much of their time out of doors. As a rule few duties are
+ attended to in the house which can possibly be performed in the open air.
+ It is growing to be more and more the custom to have, in connection with a
+ Californian home, a tent bedroom where the year round one or more of the
+ members of the family sleep, with only a wall of canvas between them and
+ nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vacation time is spent largely in summer camps, at either mountain or
+ seashore, or, quite often, a pleasant party of one or two families live
+ together, very simply, under the greenwood tree beside some spring or
+ stream, spending a few weeks in gypsy fashion. While the young folk grow
+ sturdy and beautiful, the older members of the party become filled with
+ strength and a joy of living which helps them through the cares and
+ struggles of the rest of the year. This joy in outdoor life is not,
+ however, a discovery of to-day. The old Spanish families spent as much
+ time as possible in the courtyard, the house being deserted save at night.
+ When upon journeys, men, women, and children slept in the open air. Even
+ the clothes-washing period was turned into a kind of merrymaking. Whole
+ families joined together to spend days in the vicinity of some stream,
+ where they picnicked while the linen was being cleansed in the running
+ water and dried on the bushes near by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once before, when the world was younger, there was a land similar to this,&mdash;sea-kissed,
+ mountain-guarded, with such gentle climate and soft skies. Its people, who
+ also lived much out of doors at peace with nature, became almost perfect
+ in health and figure, with mental qualities which enabled them to give to
+ the world the best it has known in literature and art. What the ancient
+ Greeks were, the people of California may become; but with an advancement
+ in knowledge and loving-kindness of man toward man which heathen Athens
+ never knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What will be the result of this outdoor life cannot yet be told; climate
+ has always had an active influence in shaping the character and type of a
+ people. With a climate mild and healthful, yet bracing; with a soil so
+ rich that the touch of irrigation makes even the sandiest places bloom
+ with the highest beauty of plant, tree, and vine; with an ocean warm and
+ gentle, and skies the kindliest in the world,&mdash;there is, if we judge
+ by the lesson history teaches, a promise of a future for California
+ greater and more noble than the world has yet known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter II. &mdash; The Story of the Indians
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Run, Cleeta, run, the waves will catch you.&rdquo; Cleeta scudded away, her
+ naked little body shining like polished mahogany. She was fleet of foot,
+ but the incoming breakers from the bosom of the great Pacific ran faster
+ still; and the little Indian girl was caught in its foaming water, rolled
+ over and over, and cast upon the sandy beach, half choked, yet laughing
+ with the fun of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Foolish Cleeta, you might have been drowned; that was a big wave. What
+ made you go out so far?&rdquo; said Gesnip, the elder sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I found such a lot of mussels, great big ones, I wish I could go back and
+ get them,&rdquo; said the little one, looking anxiously at the water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The waves are coming in higher and higher and it is growing late,&rdquo; said
+ Gesnip; &ldquo;besides, I have more mussels already than you and I can well
+ carry. The boys have gone toward the river mouth for clams. They will be
+ sure to go home the other way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cleeta ran to the basket and looked in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think there were too many for us to carry,&rdquo; she said, as she
+ tried with all her strength to lift it by the carry straps. &ldquo;What will you
+ do with them; throw some back into the water?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t like to do that,&rdquo; answered her sister, frowning, &ldquo;for it has
+ been so long since we have had any. The wind and the waves have been too
+ high for us to gather any. Look, Cleeta, look; what are those out on the
+ water? I do believe they are boats.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the little girl; &ldquo;I see what you mean, but boats never go out
+ so far as that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not tule boats,&rdquo; said Gesnip, &ldquo;but big thick one made out of trees; that
+ is the kind they have at Santa Catalina, the island where uncle lives. It
+ has been a long time since he came to see us, not since you were four
+ years old, but mother is always looking for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children gazed earnestly seaward at a fleet of canoes which were
+ making for the shore. &ldquo;Do you think it is uncle?&rdquo; asked Cleeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied her sister, uncertainly, &ldquo;I think it may be.&rdquo; Then, as the
+ sunlight struck full on the boats &ldquo;Yes, yes, I am sure of it, for one is
+ red, and no on else has a boat of that color; all others are brown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother said he would bring abalone when he came,&rdquo; cried Cleeta, dancing
+ from one foot to the other; &ldquo;and she said they are better than mussels or
+ anything else for soup.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will bring fish,&rdquo; said Gesnip, &ldquo;big shining fish with yellow tails.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother said he would bring big blue ones with hard little seams down
+ their sides,&rdquo; said Cleeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the boats drew nearer. They were of logs hollowed out until they
+ were fairly light, but still seeming too clumsy for safe seagoing craft.
+ In each were several men. One sat in the stern and steered, the others
+ knelt in pairs, each man helping propel the boat by means of a stick some
+ four feet long, more like a pole than a paddle, which he worked with great
+ energy over the gunwale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid of them,&rdquo; said Cleeta, drawing close to her sister. &ldquo;They do
+ not look like the people I have seen. Their faces are the color of the
+ kah-hoom mother weaves in her baskets. There are only three like us, and
+ they all have such strange clothes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not be afraid,&rdquo; said Gesnip. &ldquo;I see uncle; he is one of the dark ones
+ like ourselves. The island people have yellow skins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time was the year 1540, and the people, the Californians of that day.
+ The men in the boat were mostly from the island of Santa Catalina, and
+ were fairer, with more regular features, than the inhabitants of the
+ mainland, who in southern California were a short, thick-set race, with
+ thick lips, dark brown skin, coarse black hair, and eyes small and shining
+ like jet-black beads. They were poorly clothed in winter; in summer a loin
+ cloth was often all that the men wore, while the children went naked a
+ large part of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With wonderful skill the badly shaped boats were guided safely over the
+ breakers until their bows touched the sand. Then the men leaped out and,
+ half wading, half swimming, pulled them from the water and ran them up on
+ the beach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little girls drew near and stood quietly by, waiting to be spoken to.
+ Presently the leading man, who was short, dark, and handsomely dressed in
+ a suit of sealskin ornamented with abalone shell, turned to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are these little people?&rdquo; he asked, in a kind voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are the children of Cuchuma and Macana,&rdquo; replied Gesnip, working her
+ toes in and out of the soft sand, too shy to look her uncle in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Children of my sister, Sholoc is glad to see you,&rdquo; said the chief, laying
+ his hand gently on Cleeta&rsquo;s head. &ldquo;Your mother, is she well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is well and looking for you these many moons,&rdquo; said Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men at once began unloading the boats. The children watched the
+ process with great interest, Abalone in their shells, a dainty prized then
+ as well as now, fish, yellowtail and bonito, filled to the brim the large
+ baskets which the men slung to their backs, carrying them by means of a
+ strap over the forehead. On their heads they placed ollas, or water jars,
+ of serpentine from quarries which may be seen in Santa Catalina to-day,
+ the marks of the tools of workmen of, that time still in the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were also strings of bits of abalone shell which had been punctured
+ and then polished, and these Sholoc hung around his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle,&rdquo; exclaimed Gesnip, touching one of these strings, &ldquo;how much money!
+ You have grown rich at Santa Catalina. What will you buy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Buy me a wife, perhaps,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;I will give two strings for a
+ good wife. Do you know any worth so much?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the girl, stoutly. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know any worth two whole strings of
+ abalone. You can get a good wife for much less.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men, who had succeeded in loading the contents of the boats on their
+ heads and backs, now marched away, in single file, crossing the heavy sand
+ dunes slowly, then mounting the range of foothills beyond. The children
+ followed. Gesnip had her basket bound to her head by a strap round her
+ forehead; but, though her uncle had taken out part of the contents, it was
+ a heavy load for the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they neared the top of the hill, Sholoc, who was ahead, lifted his hand
+ and motioned them to stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush,&rdquo; he said softly, &ldquo;elk.&rdquo; Swiftly the men slipped off their loads and
+ with bows in hand each one crept flat on his belly over the hill crest.
+ Gesnip and Cleeta peeped through the high grass. Below them was a wide
+ plain, dotted with clumps of bushes, and scattered over it they could see
+ a great herd of elk, whose broad, shining antlers waved above the grass
+ and bushes upon which they were feeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are those elk too?&rdquo; asked Cleeta, presently, pointing toward the
+ foothills at their left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied her sister, &ldquo;I think those are antelope. I like to see them
+ run. How funny their tails shake. But watch the men; they are going to
+ shoot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke, four of the hunters, who had crept well up toward the game,
+ rose to their feet, holding their bows horizontally, not perpendicularly.
+ These weapons, which were made of cedar wood, were about four feet in
+ length, painted at the ends black or dark blue, the middle, which was
+ almost two inches broad, being wrapped with elk sinew. The strings also
+ were of sinew. The quiver which each man carried at his side was made from
+ the skin of a wild cat or of a coyote. A great hunter like Sholoc might
+ make his quiver from the tails of lions he had killed. Projecting from the
+ quiver were the bright-feathered ends of the arrows, which were of reed
+ and were two or three feet long, with points of bone, flint, or obsidian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hunters, knowing how hard it was to kill large game, had chosen their
+ arrows carefully, taking those that had obsidian points. Almost at the
+ same moment they let fly their shafts. Three elk leaped into the air. One
+ tumbled over in a somersault which broke one of its antlers, and then lay
+ dead, shot through the heart by Sholoc. Another took a few leaps, but a
+ second arrow brought it to its knees. Then it sank slowly over upon its
+ side; but it struck so fiercely at the hunter who ran up to kill it with
+ his horn knife that he drew back and shot it again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the third elk?&rdquo; asked Cleeta, looking around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Over there,&rdquo; said Gesnip, pointing across the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then they have lost it,&rdquo; said the child, with disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I think not. It is wounded. I saw the blood on its side,&rdquo; said the
+ sister. &ldquo;See, one of the men is following it, and it is half a mile behind
+ the herd. I am sure he will get it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This has been a lucky day,&rdquo; said Gesnip. &ldquo;So much food. Our stomachs will
+ not ache with hunger for a long time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is because mother wove a game basket to Chinigchinich so he would
+ send food,&rdquo; said Cleeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time the party had traveled two miles, Gesnip, with her load, and
+ Cleeta, whose bare brown legs were growing very tired, lagged behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O dear,&rdquo; said the elder sister, &ldquo;we shall surely be too late to go into
+ camp with uncle.&rdquo; Just then a whoop sounded behind them, and a boy of
+ thirteen, dressed in a rabbit-skin shirt, carrying a bow in his hand, came
+ panting up to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Payuchi,&rdquo; said Gesnip, eagerly, &ldquo;carry my basket for me and I will tell
+ you some good news.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Payuchi, shaking his head, &ldquo;it is a girl&rsquo;s place to carry
+ the basket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just this little way, and it is such good news&rdquo; urged Gesnip. &ldquo;It will,
+ make your heart glad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, then, tell it quickly,&rdquo; said the boy, changing the basket of
+ mussels to his own broad back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sholoc has come from Santa Catalina with baskets of abalone and fish, and
+ with ollas all speckled, and strings of money. He is near the top of the
+ grade now. Upon hearing the good news the lad darted away at a great pace,
+ his sisters following as fast as they could. Sholoc and his party had
+ stopped to rearrange their loads, so the children overtook them at the
+ head of the trail leading to their home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Below them was a valley dotted with live oaks, and along the banks of the
+ stream that ran through it was a thick growth of alders, sycamores, and
+ willows. At the foot of the trail, near the water, was a cluster of what
+ looked like low, round straw stacks. No straw stacks were they, however,
+ but houses, the only kind of homes known in southern California at that
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the Indian settlement where Gesnip, Cleeta, and Payuchi lived, and
+ of which their father, Cuchuma, was chief. The jacals, or wigwams, were
+ made of long willow boughs, driven into the ground closely in a circle,
+ the ends bent over and tied together with deer sinews. They were covered
+ with a thatching of grass that, when dry, made them look like straw
+ stacks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sholoc stepped to the-edge of the bluff and gave a long, quavering cry
+ which could be heard far in the still evening air. Instantly out of the
+ group of jacals came a crowd of men and boys, who gave answering cries.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad they have a fire,&rdquo; said Cleeta, as she saw the big blaze in the
+ middle of the settlement, &ldquo;I am so cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take my hand and let&rsquo;s run,&rdquo; said Gesnip, and partly running and partly
+ sliding, they followed the men of the party, who, notwithstanding their
+ heavy loads, were trotting down the steep trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were met at the foot of the grade by a crowd which surrounded them,
+ all chattering at once. Sholoc told of the elk, and a number of men
+ started off on the run to bring in the big game. As the visitors entered
+ camp, Macana, a kind-faced woman, better dressed than most of her tribe,
+ came forward. She placed her hand on Sholoc&rsquo;s shoulder, her face lighting
+ up with love and happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are welcome, brother,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The sight of you is good to my eyes, sister,&rdquo; an answered Sholoc. That
+ was all the greeting, although the two loved each other well. Macana took
+ the basket from Payuchi&rsquo;s back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she called to Gesnip, &ldquo;and help me wash the mussels.&rdquo; Then, as she
+ saw the younger girl shivering as she crouched over the fire, &ldquo;Cleeta, you
+ need not be cold any longer; your rabbit skin dress is done. Go into the
+ jacal and put it on.&rdquo; Cleeta obeyed with dancing eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gesnip followed her mother to the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take this,&rdquo; said Macana, handing her an openwork net or bag, &ldquo;and hold it
+ while I empty in some of the mussels. Now lift them up and down in the
+ water to wash out the sand. That will do; put them into this basket, and I
+ will give you some more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime some of the women had taken a dozen or more fish from Sholoc&rsquo;s
+ baskets, and removing their entrails with bone knives, wrapped them in
+ many thicknesses of damp grass and laid them in the hot ashes and coals to
+ bake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the mussels were all cleaned, Macana emptied them into a large basket
+ half filled with water, and threw in a little acorn meal and a handful of
+ herbs. Then, using two green sticks for tongs, she drew out from among the
+ coals some smooth gray stones which had become very hot. Brushing these
+ off with a bunch of tules, she lifted them by means of a green stick
+ having a loop in the end which fitted round the stones, flinging them one
+ by one into the basket in which were the mussels and water. Immediately
+ the water, heated by the stones, began to boil, and when the soup was
+ ready, she set the basket down beside her own jacal and called her
+ children to her. Payuchi, Gesnip, Cleeta, and their little four-year-old
+ brother, Nakin, gathered about the basket, helping themselves with abalone
+ shells, the small holes of which their mother had plugged with wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t father going to have some first?&rdquo; asked Payuchi, before they began
+ the meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not this time; he will eat with Sholoc and the men when the fish are
+ ready,&rdquo; replied his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is good soup,&rdquo; said Gesnip. &ldquo;I am glad I worked hard before the
+ water came up. But, Payuchi, didn&rsquo;t you and Nopal get any clams?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said her brother, making a face; he had dipped down where the
+ stones were hottest and the soup thickest, and had taken a mouthful that
+ burned him. &ldquo;Yes, we got some clams, more than I could carry; but Nopal
+ was running races with the other boys and would not come, so I left him to
+ bring them. He will lose his fish dinner if he doesn&rsquo;t hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; said Cleeta, &ldquo;may we stay up to the fish bake?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered her mother. &ldquo;You and Nakin must go to bed, but I will save
+ some for your breakfast. You are tired, Cleeta.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I am tired,&rdquo; said the little girl, leaning her head against her
+ mother&rsquo;s shoulder, &ldquo;but I am warm in my rabbit-skin dress. We all have
+ warm dresses now. Please tell me a good-night story,&rdquo; she begged. &ldquo;We have
+ been good and brought in much food.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, tell us how the hawk and coyote made the sun,&rdquo; said Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said the mother, &ldquo;only you must be quite still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was in the beginning of all things, and a bowl of darkness, blacker
+ than the pitch lining of our water basket, covered the earth. Man, when he
+ would go abroad, fell against man, against trees, against wild animals,
+ even against Lollah, the bear, who would, in turn, hug the unhappy one to
+ death. Birds flying in the air came together and fell struggling to the
+ earth. All was confusion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once the hawk, by chance, flew in the face of the coyote. Instead of
+ fighting about it as naughty children might, they, like people of good
+ manners, apologized many times. Then they talked over the unhappy state of
+ things and determined to remedy the evil. The coyote first gathered a
+ great heap of dried tules, rolled them together into a ball, and gave them
+ to the hawk, with some pieces of flint. The hawk, taking them in his
+ talons, flew straight up into the sky, where he struck fire with his
+ flints, lit the ball of reeds, and left it there whirling along with a
+ bright yellow light, as it continues to whirl to-day; for it, children, is
+ our sun, ruler of the day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The hawk next flew back for another ball to rule the night, but the
+ coyote had no tule gathered, and the hawk hurried him so that some damp
+ stems were mixed in. The hawk flew with this ball into the sky and set it
+ afire but because of the green tules it burned with only a dim light; and
+ this, children, is our moon, ruler of the night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a fine story,&rdquo; said Payuchi. &ldquo;I am glad I did not live when there
+ was no light.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell us how the coyote danced with the star,&rdquo; said Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the mother, &ldquo;another time we shall see. Now I shall sing to
+ coax sleep to tired eyes, and the little ones will go to bed.&rdquo; And this
+ was what she sang: &ldquo;Pah-high-nui-veve, veve, veve, shumeh, veve, veve,
+ veve, shumeh, Pah-high-nui-veve,&rdquo; and so on, repeating these words over
+ and over until Cleeta and Nakin were sound asleep. Then she laid them on
+ their tule mats, which were spread on the floor of the jacal, where baby
+ Nahal, close wrapped in his cocoon-shaped cradle, had been a long time
+ sleeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; said Gesnip, coming into the jacal, &ldquo;they have brought in the
+ elk. Don&rsquo;t you want something from them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Macana, &ldquo;I will go and see about it. I want one of the
+ skins to make your father a warm hunting dress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indians who had gone after the elk had skinned and cut them up where
+ they lay, as they were so large that the burden had to be distributed
+ among a number of carriers. Macana found Sholoc busy portioning out parts
+ of the elk. As he had a fine seal-skin suit himself, he gladly gave her
+ the skin of the deer which he had shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that a big one?&rdquo; said Payuchi. &ldquo;It will make father a fine hunting
+ suit, it is so thick.&rdquo; Gesnip was loaded down with some of the best cuts
+ of the meat to take to her father&rsquo;s jacal. Cuchuma himself began removing
+ the tendons from the legs, to cure for bowstrings, and to wrap a new bow
+ he was going to make.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, Nopal,&rdquo; said Sholoc to his oldest nephew, a lad of fifteen, &ldquo;I will
+ give you a piece of the antler and you can grind it down and make yourself
+ a hunting knife. It is time you ceased to play and became a hunter. I had
+ killed much game when I was your age.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you give me some of the brains that I may finish tanning a deerskin?
+ I have been waiting to finish it until I could get some brains, but it has
+ been a long time since any one has brought in big game,&rdquo; said Macana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Sholoc, &ldquo;you shall have them. Payuchi, hand me my elk-horn
+ ax so that I can split open the head, and you can take the brains to the
+ jacal.&rdquo; Soon not a piece of meat, a bit of skin, tendon, or bone, was
+ left. All was put to use by these people of the forest. And now the feast
+ was ready. The women had roasted many pieces of elk&rsquo;s meat over the coals.
+ The fish had been taken from under the hot ashes, the half burned grass
+ removed from around them, and the fish broken into pieces and put in flat
+ baskets shaped like platters. There were also pieces of elk meat and cakes
+ of acorn meal baked on hot stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As was the custom with the Indians, the men were served first. Payuchi
+ watched anxiously as his father and the other men took large helpings from
+ the baskets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think there will be enough for us to have any?&rdquo; he asked Gesnip.
+ &ldquo;I am so hungry and they are eating so much. If I were a man, I should
+ remember about the women and children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; you wouldn&rsquo;t if you were a man; men never do,&rdquo; answered Gesnip. &ldquo;But
+ you need not worry, there is plenty. Mother said there would be some left
+ for breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait for that till I get through,&rdquo; said Payuchi, laughing. After all had
+ eaten a hearty meal, more than for many weeks they had been able to have
+ at any one time, the tired women each gathered her children together and
+ took them to her own jacal, leaving the men sitting around the camp fire.
+ Payuchi, who tumbled to sleep as soon as his head touched his sleeping
+ mat, was wakened by some one pulling his rabbit-skin coat, which he wore
+ nights as well as days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Payuchi,&rdquo; said a voice, &ldquo;wake up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not been asleep,&rdquo; answered the boy, stoutly, as he rubbed his eyes
+ to get them open. &ldquo;What do you want, Nopal?&rdquo; for he saw his brother
+ speaking to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, do not waken mother,&rdquo; said Nopal, speaking very softly. &ldquo;I know
+ that the men will make an offering to Chinigchinich. I am going to watch
+ them. We are old enough, at least I am. Do you want to come?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A star shone in at the top of the jacal, and Payuchi gazed up at it,
+ blinking, while he pulled his thoughts together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They will punish us if they find us out,&rdquo; said he at length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But we won&rsquo;t let them find us out, stupid one,&rdquo; replied his brother,
+ impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What if Chinigchinich should be angry with us? He does not like to have
+ children in the ceremony of the offering,&rdquo; said Payuchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give him my humming-bird skin, and you shall give him your
+ mountain quail head; then he will be pleased with us,&rdquo; answered Nopal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said the boy; &ldquo;I do not like very well to part with that
+ quail head, but perhaps it is a good thing to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Creeping softly from the jacal, the boys crouched in the shade of a willow
+ bush and watched the men by the camp fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are standing up. They are just going,&rdquo; said Payuchi, &ldquo;and every one
+ has something in his hand. Father has two bows; I wonder why.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think he is going to make an offering of the new bow to Chinigchinich,&rdquo;
+ answered Nopal. &ldquo;I thought he was going to keep it and give me his old
+ one,&rdquo; he added, with some disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are they offering for?&rdquo; asked the young brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For rain,&rdquo; said Nopal. &ldquo;See, they are going now.&rdquo; In single file the men
+ walked swiftly away, stepping so softly that not a twig cracked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a little the boys followed, slipping from bush to bush that they
+ might not be discovered. They had walked about a mile, when they came to
+ thicker woods with bigger trees and saw a light ahead of them. Nopal laid
+ his hand on his brother to stop him. Peeping through a scrub-oak bush,
+ they looked down into a little glade arched over with great live oaks. In
+ the middle of the opening they saw, by the light of a low fire, a small
+ cone-shaped hut. Beside it stood a gigantic figure painted and adorned
+ with shells, feathers, rattlesnake skins, and necklaces of bone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come back,&rdquo; whispered Payuchi, his teeth chattering with fear. &ldquo;It is
+ Chinigchinich himself; he will see us, and we shall die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Nopal, &ldquo;it is only Nihie, the medicine man. He looks so
+ tall because of his headdress. It is made of framework of dried tules
+ covered with feathers and fish bladders. I saw it one day in his jacal,
+ and it is as tall as I am. That jacal beside him is the vanquech [temple],
+ and I think there is something awful there. You see if there isn&rsquo;t. Hush,
+ now! Squat down. Here they come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a procession the men came into the opening, and, stalking solemnly by,
+ each cast down at the door of the temple an offering of some object which
+ he prized. Cuchuma gave a bone knife which he greatly valued, and a
+ handsome new bow. Sholoc gave a speckled green stone olla from Santa
+ Catalina and a small string of money; but these were chiefs&rsquo; offerings.
+ The other gifts were simpler&mdash;shells, acorn meal, baskets, birds&rsquo;
+ skins, but always something for which the owner cared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the medicine man, satisfied with the things offered which became
+ his own when the ceremony was over, stooped and drew forth the sacred
+ emblem from the temple. It was not even an idol, only a fetich composed of
+ a sack made from the skin of a coyote, the head carefully preserved and
+ stuffed, while the body was dressed smooth of hair and adorned with
+ hanging shells and tufts of birds&rsquo; feathers. A bundle of arrows protruded
+ from the open mouth, giving it a fierce appearance. While Nihie held it
+ up, the men circled round once again, this time more rapidly, and as they
+ passed the medicine man, each gave a spring into the air, shooting an
+ arrow upward with all his force. When the last man had disappeared under
+ the trees, Nihie replaced the skin in the temple, put out the fire, and,
+ singing a kind of chant, he led the men back to their jacals. The boys
+ stood up. Payuchi shivered and drew a long breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must get away now; Nihie will be back soon to get the offerings,&rdquo; said
+ Nopal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But first we must offer our gifts, or Chinigchinich will be angry,&rdquo; said
+ Payuchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come on, then,&rdquo; said the brother; so, stealing softly down the hillside,
+ the boys cast their offerings on the pile in front of the hut and ran
+ away, taking a roundabout path home, that they might not meet the medicine
+ man returning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must hurry to get in the jacal before father,&rdquo; said Nopal, suddenly.
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think of that. Run, Payuchi, run faster.&rdquo; But they were in time
+ after all, and were stretched out on their mats some minutes before their
+ father and Sholoc came in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Macana&rsquo;s first duty in the morning was to attend to the baby, whose
+ wide-open black eyes gave the only sign that it was awake. She unfastened
+ it from the basket and unwrapped it, rubbing the little body over with its
+ morning bath of grease until the firm skin shone as if varnished. When it
+ had nursed and was comfortable, she put the little one back in its cradle
+ basket, which she leaned up against the side of the hut, where the little
+ prisoner might see all that was going on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of the usual breakfast of acorn meal mush, the children had a
+ plentiful meal of fish which their mother had saved from the feast of the
+ night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think any one could catch so many fish as uncle brought last
+ night,&rdquo; said Cleeta, as she helped herself to a piece of yellowtail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, they do, though,&rdquo; said Payuchi. &ldquo;Last night, after supper, uncle
+ told the men some fine stories. I think he has been in places which none
+ of our people have ever seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He told us that once he journeyed many moons toward the land of snow and
+ ice until he came to the country of the Klamath tribe, where he stayed a
+ long time. He said that when they fish they drive posts made of young
+ trees into the bottom of the river and then weave willow boughs in and out
+ until there is a wall of posts and boughs clear across the stream. Then
+ the big red fish come up from the great water into the river. They come,
+ uncle said, so many no one can count them, and the ones behind push
+ against those in front until they are all crowded against the wall, and
+ then the Klamath men catch them with spears and nets until there is food
+ enough for all, and many fish to dry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to see that. What else did he tell you?&rdquo; asked Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He said he visited one place where the great salt water comes into the
+ land and is so big it takes many days to journey round it. Here the people
+ eat fish, clams, and mussels instead of acorns and roots. On the shore
+ they have their feasting ground where they go to eat and dance and tell
+ big stories, and; sometimes to make an offering. So many people go there,
+ uncle said, that the shells they have left make a hill, a hill just of
+ shells that is many steps high. From the top of it one may look over the
+ water, which is so long no eye can see the end of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What else did you hear?&rdquo; asked Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing more, for mother called me,&rdquo; replied her brother. &ldquo;I should like
+ to hear more of those stories, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; asked Gesnip, as she finished her breakfast, &ldquo;when am I to begin
+ to braid mats for the new jacal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soon,&rdquo; replied Macana. &ldquo;This morning you and Payuchi must gather the
+ tule. Have a large pile when I come home.&rdquo; So saying, the mother strapped
+ the baby on her back and, accompanied by the younger children, went out
+ with other women of the tribe to gather the white acorns from the oaks on
+ the highlands pear the mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The December wind, from the snow-capped peaks, chilled and cut with its
+ icy breath their scantily clothed bodies, but for hours they worked
+ picking up the scattered nuts. The labors of an Indian mother ceased only
+ while she slept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Payuchi,&rdquo; said Gesnip, &ldquo;let us go down to the river and get tules.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; replied the boy, readily. &ldquo;Sholoc is going down too. He is
+ going to show the men how to make log canoes like his instead of the tule
+ canoes our people use. But I like the tule canoes, because I can use my
+ feet for paddles.&rdquo; When they reached the river, which was really a lagoon
+ or arm of the sea, the children stopped to watch the men at work. A large
+ log, washed down from the mountains by some flood, lay on the bank. It was
+ good hard wood, and the children saw that it was smoking in three places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is going to make two canoes, but neither one will be so big, as
+ uncle&rsquo;s,&rdquo; said Payuchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can it make two canoes if they burn it up?&rdquo; asked his sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are stupid, Gesnip,&rdquo; said her brother. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you see they are
+ burning it to separate it into two parts? Then they will burn each log
+ into the shape of a boat, finishing it up with axes of bone or horn. Uncle
+ told me how they did it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why have they put the green bark on the top of the log?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it is to keep it from burning along the edge; don&rsquo;t you see? And
+ then there are wider pieces to protect it at the ends. See how they watch
+ the fire and beat it out in one place and then in another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why does it burn so fast?&rdquo; asked Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because they have daubed it with pitch. Can&rsquo;t you smell it?&rdquo; said the
+ boy, sniffing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I can smell it,&rdquo; replied his sister. &ldquo;But come now and help me
+ gather tules. Father is going to burn down our house and build a new one
+ for winter, and I must make a tule rug for each one of you for beds in the
+ new home. It will take a great many tule stems.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is cold to wade,&rdquo; said Payuchi, stepping into the water at the edge of
+ the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Gesnip, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like to gather tules in winter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children pulled up the long rough stems one by one until they had a
+ large pile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think we have enough,&rdquo; said Payuchi, after they had been working about
+ two hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I think so too,&rdquo; said his sister. &ldquo;My back aches, my hands are sore,
+ and my feet are so cold.&rdquo; Payuchi brought some wild grapevine with which
+ he tied the tule into two bundles, fastening the larger upon his sister&rsquo;s
+ back; for with his people the women and girls were the burden bearers, and
+ a grown Indian would not do any work that his wife could possibly do for
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After they had traveled a little way on the homeward path, Gesnip stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go so fast, Payuchi,&rdquo; she begged. &ldquo;This bundle is so large it
+ nearly tumbles me over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just hurry a little until we get to the foot of the hill yonder where
+ Nopal and the other big boys are playing, and you can rest while I watch
+ the game,&rdquo; answered her brother. Gesnip struggled on, bending under the
+ weight and size of her awkward burden until, with a sigh of relief, she
+ seated herself on a stone to rest while Payuchi, throwing his bundle on
+ the ground, stood up to watch the boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See, Nopal is It,&rdquo; he said. Nopal, coming forward, stooped low and rolled
+ a hoop along the ground, which the boys had pounded smooth and hard for
+ the game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the hoop rolled another boy stepped forward and tried to throw a stick
+ through it, but failed. Then all the players pointed their fingers at him
+ and grunted in scorn. Again Nopal rolled the hoop, and this time the boy
+ threw through the ring, and all the boys, and Payuchi too, gave whoops of
+ delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children watched the game until Gesnip said that they must go on, for
+ their mother would be home and want them. When they returned, Macana was
+ warming herself by the fire where the men were sitting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See our tule; is it not a great deal?&rdquo; asked the children, showing their
+ bundles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but not enough,&rdquo; replied their mother. &ldquo;You will have to go out
+ another day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women, who had been working all the morning gathering acorns, now
+ squatted near the fire and began grinding up the nuts which had been
+ already dried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gesnip,&rdquo; called her mother, &ldquo;bring me the grinding stones.&rdquo; The girl went
+ to the jacal and brought two stones, one a heavy bowlder with a hollow in
+ its top, which had been made partly by stone axes, but more by use; the
+ other stone fitted into this hollow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now bring me the basket of roasted grasshoppers,&rdquo; said the mother. Taking
+ a handful of grasshoppers, Macana put them into the hollow in the larger
+ stone, and with the smaller stone rubbed them to a coarse powder. This
+ powder she put into a small basket which Gesnip brought her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad we caught the grasshoppers. They taste better than acorn meal
+ mush,&rdquo; said Payuchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How many grasshoppers there are in the fall,&rdquo; said Gesnip, &ldquo;and so many
+ rabbits, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We had such a good time at the rabbit drive,&rdquo; said Payuchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And such a big feast afterwards, nearly as good as last night,&rdquo; said
+ Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me about the rabbit drive,&rdquo; said Cleeta, squatting down beside the
+ children in front of the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was in the big wash up the river toward the mountains,&rdquo; began Payuchi.
+ &ldquo;You have seen the rabbits running to hide in a bunch of grass and cactus
+ when you go with mother to the mountains for acorns, haven&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cleeta nodded. &ldquo;Not this winter, though. We saw only two to-day,&rdquo; she
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is because of the drive,&rdquo; said her brother. &ldquo;It was in the
+ afternoon, with the wind blowing from the ocean, and all the men who could
+ shoot best with bow and arrow, or throw the spear well, stood on the other
+ side of the wash.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father was there,&rdquo; said Cleeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and many others,&rdquo; said Payuchi. &ldquo;Then some of the men and all of us
+ boys got green branches of trees and came down on this side of the wash.
+ Nopal started the fire. It burned along in the grass slowly at first, and
+ when it came too near the jacals on one side or the woods on the other, we
+ would beat it out with the branches, but soon it ran before the wind into
+ the cactus and bunch grass. The rabbits were frightened out and ran from
+ the fire as fast as they could, and in a few minutes they were right at
+ the feet of father and the other hunters. They killed forty before the
+ smoke made them run too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dress was made of their skin,&rdquo; said the little girl, smoothing her
+ gown lovingly. &ldquo;It keeps me so warm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did the fire burn long?&rdquo; asked Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, we beat it out, or it would have gone up the wash into the live oaks;
+ then we boys should have been well punished for our carelessness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here their mother called to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Payuchi,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;put away this basket of grasshopper meal. And,
+ Gesnip, go to the jacal and find me the coils for basket weaving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What shall I bring?&rdquo; asked Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The large bundle of chippa that is soaking in a basket, and the big coil
+ of yellow kah-hoom and the little one of black tsuwish which are hanging
+ up, and bring me my needle and bone awl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you want the coil of millay?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I shall need no red to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Squatted on the ground, where she could feel the warmth of the fire on her
+ back, but where the heat could not dry her basket materials, Macana began
+ her work. Taking a dripping chippa, or willow bough, from the basket where
+ it had been soaking, she dried it on leaves and wound it tightly in a
+ close coil the size of her thumbnail, then spatted it together until it
+ seemed no longer a cord, but a solid piece of wood. Thus she made the base
+ of her basket; then, threading her needle, which was but a horny cactus
+ stem set in a head of hardened pitch, she stitched in and out over the
+ upper and under the lower layer, drawing her thread firmly each time. The
+ thread was the creamy, satin-like kah-hoom. Round and round she coiled the
+ chippa, the butt of one piece overlapping the tip of another, while with
+ her needle she covered all with the smoothly drawn kah-hoom. After a time
+ she laid the kah-hoom aside for a stitch or two of the black root of the
+ tule, called tsuwish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children had watched the starting of the basket, then had begun a game
+ of match, with white and black pebbles. After a time Gesnip, looking up
+ from her play, exclaimed, as she saw the black diamond pattern the weaver
+ was making:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, why are you weaving a rattlesnake basket?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am making it to please Chinigchinich that he may smile upon me and
+ guard you, children, and Cuchuma from the bite of the rattlesnake. There
+ are so many of them here this year, and I fear for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, mother,&rdquo; said Gesnip. &ldquo;If Titas&rsquo;s mother had made a black
+ diamond basket, maybe the snake would not have bitten her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think Chinigchinich does smile upon you,&rdquo; said Payuchi, &ldquo;for when we
+ were so hungry in the month of roots [October] you wove him the hunting
+ basket with the pattern of deer&rsquo;s antlers, trimmed with quail feathers,
+ and see how much food we have had: first the rabbits, then the
+ grasshoppers, and now the fish and elk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While you work tell us how the first baby basket was made,&rdquo; begged
+ Cleeta. The mother nodded; and as she wound and pressed closely the moist
+ chippa, and the cactus needle flew in and out with the creamy kah-hoom or
+ the black tsuwish, she told the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the mother of all made the basket for the first man child, she used
+ a rainbow for the wood of the back of the basket, with stars woven in each
+ side, and straight lightning down the middle in front. Sunbeams shining on
+ a far-away rain storm formed the fringe in front, where we use strips of
+ buckskin, and the carry straps were brightest sunbeams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, you left out that the baby was wrapped in a soft purple cloud
+ from the mountains,&rdquo; said Cleeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, in a purple cloud of evening, wrapped so he could not move leg or
+ arm, but would grow straight and beautiful,&rdquo; said the mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long while the children watched in silence the patient fingers at
+ their work; then Gesnip asked, &ldquo;Is it true, mother, that when you were a
+ little child your father and mother and many of your tribe died of
+ hunger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; replied Macana, sadly, &ldquo;but who told you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old Cotopacnic, but I thought it was one of his dreams. Why were you all
+ so hungry?&rdquo; asked the girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because the rain failed for three seasons. After a time there was no
+ grass, no acorns, the rabbits and deer died or wandered away, the streams
+ dried up so there were no fish, the ground became so dry that there were
+ no more grubs or worms of any kind, no grasshoppers. There was nothing to
+ eat but roots. Nearly all our tribe died, and many other people, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you live?&rdquo; asked Payuchi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My aunt had married a chief whose home was in a rich valley in the
+ mountains where it is always green. She came down to see my mother, and
+ when she found how hard it was to get food for us all, she took me by the
+ hand and tumbled Sholoc who was smaller than little Nakin, into her great
+ seed basket and took us off to the mountains until times should grow
+ better; but the rains did not come until it was too late. I stayed with
+ her until I married your father. Sholoc became a great hunter, then chief
+ of the people of Santa Catalina, where he became a great fisherman also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children looked grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think such bad seasons can ever come again?&rdquo; asked Gesnip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who can tell?&rdquo; replied the mother, with a sigh. &ldquo;Last year was very bad
+ and there is little rain yet this year. That is why the men offered gifts
+ to Chinigchinich last night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody must take me away from you to keep me from being hungry,&rdquo; said
+ gentle Cleeta, hiding her face in her mother&rsquo;s lap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I were Chinigchinich,&rdquo; said Payuchi, &ldquo;I would not let so many people
+ die, just because they needed a little more rain. I would not be that kind
+ of a god.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, my child,&rdquo; said the mother, sternly. &ldquo;He will hear and punish you.
+ If it is our fate, we must bend to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter III. &mdash; &ldquo;The Secret of the Strait&rdquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Cabrillo
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One afternoon in September, in the year 1542, two broad, clumsy ships,
+ each with the flag of Spain flying above her many sails, were beating
+ their way up the coast of southern California. All day the vessels had
+ been wallowing in the choppy seas, driven about by contrary winds. At last
+ the prow of the leading ship was turned toward shore, where there seemed
+ to be an opening that might lead to a good harbor. At the bow of the ship
+ stood the master of the expedition, the tanned, keen-faced captain, Juan
+ Rodriguez Cabrillo. He was earnestly watching the land before him, which
+ was still some distance away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come hither, Juan,&rdquo; he called to a sturdy lad, about sixteen, who, with
+ an Indian boy, brought from Mexico as interpreter, was also eagerly
+ looking landward. &ldquo;Your eyes should be better than mine. Think you there
+ is a harbor beyond that point?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It surely seems so to me, sir,&rdquo; answered the boy; &ldquo;and Pepe, whose eyes,
+ you know, are keener than ours, says that he can plainly see the
+ entrance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust he is right; for this thickening weather promises a storm, and a
+ safe harbor would be a gift of God to us weary ones this night,&rdquo; said the
+ captain, with a sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the fair June day when they had sailed out of the harbor on the west
+ shore of Mexico, they had been following first up the coast line of the
+ Peninsula, then of Upper California. No maps or charts of the region
+ showing where lay good harbors or dangerous rocks, could be found in
+ Cabrillo&rsquo;s cabin. Instead, there were maps of this South Sea which
+ pictured terrible dangers for mariners&mdash;great whirlpools which could
+ suck down whole fleets of vessels, and immense waterfalls, where it was
+ thought the whole ocean poured off the end of the land into space. A brave
+ man was Captain Cabrillo, for, half believing these stories, he yet sailed
+ steadily on, determined, no matter what happened to himself, to do his
+ duty to the king under whose flag he sailed, and to the viceroy of Mexico,
+ whose funds had furnished the expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ California has ever been noted for its brave men, but none have been more
+ courageous than this explorer, who was probably the first white man to set
+ his foot upon its soil. As the ship approached land the crew became
+ silent, every eye being turned anxiously to the opening of the passage
+ which appeared before them. The vessel, driven by the stiff breeze, rushed
+ on, almost touching the rock at one point. Then, caught by a favorable
+ current, it swept into mid-channel, where it moved rapidly forward, until
+ at length it rode safely in the harbor now known as San Diego Bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a good port and well inclosed,&rdquo; said Juan Cabrillo, with great
+ satisfaction, gazing out upon the broad sheet of quiet water. &ldquo;We will
+ name it for our good San Miguel, to whom our prayers for a safe anchorage
+ were offered this morning.&rdquo; Then, when the two ships were riding at
+ anchor, the commander ordered out the boats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will see what kind of people these are, dodging behind the bushes
+ yonder,&rdquo; said he. As the Spaniards drew near shore they could see many
+ fleeing figures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a pity they are so afraid,&rdquo; said Cabrillo. &ldquo;If we are to learn
+ anything of the country, we must teach them that we mean them no harm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master,&rdquo; said Pepe, &ldquo;there are three of them hiding behind those bushes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it so, lad? Then go you up to them. They will not fear you.&rdquo; So the
+ Indian boy walked slowly forward, holding out his hands with his palms
+ upward, which not only let the natives see that he was unarmed, but in the
+ sign language meant peace and friendship. As he drew near to them an old
+ man and two younger ones, dressed in scanty shirts of rabbit-skins, came
+ from their hiding places and began to talk to Pepe, but, though they also
+ were Indians, they did not speak his language. Some of their words were
+ evidently similar to his, and by these and the help of signs he partly
+ understood what they said. Presently he returned to the group on shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say there are Spaniards back in the country a few days&rsquo; journey from
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spaniards? That is impossible,&rdquo; returned Cabrillo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say that they are bearded, wear clothes like yours, and have white
+ faces,&rdquo; answered the boy, simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They must be mistaken, or perhaps you did not understand them fully,&rdquo;
+ said the master. &ldquo;At another time we will question them further. Now, give
+ them this present of beads and hurry back, for it is late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night some of the men from the ships went on shore to fish. While
+ they were drawing their nets, the Indians stole up softly and discharged
+ their arrows, wounding three. The boy Juan had the most serious injury, an
+ arrow being so deeply embedded in his shoulder that it could not be
+ removed until they reached the ship. There the padre, who, like most
+ priests of that day, knew something of surgery, drew it out, and bound up
+ the shoulder in soothing balsams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the second day of their stay in port the wind began to blow from the
+ southwest; the waves grew rough, and Cabrillo ordered the ships to be made
+ ready for the tempest, which soon became violent. Meantime, Juan lay
+ suffering in his hammock, which swung backward and forward with the motion
+ of the ship. Suddenly he heard a step beside him and felt a cool hand on
+ his forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How goes it, lad?&rdquo; said Cabrillo, for it was the master himself. &ldquo;You are
+ suffering in a good cause. Have courage; you will soon be well. Remember,
+ you have helped to discover a harbor, the like of which is seldom found.
+ This storm is a severe one. I can hear the surf booming on the farther
+ shore, yet our ship shows no strain on the anchor. Good harbor though it
+ is, I am sorely disappointed, as I had hoped it was the entrance to the
+ strait, the strait that seems a phantom flying before us as we go, drawing
+ us onward to we know not what.&rdquo; The sadness of the captain&rsquo;s voice
+ troubled Juan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master,&rdquo; he asked earnestly, &ldquo;what is the strait? I hear of it often, yet
+ no one can tell me what it is, or where it lies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because no one knows,&rdquo; answered the captain, rising. &ldquo;I am needed on
+ deck, but I will send old Tomas to tell you its strange story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The secret of the strait,&rdquo; said old Tomas, as he seated himself beside
+ Juan, &ldquo;has led many men to gallant deeds and also many a man to a gallant
+ death. Always, since as a lad I first went to sea, the merchants of many
+ lands have been seeking a safe and speedy way of reaching the Indies,
+ where are found such foods, spices, and jewels as one sees nowhere else in
+ the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father and grandfather used to travel with caravans overland to and
+ from India. There are several routes, each controlled by some one of the
+ great Italian cities, but all have somewhere to cross the desert, where
+ the trains are often robbed by wild tribes. Sometimes, as they come nearer
+ home, they are held by the Turks for heavy tribute, with such loss that
+ the merchants have been forced to turn to the sea in hopes that a better
+ way might be found. It was while searching for this route that Columbus
+ discovered the new world, and when the news of his success was brought
+ back to Europe there was great rejoicing, because it was thought that he
+ had reached some part of India. Magellan&rsquo;s voyage, however, destroyed
+ these hopes. He sailed for months down the eastern shore of the new land,
+ and discovered, far away to the south, a strait through which he reached
+ the great South Sea, but then he still sailed on for nearly a year before
+ he came to the Spice Islands and Asia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now every one believes that somewhere through this land to the north of
+ us there is a wide, deep sea passage from the North Sea [Atlantic] to the
+ South Sea [Pacific], by which ships may speedily reach India. This passage
+ is called the Strait of Anian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The great captain, Hernando Cortez, the conqueror of New Spain [Mexico]
+ spent many years and a large fortune seeking for this water way. Four
+ different expeditions he sent out to explore this coast: most of them at
+ his own cost. In the second one his pilot, Jiminez, led a mutiny, murdered
+ his captain, and afterward discovered, accidentally, the southern point of
+ this land we are now exploring. But it was not the good fortune of the
+ noble Cortez to discover the strait. Our captain is the next to take up
+ the search, and may God send him success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a stay of nearly a week in the bay of San Diego, Cabrillo continued
+ his voyage up the coast, sailing by day, anchoring at night. He touched at
+ an island which he named San Salvador, but which we know as Santa
+ Catalina. Here, by his kind and generous treatment, he won the friendship
+ of the natives. From this beautiful spot, he sailed, one Sunday morning,
+ to the mainland. Entering the Bay of San Pedro, he found it enveloped in
+ smoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems a fair port,&rdquo; said the commander, &ldquo;but go no farther inland.
+ Drop anchor while we can see our way. We may well call this the Bay of
+ Smokes.&rdquo; The fires, they found, had been started by the Indians to drive
+ the rabbits from shelter, so they could be the more easily killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sailing on, the ships anchored off a thickly settled valley, where the
+ town of Ventura now lies. Here, on October 12, 1542, Cabrillo and his
+ company went on shore and took solemn possession of the land in the name
+ of the king of Spain and the viceroy of Mexico. Here, and along the
+ channel, the people were better-looking, more comfortably lodged and
+ clothed, than those farther south. They also had good canoes, which the
+ natives of the lower coast did not possess. Pushing on, the explorer saw
+ and noted the channel islands and rounded Point Conception. From here he
+ was driven back by contrary winds, and toward nightfall of a stormy day
+ found himself near the little island now named San Miguel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will call it La Posesion and take it for our own,&rdquo; said Cabrillo,
+ &ldquo;for, if we can but make it, there seems to be a good harbor here.&rdquo; The
+ storm, however, grew more severe. The sea rose until occasionally the
+ waves swept over the smaller ship, which was without a deck. Here occurred
+ a most unhappy accident. Something about the ship, a spar probably,
+ loosened by the storm, fell and struck the brave commander, breaking his
+ arm. Although severely injured, he would not have the wounds dressed
+ until, after a long period of anxiety, the two ships entered in safety the
+ little harbor of San Miguel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, stormbound, they remained for a week. When they ventured forth, they
+ again met with high winds and bad weather. Cabrillo, who in spite of
+ discouragements never forgot his search for the strait, pushed close
+ inshore and kept much of the time on deck looking for some signs of a
+ river or passage. One morning at daybreak, after a rough night, they found
+ themselves drifting in an open bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a fine roadstead,&rdquo; said Cabrillo, coming on deck, as the sun rose
+ over the pine-covered hills. &ldquo;Were it smaller, it would be a welcome
+ harbor. We will name it from those majestic trees La Bahia de Pinos, and
+ yonder long projection we will call the Cabo de Pinos.&rdquo; That bay is now
+ called Monterey, but the cape still bears the name given it by this first
+ explorer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anchoring in forty-five fathoms of water, they tried to go on shore, in
+ order to take possession of the land, but the sea was so rough that they
+ could not launch their boats. The next day they discovered and named some
+ mountains which they called Sierra Nevada, and, sailing on, went as far
+ north as about 40ΒΌ. But this winter voyage was made at a great sacrifice.
+ The exposure and hardships, following the wound he had received, were too
+ much for even the hardy sailor Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo. After weeks of
+ struggle with storms, the ships were forced back to their old shelter at
+ San Miguel. Here Christmas week was spent, but a sad holiday it was to the
+ explorers, for their brave leader lay dying. Nobly had he done his duty up
+ to the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Juan,&rdquo; he said, to his young attendant, on Christmas Eve, &ldquo;how gladly the
+ bells will be ringing in Lisbon to-night. I seem to hear them now. They
+ drive out all other sounds. Call Ferrelo and let no one else come but the
+ padre.&rdquo; Very soon Juan returned with Cabrillo&rsquo;s first assistant, the
+ pilot, Ferrelo, a brave navigator and a just man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ferrelo,&rdquo; said Cabrillo, faintly, &ldquo;Death calls me, and the duty I lay
+ down you must take up. I command you to push the expedition northward at
+ all hazards, and to keep such records as are necessary in order that
+ fitting account of our voyage shall be given to the world. Will you
+ promise me to do this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will, my master,&rdquo; said Ferrelo, simply. &ldquo;To the best of my ability will
+ I take up your work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Always looking for the strait, Ferrelo?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Always, senor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 3d of January, 1543, the brave man died and was buried in the sands
+ of Cuyler Harbor on San Miguel Island. His men called the island Juan
+ Rodriguez. This name was afterwards dropped, but California should see to
+ it that the island is rechristened in honor of the great sailor who sleeps
+ there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferrelo later succeeded in sailing as far north as Cape Mendocino and
+ perhaps as far as 42Β‘, but, though he kept as close to the shore as
+ possible, he failed to discover the great bay whose waters, spreading like
+ a sheet of silver over sixty miles of country, lay hidden just behind the
+ Golden Gate. Near the Oregon line he was driven back by storms, and
+ returned to Mexico, where he published a full account of the voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drake
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the town of Offenburg, Germany, there is a statue of a man standing on
+ the deck of a ship, leaning against an anchor, his right hand grasping a
+ map of America, his left, a cluster of bulbous roots. On the pedestal is
+ the inscription, &ldquo;Sir Francis Drake, the introducer of potatoes into
+ Europe in the year of our Lord 1586.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While it is doubtful whether this honor really belongs to Drake, an
+ Englishman, seeing the statue, would be inclined to say, &ldquo;Is this all that
+ Germany has to tell of the great captain who led our navy against the
+ Spanish Armada; the first Englishman to sail around the world; the most
+ daring explorer, clever naval commander, expert seaman, brave soldier,
+ loyal friend, and gallant enemy of his time?&rdquo; A Spaniard, on the contrary,
+ might well exclaim, &ldquo;Why did Germany erect a statue to this terrible man
+ whom our poets call Dragontea [Dragon], this greatest of all pirates, this
+ terror of the sea?&rdquo; All this, and more, might be said of one man, who
+ began life as a ship&rsquo;s boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time Drake first went to sea, England and Spain were by no means
+ friendly. Henry the Eighth of England had ill-treated his wife, who was a
+ Spanish princess. In addition he had drawn the English people away from
+ the Church of Rome. These things were most displeasing to Spain, but there
+ was still another reason for disagreement. The interests of the two
+ countries were opposed commercially, and this was the most important cause
+ of contention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spain claimed by right of discovery, and gift of the Pope of Rome, all the
+ land in the new world except Brazil (which belonged to Portugal), and held
+ that no explorers or tradesmen, other than her own, had any rights on her
+ waters or in her ports. English seamen denied much of this claim, and so
+ frequent were the disputes arising upon the subject that the English
+ sailors adopted as a maxim, &ldquo;No peace beyond the line,&rdquo; meaning the line
+ which was, by the Pope&rsquo;s decree, the eastern boundary of the Spanish
+ claim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favorite prey of the British mariners was the treasure ships carrying
+ to Spain the precious cargoes of gold and silver from the rich mines of
+ the new world. With the far richer ships of the Philippine and Indian
+ trade, sailing on unknown waters, they had not, up to Drake&rsquo;s time, been
+ able to interfere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drake, when a very young man, had joined a trading expedition to Mexico.
+ While there the English were attacked by the Spanish in what the former
+ considered a most treacherous manner. Drake&rsquo;s brother and many of his
+ comrades were killed, and their goods taken. After the battle he solemnly
+ vowed to be revenged, and so thoroughly did he carry out his resolution
+ that he was for years the terror of the Spanish seamen, and, by many of
+ the superstitious common sailors, believed to be Satan himself come to
+ earth in human form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after this unfortunate expedition Drake engaged in a marauding
+ voyage to Panama, where he captured rich stores of gold and silver and
+ precious stones. He gained such renown for his bravery and seamanship that
+ upon coming home he found himself famous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen Elizabeth knew that Spain was opposed to her and her religion, and
+ was not in her heart displeased when her brave seamen got the better of
+ their Spanish rivals. She received Drake privately, and help was offered
+ him secretly from people who stood high in the government. With this
+ encouragement he resolved to embark on a most hazardous and daring
+ adventure. While in Panama he had seen, from a &ldquo;high and goodlie tree&rdquo; on
+ a mountain side, the great Pacific, and was immediately filled with a
+ desire to sail on its waters and explore its shores. He therefore
+ determined to cross the Atlantic, pass through the Strait of Magellan, up
+ the Pacific, and to plunder the Spanish towns along the coast of South and
+ Central America, until he should reach the region traversed by the richly
+ laden Spanish ships coming from India and the Philippines. It is said that
+ the queen herself put a thousand crowns into this venture. One thing is
+ certain, that he received sufficient help to fit out five small vessels,
+ with one hundred and sixty-four men. With these he sailed from Falmouth,
+ England, in December of 1577. With the exception of perhaps one or two of
+ the rich men who had helped him, no one, not even his men, knew of his
+ plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a long and interesting voyage in which one vessel was lost and the
+ others, though he did not know it, had deserted him, he found himself with
+ but one ship beating his way up the coast of Lower California. This was
+ his flagship Pelican, which he had rechristened the Golden Hind. It was
+ then so laden with rich booty, that it was like a hawk which had stolen
+ too heavy a chicken, driven this way and that by the winds, scarcely able
+ to reach its nest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to a good store of Chile wines and foods of various kinds,
+ there were packed away in the hold of the Golden Hind, twenty-five
+ thousand pesos of gold, eight thousand pounds of English money, and a
+ great cross of gold with &ldquo;emeralds near as large as a man&rsquo;s finger.&rdquo; From
+ one vessel Drake had taken one hundred-weight of silver; from a messenger
+ of the mines, who was sleeping beside a spring on the Peruvian coast,
+ thirteen bars of solid silver; off the backs of a train of little gray
+ llamas, the camels of the Andes, eight hundred pounds of silver; and
+ besides all these were large quantities of gold and silver that were not
+ recorded in the ship&rsquo;s list, and stores of pearls, diamonds, emeralds,
+ silks, and porcelain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last prize taken was the Spanish treasure ship Cacafuegos. Drake had
+ transferred its cargo and crew to his own vessel and, for a time, manned
+ it with some of his men. Its noble commander, St. John de Anton, who had
+ been wounded in the attack, received every possible attention on the
+ English vessel, and in the report which he afterwards made to the viceroy
+ of Mexico, he told of the perfect order and discipline maintained on the
+ Golden Hind, and of the luxury which surrounded its commander, who was
+ treated with great reverence by his men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before sailing on to the northward, Drake restored St. John and his crew
+ to their vessel. Then, because he feared that they might fall into the
+ hands of his fleet (having no suspicion that the other captains had
+ returned home), he gave the Spaniards the following letter, which shows
+ the great Englishman to have been more honorable than he is oftentimes
+ represented:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Master Weinter and the Masters of the Other Ships of my Fleet:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it pleaseth God that you should chance to meet with this ship of St.
+ John de Anton, I pray you use him well according to my promise given him.
+ If you want to use anything that is in the ship, I pray you pay him double
+ value for it, which I will satisfy again. And command your men not to do
+ any harm and what agreement we have made, at my return unto England, I
+ will, by God&rsquo;s help, perform, although I am in doubt that this letter will
+ ever come to your hand, notwithstanding I am the man I have promised to
+ be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beseeching God, the Saviour of the world, to have us all in his keeping,
+ to whom I give all honor, praise, and glory,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your sorrowful captain, whose heart is heavy for you,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Francis Drake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How to get home was the problem which this daring man had now to solve.
+ There was no possibility of returning by the way he had come. He well knew
+ that the news of his departure had reached Spain, and that her war ships
+ would be waiting for him, not only at the eastern entrance of the Strait
+ of Magellan, but at the Isthmus and in the Caribbean Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If by sailing northward he could find the Strait of Anian, then his
+ homeward journey would be safe and short; but if he could not find that
+ illusive body of water, then there was left to him but the Pacific for a
+ highway. However, this did not daunt him, as he felt that what the
+ Portuguese Magellan had done, Drake the Englishman could do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keeping well out from shore, the Golden Hind now sailed northward for
+ nearly two months. Drake passed just west of the Farallon Islands, never
+ dreaming of the great harbor which lay so short a distance on the other
+ side. He traveled as far north as latitude 42Β‘ or possibly 43Β‘, and
+ perhaps he even landed at one point, but he failed to find the strait.
+ According to Fletcher, the priest of the Church of England who kept a
+ journal of the expedition, they were finally forced by the extreme cold to
+ turn southward. &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; says Fletcher, &ldquo;it pleased God on this 17th day of
+ June, 1579, to send us, in latitude 38Β‘, a convenient fit harbor.&rdquo; This is
+ now supposed to be Drakes Bay, which lies thirty miles northwest of San
+ Francisco, in Marin county.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In this bay we anchored, and the people of the country having their
+ houses close to the waterside showed themselves unto us and sent presents
+ to our general. He, in return, courteously treated them and liberally
+ bestowed upon them things necessary to cover their nakedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Their houses are digged around about with earth and have for the brim of
+ that circle, clefts of wood set upon the ground and joined closely
+ together at the top like the spire of a steeple, which by reason of this
+ closeness are very warm. The men go naked, but the women make themselves
+ loose garments knit about the middle, while over their shoulders they wear
+ the skin of a deer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These people brought presents and seemed to want to offer sacrifices to
+ the strangers as gods, but Drake, hastily calling his men together, held
+ divine services, &ldquo;To which, especially the prayers and music,&rdquo; says
+ Fletcher, &ldquo;they were most attentive and seemed to be greatly affected.&rdquo;
+ The Bible used by Drake in this service is still to be seen in Nut Hall
+ House, Devonshire, England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently a messenger came, saying that the king wished to visit them if
+ they would assure him of their peaceful intentions. Drake sent him
+ presents, then marched his force into a kind of fort he had had made in
+ which to place such parts of the cargo as it was necessary to remove in
+ order to careen the ship for repairing. The coming of the chief is thus
+ described:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He came in princely majesty. In the fore-front was a man of goodly
+ personage who bore the scepter whereon was hung two crowns with chains of
+ marvelous length. The crowns were made of knit-work wrought with feathers
+ of divers colors, the chains being made of bony substances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Next came the king with his guard, all well clothed in connie skins, then
+ the naked common people with faces painted, each bearing some presents.
+ After ceremonies consisting of speeches and dances, they offered one of
+ the crowns to Drake, who, accepting in the name of Elizabeth, allowed it
+ to be placed on his head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the men were busy cleaning and repairing the ship, the commander and
+ his officers made excursions into the interior, visiting many Indian towns
+ and passing through wide plains where vast herds of deer, often one
+ thousand or more, all large and fat, were feeding on the rich grasses.
+ They also saw great numbers of what they called connies, which, from their
+ description, must have been ground squirrels, or else some variety of
+ animal now extinct. The country Drake named New Albion, partly from its
+ white cliffs, which resembled those of his native land, and partly in
+ belief that it would be easier to lay claim to the country if it bore one
+ of the names applied to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the time came for our departure,&rdquo; continued Fletcher in his journal,
+ &ldquo;our general set up a monument of our being here, so also, of her
+ majesty&rsquo;s right and title to the land: namely a plate nailed upon a fair
+ great post, whereon was engraved her majesty&rsquo;s name, the day and year of
+ our arrival, with the giving up of the province and people into her
+ majesty&rsquo;s hands, together with her highness&rsquo; picture and arms in a
+ sixpence under the plate, whereunder was also written the name of our
+ general.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fletcher seemed not to know of Cabrillo&rsquo;s voyage, for he claimed that no
+ one had ever discovered land in this region, or for many degrees to the
+ south; while in fact Ferrelo with Cabrillo&rsquo;s ships had sailed as far north
+ as latitude 42Β‘, although we have no reason to think that he landed in a
+ higher latitude than that of Point Conception and San Miguel Island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again solemn religious services were held by the Englishmen on the
+ hospitable soil that had been their home for over a month. Then they went
+ on board the ship, accompanied to the shore by the grieving Indians, who
+ would not be comforted when they saw their new friends forsaking them. It
+ was near the last of July in 1579 that Captain Drake with his brave men
+ began his wonderful homeward voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a triumphant return they made in September, a year later. Crowds
+ flocked to see the famous ship and its gallant commander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the queen&rsquo;s statesmen strongly disapproved of Drake&rsquo;s attack upon
+ Spanish towns and vessels, and felt he should be arrested and tried for
+ piracy; but the common people cheered him wherever he went, and as a
+ crowning honor, in the luxurious cabin of his good ship Golden Hind, he
+ was visited by the great Elizabeth herself. When the banquet was over, at
+ the queen&rsquo;s command, he bent his knee before her, and this sovereign, who,
+ though a woman, dearly loved such courage and daring as he had displayed,
+ tapped him on the shoulder and bade him arise &ldquo;Sir Francis Drake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galli and Carmenon
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1584 Francisco Galli, commanding a Philippine ship, returning to Mexico
+ by way of Japan, sighted the coast of California in latitude 37Β‘ 30&rsquo;. He
+ saw, as he reported, &ldquo;a high and fair land with no snow and many trees,
+ and in the sea, drifts of roots, reeds, and leaves.&rdquo; Some of the latter he
+ gathered and cooked with meat for his men, who were no doubt suffering
+ from scurvy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galli wrote of the point where he first saw the coast as Cape Mendocino,
+ which would seem to imply that the point had been discovered and named at
+ some previous time, of which, however, there is no record.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1595 Sebastian Carmenon, commanding the ship San Agustin, coming from
+ the Philippines, was given royal orders to make some explorations on the
+ coast of California, probably to find a suitable harbor for Manila
+ vessels. In doing so he was so unfortunate as to run his vessel ashore
+ behind Point Reyes, and to lighten her was obliged to leave behind a
+ portion of his cargo, consisting of wax and silks in boxes. There is only
+ the briefest record of this voyage, and no report of any discoveries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vizcaino
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost sixty years after the voyage of Cabrillo, came a royal order from
+ the king of Spain to the viceroy of Mexico which, translated from the
+ Spanish, ran something like this:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go, search the northern coast of the Californias, until you find a good
+ and sufficient harbor wherein my Manila galleons may anchor safe and
+ protected, and where may be founded a town that my scurvy-stricken sailors
+ may find the fresh food necessary for their relief. Furthermore, spare no
+ expense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The destruction of Spanish shipping by Drake and other English seamen who
+ followed his example, had caused great anxiety to the Spaniards and was
+ partly the reason for this order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send for Don Sebastian,&rdquo; said the viceroy. &ldquo;He is a brave gentleman and
+ good sailor. He shall carry out the order of the king.&rdquo; But it took time
+ to fit out such an expedition, and it was not until an afternoon in May,
+ 1602, that Don Sebastian Vizcaino, on his flagship, the San Diego, sailed
+ out of the harbor of Acapulco into the broad Pacific. Closely following
+ him were his other ships, the San Thomas and Tres Reyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been solemn services at the cathedral that afternoon. Officers
+ and men had taken of the holy communion; and now their wives and children
+ stood on the island at the entrance of the harbor, watching the white
+ sails as they grew fainter and fainter and at last disappeared in the haze
+ of the coming night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the watchers returned to their lonely homes with heavy hearts, for in
+ those days few came back who sailed out on the great South Sea. Storms,
+ battles with the natives, and scurvy made sad havoc among the sailors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in November Vizcaino entered &ldquo;a famous port,&rdquo; which he named San
+ Diego, finding it, as Padre Ascension&rsquo;s journal says, &ldquo;beautiful and very
+ grand, and all parts of it very convenient shelter from the winds.&rdquo; After
+ leaving San Diego, the next anchoring place was the island named by
+ Vizcaino for Santa Catalina, on whose feast day his ships entered the
+ pretty little harbor of Avalon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spaniards were greatly pleased with the island and also with the
+ people, whom they described as being a large-figured, light-complexioned
+ race; all, men, women, and children, being well clothed in sealskins. They
+ had large dwellings, many towns, and fine canoes. What struck Padre
+ Ascension most strongly was their temple, of which he says: &ldquo;There was in
+ the temple a large level court, and about this a circle surrounded by
+ feather work of different colors taken from various birds which I
+ understand had been sacrificed to their idols. Within this circle was the
+ figure of a demon painted in color after the manner of the Indians of New
+ Spain. On its sides were figures of the sun and moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It so fell out that when our soldiers came up from the ships to view the
+ temple, there were in the circle two immense ravens, far larger than
+ ordinary. When the men arrived, they flew away to some rocks that were
+ near by, and the soldiers seeing how large they were, raised their
+ arquebuses and killed them both. Then did the Indians begin to weep and
+ make great lamentation. I understand that the devil was accustomed to
+ speak to them, through these birds, for which they showed great respect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were in the island quantities of edible roots of a variety of the
+ yucca called gicamas, and many little bulbs which the Spanish called
+ &ldquo;papas pequenos&rdquo; (little potatoes). These, the padre said, the Indians
+ took in their canoes over to the mainland, thus making their living by
+ barter. This certainly must have been the beginning of commerce on the
+ coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vizcaino entered and named the Bay of San Pedro. To the channel islands he
+ also gave the names which they now bear. Sailing on, he discovered a river
+ which he named &ldquo;Carmelo,&rdquo; in honor of the Carmelite friars who accompanied
+ him. The same day the fleet rounded the long cape called &ldquo;Point Pinos&rdquo; and
+ came to anchor in the bay formed by its projection. From here the San
+ Tomas was sent to Mexico to carry the sick, of whom there were many, and
+ to bring back fresh supplies. The men who remained were at once set to
+ work. Some supplied the two ships with wood and water; others built a
+ chapel of brush near the beach, under a large oak at the roots of which
+ flowed a spring of delicious water. In this chapel mass was said and the
+ Te Deum chanted. For over one hundred and fifty years this oak was known,
+ both in New Spain and at the court of the king, as the &ldquo;Oak of Vizcaino,
+ in the Bay of Monterey.&rdquo; From here Vizcaino wrote to the king of Spain as
+ follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Among the ports of greater consideration which I have discovered is one
+ in 30Β‘ north latitude which I called Monterey, as I wrote to your majesty
+ in December. It is all that can be desired for commodiousness and as a
+ station for ships making the voyage from the Philippines, sailing whence
+ they make a landfall on this coast. It is sheltered from all winds and in
+ the immediate vicinity are pines from which masts of any desired size
+ could be obtained, as well as live oak, white oak, and other woods. There
+ is a variety of game, great and small. The land has a genial climate and
+ the waters are good. It is thickly settled by a people whom I find to be
+ of gentle disposition, and whom I believe can be brought within the fold
+ of the Holy Gospel and subjugation to your majesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This enthusiastic praise of the harbor of Monterey by a man who was
+ familiar with the port of San Diego, caused much trouble later, as will be
+ seen in the study of the founding of the missions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not waiting for the return of the San Tomas, Vizcaino with his two ships
+ soon sailed northward, and reached a point in about latitude 42Β‘, which
+ was probably the northern limit reached by Cabrillo&rsquo;s ships and only a
+ little lower than the farthest explorations of Drake. Although Vizcaino
+ was looking for harbors, he yet passed twice outside the Bay of San
+ Francisco, the finest on the coast, without discovering it. After his
+ return to Mexico, Vizcaino endeavored to raise an expedition to found a
+ settlement at Monterey, even going to Spain to press the matter; but other
+ schemes were demanding the king&rsquo;s attention, and he would give neither
+ thought nor money to affairs in the new world; and so, thoroughly
+ disheartened Vizcaino returned to Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time for over one hundred and fifty years there is no record of
+ explorations along this coast, either by vessels from Mexico or by those
+ coming from the Philippines. California seemed again forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the story of the few voyages made to the coast of California
+ previous to its settlement. The first, under Cabrillo, was sent out by the
+ viceroy Mendoza, who hoped to gain fame and riches by the discovery of the
+ Strait of Anian, and by finding wealthy countries and cities which were
+ supposed to exist in the great northwest, about which much was imagined
+ but nothing known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drake planned his voyage largely in pursuit of his revenge upon Spain,
+ partly for the plunder which he hoped to obtain from the Spanish towns and
+ vessels along the Pacific coast of America, and partly because of his
+ desire to explore the Pacific Ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vizcaino also was expected to search for the strait, but he was especially
+ sent out to find a good harbor and place for settlement on the California
+ coast. This was intended in a great measure for the benefit of the
+ Philippine trade, but also to aid in holding the country for Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IV. &mdash; The Cross of Santa Fe
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The kings highway which led up from Vera Cruz, the chief port of the
+ eastern coast of Mexico, to the capital city of New Spain had in the
+ eighteenth century more history connected with it than any other road in
+ the new world. Over it had passed Montezuma with all the splendor of his
+ pagan court. On it, too, had marched and counter marched his grim
+ conqueror, the great Cortez. Through its white dust had traveled an almost
+ endless procession of mules and slaves, carrying the treasures of the
+ mines of Mexico and the rich imports of Manila and India on toward Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over this road there was journeying, one winter day in the year 1749, a
+ traveler of more importance to the history of the state of California than
+ any one who had gone before. He was no great soldier or king, only a
+ priest in the brownish gray cloak of the order of St. Francis. He was
+ slight in figure, and limped painfully from a sore on his leg, caused, it
+ is supposed, by the bite of some poisonous reptile. The chance companions
+ who traveled with him begged him to stop and rest beside a stream, but he
+ would not. Then, as he grew more weary, they entreated him to seek shelter
+ in a ranch house near by and give up his journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not to me thus. I am determined to continue. I seem to hear voices
+ of unconverted thousands calling me,&rdquo; was all the answer he gave. So on
+ foot, with no luggage but his prayer book, he limped out of sight&mdash;the
+ humble Spanish priest, Junipero Serra.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While only a schoolboy, young Serra had been more interested in the Indian
+ inhabitants of the new world than in boyish pleasure. As he grew older it
+ became his greatest desire to go to them as a missionary. At eighteen he
+ became a priest; but it was not until his thirty-sixth year that he gained
+ the opportunity of which he had so long dreamed, when, in company with a
+ body of missionaries, among whom were his boyhood friends, Francisco Palou
+ and Juan Crespi, he landed at Vera Cruz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was too impatient to begin his new work, to wait for the government
+ escort which was coming to meet them. So he started out on foot, with only
+ such companions as he might pick up by the way, to make the long journey
+ to the city of Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sixteen years later, attended by a gay company of gentlemen and ladies,
+ there traveled over this road one of Spain&rsquo;s wisest statesmen, Jose de
+ Galvez, whom the king had sent out to look after affairs in the new world.
+ Flourishing settlements were by this time scattered over a large portion
+ of Mexico, and even in the peninsula of Lower California there were a
+ number of missions. It was almost a hundred years before this time that
+ two Catholic priests of the Society of Jesus had asked permission to found
+ mission settlements among the Indians of this peninsula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may found the missions if you like, but do not look to us for money
+ to help you,&rdquo; was the answer returned by the officers of the government.
+ So the two Jesuit priests set about collecting funds for the work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were eloquent men, and the people who heard them preach became so
+ interested in the Indians that they were glad to give. And so, little by
+ little, this fund grew. As the good work went on, greater gifts poured in.
+ Whole fortunes were left them, and finally they had a very large sum
+ carefully invested in the city of Mexico. This was known as the Pius Fund.
+ From it was taken all the money needed for the founding of the missions of
+ Lower California; and, many years later, the expenses of founding the
+ twenty-one missions of Upper California came from the same source. This
+ fund became the subject of a long dispute between Mexico and the United
+ States, of which an account is given in Chapter XI. &mdash; In 1767 all
+ the Jesuit priests in New Spain were called back to Europe, and a large
+ portion of their wealth and missions on the peninsula were given over to
+ the order of St. Francis, with Junipero Serra at their head. It was
+ Galvez&rsquo;s duty to superintend this change, and while he was on his way to
+ the peninsula for that purpose he was overtaken by an order from the king
+ of Spain to occupy and fortify the ports of San Diego and Monterey. The
+ Spanish government had the description of these ports furnished by
+ Vizcaino in his account of his explorations in Upper and Lower California
+ over one hundred and sixty years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The articles of the king&rsquo;s order were: first, to establish the Catholic
+ faith; second, to extend Spanish dominion; third, to check the ambitious
+ schemes of a foreign power; and lastly, to carry out a plan formed by
+ Philip the Third, as long ago as 1603, for the establishment of a town on
+ the California coast where there was a harbor suitable for ships of the
+ Manila trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galvez at once proceeded to organize four expeditions for the settlement
+ of Upper California, two by land, two by sea. Captain Portola, governor of
+ the peninsula, was put in command, with good leaders under him. Still,
+ Galvez was not satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is all very well,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;these men will obey my orders, but they
+ do not care much whether this land is settled or not, and if
+ discouragements arise, back they will come, and I shall have the whole
+ thing to do over again. I must find some one who is interested in the
+ work, some one who will not find anything impossible. I think I shall send
+ for that lame, pale-faced priest, with the beautiful eyes, who has taken
+ up the work of these missions so eagerly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you think we can make the venture a success?&rdquo; asked Galvez, after he
+ had talked over his plans with Junipero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; said Padre Serra, his eyes shining, his whole face glowing with
+ enthusiasm. &ldquo;It is God&rsquo;s work to carry the cross of the holy faith [Santa
+ Fe] into the wilderness, and He will go with us; can you not hear the
+ heathen calling us to bring them the blessed Gospel? I can see that I have
+ lived all my life for this glorious day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they went to work, the priest and the king&rsquo;s counselor&mdash;down on
+ the wharf, even working with their own hands, packing away the cargo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hurry! Hurry!&rdquo; said Galvez. The word was passed along, and in a short
+ time the four expeditions were ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many were the trials and discouragements of the various parties. Scurvy
+ was so severe among the sailors that one ship lost all its crew save two
+ men, and there were a number of deaths on another ship; while a third
+ vessel which started later was never heard from. Padre Junipero, who
+ accompanied the second land party, under the charge of Governor Portola,
+ became so ill from the wound on his leg that the commander urged him to
+ return; but he would not. Calling a muleteer who was busy after the day&rsquo;s
+ march, doctoring the sores on his animals, he said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, my son, and cure my sores also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Padre,&rdquo; exclaimed the man, shocked at the idea, &ldquo;I am no surgeon; I
+ doctor only my beasts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think then that I am a beast, my child,&rdquo; said the padre, &ldquo;and treat me
+ accordingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man obeyed. Gathering some leaves of the malva, or cheese plant, he
+ bruised them a little, heated them on the stones of the camp fire, and
+ spreading them with warm tallow, applied them to the wound. The next
+ morning the leg was so much better that the cure was thought to be a
+ miracle. Still the padre was very weak; and there was great rejoicing in
+ the party when at last they looked down from a height on San Diego Bay,
+ with the two ships&mdash;the San Carlos and the San Antonio&mdash;riding
+ at anchor, white tents on the beach, and soldiers grouped about. Salutes
+ were fired by the newcomers and returned by the soldiers and ships, and
+ very soon the four expeditions were reunited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the next day, Sunday, solemn thanksgiving services were held. Then for
+ fourteen days all were busy attending to the sick, making ready for the
+ departure of the ship San Antonio, which was to be sent back for supplies,
+ and packing up food and other necessities for the journey to Monterey. The
+ San Antonio sailed on the 9th of July, 1769, and five days later Governor
+ Portola and two thirds of the well portion of the company started overland
+ to Monterey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Padre Junipero had been impatiently awaiting an opportunity to
+ begin his great work&mdash;the conversion of the heathen. He had written
+ back in his own peculiar way to his friend Padre Palou, whom he left in
+ charge of the missions of Lower California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long Live Jesus, Joseph, and Mary, This to Fray Francisco Palou.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear friend and Sir:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, thanks be to God, arrived day before yesterday at this, in truth,
+ beautiful, and with reason famous, port of San Diego. We find Gentiles
+ [the name given to the wild Indians] here in great numbers. They seem to
+ lead temperate lives on various seeds and on fish which they catch from
+ their rafts of tule which are formed like a canoe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second day after the departure of Portola and his party, Sunday, July
+ 16, Padre Serra felt that the glorious moment for which he had so long
+ prayed had at length arrived. The mission bells were unpacked and hung on
+ a tree, and a neophyte, or converted Indian, whom he had brought with him
+ from the peninsula, was appointed to ring them. As the sweet tones sounded
+ on the clear air, all the party who were able gathered about the padre,
+ who stood lifting the cross of Christ on high. All joined in solemnly
+ chanting a hymn, and a sermon was preached. Then with more chanting, the
+ tolling of, the bells, and the firing of muskets, was concluded the
+ ceremony of the founding of the first of the California missions, that of
+ San Diego.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Portola and his men, in spite of many discouragements, traveled steadily
+ northward for nearly two months until at last, one October morning, they
+ saw what they thought to be Point Pinos, the name given by Cabrillo to the
+ pine-covered cape to the south of Monterey Bay. They were right in
+ thinking this Point Pinos, but the sad part is that when they climbed a
+ hill and looked down on the bay they had come so far to find, they failed
+ to recognize it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They tramped wearily over the sun-dried hills that bordered it, and walked
+ on its sandy beach, but could not believe the wide, open roadstead,
+ encircled by bare brown heights, could be the well-inclosed port lying at
+ the foot of hills richly green, so warmly described by Vizcaino in his
+ winter voyage. It was a great disappointment, for this was the latitude in
+ which they had expected to find Monterey. After talking it over, they
+ decided they must be still too far south, so they tramped on for many
+ days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the last day of October, those of the party who were well enough,
+ climbed a high hill&mdash;(Point San Pedro on the west coast of the
+ peninsula)&mdash;and were rewarded by a glorious view. On their left the
+ great ocean stretched away to the horizon line, its waves breaking in
+ high-tossed foam on the rocky shore beneath them. Before them they saw an
+ open bay, or roadstead, lying between the point on which they stood, and
+ one extending into the sea far to the northwest. Upon looking at their map
+ of Vizcaino&rsquo;s voyage, they rightly decided that this farther projection
+ was Point Reyes; the little bay sheltered by the curve of its arm was the
+ one named on the map St. Francis, and now known as Drakes Bay. Well out to
+ sea they discovered a group of rocky islands which they called Farallones;
+ but not a man who stood on the height dreamed that only a short distance
+ to the right up the rocky coast there lay a bay so immense and so
+ perfectly inclosed that it would ever be one of the wonders of the land
+ they were exploring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On account of the sick of the party, among whom were the commander and his
+ lieutenant, it was decided to travel no further, but to camp here while
+ Sergeant Ortega was dispatched to follow the coast line to Point Reyes and
+ explore the little bay it inclosed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a few men and three days&rsquo; provisions consisting of small cakes made
+ of bran and water, which was the only food they had left, this brave
+ Spanish officer marched away, little imagining the honor which was soon to
+ be his. Leading this expedition, he was the first white man to explore the
+ peninsula where now stands the guardian city of the western coast, and we
+ must wonder what were his thoughts when, pushing his way up some
+ brush-covered heights, he came out suddenly upon the great bay we call San
+ Francisco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a mighty surprise was that sixty miles of peaceful water that had so
+ long remained hidden from European explorers, baffling the anxious gaze of
+ Cabrillo, the faithful explorations of Ferrelo, the eagle eyes of Drake,
+ and the earnest search of Vizcaino!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pushing steadily on toward Point Reyes, Ortega encountered a second
+ surprise, when from the Presidio hills he looked down on beautiful Golden
+ Gate, whose rumpled waters seemed to say:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No farther can you come. We keep guard here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing that it was quite impossible for him to reach Point Reyes, Ortega
+ decided to return to Portola. He found the commander and his party so
+ weakened by sickness and the lack of food that it had been decided to
+ explore no farther, but to return at once to the southern mission. After a
+ painful march of sixty days the party reached San Diego.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bitter was the disappointment of Padre Junipero Serra at the failure to
+ found the mission of Monterey. He did not believe, as many of the party
+ reported, that the bay was filled up with sand. Keener still was his grief
+ when Portola, after looking over the supply of food, announced that unless
+ the ship San Antonio or the sloop San Jose arrived by a certain date with
+ provisions, they would have to abandon Upper California and return to the
+ peninsula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The padre at once called the people together for a nine days&rsquo; session of
+ prayer and other church services at which to pray for the coming of the
+ relief boat. Portola, though he attended the services, went steadily on
+ with his preparations for departure. On the morning of the day before the
+ one set for the beginning of the march toward Lower California, the padres
+ went to the heights overlooking the bay, where they remained watching and
+ praying. At sea a heavy fog hung over the water. Hour after hour passed as
+ they gazed out on the lovely bay. Noon came, but they would not return to
+ the mission to rest or eat. The afternoon wore away, the sun sank in the
+ clouds above the horizon, then, as all hope seemed gone, the fog was
+ lifted by a sunset breeze, and there, far out at sea, they saw a white
+ sail. The good men fell on their knees in thanksgiving, while their Indian
+ servants ran to carry the news to camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This vessel, the San Antonio, brought not only abundant provisions but
+ fresh orders from Galvez to hurry the work at Monterey. The settlement of
+ Upper California was now made certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An expedition by land and the San Antonio by sea immediately started
+ northward. A few weeks later Padre Junipero wrote to Padre Palou: &ldquo;By the
+ favor of God, after a month and a half of painful navigation, the San
+ Antonio found anchor in this port of Monterey, which we find unvarying in
+ circumstances and substance as described by Don Sebastian Vizcaino.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They even found Vizcaino&rsquo;s oak. Indeed, it is said on good authority, that
+ the oak remained standing until 1838, when the high tides washed the earth
+ from its roots so that it fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon the land expedition arrived, and one June morning in 1770 the members
+ of the two parties, all in their best attire, were gathered on the beach
+ for the purpose of founding the second mission. It must have been a pretty
+ scene,&mdash;the stanch little vessel San Antonio, gay with bunting,
+ swinging at anchor a short distance out, while on shore were grouped the
+ sailors in the bright dress of seamen of those times, the soldiers in
+ leather uniform, the governor and his staff in the handsome costumes of
+ Spanish officials, and the padres in their gray robes. Close beside the
+ oak a brush house had been built, bells hung, and an altar erected. While
+ the bells tolled, the solemn service of dedication was held by Padre
+ Junipero, and so was founded the Mission San Carlos de Borromeo at
+ Monterey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near each of the earlier coast missions there was also founded a military
+ station called a presidio, a name borrowed from the Roman presidium. The
+ word meant a fort or fortified town. These presidios were intended to
+ guard the safety of the missions from the wild Indians, and to defend the
+ coast from ships of other countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the religious services Governor Portola proceeded to found the
+ presidio and take formal possession in the name of the king of Spain by
+ hoisting and saluting the royal banner, pulling up bunches of grass, and
+ casting stones, which was an ancient manner of taking possession of a
+ piece of land or country. The presidio of Monterey was for a long time the
+ site of the capital of Upper California and therefore most important in
+ the history of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of better land and water the mission site was soon removed
+ about six miles, to the Carmelo River. Although not so wealthy as some of
+ the missions, it was the home of Padre Junipero Serra, president of all
+ the missions, and so its history is especially interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of the settlement of San Diego and Monterey was received in
+ Mexico with great joy, and it was resolved to found five more missions
+ above San Diego. Four of these were San Gabriel, near the present site of
+ Los Angeles; San Luis Obispo, farther north; San Antonio; and San
+ Francisco. Before leaving the peninsula, Padre Serra had asked Galvez,
+ &ldquo;And for Father Francisco, head of our order, is there to be no mission
+ for him?&rdquo; To which Galvez had replied, &ldquo;If Saint Francis wants a mission,
+ let him cause his port to be found and it will be placed there.&rdquo; When the
+ beautiful bay was discovered by Sergeant Ortega, it was thought that this
+ might be the harbor Saint Francis intended for himself, but before naming
+ it for the head of the order it was necessary that it should be explored.
+ Although two land expeditions were sent up for this purpose, they were
+ unsuccessful; and it was not until August, 1775, about four months after
+ the eventful battle of Lexington had taken place on the Atlantic coast,
+ that white men first entered the Bay of San Francisco in a ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lieutenant Ayala of the Spanish navy, with the San Carlos, had the honor
+ of conducting this expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He reached the entrance to the bay just as night was coming on. Not liking
+ to trust his vessel in a strange harbor, he sent forward a boat to make
+ explorations, and then, as it was a little slow in returning, he daringly
+ pushed on in the darkness into the unknown water. His small craft bobbed
+ and plunged in the rough water of the bar, darted through Golden Gate, and
+ came safely to anchor near North Beach. Soon after this exploration it was
+ settled that here Saint Francis should have his mission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Padre Junipero Serra appointed his friend Francisco Palou, who had now
+ joined him in his work in Upper California, to make this settlement, and
+ on the 9th of October, 1776, there was founded in that portion of San
+ Francisco known as the Mission District, at the corner of Sixteenth and
+ Dolores streets, the mission of San Francisco. This is often called
+ Mission Dolores from the name of a small lake and stream beside which it
+ was built. To-day the name San Francisco rests not only on the old mission
+ building, with its white pillars, but on the beautiful city which is the
+ metropolis of our western coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As fast as possible Padre Junipero hastened the establishment of missions,
+ choosing those places where there were the largest native settlements. In
+ the vicinity of Monterey Bay there were, besides the San Carlos mission,
+ Santa Cruz on the northern curve of the bay, and in the fertile valley
+ back of the Santa Cruz Mountains the missions of Santa Clara, San Jose,
+ and San Juan Bautista. Farther south on a lonely height stood Soledad, and
+ much farther south, San Miguel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indians along the Santa Barbara Channel, of whom there were a great
+ many, were more intelligent and industrious than in other portions of the
+ country settled by the missionaries, and here were the missions of Santa
+ Barbara, San Buenaventura, La Purisima, and Santa Inez.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the south, in the fertile valley where are now the great grain fields
+ of Los Angeles county, San Fernando was founded. Between San Gabriel and
+ San Diego were placed San Juan Capistrano, San Luis Rey, and the chapel of
+ Pala. San Rafael and Solano, to the north of San Francisco Bay, complete
+ the list of twenty-one missions of Upper California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to give more than the names of most of these missions,
+ although about each many true and beautiful stories might be told. It
+ would be well if those who live near one of these noble ruins would seek
+ out its particular history and the stories connected with it. This would
+ be interesting and helpful work for the students in the schools of the
+ state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of the missions seems like a fairy tale, wonderful and unreal.
+ Into a wilderness inhabited only by savage men and wild animals, hundreds
+ of miles from any civilized settlement, there came these men trained as
+ simple priests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two by two they came, bringing with them, for the starting of each
+ mission, a few soldiers, seven to ten, a few converted Indians from the
+ missions of Lower California, a little live stock, some church furniture,
+ and always the bells; yet in a little over forty years they had succeeded
+ in founding a chain of missions whose sweet-toned bells chimed the hours
+ and called to prayer from San Diego to the Bay of San Francisco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Churches were built larger and often of a purer type of architecture than
+ those in the civilized well-settled portions of the land,&mdash;buildings
+ that have lasted for a hundred years and may last many years longer if
+ care is taken to preserve them. Canals of stone and cement and dams of
+ masonry were constructed that would do credit to our best workmen of
+ to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little packages of wheat and other grains, seeds from Spanish oranges
+ and olives, little dried bundles of grapevines from Mexico, developed,
+ under their care, into the great fields of grain, groves of oranges and
+ olives, and the wide-spreading vineyards of the mission ranches. All these
+ wonders were performed with Indian workmen trained by the padres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what the missionaries cared for more than their success in building
+ and planting were the thousands of baptized Indians at each mission. These
+ they instructed daily for the good of their souls in the truths of the
+ Christian religion, while for their bodily needs they were taught to plow
+ the earth, to plant seed, to raise and care for domestic animals. They
+ learned also many useful trades; and music, frescoing, and art were taught
+ those who seemed to have an especial taste for such things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the head of this great work was gentle Padre Junipero Serra, the most
+ interesting character in the history of the missions. He was frail and
+ slender and much worn by constant labor of head and hands, but his every
+ thought and action seemed to be for others. Back and forth from Monterey
+ to San Diego, from mission to mission, he traveled almost constantly,
+ teaching, baptizing, confirming thousands of his dusky charges. He was
+ president of all the missions, and besides this was bishop, doctor, judge,
+ and architect, as well as steward of the mission products and money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Associated with him in his work were a group of noble men whose lives were
+ spent in caring for the native people with whom they worked and among whom
+ they finally died. The inhabitants of California may well honor the
+ mission padres for their earnest, unselfish lives, and in no way can this
+ be done so fully as in the preservation of the grand old buildings they
+ left behind, which are indeed fitting monuments to their devotion, energy,
+ and skill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beginning with San Diego, let us, in fancy, visit the missions in the
+ early part of the nineteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a winter day in the year 1813 when we ride up the broad, wind-swept
+ road which leads to the newly dedicated mission building of San Diego. The
+ wide plain that surrounds it is green with native grass and the blades of
+ young wheat. Of the two hundred cattle, one hundred sheep, one hundred
+ horses, and twenty asses brought up by Padre Junipero in 1769 to be
+ divided among the earlier missions, San Diego had only its due share; yet
+ under the wise management of the padres, they have now at this mission,
+ feeding on the green plains, thousands of cattle, horses, and sheep, which
+ are tended by comfortably clothed Indian herders. Near the mission are the
+ green and gold of orange orchards, the gray of the olive, and the bare
+ branches of extensive vineyards. At one side we see a large kitchen garden
+ where young Indians are at work planting and hoeing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we draw up in front of the church, Indian servants come out to take our
+ horses. We dismount, and a padre who is superintending work in the orchard
+ comes and welcomes us with gentle courtesy. He sends us a servant to show
+ us to our room, a small square apartment with a hard earthen floor and
+ bare, whitewashed walls with no ornament but a cross. The beds are of
+ rawhide stretched over a frame. The covering consists of sheets of coarse
+ cotton grown and woven at the southern missions, and blankets, coarse but
+ warm, made by the Indians from the wool of the mission sheep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dinner at the padre&rsquo;s table we find most enjoyable. There is beef and
+ chicken, the frijole, or red bean of Spain, and other vegetables prepared
+ in a tasty manner peculiar to Spanish cooking, so we do not doubt that the
+ cook has been taught his trade by the padre himself. The Indian boys who
+ wait on the table also show careful training, performing their duties
+ quickly and quietly. Here we can find for bread the tortilla,&mdash;still
+ the food of the Indian and Mexican people of California. It is a thin cake
+ made of meal or flour and water, and baked without grease on a hot stone
+ or griddle. Wines made at the mission, the favorite chocolate, thick and
+ sweet, and some fruit from the padre&rsquo;s garden complete the meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dinner over, we visit the church and admire the striking contrast between
+ the red tiles of the roof and the creamy white of the walls. All the
+ buildings are made of bricks molded from a clay called adobe and dried
+ slowly in the sun. Each brick is twelve inches square by four inches
+ thick, and the walls are laid two or three bricks deep, those of the
+ church itself being nearly four feet in thickness. It seems almost
+ impossible that so large and well made a building could have been
+ constructed by untrained workmen. Next to the church are the rooms of the
+ padres, then the dining room and the quarters of the mission guard, which
+ consists apparently of but two men, the rest being at the presidio,
+ several miles away. Adjoining these are the storehouses and shops of the
+ Indian workmen, all of which open on the great courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the courtyard is a busy scene. Blacksmiths with hammer and anvil make
+ sounding blows as they work up old iron into needed farm utensils. The
+ soap maker&rsquo;s caldron sends up a cloud of ill-smelling steam. At one side
+ carpenters are at work trimming and cutting square holes in logs for the
+ beams of new buildings which the padres wish to put up. Saddle makers,
+ squatted on the ground, are busy fashioning saddletrees, carving, and
+ sewing leather. The shoemaker is hard at work with needle and awl. These
+ and many other trades are all going on at once. These courts, which are
+ called patios, were generally several acres in extent and at the most
+ flourishing period of the missions each settlement often gave shelter to
+ over a thousand people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind the central court is the home of the unmarried women. This, and the
+ rooms for their work, open on a separate square where there is shade from
+ orange and fig trees and a bathing pond supplied by the zanja, or water
+ ditch. Here square-figured, heavy-featured Indian girls are busy spinning
+ and weaving thread into cloth. Others are cutting out and sewing garments.
+ Some, squatted on the ground, are grinding corn into a coarse meal for the
+ atole, or mush. At the zanja several are engaged in washing clothes. Here
+ these girls live under the care of an old Indian woman, and unless she
+ accompanies them they may not, until they are married, go outside these
+ walls. Near the mission we visit a long row of small adobe buildings, the
+ homes of the families of the Christian Indians; a neat, busy settlement
+ where the little ones, comfortably clothed, play about attended by the
+ older children, while the mothers work for the padres four or five hours
+ daily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving San Diego and traveling northward along &ldquo;El Camino Real,&rdquo; the
+ highway which leads from mission to mission, we reach San Luis Rey, &ldquo;King
+ of the Missions,&rdquo; as it is sometimes called. Its church is the largest of
+ all those erected by the padres, being one hundred and sixty feet long,
+ fifty-eight feet wide, and sixty feet high. Its one square, two-story
+ tower has a chime of bells, the sweet clear tones of which reached our
+ ears while we were yet miles from the mission. Counting the arches of the
+ long corridor, we find there are two hundred and fifty-six. This mission
+ became very wealthy. At one time it had a baptized Indian population of
+ several thousand, owned twenty-four thousand cattle, ten thousand horses,
+ and one hundred thousand sheep, and harvested fourteen thousand bushels of
+ grain a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its prosperity was due in a great measure to good Padre Peyri, who had
+ charge of it from its beginning. Many years afterwards, as we shall see,
+ the padres were ordered by the Mexican government to leave their missions,
+ the wealth they had gathered, and the Indians they had taught and cared
+ for. Father Peyri, knowing how hard it would be for him to get away from
+ his Indian children, as he called them, slipped off by night to San Diego.
+ In the morning the Indians missed him. Learning what had happened, five
+ hundred of them mounted their ponies in hot haste and galloped all the way
+ to San Diego, forty-five miles, to bring him back by force. They arrived
+ just as the ship, with Padre Peyri on board, was weighing anchor. Standing
+ on deck with outstretched arms, the padre blessed them amid their tears
+ and loud cries. Some flung themselves into the water and swam after the
+ ship. Four reached it, and, climbing up its sides, so implored to be taken
+ on board that the padre consented and carried them with him to Rome, where
+ one afterwards became a priest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next link in our chain, the most beautiful of all the missions, is
+ that of San Juan Capistrano. It was founded in 1776, the year of our
+ Declaration of Independence, but in 1812 it was destroyed by an
+ earthquake, the massive towers and noble arch falling in on the Indians,
+ who were assembled in the church for morning prayers. Many of them were
+ killed. The church has never been rebuilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is Christmas Day when we reach San Gabriel, the next station on El
+ Camino Real. Inside the great cactus fence which incloses the square about
+ the mission we see a strangely mixed company,&mdash;Indians in their best
+ clothes, their faces shining from a liberal use of mission soap and water;
+ soldiers in their leather suits freshened up for the holiday; a few
+ ranchmen in the gay dress of the times, riding beautiful horses; women and
+ girls each brilliant in a bright-colored skirt with shawl or scarf
+ gracefully draped over head and shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christmas Day morning service, held at four o&rsquo;clock and known by the
+ common people as the Rooster Mass, is long since over. The crowd is now
+ gathered for the Pastorel, which, like the miracle plays of the Middle
+ Ages, is a drama with characters taken from the Bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First to appear on the scene is an orchestra composed of young Indians
+ playing violins, bass viols, reeds, flutes, and guitars. Closely following
+ come the actors, representing San Gabriel and attendant angels, Satan,
+ Blind Bartimeus, and a company of shepherds. The entertainment is very
+ simple. There is the announcement of the birth of the Savior, the
+ adoration of the babe, and the offering of gifts. The play concludes with
+ a protracted struggle between San Gabriel and Satan for the possession of
+ Blind Bartimeus, in which the saint finally comes off victor while the
+ orchestra plays lively music. After the Pastorel there are games, dancing,
+ and feasting. Every one seems happy, and it is with regret that we leave
+ the gay scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the hills to the north, across the Arroyo Seco, not dry now, but a
+ swift stream turbulent from the winter rains, we journey on. We pass Eagle
+ Rock, a great bowlder high upon the green hillside, one of the landmarks
+ of the region, and enter the valley of the Los Angeles River. After
+ traveling for several hours, we come to a large plantation of trees,
+ vines, and grainfields, in the midst of which lies the mission of San
+ Fernando. Its land extends for miles on every side and is exceedingly
+ fertile. In front of the beautiful cloisters, under tall and stately palm
+ trees, a fountain sends high its sparkling water, which falls back with
+ pleasant tinkle into a basin of carved stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we reach San Buenaventura, the next mission on our route, we find
+ priests and Indians exceedingly busy, for word has come from Monterey that
+ a Yankee trading vessel will soon sail for the south, and cattle must be
+ killed and the fat rendered into tallow for the market. As hides and
+ tallow are about the only commodities the padres have for sale, this is an
+ important event. Indians tend the caldrons of bubbling grease, and keep up
+ the fires under the kettles. When the tallow is slightly cooled, they pour
+ it into sacks made from the skins of animals. These, when filled with the
+ hardened tallow, look as though each again held a plump beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Traveling up the coast we come one afternoon to
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A golden bay &lsquo;neath soft blue skies Where on a hillside creamy rise The
+ mission towers whose patron saint Is Barbara&mdash;with legend quaint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here spring is merging into summer, and we are in time to see the ceremony
+ which closes the wheat harvest. The workmen gather the last four sheaves
+ from the field, and, fastening them in the form of a cross, carry them,
+ followed by a long procession of dusky reapers, up the ascent to the
+ church. As they approach, the bells burst out in a joyous peal, and from
+ the mission doors the padres come forth, one bearing a cross, another the
+ banner of the Virgin. A choir of Indian boys follows, chanting a hymn. All
+ advance slowly down the avenue to meet the sheaf bearers, then counter
+ march to the church, where the harvest festival is celebrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passing by other missions, we must close our journey with a visit to San
+ Carlos, the Monterey mission, most prominent of all in the history of the
+ church and state. It was from the first the special charge of Padre
+ Junipero Serra, and, at the time we see it, his monument as well; for in
+ it at last his weary body was laid to rest beside his friend Padre Juan
+ Crespi, to whose writings, next to those of Padre Francisco Palou, we are
+ most indebted for our knowledge of Junipero Serra and his great work. In
+ 1813, with its graceful arched front and two towers, San Carlos was a
+ noble-looking building, but since that time one tower has fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are reminded, as we look, of the scene when Junipero lay dying. Ever
+ since morning the grief-stricken people had been waiting, listening for
+ the news from the sick room. When the tolling of the bell announced that
+ the beautiful life was ended, crowds came weeping and lamenting, anxious
+ to see again the beloved face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with great difficulty that the Indians could be kept from tearing
+ the padre&rsquo;s robe from his body, so earnestly did they desire to possess
+ some relic of the father they had loved so long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here we notice the daily life of the Indian, which (in 1813) is the same
+ at all the missions. At sunrise comes the sound of the bells calling to
+ the morning prayers, and we see the natives hurrying to the church. After
+ service they gather for breakfast of mush and tortillas. As the flocks and
+ herds have increased, meat forms part of the daily food, sometimes from
+ the freshly killed beeves, but generally in a dried state called carne
+ seco. After breakfast the workers go in groups to their various
+ employments. Dinner is served at eleven, and they have a resting period
+ until two. Then work is again taken up and continued until an hour before
+ sunset, when the bells call to evening prayer. Supper follows the evening
+ service, after which the Indians can do as they like until bedtime. We see
+ some engaged in a game of ball. Many are squatted on the ground playing
+ other games,&mdash;gambling, we suspect. In one group there is dancing to
+ the music of violin and guitar. There is laughter and chattering on all
+ sides, and to us they seem happy, at least for the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life led by the Indians at the missions was not generally a hard one.
+ No doubt when they first came, or were brought, into the settlements, from
+ their free wild life, they found it harder to keep the regular hours of
+ the missions than to perform the work, which was seldom very heavy. When
+ disobedient or lazy, they were punished severely, judging by the standards
+ of to-day, but really no harder than was at that time the custom in
+ schools and in navies the world over. When the soldiers came in contact
+ with the natives, there was generally cruel treatment for the latter. But
+ as far as possible the padres stood between their charges and the
+ soldiers, always placing the mission as far from the presidio as the
+ safety of the former would allow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At San Diego, about five years after its settlement, wild Indians
+ surprised the mission guard, and killed the padre and several of the
+ converted Indians in a most cruel manner. The Spanish government gave
+ orders that the murderers should be taken and executed and this mission
+ abandoned; but Padre Junipero begged so hard for the culprits, who, he
+ said, knew no better, having no knowledge of God, that he was finally
+ allowed to have his way. Gentleness and patience won the day; not only the
+ Indians who made the attack were converted, but many more of their tribe,
+ and the mission became a flourishing settlement. There was once a
+ rebellion among the Santa Clara and San Jose Indians, led by a young
+ convert from Santa Clara, which required soldiers from Monterey to put
+ down. Generally, however, the mission life was peaceful, the Indians being
+ fond of their padres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Mexico became free from Spain, no more money was sent up to pay the
+ soldiers or run the government in Upper California, and for a long time
+ the missions advanced the money for the expenses of the government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a time the new priests who came up from Mexico were not generally
+ men of such education and noble character as the early mission padres.
+ They cared less for missionary work, and were not so energetic. Their
+ influence was not always good for the Indians, who quickly saw the
+ difference between them and their old padres. They had little confidence
+ in the newcomers, so at the few missions where such as these were in
+ charge the Indians were disobedient, and received harsh punishments from
+ the padres; and trouble followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1833 the Mexican government decided to confirm the mandate issued by
+ Spain several years before in regard to the breaking up of the mission
+ settlements. By this law each Indian was to have his own piece of land to
+ own and care for. He was to be no longer under the control of the church,
+ but to be his own master like any other citizen. As for the padres, they
+ were to give up their wealth and lands, and leave for other missionary
+ fields. That this would create a great change in California all realized;
+ still it was no new idea, but the plan Spain had in mind when the missions
+ were first founded. The mistake was in supposing that it was possible for
+ a people to rise in so short a time from the wild life of the California
+ Indian to the position of self-supporting citizens in a civilized country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Indians understood this order, some were pleased and, like
+ children when freed from restraint, ceased to work and became troublesome.
+ Many, however, when they found that the padres were to leave them, became
+ very unhappy; some, it is said, even died from homesickness for the
+ mission and the padre. One committed suicide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was soon seen that they were not fitted to look after themselves. Only
+ a few years had passed since they were savages, knowing nothing of
+ civilized life, and they still needed some one to guide them. They not
+ only began to drink and gamble, but were cheated and ill-treated on all
+ sides, until many of them became afraid of living in towns and went back
+ to wild life. For this they were no longer fitted, and they suffered so
+ much from hunger and cold that great numbers of them died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Because the Indians were not capable of caring for themselves at the time
+ of the secularization of the missions, the padres are often severely
+ blamed. It is said that they tried to keep the natives without knowledge,
+ in fact something like slaves. But the truth is that the padres taught
+ them by thousands, not only to cultivate the soil, to irrigate wisely, to
+ raise domestic cattle, but to work at every trade that could be of use in
+ a new country. They were encouraged to choose from among themselves
+ alcaldes, or under officers of the mission. In this way every inducement
+ was given to the Indian showing himself capable of self-control, to rise
+ to a prominent position in his little world, where he generally ruled his
+ fellow-workmen wisely and kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Added to this, the Indians acquired, through the teaching and example of
+ the padres, a religion that has lasted through generations. The breaking
+ up of the mission settlements scattered the Indians through the country,
+ many of them going back to the wild life in the forest and mountains,
+ where they no longer had any religious instructions. Yet to-day, after all
+ the years that have passed, there are few Indians from San Diego to San
+ Francisco who do not speak the language of the padres and follow, though
+ it may be but feebly, the teaching of the Catholic faith, the &ldquo;Santa Fe&rdquo;
+ of the padres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the mission buildings, many of the flocks, and much of the land
+ fell into the hands of men who had no possible right to them. Orchards and
+ vineyards were cut down, cattle killed and stolen, and there was only ruin
+ where a short time before there had been thousands of busy people leading
+ comfortable lives. Soon the churches were neglected and began to crumble
+ away, bats flew in and out of the broken arches, squirrels chattered
+ fearlessly in the padre&rsquo;s dining room, and the only human visitor was some
+ sad-hearted Indian worshiper, slipping timidly into the desolate building
+ to kneel alone before the altar where once
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sweet strains from dusky neophytes
+ Rose up to God in praise,
+ When life centered &lsquo;round the missions
+ In the happy golden days.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter V. &mdash; Pastoral Days
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For hundreds of years poets have written and singers have sung of the
+ loveliness of a country life, where there is no gathering together of the
+ inhabitants in great cities, no struggle to make money, where the people
+ live much out of doors, are simple in their tastes, healthy and happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These dreams of an ideal life the Spanish-speaking settlers of early
+ California made real. In this land of balmy airs, soft skies, and gentle
+ seas there lived, in the old days, a people who were indifferent to money,
+ who carried their religion into their daily pleasures and sorrows, were
+ brotherly toward one another, contented, beautiful, joyous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the time that the mission of San Francisco was founded, the Spanish
+ government decided to lay out two towns, or pueblos, where it was thought
+ the fertile character of the soil would lead the settlers to raise grain
+ and other supplies, not only for themselves but for the people of the
+ presidios. Up to this time a large part of the food had been brought, at a
+ considerable cost, from Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that the governor, Felipe de Neve, chose the town sites with care,
+ for in the whole state there are nowhere more beautiful and fertile spots
+ than San Jose, near the southern end of San Francisco Bay, and Los
+ Angeles, near the famous valley of the San Gabriel River. In founding
+ these two pueblos, and a third which was located where Santa Cruz now
+ stands, the plan pursued was interesting and somewhat different from the
+ methods of settlement on the eastern coast of our country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First there was chosen a spot for the plaza, or central square, care being
+ taken that it was not far from good grazing land suitable for the
+ settlers&rsquo; stock. Around the plaza, lots were set apart for the courthouse,
+ town hall, church, granaries, and jail. Next were the lots for the
+ settlers, who each had, besides his home spot, several acres of farming
+ land with water, and the right to use the pasture lands of the town. To
+ each family was given, also, two horses, two cows, two oxen, a mule,
+ several goats, sheep, chickens, farming implements, and a small sum in
+ money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of asking tax money of the town people, some of the land was
+ reserved as public property to be rented out, the proceeds to be used for
+ the expenses of the government. Many people believe that this is the
+ wisest plan man has yet discovered for managing the expenses of a city,
+ town, or country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Los Angeles had for many years a large amount of this land near the center
+ of the town, belonging to the city government. Gradually it was taken up
+ by settlers or appropriated by officials until, when the place grew large
+ and thriving, it was found that the land had become private property; and
+ finally the city had to pay large sums for parks and land for public
+ buildings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each pueblo was ruled by an alcalde, or mayor, and council, chosen by the
+ people. To advise with these officers, there was a commissioner who
+ represented the governor of the country. During the first few years the
+ pueblo was governed largely by the commissioner. Presidios, which were, at
+ first, forts with homes for the commander, officers, soldiers, and their
+ families, and were ruled by the commanding officer or comandante,
+ gradually became towns; and then they, too, had their alcalde and council.
+ There were four presidios&mdash;Monterey, San Francisco, San Diego, and
+ Santa Barbara.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of all the gifts of free land, stock, and money, it was hard to
+ secure a suitable class of settlers. Many of those who came up from Mexico
+ to live in the pueblos were idle or dissipated, and nearly all uneducated.
+ When, after several years, a Spanish officer was sent down from Monterey
+ to convey to the Los Angeles settlers full title to their lands, he found
+ that not one of the twenty-four heads of families could sign his name.
+ Later a much better class of people came into the country&mdash;men of
+ education, brave, hardy members of good Spanish families, who obtained
+ grants of land from the government, bought cattle from the mission herds,
+ and began the business of stock raising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the beginning of the pastoral or shepherd life. Each rancho was
+ miles in extent, its cattle and horses numbered by thousands. The homes
+ were generally built around a court into which all the rooms opened, and
+ were constructed of adobe bricks such as were used at the missions. In the
+ better class of homes several feet of the space in the courtyard next the
+ wall were covered with tile roofing, forming a shaded veranda, where the
+ family were accustomed to spend the leisure hours. Here they received
+ visitors, the men smoked their cigaritos, and the children made merry. In
+ the long summer evenings sweet strains of Spanish music from violin and
+ guitar filled the air, and the hard earthen floor of the courtyard
+ resounded to the tap-tap of high-heeled slippers, the swish of silken
+ skirts, and the jingle of silver spurs, as the young people took part in
+ the graceful Spanish dances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no small matter to rule one of these great households. La Patrona
+ (the mistress) was generally the first one up. &ldquo;Before the sun had risen,&rdquo;
+ said a member of one of the old families, &ldquo;while the linnets and mocking
+ birds were sounding their first notes, my mother would appear at our
+ bedside. &lsquo;Up, muchachos, up, muchachas, and kneel for your Alba!&rsquo; The Alba
+ was a beautiful prayer of thanksgiving for care during the night, with a
+ plea for help through the dangers and temptations of the day. No excuse
+ for lying abed was accepted; up, and on the floor we knelt, then she
+ passed on to where the mayordomo, or foreman, and his men were gathering
+ in the courtyard. Here, too, was the cook with the Indian maids, busy
+ making tortillas for the morning meal. &lsquo;Your Albas, my children,&rsquo; my
+ mother would say in her clear, firm voice. Down would drop mayordomo,
+ vaqueros, cook, and Indian girls, all devoutly reciting the morning
+ prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After their prayer the children might, if they chose, return to their
+ beds, but before sleep could again overtake them there would probably come
+ from a distant room the voice of their aged grandfather asking them
+ questions from the Spanish catechism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Children, who made you?&rsquo; he would call in a quavering voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A chorus of small voices would sing-song in response, &lsquo;El Dios&rsquo; [God].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again he would question, &lsquo;Children, who died for you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again the reply, &lsquo;El Dios.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the time the questions were all answered there was no chance for more
+ sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing was taken with the morning coffee but the tortilla. This was a
+ thin cake made of meal from corn ground by Indian women who used for the
+ grinding either a stone mortar and pestle, or a metate. The metate was a
+ three-legged stone about two feet in length and one in breadth, slightly
+ hollowed out in the center; grain was ground in this by rubbing with a
+ smaller stone. It took a great number of tortillas to serve the large
+ household. One Indian maid, kneeling beside a large white stone which
+ served as table, mixed the meal, salt, and water into balls of dough.
+ These she handed to another girl, who spatted them flat and thin by
+ tossing them from one of her smooth bare arms to the other until they were
+ but a little thicker than a knife blade. The cook then baked them on a hot
+ dry stone or griddle, turning them over and over to keep them from
+ burning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ El Patron (the master) usually rose early, and after his coffee, put on
+ his high, wide-brimmed sombrero, and, attended by his sons, if they were
+ old enough, and his mayordomo, rode over his estate, looking after the
+ Indian vaqueros and workmen. One gentleman, a member of a fine Spanish
+ family which lived in the southern part of the state, used to ride out
+ with his sixteen sons, all of whom were over six feet in height. Generally
+ the families were large, often comprising twelve children or more. These
+ made merry households for the little people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After breakfast it was the duty of the mistress to set the host of Indian
+ girls to their tasks. The padres were always glad to let the young Indian
+ girls from the mission go into white families where there was a wise
+ mistress, that they might be trained in both religious and domestic
+ duties. Going to the gate of the courtyard, the Patrona would call, &ldquo;To
+ the brooms, to the brooms, muchachas,&rdquo; adding, if it were foggy, &ldquo;A very
+ fine morning for the brooms, little ones;&rdquo; and out would come running a
+ cluster of Indian girls carrying each a broom. At the work they would go,
+ sweeping as clean as a floor the courtyard and ground for a large space
+ about the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next they flocked to the sewing room, often sixteen or eighteen of these
+ girls, to take up their day&rsquo;s work under the mistress&rsquo;s eye. Some made
+ garments for the ranch hands, those who were better work women attended to
+ the making of clothing for the family, while the girls who were the most
+ skillful with the needle fashioned delicate, fine lace work and
+ embroidery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children were seldom indoors unless it rained. There were no schools;
+ there were few ranches where there were teachers, and the fathers and
+ mothers generally had their hands too full to devote themselves to their
+ children&rsquo;s education, so in the early days it was all playtime. Later,
+ schools were started for boys, and dreadful places they were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As General Vallejo describes them, they were generally held in a narrow,
+ badly lighted room, with no adornment but a large green cross or some
+ picture of a saint hanging beside the master&rsquo;s table. The master was often
+ an old soldier in fantastic dress, with ill-tempered visage. The scholar
+ entered, walked the length of the room, knelt before the cross or picture,
+ recited a prayer, then tremblingly approached the master, saying, &ldquo;Your
+ hand, Senor Maestro,&rdquo; when with a grunt the hand would be extended to him
+ to be kissed. Little was taught besides the reading of the primer and the
+ catechism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ranch boys early learned to ride, each having his own horse and saddle.
+ Every year there was a rodeo, or &ldquo;round-up,&rdquo; held in each neighborhood,
+ where cattle from all the surrounding ranches were driven to one point for
+ the purpose of counting the animals and branding the young. Each stock
+ owner had to be there with all the men from his ranch who could ride, nor
+ must he forget his branding irons. These brands were recorded in the
+ government book of the department, and any one changing the form of his
+ iron in any manner without the permission of the judge was guilty of a
+ crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the boys the rodeo was the most interesting time of the whole year. The
+ coming of the strange herds and vaqueros, the counting and the separating
+ of the animals, and the branding of the young stock made a period of
+ excitement and fun. Here was offered a chance for the display of good
+ horsemanship. Sometimes as the cattle were being gradually herded into a
+ circular mass, an unruly cow or bull would suddenly dart from the drove
+ and run away at full speed. A vaquero on horseback would immediately dash
+ after the animal, and, coming up with it, lean from the saddle and seizing
+ the runaway by the tail, spur his horse forward. Then by a quick movement
+ he would give a jerk and suddenly let go his hold, when the animal would
+ fall rolling over and over on the ground. By the time it was up again it
+ was tamed. Many a boy earned his first praise for good riding at a rodeo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nowhere in the world were there better and more graceful riders. Horses
+ used for pleasure were fine, spirited animals. The saddle and the bridle
+ were generally handsomely inlaid with silver or gold. A California
+ gentleman in fiesta costume, mounted on his favorite horse, was a delight
+ to the eyes. His hat, wide in the brim, high and pointed in the crown, was
+ made of soft gray wool and ornamented with gold or silver lace and cord,
+ sometimes embroidered with rubies and emeralds until it was very heavy and
+ exceedingly valuable. His white shirt was of thin, embroidered muslin, and
+ the white stock, too, was of thin stuff wrapped several times around the
+ neck, then tied gracefully in front. The jacket was of cloth or velvet, in
+ dark colors, blue, green, or black, with buttons and lace trimmings of
+ silver or gold, often of a very elaborate design. About the waist was tied
+ a wide sash of soft material and gay color, the ends hanging down at the
+ side. The breeches were of velvet or heavy cloth, dark in color, save when
+ the rider was gay in his taste, then they might be of bright tints. They
+ either ended at the knee, below which were leggings of deerskin, or fitted
+ the figure closely down to just above the ankle, where they widened out
+ and were slashed at the outer seam, showing thin white drawers, which
+ puffed prettily between the slashes. A gentleman in Los Angeles still has
+ the trimmings for such suit, consisting of three hundred and fifty pieces
+ of silver filigree work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one seemed to live out of doors, and though the ranchos were widely
+ scattered, there was much visiting and social gayety. All who could,
+ traveled on horseback; while the mother of the family, the children, and
+ old people used the clumsy carreta with its squeaking wheels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the prettiest sights was a wedding procession as it escorted the
+ bride from her home to the mission church. Horses were gayly caparisoned,
+ and the riders richly dressed. The nearest relative of the bride carried
+ her before him on the saddle, across which hung a loop of gold or silver
+ braid for her stirrup, in which rested her little satin-shod foot. Her
+ escort sat behind her on the bearskin saddle blanket. Accompanying the
+ party were musicians playing guitar and violin, each managing horse and
+ instrument with equal skill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The California woman generally wore a full skirt of silk, satin, wool, or
+ cotton, a loose waist of thin white goods, and, in cold weather, a short
+ bolero jacket of as rich material as could be obtained. A bright-colored
+ ribbon served for a sash, and a lace handkerchief or a muslin scarf was
+ folded over the shoulders and neck. In place of bonnet and wrap a lace or
+ silk shawl, or a narrow scarf called a rebosa, was gracefully draped over
+ the head and shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Children were dressed like the older people, and very pretty were the
+ girls in their low-necked, short-sleeved camisas or waists, and full gay
+ skirts, their hair in straight braids hanging down over the shoulders. The
+ short breeches, pretty round jackets, and gay sashes were very becoming to
+ the boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At night the daughters of the house, big and little, were locked into
+ their rooms by their mother, the father attending in the same manner to
+ the boys. In the morning the mother&rsquo;s first duty was to unlock these
+ doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Various games were played. Blindman&rsquo;s buff was a great favorite for
+ moonlight nights. There was also a game called cuatrito, in which the
+ players threw bits of stone at a mark drawn on the ground at a certain
+ distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In my time,&rdquo; said a prominent Californian of to-day, &ldquo;we used to play
+ this game with golden slugs instead of stones; there was always a basket
+ of slugs sitting door. We liked them because they carried well, and we
+ thought it nothing unusual to use them as playthings. They were abundant
+ in most of the houses; my mother and her friends used them as soap dishes
+ in, the bedrooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the spare rooms was always a little pile of money covered by a napkin,
+ from which the visitor was expected to help himself if he needed. We would
+ have considered it disgraceful to count the guest money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our parents were very strict with us,&rdquo; said another Californian, &ldquo;much
+ more so than is the custom to-day. Sometimes while the parents, brothers,
+ and sisters were eating their meal, a child who was naughty had for
+ punishment to kneel in one corner of the dining room before a high stool,
+ on which was an earthen plate, a tin cup, and a wooden spoon. It was worse
+ than a flogging, a thousand times. As soon as the father went out, the
+ mother and sisters hastened to the sorrowful one and comforted him with
+ the best things from the table.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clothes were not laundered each week, but were saved up often for
+ several weeks or even a month or two, and then came a wash-day frolic.
+ Imagine wash day looked forward to as a delightful event! So it was,
+ however, to many California children. Senorita Vallejo, in the Century
+ Magazine (Vol. 41), thus describes one of these excursions:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It made us children happy to be waked before sunrise to prepare for the
+ &lsquo;wash-day expedition.&rsquo; The night before, the Indians had soaped the clumsy
+ carreta&rsquo;s great wheels. Lunch was placed in baskets, and the gentle oxen
+ were yoked to the pole. We climbed in under the green cloth of an old
+ Mexican flag which was used as an awning, and the white-haired Indian
+ driver plodded beside with his long oxgoad. The great piles of soiled
+ linen were fastened on the backs of horses led by other servants, while
+ the girls and women who were to do the washing trooped along by the side
+ of the carreta. Our progress was slow, and it was generally sunrise before
+ we reached the spring. The steps of the carreta were so low that we could
+ climb in or out without stopping the oxen. The watchful mother guided the
+ whole party, seeing that none strayed too far after flowers, or loitered
+ too long. Sometimes we heard the howl of coyotes and the noise of other
+ wild animals, and then none of the children were allowed to leave the
+ carreta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A great dark mountain rose behind the spring, and the broad, beautiful
+ valley, unfenced and dotted with browsing herds, sloped down to the bay
+ [of San Francisco]. We watched the women unload the linen and carry it to
+ the spring, where they put home-made soap on the clothes, dipped them in
+ the spring, and rubbed them on the smooth rocks until they were white as
+ snow. Then they were spread out to dry on the tops of the low bushes
+ growing on the warm, windless southern slopes of the mountain.&rdquo; After a
+ happy day in the woods came &ldquo;the late return at twilight, when the younger
+ children were all asleep in the slow carreta and the Indians were singing
+ hymns as they drove the linen-laden horses down the dusky ravines.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As at the missions, soon the ranchos, little was raised for sale save
+ hides and tallow from the cattle. It was not the fault of the settlers
+ that, living in so fertile a country, they made so little use of its
+ productiveness. Spain&rsquo;s laws in regard to trade were made entirely in the
+ interests of the mother country, the settlers of New Spain, especially of
+ Alta California, having no encouragement to raise more than they needed
+ for use at home. They could not sell their produce to ships from foreign
+ countries, for the penalty for that was death to the foreigner and severe
+ punishment for the colonist. All trade had to be carried on in Spanish
+ vessels, and it was forbidden to ship olive oil, wine, or anything that
+ was raised or made in the home country. As California and Spain were much
+ alike in climate and soil, this law really stopped all outside trade
+ except that arising from cattle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the territory became a Mexican province, the rules were not so
+ severe in regard to foreign trade, and finally the New England vessels
+ freely entered the ports by paying certain duties to the government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the young people upon the ranchos the arrival of a trading vessel was a
+ great event. If the port was not far from the house, the Patrona and the
+ young ladies sometimes went on board to select for themselves from the
+ miscellaneous cargo the things they desired; but as they were generally
+ afraid of the water, especially of trusting themselves in the ship&rsquo;s
+ boats, the father and boys often represented the family on such occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When news arrived that a ship was coming down the coast, elder sisters
+ became very kind and attentive to younger brothers, who accepted panocha
+ (a coarse brown sugar cast in square or scalloped cakes) and other gifts
+ contentedly, knowing well they would be expected to &ldquo;coax Father&rdquo; to buy
+ the ring, sash, necklace, or fan which the good sister particularly
+ desired. Often a ranchero would go down to the harbor with ten or fifteen
+ ox carts loaded with hides, skins, and tallow, and return with ranch
+ implements, furniture, dishes, sugar, other food, clothes, and ornaments
+ of all kinds. Such laughing, chattering, and excitement as there was when
+ the squeaking ox carts came into the courtyard! The whole household, from
+ the Patrona and her guests to the Indian mothers with their children from
+ the kitchen precincts, gathered to watch the slow unloading of the
+ purchases. Slow, indeed, seemed the process to the eager children of the
+ family. Except on horseback for a short dash, the Californian never
+ hurried. For a journey the usual gait was a little jog trot, hardly faster
+ than a walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senorita Vallejo, in the Century Magazine, describes the loading of a
+ ship&rsquo;s cargo: &ldquo;The landing place for the mission of San Jose was at the
+ mouth of a salt water creek several miles away. When a trading vessel
+ entered San Francisco Bay, the large ship&rsquo;s boat would be sent up this
+ creek to collect the hides and tallow; but if the season was a wet one,
+ the roads would be too bad for the ox carts; then each separate hide was
+ doubled across the middle and placed on the head of an Indian. Sometimes
+ long files of Indians might be seen, each carrying hides in this manner,
+ as they trotted across the wide, flat plains or pushed their way through
+ the little forest of dried mustard stalks to the creek mouth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No such thing was known as a Californian breaking his word in regard to a
+ debt. Yankee ship owners trusted him freely. Once, when a ship was in
+ port, the captain left it for a little while in charge of the clerk whose
+ business it was to sell the goods, but who had never been in California
+ before and knew nothing of its customs. Down to the shore came a ranchero
+ attended by servants and ox carts. He came on board and bought many
+ things, intending to pay later with hides and tallow which were not then
+ ready. When he ordered the goods taken ashore with never a word as to
+ payment, the clerk informed him that he must either give money or else
+ give some writing saying that he would pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this Californian, though rich in lands and stock, could neither read
+ nor write. When he understood that he was being distrusted, he gravely
+ drew from his beard a hair, and, handing it to the clerk, said: &ldquo;Give this
+ to your master and tell him it is a hair from the beard of Agustin
+ Machado. You will find it sufficient guarantee.&rdquo; The clerk saw that he had
+ made a mistake, and, taking the hair, placed it in the leaves of his note
+ book and allowed the goods to be taken away. When the captain returned, he
+ was mortified that there had been any distrust shown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While California was a Spanish province its chief ruler was appointed by
+ the home government and was always an educated gentleman of good family,
+ generally an officer of the army. The coming of a new governor was a great
+ event in the colony and was celebrated with all possible ceremony and
+ display.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1810 Mexico began its revolt against Spain. In California the people
+ were in sympathy with the mother country and had no doubt of her final
+ success. For a long time they received little news of how the war was
+ progressing. They only knew that no more money was sent up to pay the
+ soldiers or the expenses of government, that the padres no longer received
+ any income from the Pius Fund, that even the trading vessels from Mexico
+ upon which they depended for their supplies had ceased to come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Times became so hard that the local government turned for aid to the
+ missions, which had become largely self-supporting. Many of them were
+ indeed wealthy communities, and the padres responded generously to the
+ demand for help. For several years they furnished food and clothing to the
+ soldiers, and money for the expenses of government, for the most of which
+ they never received payment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually the fine clothes of the Californians wore out, no vessels
+ arrived from which they could purchase more, and again it was the missions
+ which came to the rescue. Their cotton and woolen goods were in great
+ demand. Indian spinners and weavers were busy from morning until night
+ making clothes for the &ldquo;gente de razon,&rdquo; or &ldquo;people of reason,&rdquo; which was
+ the term by which the white settlers were distinguished from the natives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1822 a vessel came up from the south, bringing to the governor official
+ notice that the war had been decided in favor of Mexico, and that
+ California was therefore a Mexican province. This was disagreeable news to
+ the Californians, but after consultation held by the governor, his
+ officers, the padre who was the president of the missions, and some of the
+ leading citizens, it was decided that they were too far away from Spain to
+ be able to resist, and that they should take the oath to be true to the
+ Mexican government. For the padres, who were all Spaniards and loyal to
+ the home government, this was a hard thing to do, and they never became
+ reconciled to the change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time California was not so well governed. Mexico, which was then
+ an empire but soon became a republic, had its hands full looking after its
+ own affairs, and little attention was paid its far-off province. Its best
+ men were needed at home, and the governors sent up the coast were not
+ always wise or pleasing to the people. There were several revolutions with
+ but little bloodshed. One governor was sent back to Mexico. At one time
+ the Californians declared that theirs was a free state, and a young man
+ named Alvarado was made governor. General Vallejo, who was his uncle, was
+ given command of the army. But soon the Californians quarreled bitterly
+ among themselves, so that this government did not last long and the
+ territory went back under the rule of Mexico. That government, in order to
+ have peace in the province, confirmed Alvarado and Vallejo in their
+ positions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the war between Mexico and Spain a South American pirate paid a visit
+ to the coast of Upper California. Monterey was attacked and partly
+ destroyed, also the mission of San Juan Capistrano and the rancho El
+ Refugio, the home of Captain Ortega, the discoverer of San Francisco Bay.
+ In the crew of the pirate ship was a young American named Chapman, who had
+ found life among his rough associates not so interesting as he had hoped
+ it would be, so he deserted, but was taken prisoner by the Californians
+ and imprisoned in a canyon near the present site of Pasadena. Later he was
+ brought down to Los Angeles and set at liberty. He found the people of the
+ pueblo planning to build a church on the plaza, and he told them that if
+ they would let him have some Indian workmen he would get some large
+ timbers down from the canyon. He accomplished this successfully, and it
+ was considered a wonderful work. The stumps of the trees can yet be seen
+ far up on the mountain side, and the timbers are still in the plaza
+ church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Visiting San Gabriel, young Chapman found the padres having trouble to
+ keep the flour which they ground in their new stone mill from being
+ dampened by water from the mill wheel. Knowing something of machinery, the
+ American remedied the defect by means of a flutter wheel, and there was no
+ more trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For years the catching of otters for their fur along the lagoons and bays
+ about San Francisco and Monterey brought considerable money to the
+ northern missions. Chapman, finding that the padres of San Gabriel were
+ anxious to engage in this trade, built for them the first sea-going boat
+ ever constructed in southern California. It was a schooner, the various
+ parts of which he made in the workshop of the mission. They were then
+ carried down to San Pedro, where he put them together and successfully
+ launched the vessel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, to close his history, it is recorded of Mr. Chapman that he fell
+ in love with the pretty daughter of Captain Ortega, whose home he had
+ helped his pirate associates to attack, that he married her and lived to a
+ good old age. The country had few more useful citizens than this capable
+ man, the first American to settle in the southern part of California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the secularization of the missions in 1833-34 came a change in the
+ peaceful pastoral life. In each section all that was of interest had from
+ the first centered around its mission. One of the chief pleasures of the
+ early Californians was the feast day, &ldquo;La Fiesta,&rdquo; which celebrated a
+ saint&rsquo;s birthday. During the year there were many of these festivals.
+ First there were religious exercises at the mission church; then in the
+ great square there followed dancing, games, and feasting, in which all
+ classes took some part. These happy church festivals ceased with the
+ breaking up of the mission settlements. Some of the Indians disturbed the
+ community by disorderly conduct, and the ill treatment and suffering of
+ the rest of these simple people caused sorrow and dismay in the hearts of
+ the better portion of the settlers. There was a wild scramble for the
+ lands, stock, and other wealth which had been gathered by the missionaries
+ and their Indian workmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the beautiful churches were sold to people who cared nothing for
+ the faith they represented. In some, cattle were stabled. The mission
+ bells were silent, and many of the mission settlements, once so busy and
+ prosperous, were solitary and in ruins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life in the great ranchos still went on much as before, but it was no
+ longer so simple and joyous. A change had begun, and not many years later,
+ with the coming of the Americans at the time of the Mexican war, the
+ peaceful, happy life of Spanish California was brought to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VI. &mdash; The Footsteps of the Stranger
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At no point does the early history of California come in contact with that
+ of the colonies of the Eastern coast of the United States. The nearest
+ approach to such contact was in the year 1789, when Captain Arguello,
+ commander of the presidio of San Francisco, received the following orders
+ from the governor of the province:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Should there arrive at your port a ship named Columbia, which, they say,
+ belongs to General Washington of the American States, you will take
+ measures to secure the vessel with all the people aboard with discretion,
+ tact, cleverness, and caution.&rdquo; As the Columbia failed to enter the
+ Californian port, the Spanish commander had no chance to try his wits and
+ guns with those of the Yankee captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would seem as though the Californians lived for a time in fear of their
+ Eastern neighbors, since prayers were offered at some of the missions that
+ the people be preserved from &ldquo;Los Americanos;&rdquo; but after the coming of the
+ first two or three American ships, when trade began to be established,
+ there arose the kindliest feeling between the New England traders and the
+ Californians. The ship Otter, from Boston, which came to the coast in
+ 1796, was the first vessel from the United States to anchor in a
+ California port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Perouse, in command of a French scientific expedition, was the first
+ foreigner of prominence to visit California. Of his visit, which occurred
+ in the fall of 1786, he writes in his journal: &ldquo;The governor put into the
+ execution of his orders in regard to, us a graciousness and air of
+ interest that merits from us the liveliest acknowledgments, and the padres
+ were as kind to us as the officers. We were invited to dine at the Mission
+ San Carlos, two leagues from Monterey, were received upon our arrival
+ there like lords of a parish visiting their estates. The president of the
+ missions, clad in his robe, met us at the door of the church, which was
+ illuminated as for the grandest festival. We were led to the foot of the
+ altar and the Te Deum chanted in thanksgiving for the happy issue of our
+ voyage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Perouse&rsquo;s account of the country, the people, and the missions is of
+ great value in giving us a picture of these times. In regard to the
+ Indians he said that he wished the padres might teach them, besides the
+ principles of the Christian religion, some facts about law and civil
+ government, &ldquo;Although,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I admit that their progress would be
+ very slow, the pains which it would be necessary to take very hard and
+ tiresome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Vancouver, with two vessels of the British navy, bound on an
+ exploring voyage round the world, was the next stranger to visit,
+ California. So much did he enjoy the courtesy of the Spanish officers that
+ when his map of the coast came out it was found that he had honored his
+ hosts of San Francisco and Monterey by naming for them two leading capes
+ of the territory, one Point Arguello and the other Point Sal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1781 Russia had settlements in Sitka and adjacent islands, for
+ the benefit of its fur traders, and in 1805 the Czar sent a young officer
+ of his court to look into the condition of these trading posts. Count
+ Rezanof found the people suffering and saw that unless food was brought to
+ them promptly, they would die from starvation. San Francisco was the
+ nearest port, and though he knew that Spain did not allow trade with
+ foreign countries, the Russian determined to make the attempt to get
+ supplies there. Loading a vessel with goods which had been brought out for
+ the Indian trade of the north coast, he sailed southward. The story of his
+ visit is well told by Bret Harte in his beautiful poem, &ldquo;Concepcion de
+ Arguello.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rezanof was warmly welcomed and generously entertained by Commander
+ Arguello of the presidio of San Francisco, but in vain did he try to trade
+ off his cargo for food for his starving people. The governor and his
+ officers dared not disobey the laws of Spain in regard to foreign trade.
+ While they were arguing and debating, however, something happened which
+ changed their views. The Count fell in love with the commander&rsquo;s beautiful
+ daughter, Concepcion. Then, as the poem has it,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;. . . points of gravest import yielded slowly one by one, And by Love was
+ consummated what Diplomacy begun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to the governor that the man who was to be son-in-law in the
+ powerful family of Arguello could not be considered as a foreigner, and
+ therefore the law need not apply in his case. Thus the Count got his ship
+ load of food and sailed away, promising to return as soon as possible for
+ his betrothed wife. One of the most interesting pictures of early
+ California is the poem which tells of this pathetic love story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Rezanof was so pleased with the beauty and fertility of California
+ that his letters interested the Czar, who decided to found a colony on the
+ coast. An exploring expedition was sent out, and the territory about
+ Russian River in Sonoma County was purchased of the Indians for three
+ blankets, three pairs of trousers, two axes, three hoes, and some beads.
+ Fort Ross was the main settlement, and was the home of the governor, his
+ officers and their families, all accomplished, intelligent men and women.
+ Besides the soldiers there were a number of mechanics and a company of
+ natives from the Aleutian Islands, who were employed by the Russians to
+ hunt the otter. Up and down the coast roamed these wild sea hunters, even
+ collecting their furry game in San Francisco Bay and defying the
+ comandante of the presidio, who had no boats with which to pursue them,
+ and so could do nothing but fume and write letters of remonstrance to the
+ governor of Fort Ross. Spain, and later Mexico, looked with disfavor and
+ suspicion upon the Russian settlement, but the people of California were
+ always ready for secret trade with their northern neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1816 Otto von Kotzebue, captain of the Russian ship Rurik, visited San
+ Francisco and was entertained by the comandante, Lieutenant Luis Arguello.
+ With Captain Kotzebue was the German poet, Albert von Chamisso.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian captain, with brighter faith and keener insight than any other
+ of the early visitors to the coast, says of the country: &ldquo;It has hitherto
+ been the fate of these regions to remain unnoticed; but posterity will do
+ them justice; towns and cities will flourish where all is now desert; the
+ waters over which scarcely a solitary boat is yet seen to glide will
+ reflect the flags of all nations; and a happy, prosperous people receiving
+ with thankfulness what prodigal nature bestows for their use will dispense
+ her treasures over every part of the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the writings of Albert von Chamisso can be found a most interesting
+ description of his visit. To him is due the honor of giving to our
+ Californian poppy its botanical name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1841, the supply of otter having become exhausted, the Russians sold
+ their property and claims about Fort Ross to the Swiss emigrant, the
+ genial John Sutter. In 1903, through the agency of the Landmarks Society,
+ this property and its still well-preserved buildings came into the
+ possession of the state of California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1826 there were a number of foreigners settled in California.
+ These were mostly men from Great Britain or the United States who had
+ married California women and lived and often dressed like their
+ Spanish-speaking neighbors. Captain John Sutter, the Swiss who bought out
+ the Russians of Fort Ross, came to California in 1839. He obtained from
+ the Mexican government an extensive grant of land about the present site
+ of Sacramento, and here he erected the famous Sutter&rsquo;s Fort where all
+ newcomers, were made welcome and, if they desired, given work under this
+ kindest of masters. Around the fort, which was armed with cannon bought
+ from the Russians, he built a high stockade. He gained the good will of
+ the Indians and had their young men drilled daily in military tactics by a
+ German officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Governor Alvarado, at the time of his revolution in 1837, had in his
+ forces, under a leader named Graham, a company of wandering Americans,
+ trappers and hunters of the roughest type. Although there was no real war,
+ and no fighting occurred, yet when Alvarado and his party were successful,
+ Graham and his men demanded large rewards, and because the governor would
+ not satisfy them they began to persecute him in every way possible.
+ Alvarado says: &ldquo;I was insulted at every turn by the drunken followers of
+ Graham; when I walked in my garden they would climb on the wall and call
+ upon me in terms of the greatest familiarity, &lsquo;Ho, Bautista, come here, I
+ want to speak to you.&rsquo; It was &lsquo;Bautista&rsquo; here, &lsquo;Bautista&rsquo; there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To express dissatisfaction they held meetings in which they talked loudly
+ about their country&rsquo;s getting possession of the land, until Governor
+ Alvarado, having good reason to believe that they were plotting a
+ revolution, expelled them from the territory and sent them to Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The United States took up the defense of the exiles and insisted on their
+ being returned to California. It does not seem that the better class of
+ Americans who had been long residents of the country sympathized with
+ Graham and his followers, but from this time there were less kindly
+ relations between the Californians and the citizens of the United States
+ who came into the territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We come now to the story of the conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the beginning of the year 1845 the United States and Mexico were on the
+ verge of war over Texas, which had been formerly a Mexican province, but
+ through the influence of American settlers had rebelled, declaring itself
+ an independent state, and had applied for admission to the American Union.
+ Because the question of slavery was concerned in this application, it
+ caused intense excitement throughout the United States. The South was
+ determined to have the new territory come in as a slave-holding state,
+ while the men of the North opposed the annexation of another acre of slave
+ land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight Northern legislatures protested against its admission. Twelve
+ leading senators of the North declared that &ldquo;it would result in the
+ dissolution of the United States and would justify it.&rdquo; On the other hand,
+ the South resolved that &ldquo;it would be better to be out of the Union with
+ Texas than in it without her.&rdquo; The South won its point. Texas was
+ admitted, and at once a dispute with Mexico arose over the boundary lines,
+ and war at length followed, being brought on in a measure by the entrance
+ of United States troops into the disputed territory. During the long
+ discussion over Texas the United States was having trouble with Great
+ Britain over Oregon, which was then the whole country lying between the
+ Mexican province of California and the Russian possessions on the north
+ coast (now Alaska). Before the invention of steam cars and the
+ construction of railroads, the Pacific coast region had been thought of
+ little value. The popular idea was expressed by Webster when he said:
+ &ldquo;What do we want of this vast, worthless area, this region of savages and
+ wild beasts, of deserts, of shifting sands and whirlwinds of dust, of
+ cactus and prairie dogs?&rdquo; But now the United States was waking up, and
+ things looked different. Of Oregon the Americans were determined to have
+ at least a portion. California, so far away from Mexico and so poorly
+ governed, they would like to take under their protection,&mdash;at least
+ the region around the great Bay of San Francisco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1840 the United States government urged its consul at
+ Monterey, an American named Larkin, secretly to influence the leading
+ Californians to follow the example of Texas, secede from Mexico, and join
+ the United States, where he was to assure them they would receive a
+ brother&rsquo;s welcome. Just as he felt he might be successful his plans were
+ overthrown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning in 1842 there came sailing into Monterey Bay two American
+ men-of-war. Suddenly, to the consternation of those watching from the
+ shore, one of the ships was seen to fire upon an outgoing Mexican sloop.
+ After making it captive the three vessels proceeded to the anchorage.
+ Great was the excitement in Monterey. Neither the comandante nor the
+ American consul could imagine the reason for such strange conduct. It was
+ soon explained, however, by the arrival of a ship&rsquo;s boat bringing an
+ officer who delivered to the authorities a demand for the surrender of the
+ fort and place to the American commander of the Pacific fleet, Commodore
+ Jones, who was on board one of the newly arrived vessels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mexican officials and the officers of the army were astonished; so,
+ too, was the United States consul. They knew of no war between these
+ countries. Since he had neither men nor arms to resist this strange
+ demand, Alvarado, who was acting for the absent governor, gave orders to
+ surrender, and the next day the Mexican flag and forces gave place to
+ those of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the ceremony of taking possession, Commodore Jones had a talk with
+ the American consul, Mr. Larkin, and learned to his dismay that the
+ letters upon which he had acted and which indicated that war had been
+ declared were misleading, and from the latest news it was evident that
+ there was peace between the two countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commodore saw at once that he had made a serious mistake, &ldquo;a breach of
+ the faith of nations,&rdquo; as it was called, which was liable to involve the
+ United States in grave difficulties. How best to undo his rash action was
+ now his thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He apologized to the Mexican commander and gave back possession of the
+ fort. Next, he had the unhappy task of taking down the American flag and
+ replacing it with the cactus and eagle banner of Mexico, to which the guns
+ of his vessels gave a salute of honor. From Monterey he sailed away to San
+ Pedro. There he waited while he sent a messenger to Governor Micheltorena,
+ who was living in Los Angeles, asking permission to call upon him and
+ apologize in person. This request was granted, and Commodore Jones and his
+ staff came up to Los Angeles, where they were the guests of their
+ countryman, Don Abel Stearns, who, as he had been working with Consul
+ Larkin to win the Californians to the United States, was most anxious to
+ undo the mischief of the flag raising. For the benefit of this history,
+ Dona Arcadia Bandini, who was the beautiful Spanish wife of Mr. Stearns,
+ tells the story of the visit:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We gave a dinner to the governor, the commodore, and their attendants.
+ Everything was very friendly; they seemed to enjoy themselves, and the
+ uniforms of the two countries were very handsome. On the next day but one
+ the governor gave a ball. It was to be at his home, which was the only
+ two-story house in Los Angeles. To show the Americans how patriotic the
+ people of California were, the governor requested in the invitations that
+ all the ladies wear white with a scarf of the Mexican colors,&mdash;red,
+ green, and white. Of course we gladly complied, though some of us had to
+ work hard to get our costumes ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The day of the ball came, but with it came rain, such a storm as I never
+ had seen. As it drew toward evening the water came down faster and faster.
+ The governor had the only carriage in California, and this he was to send
+ for the commodore, Mr. Stearns, Isadora, and myself; but the poor young
+ officers had to walk, and their faces were long when they looked out at
+ the rain and then down at their fine uniforms and shining boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our California horses were not trained to pull loads and would not work
+ in the rain, so when the carriage came for us it was drawn by a number of
+ the governor&rsquo;s Cholo soldiers. We got in quite safely, and it was only a
+ short distance we had to go, but as I was getting out the wind suddenly
+ changed and down came a torrent of water on me. It was clear that I could
+ not go to the ball in that condition, but the governor immediately ordered
+ the soldiers to pull the carriage back to my home, where I soon made
+ another toilet. The ball was delightful. The governor and the commodore
+ vied with each other in exchanging compliments and courtesies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a sad fact, however, that in spite of apologies, dinners, and
+ balls, Consul Larkin now found it difficult to persuade his California
+ neighbors that the United States looked upon them as brothers, and they
+ began to regard with suspicion the host of American emigrants who were
+ coming into the territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1842 Lieutenant Fremont, under orders from the United States
+ government, made the first of his wonderful journeys over deserts and
+ rough mountain ranges into the great unknown West. Soon he was to become
+ famous, not only in his own country but in Europe, as the &ldquo;Pathfinder,&rdquo;
+ the road maker of the West. Already many an Oregon emigrant had blessed
+ the name of Fremont for making plain the trail for himself and his loved
+ ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1846 Captain Fremont, conducting an exploring and scientific
+ expedition, entered California with sixty men and encamped in the valley
+ of the San Joaquin. Later he moved down into the heart of the California
+ settlements and encamped on the Salinas River. Possibly, knowing that war
+ would soon be declared between his country and Mexico, he had determined
+ to see as much of the enemy&rsquo;s position as possible, not caring
+ particularly what the Mexican authorities might think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a natural result, General Castro, commander of the California forces,
+ objected; Fremont defied him, and there seemed a likelihood of immediate
+ war. There was no actual fighting, however, and in a day or two Fremont
+ continued his journey toward Oregon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had gone but a little way when he was overtaken by a captain of the
+ navy named Gillespie, bringing him letters from the officers of the
+ government at Washington. Upon reading these, Fremont immediately turned
+ about and marched swiftly back to Sutter&rsquo;s Fort, where he encamped. Just
+ what orders the messages from Washington contained, no one knows; but it
+ is thought that perhaps they informed Fremont that war would be declared
+ very soon and that the government would be pleased if he could quietly get
+ possession of California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this was so, he had the best of reasons for his later actions. If not,
+ then in his eagerness to obtain for his country the valuable territory he
+ so well appreciated and in his desire to win for himself the honor of
+ gaining it, he brought on a war that caused the loss of many lives and
+ much property, and the growth of a feeling of bitterness and distrust
+ between Americans and Californians that has not yet entirely passed away.
+ Still it is by no means certain that California could have been won
+ without fighting, even had Fremont and the American settlers been more
+ patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon many Americans were gathered about Fremont&rsquo;s camp; but though there
+ were a number of rumors as to what General Castro was going to do to them,
+ there was no action contrary to the previous kindly treatment all had
+ received from the hands of the Californians. Still the emigrants felt that
+ as soon as war was declared an army from Mexico might come up which would
+ not be so considerate of them and their families as had been their
+ California neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having good reason to feel certain that Fremont would stand back of them
+ if they began the fight, a company of Americans attacked one of Castro&rsquo;s
+ officers, who, with a few men, was taking a band of horses to Monterey.
+ Securing the horses, but letting the men who had them in charge get away,
+ they hurried them to Fremont&rsquo;s camp, where they left them while they went
+ on to Sonoma. Here they made prisoner General Vallejo, commander of that
+ department of the territory, together with his brother and staff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Vallejo was one of the leading Californians of the north, a man of
+ fine character, quiet and conservative, generous toward the needy
+ emigrants and favorable to annexation with the United States. When he saw
+ the rough character of the men surrounding his house that Sunday morning,
+ he was at first somewhat alarmed. A man named Semple, who was one of the
+ attacking party, describing the event in a Monterey paper sometime
+ afterward, says: &ldquo;Most of us were dressed in leather hunting shirts, many
+ were very greasy, and all were heavily armed. We were about as rough a
+ looking set of men as one could well imagine.&rdquo; When they assured the
+ general that they were acting under orders from Fremont, he seemed to feel
+ no more anxiety, gave up his keys, and arranged for the protection of the
+ people of his settlement. He was first taken to Fremont&rsquo;s headquarters,
+ then for safe keeping was sent on to Sutter&rsquo;s Fort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the party which had been left in charge of affairs at Sonoma
+ chose one of their number, a man named Ide, as their leader. Realizing
+ that they had begun a war, they felt the need of a flag, and not daring to
+ use that of the United States, they proceeded to make one for themselves.
+ For their emblem they chose the strongest and largest of the animals of
+ California, the grizzly bear. The flag was made of a Mexican rebosa or
+ scarf of unbleached muslin about a yard in width and five feet long. To
+ the bottom of this they sewed a strip of red flannel; in one corner they
+ outlined a five-pointed star, and facing it a grizzly bear. These were
+ filled in with red ink and under them in black letters were the words
+ &ldquo;California Republic.&rdquo; The temporary government of the followers of the
+ Bear Flag is generally known as the &ldquo;Bear Flag Republic.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as it seemed probable that the Californians under General Castro
+ were marching to attack the Americans, Captain Fremont joined his
+ countrymen, and from that time the United States flag took the place of
+ the banner of the bear. A little later Captain Fremont took the presidio
+ and port of San Francisco, and to him is due the honor of naming beautiful
+ Golden Gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two weeks after the capture of Sonoma, Commodore Sloat, with two
+ vessels of the United States navy, entered the harbor of Monterey.
+ Although he had come for the purpose of taking the territory for his
+ country, and had orders to see to it that England did not get possession
+ of California ahead of him, yet he had been cautioned to deal kindly with
+ the Californians, and he hesitated to take decided steps. It took him six
+ days to make up his mind, and then he came to a decision partly on account
+ of the actions of Fremont and his men. Slowly up the flagstaff on the fort
+ of Monterey rose the Stars and Stripes. Unfolded by the sea breeze, the
+ beautiful flag of the United States waved again over the land of the
+ padres, and this time to stay. A few days later Commodore Stockton reached
+ California to take command in place of Commodore Sloat, who returned home.
+ Stockton appointed Fremont commander of the American forces on land, and
+ together they completed the conquest of the territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was unfortunate that Commodore Stockton had so lately arrived from the
+ East that he did not fully understand the state of affairs. As he believed
+ the wild rumors which, falsely, accused the Californians of treachery and
+ cruelty, his proclamations were harsh and unjust to the proud but kindly
+ people whom he was conquering. Many of the late historians find much to
+ blame in the treatment given by the Americans to the people of California.
+ Severity was often used when kindness would have had far better effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Los Angeles and San Diego were taken by Stockton and Fremont without any
+ fighting, and leaving a few troops in the south, both commanders returned
+ to Monterey. They were soon recalled by the news that the people of Los
+ Angeles had risen against the harsh rule of Captain Gillespie, who had
+ been left in command; that the Americans had surrendered but had been
+ allowed to retire to San Pedro, and that all the south was in a state of
+ active rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Landing at San Pedro, Stockton waited a few days, then fearing the enemy
+ was too strong for his forces, sailed away to San Diego. Here the
+ Americans received a hearty welcome, and much-needed assistance, from the
+ Spanish families of Bandini and Arguello.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Bandini escorted a body of the United States troops to his home rancho
+ on the peninsula of Lower California, where he gave them cattle and other
+ food supplies. For this aid to the invaders he was forced to remove his
+ family from their home there, and on the journey up to San Diego. Mrs.
+ Bandini made what was probably the first American flag ever constructed in
+ California. As they neared San Diego the officer in command discovered
+ that he had neglected to take with him a flag. He did not wish to enter
+ the settlement without one, and when the matter was explained to Mrs.
+ Bandini, who was journeying in a carreta with her maids and children, she
+ offered to supply the need.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the handbag on her arm came needle, thimble, thread, and scissors,
+ and from the clothing of her little ones the necessary red, white, and
+ blue cloth. Under the direction of the young officer she soon had a very
+ fair-looking flag, and beneath its folds the party marched into the town.
+ That night the band of the flagship Congress serenaded Mrs. Bandini in her
+ San Diego home, and the next day Commodore Stockton called to thank her in
+ person. The flag, it is said, he sent to Washington, where it is still to
+ be found with other California trophies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most severe battle of the war in the state of California was fought on
+ the San Pasqual rancho in San Diego County. The forces engaged were those
+ of General Andres Pico, who commanded the Californians, and General
+ Stephen Kearny, who had marched overland, entered the territory on the
+ southwest, and was on his way to join Stockton. Hearing that the country
+ was conquered and the fighting over, the American officer had sent back
+ about two hundred of his men, but he was afterward reinforced by Captain
+ Gillespie and fifty men sent by Stockton to meet him. Several American
+ officers were killed in the battle of San Pasqual, and their brave
+ commander severely wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Commodore Stockton, on his march from San Diego to Los Angeles, twice
+ engaged the enemy, once at the crossing of the San Gabriel River and once
+ on the Laguna rancho just east of the city. The Californians behaved with
+ great bravery. All of them were poorly armed, many having only lances and
+ no fire-arms, and what powder they had was almost worthless; yet three
+ times they dashed upon the square of steadily firing United States
+ marines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the last battle in the territory. The Californians retreated
+ across the hills to the present site of Pasadena. Here, at the little
+ adobe house on the banks of the Arroyo Seco, they separated. General
+ Flores, their commander, was to ride with his staff through the stormy
+ night, down El Camino Real toward Mexico. General Andres Pico, upon whom
+ devolved the duty of surrender, was to ride with his associates to the old
+ Cahuenga ranch house, the first station on the highway from Los Angeles to
+ Santa Barbara. There he met Captain Fremont, and the treaty was signed
+ which closed hostilities. The terms proposed by Fremont were favorable for
+ the Californians and did much to make way for a peaceful settlement of all
+ difficulties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VII. &mdash; At the Touch of King Midas
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was by chance that gold was discovered in both northern and southern
+ California, and by chance that many great fortunes were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Juan Lopez, foreman of the little ranch of St. Francis in Los Angeles
+ County, one morning in March, 1842, while idly digging up a wild onion, or
+ brodecia, discovered what he thought lumps of gold clinging to its roots.
+ Taking samples of the metal, he rode down to Los Angeles to the office of
+ Don Abel Stearns, who recognized it as gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon Juan and his companions were busy digging and washing the earth and
+ sands in the region where the little wild flowers grew. These mines were
+ called &ldquo;placer,&rdquo; from a Spanish word meaning loose or moving about,
+ because the metal was loosely mixed with sand and gravel, generally in the
+ bed of a stream or in a ravine where there had once been a flow of water
+ which had brought the gold down from its home in the mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these mines Don Abel Stearns sent, in a sailing vessel round Cape
+ Horn, the first parcel of California gold dust ever received at the United
+ States mint, and it proved to be of very good quality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The San Fernando mines, as they were called, because they were on a ranch
+ that had once belonged to San Fernando mission, yielded many thousand
+ dollars&rsquo; worth of gold dust. It is on record that one firm in Los Angeles,
+ which handled most of the gold from these and other mines of southern
+ California, paid out in the course of twenty years over two million
+ dollars for southern gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The true golden touch, however, was to come in a different part of the
+ territory among people of another race and tongue. It was to transform
+ California from an almost unknown land with slight and scattered
+ population to a community so rich as to disturb the money markets of the
+ world; a community sheltering a great host of people, all young, all
+ striving eagerly for the fortunes they had traveled thousands of miles to
+ find.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the signing of the treaty of Cahuenga between Colonel Fremont and
+ General Pico, the Spanish-speaking people settled down quietly and
+ peacefully. The only disagreements were between the American leaders,
+ General Kearny and Commodore Stockton, and between Kearny and Fremont, who
+ had been appointed by Stockton military governor of the territory. This
+ appointment General Kearny disputed. General Vallejo tells in one of his
+ letters of having received on the same day communication from Kearny,
+ Stockton, and Fremont, each signing himself commander-in-chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever was right in the quarrel, Fremont was the chief sufferer, for
+ General Kearny, after Stockton left, ordered him to return East under
+ arrest and at Washington to undergo a military trial or court-martial for
+ mutiny and disobedience of orders. Although the court found him guilty and
+ sentenced him to be dismissed from the army, the President, remembering
+ his services in the exploration of the West, and quite possibly thinking
+ him not the person most to blame, pardoned and restored him to his
+ position. Fremont, feeling that he had done nothing wrong, refused the
+ pardon and resigned from the army. The next year the new President,
+ Taylor, showed his opinion of the matter by appointing Fremont to conduct
+ the important work of establishing the boundaries between the United
+ States and Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Kearny, when he departed for the East, left Colonel Mason, of the
+ regular army, as military governor of California. Mason chose as his
+ adjutant, or secretary, a young lieutenant named Sherman, who, years
+ later, in the Civil War, by his wonderful march through the heart of the
+ South, came to be considered one of the greatest generals of his time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the Mexican war many settlers were gathered about Sutter&rsquo;s Fort
+ and San Francisco Bay. There were about two thousand Americans, most of
+ them strong, hardy men, all overjoyed that the territory was in the hands
+ of the United States and all eager to know what would finally be decided
+ in regard to it. Reports kept arriving of parties of emigrants that were
+ about to start overland for California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are as certain to come as that the sun will rise to-morrow,&rdquo; said
+ genial Captain Sutter, &ldquo;and as the overland trail ends at my rancho, I
+ must be ready to furnish them provisions. They are always hungry when they
+ get there, especially the tired little children, and the only thing for me
+ to do is to build a flour mill to grind my grain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well and good,&rdquo; said James Marshall, one of his assistants, an American
+ by birth, a millwright by trade; &ldquo;but to build a flour mill requires
+ lumber, and lumber calls for a sawmill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will build it, too,&rdquo; said Sutter. &ldquo;Take a man and provisions and go up
+ toward the mountains; there must be good places on my land. I leave it all
+ in your hands.&rdquo; The place was found on a swift mountain stream. Near the
+ present site of Coloma, in the midst of pine forests, on the water soon to
+ be so well known as the American River, the sawmill was located. Marshall
+ also marked out a rough wagon road forty-five miles long down to the fort.
+ Captain Sutter was delighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Set to work as soon as you like, Marshall,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;This is your
+ business.&rdquo; Soon the mill was built and almost ready for use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may let the water into the mill race to-night,&rdquo; said Marshall to his
+ men. &ldquo;I want to test it and also to carry away some of the loose dirt in
+ the bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down came the water with a rush, carrying off before it the loose earth;
+ all night it ran, leaving the race with a clean, smooth bed. The next day,
+ Monday, January 24, 1848,&mdash;wonderful day for California&mdash;James
+ Marshall went out to look at the mill race to see if everything was ready
+ to begin work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;we will commence sawing, and put things through
+ as fast as possible. The men are waiting, we have plenty of trees down,
+ there is nothing to hinder;&rdquo; but at that moment as he walked beside the
+ bed of the tail race he saw some glittering yellow particles among its
+ sands. He stopped and picked one up. The golden touch had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following is Marshall&rsquo;s own description as published in the Century
+ Magazine (Vol. 41). &ldquo;It made my heart thump, for I was certain it was
+ gold. Yet it did not seem to be of the right color; all the gold coin I
+ had seen was of a reddish tinge; this looked more like brass. I recalled
+ to mind all the metals I had seen or heard of, but I could find none that
+ resembled this. Suddenly the idea flashed across my mind that it might be
+ iron pyrites. I trembled to think of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, to make sure, Marshall, like Juan Lopez, mounted his horse and
+ rode away to find some one with more knowledge than himself. That some one
+ was Captain Sutter, who looked in his encyclopedia, probably the only one
+ in the territory at that time, and by comparing the weight of the metal
+ with the weight of an equal bulk of water found its specific gravity,
+ which proved it to be gold. Still Sutter thought that he should like
+ better authority. General Sherman, in Memoirs, tells how the news came to
+ Monterey, where, he was the governor&rsquo;s gay young military secretary:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember one day, in the spring of 1848, that two men, Americans, came
+ into the office and inquired for the Governor. I asked their business, and
+ one answered that they had just come down from Captain Sutter on special
+ business and they wanted to see Governor Mason in person. I took them in
+ to the colonel and left them together. After some time the colonel came to
+ his door and called to me. I went in and my attention was directed to a
+ series of papers unfolded on his table, in which lay about half an ounce
+ of placer gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mason said tome, &lsquo;What is that?&rsquo; I touched it and examined one or two of
+ the larger pieces and asked, &lsquo;Is it gold?&rsquo; I said that if that were gold
+ it could be easily tested, first by its malleability and next by acids. I
+ took a piece in my teeth and the metallic lustre was perfect. I then
+ called to the clerk, Baden, to bring in an ax and hatchet from the
+ backyard. When these were brought, I took the largest piece and beat it
+ out flat, and beyond doubt it was metal and a pure metal. Still we
+ attached little importance to the fact, for gold was known to exist at San
+ Fernando at the south and yet was not considered of much value.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time some of the business men who had settled in the little
+ town of Yerba Buena, finding that all ships that entered the harbor were
+ sent by their owners not to Yerba Buena, of which they knew nothing, but
+ to San Francisco, persuaded the town council to change the name of the
+ settlement from Yerba Buena to San Francisco, which was already the name
+ of the mission and presidio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gold! Gold!! Gold!!! from the American River,&rdquo; cried a horseman from the
+ mines, riding down Market Street, waving his hat in one hand, a bottle of
+ gold dust in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When words like these dropped from the lips of a messenger in any of the
+ little communities, the result was like a powerful explosion. Everybody
+ scattered, not wounded and dying, however, but full of life, ready to
+ endure anything, risk anything, for the sake of finding the precious metal
+ which enables its owner to have for himself and those he loves the
+ comfortable and beautiful things of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result at San Francisco is thus described in one of its newspapers of
+ 1848: &ldquo;Stores are closed, places of business vacated, a number of houses
+ tenantless, mechanical labor suspended or given up entirely, nowhere the
+ pleasant hum of industry salutes the ear as of late; but as if a curse had
+ arrested our onward course of enterprise, everything wears a desolate,
+ sombre look. All through the Sundays the little church on the plaza is
+ silent. All through the week the door of the alcalde&rsquo;s office remains
+ locked. As for the shipping, it is left at anchor; first sailors, then
+ officers departing for the mines.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And how was it at the logging camp where Marshall made his great
+ discovery? The new sawmill, built with such high hopes, was soon silent
+ and deserted. No more logs were cut, and no lumber hauled down for the
+ flour mill. There were no men to be found who were willing to cut and saw
+ logs, build mills, or put in the spring wheat when they might be finding
+ their fortunes at the mines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The newly arrived emigrants suffered no doubt from hunger; maybe the
+ children cried for bread; but most of the men, as soon as they had rested
+ a little and knew what was going on, got together money enough to buy the
+ simple implements of knife, pan, pick, and cradle, which were all the
+ tools necessary for the easy placer mining of those days, and joined the
+ endless procession of those who were pushing up toward the streams and
+ canyons round Sutter&rsquo;s famous sawmill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As summer came on, the excitement became intense. Not only from the region
+ around San Francisco Bay, but from San Diego and Los Angeles, people came
+ flocking to the mines. Reports were current of men finding hundreds of
+ dollars&rsquo; worth of gold a day, gaining a fortune in a few weeks. It was
+ almost impossible to hire laborers either in San Francisco or on the
+ ranches. Even the soldiers caught the gold fever and deserted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer, Governor Mason and Lieutenant Sherman visited the mines.
+ Upon their return to Monterey, having seen for themselves that many even
+ of the wildest rumors were true, they made arrangements to send on to
+ Washington official announcement of the discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How this was accomplished is interesting. A lieutenant of the army was
+ appointed by the governor for the important office, and a can of sample
+ gold was purchased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only vessel on the coast ready for departure was a boat bound for
+ Peru. On this ship the lieutenant with his pot of gold and the governor&rsquo;s
+ report embarked at Monterey. He reached the Peruvian port just in time to
+ catch the British steamer back to Panama. Crossing the Isthmus on
+ horseback, he took a steamer for Kingston, Jamaica. There he found a
+ vessel just leaving for New Orleans. Reaching that city he at once
+ telegraphed the news to Washington, trusting it would be in time to form
+ part of the President&rsquo;s message.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On December 5, 1848, the President, in his message to Congress, after
+ speaking of the discovery of gold in California, said, &ldquo;The accounts of
+ the abundance of gold in that territory are of such extraordinary
+ character as would scarcely command belief but for the authentic reports
+ of officers in the public service who have visited the mineral districts
+ and drew the facts which they detail from personal observation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The certainty that the wonderful reports of the gold country were true,
+ electrified not only the whole country but the whole civilized world.
+ Large numbers of people began immediate preparation for making the
+ overland journey as soon as the weather should permit; while others, too
+ impatient to wait, left for California by the way of the Isthmus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In February, 1849, there arrived at Monterey the Panama, the first
+ steamboat to visit the coast. The whole population turned out to see and
+ welcome it. The Californians as they compared it with the stately frigates
+ and ships they had been accustomed to see, exclaimed, &ldquo;How ugly!&rdquo; Although
+ it was not a beautiful vessel, its arrival was an event of great
+ importance, for it was the first of a line of steamers which were under
+ contract to ply monthly between San Francisco and Panama, and with its
+ coming began such an immigration as the world has seldom known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1849 nearly twenty-five thousand people came by land and almost as many
+ more by sea, from the States alone. There were between thirty and forty
+ thousand from other parts of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ San Francisco at the time of the discovery had about seven hundred
+ inhabitants, and shortly after only the population of a hamlet, because so
+ many had gone to the gold fields. Now it suddenly found itself called upon
+ to give shelter to thousands of people bound for the mines, and many also
+ returning, some successful, others penniless and eager to get work at the
+ very high wages offered, sometimes as much as thirty dollars a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were streets to be surveyed, houses and warehouses to be built,
+ lumber and brick to be provided. People were living in tents, in brush
+ houses, even in shelter made by four upright green poles over which were
+ spread matting and old bedding. Hundreds of ships lay helpless in the
+ harbor waiting for crews, often for men to unload the cargoes. No longer
+ could the papers complain of lack of business. The town was like a hive,
+ but such a disorderly one as would have driven wild any colony of bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was mud flats or water where are now the water front and some of the
+ leading business streets of the city. On these flats old unseaworthy
+ vessels were drawn up and did duty side by side with rough board buildings
+ as dwellings and stores. In the rainy seasons the streets were lakes of
+ mud where mules and drays were sometimes literally submerged. The arrival
+ of the mail steamer was the event of the month to this host of people so
+ far away from home and loved ones. Guns were fired, bells rang to announce
+ the approach of the vessel, then there was a wild rush to the post office,
+ where the long lines of men, most of them wearing flannel shirts, wide
+ hats, and high boots, extended far down the street. Very high prices were
+ sometimes paid, as high even as one hundred dollars, by a late corner to
+ buy from some one lucky enough to be near the head of the line a position
+ near the delivery window. Then if no letter came, how great was the
+ disappointment!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One man thus described the mines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was but a lad and my party took me along only because I had a knack at
+ cooking and was willing to do anything in order to see the place where
+ such wonderful fortunes were made. It was a hot summer afternoon when,
+ crossing a region of low, thinly wooded hills, we looked down upon
+ American River; away to the east were high mountain ranges, their peaks,
+ although it was still August, snow-tipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From them came swiftly down the already famous river. Its volume was
+ evidently diminished from the heat, and along its gravelly bed men were
+ digging the sand and gravel into buckets. As I reached them and watched
+ them work I was greatly disappointed. It seemed like very ordinary dirt
+ they were handling; I saw no gleam of the yellow sands of which I had
+ heard such stories. I followed one of the men who carried the buckets of
+ earth to something that looked very like our family cradle with the
+ footboard knocked out. Where the slats might have been there was nailed a
+ piece of sheet iron punched full of holes. Above this was a chute in which
+ the dirt was emptied. The cradle was then rocked violently while water was
+ poured over its contents. The lighter earth and gravel were carried away,
+ while the gold, being heavier, rested either on the sheet iron or between
+ the slats on the cradle bottom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some of the men had no cradle, only a large pan made of sheet iron. This
+ pan, when half filled with dirt, was sunk in the water and shaken sidewise
+ until the dirt and gravel were washed away and only heavy grains of gold
+ remained. There were enough of these to make my eyes open wide. The men
+ who had the cradle were making pretty steadily from eighteen to twenty
+ dollars a day apiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After a day or two I visited the dry diggings. Here I saw things that
+ were more astonishing to me than anything that I had seen at the placer
+ mines. Some men were at work in a little canyon, and I sat on the bowlder
+ and watched them digging into the earth with their knives and picking up
+ every few minutes spoons of earth in which there were plainly visible
+ little lumps of gold the size of a pea. This was considered a rich find;
+ the men were joyful over their success. Suddenly one of the older ones,
+ looking up at me, sang out:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Sonny, why do you sit there idle? Out with that bread knife of yours
+ and dig for your fortune. Across this ridge is another ravine. It may be
+ like this. Try your luck, anyway.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Somehow, until that moment, it had not entered my boyish mind, that I
+ might join this great mad race for wealth. I sprang to my feet. My heart
+ began to pound faster than it did on the glorious day when in my boyhood
+ home I had won the mile race at the county fair. There was a singing in my
+ ears; for the minute I could scarcely breathe. I had heard of the gold
+ fever, and now I had caught it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dashed up the hillside, fairly rolled down into the rocky little valley
+ beyond, and began to dig wildly; but I found only good honest earth, rich
+ noble soil so like our fertile bottom lands at home. My spirits began to
+ sink, my heart to resume its natural beats. I worked half an hour or so
+ without finding any sign, as it was called, and began to feel discouraged.
+ In the canyon, which was very narrow, a large bowlder blocked my progress.
+ I determined to dig it loose. This was the work of some time, but finally
+ I succeeded in dislodging it, and drawing up my legs out of its way
+ watched with a youngster&rsquo;s delight its wild dash down the mountain side to
+ the stream far below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Slowly I turned to resume my work, but what I saw brought me to my feet
+ with a yell. The socket where the stone had rested was dotted with yellow
+ lumps of gold as big as a pea, some even larger. Down I went upon my knees
+ and I fell to work with a will&mdash;the strength of a man seemed in my
+ arms. Off came my coat, and spreading it out I scooped the rich dirt into
+ it by the handful. I had happened on a pocket, as it was called; a turn in
+ the bed of some old mountain stream. The dirt from this when washed
+ yielded me about five hundred dollars, but it was all except cook&rsquo;s wages
+ that I ever made at the mines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before I left the gold fields I saw some small attempt at hydraulic
+ mining which later proved so successful. From a stream up in a canyon some
+ enterprising men had built a log flume and connected with it a large hose
+ and nozzle they had brought up from the coast. Turning the water in this
+ on a dry hill rich in gold deposit, they easily and rapidly washed the
+ dirt down into a sluice or trough below. This had bars nailed across, and
+ water running through carried the dirt away while the gold dropped into
+ the crevices between the bars.&rdquo; This method of mining and also quartz
+ mining, that is, digging gold and other metals from rock, is described in
+ another chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gold-bearing earth extended along the west slope of the Sierra Nevada
+ and their base, from Feather River on the north to the Merced River on the
+ south, a territory about thirty miles wide by two hundred and fifty long.
+ In this district are still some of the richest mines in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VIII. &mdash; The Great Stampede
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The rush of people to the Pacific coast after the gold discovery may well
+ be called a stampede. The terrible overland journey, over thousands of
+ miles of Indian country, across high mountains and wide stretches of
+ desert, was often undertaken with poor cattle, half the necessary supplies
+ of food, and but little knowledge of the route. On the other hand, those
+ who preferred going by water would embark in any vessel, however unsafe,
+ sailing from Atlantic ports to the Isthmus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In New York the excitement was especially great. Every old ship that could
+ be overhauled and by means of fresh paint made to look seaworthy was gayly
+ dressed in bunting and advertised to sail by the shortest and safest route
+ to California. The sea trip is thus described by an elderly gentleman who
+ made the journey when a boy of ten:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Together with the news of the discovery of gold came also reports of a
+ warm, sunny land which winter never visited, where life could be spent in
+ the open air,&mdash;a favorable spot where sickness was almost unknown. It
+ was, I think, as much on account of my mother&rsquo;s health as to make his
+ fortune that my father decided to go to California. The water route was
+ chosen as being easier for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The saying good-by to our relatives had been hard; but by the time we
+ were three miles from home we children ceased to grieve, so interested
+ were we in new sights and experiences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had never seen salt water until that morning in New York, when we
+ boarded the gayly trimmed brig, the Jane Dawson, which was to carry us to
+ the Isthmus. To my sister and myself it was a real grief that our vessel
+ had not a more romantic name. We decided to call it the Sea Slipper, from
+ a favorite story, and the Sea Slipper it has always been to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the deck there were so many unhappy partings that we became again
+ downhearted, a feeling which was intensified in the choppy seas of the
+ outer bay to the utter misery of mind and body. We got ourselves somehow
+ into our berths, where, with mother for company, we remained for many
+ hours. Finally the sea grew calmer and we were just beginning to enjoy
+ ourselves when off Cape Hatteras a severe storm broke upon us. The vessel
+ pitched and rolled; the baggage and boxes of freight tumbled about,
+ threatening the lives of those who were not kept to their berths by
+ illness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Although I was not seasick I dared not go about much. One night, however,
+ growing tired of the misery around me, I crawled over to the end of the
+ farther cabin, which seemed to be deserted. Presently the captain and my
+ father came down the stairs and I heard the officer say in a hoarse
+ whisper. &lsquo;I will not deceive you, Mr. Hunt; the mainmast is down, the
+ steering gear useless, the crew is not up to its business, and I fear we
+ cannot weather the night!&rsquo; I almost screamed aloud in my fright, but just
+ then a long, lanky figure rose from the floor where it had been lying. It
+ was one of the passengers, a typical Yankee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;See here, captain,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;my chum and I are ship carpenters, and the
+ other man of our party is one of the best sailors of the Newfoundland
+ fleet; just give us a chance to help you, and maybe we needn&rsquo;t founder yet
+ awhile.&rsquo; The chance was given, and we did not founder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some days later we anchored in the harbor of Chagres. There were many
+ vessels in the bay, and a large number of people waiting to secure passage
+ across the Isthmus. They crowded around the landing place of the river
+ canoes and fought and shouted until we children were frightened at the
+ uproar, and taking our hands mother retired to the shade of some trees to
+ wait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was almost night when father called to us to come quickly, as he had a
+ boat engaged for us. It lay at the landing, a long canoe, in one end of
+ which our things were already stored. Some men who were friends of
+ father&rsquo;s and had joined our party stood beside it with revolvers in hand
+ watching to see that no one claimed the canoe or coaxed the boatmen away.
+ Mother and Sue were quickly tucked beneath the awning, the rest of us
+ tumbled in where we could, and at once our six nearly naked negro boatmen
+ pushed out the boat and began working it up the stream by means of long
+ poles which they placed on the bottom of the river bed, thus propelling us
+ along briskly but with what seemed to me great exertion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To us children the voyage was most interesting. On either side the banks
+ were covered with such immense trees as we had never dreamed of. The ferns
+ were more like trees than plants, and the colors of leaves and flowers so
+ gorgeous they were dazzling. The fruits were many and delicious, but our
+ father was very careful about our eating, and would not allow us to
+ indulge as we desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The night came on as suddenly as though a great bowl had been turned over
+ us. For an hour or more we watched with delight the brilliant fireflies
+ illuminating all the atmosphere except at the end of the boat, where the
+ red light of a torch lit the scene. After we had lain down for the night
+ the moon rose and I could not enough admire the beauty of the tropical
+ foliage, with the silvery moonlight incrusting every branch and leaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The second day we left the boats and took mules for the rest of the
+ journey. To my delight I was allowed an animal all to myself. Sue rode in
+ a chair strapped to the back of a native, and our luggage was taken in the
+ same manner, the porters carrying such heavy loads that it did not seem
+ possible they could make the journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To my sister and me, the city of Panama was amazingly beautiful, with its
+ pearl oyster shells glittering on steeple and bell tower, and the dress of
+ the people as magnificent as the costumes described in the &lsquo;Arabian
+ Nights.&rsquo; In Panama we waited a long time for a steamer. The town was
+ crowded and many people were ill. My mother was constantly helping some
+ one until my father forbade her to visit any stranger, because cholera had
+ broken out and many were dying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a joyful morning when we boarded the steamer California, steamed
+ out on the blue Pacific, and headed northward. We had more comfortable
+ quarters and better food than when on the Atlantic; but never on the
+ steamer did we feel the sense of grandeur and power that came to us on the
+ brig when, with white sails all set, she rushed like a bird before the
+ wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Toward the close of the voyage there was so much fog that our captain did
+ not know just whereabouts we were, and for that reason kept well out to
+ sea. One morning there came a rap at the stateroom door, and a loud voice
+ cried, &lsquo;Wake up, we shall be in San Francisco in less than an hour.&rsquo; What
+ a time of bustle followed! The sea was rough. Sue and I fell over each
+ other and the valises in our eagerness to get dressed. I, being a boy, was
+ out first. The sun was shining as though it was making up for the days it
+ was hidden from us. The water was blue and sparkling, the air warm and
+ delightful after the cold, foggy weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were steaming due east, and almost before I knew it we had passed
+ through Golden Gate and were in the quiet water of the bay. By the time
+ mother and Sue were on deck, we were nearing the wharf. I thought then
+ that San Francisco was rather disappointing in its looks, with its
+ unpainted houses of all kinds of architecture, and the streets like
+ washouts in the hills, but soon I learned to love it with a faithfulness
+ which was felt by many of the pioneers and will end only with life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were some of the hardships and discomforts endured by those who
+ traveled to California by water during the period of the gold excitement.
+ Yet those who made the journey by land often suffered even more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first immigrant train to California started in 1841.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It brought among its members a young man named Bidwell, afterward United
+ States representative from California. Describing this journey in the
+ Century Magazine (Vol. 41), Mr. Bidwell says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The party consisted of sixty-nine persons. Each one furnished his own
+ supplies of not less than a barrel of flour, sugar, and other rations in
+ proportion. I doubt whether there was a hundred dollars in money in the
+ whole party, but all were anxious to go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our ignorance of the route was complete. We knew that California lay
+ west, and that was all. Some of the maps consulted and supposed to be
+ correct showed a lake in the vicinity of where we now know Salt Lake to
+ be, that was three or four hundred miles in length, with two outlets, both
+ running into the Pacific Ocean, either apparently larger than the
+ Mississippi River. We were advised to take along tools to make canoes, so
+ that if we found the country too rough for our wagons, we could descend
+ one of these rivers to the Pacific.&rdquo; It was two years later that Fremont,
+ the pathfinder and roadmaker of the West, surveyed the great Salt Lake and
+ made a map of it. The Bidwell party after many hardships reached
+ California in safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unhappy Donner party, also home seekers, made the journey in 1848.
+ They lost their way and became snow-bound in the mountains. A number of
+ them died from cold and starvation, but the remainder were rescued by
+ relief parties sent out from Sutter&rsquo;s Fort. Their sufferings were too
+ terrible to be told, and yet they started with fair hopes and as excellent
+ an outfit as any party that ever crossed the plains. The following is from
+ an account of the journey written by one of their number for the Century
+ Magazine (Vol. 42):&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was a child,&rdquo; says Virginia Reed Murphy, &ldquo;when we started for
+ California, yet I remember the journey well. Our wagons were all made to
+ order, and I can say truthfully that nothing like the Reed family wagon
+ ever started across the plains. The entrance was on the side, and one
+ stepped into a small space like a room, in the center of the wagon. On the
+ right and left were comfortable spring seats, and here was also a little
+ stove whose pipe, which ran through the top of the wagon, was prevented by
+ a circle of tin from setting fire to the canvas. A board about a foot wide
+ extended over the wheels on either side, the full length of the wagon,
+ thus forming the foundation of a large roomy second story on which were
+ placed our beds; under the spring seats were compartments where we stored
+ the many things useful for such a journey. Besides this we had two wagons
+ with provisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The family wagon was drawn by four yoke of choice oxen, the others by
+ three yoke. Then we had saddle horses and cows, and last of all my pony.
+ He was a beauty, and his name was Billy. The chief pleasure to which I
+ looked forward in crossing the plains was to ride on my pony every day.
+ But a day came when I had no pony to ride, for the poor little fellow gave
+ out. He could not endure the hardships of ceaseless travel. When I was
+ forced to part with him, I cried as I sat in the back of the wagon
+ watching him become smaller and smaller as we drove on until I could not
+ see him any more. But this grief did not come to me until I had enjoyed
+ many happy weeks with my pet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never can I forget the morning when we bade farewell to our kindred and
+ friends. My father, with tears in his eyes, tried to smile as one friend
+ after another grasped his hand in a last farewell. My mother was overcome
+ with grief. At last we were all in the wagon, the drivers cracked their
+ whips, the oxen moved slowly forward, the long journey had begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The first Indians we met were the Caws, who kept the ferry and had to
+ take us over the Caw River. I watched them closely, hardly daring to draw
+ my breath, feeling sure that they would sink the boat in the middle of the
+ stream, and very thankful I was when I found that they were not like the
+ Indians in grandmamma&rsquo;s stories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When we reached the Blue River, Kansas, the water was so high that the
+ men made rafts of logs twenty-five feet in length, united by cross
+ timbers. Ropes were attached to both ends and by these the rafts were
+ pulled back and forth. The banks of the stream being steep, our
+ heavy-laden wagons had to be let down carefully with ropes so that the
+ wheels might run into the hollow between the logs. This was a dangerous
+ task, for in the wagons were the women and children, who could cross the
+ rapid stream in no other way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After striking the great valley of the Platte the road was good, the
+ country beautiful. Stretching out before us as far as the eye could reach
+ was a valley as green as emerald, dotted here and there with flowers of
+ every imaginable color. Here flowed the grand old Platte&mdash;a wide,
+ shallow stream. This part of our journey was an ideal pleasure trip. How I
+ enjoyed riding my pony, galloping over the plain gathering wild flowers!
+ At night the young folks would gather about the camp fire chattering
+ merrily, and often a song would be heard or some clever dancer would give
+ us a jig on the hind door of a wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the evening, when we rode into camp, our wagons were placed so as to
+ form a circle or corral, into which, after they had been allowed to graze,
+ the cattle were driven to prevent the Indians from stealing them. The camp
+ fire and the tents were placed on the outside of this square. There were
+ many expert riflemen in the party, and we never lacked game. I witnessed
+ many a buffalo hunt and more than once was in the chase close behind my
+ father. For weeks buffalo and antelope steaks were the main article on our
+ bill of fare, and our appetites were a marvel.&rdquo; The Reed family was the
+ only one belonging to the Donner party, it is said, who made the terrible
+ journey without losing a member.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the young people and men there was often much pleasure in crossing the
+ continent in a prairie schooner, as the white-covered emigrant wagon was
+ called; but to the women it was another matter, since they had to ride
+ constantly in a wagon, attend to the little children, and do the cooking,
+ often under great difficulties. Many of them learned to be experts in camp
+ cooking, requiring nothing more than a little hollow in the hard ground
+ for a range; or if there were plenty of stones, the cooking place might be
+ built up a little. Over this simple contrivance, with the aid of a couple
+ of iron crossbars, a kettle, a frying pan, and coffee pot, many a
+ delicious meal was easily and quickly prepared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Hecox, in the Overland Monthly, says: &ldquo;I am sure the men never
+ realized how hard a time the women had. Of course the men worked hard too,
+ but after their day&rsquo;s travel was over they sat around the camp fire,
+ smoked, and told stories, while the women were tending the children,
+ mending clothes, and making ready for the next day&rsquo;s meals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After we crossed the Mississippi, it commenced raining, and for days we
+ splashed through the mud and slush. When we camped at night, we had to
+ wade about and make some kind of shelter for our fires, and I was obliged
+ to keep the children cooped up in the wagons. Here let me say that I never
+ heard an unkind word spoken among the women all the way across the plain.
+ The children were good, too, and never out of humor either, unless some
+ cross man scolded them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At one place a drove of buffalo ran into our train and gave us a bad
+ scare. I was in the wagon behind ours attending a sick woman when I saw
+ the drove coming. I knew the children would be frightened to death without
+ me, so I jumped from the wagon and ran, but I was too late. Finding that I
+ had no time to get into the wagon, I crawled under it, where a wounded
+ buffalo cow tried to follow me. I kicked her in the head as I clung to the
+ coupling pole, and somehow broke my collar bone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the grass began to get green in the spring of 1849, after the
+ news of the discovery of gold reached the States, the overland march
+ began. In white-covered emigrant wagons, in carts, on horses, mules, even
+ on foot, came the eager gold seekers. How poorly prepared were many of
+ them, it would be hard to believe. They were a brave and hardy company of
+ people, but they suffered much. It is estimated that at least eight or ten
+ thousand of the young, strong men died before the year was over. Many of
+ these deaths were due to overwork and exposure, to the lack of the
+ necessaries of life at the mines, also to the fact that a great many of
+ the gold seekers were clever, educated people, quite unused to extreme
+ poverty, and therefore lacking in the strength that comes from
+ self-denial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who remained formed the best material for the making of the state.
+ To this class belonged those who endowed the two great universities which
+ are now the glory of California. For many years the highest position in
+ public life was held by men who came to the Golden State over the plains
+ or by the uncomfortable ocean route in the days of &lsquo;49.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IX. &mdash; The Birth of the Golden Baby
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The birth of the Golden Baby, in other words, the coming of the Golden
+ State into the Union, was a time of struggle and uncertainty, when
+ feelings were deeply stirred and hope deferred caused bitter
+ disappointment. When the treaty of peace with Mexico was ratified by
+ Congress it left the Pacific coast settlements in a strange position&mdash;a
+ territory containing thousands of people, with more coming by hundreds,
+ but with no legally appointed rulers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Congress accepted the treaty, the military governor ceased to
+ have any power, for there was then no longer a state of war; yet he was
+ still obeyed by courtesy, until some one with a better right took his
+ place. The only other official was the local alcalde of each community.
+ This was a Mexican office, but was at that time often filled by an
+ American who had, perhaps, been in the territory only a few months and
+ knew nothing of Mexican laws, but ran things as well as he could after the
+ Eastern fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Mr. Colton, chaplain of the warship Congress, was made alcalde of
+ Monterey, and his book on those times is most interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My duties,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;are similar to those of the mayor of an Eastern
+ city, but with no such aid of courts as he enjoys. I am supreme in every
+ breach of peace, case of crime, disputed land title, over a space of three
+ hundred miles. Such an absolute disposal of questions affecting property
+ and personal liberty never ought to be confided to one man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country owed much to Mr. Colton&rsquo;s work while alcalde. He soon gained
+ the confidence of law-abiding residents, but was a terror to evil doers.
+ Those he put to work quarrying stone and building the solid structure
+ afterward named Colton&rsquo;s Hall. Here one of the first of California&rsquo;s
+ schools was opened, and here was held the first convention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the truth that &ldquo;as a man sows, so shall he reap,&rdquo; that a wrong
+ action is apt to bring its own punishment, was never more plainly shown
+ than in the Mexican war. The war was brought upon the United States in a
+ great degree by those interested in slavery, not because they had any just
+ cause of quarrel with the people of Mexico, but because they wanted more
+ territory where slaves could be held.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ California, which was the name generally given to all the country
+ extending from Mexico northward to Oregon and the Louisiana Purchase, and
+ eastward from the Pacific Ocean to Texas, was what they really fought for,
+ and when they got it, it became their undoing. When a commissioner went to
+ Mexico to arrange for peace, he demanded California for the United States.
+ As is usual, the conquered had to yield to the victor, and Mexico agreed,
+ &ldquo;provided the United States would promise not to permit slavery in the
+ territory thus acquired.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Mr. Trist, the American commissioner, &ldquo;the bare mention of
+ such a thing is an impossibility. No American president would dare present
+ such a treaty to the Senate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mexican authorities persisted, saying the prospect of the introduction
+ of slavery into a territory gained from them excited the strongest
+ feelings of abhorrence in the hearts of the Mexican people, but the
+ American commissioner made no promise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer of 1848 the President, in a special message, called the
+ attention of Congress to California and asked that the laws of a territory
+ be granted to it. The South agreed, provided half should be slave
+ territory. The Northern people, who disliked slavery, had no commercial
+ interest in it, and felt it a disgrace to the nation, resisted this
+ demand. Then began a bitter struggle over California and the question of
+ slavery on her soil, which lasted for two years and called forth some of
+ the grandest speeches of those mighty leaders, Webster, Clay, and Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1849, while this fight in Congress was still going on, an amendment to
+ tax California for revenue, and another which would result in making her a
+ slave state, were added to the regular appropriation bill which provided
+ for the expenses of government and without which the government would
+ stop. Congress was supposed to close its session on Saturday, March 3d, at
+ midnight. The new President, Taylor, was to take office on Monday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been many times of excitement in that Senate chamber, but this
+ night, it is said by those who were present, was equal to any. Such a war
+ of words and a battle of great minds! Many eyes were turned to the clock
+ as it drew near the hour of midnight. Would the stroke of twelve dissolve
+ the meeting and the great government of the United States be left without
+ funds?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To many of the senators this seemed a certainty, but Mr. Webster insisted
+ that Congress could not end while they remained in session. So, through
+ the long night, the struggle went on. About four o&rsquo;clock the amendment in
+ regard to slavery was withdrawn, and the bill for the government money was
+ passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the American settlers in California were extremely dissatisfied.
+ To be living without suitable laws was an unnatural and dangerous state of
+ affairs which could not be tolerated by men who loved their country and
+ their homes. The Spanish Californians, also, were anxious to know what
+ they had to expect from the laws of the United States. At last it was
+ decided by the people, and agreed to by the military governor, Riley, who
+ was a man of good judgment, that delegates should be chosen to a
+ convention which should arrange a state constitution and government. It
+ was determined, however, to wait for word from Congress, which had closed
+ in such tumult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ News would certainly arrive by the next steamer, the Panama, which was
+ long overdue. It was a favorite amusement in those days for the boys of
+ San Francisco to go upon the hill and watch for her coming. The 4th of
+ June they were rewarded by the sight of her. As she came into harbor a
+ large part of the population hurried to the wharf, eager to learn the
+ action of Congress. Was California to be a state or not?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disappointment was great when it was found that nothing had been done
+ except to pass the revenue laws, which meant taxation without
+ representation. In the plaza and on the streets the crowds were loud in
+ their disapproval. The excitement was almost as great as in Boston, so
+ long before, when the news of the tax on tea arrived. A mass meeting was
+ called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is plain they expect us to settle the slavery question for ourselves,&rdquo;
+ said one. &ldquo;We can do it in short order,&rdquo; said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monday, September 3, 1849, the constitutional convention met at Monterey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Recognizing the fact that there is need of more than human wisdom, in the
+ work of founding a state under the unprecedented condition of the
+ country,&rdquo; says the minutes of that meeting, &ldquo;the delegates voted to open
+ the session with prayer.&rdquo; It was decided to begin each morning&rsquo;s work in
+ this way, the Rev. S. H. Willey and Padre Ramirez officiating alternately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were present forty-eight delegates, seven of whom were Spanish
+ Californians. Of these Carrillo of the south and General Vallejo of Sonoma
+ were prominent. They were able men, who were used to governing and who
+ understood fairly well the needs of the times. Later, in the United States
+ Senate, Mr. Webster quoted Mr. Carrillo of &ldquo;San Angeles,&rdquo; as he called it.
+ Another delegate, Dr. Gwin, was a Southern man who had recently come to
+ California for the purpose of gaining the position of United States
+ senator and of so planning things that even though the state should be
+ admitted as free soil, it might later be divided and part be made slave
+ territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He depended for this upon the boundaries. If the whole great section was
+ admitted as California, he thought division would surely follow with the
+ southern part for slavery. The people, however, showed themselves opposed
+ to slavery in their new state, and Dr. Gwin soon found that he must either
+ forego his hopes of becoming senator or give way on this point. The
+ constitution finally adopted was that of a free state with its boundaries
+ as they are to-day. The new legislature chose Colonel Fremont and Dr. Gwin
+ senators, and they left in January, 1850, for Washington, taking the new
+ constitution to offer it for the approval of Congress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the people of the Pacific coast had been making their constitution,
+ Congress was in session, and the subject of California and slavery was
+ still troubling the nation. The discussion grew so bitter that in January
+ Clay brought forward his famous Omnibus Bill, so called because it was
+ intended to accommodate different people and parties, and contained many
+ measures which he thought would be so satisfactory to the senators that
+ they would pass the whole bill, although part of it provided for the
+ admission of California as a free state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once Southerners sprang forward to resist the measure. They realized
+ keenly that slavery could not hold its own if the majority of the country
+ became free soil. They must persist in their demand for more slave
+ territory, or give up their bondmen. Calhoun, the great advocate of
+ slavery, who was at that time ill and near his death, prepared a speech,
+ the last utterance of that brilliant mind, which was delivered March 4th.
+ He was too ill to read it, but sat, gaunt and haggard, with burning eyes,
+ while his friend spoke for him. It closed with the declaration that the
+ admission of California as a slave or a free state was the test which
+ would prove whether the Union should continue to exist or be broken up by
+ secession. If she came in free, then the South could do no less than
+ secede.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days later, March 7th, Webster delivered one of the great speeches
+ of his life. In it he said, &ldquo;The law of nature, physical geography, and
+ the formation of the earth settles forever that slavery cannot exist in
+ California.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seward followed with a speech mighty in its eloquence. He said:
+ &ldquo;California, rich and populous, is here asking admission to the Union and
+ finds us debating the dissolution of the Union itself. It seems to me that
+ the perpetual unity of the empire hangs on this day and hour. Try not the
+ temper and fidelity of California, nor will she abide delay. I shall vote
+ for the admission of California directly, without conditions, without
+ qualifications, and without compromise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On September 9, 1850, California was at last admitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time the country advanced steadily onward to the terrible period
+ of 1861, when the South put her threat into execution. The Civil War
+ followed, and the abolition of slavery; but from the sorrowful struggle
+ there arose a better and happier nation, a united North and South. There
+ are two things to be remembered: that into the new territory gained from
+ Mexico slavery never entered; and that the wealth which came from the
+ mines of California did much toward strengthening the North in the
+ conflict.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over half a year the Californians had been waiting for their constitution
+ to be adopted, and for their representatives to be received in Congress.
+ Sometimes it seemed as though the good news would never come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One October morning word came down from the lookout on Telegraph Hill:
+ &ldquo;The Oregon is coming in covered with bunting. All her flags are flying.&rdquo;
+ Almost at the same moment throughout the city could be heard the quick
+ booming of her guns as she entered the harbor. With shouts and clapping of
+ hands the people rushed to the wharf. Tears were pouring down the faces of
+ men who did not know what it was to cry; women were sobbing and laughing
+ by turns. The shrill cheers of the California boys rose high above all.
+ There was the report of guns, the cracking of pistols, the joyful pealing
+ of bells. New York papers sold readily at five dollars each. No more
+ business that day. Joy and gayety reigned. At night the city was ablaze
+ with fireworks and mighty bonfires, which the boys kept going until
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Messengers started in every direction to carry the news. The way the word
+ came to San Jose was exciting. The new governor, Peter Burnett, was in San
+ Francisco on steamer day. On the very next morning he left for San Jose on
+ the stage coach of Crandall, one of the famous drivers of the West. The
+ stage of a rival line left at the same time. There was great excitement: a
+ race between two six-horse teams, with coaches decorated with flags, and
+ the governor on the box of one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had to creep through the heavy sands to the mission, but beyond there
+ they struck the hard road, and away they went, horses at a gallop,
+ passengers shouting and singing. As they passed through a town or by a
+ ranch house people ran out, aroused by the hubbub. Off went the hats of
+ all on the coaches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;California has been admitted to the Union!&rdquo; some one would shout in his
+ loudest voice, and, looking back, they would see men shaking hands and
+ tossing hats on high, and small boys jigging while shouts and cheers
+ followed them faintly as they disappeared in the distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Past San Bruno, San Mateo, Mayfield, they went with a rush, then swept
+ through Santa Clara, then at a gallop down the beautiful Alameda to San
+ Jose, the governor&rsquo;s coach but three minutes in advance of its rival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later there was the grand ceremony of admission day, which was
+ described in the papers not only of this country but of England as well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, after the rejoicing came a time of anxiety and sorrow. In its
+ treatment of the land question in California the United States made one of
+ the gravest mistakes ever made by a civilized nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man whom the government sent out to investigate the subject, W. C.
+ Jones, was an able Spanish scholar, skilled in Mexican and Spanish law,
+ and his carefully prepared report declared that the greater part of the
+ rancheros had perfect title to their lands, and all that was necessary for
+ the United States to do was to have them resurveyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Congress, Senator Benton and Senator Fremont in most points supported
+ this report as the only just plan. Against the bill that was finally
+ passed Senator Benton protested vigorously, saying that it amounted to
+ confiscation of the land instead of the protection promised by the
+ American government, through Larkin and Sloat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This law made it necessary for every Californian, no matter how long he
+ had lived on his land, to prove his title to it, and that, too, while the
+ United States attorney resisted his claim inch by inch, as if he were a
+ criminal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the Spanish American, who was seldom a man of business after the
+ standard of the Eastern states, was forced into the distressing necessity
+ of fighting for what was his own, in courts, the law and language of which
+ he did not understand. Meantime his property was rendered hard to sell,
+ while taxation fell heaviest upon him because he was a large land owner.
+ Often, too, he would have to pay his lawyer in notes, promising to give
+ money when he could get it, and in the end the lawyer often got most of
+ the land which the United States government had left to the unhappy
+ Californian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The way in which unprincipled men got the better of the rancheros would
+ fill a volume. Guadalupe Vallejo, in the Century Magazine (Vol. 41), tells
+ how a leading American squatter came to her father and said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a large piece of your land where the cattle run loose, and your
+ vaqueros are all gone to the mines. I will fence the field at my own
+ expense if you will give me half of it.&rdquo; Vallejo agreed, but when the
+ American had inclosed it, he entered it on the record books as government
+ land and kept it all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This article also describes the losses of the ranchmen from cattle
+ stealing. It tells how Americans, who were afterward prosperous citizens,
+ were guilty of selling Spanish beef which they knew had been stolen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life of the Spanish-speaking people at the mines was made miserable.
+ The American miners seemed to feel that the Californian had no right to be
+ there. Of course there were some of the lower class, many of whom were
+ part Indian, who would lie, steal, or, if they had an opportunity, murder;
+ but often those who were persecuted were not of this type. A woman of
+ refinement, who under the title of &ldquo;Shirley&rdquo; wrote her experiences at the
+ mines, says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The people of the Spanish race on Indian Bar, many of whom are highly
+ educated gentlemen, are disposed to bear an ill opinion of our whole
+ nation on account of the rough men here. They think that it is a great
+ characteristic of Columbia&rsquo;s children to be prejudiced, selfish,
+ avaricious, and unjust.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Because in a quarrel a Mexican killed a drunken miner, the men of the Bar
+ determined to drive away all Californians. They captured several, not the
+ guilty one, banished some, and two they sentenced to be flogged. Shirley
+ from her cabin heard what was going on. She tells how one of them, a
+ gentlemanly young Spaniard, begged in vain to be killed rather than be
+ disgraced by whipping. When, finally, he was released, he swore eternal
+ vengeance against the American race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In San Francisco the disorderly state of affairs caused by the host of
+ criminals gathered there from all over the world, attracted by the
+ discovery of gold, became unendurable. On the city streets robbery and
+ murder were of frequent occurrence, no one was safe, and wrongdoers went
+ unpunished because, frequently, the officers of the law were in league
+ with them. At last the best citizens felt that for the sake of their homes
+ and families they must take matters into their own hands, so they formed
+ an association, seven thousand strong, which was known as the
+ &ldquo;Vigilantes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who committed crimes were taken by this organization, and, after
+ careful trial, punished. Several of the worst offenders were executed,
+ many were banished from the country, and unjust officials were removed.
+ When law and order were restored, the Vigilantes disbanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The example of San Francisco was followed in various parts of the state,
+ especially in the mining camps, where there were many crimes; but not all
+ the Vigilantes displayed the same care and fairness as the people of the
+ larger city, and sometimes terrible mistakes were made, and innocent
+ people suffered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With thousands of newcomers on the Pacific coast, and the long distance
+ between them and their homes, it was often of the greatest importance to
+ get their parcels and mail to them as promptly as possible. For this
+ reason several express companies were started and did excellent work; but
+ the mail route called the Pony Express was the most interesting. It is
+ well described by W. F. Bailey in the Century Magazine (Vol. 56).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day in March, 1860, the following advertisement appeared in a St.
+ Louis paper:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To San Francisco in eight days. The first carrier of the Pony Express
+ will leave the Missouri River on Tuesday, April 3d, and will run regularly
+ weekly hereafter, carrying letter mail only. Telegraph mail eight days,
+ letters ten days to San Francisco.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From St. Joseph, Missouri, the first start was made. A large crowd was
+ present to see the rider off. The same day, the same hour, the Western
+ mail started on the thousand-mile ride eastward. There would be ten riders
+ each way, with horses changed every twenty-five miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Sacramento and San Francisco were full of enthusiasm. It was planned
+ to give the first messenger a rousing reception when he should arrive from
+ the East. He was received by crowds as he galloped into Sacramento, and
+ hurried to a swift river steamboat which immediately started for the Bay.
+ News of his coming was telegraphed ahead, and was announced from the
+ stages of the San Francisco theaters so that when he arrived at midnight a
+ large number of people were awaiting him, bands were playing, and bells
+ were ringing; and a long procession escorted him to the company&rsquo;s office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all, there were sixty riders of this express company, all young men,
+ light in weight, accomplished riders, coolheaded, and absolutely brave.
+ They were held in high regard by all, and with good reason. Each when he
+ entered the service signed this pledge:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I agree not to use profane language, not to get drunk, not to gamble, not
+ to treat animals cruelly, and not to do anything incompatible with the
+ conduct of a gentleman.&rdquo; They also had to swear to be loyal to the Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average journey of one man was seventy-five miles, this to be
+ accomplished in one day, but the men frequently had to double the
+ distance, and once, when the messenger who was waiting was killed by
+ Indians, &ldquo;Buffalo Bill&rdquo; (Mr. Cody) made the long trip of three hundred and
+ eighty-four miles, stopping only for meals and to change horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By day and by night, through rain and storm, heat and cold, they rode,
+ these brave men, one facing east, the other west, alone, always alone,
+ often chased by Indians, though, owing to their watchfulness and the
+ superiority of their horses, they were seldom caught. A number were,
+ however, killed by immigrants, who mistook them for Indians or robbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great feat of the Pony Express was the delivering of Lincoln&rsquo;s
+ inaugural address in 1861.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the Southern states claiming to be out of the Union, people were wild
+ to know what the President would say. To St. Joseph, Missouri, the address
+ was hurried. Here it was carefully wrapped in oil skin, consigned to the
+ saddle bags, and amid wild cheers the express was off. Horses were waiting
+ every ten miles. What a ride was that! &ldquo;Speed, speed! faster, faster!&rdquo; was
+ the cry. Each man tried to do a trifle better than the last, while the
+ thousands on the Pacific coast seemed to be straining their ears for the
+ sound of the galloping hoof beats which brought nearer to them the brave
+ message of the grand new President. And when the last rider came in,
+ making the final ten miles in thirty-one minutes, what a cheer went up!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One thousand nine hundred and fifty miles in one hundred and eighty-five
+ hours, the message had traveled&mdash;at an average of a little more than
+ ten miles an hour&mdash;straight across the continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we read of the speed-breaking special trains of to-day, let us not
+ forget what these brave men of the first overland express accomplished in
+ the days of &lsquo;61.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter X. &mdash; The Signal Gun and the Steel Trail
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Boom! Boom! Boom! Never in history did the firing of a gun have such a
+ powerful effect as that which sent the first shot at the flag of the
+ Union, as it floated over Fort Sumter on that memorable Friday, April 12,
+ 1861.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fired at a time when most people were hoping for a peaceful outcome of the
+ sectional troubles, it astonished the world and stirred the whole country
+ to its depths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the dry plains and rugged mountains of the West its echoes seemed
+ to roll. The startled people of the Pacific coast looked at each other
+ with anxious, uncertain eyes. No one felt quite sure of his neighbor, and
+ they were so far from the scene of action that the government could not
+ help them. They must settle the great question for themselves. Who was for
+ the Union? Who was against it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Washington the President and his advisers waited with keen anxiety to
+ learn what wealthy California would do. Senator Gwin had often spoken in
+ Congress and elsewhere as though it would certainly be one of the states
+ to secede. He and others had talked too, in a confident way, of the &ldquo;Grand
+ Republic of the Pacific&rdquo; that might be then formed out of the lands of the
+ Western coast. To lose this rich territory would be a terrible blow to the
+ Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the time of California&rsquo;s admission there had been a constant endeavor
+ on the part of Southern sympathizers to introduce slavery into its
+ territory. A large number of politicians, especially those holding
+ prominent positions, were Southerners, some of whom, like Dr. Gwin, had
+ come to the Pacific coast for the express purpose of winning either the
+ new state or some portion of it for the South and slavery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had succeeded in giving it a fugitive slave law that was particularly
+ evil. Under it a colored man or woman could be seized, brought before a
+ magistrate, claimed as a slave, and taken back South without being allowed
+ to testify in his or her own behalf. Neither could a colored person give
+ testimony in a criminal case against one who was white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposed to this strong Southern party one man stood almost alone as the
+ friend of free labor and free soil. This man was David C. Broderick. For
+ years he fought the slavery interests inch by inch in San Francisco, in
+ the state legislature, and finally in the United States Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he went to Washington he found the same state of affairs as in
+ California&mdash;President Buchanan yielding to the Southern demands,
+ Southern members ruling and often terrifying Congress. Broderick at once
+ joined Stephen A. Douglas in the struggle he was then making for free soil
+ in Kansas and the territories, and his speeches were clear and often
+ fierce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reply to a speech from a Carolina senator in regard to the disgrace of
+ belonging to the working class, Mr. Broderick said (Congressional Globe,
+ 1857-58), &ldquo;I represent a state where labor is honorable, where the judge
+ has left his bench, the doctor and lawyer their offices, the clergyman his
+ pulpit, for the purpose of delving in the earth, where no station is so
+ high, no position so great, that its occupant is not proud to boast that
+ he has labored with his own hands. There is no state in the Union, no
+ place on earth, where labor is so honored, so well rewarded, as in
+ California.&rdquo; Mr. Broderick died in the midst of his bright career,
+ murdered in a duel by one of the leading members of the slavery party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he died, those of his fellow-citizens who believed much as he did,
+ yet had let him fight secession and slavery lone-handed, recognized what
+ he had done for them&mdash;their &ldquo;brave young senator,&rdquo; as Seward called
+ him, who had kept the evil of slavery from their soil. His work, stopped
+ by the bullet of his enemy, was taken up by the people, and his name
+ became a rallying cry for the lovers of the Union, of honest labor, and of
+ free soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ News that the war had really begun brought forth the strongest Union
+ sentiments from many of those who had before been careless or indifferent.
+ A mass meeting of the people of San Francisco was held&mdash;business was
+ suspended, flags were flying everywhere, while eager-faced people listened
+ to earnest Union speeches. A few days later the legislature, by an almost
+ unanimous vote, declared in the strongest terms for the Union, offering to
+ give any aid the government might require. No one could longer have any
+ doubt of the loyalty of the state of California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were certainly many people from the South who were deeply in
+ sympathy with secession; but these, if honorable men who were able to
+ fight, hurried east to join the Confederate army, or if they chose to
+ remain under the protection of the flag, were generally wise enough to
+ keep their feelings to themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some there were, however, who, while they enjoyed the law and order of the
+ peaceful state, still spoke, plotted, and schemed for secession. To keep
+ such as these in order it was found necessary to retain most of the
+ California troops in the state for home defense. Those who did reach
+ Eastern battlefields fought well and nobly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of San Francisco&rsquo;s ministers was unwise enough frequently to express
+ disloyal views in the pulpit, until one Sunday morning he found the banner
+ he would dishonor floating over his church, and hanging to a post in front
+ of the door a figure intended to represent himself, with his name and the
+ word &ldquo;traitor&rdquo; pinned to it. The next day he left for Europe, where he
+ stayed until the close of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another minister, Thomas Starr King, was one of the most earnest
+ supporters of the government. He organized the California division of the
+ Sanitary Commission for the assistance of sick and wounded soldiers.
+ Chiefly through his influence California gave over a million and a half to
+ that cause, which was one third of the whole expenditure of the
+ Commission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1862 Leland Stanford became governor. He was devoted to the Union,
+ always striving to influence his state to give liberally of its wealth to
+ help the government; and its record in that line was second to none. &ldquo;A
+ good leader, energetic and long-headed,&rdquo; the governor was called; but no
+ one dreamed that long before he was an old man, he would give for the
+ cause of education in California the mightiest gift ever bestowed by any
+ one man for the benefit of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the war, California furnished 16,000 men, two regiments of which
+ were among the best of the Union cavalry. One regiment of infantry was
+ composed of trappers and mountaineers, from whom were taken many
+ &ldquo;sharpshooters&rdquo; so famous in assisting the advance of the Northern troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the southern part of the state there was a body of volunteers known as
+ the California Column, also the California Lancers, who, far off though
+ they were, found enough to do. They drove the Southern forces out of
+ Arizona and New Mexico, fought the Apache Indians in several battles, met
+ and defeated the Texas Rangers, and took various military posts in Texas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great was the excitement in San Francisco when one morning the United
+ States marshall captured, just as she was leaving the wharf, a schooner
+ fully fitted out as a privateer. She was filled with armed men, and in her
+ cabin was a commission signed by Jefferson Davis in the name of the
+ Confederate States, also a plan for capturing the forts of the harbor, the
+ Panama mail steamer, then en route north, and a treasure steamer soon to,
+ sail for Panama.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Los Angeles disloyalty was more outspoken and unrebuked by public
+ opinion. Sometimes the surrounding ranchmen, many of whom were in sympathy
+ with the South, on the news of a Southern victory would come into Los
+ Angeles to celebrate with disloyal banners and transparencies. Living on
+ Main Street there was a Yankee, one of the leading citizens, who upon such
+ an occasion would take his rifle and, promenading the flat roof of his
+ wide-spreading adobe, hurl down defiance at the enemy, calling them
+ &ldquo;rebels&rdquo; and &ldquo;traitors&rdquo; and defying them to come up and fight him man to
+ man. But there must have been a feeling of good fellowship through it all,
+ since no stray bullet was ever sent to put a stop to the taunts of the
+ fiery old Unionist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some Spanish soldiers of the California Column, however, grew weary of
+ such open disloyalty, and one night, when off duty, captured two of the
+ Southern ranchmen and proposed to hang them to the oaks in the pasture
+ near where the city of Pasadena now stands. The American officers of the
+ troops, hearing of the affair, hurried out from Los Angeles and begged
+ their men to give up so disorderly and unsoldier-like an idea. &ldquo;Yes, sirs,
+ it is true, all that you say; but they are rebels, they talk too much; why
+ suffer them to cumber Union ground?&rdquo; This seemed the only reply they could
+ obtain; but finally the captives were liberated, though advised in the
+ future to guard well their tongues and actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The desire for war news from the Eastern states led to the completion of a
+ telegraph line between the Missouri River and San Francisco, and on all
+ sides the need of an overland railroad was also being recognized. Plans
+ for such a road had been frequently presented to Congress, but straightway
+ slavery entered into the question. The South wanted the road, but it must
+ be through Southern territory, while the North favored the middle or
+ northern route; and they could not agree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one such occasion Senator Benton spoke in favor of a line that had just
+ been surveyed by Captain Fremont. He was told by those who had other plans
+ that his route was not possible, that only scientific men could lay out a
+ railroad and determine the most practicable ways and easiest passes. But
+ Senator Benton&rsquo;s answer is worth remembering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;a class of scientific engineers older than the
+ schools and more unerring than mathematics. They are the wild animals&mdash;the
+ buffalo, elk, deer, antelope, and bear&mdash;which traverse the forest,
+ not by compass, but by an instinct which leads them always the right way
+ to the lowest passes in the mountains, the shallowest fords in the rivers,
+ the richest pastures in the forest, the best salt springs, the shortest
+ practicable route between two distant points. They are the first engineers
+ to lay out a road; the Indian follows. Hence the buffalo road becomes the
+ war path. The white hunter follows the same trail in the pursuit of game;
+ after that the buffalo road becomes the wagon road of the emigrant, and,
+ lastly, the railroad of the scientific man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through her senators and representatives California spent several years in
+ pushing this matter. In vain they called attention to the fact that the
+ distance from Washington to San Francisco by the way of Cape Horn was
+ 19,000 miles, or more than the entire distance round the earth in the
+ latitude of San Francisco; and that by Panama it was as far as from
+ Washington to Peking in a direct line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1859-60 there appeared in Washington a young engineer named Judah, who
+ had been sent by the people of the Pacific coast to urge the immediate
+ building of the road by the middle route that which was finally chosen.
+ Mr. Judah knew more about the matter than any other man, east or west, and
+ he failed in his mission only because the troubles over slavery and the
+ prospect of immediate secession took up the whole attention of Congress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, he came back in no way discouraged, and continued to urge the
+ matter in his cheerful, hopeful way. That he should be hopeful does not
+ seem strange to us who know that the road was built and that it was a
+ great success, but then conditions were different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, build a railroad over those mountains, with their terrible winter
+ snows and landslides, across the desert, where there is absolutely no
+ water? It is impossible, and these men know it; they only want to get the
+ people&rsquo;s money.&rdquo; Such was the type of article one might read at any time
+ in the papers of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, Mr. Judah&rsquo;s talk had its results. One June day in 1861, Leland
+ Stanford, a young lawyer, who was at that time Sacramento&rsquo;s chief grocer,
+ Mark Hopkins and Collis P. Huntington, hardware merchants, and Charles
+ Crocker, proprietor of the leading dry-goods store, met and organized the
+ Central Pacific Railroad Company, with Stanford as president, Huntington
+ as vice-president, Hopkins as treasurer, Judah as engineer, and Crocker as
+ one of the directors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This action seems sensible enough as we write of it, but it was one of the
+ most daring undertakings ever attempted by any body of men. None of the
+ four was rich, all had worked hard for the little they had; but they felt
+ that the country must have the railroad, that without it California could
+ never become a great state. But if they could only push forward, as soon
+ as they had themselves accomplished something, help would come to them
+ from the East and their success would be assured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Mr. Judah went to Washington, and this time he was successful. The
+ war had made the government feel the need of the railway, not only to bind
+ the Pacific coast closer to the eastern half of the continent, but to
+ transport troops to defend its western shores. There were many now ready
+ to vote for the road, and in July, 1862, the bill, having been passed by
+ both houses, was signed by Abraham Lincoln.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It provided for the building of two roads, one from the Missouri River
+ westward, the Union Pacific, and one from the Pacific coast eastward, the
+ Central Pacific, the two to be continued till they met and formed one long
+ line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day that Leland Stanford was inaugurated governor of California, he
+ had the further satisfaction of beginning the construction of the overland
+ railroad by digging and casting the first shovelful of earth. This took
+ place in Sacramento, in the presence of a large gathering of the leading
+ people of the state; and from that time the work went speedily on. It was
+ estimated that the road would cost an average of eighty thousand dollars a
+ mile, though in the mountains the cost was nearer one hundred and fifty
+ thousand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only the right of way, but a large portion of the near-by public
+ lands, were granted by the government to each road, and at the completion
+ of each forty miles of track there was to be further aid. The state of
+ California, the city of San Francisco, and the counties through which the
+ railroad passed, each gave generously to the Central Pacific; but all this
+ did not bring in enough ready money. Huntington in the East and Stanford
+ in the West almost worked miracles in getting funds to begin the work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the death of Mr. Judah, which occurred at this time, the company
+ suffered a great loss. Although the enterprise went on to a successful
+ ending, his name dropped out of sight; but those who know, feel that to
+ him California owes a great debt of gratitude. Though she was sure to have
+ the overland sometime, it might have been years later in its
+ accomplishment, but for the faith, energy, and perseverance of Theodore D.
+ Judah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Crocker now took charge of the building of the road; to accomplish
+ the work he imported Chinese, whom he found peaceable, industrious, and
+ quick to learn. They were arranged in companies moving at the word of
+ command like drilled troops&mdash;&ldquo;Crocker&rsquo;s battalions&rdquo; they were called.
+ There was need of the greatest haste to get the different portions
+ completed in the time allowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Crocker, &ldquo;I used to go up and down that road in my car like a
+ mad bull, stopping along where there was anything wrong, raising Cain with
+ the men that were not up to time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither Mr. Crocker nor Mr. Stanford ever recovered from the strain of
+ that time. It is said that it eventually caused the death of both men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Union Pacific was pushing overland westward as fast as
+ possible. Each road was aiming for the rich plains of Utah. If the Central
+ stopped at the eastern base of the mountains, it would make this road of
+ little value except for Pacific coast traffic; but if it could reach
+ Ogden, the line would pay well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a mighty race all through the winter of 1868 and 1869, Crocker and
+ his men working like giants. What he accomplished then was scarcely less
+ wonderful than Napoleon&rsquo;s passage of the Alps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the supplies for his thousands of workmen, all the materials and iron
+ for the road, even the locomotives, he had to have hauled on sledges over
+ the mountains through the winter snows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ogden was finally made the place where the two roads joined; but they
+ first met, and the last work was done, at Promontory, a point fifty miles
+ northwest of Ogden. There in May, 1869, the last tie was laid. It was made
+ of California laurel, handsomely polished, and on it was a silver plate
+ with an inscription and the names of the officers of the two roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an eventful meeting on that grassy plain, under the blue Western
+ sky, while all around rose the rugged peaks that had at last been
+ conquered by man&rsquo;s energy. The telegraph at this spot was, for the
+ occasion, connected with all the offices along the line and in the leading
+ cities of the country, where crowds were in waiting to hear that the great
+ work was finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two trains were there with their engines, as Bret Harte describes them,
+ &ldquo;facing on the single track, half a world behind each back.&rdquo; Around stood
+ the guests and officers of the roads waiting for the final ceremony. &ldquo;Hats
+ off,&rdquo; clicked the telegraph. Prayer was offered, and then the four gold
+ and silver spikes, presented by California, Nevada, Idaho, and Montana,
+ were put in place by President Stanford of the Central Pacific and Dr.
+ Durant of the Union Pacific.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the silver hammers fell on the golden spikes, in all the telegraph
+ offices along the line and in the Eastern cities the hammer of the magnet
+ struck the bell&mdash;&ldquo;tap, tap, tap.&rdquo; &ldquo;Done,&rdquo;&mdash;flashed the message
+ to the eager crowds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All over the land the event was celebrated with great rejoicing. In
+ Buffalo, as the news came, hundreds of voices burst out in the singing of
+ &ldquo;The Star-Spangled Banner.&rdquo; In Boston, services were held at midday in
+ Trinity Church, where the popular pastor offered &ldquo;thanks to God for the
+ completion of the greatest work ever undertaken by men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the four men who were the builders of the Central Pacific, the public
+ and particularly the state of California owes much. They not only built
+ the road, but made it a grand, complete success in all its departments.
+ Without it, California would still be a remote province, little known.
+ With it she is one of the chief states of the Union, and in the great
+ business world she is known and felt as a power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later the corporation became very wealthy and powerful. Then it was that
+ it began to abuse its power, working often against the best interests of
+ the inhabitants of the Pacific slope. In some cases, as in the eviction of
+ the people who were settlers in the Mussel Slough District, it was guilty
+ of extreme cruelty and injustice, such as is almost certain to bring its
+ own punishment. But in reckoning with the Southern Pacific, for so the
+ company is now called, the people of California should be careful to look
+ on both sides of the question, remembering the terrible struggles of those
+ early days, when the building of the Overland, that greatest achievement
+ America had ever seen, was to them like the miraculous gift of some fairy
+ godmother, seemingly beyond the possibility of nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XI. &mdash; That Which Followed After
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ About the time that the people of California were beginning to feel the
+ trouble arising from the unlimited wealth and power of the great railroad
+ corporation, they discovered what they felt was danger coming from another
+ quarter. This was in the large number of Chinese pouring into the state.
+ Already every town of importance had its quaint Chinese quarter, bits of
+ Asia transplanted to the western hemisphere. Yet these sons of Asia, with
+ their quiet, gliding motions and oriental dress, had been of great service
+ in the development of the new land. Many of the most helpful improvements
+ were rendered possible by their labor, and for years they were almost the
+ only servants for house or laundry work to be obtained. Never did the
+ housewives of the Pacific coast join in the outcry against the Chinese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although all this was true, it was also a fact that an American workingman
+ could not live and support his family on the wages a Chinaman would take;
+ and when the white man saw the Chinese given the jobs because they could
+ work cheaply, he became discouraged and angry. Was he to be denied a
+ living in his own country because of these strangers? For this reason the
+ working people became very bitter toward the Chinese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their complaints were carried to Washington, and because of them the
+ government finally arranged with China for the restriction of immigration,
+ but not, however, before the matter caused much trouble in California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the years 1876-77 times were rightly called &ldquo;hard&rdquo; along the
+ Pacific slope. Often laboring men could not get work, and their families
+ suffered. The blame for all this was unjustly given to the Chinese, who
+ were several times badly treated by mobs. The general discontent led at
+ last to a demand for a new state constitution, which many people thought
+ would remedy the evils of which they complained. For twenty-five years the
+ old constitution had done good service. On the day it had been signed,
+ Walter Colton, alcalde of Monterey, wrote thus of it in his diary: &ldquo;It is
+ thoroughly democratic; its basis, political and social equality, is the
+ creed of the thousands who run the plow, wield the plane, the hammer, the
+ trowel, the spade.&rdquo; Still it had its faults, the greatest of which was the
+ power given the legislature over public moneys and lands, as well as the
+ chance it allowed for dishonesty in voting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately many of the delegates to the convention which was to make
+ the new constitution were foreigners who knew very little of American
+ manners, customs, and laws, and few of them were among the deeper thinkers
+ of the state, men who had had experience in lawmaking. That the new
+ constitution is not much better than the old, many who helped in the
+ making of it will agree. It was adopted in May, 1879. Since that time it
+ has received a number of changes by means of amendments voted for by the
+ people, and in spite of whatever errors it has contained, the state under
+ it has gone forward to a high degree of prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1875, during the administration of Governor Pacheco, the first native
+ state governor, an invitation was extended to native-born boys of San
+ Francisco to take part in the Fourth of July celebration. A fine body of
+ young men were thus assembled, of whom Hittell in his story of San
+ Francisco says, &ldquo;They were unparalleled in physical development and mental
+ vigor, and unsurpassed in pride and enthusiasm for the land that gave them
+ birth.&rdquo; This gathering led to the founding of the &ldquo;Native Sons of the
+ Golden West,&rdquo; an organization which now numbers many thousands and of
+ which the great state may well be proud. Later there was organized a
+ sister society of native daughters, and this also has a large membership.
+ As stated in their constitution, one of the main objects of these sons and
+ daughters of the West is &ldquo;to awaken and strengthen patriotism and keep
+ alive and glowing the sacred love of California.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An event of the utmost importance to the southern part of the state was
+ the completion of the railroad between San Francisco and Los Angeles,
+ which occurred in 1879. Its route lay through the rich valley of the San
+ Joaquin. Work had been carried on from each end of the line, and it was a
+ very happy assembly which gathered to witness the junction of the two
+ divisions, the event taking place at the eastern end of the San Fernando
+ tunnel. This road was afterward extended from Los Angeles eastward by the
+ way of Yuma and Tucson, and is to-day the Southern Pacific Overland. Later
+ the Santa Fe Company built its popular road between Los Angeles and the
+ Eastern states. Both these companies now have lines from Los Angeles to
+ San Diego, and the Southern Pacific has a coast road the length of the
+ state, along which the scenery is of great beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indians
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the history of the state the most pathetic portion is that which
+ relates to the Indians. Bancroft says, &ldquo;The California valley cannot grace
+ her annals with a single Indian war bordering upon respectability. It can
+ boast, however, a hundred or two of as brutal butcherings on the part of
+ our honest miners and brave pioneers as any area of equal extent in our
+ republic.&rdquo; Miners and settlers coming into the country would take up the
+ waters where the natives fished, the land where they hunted, driving them
+ back to rocky soil, where there was nothing but acorns and roots to
+ support life. As a result the poor, unhappy creatures, driven by hunger,
+ would steal the newcomers&rsquo; horses and cattle. It is true that the white
+ men depended, in a great measure, upon their animals for the support of
+ their families; but they thought only of their own wrongs, and would arm
+ in strong parties, chase the wretched natives to their homes, and tear
+ down their miserable villages, killing the innocent and guilty alike. The
+ government was the most to blame, because it did not in the first place
+ enact laws for the protection of the Indians in their rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the towns, many of the natives gathered for work. In some places the
+ authorities had the right to arrest them as vagabonds and hire them out as
+ bondmen to the highest bidder, for a period often of as many as two or
+ three months at a time, with no regard to family ties. Little seems to
+ have been done to assist them to a better kind of life. In Los Angeles,
+ when working in the vineyards as grape pickers, they were paid their wages
+ each Saturday night, and immediately they were tempted on all sides by
+ sellers of bad whisky and were really hurried into drunkenness. Their
+ shrieks and howls would, for a time, make the night hideous, when they
+ were driven by the officers of the law into corrals, like so many pigs or
+ cattle, and left there till Monday morning, when they were handed over to
+ whoever chose to pay the officers for the right to own them for the next
+ week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near the Oregon line lived some of the most warlike and troublesome
+ Indians of California. Here there were one or two severe fights, the worst
+ of which was with the Modocs, in the northern lava beds. It was here that
+ General Canby was killed. To-day the Modocs are still suffering keenly. In
+ the upper part of the state the Indians have no lands of any kind, and
+ noble men and women of California are working to secure for them their
+ rights from the government. In the south, whole villages have been found
+ living on nothing but ground acorn meal, from which miserable diet many
+ children die and older people cannot long sustain life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sequoya League, an association for the betterment of the Indians of
+ the Southwest, has done much toward opening the eyes of the public and of
+ the government officials to the unhappy condition of these first owners of
+ the soil. Congress, in 1906, appropriated $100,000 to be used in buying
+ land and water for those Indian reservations or settlements where the
+ suffering was greatest. This was a good beginning, but as the needy
+ Indians are scattered all over the state, much more is required before
+ they can be so placed that they can earn a living by their labors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheep Industry
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually the cattle industry, which was for so long a time the leading
+ business of the country, gave way to sheep raising. During summer and fall
+ large flocks of grayish white merinos could be seen getting a rich living
+ on the brown grasses, the yellow stubble of old grain fields, and the
+ tightly rolled nuts of the bur clover; while in winter and spring, hills
+ and plains with their velvet-like covering of green alfileria offered the
+ best and juiciest of food. This was the time of the coming of the lambs.
+ As soon as they were old enough to be separated from their mothers they
+ were put during the day in companies by themselves. A band of five or six
+ hundred young lambs, playing and skipping over the young green grass they
+ were just learning to eat, was a beautiful sight to everybody save to the
+ man or boy who had them to herd. They led him such a chase that by the
+ time he had them safely corralled for the night, every muscle in his body
+ would be aching with fatigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shearing time was the liveliest portion of the herder&rsquo;s life, which was
+ generally very lonely. First came the shearing crew with their captain;
+ next arrived the venders of hot coffee, tamales, tortillas, and other
+ Mexican dainties; brush booths were erected and a brisk trade began. The
+ herds were driven up and into a corral where several shearers could work
+ at a time. Snip, snip, snip, went the shears hour after hour. It was the
+ boast of a good shearer that he could clip a sheep in seven minutes and
+ not once bring blood. As fast as cut, the wool was packed in a long sack
+ suspended from a framework. The dust was dreadful, and the man or boy
+ whose duty it was, when the bag was partly full, to jump in and tramp the
+ wool down so that the bag might hold more, would nearly choke before he
+ emerged into the clear daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passage of the no-fence law by the legislature of 1873, while it was
+ opposed by the sheep and cattle men, was one of the greatest aids to the
+ growth of agriculture, especially in the southern part of the state. It
+ provided that cattle and sheep should not be allowed to run loose without
+ a herder to keep them from trespassing. This saved the farmer from the
+ necessity of fencing his grain fields, a most important help in a country
+ where fence material was so scarce and expensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colony Days
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time after California&rsquo;s admission to the Union most of the events
+ of importance in its history took place around the Bay of San Francisco
+ and the junction of the Sacramento and San Joaquin; but early in the
+ seventies the south land awoke from its long sleep and took part in
+ history making, not in such stirring incidents as those of the days of
+ &lsquo;49, but in a quieter growth that was yet of importance in the making of
+ the state. People in the East had begun to find out that southern
+ California had a mild, healthful climate and that, though the sands of her
+ rivers and rocks of her mountains were not of gold, still her oranges, by
+ aid of irrigation, could be turned into a golden harvest, and that all her
+ soil needed was water in order to yield most bountiful crops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As little land could be bought in small ranches, those wishing to settle
+ in the country chose the colony plan. A number of families would
+ contribute to a common sum, with which would be purchased a large piece of
+ land of several thousand acres with its water right. Each man received
+ from this a number of acres in proportion to the amount of money he had
+ invested. The first colony formed was that of Anaheim; then followed
+ Westminster, Riverside, Pasadena, and many others, and by that time people
+ began to come into southern California in large numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The overland journey was much longer, then than now, but quite as
+ pleasant. At twenty-two miles an hour the country could be seen and
+ enjoyed, acquaintance made with the plump little prairie dogs of the
+ Nebraska plains, and their neighbors the ground owls, which bobbed grave
+ salutes as the train passed by. Bands of galloping deer, groups of grave
+ Indian warriors sitting on their ponies watching the train from afar, an
+ occasional buffalo lumbering along, shaking his shaggy head, were the
+ things that interested the traveler who took the overland trains in &lsquo;74
+ and &lsquo;75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that time between San Francisco and Los Angeles there were two forms of
+ travel: a hundred miles of railroad, with the rest of the distance by
+ stage; and the steamship line. Families chose the ship. From San Pedro to
+ Los Angeles was the only railroad of the southern country. In Los Angeles
+ the flat-roofed adobe buildings, where people could walk about on the tops
+ of the houses, were a wonder to the Eastern strangers. Beautiful homes
+ some of them were, where glimpses could be had of stately senoras in silks
+ and laces, and beautiful senoritas whose dark eyes made havoc with the
+ hearts of the colony young men. The young Californian, who seemed a very
+ part of his fiery steed, was at once the admiration and envy of the Yankee
+ boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queer sights were to be seen at every turn. Creaking carretas, whose
+ squeaking wheels announced their coming a block away, filled the streets,
+ some loaded with grapes, others with rounded shaggy grease-wood roots or
+ sacks of the red Spanish bean and great branches of flaming red peppers.
+ The oxen, with yoke on the horns, seemed as if out of some Bible picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life in the different colonies was much the same. The newcomers had many
+ things to learn, but they made the best of their mistakes, and days of
+ hard work, such as many of them had never known, were often ended with
+ social or literary meetings, where minds were brightened and hearts warmed
+ by friendly intercourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the rains were heavy, the swift mountain streams could not be
+ crossed, and often provisions gave out; then with neighborly kindness
+ those who had, loaned to those who had not, until fresh supplies could be
+ obtained. To this day the smell of new redwood lumber, the scent of
+ burning grease-wood brush, will bring back those times to the colonists
+ with a painful longing for the happy days of their new life in the new
+ land. Many never gained wealth, while some lost lands and savings; but it
+ was these earnest, intelligent men and women who developed the rich
+ valleys of the south land and to whom we are indebted for the bloom and
+ beauty found there to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of the land laws and the ill-treatment of the Mexican
+ population at the mines was a period of highway robbery by bands of
+ outlaws, each under the leadership of some especially daring man. The
+ story of some of their adventures reminds the hearer of the tales of Robin
+ Hood. Not so mild as Robin&rsquo;s were their lives, however. Often their
+ passage was marked by a trail of blood, where bitter revenge was taken
+ because of bitter wrongs. Last of these bands was that of Vasquez, who
+ robbed the colony folk gently with many apologies. He was finally captured
+ and executed, and with him the bandits passed from the page of state
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alaska
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night in 1867 there took place in Washington an event that was to be
+ of great importance to the western part of the United States. This was the
+ signing of the treaty for the purchase of Alaska. As early as 1860 Mr.
+ Seward, in a speech delivered at St. Paul, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looking far off into the northwest I see the Russian as he occupies
+ himself establishing seaports, towns, and fortifications, on the verge of
+ this continent, and I say, &lsquo;Go on and build up your posts all along the
+ coast up even to the Arctic Ocean, they will yet become the outposts of my
+ own country.&rsquo;&rdquo; So long ago did the desire for Alaska, or Russian America
+ as it was then called, possess the mind of the great statesman. But it was
+ not until seven years later that he found the chance to win the government
+ to his views. One evening, while the matter was under discussion between
+ the two countries, the Russian minister called upon Mr. Seward at his
+ home, to inform him that he had just received the Czar&rsquo;s sanction for the
+ sale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good, we will sign the treaty to-night,&rdquo; said the American statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, so late as this, and your department closed, your clerks
+ scattered?&rdquo; remonstrated the Russian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It can be done,&rdquo; replied Mr. Seward; and it was. At midnight the treaty
+ was signed. The price paid for Alaska was less than the cost of two of our
+ modern battleships. Every year has proved more and more the wisdom of the
+ purchase. The discovery of gold in particular has immensely increased its
+ value and has brought to California an enlarged commerce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spanish-American War
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1898 came the war with Spain. The tidings of the 15th of February,
+ 1898, filled the hearts of the people of California with indignation and
+ grief. That the United States battleship Maine had been blown up in Havana
+ harbor and numbers of our seamen killed, seemed to many sufficient cause
+ for immediate war. Some, however, feared for the Pacific coast
+ settlements, with insufficient fortifications and no war vessels of
+ importance, except the magnificent Western-built battleship, Oregon. This
+ vessel was at Puget Sound when the news of the blowing up of the Maine
+ reached her. At the same time came orders to hurry on coal and proceed to
+ San Francisco. There ten days were spent in taking on as much coal and
+ provisions as the vessel could carry. Then, with orders to join the
+ Atlantic fleet as quickly as possible, on the morning of March 19 she
+ steamed through Golden Gate and turned southward, to begin one of the
+ longest voyages ever made by a battleship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of California were sad at heart to part with their noble
+ vessel, and when, in April, war was declared, thousands followed the loved
+ ship and her brave men with their interest and prayers. All alone upon the
+ great sea she was sailing steadily onward, to meet, perhaps, a fleet of
+ foes, or worse still, a dart from that terror of the waters, a torpedo
+ boat; yet always watchful and always ready for whatever foe might appear,
+ she journeyed on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The order given by Captain Clark to his officers in case they sighted the
+ Spanish squadron, was to turn and run away. As the Spanish ships followed
+ they were almost sure to become separated, some sailing faster than
+ others. The Oregon having a heavy stern battery, could do effective
+ fighting as she sailed; and if the enemy&rsquo;s ships came up one at a time,
+ there might be a chance of damaging one before the next arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through two oceans and three zones, fifteen thousand miles without mishap,
+ the Oregon sailed in fifty-nine days. When she joined the fleet where it
+ lay off Cuba, she came sweeping in at fifteen knots an hour, the winner of
+ the mightiest race ever run, cheered at the finish by every man of the
+ American squadron. All honor should be given to her wise captain and brave
+ crew and to the Western workmen who made her so stanch and true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a fair May day, while California children were rejoicing over their
+ baskets of sweet May flowers, the first battle of the war was fought, the
+ first, and for California the most important. When Dewey destroyed the
+ Spanish fleet on that Sunday morning (May 1, 1898) in Manila Bay, he not
+ only won an important victory, but a greater result lay in the change of
+ attitude of the United States toward the rest of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a change which had begun long before; many events had led up to it,
+ but possession of the Philippines and other islands of the Pacific forced
+ our country to recognize the importance of Asia and the ocean which washes
+ its shores.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Commerce has always moved westward, going from Asia to Greece, to Rome, to
+ western Europe, to the western hemisphere; and the race which takes up the
+ movement and carries it forward is the one which gains the profits. All
+ must realize the truth of Mr. Seward&rsquo;s prophecy when he said, &ldquo;The Pacific
+ coast will be the mover in developing a commerce to which that of the
+ Atlantic Ocean will be only a fraction.&rdquo; &ldquo;The opportunity of the Pacific,&rdquo;
+ some one has called it. Nearly two thirds of the people of the earth
+ inhabit the lands washed by the waters of this western sea, and the
+ country which secures their trade will become the leading nation of the
+ world&mdash;a leadership which should be of the best kind, supplying the
+ needs of peaceful life, building railroads, encouraging the things that
+ help a people upward and onward. To the young men of California, Hawaii
+ and the Philippines offer every chance for daring, energy, and invention.
+ If to honesty and energy there be added a speaking knowledge of the
+ Spanish language, there lie before the youth of the Pacific coast the
+ finest opportunities for active, successful lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as President McKinley issued his call to arms for the Spanish war,
+ the men of California responded with a rush. A large number of those who
+ had enlisted were hurried to San Francisco, where the military authorities
+ were quite unprepared to furnish supplies. For a day or two there was real
+ suffering; then the Society of the Red Cross came to the rescue, and
+ thousands of dollars&rsquo; worth of food and blankets were sent to the camp. As
+ soon as the always generous people of San Francisco comprehended the state
+ of affairs, there was danger that the hungry young soldiers would be ill
+ from overfeeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twenty-third day of May, 1898, is a day to be remembered in the
+ history of our country, for on that day went out the first home regiment
+ from the mainland of the United States, to fight a foe beyond the sea.
+ When the twelve companies of California Volunteers marched through the
+ city from the Presidio to the docks of the Pacific Mail and Steamship
+ Company, two hundred thousand people accompanied them. So hard was it for
+ our peace-loving people to understand the real meaning of war that it was
+ not until the brave lads and earnest men were actually marching to the
+ steamer which was to carry them thousands of miles to meet danger and
+ death, that many quite realized the sorrowful fact. Men cheered the
+ regiment as it passed, but the sobs of the women sometimes nearly drowned
+ the hurrahs. Said one officer, &ldquo;It was heartrending. If we had let
+ ourselves go, we would have cried our way to the dock.&rdquo; But in the war the
+ record of the California troops was one that gave new honor to their
+ state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Annexation of Hawaii
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Hawaiian Islands,&rdquo; said Walt Whitman, in the Overland Monthly, &ldquo;are
+ not a group. They are a string of rare and precious pearls in the sapphire
+ center of the great American seas. Some day we shall gather up the pretty
+ string of pearls and throw it merrily about the neck of the beautiful
+ woman who has her handsome head on the outside of the big American Dollar,
+ and they will be called the beautiful American Islands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1893 the native queen of the islands was deposed by a revolution
+ conducted in a great measure by Americans living in Hawaii. A provisional
+ government was formed and an application made for annexation to the United
+ States. Through two presidential terms the matter was discussed both in
+ Congress and by the people all over the country. Many were against
+ extending our possessions beyond the mainland in any direction. Others
+ thought it unfair to the natives of the islands to take their lands
+ against their will. It seemed to be pretty well proved, however, that the
+ native government was not for the advancement and best interests of the
+ country, and that in a short time these kindly, gentle people would have
+ to give up their valuable possessions to some stronger power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Mahan, writing of these conditions, said: &ldquo;These islands are the
+ key to the Pacific. For a foreign nation to hold them would mean that our
+ Pacific ports and our Pacific commerce would be at the mercy of that
+ nation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early part of the Spanish war (July, 1898) the resolution for the
+ annexation of the Hawaiian Islands was passed by Congress and approved by
+ President McKinley, and the string of pearls was cast about Columbia&rsquo;s
+ fair neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pius Fund
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems strange that the first case to be tried in the peace court of the
+ nations at the Hague should have been in regard to the Pius Fund of the
+ Californias collected by the Jesuit padres two hundred and thirty years
+ before, to build missions for the Indians of California. The way in which
+ this money was obtained is described in Chapter IV of this history. It
+ grew to be a large sum, of which the Mexican government took control,
+ paying the interest to the Roman Catholic Church in Upper and Lower
+ California. After the Mexican war, Mexico refused to pay its share to the
+ Church of Upper California. The United States took up the matter, claiming
+ that according to the treaty which closed the war, the Catholic Church of
+ the state of California had a right to its Mexican property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1868 it was agreed by the two countries to leave the matter to the
+ decision of Sir Edward Thornton, English ambassador at Washington. He
+ decided that Mexico should pay an amount equal to one half the interest
+ since the war. Mexico did this, but had paid nothing during all the years
+ which had passed since that time. To settle the dispute finally, it was
+ decided to leave it to arbitration by the Hague court. The verdict given
+ was that Mexico should pay the Roman Catholic Church of California
+ $1,400,000 for the past, and one half the interest on the fund each year
+ from February, 1903, forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Panama Canal
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natural result of the nation&rsquo;s need in the Civil War was the overland
+ railroad. The danger to the Oregon on its long journey, the difficulties
+ in getting reinforcements to Admiral Dewey, and the possession of new
+ lands in the Pacific led to decided action in regard to the building of a
+ ship canal through the Isthmus of Panama.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For years the plan had been talked over. In General Grant&rsquo;s first term as
+ President he saw so plainly our need of this water way, that he arranged a
+ canal treaty with Colombia, and it seemed as though the work would soon
+ begin, but the Colombian government refused to allow the matter to go on,
+ hoping to make better terms with the United States. This was not possible
+ then, so the plan was not carried out. Later, a French company undertook
+ to build a canal across Panama, but after several years of work failed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the Americans favored the route through Nicaragua, but after the
+ government had spent much money and time in considering carefully both
+ propositions, the preference was given to the Panama route. In 1902 an act
+ for the building of the canal was passed by Congress and approved by
+ President Roosevelt. It provided, however, that should the President be
+ unable to obtain a satisfactory title to the French company&rsquo;s work and the
+ necessary territory from the republic of Colombia on reasonable terms and
+ in a reasonable time, he should seek to secure the Nicaragua route. The
+ matter was almost settled, when again Colombia&rsquo;s greed got the better of
+ her judgment and she refused to ratify the compact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the people of the province of Panama saw that they were likely to
+ lose their canal through the action of their government, they promptly
+ revolted and declared themselves independent of Colombia. The United
+ States recognized their independence, and a satisfactory treaty was at
+ once concluded with them. In March, 1904, the commission appointed by the
+ President for building the canal sailed for the Isthmus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly one fourth of the work had already been done by the old company,
+ but there was yet a great deal to do. Besides the actual building of the
+ canal, its dams and locks, the fever district had to be made healthful
+ enough for workmen to live there, marshes had to be drained, pure water
+ brought in from the mountains, and the fever-spreading mosquitoes killed.
+ In addition to all this, the natives of the land and the many bands of
+ workmen of different races had to be brought into an orderly, law-abiding
+ condition. In less than a year it was found necessary to alter the
+ commission, the President choosing this time men particularly noted for
+ their energy and power to make things go. The work progressed with great
+ rapidity, until, in August, 1914, the canal was opened to navigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Orient
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the latter part of the nineteenth century the eastern portion of Asia
+ began to stir itself, rising up from the sleepy, shut-in life it had led
+ for hundreds of years. The eyes of the world watched in wonder the
+ progress of the war between China and Japan (1894-95). In it was fought
+ the first battle in which modern war vessels were engaged. It was found
+ that the Japanese, of whom so little was then known, could fight, and
+ fight well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result of the war, China ceded to Japan the territory of Manchuria
+ and the right to protect Korea. Russia and Germany objected, however, and
+ France agreed with them, so Japan had to give way. Soon Russia began
+ taking possession of the disputed territories, but she had constant
+ trouble with Japan, and early in 1904 war broke out. Before the close of
+ the year the civilized world stood astonished not only at the wisdom,
+ patriotism, and fighting qualities of the Japanese, but also at their
+ humanity, which would not have discredited a Christian nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There took place a series of great battles, both on land and on the sea,
+ in which the Japanese were generally victorious. The terrible loss of life
+ and destruction of property led the President of the United States, in the
+ spring of 1905, to urge upon the two countries that fighting cease and
+ peace be arranged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few statesmen believed that Mr. Roosevelt would be successful in his
+ humane endeavor, but he pushed his suggestion with patient perseverance
+ until, in September, 1905, Americans had the satisfaction of witnessing
+ upon their soil, at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the signing of the treaty
+ of peace between Russia and Japan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Japan&rsquo;s methods of conducting the war had advanced her to a standing among
+ nations which she had never before occupied, and all realized the wisdom
+ of securing commercial relations with her people, who were so rapidly
+ adopting the habits and customs of the rest of the civilized world. In
+ this competition for her commerce, California, by her position on the
+ western shore of the United States, has unusual advantages, a fact which
+ was soon proved by the amount of money invested in increasing her
+ facilities for production and manufacturing. Unfortunately little has yet
+ been done in the matter of shipbuilding, and few vessels which enter her
+ harbors have been built in the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some Recent Events
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put a girdle around the earth in forty minutes,&rdquo; prophesied Puck in
+ &ldquo;Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream.&rdquo; The boastful fairy did not succeed in
+ accomplishing this wonder until midnight on the Fourth of July, 1903. On
+ that day the Pacific cable from the United States to Hawaii, to Midway
+ Island, to Guam, and to Manila, began operations. The men worked hard that
+ last day of the cable laying, and by 11 P.M. the President of the United
+ States sent a message to Governor Taft at Manila. Soon after was the old
+ prophecy fulfilled, when President Roosevelt, no doubt with Puck at his
+ elbow, sent a message round the world in twenty minutes, thus bettering
+ Puck&rsquo;s idea by half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The saddest year in California&rsquo;s records is that of 1906. On the morning
+ of April 18, a great and overwhelming calamity overtook the beautiful
+ region around San Francisco Bay. A movement of the earth&rsquo;s crust which
+ began in the bottom of the ocean far out from land, reached the coast in
+ the vicinity of Tomales Bay in Marin County. Wrecking everything that came
+ in its direct path, it shivered its way in a southeasterly direction to a
+ point somewhere in the northern part of Monterey County. The land on the
+ two sides of the fault moved a short distance in opposite directions. Thus
+ in some straight fences and roads crossing the fault, one section was
+ found to be shifted as much as sixteen feet to one side of the other. The
+ severe vibrations set up by this break and shifting extended a long
+ distance in all directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the earthquake was by no means so severe in San Francisco as in
+ the region of Tomales Bay or even in the vicinity of Stanford, Santa Rosa,
+ San Jose, or Agnews, it caused greater loss of life and property on
+ account of the crowded population. Many buildings were wrecked, especially
+ those poorly constructed on land reclaimed from swampy soil or built up by
+ filling in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People who had prophesied that, should an earthquake come, the high
+ buildings such as those of the Call and the Chronicle would surely
+ collapse, were astonished to see those giant structures apparently
+ unharmed while buildings of much less height, but without the steel
+ framework, were completely wrecked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The earthquake was a sad calamity, but had this been the sum of the
+ disaster the city would only have paused in its progress long enough to
+ clear away the wreck and to sorrow with the mourners. It was the fires
+ which sprang up while the water system was too damaged to be of use that
+ wiped out old historical San Francisco, leaving in its place a waste of
+ gray ashes and desolate ruins. Santa Rosa, San Jose, Stanford, Agnews, all
+ suffered severely from the earthquake; but in few cases did fires arise to
+ add to their loss. The State Insane Asylum at Agnews, which was built on
+ swampy ground, was a complete wreck with large loss of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The marvelous bravery and cheerfulness with which the people of San
+ Francisco bore their cruel fate gave a lesson in courage and unselfishness
+ to humanity. The magnificent generosity with which not only the people of
+ southern and northern California, but of the whole country, sprang to the
+ relief of the unhappy city gave a silver lining to the black cloud of
+ disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the embers of their ruined homes had ceased to smoke the people
+ began the work of rebuilding, and at the time of the visit of the Atlantic
+ fleet of the United States navy in 1908, business had so revived as to be
+ almost normal, and the welcome accorded the silent vessels in white by the
+ gallant City of St. Francis was as hearty and generous as any that greeted
+ them during their progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ October, 1909, was marked by two events of importance to San Francisco.
+ One was the visit of President Taft, to whom the great state of California
+ had given all its electoral votes. The second was the celebration, at the
+ same time, of the discovery of the bay, which occurred in the fall of
+ 1769, the founding of the presidio and mission, which took place in the
+ fall of 1776, and the rebuilding of the burned district. On this occasion
+ the people of San Francisco and their guests gave themselves up to a time
+ of merrymaking&mdash;a three days&rsquo; historical carnival called, in honor of
+ the commander of the expedition during which the great bay was discovered,
+ the &ldquo;Portola Festival.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1915 the Panama-Pacific International Exposition was held in San
+ Francisco. It contained many novel and beautiful features, and was
+ attended by vast multitudes of people. Another notable exposition was held
+ at San Diego, beginning in 1915 and continuing in 1916.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XII. &mdash; &ldquo;The Groves Were God&rsquo;s First Temples&rdquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If the people of this century continue the destruction of trees as they
+ are doing at present, a hundred years from now this will be a world
+ without forests, a woodless, treeless waste. What a desolate picture is
+ this! What a grave charge will the people of the future have to bring
+ against us that we recklessly destroy the trees, one of God&rsquo;s most
+ beautiful and useful gifts to man, without even an endeavor to replace the
+ loss by replanting!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the last hundred years the American lumber belt has moved westward
+ over a wide space. In the early days of our history nearly the entire
+ supply came from Maine, and what interesting stories we have of those
+ brave pioneer loggers and settlers! Gradually the noble woods which
+ furnished the tall, smooth masts for which American ships were famous,
+ were destroyed; and the ringing ax blows were then heard in the forests
+ about the Great Lakes and in the middle Southern states. This supply is by
+ no means exhausted, but to-day the heart of the lumber interest is on the
+ Pacific coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Around the great central valley which is drained by the Sacramento and the
+ San Joaquin rivers, six hundred and forty miles long, lie mountain ranges
+ on whose slopes are some of the noblest forests of the world. To the north
+ of the central valley the trees of the east and west join, forming a
+ heavily wooded belt quite across the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the trade, the greatest demand is for lumber of the pine and fir trees,
+ and of these California has as many species as Europe and Asia combined.
+ She has, indeed, only a little less than one fifth of all the lumber
+ supply of the United States. Her most valuable tree for commerce is the
+ sugar pine. It attains a diameter of twelve feet or more and is often two
+ hundred feet high. But the most interesting trees of California and of the
+ world are the Sequoias, the oldest of all living things. Very far back, in
+ the time of which we have no written history, in the moist days of
+ gigantic vegetation and animals, the Sequoias covered a large portion of
+ the earth&rsquo;s surface; then came the great ice overflow, and when that
+ melted away, almost the only things living of the days of giants were the
+ Sequoias of middle and upper California, and those on some two thousand
+ acres over the Oregon line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sequoia sempervirens, which is commonly called redwood, is distributed
+ along the Coast Range, the trees thriving only when they are constantly
+ swept by the sea fogs. For lumber this tree is nearly as valuable as the
+ sugar pine. From Eureka to San Diego, this is the material of which most
+ of the houses are built. Because of its rich color and the high polish it
+ takes, especially the curly and grained portions, its value for cabinet
+ work is being more and more appreciated. On account of the presence of
+ acid and the absence of pitch and rosin in its composition, it resists
+ fire and is therefore a safe wood for building. When the Baldwin Hotel in
+ San Francisco, a six-story building of brick and wood, burned down, two
+ redwood water tanks on the top of the only brick wall that was left
+ standing, were found to be hardly charred and quite water-tight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the redwood which furnishes the largest boards for the lumber trade.
+ Not long ago a man in the lumber region built his office of six boards
+ taken from one of the trees. The boards were twelve by fourteen feet, and
+ there was one for each wall, one for the floor, and one for the ceiling.
+ Windows and doors were cut out where desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the heart of the redwood and pine forests there are some thirty mill
+ plants, and they own about half of the timber district. The methods of
+ lumbering are exceedingly wasteful. Scarcely half of the standing timber
+ of a tract is taken by the loggers and what is left is often burned or
+ totally neglected. Replanting is unthought of and the young trees are
+ treated as a nuisance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three fourths of the forests of California grow upon side hills, generally
+ with an incline of from fifteen to thirty degrees. When the trees are
+ gone, therefore, the rain soon washes away the soil, leaving the rocks
+ bare. When the next rainy season comes, the water, not being able to sink
+ into the earth, and so gradually find its way to the streams, rushes down
+ the hillsides in torrents, flooding the smaller water courses. Then the
+ rivers rise and overflow, causing great damage to property; but their
+ waters quickly subside, and when the dry season comes they have not
+ sufficient depth for the passage of ships of commerce. The total
+ destruction of the forests would soon destroy the navigability of the
+ principal water highways of the state, while another serious result would
+ be the lessening of the water supply for irrigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second variety of the Sequoia, the gigantea, or &ldquo;big tree,&rdquo; as it is
+ called, grows much farther inland than the redwood, being found on the
+ western slopes of the Sierras. There are ten separate groves of these
+ trees, from the little company of six in southern Placer County to the
+ southernmost Sequoia, two hundred and sixty miles away on the Tule River.
+ The whole put together would not make more than a few hundred thousand of
+ extra-sized trees, and of the giants themselves not more than five
+ hundred. These rise as high as three hundred and fifty feet, and are from
+ twenty to thirty feet through. Near the Yosemite the stage road passes
+ through the hollow center of one of those monsters. In a grove owned by
+ the government some cavalry men, with their horses, lined up on a &ldquo;big
+ tree&rdquo; log, and it easily held fourteen, each horse&rsquo;s nose touching the
+ next one&rsquo;s tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How old these trees may be is yet unsettled, but Mr. John Muir, their
+ intimate friend and companion, tells of one which was felled which showed
+ by its rings that it was 2200 years old. Another which had blown down was
+ fully 4000 years old. Later investigation makes it seem not unlikely that
+ some have existed for even 5000 years. It seems a sin to destroy a living
+ thing of that age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great basin of the Santa Cruz Mountains, which contains a large
+ collection of the Sequoia sempervirens, belongs to the United States
+ government. So, too, do the Mariposa grove of Sequoia gigantea, and the
+ General Grant park, and Tuolumne grove, each of which contains a small
+ number of fine specimens of the big trees. These properties will be
+ protected, but all other groves, in which are the giant Sequoias, are in
+ great danger. There has recently been a movement by the government toward
+ purchasing the Calaveras grove, which has the finest collection of the big
+ trees known, but nothing decided has been done. Meantime there are a
+ number of mills engaged in devouring this noble forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unless the people of California take up the matter with earnestness and
+ energy, the state and the United States will stand disgraced before
+ mankind for letting these wonders of the world, these largest and oldest
+ of all living things, be destroyed for the lumber they will make. They
+ should be purchased by the government and protected, then some movement
+ should be started in all lumber districts by which waste in logging may be
+ done away with, young trees protected and cleared, and forest land
+ replanted with suitable trees. The law excluding cattle and sheep from the
+ forests is already proving its wisdom by the new growth of young trees.
+ Only among the giant Sequoias of the Tule and King&rsquo;s River district are
+ there to be found baby trees of that species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lumber trade is one of the most interesting and necessary industries
+ of the state. Work in the camp is healthful and well paid. Many a delicate
+ boy or young man in the city would grow strong and healthy and live a much
+ longer time if he would cast his lot with the hardy choppers and cutters
+ of the great forest of the Pacific slope. A logging crew consists of
+ thirty men, including two cooks. The discipline is as rigid as that of a
+ military system; each man knows his own particular duties, and must attend
+ to them promptly and faithfully. Trees are not chopped down, as used to be
+ the custom; with the exception of a little chopping on either edge, a saw
+ run by two men does the work. Oxen are seldom used, as in early days on
+ the Atlantic coast, to haul out the logs, for they have given way to
+ &ldquo;donkeys,&rdquo;&mdash;not the long-eared, loud-voiced little animals, but the
+ powerful, compact donkey-engines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lumber schooners and steamers are the chief features of our coast traffic.
+ Almost all the large cities of the Pacific coast owe their foundation and
+ prosperity to this trade. San Francisco and Eureka in Humboldt County are
+ the principal ports of the trade. Mendocino has a rock-bound coast, with
+ no harbors, but she has fine forests. Here the lumber steamer secures its
+ cargo by means of suspended wire chutes as trolleys. The outer end of the
+ trolley wire is anchored in the ocean, the wire crosses the deck of the
+ moored steamer, the slack being taken up to the ship&rsquo;s gaff, thus making a
+ tight wire up and down which the trolley car with its load is sent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes a great raft made of lumber is taken in tow by a steamer loaded
+ with the same material and they start on a voyage down the coast, but this
+ is a dangerous venture. If the sea becomes rough the raft may break loose
+ from the steamer and go plunging over the waves, no one knows where. The
+ brave captains of our coasting vessels fear nothing so much as a timber
+ raft adrift which may crash into a vessel at any moment and against which
+ there is no way of guarding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIII. &mdash; To All that Sow the Time of Harvest Should be Given
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In all but savage countries, wheat is the most important product of the
+ soil, A large proportion of human beings living on the earth to-day are so
+ poverty-stricken as to make the question of food a matter of anxiety for
+ every day. The prayer for bread unites more voices than any other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The padres who settled California understood this well. A number of
+ bushels of wheat, snugly incased in leather sacks, formed a precious part
+ of the cargo of the San Carlos, that stout Spanish vessel which in 1769
+ brought the first settlers to California. This seed-wheat was divided
+ among the early missions and as soon as possible was planted&mdash;not
+ with success at first. For a time the padres made little progress in crop
+ raising. They had to learn by their failures. In San Diego the first wheat
+ planted was sown in the river bottom and the seed was carried entirely
+ away by the rising of the stream in the winter; and the next year, which
+ proved to be a dry one, it was planted so far from the water that it was
+ almost all destroyed by drought. At San Gabriel the first crop was drowned
+ out, but the second, planted on the plain where it could be irrigated, was
+ a success. San Gabriel was chief among the missions for wheat raising, and
+ was called the &ldquo;mother of agriculture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grain planting and harvesting, in the days of the padres, differed widely
+ from the methods which prevail to-day. Then the ground was plowed once or
+ twice, but in what manner? A yoke of oxen, guided by an Indian, dragged a
+ plow with an iron point made by an Indian blacksmith. If iron could not be
+ obtained, the point was of oak. Seed, which had been first soaked in lye,
+ was sown by hand, broadcast, and harrowed in with branches of trees. The
+ grain was cut by the Indians with knives and sickles. It was afterward
+ placed on the hardened floor of a circular corral made for the purpose,
+ and into it was turned a band of horses which were urged to a run by the
+ shouts and whips of the Indian vaqueros. After running one way they were
+ frightened into turning and going the other. In this manner the grain was
+ trampled out of the husks. It was freed from the chaff by being thrown
+ high in the air by the shovelful, when the wind was blowing hard enough to
+ carry away the light straw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next, the grain was washed and dried, then ground, generally between two
+ stones bolted together. A pole for a handle was also fastened by the bolt,
+ and the stone was turned, sometimes by mules, sometimes by Indians. La
+ Perouse, the French scientist who visited the coast in 1786 and gave to
+ the padres of San Carlos a handmill for grinding grain, said that it would
+ enable four Indian women to do the work of a hundred by the old way.
+ Before many years the padres at San Gabriel built a water mill of stone
+ and adobe which ground grain in large quantities, but not with entire
+ success, until Chapman, the first American in that region, gave them his
+ assistance to perfect the machinery. This interesting building has been
+ restored by Mr. H. E. Huntington and is an object of interest to those who
+ visit San Gabriel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1815 the missions raised enough wheat to supply the whole population,
+ and there was even an attempt to ship grain to Mexico. This was a failure,
+ but a little grain was sold to the Russians at Fort Ross. At the time of
+ the change in the mission settlements, when the padres were sent away, all
+ agriculture declined. During the Mexican War and when the crowd of gold
+ seekers came, there was very little grain or flour to be had. Some of the
+ gold hunters, who had been farmers in the East, failing to find a fortune
+ in the river sands, and seeing the lack of food stuffs, went back to their
+ old occupation. They put in crops of wheat and barley along the waters of
+ the Sacramento and San Joaquin, and were amazed at the fertility of the
+ soil and the success of their venture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time the cultivation of wheat increased rapidly. In 1899 was
+ harvested the largest crop recorded. After that there was a decline in
+ wheat raising, because many farmers planted much of their grain lands to
+ fruit for canning and drying. To California inventors is due the credit of
+ substituting steam for hand labor in planting and harvesting grain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us look at the busy scene on a grain field in the California of
+ to-day. It is fall or early winter, and the time for planting has arrived.
+ Into the field, which is several thousands of acres in extent, comes a
+ great engine, one that does not need a track to run upon. Over the ground
+ it rolls. With strength equal to fifty horses it draws behind it sixteen
+ ten-inch plows, four six-foot harrows, and a press drill to match. It
+ takes only a few men to manage it, and in a short time it has plowed,
+ harrowed, and sown the broad acres; nothing is left to do until the
+ harvest time arrives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the grain is ripe, there comes another great machine. This is the
+ harvester, whose knives or cutters may be as much as twenty-six feet wide.
+ This one machine cuts off the heads of wheat, thrashes them, cleans the
+ grain, and sacks it, clearing seventy-five acres in a day, leaving on the
+ fields the piles of sacked wheat ready for market. It is most interesting
+ to watch one of these giants of steel and iron traveling over the uneven
+ ground, crossing ditches, crawling along side hills, without any trouble
+ or change of pace, gathering in the ripe grain, turning it out snugly
+ tucked away in the brown gunny-sacks waiting for its long journey by ship
+ or car. How the padres would wonder if they could see it working!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grain of the California wheat is white and soft, and contains much
+ gluten. No matter what hard red or yellow varieties are brought from other
+ countries and planted here, in a year or two they change to the California
+ type. It is not certainly known what causes this peculiarity. The grain
+ most in favor through the state is called &ldquo;club wheat&rdquo; from the form of
+ the head, which is blockshaped, instead of long and slender. The &ldquo;club
+ wheat&rdquo; holds fast its grain so that it can be harvested without falling to
+ the ground, which, in so dry a climate, is a great point in its favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wheat is raised all over the state, both on high and on low land. Some of
+ the largest grain ranches are along the tule lands around Stockton. These
+ were marshes once, but have been drained, and now are choice grain fields.
+ Wheat was first sent out of the state to England as ballast for returning
+ ships, but the trade gradually increased until there are now over one
+ hundred of the finest sailing vessels engaged in it. Unfortunately, few of
+ these vessels are American, perhaps but one fourth. It is a pity that our
+ countrymen should not benefit more by this trade. During the grain season
+ at most of the Pacific ports the flag of nearly every nation on earth is
+ represented. All styles of shipping, from the largest modern steamer to
+ the smallest ocean sailing vessel, are then to be found in the harbors of
+ the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grain is carried to the docks in barges, schooners, or on cars, and is
+ seldom shipped except in sacks. Wheat, unless it needs to be cleaned or
+ graded, is kept in the sack in which it leaves the home field. To watch
+ the grain being loaded in the ship is a sight well worth seeing. If the
+ wharf, or car, or warehouse where it lies is higher than the deck of the
+ vessel on which it is to be shipped, the sacks are placed on an inclined
+ chute down which they descend to the hold of the ship. If the deck of the
+ vessel is the higher, sometimes an endless belt, run by electricity, is
+ placed in a chute, the sacks are laid on the belt, and so carried to their
+ resting place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In loading wheat for export, a number of sacks in each row are bled; that
+ is, a slit is made in the sack which allows a small quantity of grain to
+ escape and fill the spaces round the corners and sides of the sack, thus
+ making a compact cargo which is not liable to shift. At Port Costa is
+ located a grader, where, when necessary wheat can be cleaned and graded;
+ here also are many large warehouses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time about two thirds of the wheat crop of the state was sent
+ to Ireland, but now our new lands in the Pacific take much of it.
+ California has an immense trade in wheat that has been ground into flour.
+ Over six million dollars&rsquo; worth of flour is shipped each year, nearly
+ three fourths of it going to China, Japan, and the islands of the Pacific.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is believed by scientific agriculturists that better results will be
+ obtained in wheat raising as smaller ranches become the rule, where the
+ farmer can give more attention to the needs of the grain, adding what is
+ necessary to the soil. Often the alternation of crops increases the yield&mdash;wheat
+ doing much better if planted where beans or other legumes were raised the
+ year before. Where the grain fields are not so large, irrigation can be
+ depended upon instead of the rainfall, and crops then are sure and more
+ even in quantity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barley is the grain next in importance to wheat in California. It can be
+ raised where wheat can not, as it needs less moisture for its development;
+ and if the rains fail, it can be cut for hay which always brings a good
+ price. Barley hay, with the heads on, is in California the chief food of
+ horses, and in many cases of cattle. A horse for ordinary work fed on
+ barley hay gets all the grain necessary. If on account of heavier work,
+ stronger food is required, rolled barley is given in addition. A large
+ quantity of the better graded barley grain raised in the state is used by
+ the brewers for malt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Corn does not do so well through the state in general, but in some
+ locations it is justly claimed that a man can ride on horseback down the
+ rows of corn without being seen over the tops. This, too, the padres
+ brought into the state. The tortilla, the common food of the Spanish
+ settlers, was made of coarse-ground or pounded corn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alfalfa, the wonderful forage plant of dry regions of the West, is a
+ member of the clover family. Throughout the southern and middle portion of
+ California are large ranches devoted to its culture for hay. It is also
+ raised extensively for green feed for horses and cattle. It produces from
+ three to six crops a year according to location and care given it, and is
+ treated for the market much the same as barley hay, except that it is
+ generally made into smaller bales. Alfalfa is raised by irrigation, the
+ best method being from flumes opening into indentations, not so deep as
+ furrows, from which the water spreads, flooding the whole surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many a California young man from high school gets his first taste of work
+ away from home in the harvest fields. Generally this is a good experience
+ for him. He receives some pretty hard knocks, and sees the rough side of
+ life, but if he has self-control and good principles, he will be the
+ better for the venture, returning more manly, earnest, and self-reliant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIV. &mdash; The Golden Apples of the Hesperides
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The orange, like many other of California&rsquo;s most valuable products, was
+ brought into the country by the patient, far-seeing padres. Orange, lemon,
+ and citron, those three gay cousins of royal blood, traveled together, and
+ soon were to be found in many of the mission gardens. The most extensive
+ of that early planting was an orchard at San Gabriel, set out by Padre
+ Sanchez in 1804. In the height of its prosperity, this mission is recorded
+ as having two thousand three hundred and thirty-three fruit trees, a large
+ proportion of which were orange trees. San Fernando had sixteen hundred
+ trees. San Diego had its orange orchard: how many trees is not recorded,
+ but its olive grove numbered five hundred and seventeen flourishing trees.
+ Santa Inez had nearly a thousand trees. As early as 1800 Santa Barbara and
+ San Buenaventura also had valuable orchards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside the missions the first orange trees in any number were planted in
+ 1834, the famous Wolfskill grove in 1841. By 1862 there were about
+ twenty-five thousand trees of this variety in the state, and two thirds of
+ these belonged to Wolfskill, of Los Angeles. A little later several large
+ orchards were planted in the region around the Mission San Gabriel. In
+ Riverside, often called the mother of orange culture in the state, the
+ first seeds were planted in 1870, the first trees from these seeds in
+ 1873, and from that period is dated the beginning of extensive planting.
+ This was largely the work of colonists. About the time the orchards came
+ into bearing, the Southern Pacific and the Santa Fe Overland were
+ completed, so that an Eastern market was gained for the fruit, with the
+ result that the new industry fairly bounded forward. So much was sometimes
+ made from an acre of trees that it seemed as though people could not get
+ land and plant fast enough. Occasionally an income was reported of three
+ thousand dollars from an acre, and eight hundred to one thousand dollars
+ per acre was not an uncommon crop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although at this time there were a few orange trees in the middle and
+ northern parts of the state, for many years it was supposed that only the
+ southern country could raise this fruit suitable for the market, but
+ to-day people know better. Excellent oranges are grown as far north as
+ Shasta, and Butte County, which leads in the northern orange culture, has
+ a number of large and valuable orchards. From Tulare County and other
+ parts of the valley of the San Joaquin, choice fruit is being shipped to
+ the markets of the East. From San Diego all the way up the state one may
+ find trees of the citrus family flourishing; still, whether north or
+ south, in planting an orange orchard, the greatest care has to be taken in
+ the choice of location. Jack Frost is the enemy to be avoided, and
+ generally in any strip of country the lower lands are the ones he visits
+ first. So the highlands are preferred, and even here the currents of air
+ must be studied. A strong, uninterrupted, downward sweep of air from the
+ snowcovered mountains will often, at night, drive away the needed warmth
+ gathered during the day, so that land protected by some mountain spur
+ which makes an eddy in the current is the best for this heat-loving fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are several popular varieties of the orange. The Valencia late is
+ being planted by many in preference to others because, besides being a
+ fine fruit, it keeps well, ripening when the days begin to be long and
+ hot, and is therefore doubly welcome. The sweet orange from the
+ Mediterranean country, and the St. Michael, with its paper rind, are also
+ favorites, as are the delicious little Mandarin and Tangerine varieties,
+ with their thin skin and high flavor; but the king of them all is the
+ Washington navel, which has gained for the state its high position as an
+ orange-raising territory. This is not a new variety, though many may
+ believe it so. A book published in Rome over three hundred years ago gives
+ an interesting description and pictures of this and other kinds of oranges
+ and the way they should be raised. The title of this rare old volume is
+ &ldquo;Hesperides, or about the Golden Apples, their Culture and Use.&rdquo; Among its
+ many fine illustrations is one of Hercules receiving the golden apples.
+ Another shows the bringing of the fruit to Italy by a body of nymphs and
+ goddesses in Neptune&rsquo;s car. Mr. Charles F. Lummis has translated portions
+ of the book in the California magazine Out West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On its travels the navel orange finally reached Bahia, Brazil, and there,
+ sometime during the Civil War in the United States, a lady who, it is
+ said, was the wife of the American consul, discovered the deliciousness of
+ this fruit. So pleased was she that she determined to share her enjoyment
+ with others; so upon her return to her own country, she described this
+ orange to Mr. Saunders, head of the government&rsquo;s experimental farm at
+ Washington. He became interested in the subject, sent to Bahia, and had
+ twelve navel trees propagated by budding. These were shipped to
+ Washington, where they arrived safely, and were placed in the orangery
+ there. They all grew, and from them a large number of trees were budded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still they had not reached California. Bringing them to the Pacific coast
+ was also the work of a woman. Mrs. Tibbetts, wife of a fruit grower of
+ Riverside, was visiting in Washington and to her Mr. Saunders presented
+ two navel orange trees, which she brought home with her. They were planted
+ beside her doorstep in Riverside. The trees grew rapidly, and when they
+ bore fruit it did not take the California orange growers long to discover
+ that here they had a treasure of more value than the largest nugget of
+ gold ever found in the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at a citrus fair in Riverside in 1879 that this golden king first
+ appeared before the world. Then from all over southern California came
+ orange men to get buds from these trees. Back home they went with the
+ precious bits of life. Acres of seedling oranges were quickly shorn of
+ their green crowns. Cut, cut, went knife and shears till only the stock
+ was left, and then into a carefully made slit in the bark was placed the
+ navel bud. It soon sprouted, and everywhere one could see the stranger
+ growing sturdily on its adopted stem. Thousands of buds were sold from the
+ two parent trees until there were hundreds of thousands of their beautiful
+ children growing all over the state, giving golden harvests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we owe to two ladies the success of orange culture in California, it
+ was a third who saved the industry when ruin threatened it. For a while
+ all went merrily with the orange grower; then in some way, from Australia,
+ there came into the country an insect pest called the cushiony scale,
+ which settled on the orange trees and seemed likely to destroy them. &ldquo;What
+ can be done to save our trees?&rdquo; was the cry from the people of the
+ southland. What they did was to bring from Australia a different visitor,
+ the dainty bug called the ladybird. She was eagerly welcomed. No one
+ dreamed of bidding her, in the words of the old nursery rhyme, &ldquo;fly away
+ home.&rdquo; She was carried to the diseased orchards, where she settled on the
+ scale, and as it was her favorite food, she soon had the trees clean
+ again. In time other pests came to trouble vine and fruit growers, but it
+ is interesting to know that scientists nearly always succeeded in finding
+ some insect enemy of the troublesome visitor, which would help the
+ horticulturist out of his difficulties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the business of orange-growing, success is due in a large measure to
+ care in the picking, packing, and shipping of the fruit&mdash;care even in
+ those little things that seem almost of no consequence. The more
+ particular Californians are to ship only the best fruit in the best
+ condition and properly packed, the higher prices will the fruit bring, the
+ higher reputation the state gain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lemon industry comes closely second to the orange. This fruit does not
+ need so much heat as does the orange, but neither can it stand so much
+ cold. It needs more water, but it bears more fruit and can be marketed the
+ year round. The lemons not sold as fresh fruit are made to yield such
+ products as citric acid, oil of lemon, from which cooking essences are
+ made, and candied lemon peel. In this latter branch of the trade, however,
+ the citron is more generally used, though it is not of so delicate a
+ flavor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pomelo, or grape fruit, is fast gaining in favor and increasing in
+ value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the stranger who visits California the orange is the most interesting
+ of trees. To pick an orange with her own hands, and to pin on her breast a
+ bunch of the fragrant blossoms, is to an Eastern woman one of the most
+ pleasant experiences of her visit to the Golden State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the history of the growth of southern California, and especially of its
+ orange culture, the use of water on the soil plays a prominent part. It
+ was the discovery that the most sandy and unpromising-looking land became
+ a miracle of fertility when subjected to the irrigating stream, that
+ caused the wonderful prosperity of the dry portions of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Irrigation, which means the turning of water from a well, spring, or
+ stream, upon land to promote the growth of plant life, has been used by
+ mankind for thousands of years. In Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico,
+ there are remains of irrigation canals made by people who lived so long
+ ago that we know nothing of their history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The padres who settled California were adepts in this science. In founding
+ a mission they always chose its site near some stream, the water of which
+ could be turned upon the cultivated fields; and the dams, canals, and
+ reservoirs which the padres constructed were so well built that many of
+ them have lasted until the present time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will seem strange to many people to learn that the highest-priced, most
+ fertile farm lands in the United States are not to be found in the rich
+ valleys of the Eastern states or the prairies of the middle West, but in
+ the dry region between the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean.
+ Colorado, which belongs to the land of little rain, has in proportion to
+ its size the richest mines of any state in the Union, yet the product of
+ its farms, all irrigated, equals the output of its mineral wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the flourishing towns of southern California depend for their
+ wonderful prosperity upon the fertility of the irrigated country
+ surrounding them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trees and plants require water for their growth, but they do not all need
+ it in like quantity, nor at the same time; therefore, the scientific
+ farmer on arid lands, where there is an abundance of water for irrigation,
+ has an immense advantage over his Eastern brother who depends for water
+ upon the rainfall alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the valuable raisin crop of the Californian is drying in the sun and
+ the slightest shower would damage, or perhaps ruin it, just beyond lies
+ the orange orchard, the trees of which are suffering for water. The fruit,
+ the size of a large walnut, is still hard and green, and must have an
+ abundance of the life-giving liquid if it is to develop into the rich
+ yellow orange, filled with delicious juice, which adorns the New Year&rsquo;s
+ market. How would our ranchman prosper if he depended upon rain? As it is,
+ he furrows his orchard from its highest to its lowest level; then into the
+ flume which runs parallel with the highest boundary of the grove he turns
+ the water from pipe or reservoir, and opening the numerous little
+ slide-doors or sluice-gates of the flume, soon has the satisfaction of
+ seeing each furrow the bed of a running stream, the water of which sinks
+ slowly, steadily, down to the roots of the thirsty trees. After the water
+ has been flowing in this manner for some hours, it is shut off, for it has
+ done enough work. In a day or two the ranchman runs the cultivator over
+ the ground of the orchard, leaving the soil fine and crumbly and the trees
+ in perfect condition for another six or eight weeks of growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first attempts of the American immigrant at irrigation were very
+ simple&mdash;just the making of a furrow turning the water of a stream
+ upon his land. Then, as he desired to cultivate more land and raise larger
+ crops, his ditches had to be longer, often having branches. Soon neighbors
+ came in and settled above and below him. They too used of the stream;
+ there was no law to control selfishness, so there were disagreements and
+ bitter quarrels over the water. Lawsuits followed and sometimes even
+ fighting and murders. The remedy for this state of things was found to be
+ in a company ditch, flume, or reservoir, with the use of water controlled
+ by fixed laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are some crops, notably grapes, which are grown without irrigation.
+ The grapevine, instead of being treated as a climber, is each year trimmed
+ back to the main stem, which thus becomes a strong woody stalk, often a
+ foot or more in circumference, quite capable of withstanding the heat and
+ dryness of the atmosphere and of drawing from the soil all the nourishment
+ needed for the fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wheat, barley, and oats, both as grain and as hay, are largely raised
+ without irrigation. Olives, and many deciduous trees, by careful
+ cultivation may flourish without water other than the rainfall; yet
+ notwithstanding this, for a home in southern California, land without a
+ good water-right is of little value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wealth of the region is in a great measure in its expensive water
+ system, which, by means of reservoirs, dams, ditches, flumes, and pipes,
+ gathers the water from the mountain streams and conveys it to the thirsty
+ land below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XV. &mdash; California&rsquo;s other Contributions to the World&rsquo;s Bill
+ of Fare
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By 1874 people in the Eastern states had begun to talk of California
+ canned fruits. Apricots and the large white grape found ready sale, but
+ California raisins, though on the market, were not in demand. That line
+ from the old game &ldquo;Malaga raisins are very fine raisins and figs from
+ Smyrna are better,&rdquo; represented the idea of the public; and figs, raisins,
+ and prunes eaten in the United States all came from abroad. But how is it
+ to-day?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners of our Eastern friends owe much to
+ California. She sends the seedless raisins, candied orange and lemon peel,
+ the citron and beet sugar for the mince pies and plum puddings. Her
+ cold-storage cars carry to the winter-bound states the delicious white
+ celery of the peat lands, snow-white heads of cauliflower, crisp string
+ beans, sweet young peas, green squash, cucumbers, and ripe tomatoes. For
+ the salads are her olives and fresh lettuce dressed with the golden olive
+ oil of the Golden State. Of ripe fruits, she sends pears, grapes, oranges,
+ pomegranates. For desserts, she supplies great clusters of rich sugary
+ raisins, creamy figs, stuffed prunes, and soft-shelled almonds and
+ walnuts. All these and other delicacies California gives toward the
+ holiday making in the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is not only to the homes of the wealthy that she carries good
+ cheer; to people who have very little money to spend, and those who are
+ far away from civilization, as soldiers, surveyors, woodmen, and
+ road-builders, California&rsquo;s products go to help make palatable fare. To
+ these her canned meats, fish, and vegetables, and canned and dried fruits,
+ are very welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canneries and fruit-packing establishments of the state bring in many
+ millions of dollars each year and give employment to a host of people, a
+ large number of whom are women and young girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of the fruits California now raises came into the country with the
+ padres. Captain Vancouver tells us that he found at the Santa Clara
+ mission, at the time of his visit in 1792, a fine orchard consisting of
+ apples, pears, peaches, plums, apricots; and at San Buenaventura all these
+ with the addition of oranges, grapes, and pomegranates. Alfred Robinson
+ describes the orchards and vineyards of San Gabriel mission as very
+ extensive. Wine and brandy were made at most of the missions, San Fernando
+ being especially noted for its brandy. Guadalupe Vallejo tells of bananas
+ plantains, sugar cane, citrons, and date palms growing at the southern
+ missions. Palm trees were planted &ldquo;for their fruit, for the honor of St.
+ Francis, and for use on Palm Sunday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only did the padres enjoy fresh fruits from their gardens, but raisins
+ were dried from the grapes, citron, orange, and lemon peel were candied,
+ and much fruit was preserved. It is not recorded that they had pumpkin pie
+ in those days, but a small, fine-grained pumpkin was raised extensively
+ for preserves. It is still a favorite dainty among the native
+ Californians, and no Spanish dinner is complete without this dulce, as it
+ is called. Spanish-American housewives excel their American sisters in the
+ art of preserving. Pumpkin, peach, pear, fig, are all treated in the same
+ manner, being first soaked in lye, then thoroughly washed and scalded in
+ abundance of fresh water, and then cooked in a very heavy sirup. The
+ result of this treatment is that the outside of the fruit is crisp and
+ brittle, while the inside is creamy and delicious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first of California&rsquo;s dried fruits to come before the public was the
+ raisin. Raisins are merely the proper variety of grapes suitably dried.
+ Some think that they are dipped in sugar, but this is not the fact. The
+ only sugar is that contained in the juice of the grape, which should be
+ about one fourth sugar. The only raisin grape for general use is the
+ greenish variety called the Muscat. The rich purple or chocolate color of
+ the raisin of the market is caused by the action of the sun while the
+ raisin is being cured. If dried in the shade the fruit has a sickly
+ greenish hue. The seedless Sultana is a small grape, fast coming into
+ favor for a cooking raisin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proper planting of a raisin vineyard requires a large amount of care
+ and labor. But the summer is one long holiday, as there is little to do to
+ the vines from early May until August. Then comes picking time. From all
+ the country round gather men and women, boys and girls, and the work
+ begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be a successful raisin grower and packer, one must take care in all
+ little things. The workman who neglects to cut from the branch the
+ imperfect or bad grapes, or who lays the fruit in the trays so that it
+ will be in heaps or overlapped, is apt to be soon discharged. After about
+ a week of exposure to the sun and air, the grapes are turned by placing an
+ empty tray over a full one, and reversing the positions. Then after a few
+ days longer in the sun, the fruit goes to the sweat-box, a hundred pounds
+ to the box, and is placed in a room in the packing house, where it lies
+ about ten days. The bunches go into this room unequally dried, with still
+ a look and taste of grape about them, but after this sweating process they
+ come out uniform in appearance, rich, sugary, tempting,&mdash;the raisins
+ of commerce, with little suggestion of the fruit from which they came.
+ Then they are boxed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are generally three grades: very choice clusters, ordinary and
+ imperfect bunches, and loose raisins. Raisins of the third class are sent
+ to the stemmer and a large proportion of them then go to the seeder.
+ Seeding raisins for mother and grandmother at holiday times used to be the
+ duty and pleasure of the older boys and girls of the household. But
+ seeding is now done by machinery. A machine will seed on an average ten
+ tons daily. Before entering the seeder the raisins are subjected to a
+ thorough brushing, by which every particle of dust is removed. They are
+ then run through rubber rollers which flatten the fruit and press the
+ seeds to the surface; then through another pair of rollers, with wire
+ teeth which catch and hold the seeds while the raisins pass on down a long
+ chute to the packing room, where women and girls box them for market.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With all fruits the drying process is much the same, though peaches,
+ apples, and pears are first peeled. California figs, when dried, sell
+ well. This is a fruit which is growing in favor, whether fresh, preserved,
+ or dried. Fruit canning is an interesting process. The fruit is not boiled
+ in sirup and then placed in cans, as is frequently the custom in home
+ preserving, but when peeled it is placed directly in the cans, in which it
+ receives all its cooking and in which it is finally marketed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The raising of beets and the converting of them into sugar form an
+ industry which is growing rapidly, and is of the utmost importance to the
+ people of the Pacific slope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canning of fresh vegetables is a new industry which is bringing into
+ the state a steady stream of money, and in addition is proving a double
+ blessing to thousands of people, both those who gain from it their living,
+ and those who could not otherwise have vegetables for food. A sailor said
+ recently that if he could not be a sailor he would do the next best thing&mdash;can
+ vegetables for other sailors. When Galvez received the order from the king
+ of Spain to found settlements in Upper California, one of the chief
+ reasons for so doing was that fresh vegetables might be raised for the
+ sailors engaged in the Philippine trade. To-day the Philippines use a
+ large portion of California&rsquo;s canned goods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the southern counties olive orchards are being extensively planted.
+ Near San Fernando is the largest in the world, covering thirteen hundred
+ acres. Doctors have said that a liberal use of California olive oil will
+ do much to promote the good health of mankind, and it is thought by many
+ that the manufacture of olive oil will be one of the greatest industries
+ the state has known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nut raising is keeping pace with fruit in importance. To an Eastern person
+ it seems strange to see nut-bearing trees cultivated in orchards; though
+ profitable, this method does away with the pleasures of nutting parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ California&rsquo;s crystallized fruits are in constant demand, especially for
+ the Christmas trade. This crystallizing is a process in which the juice is
+ extracted and replaced with sugar sirup, which hardens and preserves the
+ fruit from decay while still keeping the shape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One sometimes reads the saying, &ldquo;Fresno for raisins, Santa Clara for
+ cherries and prunes, and the northern counties and mountain-ranches for
+ apples.&rdquo; But in fact, California&rsquo;s fruit industries are well distributed
+ over the state, and the really excellent work which is being done in all
+ sections will still advance as the people learn more of the necessary
+ details and methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of mistakes and experiments the steady progress on the California
+ ranches is being recognized. Of one of our leading fruit growers, Mr.
+ Eliwood Cooper of Santa Barbara, the Marquis of Lorne writes in the
+ Youth&rsquo;s Companion: &ldquo;He has shown that California can produce better olive
+ oil than France, Spain, or Italy, and English walnuts and European almonds
+ in crops of which the old country hardly even dreams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A history of California&rsquo;s products would be incomplete without a reference
+ to him who is called the &ldquo;Wonder Worker of Santa Rosa.&rdquo; &ldquo;Magician!
+ Conjurer!&rdquo; are terms frequently applied to Mr. Luther Burbank, the man who
+ is acknowledged by the scientists of the world to have done more with
+ fruits and flowers than any other man. Mr. Burbank waves his wand, and the
+ native poppy turns to deepest crimson, the white of the calla lily becomes
+ a gorgeous yellow, rose and blackberry lose their thorns, the cactus its
+ spines. The meat of the walnut and almond become richer in quality, while
+ their shells diminish to the thinness of a knife blade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet in these seeming miracles there is nothing of &ldquo;black art&rdquo; or sleight
+ of hand. The experiments of this wonderful man, the surprising results he
+ gains, are obtained, first by a close study of the laws of nature, then,
+ where he desires change and improvement, by assisting her process, often
+ through years of closest application and unceasing toil. He is a man of
+ whom it is truthfully said, &ldquo;He has led a life of hardships, has
+ sacrificed self at every point, that he might glorify and make more
+ beautiful the world around him.&rdquo; Any boy or girl who knows something of
+ how plants grow and reproduce themselves will find great pleasure in
+ following Mr. Burbank&rsquo;s simple methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only recently that his countrymen have begun to appreciate the work
+ of this great naturalist. A short time ago a resident of Berkeley, a
+ student and book-lover, one who knew Mr. Burbank but had given little
+ attention to his productions, was in Paris. While there he had the good
+ fortune to be present at a lecture delivered before a gathering of the
+ most eminent scientists of Europe. In the course of his address the
+ speaker had occasion to mention the name of Luther Burbank. Instantly
+ every man in the audience arose and stood a moment in silence, giving to
+ the simple mention of Mr. Burbank&rsquo;s name the respect usually paid to the
+ presence of royalty. It is a name now known in all the languages of the
+ civilized world, and numbers of the wisest of the world&rsquo;s citizens cross
+ the ocean solely to visit the busy plant-grower of Santa Rosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luther Burbank was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1849, and while
+ yet a lad his strongest desire was to produce new plants better than the
+ old ones. His first experiment was with a vegetable. For the sake of
+ getting seed, he planted some Early Rose potatoes in his mother&rsquo;s garden.
+ In the whole patch only one seed-ball developed, and this he watched with
+ constant care. Great was his disappointment, therefore, when one morning,
+ just as it was ready to be picked, he found that it had disappeared. A
+ careful search failed to recover the missing ball, but as he thought the
+ matter over, while at work, it struck Luther that perhaps a dog had
+ knocked it off in bounding through the garden. Looking more carefully for
+ it, he found the ball twenty feet away from the vine on which it had hung.
+ In it were twenty-three small, well-developed seeds. These he planted with
+ great care, and from one of them came the first Burbank potatoes. The
+ wealth of the country was materially increased by this discovery; the
+ wealth of the boy only to the amount of one hundred and twenty-five
+ dollars, which he used in attending a better school than he had before
+ been able to enjoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1875 Mr. Burbank, to secure, as he said, &ldquo;a climate which should be an
+ ally and not an enemy to his work,&rdquo; moved to Santa Rosa, California. For
+ ten years of poverty and severe toil he was engaged, for the sake of a
+ livelihood, in the nursery business, making, in the meantime, such
+ experiments as he had time for. During the next twenty years, however, Mr.
+ Burbank was able to give nearly his whole time to his nature-studies. His
+ energy is tireless, and his aim is to supply to humanity something for
+ beauty, sustenance, or commerce better than it has possessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps among all his productions the greatest good to the world will
+ arise from the spineless cactus. The scourge of the American desert is the
+ cactus, commonly known as the prickly pear, the whole surface of which is
+ covered with fine, needlelike spines, while its leaves are filled with a
+ woody fiber most hurtful to animal life. When eaten by hunger-crazed
+ cattle it causes death. After years of labor Mr. Burbank has succeeded in
+ developing from this most unpromising of plants a perfected cactus which
+ is truly a storehouse of food for man and beast. Spines and woody fiber
+ have disappeared, leaving juicy, pear-shaped leaves, weighing often
+ twenty-five or fifty pounds, which, when cooked in sirup, make a delicious
+ preserve, and in their natural state furnish a nourishing,
+ thirst-quenching food for domestic animals. The fruit of this immense
+ plant is aromatic and delicate, and its seeds are at present worth far
+ more than their weight in gold, since from them are to spring thousands of
+ plants by means of which it is believed the uninhabitable portions of the
+ desert may be made to support numberless herds of cattle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of Mr. Burbank&rsquo;s achievements is the evergreen crimson rhubarb,
+ which is not only far less acid than the old variety, but richer in flavor
+ and a giant in size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pomato, a tomato grown on a potato plant, is most interesting. The
+ plant is a free bearer, having a white, succulent, delicious fruit,
+ admirable when cooked, used in a salad, or eaten fresh as our other fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The experiments with prunes conducted at the Santa Rosa ranch have been of
+ the greatest value to the state. For forty years the prune growers of the
+ Pacific slope had been searching for a variety of this fruit which would
+ be as rich in sugar and as abundant a bearer as the little California
+ prune of commerce, and yet of a larger size, and earlier in its time of
+ ripening. Mr. Burbank with his famous sugar prune filled all these
+ requirements, and revolutionized the prune industry of the state. Besides
+ this triumph he has succeeded in obtaining a variety of this fruit having
+ a shell-less kernel, so that the fruit when dried much resembles those
+ which are artificially stuffed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers which Mr. Burbank has evolved by his methods, and those which
+ he has simply enlarged and glorified, are far too numerous to be named
+ here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1905 a grant of ten thousand dollars a year was bestowed upon Mr.
+ Burbank by the Carnegie Institution of Washington, D.C., for the purpose
+ of assisting him in his experiments. Seldom has money been better placed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVI. &mdash; The Hidden Treasures of Mother Earth
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Thousands of years ago, before the time of which we have any history,
+ there were rivers in California,&mdash;rivers now dead,&mdash;whose sides
+ were steeper and whose channels were wider than those of the rivers in the
+ same part of the world to-day. Rapid streams they were, and busy, too;
+ washing away from the rocks along their sides the gold held there,
+ dropping the yellow grains down into the gravelly beds below. After a time
+ there came down upon these rivers a volcanic outflow; great quantities of
+ ashes, streams of lava and cement, burying them hundreds of feet deep,
+ until over them mountain ridges extended for miles and miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other changes in the earth&rsquo;s surface took place, and in the course of time
+ our streams of to-day were formed. As they cut their way through the
+ mountain ranges, some of them crossed the channels of old dead rivers, and
+ finding the gold hidden there, carried some of it along, rolling it over
+ and over, mixed with sand and gravel, down into the lower lands under the
+ bright sunlight. Here it was found by Marshall and the gold hunters who
+ followed him. These were the placer mines of which we read in Chapter VII.
+ &mdash; Gradually the best placer mines were taken up and the newcomers to
+ the gold fields traced the precious metal up the streams into the gravel
+ of the hillsides. Then was begun hydraulic mining, where water did the
+ work. In the canons great dams were constructed to catch the flow from the
+ melting snows of the mountains, and miles of flumes were built to carry
+ the water to the mining grounds. Immense pipes were laid and altogether
+ millions of dollars were invested in hydraulic mining. The water coming
+ down under heavy pressure from the mountain reservoirs passed through
+ giant hose which would carry a hundred miner&rsquo;s inches, and, striking the
+ mountain side with terrific force, washed away the earth from the rocks.
+ Down fell the sand and gravel into sluices or boxes of running water where
+ cleats and other arrangements caught and held the gold, which was heavy,
+ while the lighter mixture was carried out into the canyon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The material thus dumped on the mountain side was called debris, and to
+ any one living in the mining region of the state that word means trouble&mdash;means
+ fighting, lawsuits, ruin. For the debris did not stay up in the canyon,
+ but was washed down into the rivers, overflowing farm lands, spoiling
+ crops and orchards, and making the streams shallow, their waters muddy. So
+ great was the destruction this process caused that, in 1893, the Congress
+ of the United States enacted a law which provided for the creation of a
+ Debris Commission to regulate the business of hydraulic mining in
+ California. The result of the investigations of this commission was to put
+ a stop to all hydraulic mining in territory drained by the San Joaquin and
+ Sacramento rivers, or any other territory where the use of this form of
+ mining should injure the river systems or lands adjacent. Thus, almost in
+ a moment, the important industry was stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is estimated that over one hundred million dollars were invested in
+ hydraulic mining. Much of this was entirely lost, as the expensive
+ machinery rusted and the water system fell into ruins. It was very hard
+ for the miners, as well as for the commerce of the state, but the act of
+ the government was based upon the principle that one man&rsquo;s business must
+ not damage another man&rsquo;s property. Clever engineers in the pay of the
+ government are still trying to find some way by which the debris can be
+ safely disposed of in order that this valuable system may resume
+ operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deprived of the use of water as their agent, gold hunters next tried
+ mining by drifts; that is, by tunneling into the mountain&rsquo;s side until the
+ bed of a buried river is reached. These tunnels are often five thousand to
+ eight thousand feet long. The gold is brought out of the ground before it
+ is washed clean of the gravel. Sometimes it is mixed with cement, when it
+ has to be crushed in rollers before it can be cleared of other material.
+ The counties where drift mining is most in operation are Placer, Nevada,
+ and Sierra.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quartz mining is the most expensive manner of getting out gold, and a
+ great deal of valuable and complicated machinery has been invented for
+ this branch of the business. The quartz mines of California are among the
+ richest in the world, and some of the greatest fortunes of modern times
+ have been made from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a mine of this kind there is generally a shaft, or opening, extending
+ straight down into the earth, from which, at different levels, passageways
+ branch out where the veins of gold are richest. The openings must be
+ timbered to prevent caving in, and there must be pumps to remove the water
+ as well as hoisting works to take out the material. Then on the surface,
+ as near as possible to the mouth of the mine, must be located the quartz
+ mill. When possible, a tunnel is used in this mining, which makes the
+ handling of ore less expensive, for then there need be no hoisting works
+ or pumps, since the tunnel drains itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gold in quartz rock is generally in ledges or veins, one to three feet in
+ width. Digging it out is not very hard, save where there is not enough
+ room to stand upright and use the pick, or when, in a shaft deep in the
+ ground, the heat makes it difficult to work. A California boy at the mines
+ wrote recently: &ldquo;Mining is not so bad; that is, if I could get along
+ without the occasional whack I bestow upon my left hand. Last week I
+ started a little tunnel and pounded my hand so that it swelled up
+ considerably. Drilling is not hard, and loading is a snap, but it&rsquo;s all
+ interesting work and there is the excitement of seeing what you are going
+ to find next.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the ore reaches the surface it is sent to the mill, where it is first
+ pulverized, then mixed with a chemical which goes about catching up the
+ grains of gold&mdash;arresting and holding them fast. It is quite a long
+ process before the gold is completely separated from all other material
+ and ready for shipment. Often the quartz contains other minerals of value,
+ the separation of which requires much work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a very rich mine in Nevada called the Comstock, which some years
+ ago had sunk its shafts so deep into the earth that it became almost
+ impossible for the miners to work on account of the great heat, the bad
+ air, and the quantity of water which had constantly to be pumped out. How
+ these troubles were remedied is the story of one of California&rsquo;s greatest
+ and best citizens. Adolph Sutro was a Prussian by birth, and his adopted
+ state may well be proud to claim him. He had built a little quartz mill in
+ Nevada, near the Comstock mine. Seeing the suffering of the workmen in all
+ the mines on that mountain side, he thought of a plan for the construction
+ of a large tunnel which was to begin at a low level at the nearest point
+ of the Carson River and run deep into the mountain so that it could drain
+ all the rich mining section, give good ventilation for the deep
+ underground works, and afford a much cheaper and more convenient way of
+ taking care of the ore. It was to be four miles long, with branches
+ extending from it to different mines. Its height was to be ten feet;
+ width, twelve, with a drainage trench in the center to carry away the
+ waste water to the Carson River, and tracks on each side for the passage
+ of mules and cars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the mine owners were pleased with the project, and Mr. Sutro
+ succeeded in forming a company to build the tunnel. Then he went to
+ Washington, where the government became so interested in his plans that on
+ July 25, 1866, there was passed an act of Congress granting Sutro such
+ privileges in regard to public lands as would safeguard his work. About
+ the time that the news of this action reached the West, the men who owned
+ the mines and had made an arrangement for the use of the tunnel, decided
+ that they did not want the work done; it is said, for the reason that they
+ found Mr. Sutro too wise and far-seeing for them to be able to manage him.
+ At all events, with all their wealth and power they tried to ruin him.
+ They said that his plans were worthless, and any one was foolish to invest
+ in the tunnel company. Then Mr. Sutro, by means of lectures upon the
+ subject, appealed to the people. In California, Nevada, the Eastern
+ states, and even Europe, he told what his plans would do for the miners
+ and the good of the country. It was not long before he gained all the help
+ he needed, and the great work was begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the workmen progressed into the mountain side there were many
+ difficulties to overcome. Day and night without ceasing the work went on.
+ Laborers would faint from the combined heat and bad air, and be carried to
+ the outer world to be revived. Carpenters followed the drillers, trackmen
+ coming closely after. Loose rock, freshly blasted, was tumbled into
+ waiting cars and hauled away over rails laid perhaps but half an hour
+ before. Constantly in the front was Sutro himself, coat flung aside,
+ sleeves rolled up. In the midst of the flying dirt, great heat, bad air,
+ dripping slush, and slippery mud he worked side by side with the grimy,
+ half-naked miners, thus showing himself capable not only of planning a
+ great work, but of seeing personally that it was well done, no matter with
+ what sacrifice to his own ease and comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the tunnel was completed, Mr. Sutro sold his interest in it for
+ several millions of dollars. How that money was expended, any visitor to
+ San Francisco well knows. With it were built the great Sutro baths, with
+ their immense tanks of pure and constantly changing, tempered ocean water,
+ their many dressing rooms, their grand staircases, adorned with rare
+ growing plants, their tiers of seats rising in rows, one above another,
+ with room for thousands of spectators, and their galleries of pictures and
+ choice works of art. Over all is a roof of steel and tinted glass. Nowhere
+ else in America is there so fine a bathing establishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this there are the lovely gardens of Sutro Heights, developed by
+ Mr. Sutro&rsquo;s money and genius from the barren sand-hills of the San Miguel
+ rancho. In addition to these is the choice library of about two hundred
+ thousand volumes, which is of great use to the people of San Francisco.
+ Perhaps neither San Francisco nor California has yet quite appreciated the
+ value of the work of Adolph Sutro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since 1848 the state of California has sent to the United States Mint over
+ one billion dollars in gold. Of this, little Nevada County, which seems to
+ be worth literally her weight in gold, has sent over two hundred and forty
+ million. The Empire Mine is the leading producer of California, but there
+ are others nearly as rich. Nevada City is in the center of this mining
+ country. The streets are very hilly, and after a heavy rain people may be
+ seen searching the city gutters and newly-formed rivulets for gold, and
+ they are sometimes rewarded by finding fair-sized nuggets washed down from
+ the hills above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A visitor to one of the deep mines of California says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We descended to the seven hundred foot level, where the day before a pile
+ of ore had been blasted down. A little piece of the quartz, crushed in a
+ mortar panned out four dollars in gold. I picked out one piece of rock,
+ not larger than a peach, and the manager, after weighing and testing it,
+ announced that it contained ten dollars in free gold. The kick of a boot
+ would reveal ore which showed glittering specks of pure gold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the estimate of many people all very valuable mines are supposed to be
+ of gold, but this is a mistake. While gold is king in California, copper
+ mining is rapidly becoming of great importance. A continuous copper belt,
+ the largest yet discovered in the world, exists under her soil, and while
+ a comparatively small depth has been so far attained, the profit has been
+ considerable. One of the largest quicksilver mines in the world is at New
+ Almaden. The value of the output of the borax mines is over a million
+ dollars a year. There were mined in California in 1907 over fifty
+ different materials, most of them at a value of several thousand dollars a
+ year, with some as high as a million and over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mineral product of California outranking gold in value is petroleum,
+ which has added greatly to the wealth of the state. Natural gas and
+ mineral waters are also valuable commercial products.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To many, the most interesting class among minerals is the gems, of which
+ California yields a variety. The beautiful lilac stone, Kunzite, was
+ discovered near Pala, San Diego County. This county has also some fine
+ specimens of garnets, and beautiful tourmalines are being mined at a
+ profit. San Bernardino County yields a superior grade of turquoise from
+ which has been realized as much as eleven thousand dollars a year.
+ Chrysoprase is being mined in Tulare County, also the beautiful new green
+ gem something like clear jade, called Californite. Topaz, both blue and
+ white, is being found, and besides these, many diamonds of good quality
+ have been collected, principally from the gravels of the hydraulic mines.
+ In 1907 there was discovered in the mountains of San Benito County a
+ beautiful blue stone closely resembling sapphire, more brilliant but less
+ durable. It was named, by professors of mineralogy in the state
+ university, Benitite, from the place where it was discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the most valuable of all the products of California is its water
+ supply, either visible as in springs and streams, or underground as in
+ artesian water. Of its use in irrigation, we have already spoken. In the
+ production of electricity it is coming to be of the greatest importance,
+ making possible the most stupendous works of modern times. Such is the
+ undertaking of the Edison Electric Company in bringing down to Los
+ Angeles, over many miles of the roughest country, power from the Kern
+ River, tapping the tumultuous stream far up in the Sierras. The taking of
+ the necessary machinery to those heights was in itself a wonderful labor.
+ The power thus created is a blessing to a wide region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVII. &mdash; From La Escuela of Spanish California to the Schools
+ of the Twentieth
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Century
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In no line has California advanced so far beyond the days of the padres as
+ in her schools. In the early settlements there were no educated people but
+ the priests at the missions and the Spanish officers with their families
+ at the presidios. Later, clever men of good families came into the
+ territory, took up land, and made their homes on the great ranchos, but
+ among these there were few who would take the time or trouble to teach the
+ children; so life to the young people was a long holiday. The sad result
+ was that they grew up so ignorant as to astonish the educated strangers
+ who visited the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the missions the padres had schools where they taught the young Indians
+ something of reading and writing, religious services and songs, and the
+ trades necessary for life. This, with their duties in the church and the
+ extensive building and planting of the mission settlements, took all the
+ time of the hard-working priests. Occasionally, an educated woman would
+ teach her own children and those of her relatives, but like most attempts
+ at home education, it was so interrupted as to amount to little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1794 a new governor came from Spain who was so shocked at this state of
+ affairs that he at once ordered three schools opened. The first, December,
+ 1794, was held in a granary at San Jose and was in charge of a retired
+ sergeant of the Spanish army. The children had been so long free from all
+ restraint that they did not like to go to school, and their parents did
+ not always take the trouble to insist. There were some reasons for this,
+ as the masters did not know much about what they were trying to teach, and
+ the use of the ferule and scourge (the latter a whip of cords tipped with
+ iron) was frequent and cruel. There were no books but primers, and these
+ were hard to obtain. The writing, paper was furnished by the military
+ authorities and had to be returned when the child was through with it,
+ that it might be used in making cartridges. These schools were for boys
+ only, girls not being expected to learn anything except cooking, sewing,
+ and embroidery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly the state of things improved, and in 1829 in the yearly report to
+ the Mexican government, it was stated that there were eleven primary
+ schools in the province with three hundred and thirty-nine boys and girls.
+ One of the best of these schools was that of Don Ignacio Coronel of Los
+ Angeles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1846 the first American school was opened at Santa Clara by Mrs. Oliver
+ Mann Isbell. It provided for children from about twenty emigrant families
+ and was held in a room of the Santa Clara mission on the great patio. The
+ floor was of earth, the seats boxes; an opening in the tiled roof over the
+ center of the room allowing the smoke to escape when, on rainy days, a
+ fire was built on a rude platform of stones set in the middle of the
+ floor. Wherever the Americans lived, they would have schools, although
+ their first buildings were bare and inconvenient, with no grace or
+ adornment either inside or out. In some out-of-the-way places, whole terms
+ of school were spent most happily under spreading live oaks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the making of the first constitution, educational matters were not
+ forgotten; one section providing that there should be a common school
+ system supported by money from the sale of public lands. On account of the
+ minerals the lands so allotted were supposed to contain, it was believed
+ that they would sell for such vast amounts that the state would have money
+ sufficient for the grandest public schools that ever existed. In fact
+ these lands brought in altogether, after a number of years, less than a
+ quarter of a million dollars. The act provided also that the schools be
+ kept open three months in the year. An effort was made to extend this
+ period to six months, but was defeated by Senator Gwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considering the state of the country when the public schools were begun,
+ and the short time in which they have been developed, the California free
+ schools are a credit to the state and to the men and women who have helped
+ to make them what they are. No community is so poor and remote but that it
+ may have its school if the inhabitants choose to organize for the purpose.
+ Hardly can the settler find a ranch from which his children may not attend
+ a district school over which floats the stars and stripes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Money for educational purposes is now raised by state and county taxes on
+ property, this sum, in cities, being largely increased by the addition of
+ the city taxes. High schools have only recently been given state aid, and
+ that moderately; the larger ones still depending, in a great measure, upon
+ the special tax of the city, district, or county, according to the class
+ to which the school belongs. The state supports one Polytechnic school,
+ that at San Luis Obispo, where there are three courses, agriculture,
+ mechanics, and domestic science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About 1878, in the endeavor to teach the children of the worst parts of
+ San Francisco a right way of living, the free kindergartens were begun.
+ Perhaps their success cannot be better shown than in the fact that in the
+ first year of the work along &ldquo;Barbary coast,&rdquo; one of the most turbulent
+ districts of the city, the Italian fruit and vegetable dealers who lived
+ there, brought the teachers a purse of seventy-five dollars, because the
+ children had been taught not to steal their fruits and vegetables or to
+ break their windows. The first free kindergarten was started on Silver
+ Street in &ldquo;Tar Flats&rdquo; and had for its teacher a pretty young girl, with
+ beautiful eyes and a mass of bronze-colored hair, whom the ragged little
+ urchins soon learned to adore. That little school was the beginning of one
+ of the best kindergarten systems in the country, and the pretty young
+ teacher is now Kate Douglas Wiggin, one of America&rsquo;s best loved writers,
+ the author of those delightful books, &ldquo;The Birds&rsquo; Christmas Carol,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Timothy&rsquo;s Quest&rdquo; and others equally interesting. There have been many
+ gifts to these kindergartens. In memory of their only son, Mr. and Mrs.
+ Leland Stanford gave one hundred thousand dollars, while Mrs. Phoebe
+ Hearst supported entirely three of the schools. Kindergartens may now form
+ part of the primary department in the school system of any community so
+ desiring, and are to be found in most of the cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing in the educational work of California is of more importance than
+ the five normal schools, which graduate each year hundreds of teachers
+ thoroughly prepared in all branches for the important work of training the
+ children of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the crown of the free school system, stands the state university at
+ Berkeley. Many an interesting story might be told of the noble men, who as
+ early as 1849 began their long struggle to gain for the youth of
+ California the chance for higher education. The Reverend Samuel Willey,
+ the American consul Mr. Larkin, and Mr. Sherman Day were leaders in this
+ enterprise. There was much against them; men&rsquo;s thoughts were almost
+ entirely given to the necessities of everyday life, and few seemed able to
+ see that a grand and beautiful future was coming to the new territory. The
+ university secured its charter in 1868, but it was not until the adoption
+ of the new constitution in 1879 that it was placed on a firm basis which
+ could not be changed by each new legislature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coming of Mr. Benjamin Ide Wheeler to the presidency was one of the
+ best strokes of fortune the institution has ever known. Under his
+ management it has taken a great stride forward. In the work it does, and
+ the high standard it demands, it takes its place side by side with the
+ best universities of the older Eastern states. The work of its college of
+ agriculture is becoming of great service to the farmer and fruit grower.
+ The result of its experiments in determining the best wheat for the soil
+ is of very great importance to the grain industry of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Connected with the university are: the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton;
+ the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, the Hastings College of Law, and
+ Colleges of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmacy, in San Francisco; and an
+ admirable University Extension Course which offers its advantages to the
+ people of any locality throughout the state who may desire its help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most practical and important associations in the state is the
+ Farmer&rsquo;s Institute, which, under direction and control of the university,
+ holds a three days&rsquo; meeting once a month in each locality throughout the
+ state. Also, once a year, an institute of a week&rsquo;s duration is held at
+ Berkeley, where eminent scientists give their services, and the results
+ are most helpful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The university has received many gifts from distinguished citizens. Mrs.
+ Phoebe Hearst has devoted much of her time and a large amount of her money
+ to its improvement, and plans are under way to make it the most finished
+ and beautiful educational institution ever owned by any state or country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barely one hour&rsquo;s ride from San Francisco south, lies the Leland Stanford
+ Junior University, which at the time of its foundation, in 1885, was the
+ greatest gift ever bestowed upon humanity by any one person. In this noble
+ movement Mr. and Mrs. Stanford were as one. Their only son died in 1884,
+ and the university is a memorial of him, a grand example of the way in
+ which those who are dead may yet live, through the good done in their
+ names. Although entirely a private benefaction, its doors are open to
+ students absolutely free of all tuition charges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This university started with a large endowment, but after the death of Mr.
+ Stanford, a lawsuit with the United States, and a shrinkage in the value
+ of the properties it owned, ran the finances so low that for a short time
+ it was found necessary to charge a small entrance fee. Even then, the
+ college was kept open only through the economy and self-sacrifice of Mrs.
+ Stanford and the members of the faculty, who stood by the institution with
+ noble unselfishness. By the year 1906 the financial condition had become
+ satisfactory and the attendance had materially increased. Two handsome new
+ buildings, one for the library and the other for the gymnasium, were about
+ completed when, on April 18, an earthquake, the most destructive ever
+ experienced on the Pacific coast, shook all the region around San
+ Francisco Bay. Stanford suffered severely: the two new buildings were
+ ruined; so, too, was the museum and a portion of the chemistry building.
+ Both the noble arch and the mosaics in the front of the memorial chapel
+ were destroyed. Beyond this, comparatively little damage was done to the
+ college buildings. The graduating exercises were postponed until the fall
+ term; otherwise the disaster did not interfere seriously with the routine
+ of study, neither did it affect the attendance in 1906-7, which was
+ unusually large. In the fall of 1907 President Jordan stated that he was
+ empowered to announce that Thomas Weldon Stanford, brother of Senator
+ Leland Stanford, had decided to give the university his own large fortune
+ of several millions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is generally recognized that the university owes a great part of its
+ present success to the splendid talents and faithfulness of President
+ Jordan, who has given the hardest labor of the best years of his busy life
+ to helping it onward and upward. Its educational work is thorough, and its
+ requirements are being steadily raised. It stands for the highest
+ education that is possible. Addition is constantly being made to its group
+ of noble buildings. Beautiful Stanford is the sparkling jewel in
+ California&rsquo;s diadem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not far from the University of California in the suburbs of Oakland is
+ situated Mills College, which for many years was the only advanced school
+ for girls of which the state could boast. This institution had its
+ beginning as a seminary in Benicia, but was moved to its present situation
+ in 1871. In 1885 it became a college with a state charter. In plan of
+ studies and high Christian aim, it resembles Mount Holyoke, from which
+ many of its leading instructors have been graduated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no place here to speak of all the leading private schools of the
+ state. Throop Polytechnic in Pasadena, the Thatcher School in the valley
+ of the Ojai, and Belmont Military Academy are among the best. A word,
+ however, must be said in tribute to Santa Clara College, without which the
+ California youth of from twenty to forty years ago would have been lacking
+ in that higher education which stands for so much in the making of a
+ state. Incorporated in 1851, it was opened with funds amounting to but one
+ hundred and fifty dollars, yet it grew steadily. With a clever Jesuit
+ faculty, this college has done admirable work of so thorough a character
+ as to win the praise of all those who have come in contact with its
+ results. From it have been graduated such men as Stephen M. White,
+ Reginaldo del Valle, and many other of our leading professional and
+ business men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVIII. &mdash; Statistics
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The state of California lies between the parallels 32Β‘ and 42Β‘ north
+ latitude, extending over a space represented on the eastern coast by the
+ country between Edisto Inlet, South Carolina, and the northern point of
+ Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Its northern third lies between 120Β‘ and 124Β‘ 26&rsquo;
+ west longitude. From Cape Mendocino, its most westerly point, the coast
+ trends southeastward to San Diego Bay. The total coast line on the Pacific
+ is 1200 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state&rsquo;s greatest width is 235 miles, which is between Point Conception
+ and the northern end of the Amaragosa Range on the Nevada line. It is
+ narrowest between Golden Gate and the southern end of Lake Tahoe. Its area
+ is 158,297 sq. miles, second only to Texas of all the states.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The population of California, according to the United States census of
+ 1920, is 3,426,861, which has since been greatly increased. The following
+ table shows the counties of the State:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Counties of California
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Area Population Valuation
+ Name Origin and Meaning of Name
+ Sq. Mi. 1920 1910 of Property County Seat
+
+ Alameda Sp., Shaded promenade
+ 764 344,127 246,131 128,681,766 Oakland
+ Alpine
+ 710 243 309 422,063 Markleeville
+ Amador Sp., Sweetheart
+ 632 7,793 9,086 4,918,908 Jackson
+ Butte Fr., Rounded, detached hill
+ 1,660 30,030 27,301 16,057,766 Oroville
+ Calaveras Sp., Skul&rsquo;s (from Indian battle ground)
+ 1,080 6,183 9,171 6,177,285 San Andreas
+ Colusa Ind.
+ 1,088 9,290 7,732 12,188,096 Colusa
+ Contra Costa Sp., Opposite coast
+ 728 53,889 31,674 21,753,956 Martinez
+ Del Norte Sp., Of the North
+ 992 2,759 2,417 2,882,445 Crescent City
+ Eldorado Sp., The gilded (name given to fabled land of gold)
+ 1,796 6,426 7,492 4,668,840 Placerville
+ Fresno Sp., Ash tree
+ 6,152 128,779 75,657 34,302,205 Fresno
+ Glenn
+ 1,270 11,853 7,172 10,645,524 Willow
+ Humboldt (named for Baron von Humboldt)
+ 3,496 37,413 33,857 24,911,492 Eureka
+ Imperial
+ 4,200 43,383 13,591 El Centro
+ Inyo
+ 10,294 7,031 6,974 2,316,319 Independence
+ Kern
+ 8,050 54,843 37,715 24,050,871 Bakersfield
+ Kings
+ 1,176 22,032 16,230 7,883,009 Hanford
+ Lake
+ 1,328 5,402 5,526 3,258,020 Lakeport
+ Lassen
+ 4,520 8,507 4,802 4,590,748 Susanville
+ Los Angeles Sp., The angels
+ 4,200 936,438 504,132 169,268,166 Los Angeles
+ Madera Sp., Timber
+ 2,062 12,203 8,368 6,732,495 Madera
+ Marin Ind.
+ 549 27,342 25,114 14,489,582 San Rafael
+ Mariposa Sp., Butterfly
+ 1,510 2,775 3,956 2,270,246 Mariposa
+ Mendocino Sp., (from Mendoza, viceroy of Mexico)
+ 3,626 24,116 23,929 13,131,995 Ukiah
+ Merced Sp., Mercy
+ 1,932 24,579 15,148 14,877,086 Merced
+ Modoc Ind.
+ 3,741 5,425 6,191 4,076,680 Alturas
+ Mono Sp., Monkey, or pretty
+ 3,020 960 2,042 1,151,109 Bridgeport
+ Monterey Sp., King&rsquo;s forest
+ 3,340 27,980 24,146 18,962,554 Salinas
+ Napa Ind.
+ 780 20,678 19,800 13,840,291 Napa
+ Nevada Sp., Heavy fall of snow
+ 972 10,850 14,955 7,203,349 Nevada City
+ Orange (named for its chief product)
+ 750 61,375 34,436 13,812 Santa Ana
+ Placer Sp., Loose (from placer mines)
+ 1,365 18,584 18,237 9,677,724 Auburn
+ Plumas Sp., Feathers
+ 2,694 5,681 5,259 2,792,091 Quincy
+ Riverside
+ 7,323 50,297 34,696 16,373,296 Riverside
+ Sacramento Sp., The Sacrament
+ 1,000 90,978 67,806 41,333,337 Sacramento
+ San Benito Sp., St. Benedict
+ 1,388 8,995 8,041 6,499,068 Hollister
+ San Bernardino Sp., St. Bernard
+ 19,947 73,401 56,706 21,392,228 San Bernardino
+ San Diego Sp., St. James
+ 4,278 112,248 61,665 20,807,594 San Diego
+ San Francisco Sp., St. Francis (of Assisi)
+ 47 506,676 416,912 564,070,301 San Francisco
+ San Joaquin Sp., name of a saint
+ 1,396 79,905 50,732 34,740,353 Stockton
+ San Luis Obispo Sp., St. Louis the Bishop
+ 3,310 21,893 19,383 13,680,235 San Luis Obispo
+ San Mateo Sp., St. Matthew
+ 434 36,781 26,585 18,999,564 Redwood City
+ Santa Barbara Sp., St. Barbara
+ 2,632 41,097 27,738 18,849,976 Santa Barbara
+ Santa Clara Sp., name of a saint
+ 1,286 100,588 83,539 61,390,817 San Jose
+ Santa Cruz Sp., Holy Cross
+ 424 26,269 26,240 12,560,071 Santa Cruz
+ Shasta Fr., Chaste, pure
+ 3,876 13,311 18,920 10,902,036 Redding
+ Sierra Sp., Sawtoothed Ridge
+ 960 1,783 4,098 1,844,560 Downieville
+ Siskiyou
+ 5,991 13,545 18,801 10,560,650 Treks
+ Solano Sp., name of a mission
+ 900 40,602 27,559 20,195,481 Fairfield
+ Sonoma Ind., Valley of the Moon
+ 1,620 51,990 48,394 30,380,419 Santa Rosa
+ Stanislaus
+ 1,456 43,557 22,522 12,834,108 Modesto
+ Sutter (named for J. A. Sutter)
+ 622 10,115 6,328 6,621,047 Yuba City
+ Tehama
+ 3,008 12,882 11,401 11,674,562 Red Bluff
+ Trinity
+ 3,282 2,552 3,301 1,651,362 Weaverville
+ Tulare Sp., Reed-covered
+ 4,952 59,032 35,440 17,447,042 Visalia
+ Tuolumne Ind., Stone wigwams
+ 2,208 7,768 9,979 7,089,725 Sonora
+ Ventura Sp.
+ 1,722 28,724 18,347 11,171,219 Ventura
+ Yolo Ind., Rushes
+ 996 17,105 13,926 17,640,436 Woodland
+ Yuba Sp., Uba, wild grapes
+ 636 10,375 10,042 5,898,350 Marysville
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_LIST" id="link2H_LIST"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ List of Governors
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Gaspar de Portola, April, 1769
+ Pedro Fages, July, 1770
+ Fernando Rivera y Moncada, May 25, 1774
+ Felipe de Neve, Feb. 3, 1777
+ Pedro Fages, Sept. 1O, 1782
+ Jose Romeu, April 16, 1791
+ Jose Arrillaga, April 9, 1792
+ Diego de Borica, May 14, 1794
+ Jose Arrillaga, Jan. 16, 1800
+ Jose Arguello, July 24, 1814
+ Pablo de Sola, March 31, 1815
+
+ California became province of the Mexican Empire, April 11, 1822
+
+ Luis Arguello, Nov. 10, 1822, First native Governor.
+
+ March 26, 1825, California became province of Mexican Republic.
+
+ Jose Maria Echeandia, Nov. 8, 1825
+ Manuel Victoria, Jan. 31, 1831
+ Jose Maria Echeandia, Dec. 6, 1831
+ Jose Figueroa, Jan. 15, 1833
+ Jose Castro, Sept. 29, 1835
+ Nicolas Gutierrez, Jan. 2, 1836
+ Mariano Chico, May 3, 1836
+ Nicolas Gutierrez, Sept. 6, 1836
+ Jose Castro, Nov. 5, 1836
+ Juan B. Alvarado, Dec. 7, 1836
+ Manuel Micheltorena, Dec. 31, 1842
+ Pio Pico, Feb. 22, 1845, to Aug. 10, 1846, end of Mexican rule.
+
+ The following were Governors under Military Rule, U.S.A.
+
+ John D. Sloat, July 7, 1846
+ Robert F. Stockton, July 29, 1846
+ John C. Fremont, Military Governor, Jan. 19, 1847, for 50 days
+ Stephen W. Kearny, Military Governor, March to May 31, 1847
+ R. B. Mason, Military Governor, May 31, 1847
+ Persifer F. Smith, Military Governor, Feb. 28, 1849
+ Bennet Riley, April 12, 1849
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Peter H. Burnett, Dec. 20, 1849, First State Governor, Democratic,
+ received 6716 votes, total vote, 12,064.
+ John McDougall, Lieutenant Governor, became Governor Jan. 9, 1851,
+ Democrat
+ John Bigler, Jan. 8, 1852, Democrat
+ John Bigler, Jan. 7, 1854, Democrat
+ John Neely Johnson, Jan. 9, 1856, American Party
+ John B. Weller, Jan. 8, 1858, Democrat
+ Milton S. Latham, Jan. 9, 1860, Democrat
+ John G. Downey (Lieutenant Governor), inaugurated Jan. 14, 1860,
+ Democrat
+ Leland Stanford, Jan. 10, 1862, Republican
+ Frederick F. Low, Dec. 10, 1863, Union Party
+ Henry H. Haight, Dec. 5, 1867, Democrat
+ Newton Booth, Dec. 8, 1871, Republican
+ Romualdo Pacheco (Lieutenant Governor), inaugurated Feb. 27, 1875,
+ Republican (native state Governor)
+ William Irwin, Dec. 8, 1875, Democrat
+ Geo. C. Perkins, Jan. 8, 1880, Republican
+ Geo. Stoneman, Jan. 10, 1883, Democrat
+ Washington Bartlett, Jan. 8, 1887, Democrat
+ Robert W. Waterman (Lieutenant Governor), inaugurated Sept. 13, 1887,
+ Republican
+ H. H. Markham, Jan. 8, 1891, Republican
+ James H. Budd, Jan. II, 1895, Democrat
+ Henry T. Gage, Jan. 4, 1899, Republican
+ Geo. C. Pardee, Jan. 7, 1903, Republican
+ James N. Gillett, Jan. 9, 1907, Republican
+ Hiram W. Johnson, January, 1911, Republican; reelected on Progressive
+ ticket, 1914
+ William D. Stephens (Lieutenant Governor), inaugurated March 15, 1917,
+ Progressive
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Electoral Vote
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 1852, Democratic, 4 votes
+ 1856, Democratic, 4 votes
+ 1860, Republican, 4 votes
+ 1864, Republican, 5 votes
+ 1868, Republican, 5 votes
+ 1872, Republican, 6 votes
+ 1876, Republican, 6 votes
+ 1880 Republican, 1 vote
+ Democratic, 5 votes
+ 1884, Republican, 8 votes
+ 1888, Republican, 8 votes
+ 1892, Republican, 1 vote
+ Democratic, 8 votes
+ 1896, Republican, 8 votes
+ Democratic, People&rsquo;s and Silver parties, 1 vote
+ 1900, Republican, 9 votes
+ 1904, Republican, 9 votes
+ 1908, Republican, to votes
+ 1912, Democratic, 2 votes
+ Progressive, 11 votes
+ 1916, Democratic, 13 votes
+ 1920, Republican, 13 votes
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_BIBL" id="link2H_BIBL"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Bibliography
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Bancroft&mdash;&ldquo;History of California,&rdquo; vols. I, II, Ill, IV, V, VI, VII.
+ Bancroft&mdash;&ldquo;California Pastoral.&rdquo;
+ Bancroft&mdash;&ldquo;History of North Mexican States.&rdquo;
+ Hittell&mdash;&ldquo;History of California,&rdquo; vols. I, II, III, IV.
+ Royce&mdash;&ldquo;History of California.&rdquo;
+ Blackmar&mdash;&ldquo;Spanish Institutions of the Southwest.&rdquo;
+ Montalvo&mdash;&ldquo;Sergas of Esplandian.&rdquo; Translator, E. E. Hale, Atlantic
+ Monthly, Vol. XIII, p. 265.
+ Vancouver&mdash;&ldquo;Voyage of Discovery to the Pacific Ocean,&rdquo; vol. III.
+ Geronimo Boscano&mdash;&ldquo;Chinigchinich,&rdquo; &ldquo;History of Mission Indians.&rdquo;
+ Translator,
+ Alfred Robinson&mdash;&ldquo;Life in California.&rdquo;
+ Francisco Palou&mdash;&ldquo;Life of Fray Junipero Serra.&rdquo;
+ Junipero Serra&mdash;&ldquo;Diary.&rdquo; Translated in magazine Out West, March-July,
+ 1902.
+ Hakluyt&mdash;&ldquo;Drake&rsquo;s Voyages.&rdquo;
+ Vanegas&mdash;&ldquo;History of California.&rdquo;
+ Davis&mdash;&ldquo;Sixty Years in California.&rdquo;
+ Colton&mdash;&ldquo;Three Years in California.&rdquo;
+ Fremont&mdash;&ldquo;Memoirs.&rdquo;
+ Sherman&mdash;&ldquo;Memoirs.&rdquo; Century Magazine, vols. 41-42.
+ Stoddard&mdash;&ldquo;In the Footsteps of the Padres.&rdquo;
+ Lummis&mdash;&ldquo;The Right Hand of the Continent.&rdquo; Series, Out West Magazine,
+ 1903.
+ Lummis&mdash;&rdquo; Spanish Pioneers.&rdquo;
+ Jackson&mdash;&ldquo;A Century of Dishonor.&rdquo;
+ Jackson&mdash;&ldquo;Ramona.&rdquo;
+ California Book of Louisiana Purchase Exposition.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Index
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Abalone, 22
+ Acapulco, 68
+ Admission to the Union, 179-182
+ Adobe, 93
+ Alameda, 182
+ Alaska, 214
+ Alba, 110
+ Alcalde, 104, 108, 173, 174
+ Alfalfa, 244
+ Afileria, 209
+ Alta, 86
+ Alvarado, 125, 133, 134, 136
+ American government of California, 173-179
+ American River, 150
+ Americans in California, 129, 134, 140-146, 149
+ Anaheim, settled, 212
+ Anian, Strait of, 53, 62
+ Apricots, 256
+ Area, 289
+ Arguello, Captain Lulls, 128, 131, 132
+ Arguello family, 145
+ Arroyo Seco, 97, 146
+ Ascension, Padre, 8, 670
+ Atole, 94
+ Avalon, 68
+ Ayala, Lieutenant, 88
+ Bahia, 249
+ Bailey, W. F., quoted, 185
+ Bananas, 257
+ Bancroft, quoted, 206
+ Bandini, aids Americans, 145
+ Bandini, Dona Arcadia, quoted, 137
+ Bandini, Mrs., makes flag, 146
+ Barley, 255
+ Bautista, 134
+ Bear Flag Republic, 142
+ Beets, 260
+ Belmont Military Academy, 287
+ Benitite, 277
+ Benton, Senator, 182, 195
+ Berkeley, State University at, 283
+ Bidwell, quoted, 166
+ Bolero, 116
+ Bonito, 22
+ Borax, 276
+ British, visit California, 130
+ Broderick, David C., 190, 191
+ Buffalo Bill, 186
+ Burbank, Luther, 262-266
+ Burnett, Peter, 181
+ Butte County, oranges in, 247
+ Cable, Pacific, 225
+ Cabo de Pinos, 55
+ Cabrillo, Juan Rodriguez, 48-56, 72
+ Cacafuegos, 60
+ Cactus, 265
+ Cahuenga, treaty of, 146, 148
+ Calaveras grove, 235
+ Calhoun, 179
+ California, area of, 289
+ California, climate of, 13-18
+ California, geography of, 13,14
+ California, name, origin of, 11, 12
+ California Column, 198
+ California Lancers, 193
+ Californite, 276
+ Camisa, 116
+ Canneries, 257, 260, 261
+ Cape Mendocino, 67
+ Capitol, 204
+ Carmelo River, 71, 87
+ Carmenon, Sebastin, explorations of, 67
+ Carne seco, 101
+ Carquinez, Strait of, 14
+ Carreta, 116, 118, 213
+ Carrillo, in convention, 177
+ Castillo, Domingo, map of, 12
+ Castro, General, 139, 140, 142
+ Cattle raising, 108, 113
+ Celery, 256
+ Central Pacific Railroad, 197-201
+ Chagres, Panama, 163
+ Chamisso, Albert von, 182
+ Chapman, 125, 126
+ Cherries, 262
+ China, war with Japan, 223
+ Chinese, in California, 202, 203
+ Chinese, work on railroad, 198
+ Chinigchinich, 25, 33-36, 45, 47
+ Chippa, 43-45
+ Cholos, 138
+ Cigaritos, 109
+ Citron, 246, 256
+ Civil War, 180, 189-194
+ Clay, Henry, 178
+ Cleeta, 19-29, 45-47
+ Climate, 13-18
+ Club wheat, 242
+ Cody, Mr., 186
+ Coloma, mill near, 150
+ Columbia, and Panama Canal, 222
+ Colony days, 211-214
+ Colton, Rev. Walter, 173, 174
+ Colton, quoted, 203
+ Comandante, 136
+ Comstock mine, 271
+ Concepcion de Arguello, 130, 131
+ Conquest of California, 139-146
+ Constitution of 1849, 178
+ Constitution of 1879, 203
+ Constitutional Convention of 1849, 177
+ Cooper, Ellwood, 262
+ Copper mining, 276
+ Corn, 244
+ Coronel, Don Ignacio, school of, 280
+ Cortez, Hernando, 12, 53, 74
+ Cotopacnic, 46
+ Counties, 290, 291
+ Cradle, used in mining, 158
+ Crespi, Juan, 75, 100
+ Crocker, Charles, 197-199
+ Cuatrito, 117
+ Cuchuma, 22, 26, 32, 35, 45
+ Cushiony scale, 250
+ Day, Sherman, 284
+ Debris, 268
+ Del Valle, Reginaldo, 288
+ Dewey, Commodore, in Spanish war, 217
+ Dios, 110
+ Dolores mission, 88
+ Donner party, 167
+ Dragontea, 57
+ Drake, Sir Francis, 57-66, 12, 73
+ Drakes Bay, 63
+ Dress of early Californians, 115, 116
+ Dried fruits, 260
+ Drift mining, 269
+ Dulce, 258.
+ Earthquake (1906), 225-228
+ El Camino Real, 95
+ El Refugio, 125
+ Empire mine, 274
+ England, explorations, 59-66
+ Escuela, 279
+ Explorations, 48-73, 81-83
+ Farallones, 81
+ Farmer&rsquo;s Institute, 285
+ Ferrelo, 56, 57, 85
+ Festivals, 126
+ Fiesta, 126
+ Figs, 260
+ Flores, General, 146
+ Flour trade, 243
+ Forests, 229-236
+ Forty-niners, 156, 172
+ Fremont, Captain, 139-143, 146
+ Fremont, dispute with Kearny, 148, 149
+ Fremont, elected senator, 178
+ Fremont, explorations, 139, 107, 195
+ Fremont, on land question, 182
+ French, visit California, 129
+ Frijoles, 98
+ Fruit, 246-263
+ Fruit, canned, 257, 260
+ Fruit, crystallized, 261
+ Fruit, dried, 260
+ Fruit, preserved, 258
+ Fugitive Slave Law, 190
+ Galli, Francisco, 66
+ Galvez, Jose de, 75-78, 84, 87
+ Gems, 276
+ Gente de razon, 124
+ Gentiles, 80
+ Gesnip, 19-33, 38-47
+ Gicamas, 70
+ Gigantea, 234
+ Gillespie, 140, 143, 146
+ Gold, discovered, 147, 151, 155
+ Gold, early mining, 154-160
+ Gold, modern mines, 267-271, 274
+ Golden Hind, ship, 66
+ Governors, list of, 292
+ Graham, 133, 134
+ Grain, 238-245
+ Grape fruit, 252
+ Grapes, 254, 258-260
+ Guam, 225
+ Gwin, in convention, 177
+ Gwin, senator, 178, 189, 190, 281
+ Hague, 220, 221
+ Harte, Bret, 180, 200
+ Harvester, 240
+ Hawaii, 218-220, 225
+ Hearst, Mrs. Phoebe, 283, 285
+ Hecox, Mrs., quoted, 171
+ Hittell, quoted, 205
+ Hopkins, Mark, 197
+ Huntington, Collis P., 197, 198
+ Huntington, H. E., 239
+ Hydraulic mining, 160, 268, 269
+ Ide, 141.
+ Immigration after 1848, 156, 161-172
+ Indian Bar, 184
+ Indians, aborigines, 19-47, 54, 63, 64
+ Indians, baskets, 43-45
+ Indians, boats, 39
+ Indians, clothing, 21, 31, 32, 33, 43, 63
+ Indians, food, 28, 29, 38, 42, 45-47
+ Indians, houses, 26
+ Indians, hunting, 23-25, 42, 43
+ Indians, myths, 80, 45
+ Indians, worship, 33-36
+ Indians in Santa Catalina, 70
+ Indians, mission, 91-105, 127
+ Indians, on ranches, 110-112
+ Indians, recent history, 206-208
+ Irrigation, 245, 252-255
+ Isadora, 138
+ Isbell, Mrs. Oliver Mann, 280
+ Jacal, 26
+ Japan, 223-225
+ Jesuits in New Spain, 76
+ Jiminez, 53
+ Jones, Commodore, 136, 137
+ Jones, W. C., 182
+ Jordan, President, 287
+ Juan, 48, 51, 52, 56
+ Judah, Theodore D., 196-198.
+ Kahhoom, 43-45
+ Kearny, General Stephen, 145, 148, 149
+ Kern River, electric power from, 278
+ Kindergartens, 282
+ King, Thomas Starr, 192
+ Klamath, 37, 38
+ Korea, 223
+ Kotzebue, Otto von, 132
+ Kunzite, 276
+ Ladybird, 250
+ La Fiesta, 126
+ Laguna rancho, battle of, 146
+ Laguna rancho, sheep on, 210
+ Land question, 182, 183
+ La Perouse, 129
+ La Posesion, 55
+ La Purisima mission, 89
+ Larkin, consul, 136, 137,139, 284
+ Leland Stanford Junior University, 285-287
+ Lemons, 245, 251
+ Lick Observatory, 284
+ Lollah, 30
+ Lopez, Juan, 147
+ Lorne, Marquis of, quoted, 262
+ Los Angeles, beginnings of, 107, 108.
+ Los Angeles, captured by Americans, 143
+ Los Angeles, church built by Chapman, 125
+ Los Angeles, during Civil War, 194
+ Los Angeles, in colony days, 213
+ Los Angeles, Kern River power, 278
+ Los Angeles, old palms in, 144
+ Los Angeles, State Normal School, 283
+ Lumber, 229-236
+ Lummis. Charles F., author, 249
+ Macana, 22, 27, 28, 31, 32, 37, 38, 41, 42, 44, 46
+ Machado, Agustin, 122
+ McKinley, President, 218, 220
+ Maestro, 113
+ Mahan, Captain, quoted, 220
+ Malaga, 256
+ Manchuria, 223
+ Mandarin orange, 248
+ Manila, cable to, 225
+ Manila, trade, 67, 74, 77
+ Manila Bay, battle, 217
+ Marin County, 226
+ Mariposa grove, 234
+ Marshall, James, 150-153
+ Mason, Colonel, 149, 154
+ Mayor domo, 110
+ Mendocino, Cape, 67
+ Mendoza, 72
+ Merced River, 160. 111
+ Mexican government of California, 124
+ Mexico, dispute over Plus Fund, 221
+ Mexico, revolt against Spain, 122, 124
+ Mexico, war with the United States, 134-135, 140, 174
+ Micheltorena, Governor, 137
+ Millay, 48
+ Mills College, 287
+ Mines, modern, 267-277
+ Missions, 76-105
+ Missions, aid government, 123
+ Missions, irrigation, 252
+ Missions, orchards, 257, 258
+ Missions, schools at, 279
+ Missions, secularized, 103-105, 126
+ Missions, wheat raising, 237-239
+ Modocs, 208
+ Monterey, attacked by pirate, 125
+ Monterey, captured by Jones, 186, 137
+ Monterey, captured by Sloat, 143
+ Monterey, mission founded at, 85
+ Monterey, presidio of, 87
+ Monterey Bay, discovered, 55, 71
+ Monterey Bay, Portola at, 81
+ Mountains, 18-16
+ Muchachas, 110, 112
+ Muchchos, 110
+ Murphy, Virginia Reed, quoted, 168
+ Muscat grape, 258
+ Mussel Slough District, 201
+ Nahal, 31
+ Nakin, 29, 47
+ Native Sons of the Golden West, 205
+ Navel orange, 248-250
+ Nevada City, 274
+ Neve, Felipe de, 107
+ New Albion, 64
+ New Almaden, quicksilver mines, 276
+ Nihie, 35, 36
+ No-fence law, 211
+ Nopal, 29, 32-36, 40, 41, 43
+ Normal schools, 283
+ Nuts, 257, 261, 262
+ Oats, 255
+ Ojai, 287
+ Olives, 246, 255, 261
+ Ollas, 22, 26, 85
+ Oranges, 246-254
+ Oregon, voyage of the, 216, 217
+ Oregon Country, 135
+ Ortega, discovers San Francisco bay, 82, 83
+ Ortega, rancho attacked, 125
+ Otter hunting, 132, 183
+ Outdoor life, 17, 18
+ Outlaws, 214
+ Pacheco, Governor, 205
+ Pacific cable, 225
+ Pacific Ocean, importance of, 18, 217
+ Padres, 51, See Missions
+ Pala, chapel, 89
+ Palou, Francisco, 75, 79, 88, 100
+ Panama Canal, 221
+ Panocha, 120
+ Papas pequenos, 70
+ Pasadena, settled, 212
+ Pastorel, 97
+ Patio, 94
+ Patron, 111
+ Patrona, 110, 112
+ Payuchi, 25-47
+ Pepe, 49, 50
+ Pesos, 60
+ Petroleum, 276
+ Peyri, 95, 96
+ Philippine trade, 58, 71-78, 201
+ Philippines, 217, 218
+ Pico, General Andres, 145, 146, 148
+ Pinos, Point, 55, 71, 80, 81
+ Pius Fund, 76, 220
+ Placer mines, 347, 158, 268
+ Plaza, 107
+ Pocket, in placer mining, 180
+ Pomato, 265
+ Pomelo, 252
+ Pony express, 185-188
+ Port Costa, wheat grader at, 243
+ Portola, Captain, 77-80, 88-85
+ Prairie schooner, 170
+ Preserved fruit, 258
+ Presidios, 85, 108
+ Prunes, 262, 266
+ Pueblos, 106-108
+ Pumpkin, preserved, 258
+ Quartz mining, 270
+ Quicksilver, 276
+ Railroad, 196-201, 205, 206
+ Rainfall, 14, 16
+ Raisins, 250, 258-260
+ Ramirez, 177
+ Ranch life, 109-127
+ Rancheros, 121, 122, 183
+ Ranches, modern, 262
+ Ranchos, 109
+ Rebosa, 118
+ Reyes, Point, 67, 81-88
+ Rezanof, Count, 130, 181
+ Rhubarb, 205
+ Riley, Governor, 176
+ Riverside, founded, 212
+ Riverside, oranges at, 247, 249, 250
+ Robinson, Alfred, quoted, 257
+ Rodeo, 113, 114
+ Roosevelt, 222, 224, 225
+ Ross, Fort, 131, 133
+ Routes to California, 101-172
+ Rurik, ship, 182
+ Russia, sells Alaska, 215
+ Russia, war with Japan, 224
+ Russians in California, 131-133
+ Sacramento, founded, 133
+ Sacramento, pony express at, 186
+ Sacramento, railroad begun, 198
+ Sacramento valley, 239, 269
+ St. John de Anton, 61
+ St. Michael orange, 248
+ Sal, Point, 130
+ Salinas River, 189
+ San Agustin, 67
+ San Antonio mission, 87
+ San Antonio, ship, 79, 83-85
+ San Benito County, benitite in, 277
+ San Bernardino County, gems in, 276
+ San Bruno, 182
+ San Buenaventura mission, 89, 99
+ San Buenaventura mission, fruit trees, 246, 257
+ San Carlos, ship, 79, 88, 287
+ San Carlos de Borromeo mission, 85, 86, 100, 120
+ San Diego, captured by Americans, 143-146
+ San Diego Bay, discovered, 50, 68
+ San Diego mission, 80, 92
+ San Diego mission, fruit trees, 248
+ San Diego mission, Indian revolt, 102
+ San Diego mission, wheat, 287
+ San Diego presidio, 108
+ San Diego, ship, 68
+ San Fernando mines, 148
+ San Fernando mission, 89,90
+ San Fernando mission, brandy, 257
+ San Fernando mission, fruit trees, 246
+ San Francisco, city named, 153
+ San Francisco, disorder in (Vigilantes), 184
+ San Francisco, during Civil War, 192, 198
+ San Francisco, earthquake and fire, 226-228
+ San Francisco, gold excitement, 158, 154
+ San Francisco, growth after 1848, 156
+ San Francisco, in war of 1898, 218
+ San Francisco, kindergartens, 282
+ San Francisco, pony express at, 186
+ San Francisco, Sutro baths, etc., 273, 274
+ San Francisco Bay, discovered, 88, 87, 88
+ San Francisco mission, 87, 88
+ San Francisco presidio, 108
+ San Gabriel mission, 87,90
+ San Gabriel mission, Chapman at, 125, 120
+ San Gabriel mission, mill at, 239
+ San Gabriel mission, orchards, 246, 257
+ San Gabriel mission, wheat, 237
+ San Gabriel River, battle of, 146
+ San Joaquin Valley, 239, 247, 269
+ San Jose, beginnings of, 107
+ San Jose, early school at, 280
+ San Jose, earthquake, 226
+ San Jose mission, 89, 121
+ San Jose mission, Indian revolt, 102
+ San Jose, ship, 83
+ San Juan Bautista mission, 89
+ San Juan Capistrano mission, 89, 98
+ San Juan Capistrano mission, attacked by pirate, 125
+ San Luis Obispo mission, 87
+ San Luis Obispo Polytechnic School, 282
+ San Luis Rey mission, 89, 95
+ San Mateo, 182
+ San Miguel, Cabrillo at, 50, 55-57
+ San Miguel mission, 89, 123
+ San Pasqual, battle, 145, 146
+ San Pedro, Bay-of, discovered, 54, 71
+ San Rafael mission, 89
+ San Salvador, 53
+ San Tomas, ship, 68, 71, 72
+ Sanchez, Padre, 246
+ Sanitary Commission, 192
+ Santa Barbara mission, 89
+ Santa Barbara mission, fruit trees, 246
+ Santa Barbara presidio, 108
+ Santa Catalina, 22
+ Santa Catalina, discovered, 53, 68
+ Santa Clara College, 288
+ Santa Clara mission, 89
+ Santa Clara mission, Indian revolt, 102
+ Santa Clara mission, orchards, 257
+ Santa Clara mission, school at, 280
+ Santa Cruz, town founded, 107
+ Santa Cruz mission, 80
+ Santa Fe, 78
+ Santa Inez mission, 89
+ Santa Inez mission, fruit trees, 246
+ Santa Rosa, 226, 264, 266
+ Saunders, and navel oranges, 249
+ Scale, orange, 250, 251
+ School taxes, 282
+ Schools, early, 113, 279-281
+ Schools, modern, 281-288
+ Sempervirens, 230, 234
+ Senor, 56, 133
+ Senora, 213
+ Senorita, 213
+ Sequoias, 230-235
+ Sequoya League, 208
+ Serra, Junipero, 75-80, 83-88, 102
+ Serra, Junipero, death of, 100
+ Serra, Junipero, work of, 91, 92
+ Seward, 179, 214, 215
+ Shasta, oranges in, 247
+ Shasta, Mount, 275
+ Sheep Industry, 209-211
+ Sherman, Wm. T., 149, 151, 164
+ &ldquo;Shirley,&rdquo; quoted, 184
+ Sholoc, 22-82, 85, 36, 89, 46, 47
+ Shumeh, 31
+ Sierra Nevada, 14, 16, 56, 100, 282
+ Slavery struggle, 175-179, 190
+ Sloat, Commodore, 142, 148
+ Soil, 16, 18
+ Solano mission, 89
+ Soledad mission, 89
+ Sombrero, 111
+ Sonoma, captured, 141
+ South Sea, 58
+ Southern Pacific Railroad, 201,290
+ Spain, colonies, 75, 77
+ Spain, colonies, explorations, 48-57, 66-73, 81-83
+ Spain, colonies, revolt against, 122, 124
+ Spain, colonies, trade laws, 119-122
+ Spanish government of California, 77, 122
+ Spanish-American War, 215-219
+ Stampede of 1849, 161
+ Stanford, Leland, gifts for education, 283, 286
+ Stanford, Leland, governor, 193
+ Stanford, Leland, railroad work, 197-200
+ Stanford, Mrs. Leland, 283, 286
+ Stanford, Thomas Weldon, 287
+ Stanford University, 285-287
+ Steamboat, first in California, 155
+ Stearns, Don Abel, 137, 147, 148
+ Stock raising, 108, 113
+ Stockton, Commodore, 143, 146, 148
+ Stockton, grain center, 242
+ Sugar, 260
+ Sultana grape, 239
+ Sutro, Adolph, 271-274
+ Sutro baths, 273, 274
+ Sutter, Captain John, 133, 150-152
+ Sutter&rsquo;s Fort, 133
+ Sutter&rsquo;s mill, 150, 153
+ Tamales, 209
+ Tangerine orange, 248
+ Telegraph, 195
+ Texas, 134, 135
+ Thatcher School, 287
+ Throop Polytechnic School, 287
+ Tibbetta, Mrs., and navel oranges, 249
+ Titas, 45
+ Tomales, 226
+ Tortilla, 93,111, 244
+ Trade, early, 119-122
+ Tres Re yes, ship, 68, 82, 83
+ Trist, 175
+ Tsuwish, 43, 45
+ Tuscon, 206
+ Tulare County, products, 247, 276
+ Tules, 30, 31, 35, 39, 40
+ Tuolumne grove, 284
+ Union Pacific Railroad, 197-201
+ United States, conquers California, 134-146
+ University of California, 283-285
+ Valencia late orange, 248
+ Vallejo, General, 125
+ Vallejo, General, captured, 141
+ Vallejo, General, in convention, 177
+ Vallejo, General, loses land, 183
+ Vallejo, General, quoted, 118, 148
+ Vallejo, Senorita Guadalupe, quoted 118, 121, 183, 257
+ Vancouver, Captain, 130
+ Vancouver, Captain, quoted, 257
+ Vanquech, 35
+ Vaquero, 111
+ Vasques, 214
+ Vegetables, 256, 257, 261
+ Ventura, Cabrillo at, 54
+ Vera Cruz, 74, 75
+ Vigilantes, 184, 185
+ Vizcaino, Don Sebastian, explorations of, 68-73
+ Wash-day expedition, 118
+ Webster, Daniel, 176, 179
+ Westminster, settled, 212
+ Wheat, 237-245, 255
+ Wheeler, Benjamin Ide, 284
+ White, Stephen M., 288
+ Whitman, Walt, quoted, 219
+ Wiggin, Kate Douglas, 282
+ Willey, Rev. Samuel, 284
+ Wolfskill grove, 246
+ Yerba Buena, 152
+ Yosemite, 238
+ Zanja, 94
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg&rsquo;s History of California, by Helen Elliott Bandini
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
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