Edward Coker was one of a party of twenty-one men who left
their wagons, being impatient of the slow progress made by the
ox train, and organized a pack train in which they were
themselves the burden carriers. They discarded everything not
absolutely necessary to sustain life, packed all their
provisions into knapsacks, bravely shouldered them and started
off on foot from the desert to reach California by the
shortest way.
Among those whom Mr. Coker can recollect are Capt. Nat.
Ward, Jim Woods, Jim Martin of Missouri, John D. Martin of
Texas, "Old Francis," a French Canadian, Fred Carr,
Negro "Joe" and some others from Coffeeville, Miss.,
with others from other states.
Mr. Coker related his experience to the Author somewhat as
follows:—
One other of the party was a colored man who joined us at
the camp when we left the families, he being the only
remaining member of a small party who had followed our wagon
tracks after we had tried to proceed south. This party was
made up of a Mr. Culverwell who had formerly been a writer in
a Government office at Washington, D.C., a man named Fish
claiming to be a relative of Hamilton Fish of New York, and
another man whose name I never knew. He, poor fellow, arrived
at our camp in a starving condition and died before our
departure. The other two unfortunates ones died on the desert,
and the colored man reported that he simply covered their
remains with their blankets.
I well remember that last night in camp before we started
with our knapsacks and left the families, for it was plain the
women and children must go very slow, and we felt we could go
over rougher and shorter roads on foot and get through sooner
by going straight across the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Our
condition was certainly appalling. We were without water, all
on the verge of starvation, and the three poor cattle which
yet remained alive were objects of pity. It seemed almost a
crime to kill the poor beasts, so little real food was there
left on their skeleton frames. They had been so faithful and
had plodded along when there seemed no hope for them. They
might still serve to keep the party from starvation.
It was at this camp that Mr. Ischam died. The night before
our departure he came wandering into camp and presented such
an awful appearance, simply a living skeleton of a once grand
and powerful man. He must have suffered untold agony as he
struggled on to overtake the party, starving and alone, with
the knowledge that two of his companions had perished
miserably of starvation in that unknown wilderness of rocks
and alkali.
Our journey on foot through the mountains was full of
adventure and suffering. On our arrival at the shores of
Owen's Lake not a man of the party had a mouthful of food left
in his pack, and to add to our difficulties we had several
encounters with the hostile Indians. There was a fearful snow
storm falling at Owen's Lake on the evening that we arrived
there, and we could make no fire. The Indians gathered around
us and we did not know exactly what to make of them, nor could
we determine whether their intentions were good or bad. We
examined the lake and determined to try to ford it, and thus
set out by the light of the moon that occasionally peeped out
from behind the clouds, while the red devils stood howling on
the shore.
The following morning we found what was then known as the
Fremont Trail, and by the advice of some friendly Indians who
came into our camp, we kept the "big trail" for
three days and came to Walker's Pass. While on this trail we
were followed at night by a number of wild Indians, but we
prudently avoided any collisions with them and kept moving on.
Going on through the pass we followed the right hand branch of
the trail, the left hand branch leading more to the south and
across a wide plain. We soon came to a fair-sized stream, now
known to be the south fork of the Kern River, which we
followed until we came to its junction with a larger river,
the two making the Kern River. Here we were taken across by
some friendly Indians who left the Missions farther west
during the Mexican war and took to their own village located
at the foot of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. At this village we
were on exhibition for several hours with an audience of five
hundred people or more, of the red men, and on the following
morning we commenced the ascent of the mountains again, the
Indians furnishing us with a guide in the person of an old
Pi-Ute. He brought us over the range, through the snow and
over the bleak ridges, in the month of December, 1849, and we
made our first camp at an Indian village in Tulare Valley, a
few miles south of where Porterville now stands.
From this Indian village we walked on until we arrived at
the present site of Millerton on the south bank of the San
Joaquin River. Our sufferings were terrible from hunger, cold,
and wet, for the rains were almost continual at this
elevation, and we had been forced several times to swim. The
sudden change from the dried-up desert to a rainy region was
pretty severe on us. On our arrival at the San Joaquin River
we found a camp of wealthy Mexicans who gave us a small amount
of food, and seemed to want us to pass on that they might be
rid of us. I can well believe that a company of twenty-one
starving men was the cause of some disquietude to them. They
gave us some hides taken from some of the cattle they had
recently slain, and from these we constructed a boat and ferry
rope in which we crossed the river, and then continued our
journey to the mining camp on Aqua Frio, in Mariposa
county.
It is very strange to think that since that time I have
never met a single man of that party of twenty-one. I had kept
quite full notes of the whole trip from the state of New York
to the mines, and including my early mining experience up to
the year 1851. Unfortunately this manuscript was burned at the
Russ House fire in Fresno, where I also lost many personal
effects."
In the year 1892 Mr. Coker was living in Fresno, or near
that city, in fairly comfortable health, and it is to be hoped
that the evening of his days, to which all the old pioneers
are rapidly approaching, may be to him all that his brightest
hopes pictured.
Having followed the various little parties into which the
great train had resolved itself when it began to feel the
pressure of suffering and trouble which came with contact with
the desert, followed them in their various ways till they came
through to the Pacific Slope, the travels and experiences of
the Author are again resumed.
It will be remembered that he had rested at Los Angeles,
working for Mr. Brier who had temporarily turned boarding
house keeper, and finally made arrangements with some drovers
to assist in taking a small stock of horses north to the
mines. His story is thus continued:—
We followed the wagon road which the companies that had
gone on before had made, and got along very well. At night I
acted independently—staked out my mule and ate my meal
of dried meat and crackers—then joined the others around
a large fire, and all seemed to enjoy the company. After a few
days the two men who owned the horses proposed to me to let my
mule carry the provisions, and they wanted me to ride one of
their horses that was not carrying a pack, as they said it
would keep it more gentle to ride it.
To please the old gentleman from Sacramento I agreed to the
proposition, for I thought perhaps by being accommodating I
could get along more pleasantly.
Thus we traveled on, over rolling hills covered with grass
and wild flowers, and I was much pleased with all that I could
see. For the first two days we did not pass a house, which
shows how thinly settled the country was. Cattle were often
seen, and sometimes horses, but people were very scarce. In
time we went down a long, steep hill, then across a wide
valley that supported a rank growth of vegetation, and came to
a Mission called San Buena Ventura (good luck.) Here the men
seemed scarce, but Indians and dogs plenty. The houses were of
the same sort as at Los Angeles, except the church, all made
of dried mud, and never more than one story high.
As we journeyed along we came to the sea shore, the
grandest sight in the world to me, for I had never before seen
the ocean. What a wide piece of water it was! Far out I could
see small waves coming toward the shore, and the nearer they
came the faster they seemed to rush and at last turned into
great rollers and breakers which dashed upon the rocks or
washed far up the sandy shore with a force that made the
ground tremble. There was no wind and I could not see what it
could be that so strangely agitated the water. Here the waves
kept coming, one after another, with as much regularity as the
slow strokes of a clock. This was the first puzzle the great
sea propounded to me, and there under the clear blue sky and
soft air I studied over the ceaseless, restless motion and the
great power that was always beating on the shore. I tasted the
water and found it exceedingly salt, and I did not see how
anything could live in it and not become in the condition of
pickled pork or fish. Where was the salt to make this mighty
brine pond, and why did it keep so when the great rivers kept
pouring in their torrents of fresh waters? I did not
understand, and these are some of the thoughts that came to
the boy who had been raised upon the prairie, and to whom the
great ocean was indeed an unknown sea.
We followed along the road and in time came to another
village and Mission called Santa Barbara. The village was near
the shore, and the church farther back upon an elevated piece
of ground near the foot of the mountain, overlooking the town
and sea and much of the country to the south, west and east.
The mountain was high and rough, and a point ran out into the
sea making a sort of harbor. This town was built much as the
others had been except perhaps the Mission which seemed
better. The roofs were as flat as the floors and were covered
with a sort of tar which made them water-proof. The material
of the houses was sun-dried bricks, two feet long by one foot
wide and four to six inches thick. There was no lime in the
mortar of this mason work, and the openings in the walls had
iron bars across them instead of sash and glass. Dried hides
were spread upon the floors, and there was a large earthen jar
for water, but not a table, bedstead or chair could be seen in
the rooms we saw. A man came along, rode right in at the door,
turned around and rode out again. The floor was so hard that
the horse's feet made no impression on it. Very few men, quite
a number of Indians, more women, and a still larger quantity
of dogs made up the inhabitants.
Leaving here the road led back from the sea shore and over
quite a level table land, covered with a big growth of grass
and some timber, and then down to the sandy shore again where
the mountain comes so close that we were crowded down to the
very water's edge. Here the never-tiring waves were still
following each other to the shore and dashing themselves to
pieces with such a noise that I felt awed to silence. What a
strange difference in two parts of the earth so little
distance from each other! Here was a waste of waters, there
was a waste of sands that may some time have been the bottom
of just such a dashing, rolling sea as this. And here, between
the two, was a fertile region covered with trees, grass and
flowers, and watered with brooks of fresh, sweet water.
Paradise and Desolation! They surely were not far apart. Here
I saw some of the queer things that wash on shore, for we
camped close to the beach.
It was a circumstance of great interest to me to see the
sun slowly go down into the great ocean. Slowly and steadily
it went, getting redder and redder as it went down, then it
just touched the distant water and the waves dashed over more
and more of its face till all was covered. Were it not for the
strong, bright rays that still shot up across the sky one
might think it was drowned forever, but in the morning it came
up over the mountain top, having apparently made half the
circuit of the globe.
Soon after this the road left the shore and turned into the
mountains. Another Mission was on this road, Santa Ynez,
situated in a beautiful place but apparently in decay, for the
men had gone to the mines, leaving the Indians, women, and
dogs as in other places. San Luis Obispo was another Mission
similarly inhabited, but the surroundings did not seem so
pleasant as those we had seen before, although it bore signs
that considerable had been done. From here our road bore still
more north and we had a long mountain to work over, very
rocky, and in some places barren.
San Miguel was a Mission situated on the bank of a dry
stream that evidently had seen plenty of water earlier in the
season. The surrounding country was covered with scattering
timber. Soledad was another place where there were some
improvements, located on a small river, but nearly deserted
like the other places. Prospects at the gold mines were so
favorable that every man felt an irresistible desire to enrich
himself, and so they left their families at the Missions and
in the towns and rushed off to the mines. Nearly all of them
expected to return by winter.
I think I must stop right here and tell about the
California carriages of which I had seen several at Los
Angeles and at the Missions along our road. The first time I
saw one it was a great curiosity, I assure you. The wheels
were cut off the end of a sycamore log a little over two feet
in diameter and each section about a foot long. The axle was a
piece of wood eight inches square with a tongue fastened to it
long enough to be used with a yoke of oxen, and the ends of
the axle were roughly rounded, leaving something of a
shoulder. The wheels were retained in place by a big
lynch-pin. On the axle and tongue was a strong frame of square
hewed timbers answering for bed pieces, and the bottom was of
raw-hide tightly stretched, which covered the whole frame.
Tall stakes at each corner of the frame held up an awning in
hot weather. The yoke was fastened to the horns of the oxen by
strong, narrow strips of raw-hide, and the tongue was fastened
to the yoke in the same way. The driver was generally an
Indian, armed with a small pole six or eight feet long, who
marched on before, the oxen following after. I saw many a
wagon like this, the platform well filled up with women and
children, and a pack of dogs following along behind, slowly
rolling over the country, and this is the way they traveled
when they went visiting friends who lived a few miles in the
country. Sometimes the wheels gave perfectly agonizing shrieks
as they revolved, and when they made so much noise that their
strong Spanish nerves could stand it no longer, if there was
any green grass to be found the drivers would crowd in a
quantity around the axle, and there was generally room for a
good lot of it, to answer for a lubricator.
We passed on from Soledad and shortly rose into the table
land we had seen for some time before us. From here we could
look north for a long way with no hill or mountain in sight;
but our road led along on the east side of this treeless
plain, so thickly covered with grass that we recalled some of
the old tales of the grassy plains. We passed a landholder's
house on the road, then crossed a range of low mountains and
came to the Mission of San Juan (St. John) situated near the
foot-hills, overlooking a level, rich appearing extent of
valley land with a big vegetable growth all over it; in some
places wild mustard which stood thickly and was from four to
ten feet high. I thought what a splendid place it would be for
the Yankees who are fond of greens.
This was the first place since we left Los Angeles where we
could buy any kind of breadstuff, and we were here enabled to
get a change of diet, including greens. This seemed to be one
end or side of another valley, and as we went along it seemed
to widen away to the east; but our course was to the north,
and we followed the road. The architecture of all the
buildings except the churches was all the same, being built of
the sun dried adobes or bricks made by mixing up a clay mud
with tough grass and letting it get dry and hard. We saw the
same kind of roof material as before, a sort of mineral tar
which I supposed they must find somewhere about.
I could imagine why the houses were built in this way, for
when the Jesuit missionaries first came in they found the
country occupied by Indians who used their arrows to good
effect, as they were jealous of all outside occupation. The
early settlers evidently made the walls of their dwellings
thick and strong enough to resist all kinds of weapons used by
Indians. They could not set fire to them for they were fire
proof and arrow proof, and the hostile Indian could dance on
the roof without being able to get in or do any injury. Thus
the poor Indian was fairly beat and eventually became a better
Indian.
The Indians of what is now Nevada and Arizona used to come
over into these rich valleys and clandestinely capture a band
of a hundred or more head of cattle or horses and make their
escape. They were often followed by the herders, but if they
did not overtake the thieves before they got into the deep
cañons of the mountains, they would usually turn back
and let them go rather than be led into ambush in some strange
narrow place where escape would be impossible and they might
be filled with arrows. No doubt the trail we had followed
across the plains, where there were so many horses' bones, was
one of these trails along which the thieving Indians took
their booty which died upon the trip.
Our road from here was near the foot-hills on the west side
of a level, grassy, thinly timbered valley, and as we advanced
we noticed that the timber grew more plentiful and the trees
larger, without much underbrush. We also noticed that the
vegetation was ranker and no doubt the soil was very rich. We
then came to a point where the mountain reaches out almost
across the valley to meet the mountain on the east side. Here
we found a gravelly creek with but little water, but as soon
as we passed this point we saw the valley suddenly widening
out, and beautiful groves of live oak trees scattered all
around. The vegetation here was very rank, the mustard ten
feet high in places, making it difficult to see out of the
road. This was perhaps the strongest contrast to the arid
desert that we had seen.
As we went on down the valley the hills seemed to stand
farther and farther back as if to make more room for those who
would soon settle in this fertile place, and we soon came in
sight of the village or pueblo of San Jose (St. Joseph) where
we camped. Here we learned that the two owners of the horses
intended to go to San Francisco instead of Sacramento, and as
we considered the former place a very poor one for a penniless
person to go we concluded to break up the company camp and
each do the best he could for himself, for our objective point
was the gold mines, and the sooner we reached them the
better.
The drovers who had been anxious to have us go with them
and help them now began to talk about a settlement with us, as
if they had done us great favors, and called on the other
fellows to help pay for their board upon the way. When they
came to me they said my share would be an ounce. This struck
me hard, but they said I had ridden their horse all the way
and the charge was very low. I told them I had furnished the
most of the provisions I had eaten, and my mule had packed a
good load all the way, which I considered worth as much as the
use of the horse. But they refused to allow me anything for
the use of the mule and became very urgent in their demand for
money.
These men were evidently of the tribe of Skinflint, who had
no souls, or they would not have attempted to rob an almost
penniless emigrant in this way of the last few dollars he had,
and all the hope he had of reaching the mines. I did not
desire to give up to such narrow principles as this and
hesitated, but they were bound to have the money or make a
quarrel, and talked pretty loud of the way they collected
debts in Sacramento, so that to avoid trouble and get out of
the clutches of such mean scoundrels as these I counted out
sixteen dollars, almost every cent I had, and reluctantly gave
them to my enemy. I immediately mounted my mule, and without
stopping to say goodbye rode off. I may have quoted a part of
the speech Capt Hunt made when the party wanted to leave the
trail and take the cut-off, especially that part where he
alluded to their going to h--l. I very much fear the little
piety my mother taught me was badly strained on that occasion,
and I thought of a good many swear words if I did not say
them, which I suppose is about as bad. I could see how
cunningly they had managed to get me to ride their horse that
it might serve as the foundation for a claim on me for about
all the money I had in the world.
I hitched my mule in the edge of the town and went in to
look at the place. The houses were situated very much as in
other places we had come through—scattered around over
much ground and built low, but had a different style of roof,
a peaked or sloping one, and covered with half round tile two
feet or more long and an inch thick. One course of these would
be laid with the hollow side up, and then a course with the
hollow side down, covering the joints of the lower course.
This allowed the air to circulate freely and was proof against
rain. I saw no flat roofs such as I had seen down along the
coast. I saw one gambling house and about all the men in town
were gathered there, and some women, too. This was the busiest
place in town and situated near the plaza. This was the
largest town I had yet been in. There seemed to be plenty of
women and lots of dogs, but the men were as scarce as they had
been in any of the towns—gone to the gold mines to make
a stake. I took in the sights pretty well, and there were a
great many new things for me to see, and when pretty well
satisfied concluded I would go back to my mule and camp in
some place just out of town for the night.
Before I reached my animal whom should I meet but my old
traveling companion John Rogers whom I thought to be a hundred
miles away by this time. We shook hands heartily and he told
me that Bennett, Moody and Skinner were camped not far off,
and he was still with them. He wore a pair of blue overalls, a
blue woolen shirt and the same little narrow rimmed hat he had
worn so long. I observed, too, that he was barefoot, and told
him I had a dollar or two which he could take and get some
shoes. He said it was no use for there was not a pair of shoes
in the town to buy, and he had not found any material of which
he could make himself a pair of moccasins. I told him how I
had been swindled coming up, and he was about as angry as I
had been. I think if I had known that my friend John Rogers
had been so near I should have bidden the rascals an
unceremonious good-bye and we would have been able to hold our
own on a claim for the services of myself and mule.
We went up to the place where our people were camped,
perhaps a mile above town on the bank of a river, nearly dry,
but where plenty of wood, water and grass were at hand; such a
place as we had looked for in vain for many a weary day upon
the desert. This was as far above Death Valley as a king above
a pauper, and we hoped never to see such a country again.
In camp we talked about moving on to the mines. Rogers said
he was going to start next day, and in answer to exclamations
of surprise that he should start off alone, he said that some
fellows camped a little way down the river were going to start
and he had made arrangements to go with them, as the Bennett
party would not go yet for a week. In the morning he shook
hands and bade us good-bye and good luck, and started off down
the river bank, lost to us, as it proved, for many years.
The next day as we were all sitting on the ground I felt a
sort of moving of the earth under me and heard a rumbling
sound that seemed very queer. It seemed there was a motion
also to the trees around us. We all started and looked a
little frightened, and Skinner said he believed it was an
earthquake, for he said he could see the motion in a sort of
wave. It was gone in half a minute. Moody
said:—"How do you like California now?" I said
I thought this part of it was a pretty good place for there
was plenty of wood, water and grass, and that was better than
we had seen in some places.
He then went on to say that he had heard Mr. Bennett's
story of their sufferings and narrow escape from death, and it
was the most wonderful story he had ever heard. He said the
idea of Mrs. Bennett walking over such a country for
twenty-two days was almost beyond belief, for he would not
have thought her able to walk one-third the distance. He never
knew before how much women could do when they were called to
do it, and they proved in emergencies to be as tough as any
body. He said if he ever got back home he should move to give
them all the rights and privileges of men for sure.
One day I mounted my mule for a ride to the eastern
foothills, and sat down on a little incline and overlooked the
valley, a beautiful landscape, while my mule cropped the rich
grasses in a circle described by the rope which confined him.
I was always a great admirer of nature, and as I sat there
alone I could see miles on miles of mammoth mustard waving in
the strong breeze which came down over the San Francisco Bay
just visible to the northward, and on the mountain summits to
the west could see tall timber reaching up into the deep blue
of the sky. It was a real contented comfort to be thus in the
midst of luxuriance and beauty, and I enjoyed it, coming as it
did at the end of the long and dreary road I had been
traveling for the past twelve months. Up the Platte; across
the Rockies; down the Green River cañons in my canoe;
across the mountains to Salt Lake; out over the "Rim of
the Basin," and across the desert, guided only by the
fact that we knew the Pacific Ocean was to the west of us, and
choosing our road as best we could in view of the lofty,
snow-clad, impassible mountains; seeing thirteen of our
comrades lie down never to rise again, and, when hope and
strength were almost gone, to suddenly come out into a fertile
region on the seventh of March, 1850. How I wished the fellows
who slept in Death Valley could have seen this view. The
change from all that barrenness and desolation to this
beautiful, fertile country, covered with wild flowers and
luxuriant live oaks, was as strong a contrast as one could
imagine a sudden coming from purgatory to paradise in the
space of a single hour.
I waked up from my dreamy thoughts, mounted my mule and
rode to camp. As I rode along the nimble ground squirrel, with
his keen black eye, would climb to the top of the high mustard
stalks to get a better view and, suspicious of an enemy within
his almost undisputed territory, disappear in a wink to his
safe underground fortress. Fat cattle and horses would appear
before me a moment, and then, with a wild look and high heads,
dash through the tall mustard out of sight.
Next day my trip was toward the western hills, and before I
came to them was confronted with an extensive stretch of
chaparral brush, absolutely impenetrable, which I must go
around or stop my progress in this direction. These thickets
were a regular paradise for grizzly bears, for within the
protection of this matted and thorny growth he is as safe as
is the soldier in the rocky fort of Gibraltar. I soon found a
way around the brush and rose high enough so that a backward
look over the valley was charming, quite as much so as the
eastern side. I wandered over the grassy hills covered with
great scattering oaks, and came to a grove of mammoth trees,
six feet or more in diameter, with tops reaching two hundred
or three hundred feet toward the blue sky. They seemed to me
to be a kind of cedar, and were far larger and taller than any
trees I had ever seen in the forests of Vermont, Michigan or
Wisconsin, and in my long journey from the East the route had
been principally through a country devoid of good timber. A
stranger in a strange land, everything was new and wonderful.
After satisfying my inquiring mind I returned to camp again,
and soon learned that my newly discovered trees were the
famous redwoods, so greatly prized for their valuable
qualities.
Taking the most direct course to camp I came, when within
two or three miles of San Jose, to a large extent of willows
so thick, and so thickly woven together with wild blackberry
vines, wild roses and other thorny plants, that it appeared at
first as if I never could get through. But I found a winding
trail made by the cattle through the bushes and mustard, and
this I followed, being nearly scared occasionally by some wild
steers as they rushed off through the thickets. I got through
safely, though it would have been difficult to escape a wild,
enraged steer, or a grizzly had I met him face to face even
with a rifle in hand. I could see nowhere but by looking
straight up, for the willows were in places fifty feet high
and a foot in diameter. The willows where I came from were
mere bushes, and these astonished me. This bit of brush is
still locally known as "The Willows," but the trees
are all gone, and the ground thickly covered with orchards and
fine residences, the land selling at from one thousand to two
thousand dollars per acre.
The sun rose without a cloud, and a little later the sea
breeze from the bay blew gently over the valley, making the
climate perfectly delightful in its temperate coolness, a true
paradise on earth it seemed to me, if I was able to judge or
set a value upon so beautiful a spot; and surely I had seen
all sorts, good and poor, desert and valley, mountain and
plain.
But I was poor in purse, and resolved I would seek first
the gold mines and secure gold enough to buy a piece of this
valley afterward.
When I had seen what was to be seen about San Jose I had a
talk with my friends and found that Mr. Bennett favored going
on to the mines at once and that Moody and Skinner thought
they would remain a little while at least.
I went along in company with Bennett, and when we got a
little way from San Jose, on the road to the Mission, the road
seemed walled in on both sides with growing mustard ten or
twelve feet high and all in blossom. How so much mustard could
grow, and grow so large, I could not understand. I had seen a
few plants in the gardens or fields which people used for
greens, and here seemed to be enough to feed the nation, if
they liked mustard greens.
The second day out we passed the big church at Mission San
Jose and soon left the valley and turned into the mountains
and when part way over we came to a stream which we followed
up and came out into Livermore valley, where we found a road
to follow. Houses were scarce, and we camped a mile or so
before we got to the Livermore ranch buildings. There was very
little sign of life about the place, and we soon went out of
the valley and into the mountains again.
The first sign of settlement we saw when part way through
the mountains was a stone corral, but no house or other
improvements. The next place was a small house made of willow
poles set in the ground and plastered over with mud. This
rejoiced in the name of "Mountain House." This
wayside inn looked like a horse thief's glory; only one or two
men, a quarter of an elk hanging on a pole, and no
accommodations for man or beast. There was very little water,
nothing to sell as well as nothing wanted. On the summits of
the mountains as we passed through we saw, standing like
guards, many large buck elks.
It was now fifteen miles to the San Joaquin river, and a
level plain lay before us. When our road turned into the river
bottom we found the water too deep to get through safely, so
we concluded to go on and try to find some place where we
could cross. On our way droves of antelopes could be seen
frolicking over the broad plains, while in the distance were
herds of elk winding their way from the mountains towards the
river for water. When far away their horns were the first
things visible, and they much resembled the dry tops of dead
pine trees, but a nearer view showed them to us as the proud
monarchs of the plain.
When we came up opposite the mouth of the Merced river we
concluded to try again to cross. The river here, as below, was
out of its banks, and the overflowed part was quite wide which
we had to pass through before we could reach the river
proper.
I waded in ahead of the team and sounded the depth of the
river so as not to get in too deep water, and avoid if
possible such accidents as might otherwise occur. Sometimes
the water was up to the wagon bed and it looked a little
doubtful of our getting through in safety, but we made it at
last.
We found a narrow strip of dry land along the river bank. A
town was on the east side of the San Joaquin. river, just
below where the Merced river came in. I think this place was
called Merced City. This so-called city contained but one
residence, a tent occupied by the ferryman. We crossed the
sluggish stream and for the privilege paid the ferryman, ten
dollars for toll. The road was not much used and the ferry
business seemed lonesome.
Here we camped for the night. The mosquitoes soon found us,
and they were all very hungry and had good teeth. They annoyed
me so that I moved my lodgings to the ferryboat, but here they
quickly found me and troubled me all night. These insects were
the first I had seen since I left the lower Platte river, and
I thought them as bad as on the Mississippi.
From here the road led up the Merced river near the bottom,
and as we came near groves of willows, big, stately elk would
start out and trot off proudly into the open plains to avoid
danger. These proud, big-horned monarchs of the plains could
be seen in bunches scattered over the broad meadows, as well
as an equal amount of antelope. They all seemed to fear us,
which was wise on their part, and kept out of rifle shot. As
were not starving as we were once, I did not follow them out
on the open plain, for I thought I could get meat when we were
more in need.
We followed up the river bottom and saw not a single house
until we reached the road leading from Stockton to the
Mariposa mines, where we found a ferry and a small store. Here
we learned that some men were mining a few miles up the river,
so we drove on until we found a little work being done in a
dry gulch near the river bank. We made our camp at this spot
and had plenty of wood, water and grass. We found there was
something to be learned in the art of gold mining. We had no
tools nor money, and had never seen a speck of native gold and
did not know how to separate it from the dirt nor where to
search for it. We were poor, ignorant emigrants. There were
two or three men camped here. One of them was more social than
the rest and we soon got acquainted. His name was Williams,
from Missouri. He came down to the river with a pan of dirt,
and seeing me in my ignorance trying to wash some as well, he
took the pan from me and very kindly showed me how to work so
as to let the dirt go and save the gold. When he had the pan
finished a few small, bright scales remained. These to me were
curious little follows and I examined them closely and
concluded there was a vast difference between gold and lead
mining. Williams became more friendly and we told him
something about our journey across the plains, and he seemed
to think that we deserved a good claim. He went to a dry gulch
where a Spaniard was working and told him that all of
California, now that the war was over, belonged to Americans
and he must leave. Williams had his gun in his hand and war
might follow, so Mr. Spaniard left and his claim was presented
to Bennett and myself.
Williams had been twice to Santa Fe from Missouri and had
learned the Spanish language and could swear at them by note
if necessary. We now began work almost without tools, but our
ground we had to work was quite shallow and Williams helped us
out by loaning us some of his tools at times. We soon
succeeded in scratching together some of the yellow stuff and
I went down to the store and bought a pan for five dollars, a
shovel for ten dollars, and a poor pick cost me ten dollars
more. This took about two ounces of my money.
We now worked harder than ever for about three weeks, but
we could not save much and pay such high prices as were
charged. Our gulch claim was soon worked out, and as the river
had fallen some we tried the bar, but we could only make four
or five dollars a day, and the gold was very fine and hard to
save. We bought a hind quarter of an elk and hung it up in a
tree and it kept fresh till all of it was eaten.
Some others came and took up claims on the bar, and as the
prospects were not as good as was wished, three of us
concluded to go and try to find a better place. The next day
was Sunday and all lay in bed late. Before I rose I felt
something crawling on my breast, and when I looked I found it
to be an insect, slow in motion, resembling a louse, but
larger. He was a new emigrant to me and I wondered what he
was. I now took off my pants and found many of his kind in the
seams. I murdered all I could find, and when I got up I told
Williams what I had found. He said they hurt nobody and were
called piojos, more commonly known as body lice.
We started on our prospecting tour and went northeast to a
place now called Big Oak Flat. This was at the head of a small
stream and there were several small gulches that emptied into
it that paid well. This flat was all taken up and a ditch was
cut through to drain it. A ship load of gold was expected to
be found when it was worked. A small town of tents had been
pitched on both sides of the flat. One side was occupied by
gamblers, and many games were constantly carried on and were
well patronized. On the opposite side of the flat were many
small tents, and around on the hillside some mules and jacks
were feeding. One of the little long-eared donkeys came down
among the tents and went in one and commenced eating flour
from the sack. The owner of the flour ran to the tent, took
his shot gun and fired a load of buck-shot into the donkey's
hams. The animal reeled and seemed shot fatally. I now looked
for a battle to commence, but the parties were more
reasonable. The price of the animal was fully paid, and no
blood shed as I expected there surely would be.
We now prospected further east, but nothing good enough was
found. The place we looked over was where the town of Garota
now stands. We concluded to go back, have a council, and go
somewhere else. On our way back we stopped to get dinner.
While I was around the fire, barefooted, I felt something
crawl up my instep, and it proved to be another of those
piojos of Williams'. I now thought these torments must
be all over this country.
Gold dust was used to transact all business; all the coin
was in the hands of the gentlemen gamblers. Most miners found
it necessary to have a small pair of scales in the breast
pocket to weigh the dust so as not to have to trust some one
who carried lead weights and often got more than his just
dues. Gold dust was valued at sixteen dollars an ounce.
We now thought it would be best for two of us to take our
mules and go down in the small hills and try to get some elk
meat to take with us, as our route would be mostly through the
unsettled part of the country, and no provisions could likely
be procured, so Mr. Bradford of New Orleans and myself took
our mules and went down where the hills were low and the game
plenty. We camped in a low ravine, staked out our mules and
staid all night without a fire, believing that when we woke in
the early morning some of the many herd of elk then in sight
would be near us at daylight, and we could easily kill all we
wanted without leaving camp; but we were disappointed.
Hundreds of the big-horned fellows were in sight, but none in
rifle shot, and there was no chance for us to get any nearer
to them. We got near a couple of antelope and Mr. Bradford,
who was a brag shot and had the best gun, proposed to kill
them as we stood. The larger of the two was on his side and
much nearer than the smaller one, but we fired together just
as we stood. Bradford's antelope ran off unhurt: mine fell
dead in its tracks. Bradford bragged no more about his fine
gun and superior marksmanship.
We went back to camp with the little we had killed and soon
got ready to start north. Bennett was to go with his team to
Sacramento and wait there until he heard from us.
Four of us, mounted on mules, now started on our journey
along the foothills without a road. We struck the Tuolumne
river at a ferry. The stream was high and rapid and could not
be forded, so we had to patronize the ferryman, and give him
half an ounce apiece. We thought such charges on poor and
almost penniless emigrants were unjust.
The point we were seeking to reach was a new discovery
called Gold Lake on Feather River, where many rich gulches
that emptied into it had been worked, and the lake was
believed to have at least a ship load of gold in it. It was
located high in the mountains and could be easily drained and
a fortune soon obtained if we got there in time and said
nothing to anyone we might meet on the road. We might succeed
in getting a claim before they were all taken up. We followed
along the foothills without a road, and when we came to the
Stanislaus River we had to patronize a ferry and pay half an
ounce each again. We thought their scale weights were rather
heavy and their ferrymen well paid.
We continued along the foothills without any trail until we
struck the road from Sacramento to Hangtown. This sounded like
a bad name for a good village, but we found it was fittingly
named after some ugly devils who were hanged there. The first
house that we came to on this road was the Mormon Tavern. Here
were some men playing cards for money, and two boys, twelve or
fourteen years old, playing poker for the same and trying in
every way to ape the older gamblers and bet their money as
freely and swear as loud as the old sports. All I saw was new
and strange to me and became indelibly fixed on my mind. I had
never before seen such wicked boys, and the men paid no
attention to these fast American boys. I began to wonder if
all the people in California were like these, bad and
wicked.
Here we learned that Gold Lake was not as rich as reported,
so we concluded to take the road and go to Coloma, the place
where gold was first found on the American River.
We camped at Coloma all night. Mr. Bradford got his mule
shod and paid sixteen dollars, or in the mining phrase, an
ounce of gold dust. I visited the small town and found that
the only lively business place in it was a large gambling
house, and I saw money (gold dust) liberally
used—sometimes hundreds of dollars bet on a single card.
When a few hundred or thousand were lost more would be brought
on. The purse would be set in the center of the table and the
owners would take perhaps twenty silver dollars or checks, and
when they were lost the deposited purse would be handed to the
barkeeper, the amount weighed out and the purse returned. When
the purse was empty a friend of the better would bring
another, and so the game went on almost in silence. The game
called Monte seemed to be the favorite. How long these sacks
of gold lasted or who eventually got the whole I never knew.
This was a new country with new people, and many seemed to be
engaged in a business that was new, strange and hazardous. The
final result of all this was what puzzled me.
We now followed the road up the mountain to Georgetown.
Here was a small village on the summit of the ridge and it
seemed to be in a prosperous mining section. After some
inquiry about a good place to work we concluded to go down a
couple of miles northeast of town on Cañon creek and go
to work if vacant ground could be found. There was a piece of
creek bottom here that had not been much worked. Georgia Flat
above had been worked and paid well, and the Illinois and
Oregon cañons that emptied into the bottom here were
rich, so we concluded to locate in the bottom. Claims here in
the flat were only fifteen feet square. I located one and my
notice told others that I would go to work on it as soon my
partner came from Sacramento. I sent my partner, Mr. Bennett a
note telling him to come up.
While waiting for Mr. Bennett I took my pan and butcher
knife and went into a dry gulch out of sight of the other
campers and began work. As the ground was mostly bare bed rock
by scratching around I succeeded in getting three or four pans
of dirt a day. The few days I had to wait for Bennett I made
eight dollars a day until my claim was worked out.
I then went to Georgetown to meet Bennett and family, and
soon after my arrival they came well and safe. All of them,
even to the faithful camp dog, Cuff, were glad to see me. Old
Cuff followed me all around town, but when we got ready to
start for camp the dog was gone and could not be found. Some
one had hidden him away knowing he could not be gotten any
other way, for six ounces would not have bought him. We had
raised him in Wisconsin, made him a good deer dog, and with us
he had crossed the dry and sandy deserts. He had been a great
protection to Bennett's children on the plains, and company
for us all.
We now located claims on the creek bottom. The channel of
the creek was claimed by Holman of Alabama and the Helms
brothers of Missouri. They had turned the stream into a ditch
in order to work the bed of the stream, believing that their
claims had all the gold in them. Our claims joined theirs.
Mr. W.M. Stockton, who left his family in Los Angeles, came
with Mr. Bennett and went to work with us. As everything here
was very high we concluded to let Mr. Stockton take the team
and go to Sacramento for provisions for our own use. Flour and
meat were each fifty cents a pound, potatoes twenty-five cents
a pound and onions one dollar and twenty-five cents each.
Onions and potatoes eaten raw were considered very necessary
to prevent and cure scurvy, which was quite a common
complaint. Whiskey, if not watered, cost one dollar a
drink.
Our claims were about ten feet deep. The bottom was wet and
a pump needed, so we went to a whip saw-mill and got four
narrow strips one by three and one by five and twelve feet
long, paying for them by weight, the price being twelve cents
a pound. Out of these strips we made a good pump by fixing a
valve at the end and nailing a piece of green rawhide on a
pole, which answered for a plunger, and with the pump set at
forty-five degrees it worked easily and well. One man could
easily keep the water out and we made fair wages.
In the creek bottom Mr. Bush of Missouri had a saloon. The
building was made mainly of brush, with a split piece for a
counter, and another one for a shelf for his whiskey keg, a
box of cigars, a few decks of cards and half a dozen glasses,
which made up the entire stock of trade for the shop. In front
was a table made of two puncheons with a blanket thrown over
all, and a few rough seats around. There was no roof except
the brush, and through the dry season none was needed except
for shade.
There was also at this place five brothers by the name of
Helms, also from Missouri. Their names were Jim, Davenport,
Wade, Chet and Daunt. These men, with Mr. Holman, owned the
bed of the stream, and their ground proved to be quite wet and
disagreeable to work. Mr. Holman could not well stand to work
in the cold water, so he asked the privilege of putting in a
hired man in his place, which was agreed to. He then took up a
claim for himself outside of the other claims, and this proved
to be on higher bed rock and dry, and paid even better than
the low claims where the Helms brothers were at work. This was
not what the Helms boys considered exactly fair, as Holman
seemed to be getting rich the fastest, and as there was no law
to govern them they held a free country court of their own,
and decided the case to suit themselves; so they ordered
Holman to come back and do his own work. No fault was found
with the hired man but what he did his work well enough, but
they were jealous and would not be bound by their
agreement.
But this decision did not satisfy all parties, and it was
agreed to submit the case to three men, and I was chosen one
of them. We held Court on the ground and heard both sides of
the story, after which we retired to the shade of a bunch of
willows to hold council over the matter with the result that
we soon came to a decision in favor of Mr. Holman. About this
time one of the Helms boys began to quarrel with Holman and
grew terribly mad, swearing all kinds of vengeance, and making
the cañon ring with the loudest kind of Missouri oaths.
Finally he picked up a rock to kill Holman, but the latter was
quick with his pistol, a single shot duelling piece, and as
they were not more than ten feet apart Helms would have had a
hole in him large enough for daylight to shine through if the
pistol had not missed fire. We stopped the quarrel and made
known our decision, whereupon Helms went off muttering
vengeance.
We now went back to our work again at our claims, mine
being between Helms' cabin and the saloon. Holman stopped to
talk a little while on my claim, while I was down below at
work, and soon Helms came back again in a terrible rage,
stopping on the opposite side of the hole from Holman,
swearing long and loud, and flourishing a big pistol with
which he threatened to blow Holman into purgatory. He was so
much enraged that he fairly frothed at the mouth like a rabid
dog. The men were about twenty feet apart, and I at the bottom
of the hole ten feet below, but exactly between them. It
seemed to me that I was in some little danger for Helms had
his big pistol at full cock, and as it pointed at me quite as
often as it did at anybody, I expect I dodged around a little
to keep out of range. Helms was terribly nervous, and trembled
as he cursed, but Holman was cool and drew his weapon
deliberately, daring Helms to raise his hand or he would kill
him on the instant. Helms now began to back off, but carefully
kept his eye on Holman and continued his abuse as he went on
to the saloon to get something to replenish his courage.
Holman, during the whole affair, talked very calmly and put
considerable emphasis into his words when he dared Helms to
make a hostile motion. He was a true Alabamian and could be
neither scared nor driven. He soon sold out, however, and went
to a more congenial camp for he said these people were
cowardly enough to waylay and kill him unawares.
Soon after this unpleasantness a man and wife who lived in
Georgetown came into notice, and while the man made some money
mining his wife did a good stroke of business washing for the
boys who paid her a dollar a shirt as laundry fees. As she
began to make considerable money the bigger, if not better,
half of this couple began to feel quite rich and went off on a
drunk, and when his own money was spent he went to his wife
for more, but she refused him, and he, in his drunken rage,
picked up a gun near by and shot her dead.
All of a sudden the Helms boys and others gathered at the
saloon, took drinks all around, and did a good deal of
swearing, which was the biggest portion of the proceedings of
the meeting; and then they all started off toward town,
swearing and yelling as they struggled up the steep mountain
side—a pack of reckless, back-woods Missourians who
seemed to smell something bloody.
It was near night when they all came back and gathered
around the saloon again. They were all in unusual good humor
as they related the adventures of the afternoon, and bragged
of their bravery and skill in performing the little job they
had just completed, which consisted in taking the murderer out
to the first convenient oak tree, and with the assistance of
some sailors in handling the ropes, hoisting the fellow from
the ground with a noose around his neck, and to the
"Heave, yo heave" of the sailor boys, pulling the
rope that had been passed over an elevated limb. They watched
the suspended body till the last spark of life went out, and
then went back to town leaving the corpse hanging for somebody
else to cut down and bury. They whooped and yelled at the top
of their voices as they came down along the mountain trail,
and at the saloon they related to the crowd that had gathered
there how they had helped to hang the ---- who had killed his
wife. They said justice must be done if there was no law, and
that no man could kill a woman and live in California. They
imagined they were very important individuals, and veritable
lords of Creation.
These miners, many of them, were inveterate gamblers and
played every night till near day-light, with no roof over
them, and their only clothes a woolen shirt and overalls which
must have been a little scanty in the cool nights which
settled down over the mountain camp; but they bore it all in
their great desire for card playing.
Near by there were three men who worked and slept together,
every night dividing the dust which each put into a purse at
the head of his bed. One day the news came to the saloon that
one of the purses had been stolen. The Helms boys talked it
over and concluded that as one of the men had gone to town, he
might know something about the lost dust; so they went to town
and there, after a little search, found their man in a
gambling house. After a little while they invited him to
return to camp with them, and all started together down the
mountain; but when about half way down they halted suddenly
under an oak tree and accused their man of knowing where his
partner's money was. This he strongly denied, and was very
positive in his denial till he felt the surprise of a rope
around his neck, with the end over a limb, and beginning to
haul pretty taut in a direction that would soon elevate his
body from the ground, when he weakened at their earnestness
and asked them to hold on a minute. As the rope slackened he
owned up he had the dust and would give it up if they would
not send the news to his folks in Missouri. This was agreed to
and the thief was advised to leave at once for some distant
camp, or they might yet expose him. He was not seen
afterward.
The boys bragged a good deal of their detective ability
after this, and said that a little hanging would make a ----
thief tell the truth even if it did not make an honest man of
him, and that a thief would be lucky if he got through with
them and saved his life. Their law was "Hanging for
stealing."
The Helms brothers were said to be from western Missouri,
and in early days were somewhat of the border ruffian order,
and of course preferred to live on the frontier rather than in
any well regulated society. As the country became settled and
improved around them they moved on. A school house was an
indication that the country was getting too far advanced for
them.
They crossed the plains in 1849 and began mining operations
near Georgetown in Placer county. It was well known that they
were foremost in all gambling, and in taking a hand in any
excitement that came up, and as a better class of miners came
in they moved on, keeping ahead with the prospectors, and just
out of reach of law and order. If anyone else committed a
crime they were always quite eager to be on the vigilance
committee, and were remarkably happy when punishing a
wrong-doer. When any of their number was suspected it was
generally the case that they moved quickly on and so escaped.
It was reported, however, that one of their number was in the
hands of the vigilance committee and hanged in Montana.
After a time, it is said, they went down to southern
California and settled on the border of the Colorado desert,
about seventy-five miles east of San Diego, in a mountainous
and desert region. Here they found a small tribe of Indians,
and by each marrying a squaw they secured rights equal to any
of them in the occupation of the land. This was considered
pretty sharp practice, but it suited them and they became big
chiefs and midecine men, and numerous dusky descendants grew
up around them.
It is said that their property consists of extensive
pasture lands on which they raise cattle, and that they always
go well armed with pistol, rifle and riata. It is said that
some of the Indians undertook to claim that the Helms brothers
were intruders, but that in some mysterious way accidents
happened to most of them and they were left without any
serious opposition.
They are very hospitable and entertaining to people who
visit them, provided they do not know too much about the men
or their former deeds or history. In this case ignorance is
bliss and it is folly, if not dangerous, to be too wise. They
have made no improvements, but live in about the same style as
the Indians and about on a level with them morally and
intellectually.
There may be those who know them well, but the writer only
knows them by hearsay and introduces them as a certain type of
character found in the early days.
As I was now about barefoot I went to town to look for
boots or shoes. There were no shoes, and a pair of the
cheapest boots I found hanging at the door were priced to me
at two ounces. This seemed a wonderful sum for a pair of
coarse cow-hide boots that would sell in the state for two
dollars and fifty cents; but I had to buy them at the price or
go barefoot.
While rambling around town I went into a round tent used as
a gambling saloon. The occupants were mostly men, and one or
two nice appearing ladies, but perhaps of doubtful reputation.
The men were of all classes—lawyer, doctors, preachers
and such others as wanted to make money without work. The
miners, especially sailors, were eager to try to beat the
games. While I was here the table was only occupied by a
sailor lying upon it and covered with a green blanket. All at
once the fellow noticed a large piojo walking slowly
across the table, and drawing his sheath knife made a
desperate stab at him, saying "You kind of a deck hand
can't play at this game."
Our claims, by this time were nearly worked out, and I
thought that I had upward of two thousand dollars in gold, and
the pile looked pretty big to me. It seemed to me that these
mines were very shallow and would soon be worked out, at least
in a year or two. I could not see that the land would be good
for much for farming when no irrigation could be easily got,
and the Spanish people seemed to own all the best land as well
as the water; so that a poor fellow like myself would never
get rich at farming here.
Seeing the matter in this light I thought it would be best
to take my money and go back to Wisconsin where government
land was good and plenty, and with even my little pile I could
soon be master of a good farm in a healthy country, and I
would there be rich enough. Thus reasoning I decided to return
to Wisconsin, for I could not see how a man could ever be a
successful farmer in a country where there were only two
seasons, one wet and the other long and dry.
I went out and hunted up my mule which I had turned out to
pasture for herself, and found her entirely alone. After a
little coaxing I caught her and brought her with me to camp,
where I offered her for sale. She was sleek and fat and looked
so well that Helms said that if I could beat him shooting he
would buy both mule and gun; so three or four of us tried our
skill. My opponents boasted a good deal of their superior
marksmanship, but on the trial, which began at short range, I
beat them all pretty badly. Helms was as good as his word and
offered me twelve ounces for my gun and mule, which I took. I
thought a great deal of my fat little one-eyed mule, and I
thought then, as I think now, how well she did her part on the
fearful road to and from Death Valley.
Helms was now going to the valley to have a winter's hunt,
for here the snow would fall four feet deep and no mining work
could be done till spring, when he would return and work his
claim again.
I now had all in my pocket, and when I got ready to go Mrs.
Bennett was much affected at knowing that I would now leave
them, perhaps never to return to them again. She clasped me in
her arms, embraced me as she would her own son, and said
"Good luck to you—God bless you, for I know that
you saved all our lives. I don't suppose you will ever come
back, but we may come back to Wisconsin sometime and we will
try to find a better road than the one we came over. Give my
best regards to all who inquire after us." She shook my
hand again and again with earnest pressure, and cried and
sobbed bitterly. As I climbed the mountain she stood and
watched me so long as I was in sight, and with her
handkerchief waved a final adieu. I was myself much affected
at this parting, for with Mr. and Mrs. Bennett had been really
a home to me; she had been to me as a mother, and it was like
leaving a home fireside to go away from them. I was now
starting out among strangers, and those I should meet might be
the same good friends as those whom I had left behind. Mr.
Bennett and I had for many years been hunting companions; I
had lived at his house in the East, and we never disagreed but
had always been good friends. I had now a traveling companion
whose home was in Iowa Co., Wis., where I had lived for
several years, and we went along together by way of Greenwood
where there was a small mining town built of tents, many of
which were used as gambling places. These places were occupied
by gentlemen, some of whom wore white shirts to distinguish
them, I presume, from the common herd of miners from whom they
won their dust.
We crossed the American River at Salmon Falls, and walked
thence on to Sacramento City, which was the largest town we
had seen on the coast. The houses were all small wooden ones,
but business seemed to be brisk, and whiskey shops and
gambling houses plenty. One game played with three cards,
called three card Monte, was played openly on the streets,
with goods boxes for tables. Every one who came along was
urged to bet by the dealer who would lay out his cards face up
so all could see them, then turn them over and shuffle them
and say "I'll bet six ounces that no one can put his
finger on the queen." I watched this a while and saw that
the dealer won much oftener than he lost, and it seemed to be
a simple and easy way to make a living when money was
plenty.
We strolled around town looking at the sights, and the
different business places, the most lively of which had plenty
of music inside, lots of tables with plenty of money on them,
and many questionable lady occupants. These business places
were liberally patronized and every department flourishing,
especially the bar. Oaths and vulgar language were the
favorite style of speech, and very many of the people had all
the whiskey down them that they could conveniently carry.
We got through the town safely and at the river we found a
steamboat bound for San Francisco and the fare was two ounces.
The runners were calling loudly for passengers, and we were
told we could never make the trip any cheaper for they had
received a telegram from below saying that no boat would come
up again for two days. I said to him "I can't see your
telegram. Where is it?" At this he turned and left us. He
had thought, no doubt, that miners were green enough to
believe anything. In the course of an hour the smoke of a
steamer was seen down the river, and this beat out the runners
who now offered passage for half an ounce.
At this time there was no telegraph and the delay was a
lucky one for us. We took passage and went to San Francisco
that night, where we put up at a cheap tavern near where the
Custom House now stands.
Here we learned that we would have to wait two days before
a ship would sail for Panama, and during this time we surveyed
the town from the hill-tops and walked all over the principal
streets. It was really a small, poorly built, dirty looking
place, with few wharves, poor, cheap hotels, and very rough
inhabitants. There were lots of gambling houses full of tables
holding money, and the rooms filled with pretty rough looking
people, except the card dealers, most of whom wore white
shirts, and a few sported plug hats. There was also a
"right smart sprinkling" of ladies present who were
well dressed and adorned with rich jewelry, and their position
seemed to be that of paying teller at the gambling tables.
The buildings seemed to be rather cheap, although material
was very expensive, as well as labor, mechanics of all sorts
getting as much as ten or twelve dollars per day for work.
Coin seemed to be scarce, and a great deal of the money needed
on the gambling tables was represented by iron washers, each
of which represented an ounce of gold.
I noticed some places in the streets where it was muddy and
a narrow walk had been made out of boxes of tobacco, and
sometimes even bacon was used for the same purpose.
Transportation from the city to the mines was very slow and
made by schooner. Ship loads of merchandise had arrived and
been unloaded, and the sailors having run away to the mines,
everything except whiskey and cards was neglected. Whiskey
sold at this place for fifty cents a drink.
A man at the tavern where we stopped tried hard to sell me
a fifty-vara lot there in the edge of the mud (near where the
Custom House now stands) for six hundred dollars. I thought
this a pretty high price and besides such a lot was no use to
me, for I had never lived in town and could not so easily see
the uses to which such property could be put. It seemed very
doubtful to me that this place would ever be much larger or
amount to much, for it evidently depended on the mines for a
support, and these were so shallow that it looked as if they
would be worked out in a short time and the country and town
both be deserted. And I was not alone in thinking that the
country would soon be deserted, for accustomed as we all had
been to a showery summer, these dry seasons would seem
entirely to prevent extensive farming. Some cursed the country
and said they were on their way to "good old Missouri,
God's own country." Hearing so much I concluded it would
be wise not to invest, but to get me back to Wisconsin
again.
The steamer we took passage in was the Northerner,
advertised to sail on the twenty-ninth day of November, 1850.
The cabin room was all engaged, and they charged us nine
ounces for steerage passage; but I did not care as much about
their good rooms and clean sheets as I would have done at one
time, for I had been a long time without either and did not
care to pay the difference. When we were at the ship's office
we had to take our turns to get tickets. One man weighed out
the dust, and another filled out certificates. When the
callers began to get a little scarce I looked under the
counter where I saw a whole panful of dust to which they added
mine to make the pile a little higher. They gave out no berths
with these tickets, but such little things as that did not
trouble us in the least. It was far better fare than we used
to have in and about Death Valley, and we thought we could
live through anything that promised better than the
desert.
The passenger list footed up four hundred and forty, and
when all got on board, at about ten o'clock in the morning,
there was hardly room for all to stand up comfortably. It
seemed to me to be a very much over-crowded boat in which to
put to sea, but we floated out into the current, with all the
faces toward the shore, and hats and handkerchiefs waving
goodbye to those who had come down to see the home-goers
safely off.
As we passed out through the wonderful Golden Gate and the
out going current met the solid sea, each seemed wrestling for
the mastery, and the waves beat and dashed themselves into
foam all around us, while the spray came over the bows quite
lively, frightening some who did not expect such treatment.
When we had passed this scene of watery commotion and got out
into the deeper water, the sea smoothed down a great deal; but
sea-sickness began to claim its victims, at first a few, then
more and more, till the greater part were quite badly
affected. I had a touch of it myself, but managed to keep my
feet by bracing out pretty wide, and hugging everything I
could get hold of that seemed to offer a steady support, and I
did not lie down until after I had thrown my breakfast
overboard.
By the time dark came nearly every one was on his back,
mostly on deck, and no one asleep. All were retching and
moaning bitterly. Some who had a few hours before cursed
California now cursed the sea, and declared that if they could
induce the Captain to turn about and put them back on shore
again, they would rather creep on their hands and knees clear
back to old Missouri over rocks and sand, than to ride any
further on such a miserable old boat as this one was.
Next morning the decks looked pretty filthy, and about all
the food the passengers had eaten was now spread about the
decks in a half digested condition. Most of the passengers
were very sick. With the early daylight the sailors coupled
the hose to the big steam pump, and began the work of washing
and scrubbing off the decks, and though many begged hard to be
left alone as they were, with all the filth, a good flood of
salt water was the only answer they received to their
pleading, and they were compelled to move, for the sailors
said they could not change their orders without the Captain,
and he would not be out of bed till ten o'clock or later. So
the cursing and swearing went for naught, and the decks were
clean again. There were no deaths to report, but there were
very few to do duty at the tables in eating the food prepared
for them. After a few days the tables filled up again, and now
it took them so long to eat that there had to be an order for
only two meals a day or there would not have been a chance for
all to get something. They were terribly hungry now, and every
one seemed to try his best to take in provisions enough to
last him for at least twelve hours.
As the fellows began to get their sea legs on, they began
to talk as if they were still in California, and could easily
manage any little boat like this, and could run things as they
did when they crossed the plains, where no sheriff, court or
judge had anything to say about matters, and all law was left
behind. They began to act as if they were lords over all they
could see, and as many of them were from the Southern states,
they seemed to take an especial pride in boasting of how they
did as they pleased, about like the Helms brothers. They
talked as if they could run the world, or the universe even,
themselves without assistance.
One morning at breakfast, when the table was full and the
waiters scarce, some of these fellows swore and talked pretty
rough, and as a waiter was passing a blue-blood from New
Orleans rose in his seat and called for sugar, holding the
empty bowl in his hand, but the waiter passed on and paid no
attention, and when a mulatto waiter came along behind him the
angry man damned him the worst he could, ordering him to bring
a bowl of sugar, quick. This waiter did not stop and the
Louisiana man threw the bowl at the waiter's head, but missed
it, and the bowl went crashing against the side of the ship. I
expected surely the Captain and his men would come and put the
unruly fellow in irons, and there might be a fight or a riot,
so I cut my meal short and went on deck about as soon as I
could do so, thinking that would be a safer place. But the
Captain seemed to know about how to manage such fellows, and
never left his stateroom, which I think was a wise move. The
darky did not make his appearance at table afterwards, and the
man who threw the bowl said that colored folks had to mind a
gentleman when he spoke to them, or fare worse.
The Captain now got out his passenger list, and we all had
to pass through a narrow space near the wheel-house and every
one answer to his name and show his ticket. This made work for
about one day. Some stowaways were found and put down into the
hole to heave coal. One day the Captain and mate were out
taking an observation on the sun when a young Missourian
stepped up to see what was being done, and said to the
Captain:—"Captain, don't you think I could learn
how to do that kind of business?" The Captain took the
young man's hand and looked at his nails which were very rough
and dirty and said:—"No my lad; boys with such
finger nails can't learn navigation." This made a big
laugh at the brave lubber's expense.