Index of Herbs
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
- A
- Achillea millefolium, 24
- Adiantum capillus-Veneris, 5, 60
- Agave, 37
- Alligator pear, 25
- Allium biceptrum, 62
- Allium canadense, 63
- Allium vineale, 63
- Ambrosia artemisifolia, 13
- Andromeda polifolia, 24
- Anemopsis californica, 15
- Antennaria margaritacea, 11
- Anthemis nobilis, 7
- Apium, 68
- Arctostaphylos glauca, 70
- Arrow-wood, 64
- Artemisia californica, 14
- Artemisia tridentata, 5, 13
- Asclepias syriaca, 51
- Astragalus mollissimus, 36
- Audibertias stachyoides, 19
- Avocado, 25
- B
- Bean, Mesquite, 57
- Berry, Holly, 70
- Ink, 65
- Juniper, 9
- Lemonade, 70
- Manzanita, 70
- Squaw-bush, 70
- Bertholletia, 64
- Blackberry, 7, 70
- Bottle-weed, 20
- Brodiaea, 40
- Button root, 37
- C
- Cactus-pear, 16
- Cactus, Water-barrel, 47
- Camomile, 7
- Candlewood, Desert, 28
- Capsella bursa-pastoris, 7
- Carduacea, 16
- Cascara sagrada, 21
- Cat-tail, 56
- Ceanothus divaricatus, 40
- Centaurea melitensis, 69
- Centunculus, 70
- Cercocarpus betulaefolia, 70
- Chaparral, 40
- Chenopodium ambrosioides, 14
- Cherry, Holly-leaf, 18, 70
- Cherry, Wild black, 18, 70
- Chlorogalum pomeridianum, 39
- Chrysanthemum Parthenium, 60
- Clematis ligusticifolia, 17
- Cocklebur, 68
- Cocklebur, Spiny, 69
- Coffee-berry, 21
- Cottonweed, 11
- Cracca virginiana, 15
- Creosote bush, 5, 14, 37
- Croton corymbosus, 68
- Croton setigerus, 61
- Cucumber, Thorny, 38
- Cucurbita foetidissima, 39
- Currant, Wild, 70
- D
- Datura meteloides, 43
- Deer-ears, 15
- Dennstaedtia punctilobula, 19
- Dipsacus glutinosus, 6
- Dove weed, 61
- E
- Echinocactus acanthoides, 47
- Elderberry, 5, 10, 70
- Elm, 27
- Ephedra, 5, 21, 68
- Equisetum hyemale, 21
- Eriodictyon californicum, 20
- Eriodictyon glutinosum californicum, 5, 19
- Eriogonum, 25
- Eriogonum elatum, 20
- Eriogonum elongatum, 22
- Eriogonum umbellatum, 49
- Erythaea muehlenbergii, 8
- Eschscholtzia californica, 34
- Eupatorium purpureum, 18
- Euphorbia, 13
- F
- Fern, Bracken, 58
- Fern, Hay-scented wild, 19
- Fern, Maidenhair, 5, 60
- Fern, Purple cliff-brake, 22
- Feverfew, 60
- Fouquieria splendens, 28
- Four O’clock, 10
- Frasera, 15
- Fuchsia, Wild, 12
- G
- Garlic, Wild, 63
- Goldenrod, 12
- Gooseberry, Wild, 70
- Goosefoot, 14
- Gourd, Wild, 39
- Grape, Wild, 6, 70
- Grass, Blue star-flower, 6
- Grass, Deer, 34
- Grass, Pepper, 66
- Grass, Salt, 66
- Grindelia cuneifolia, 11
- Grindelia squarrosa, 15
- Gum plant, 11, 15
- H
- Hedeoma pulegioides, 7
- Helenium autumnale, 24
- Helenium nudiflorum, 24
- Heteromeles arbutifolia, 70
- Holly-berry, 70
- Holly, White woolly, 5, 20
- Horehound, 18
- Horsemint, 8
- Horsetail, 21
- Hosackia glabra, 34
- I
- Ilysanthus brachiatus, 23
- Inkberry, 65
- Iva axillaris, 67
- J
- Jimson weed, 43
- Joe-pye weed, 18
- Juniper, Desert, 9
- Juniperus californica, 9
- K
- Kalmia latifolia, 52
- L
- Larrea mexicana, 5, 14, 37
- Laurel, Mountain, 52
- Leek, House, 47
- Lepidium epetalum, 66
- Lettuce, Miner’s, 62
- Lilac, Wild, 40
- Lippia lanceolata, 60
- Locoweed, 36
- Lophophora williamsii, 37
- M
- Mahogany shrub, 70
- Mallow, Common, 8
- Mallow, Creeping rock-, 70
- Malva rosa, 26
- Malva rotundifolia, 8
- Malvacea rubra, 70
- Marrubium vulgare, 18
- Mentha canadensis, 23
- Mentha spicata, 23
- Micrapelis micracarpa, 38
- Micromeria douglasii, 23
- Milkweed, 51
- Mint, 23
- Mirabilis californica, 10
- Monardella villosa, 8
- Monkey flower, 6
- Montia perfoliata, 62
- Moorwort, 24
- Morajaum, 10
- N
- Nettle, Stinging, 59
- Nicotiana glauca, 60
- O
- Oak, Live, 55, 56
- Oak, Poison, 11
- Oak, Red, 25
- Ocotillo, 28
- Onion, Wild, 62
- Opuntia, 16
- P
- Paeonia brownii, 9
- Panicum capillare, 66
- Parsley, Wild, 68
- Pellaea atropurpurea, 22
- Pennyroyal, 8
- Pennyroyal, False, 23
- Pennyroyal, Mock, 7
- Pentstemon cordifolius, 12
- Peony, Wild, 9
- Pepper grass, 66
- Pepper plant, 5, 34
- Persea americana, 25
- Phlox subulata, 59
- Phytolacca decandra, 65
- Pimpernel, 70
- Pine, Scrub, 60
- Pine, Digger, 40
- Pink, Moss, 59
- Pinus monticola, 60
- Pinus sabiniana, 40
- Piperacea, 5, 34
- Plantago major, 16
- Plantain, 16
- Platanus occidentalis, 24
- Poppy, California golden, 34
- Poverty-weed, 67
- Prosopis juliflora, 57
- Prunus ilicifolia, 18, 70
- Prunus serotina, 18, 70
- Pteris aquilina, 58
- Q
- Queen of the Meadows, 18
- Quercus agrifolia, 56
- Quercus rubra, 25
- Quercus virginiana, 55
- R
- Ragweed, Common, 13
- Ramona Polystachya, 14
- Raspberry, Wild, 70
- Rhamnus californica, 21
- Rhubarb, Wild, 17
- Rhus diversiloba, 11
- Rhus integrifolia, 70
- Rhus trilobata, 63, 70
- Ribes amarum, 70
- Ribes glutinosum, 70
- Rorippa nasturtium officinale, 65
- Rosa californica, 8
- Rosa gallica, 26
- Rosa Malva, 26
- Rose, Wild, 8
- Rosemary, 48
- Rubus villosus, 7, 70
- Rue, Garden (Goat’s), 15
- Rumex hymenocallis, 17
- S
- Sage, 54
- Sage, Black, 19
- Sagebrush, 5, 13
- Sage, Green, 16
- Sage, White, 14
- Salinia, 66
- Salt grass, 66
- Salix washingtonia, 32
- Salvia columbriae, 54
- Salvia, White, 14
- Sambucus pubens, 5, 10, 70
- Saponaria officinalis, 40
- Sempervivum, 47
- Serum, Botanical, 11
- Shepherd’s purse, 7
- Sisyrinchium angustifolium, 6
- Sneezeweed, 24
- Soap plant, 39
- Soapwort, 40
- Solidago nemoralis, 12
- Spanish Bayonet, 58
- Spearmint, 23
- Speedwell, 22
- Spiraea salicifolia, 18
- Spurge, 68
- Squaw bush, 63, 70
- Swamp root, 15
- Sycamore, 24
- T
- Tabardillo, 33
- Tea of the Indian, 5, 21, 68
- Thistle, Star, 69
- Tobacco, Tree, 60
- Trichostema lanatum, 48
- Tule, 56
- Typha latifolia, 56
- U
- Ulmus pubescens, 27
- Urtica holosericea, 59
- V
- Vanilla planifolia, 25
- Verbena hastata, 9
- Verbena, Lemon, 60
- Vervain, 9
- Veronica officinalis, 22
- Vitis vulpina californica, 6, 70
- W
- Watercress, 65
- Willow, 32
- Witch grass, 66
- Wormwood, 14
- X
- Xanthium canadense, 69
- Xanthium spinosum, 69
- Y
- Yarrow, 24
- Yerba Mansa, 15
- Yerba Mora Real, 69
- Yerba Santa, 19
- Yucca whipplei, 58
$2.50
THE BOTANICAL LORE OF THE CALIFORNIA INDIANS
by
John Bruno Romero
(Ha-Ha-St of Tawee)
Rare Indian lore collected and interpreted
by a full-blooded Chu-Mash Indian, who
grew up among members of the Cahuilla
tribe, is revealed in this unique book. Written
by a man who is anxious to share his
ancestral knowledge of the treasures in the
Great Field of Nature, this volume describes
120 medicinal herbs and gives recipes for
their preparation, their uses, their English
and Latin names, and where they may be
found.
The collection presented here was hand-picked
from 500 specimens gathered by
the author on a plant-hunting expedition
on the Pacific Coast and in Arizona. Only
twenty-eight, it is said, are known to modern
medical science.
For more than one hundred years, the
Indians have kept to themselves their profound
knowledge of medicinal herbs and
their application. Meanwhile, if the Indian,
with his intelligent and extraordinary attachment
to nature, had not preserved and
replanted a large number of these herbs,
many of them would now be extinct.
A close collaborator of the historical department
of the Santa Ana Museum in his
native California, the author is known as
a botanist of such high order that some
years back the British Museum sought his
assistance in assembling a remarkable collection
of Pacific Coast specimens of medicinal
herbs and Indian artifacts.
Mr. Romero, whose Indian name is Ha-Ha-St
of Tawee, presents his material in
highly entertaining manner, and his remarks,
some of them sotto voce, are extremely
apropos. Adding to the color of the
book is a wonderful legend written by the
author’s father, Chief Als Pablo, Chief of
Police of the Indian reservations in the
Southwest at the turn of the century.
The book is dedicated to the memory of
the author’s uncle, Chief William Pablo of
Guana-pia-pa, medical herbalist and medicine
man. It is a unique treasury of authentic
Americana, fortunately preserved for
our time.
Vantage Press Logo
VANTAGE PRESS, INC.
120 W. 31st St., New York 1
JOHN BRUNO ROMERO
John Bruno Romero
John Bruno Romero is a descendant of the Chu-Mash, once the largest
and most powerful of Indian tribes, whose domain included all the islands
along the California Coast, and, on the mainland, from the San Fernando
Mission northwest to San Francisco and north-northwest to the High
Sierras.
Mr. Romero was born in Santa Barbara, where he studied Spanish and
Latin at the Franciscan School Mission, and attended the Sherman Institute,
where he was a student of English and scientific subjects. He was later
graduated from the Detroit Veterinarian College.
At one time, the Cahuilla Indians controlled the lands of California
southward to the end of what is now the Mexican peninsula. When the
Chu-Mash tribe, in its later years, had dwindled in numbers, Mr. Romero
joined the Cahuilla tribe “to help fight the United States Government for
our land treaty rights.” Today this tribe is the second oldest in California
and the strongest in membership.
The author’s interests are wide. He is a director of Indian Affairs for
seven Southern California counties, and while his principal hobby is
medicinal botany, he is also a collector of minerals, stamps, books, and
fossils, and dabbles in taxidermy. Fond of children, he has adopted and
reared ten orphans. At one time or another, he has worked as a surveyor,
explorer, geologist, and antho-botanist, and his home is a veritable treasure
trove of interesting archaeological, geological, and botanical specimens
which he has collected in the mountains and deserts of Southern California
and Arizona—in sections where the white man has seldom traveled.
In 1933 he discovered, in the Trabuco Hills, in Orange County, near
Los Angeles, the skeleton of a mastodon, one of the few uncovered in
Southern California. Paleontologists at the Los Angeles Museum made
varying estimates of the age of the bones, ranging from ten thousand to a
million years.
In 1937, when the author was a junior geologist at the Santa Ana
Museum, he deciphered the hieroglyphics inscribed on some rocks found
on the Indian prayer grounds at the peak of a volcanic vent in La Piomosa
range in Arizona, which have been instrumental in providing historical
information about the life of the early Indians in the Southwest. The inscriptions
revealed the location of food and water in the surrounding
country and primitive conceptions of the supernatural.
Transcriber’s Notes
- Retained copyright information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
- Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
- In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.