A history of California: the American period, Part 1

Author: Cleland, Robert Glass, 1885-1957
Publication date: 1922
Publisher: New York, The Macmillan company
Number of Pages: 552


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A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA:


THE AMERICAN PERIOD


BY ROBERT GLASS CLELAND, PH.D.


New York THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1922


All rights reserved


COPYRIGHT, 1922 BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY


Set up and electrotyped. Published August, 1922.


Printed in the United States of America


1223471


TO MY MOTHER AND THE MEMORY OF MY FATHER


PREFACE


As the title indicates, this volume deals with the American period of California history. It thus aims to complement the work of Dr. Charles E. Chapman, whose History of California: the Spanish Period, has already made its wel- come appearance from the press. As the preface to this latter volume states, the general plan of the two books was agreed upon as far back as 1914. Since that date, Dr. Chapman and the writer "have been in constant communi- cation, but otherwise working independently, with the view to producing between them, an authoritative popular history of California."


With the exception of a slight overlapping of the writer's opening chapters with the closing pages of Dr. Chapman's narrative (an overlapping, however, which has involved almost no actual repetition of incident), each book covers a separate field. Yet the keynote of the two volumes is essentially the same, namely, that California history is vastly more significant because of its national and inter- national aspects than for any local interest it may possess. From this standpoint, the event of primary importance in the history of California is its transformation from a Mexican province into an American state. To this event, as Dr. Chapman shows, the Spanish period looks forward; from this event, dates the California of today and the greater California of tomorrow.


In preparing this volume for the press, the writer has had in mind three objects-to make his book conform to the canons of sound scholarship; to escape a provincial and localized point of view; and to avoid being classed with those "who write for nothing so irrelevant as a reader."


Part of the material used in this volume was collected as far back as 1910 when the writer began the preparation


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viii


PREFACE


of a monograph (later published in Volume XVIII, Numbers 1-3, of the Southwestern Historical Quarterly), entitled The Early Sentiment for the Annexation of California. In the years since 1910, he has been working more or less steadily in the field of California history and closely related subjects, and has consulted many thousands of manuscripts and printed works in various libraries throughout the United States.


This volume, however, is something more than the product of many years of research and investigation. The writer has lived in California since 1889. He has known the state when it was still in a semi-pioneer stage, and has seen it rise to its present height of cultural development and material prosperity.


At one time or another, too, especially within the last few years, he has visited nearly every section of the state, from Imperial Valley to Humboldt Bay. Sometimes travelling by railroad; sometimes by automobile equipped with camping outfit; and best of all, sometimes with saddle horse and pack train, he has sought to familiarize himself with that vast empire of desert and mountain, thriving cities and fruitful valleys, which stretches a thousand miles along the Pacific, from Oregon to the Mexican bound- ary. For that empire, which the world calls California, the writer confesses an absorbing love; and for those who laid its foundations, an abiding admiration. This book, in the last analysis, is chiefly the product of that love and of that admiration.


The mechanical construction of the volume is essentially the same as that employed by Dr. Chapman. Quotations from accounts by eye-witnesses-the most interesting form of all historical literature-have been freely used; and much of the "professional paraphernalia" nowadays in common use among historians has been omitted. Footnotes, except in the case of Chapter XXIX, have been employed with restraint and elaborate bibliographical references avoided. A short bibliographical note, however, appears at the close of nearly every chapter. These notes are self-explanatory;


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PREFACE


and, except to say that the standard historians such as Bancroft, Hittell, and Eldredge, have been used through- out the course of the narrative, require no further com- ment here. For an excellent critical bibliography, cover- ing the entire field of California history, one is referred to the Literature of California History, which appears as an Appendix to Dr. Chapman's volume.


Because of the limitations of space, it has not been pos- sible to treat some of the important issues of California history as fully as one might wish in this volume. As an outstanding consequence-since the chief emphasis has deliberately been laid upon the years preceding and im- mediately following the acquisition of statehood-it has been necessary to condense the account of the developments of the last half century into the brief compass of three chapters. It is hoped that a more detailed discussion of the significant features of this period may sometime find place in another volume.


In conclusion, it is a pleasure to express the writer's grati- tude to the many persons who have aided in the preparation of this work. To the attendants of the Los Angeles Public Library, whose courtesy and helpfulness have been unfailing, he wishes to acknowledge an especial obligation. To Profes- sor Herbert E. Bolton and Professor Herbert I. Priestley, not only for the use of the materials of the Bancroft Library, but also for much personal assistance, he is likewise deeply indebted. Miss Laura Cooley of Los Angeles is especially deserving of thanks for the indexing of the volume.


Percy B. Goodell and Daniel S. Hammack, friends of long standing and companions on many a Sierra camping trip, aided in the selection of the photographs appearing in the volume. Judge Grant Jackson of Los Angeles; Mrs. Mabel Kilburn Doty of San Francisco; and Dr. George Watson Cole of the Henry E. Huntington Library placed valuable manuscript material at the writer's disposal, indebtedness for which is elsewhere more specifically acknowledged. To Dr. Norman Bridge of Los Angeles, who read many of the chapters in manuscript; and to Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.


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PREFACE


Gates of Pasadena, the writer also expresses his appre- ciation.


Dr. Charles Edward Chapman, author of the companion volume, has given advice and assistance in ways so numerous as to make impossible any adequate expression of the writer's thanks. Lastly, to his wife, Muriel Stewart Cleland, the author of this book owes the chief inspiration for what- ever merit its pages may possess.


ROBERT GLASS CLELAND.


Occidental College, Los Angeles, California. March 10, 1922.


CONTENTS


PAGE vii


PREFACE


CHAPTER


I. BOSTON, CALIFORNIA, AND CANTON 1


II. RESTRICTIONS AND EVASIONS 11


III. THE RUSSIAN EXPERIMENT . 22


IV. THE WHALERS AND HIDE TRADERS 35


V. JEDEDIAH SMITH, "PATHFINDER OF THE SIERRAS" 46


VI. JAMES OHIO PATTIE, FUR TRADER AND EXPLORER 61


VII. THE SUCCESSORS OF SMITH AND PATTIE 75


VIII. ADVERTISING AND IMMIGRATION-JOHN BIDWELL 91


IX. IMMIGRATION AND TRAGEDY-THE DONNER PARTY 108


X. WILKES AND FRÉMONT, GOVERNMENT EXPLORERS


128


XI. JACKSON, TYLER, AND CALIFORNIA 140


XII. "ANARCHY AND CONFUSION" 153


XIII. PLANS FOR ANNEXATION 165


XIV. CALIFORNIA, GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATES 176


190


XV. THE BEAR FLAG REVOLT 206


XVI. THE CONQUEST OF CALIFORNIA 225


XVII. THE GOLD RUSH .


XVIII. STATEHOOD . 247


XIX. MINES AND MINERS 262


XX. SAN FRANCISCO, THE BOISTEROUS . 284


XXI. THE QUEEN OF THE COW COUNTIES 303 XXII. CALIFORNIA AND SONORA: THE DAY OF THE FILIBUSTER 323 XXIII. THE FIRST DECADE OF POLITICS 343


XXIV. THE OVERLAND MAIL AND THE PONY EXPRESS 359


XXV. THE BACKGROUND OF THE PACIFIC RAILROAD . 369


XXVI. THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD 383


XXVII. THE DISCONTENTED SEVENTIES 402


XXVIII. POLITICS 1880-1910: A RÉSUMÉ 424


XXIX. MATERIAL PROGRESS . 440


XXX. REVIEW AND PROPHECY 461


APPENDIX A. THE GOVERNORS OF CALIFORNIA, 1846-1922 469


APPENDIX B. SHALER'S DESCRIPTION OF CALIFORNIA 470


APPENDIX C. A FORTY-NINER IN LOWER CALIFORNIA 483


APPENDIX D. RICHARD KERN'S REPORT OF 1853 ON THE ROUTE FOR A TRANSCONTINENTAL RAILROAD 496


INDEX


503


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MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS


CALIFORNIA AND THE FAR WEST, 1824 .


. Frontispiece FACING PAGE


THE SIERRA DIVIDE . 114


CASTRO'S PROCLAMATION AGAINST FRÉMONT 196


LAWSON'S MAP OF THE GOLD REGIONS .


262


KING'S RIVER CAÑON AND THE TUOLUMNE


464


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A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA THE AMERICAN PERIOD


A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA


CHAPTER I


BOSTON, CALIFORNIA, AND CANTON


ON February 2, 1848, the far-flung province of California so long the outpost of Spanish advance on the Pacific, passed out of the possession of Mexico into the hands of the United States. This change of sovereignty was the inevitable re- sult of forces set in operation a full half century before the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo formally recognized an ac- complished fact. The object of the chapters immediately succeeding is to explain the motives behind the long sus- tained movement for the annexation of California by the United States and to point out the numerous factors which tended to weaken Mexican control over the distant province.


American interest in California was first aroused by those New England "merchant adventurers" of the latter 18th and early 19th centuries, who transformed commerce into sheer romance and left behind them a record of accomplish- ment and daring that has not yet faded from American tradition. In the beginning, these New Englanders were drawn to California by the fur trade of the northwest coast, and the opening of commercial relations with the Chinese Empire.


The origin of this three-cornered New England-Northwest- Chinese trade dates back to the year of American inde- pendence. In 1776, while the colony of Alta California was still in swaddling clothes, two vessels sailed from Plymouth Harbor, England-starting point of so many famous voyages in the world's history-to explore the northwest coast of America and the islands of the Pacific. The command of


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A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA


this undertaking was entrusted to Captain James Cook, a navigator of the true Elizabethan type, in whose soul lived the same shrewd instincts of the sea and the same bold love of adventure that had lured Drake around the world, and sent Hawkins into the forbidden waters of the Spanish Main two hundred years before.


Upon reaching the northwest coast, after a prolonged stay among the South Pacific Islands, Cook found the natives of Nootka Sound, and of other places where his vessels touched, eager to trade with the Englishmen. For this purpose, accord- ing to the chronicler of the expedition, the Indians brought


"skins of various animals, such as wolves, foxes, bears, deer, rac- coons, polecats, martins, and in particular of the sea otters, which are found at the islands East of Kamtschatka." "The fur of these animals," the writer continued, "is certainly softer and finer than that of any others we know of and, therefore, the discovery of this part of the Continent of North America, where so valuable an article of commerce may be met with, cannot be a matter of indifference."


The sailors bought the skins from the Indians for a few trinkets of insignificant value, and used them as bed cover- ings for protection against the cold of the higher latitudes. When the expedition reached China, however, the furs, even though badly worn and in most cases infested with vermin, commanded extraordinary prices. The sea otter skins which the sailors had secured were especially in demand, and the Chinese readily gave over a hundred dollars apiece for them. So profitable, indeed, was the trade that the members of the expedition were with difficulty restrained from seizing the vessels and sailing back to the American coasts for a full cargo of furs, instead of completing the voyage to England.


The results of Cook's voyage were not made public until 1784; but some time before the publication of his official journals the opportunities offered by the northwest fur trade were revealed to a few Americans (among whom were Robert Morris, John Paul Jones, and Thomas Jefferson) by a very remarkable adventurer, John Ledyard, who had


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BOSTON, CALIFORNIA, AND CANTON


served as corporal on Cook's expedition. Several attempts were made to take advantage of the new field by Morris and Ledyard; but misfortune dogged the latter's steps, so that he never succeeded in reaching the northwest coast again. Before 1790, however, British and Russian traders, profiting from Cook's discovery, were visiting the coast in such numbers that the Spanish government became alarmed and made a futile effort to shut out the interlopers. The chief result of these activities was the Nootka Sound controversy and the end of Spain's policy of exclusion north of California.


In the meantime the Revolutionary War had come to a close, leaving the American States face to face with serious problems of government and equally grave economic difficulties. The commercial situation touched especially the merchant and shipping interests of New England, forcing them to look abroad for markets and to develop new lines of commercial enterprise if they were to prevent complete stagnation of trade. As a result of this condition, a certain William Shaw, supercargo of the Empress of China, sailed from Boston early in 1784 for the Orient. Reaching Macao, the port of entry for Canton, Shaw disposed of his cargo to good advantage and thus opened an entirely new field for American commerce.


For more than half a century the trade thus begun not only enriched the merchants of the Atlantic seaboard, but also exerted a very profound influence upon the course of California history. Shortly after Shaw's successful venture a company of Boston merchants, headed by Joseph Barrell, conceived the idea of enlarging the New England-Chinese commerce so as to include the northwest coast. In keeping with this plan the company sent two vessels to the Pacific in 1787. These were the Columbia, under John Kendrick, and the Lady Washington, under Robert Grey.


The present narrative makes no pretense of dealing with the memorable expeditions of these two men, since their field of operations and discoveries touched the northwest rather than the California coast. Inasmuch, however, as


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A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA


these voyages ushered in the New England trade with the northwest coast and China, they had a direct bearing upon California history. In this trade furs constituted the chief item of every cargo; and before long, fur hunting ceased to be localized along the northern coast, but extended from South America to Alaska, flourishing especially off the long stretches of unfrequented seaboard and in the little-used harbors of California.1


Most of the furs obtained by American vessels were carried to Canton, which was then one of the chief fur mar- kets of the world. One reason for this demand for furs among the Chinese was the lack of heating facilities in their homes, and the consequent reliance of the people upon heavy clothing to protect them against the cold, both indoors and out. By those able to afford the luxury, furs were conse- quently much sought after; and a fur garment became a sort of heirloom to be passed down from father to son for several generations.


When the American trade with China began, the latter nation was living under its traditional policy of exclusion. Foreign vessels were allowed to touch only at a single port, that of Macao, through which entrance was had to Canton. The trade was hedged about with all manner of additional restrictions which sprang from the pride and jealousy of the Chinese government, but from the very beginning American merchants were treated with somewhat greater favor than those of European countries.


As time went on the value of the Chinese commerce be- came more and more apparent to New England merchants. The Yankee navigators of those early days not only had great daring and skill in the handling of ships; but also combined with their knowledge of the sea a native shrewdness and originality in business that made them successful competi- tors in every branch of international commerce in which they chose to engage.


1 The first New England vessel to touch at a California port was the Otter, commanded by Captain Eben-


ezer Dorr, which put into Monterey October 29, 1796. Dorr was not a fur trader.


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BOSTON, CALIFORNIA, AND CANTON


In the Chinese trade the New Englanders had a free field in which to exercise all their native ability. Disregarding custom and tradition, they "inverted all the ancient rules of doing business at Canton." Once in the Pacific, the navigator felt himself superior to any law that proved in- convenient to his business. Ships' papers and names were changed to suit the needs of the moment; customs duties were evaded, and forbidden trade carried on with calm disregard for local regulations. Competition with rivals of other nations and between New England merchants themselves led to secrecy in commercial dealings, constant search for new fields of enterprise, and remarkable reduction in sailing time from port to port. For the most part the vessels engaged in the China trade were sound and well equipped; but when occasion required, a Yankee captain would take a leaky, worm-eaten craft, man it with a crew made up of broken down sailors or deserters from other vessels, sail it half way around the world in spite of storm and mutiny, and make his fortune on the cargo.


In searching for commodities acceptable to the Chinese, the New England vessels soon left the regular channels of trade for out-of-the-way and, in many cases, previously undiscovered ports. They penetrated every nook and corner of the South Seas. The harbors of South America, California, and the northwest were almost as well known to them as their own coasts of New England. They became familiar sights to the natives of the Malay Archipelago and the In- dians of Alaska. And when, after sailing through most of the Seven Seas, a New England vessel finally reached Can- ton, its cargo would be made up, aside from the original store of domestic products with which it left Boston, of a score of commodities from the world's out-lying ports-copper from Chili, sandalwood from the Sandwich Islands, rice from Manila and Java, mother-of-pearl from the Persian Gulf, and pepper, tin, fish maws, and birds' nests from the Straits Settlements. Most valuable of all were the furs from South America, California, and the northwest coast.


By a fortunate combination of circumstances the Ameri-


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A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA


cans enjoyed a monopoly of this fur trade after the beginning of the century. The Russians, first to enter the field of the northwest, were limited in their intercourse with China to a semi-clandestine overland trade of too small proportions to supply a market for any considerable number of furs. The English, who might have preempted the business after Cook's voyage, were likewise restricted, not by Chinese law as was the case of the Russians, but by the conflicting privi- leges of two great monopolies-the East India and the South Sea Companies. The former, which held the exclusive right in England to trade with China, was not free to send its vessels across the Pacific for furs, and would not permit its South Sea rival to infringe upon the Chinese monopoly. The consequence was that neither company could profit by the northwest trade. In various ways, it is true, a few English vessels succeeded in trespassing upon the East India Company's prerogative; but the bulk of the business neces- sarily fell into the hands of Americans. In this monopoly the latter were also aided by the effect of the Napoleonic wars upon European shipping.


The New England traders soon entered into mutually satisfactory arrangements with the Russian American Fur Company, which obtained a monopoly of the Russian activities on the Pacific in 1799. Under these agreements the Russians engaged to furnish furs and companies of Indian hunters to the American vessels, while the New Englanders undertook to dispose of the skins in China and bring back such supplies as the Russian company required for its settlements in Alaska.


The furs carried to China were of many kinds-land otter, fox, rabbit, beaver, nutria, musk rat, sea lion, and sea elephant. The skins of chief value, however, were those of the fur seal and the sea otter. The fur seal abounded along the South American coast and on the adjacent islands, and from Lower California northward to Alaska. These skins formed the bulk of most of the fur cargoes carried to China until the virtual extinction of the seal in southern waters by indiscriminate slaughter. In 1798, for example,


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BOSTON, CALIFORNIA, AND CANTON


Captain Fanning, in command of the Betsey, obtained a full cargo of seal skins from a single hunt on the island of Masa- fuero; and during the course of the next few years the same island yielded more than a million skins to other American hunters. In one year, it is said, thirty vessels were engaged in the industry off the South American coast. California was likewise a favorite hunting ground for these early sealers, the Farallon Islands alone producing over 150,000 skins between 1809 and 1812. The pelts brought an average price of a dollar and a half or two dollars in the Chinese market; and cach animal also furnished nearly a gallon and a half of excellent oil.


The fur of chief importance in California history, however, was not that of the seal but of the sea otter. This animal, indeed, exerted almost as great an influence as the beaver upon the course of North American history. It was re- sponsible for the Russian occupation of Alaska, the early voyages of Englishmen to the British Columbia coast, and the first contact of Americans with California and the northwest.


To describe the fur of the sea otter one must appropriate good old Sir Isaac Walton's tribute to the strawberry- "Doubtless God might have made a more beautiful fur, but doubtless He never did." The skin of the full grown animal was nearly five feet long, and from two feet to two and a half feet wide. The fur, normally about three quarters of an inch in length, had a jet-black, glossy surface of sur- passing beauty. The finest skins also contained some white hairs intermingled with the black.


The habitat of the sea otter extended from about 28º north latitude to the Aleutian Islands. It was found in largest numbers off the coasts of Upper and Lower Cali- fornia, and on the islands of Cerros, Guadalupe, San Miguel and those of the Santa Barbara Channel. The otter of these channel islands, in fact, yielded the most valuable fur of the entire coast from Alaska to Lower California; and the stretch of sea from Catalina to Santa Cruz was conse- quently a common hunting ground for American vessels. The long reaches of San Francisco Bay were also favorite


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A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA


haunts of the animal; and above the California line, it was found in largest numbers in the vicinity of Cape Blanco, Point Grenville and Grey's Harbor.


Vessels engaged in the traffic obtained furs in various ways. On the northwest coast most of the skins were secured by trade with the Indians. In California waters the New Englanders both hunted on their own account and also purchased skins from the mission authorities or govern- ment officials. By an arrangement already mentioned, the Russian American Company sometimes furnished American vessels with Kadiak Indians to serve as hunters. These hunters were brought down to the California coast, and left in small groups on the Farallon, Channel, or Lower California Islands. From time to time the vessel then brought them supplies, or came to take off the skins al- ready procured. Since these Indian hunters lived almost entirely upon the flesh of the animals secured, the cost of procuring furs in this way was very low.


The Indians hunted chiefly from the shore, or in skin canoes called bidarkas. They sometimes used rifles in hunting, but more commonly employed nets, clubs, and spears. The use of these primitive weapons, however, re- sulted in a serious wastage of furs, since many of the otter, killed after a long chase, sank beneath the water and were never recovered. This difficulty was sometimes obviated by the use of a native wooden harpoon, with a head some six or eight inches long, to which was attached a long string.




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