USA > California > Fresno County > History of Fresno County, California, with biographical sketches of the leading men and women of the county who have been identified with its growth and development from the early days to the present, Volume I > Part 12
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The blockhouse was erected in 1851 as a temporary defense in advance of the actual construction of the fort. At about the height that a man within would hold a rifle in the act of aiming the weapon on a rest, runs around the building a thick plank pierced with loopholes, each about a foot square.
All the habitable reservation structures have, in their day, been used as private dwellings, even to the barracks and hospital, for Millerton never had a building boom and accommodations for the visitor or newcomer were often at a premium. After abandonment of the fort it became the home of Judge C. A. Hart, was so occupied for years, and there he died. Having all been in almost continuous occupancy, fort buildings are fairly well preserved, though the boards protecting the adobe outside walls have been punctured by
THE OLD BLOCK HOUSE-FORT MILLER Erected 1851-The oldest building standing in county-original building constructed without use of nails
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
generations of wood-peckers for the storing of acorns. The blockhouse, sad to tell, is relegated to the base use of a cowshed.
The enclosing wall has long ago disappeared, so have the stables and quartermaster's sheds. The cemetery graves, with a few exceptions where no one came forward to make claim, were emptied long ago also, and the military dead removed to the national cemetery at the San Francisco Pre- sidio on final evacuation of the fort. The disinterments were principally among the later graves in the newer portions of the cemetery nearest the fort buildings. The last exhumation was that of the remains of the old-time sheriff. J. S. Ashman. The grave of the little Stiddam girl is the only marked sepulcher left in the burial ground-the rust eaten, iron fenced sunken grave of an infant. Frances E. Stiddam, who died October 21. 1861, and concerning whose kin all trace or knowledge has been lost.
The fort is used now as the farmhouse of the 14,000-acre cattle ranch, including townsite, of the W. H. Mckenzie estate, taking in land on both sides of the river and in two counties as the San Joaquin is the boundary with Madera on the north.
THE PICTURESQUE WAS NOT LACKING
The picturesque was not lacking at Millerton in the mining days. In- dians were a common-place sight in times of idling peace, to fill out the picture, what with one rancheria below the village and another on the bare bluffs on the other side of the river, facing the town. They begged for food, pilfered small things, did chores for money or a meal, or came to sell salmon speared in the stream, or small game snared or shot in the hillsides, while the squaw with papoose strapped on back in chokoni (canopied basket), came to barter her handiwork in beaded belts or moccasins, or woven reed baskets.
The rough and sun-blistered miner was of course very much in evidence in flaming red shirt, whatever the thermometer, heavy water-proof topboots with pantaloons tucked in them, and ostentatiously displaying pistol and bowie knife in belt, whether arriving new comer with pack on burro look- ing for a prospect, or whether one already located and at the village with pack animals to stock up provisions, and never forgetting a goodlv supply of aqua fortis for snakebites, or as a sovereign preventive against chills and colds as the result of working in the wet slush about rocker or cradle on river or creek bank.
The swarthy Sonoran was there in his wide sombrero, gaudy colored neckcloth and often in serape covering his shoulders. gliding about furtively because he was not always looked upon with favor. The meekest, most docile and unobtrusive was the blue-bloused, cow-hide booted, bowl-shaped, bam- boo-hatted Chinaman, working over the tailings that others had abandoned after winnowing the surface "color." A few Chinese women there were also, and never did one amble down the village street from Chinatown at the upper end of it bevond the later courthouse but she attracted general notice, even admiration, for woman was yet a curiosity. And last but not least during the days of the fort occupation, there were the off-duty soldiers kill- ing dull time and not looking the trim and natty men at arms as of the days long after the war. The Indians regarded them as veritable demi gods though, sober or not.
The arrival in dust cloud of freight team, mounted express or passenger stage was always an event that assembled the villagers. Steamers later landed at the head of Fresno Slough on the West Side and teams hauled freight to Visalia and other southern points, or eastward to Millerton or into the mines. The mounted express for the conveyance of gold dust, mail and small packages was the rapid transit means to the mines, for post offices there were at first none, and express companies handled the mail.
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
Adams & Company succeeded by Wells, Fargo & Company were in their day the carriers and did an immense and profitable mail and passenger busi- ness that was practically a monopoly for years. For the conveyance of dust or bullion, they were the only safe and responsible agencies, every coach carrying shotgun messengers to guard and protect the treasure. In 1857 Thomas M. Heston ran a stage (called the Rabbit Skin Express) from Hornitas to Visalia via Millerton, and the Silman lines made regular stage trips from Stockton to Millerton via Tuolumne City, Paradise City, Empire City, Snelling and Plainsburg. Later Silman & Carter also ran a stage from the Slough City to Visalia via Millerton.
Thomas M. Heston was represented to be "a whole-souled fellow and a good citizen." He was elected an assemblyman, and attended the eleventh legislative session in 1860, and in those days to be a successful stageman one had to be a popular idol-a very lacquered tin-god on wheels. Heston was believed to have been murdered afterwards near Esmeralda Mining Dis- trict, his remains having been identified by the gold filling in his teeth. But the California State Blue Book records that he was drowned in the Kern River in 1863.
The isolation of Millerton is not sufficiently appreciated in these days of hourly trains and of rapid transportation by Owl, Limited, Angel and all the other lightning express trains, in these hurry-scurry days of telegraph, telephone, long distance phones, special delivery mail, parcels post, wireless telegraphy and flying machines. This isolation was an inconvenience as late as February, 1871, in that it took then three days to go from Millerton to the near cities as follows: One day to Hornitas in Mariposa, sixty miles; one day from Hornitas to Modesto, forty miles, and then on the third day by the cars to San Francisco or Stockton. It was declared in all sobriety that under the existing schedule and if one were in a hurry to go to San Fran- cisco one could do so more quickly by stage riding to Visalia, sixty-five miles south, and then staging it to destination, gaining nearly two hours in time. The railroad had then built as far only as Modesto, with finishing work on the railroad bridge across the Tuolumne. Snelling was then the county seat. It was changed to Modesto with the advent of the railroad.
In May, 1870, a mail route from the New Idria quicksilver mines (now located in San Benito County just beyond the Fresno County line) via Panoche Valley, Firebaugh Ferry, Arcola (now Borden in Madera County) and Millerton, with an office at Arcola, was urged because as represented then the mine residents must come twenty miles to Millerton for their mail, while mail from Millerton to the New Idrians and Panoche Valleyites went to Stockton, thence to Gilroy in Santa Clara County, thence to the place of destination, journeying nearly 500 miles in a circle to cover about sixty or seventy in a direct line.
The people of Buchanan (a deserted copper mining camp now in Ma- dera County) were as urgently in need of a postoffice. They were forced to come to Millerton, fifteen miles distant, for their mail and this too in the face of the fact that it passed through the camp to go to Millerton for dis- tribution.
A RED LETTER WEEK FOR EXCITEMENT
A red letter week for unwonted excitement must have been the closing one in July, 1853, when the railroad route topographical survey party and its train of baggage wagons raised the dust of town towards a camp at the fort, followed in a day or so by Harry S. Love's dust-powdered cavalcade of twenty rangers, in redhot from the killing of Bandit Joaquin Murieta, whose head was brought in pickle, also the hand of Manuel Garcia, "Three Fingered Jack." Garcia was also decapitated but the skull was so shattered with Love's shots that it could not be preserved and was cast to the coyotes.
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
The survey party was protected by a detachment of dragoons, commanded by Lieut. George Stoneman. Little dreamed he then of the honors in store for him as a cavalry and corps commander ten years later in the war, or that in 1879 under the new constitution he would be elected one of the state's first railroad commissioners and on his masterly negative record as the minority member of three he would pave the easy way for the 1883-87 governorship of the state.
Certain, however, that a vermilion hued dash of color was given to the picture when there came into the village the sunbrowned gun fighters of Love, deputy sheriff of Los Angeles, a Texan, who had served as scout and express rider in the Mexican War and inured himself to border dangers and hardships. Bancroft describes him as "a law abiding desperado who de- lighted to kill wild men and wild beasts," a leader "with bright, burning and glossy ringlets falling over his shoulders," one who "wore a sword given by a Spanish count whom he had rescued from the savages," a personage the "way and walk of whom were knightly as of ancient cavalier," while "savages he had butchered until the business afforded him no further pleas- 1tre." That in the rude frontier settlement of rough men as at Millerton, Love was lionized goes without saying. Among his gun men were Harvey, who murdered Savage, and Philemon T. Herbert, the California congress- man (1855-56), who distinguished himself by shooting an inoffensive negro hotel waiter in Washington.
Truth to tell, the end of Murieta, with his pickled head as evidence of the fact, and the extermination of his band of cutthroats were events of state wide moment, the importance of which cannot be measured in these staid days of governmental regulation. The end of Murieta, described by Ban- croft as the "King of California Cutthroats," and the "Fra Diavolo of El Dorado," merits more than passing reference, because a state verily rejoiced in his death.
One unquestioned result of the enforcement of the foreign miner's tax law was the prejudice which it fomented, depriving many of employment and driving them to theft and even murder. This prejudice was evidenced in the passage, by the first legislature in April, 1850, of this tax law. It forbade anyone mining in the state, unless holding a thirty-days' twenty-dollar license, the sheriff empowered to assemble a posse of Americans to drive him off on nonpayment, and the governor's appointed tax gatherers receiv- ing three dollars out of every license collected, to make them active and per- sistent. In March, 1851, this trouble-making law was repealed, but subse- quently another was enacted fixing the license at four dollars per month and making the sheriffs the collectors. Except for harassing the inoffensive Chinese, it was not always strictly enforced. Persecution in 1850 growing out of this tax, in being driven from the Stanislaus River, followed by bind- ing to a tree and public flogging in Calaveras, on an unfounded charge of horse stealing is said to have prompted Murieta to take an oath of vengeance that was relentlessly kept, sparing not even the innocent, such an implacable foe of every Gringo American came he to be.
Besides the tax, there were laws prohibiting mining by any save such as could or intended to become citizens, and regulations of this character were not unusual in the Southern Mines until the four-dollar tax law was passed. But it was when the Chinese began to flock into the mining regions that the most violent hatred of the foreign element was aroused by their thrift and industry and the withdrawal of gold for which, as claimed, they left no compensating return. Driven from the mines, the Chinese accommodated themselves to the situation and became house servants, work hands and railroad builders, working more injury to white labor than if they had been left undisturbed in the mines among only a restricted class as to number.
For some years in connection with the tax collections, the waste upper San Joaquin Valley region, and especially that west of Tulare Lake was
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
roamed over by bands of Spanish speaking vagabonds, whose nominal voca- tion was running mustangs, but whose real activities were robbery and the protection of robbers. In October, 1855, the evil had so grown that on the Merced a company of rangers was formed and a bloody fight was had on the Chowchilla River with a band of horse and mule thieves. Sheriff's posses after these bands were not infrequent, nor sanguinary encounters either.
It is an interesting coincidence that in his career Murieta came in early contact with Ira McCray, who was such a notable and conspicuous personage in the history of Millerton. It was about 1853 in Tuolumne County, at Saw- mill Flat that McCray was a store keeper and obnoxious. to Murieta and his band, and that attempt was made to poison the spring furnishing drink- ing water. Fortunately the poison was so liberally applied that the project failed. McCray and others, it was said, had been marked for death and report had it that the store was to be robbed on a certain night. A mes- senger was sent to Columbia for aid, and in response came, with a little field piece that was discharged at frequent intervals to announce its ap- proach, a military company under Thos. N. Cazneau, who was state adjutant general under Governor Haight in 1870-71, but removed from office. There was no robbery attack on the store, but there was such a cleanup of eat- ables and drinkables at the Flat by the soldiers after the day's march that it was a debatable question whether a raid by the robbers would not have been preferable to the protection of the soldiery.
THE NAPOLEON OF THE CANYONS
To quote Bancroft, "Murieta stood head and shoulders over all knights of the road in California, if not indeed superior to the most famous high- waymen recorded in the annals of other countries." He was only a few months more than twenty-one when he died, after "a brilliant career of crime" of less than three years. Bancroft asserts that "the terms brave, daring and able faintly express his qualities," drawing then the far-fetched comparison that "in the canyons of California he was what Napoleon was in the cities of Europe." It is needless to recite details of his many crimes. Educated in the school of revolution in Mexico, it was an easy gradation for him to consider himself the champion of his countrymen rather than an outlaw.
The terror of the Stanislaus, his history "though crimson with murder, abounds in dramatic interest." In a few months he headed an organized band that ravaged in every direction, and he "gave proof every day of possessing a peculiar genius for controlling the most accomplished scoun- drels that had ever congregated in christendom." They operated principally in Calaveras, Tuolumne and Mariposa Counties, but covered the state at large in their impartial distribution of murderous attentions. For nearly three years, Murieta flitted between town and country, snapping fingers in the face of authorities and the populace, while throughout the length and breadth of the interior valley from Shasta to Tulare, and along the coast line of missions, the country lamented its dead and rang with demands for his capture, dead or alive. Joaquin lived mostly about the towns but kept his henchmen informed of what was going on and of the opportunities for plunder.
One of the secluded rendezvous places of the band was in the Arroyo de Cantua foothills on the West Side of Fresno County, where to this day are pointed out caves and watch peaks that served the band. The fraternity was sent out for operations in five subdivisions under as many secondary chiefs, acting simultaneously in widely scattered sections, and this with the membership of Joaquin Valenzuela, with similarity in name and appearance, earned for Murieta a reputation with some for ubiquity almost supernatural. Indeed upon his death, it was long insisted with dogged pertinacity that he
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
was still alive. In disguise one day at Stockton, he halted his horse to read a tacked up handbill offering $1,000 for his capture, and he nonchalantly added in pencil, "I will give $5,000-Joaquin."
The monster of the band was Manuel Garcia, "Three Fingered Jack," from the loss of a finger in the war with Mexico. This most sanguinary wretch. was no less conspicuous for savage cruelty as for courage. To grat- ifv his lust for human butchery, he adopted as his specialty the throat- slitting of Chinamen. Sometimes he pistoled them, but this was too tame work. He would seize them by the queue and with a twist peculiar to his practiced hand threw up the chin, presenting an unobstructed mark. His boast was that out of every ten not more than five escaped his aim.
At last the people of the state were aroused against this saturnalia of crime and butcheries as a reflection on their manhood in permitting it to go unchecked so long, and in March, 1853, the legislature passed an act empowering Love to bring out a ranger company of twenty mountaineers of experience, bravery and tested nerve to hunt down the marauders. Love followed on the trail, spying by night and keeping close cover by day. On Sunday, July 25, 1853, he and eight rangers came upon a party of seven camping west of Tulare Lake, six seated around a fire at breakfast. Murieta gave the alarm and threw himself on the back of his saddleless and bridle- less horse, speeded down the mountain side, leaped the animal over a preci- pice but falling with him was on his feet again, remounted and dashed on. The rangers close at his heels fired and the bay steed was shot in the side and fell. Joaquin ran afoot and received three balls in the hody. He turned on his pursuers, saying, "It is enough; the work is done," reeled, fell on right arm and died without groan. Garcia being cornered, fought but was overcome, after riding five miles and being shot nine times.
Love afterward received the $1,000 reward offered by the governor, and the legislature of 1854 generously added $5,000, the rangers having been engaged for $150 a month. The head of Murieta and the mutilated hand of Garcia were on August 18, 1853, advertised in San Francisco on exhibition at King's saloon at Halleck and Sansome streets-admission one dollar. Certificates of identity were attached of persons who had known Joaquin. These gruesome relics fell, in later years, into the hands of an anatomical museum, and were presumably destroyed in the big fire of April, 1906. The superstitious made much of the growth after death of Joaquin's hair and of the nails on Garcia's hand, but pshaw! there have heen more lurid and incredible tales told about Murieta and his band of a half hundred than were ever circulated concerning Robin Hood, Rob Roy, Fra Diavolo, Capt. John Kidd, Jonathan Wild, Jack Sheppard, Robert Ma- caire, and all the other unmentioned famous outlaws of history.
CHAPTER XV
FRESNO CUTS LOOSE FROM MARIPOSA, THE MOTHER COUNTY. POPULATION AND PROPERTY INCREASES. IT ORGANIZES AS A COUNTY. FIRST PUBLISHED MENTIONS WERE AS "FREZNO." NEEDS FOR INDEPENDENT POLITICAL ORGANIZATION. FIRST ELECTED COUNTY OFFICIALS. FOR MANY YEARS A DEMOCRATIC STRONGHOLD. A STATISTICAL CURIOSITY OF 1857. YEAR OF BIRTH, THE REMARKABLE ONE OF THE GREAT VIGILANCE COM- MITTEE. "LONE REPUBLICAN OF FRESNO." A YEAR OF MODEST AND SMALL BEGINNINGS.
For about six years, the territory now comprised in Fresno County, and more too, was tied to the governmental apron strings of Mariposa, the
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
mother county in the San Joaquin Valley, once regarded by common consent as a part of that geographical myth mapped on ancient charts as "The Great American Desert." A time came to cut loose and assume political majority as a county. Fresno, Merced and Mono were originally comprised in Mariposa, and all of Madera, parts of Kings and San Benito in Fresno. Mariposa had, in 1850, a population of 4,879, and in 1860, of 6,243. As showing the population increase of Fresno, there are the decade census returns as follows :
1860
4,605
1890 32,026
1870
6,336
1900
37,862
1880
9,478
1910 75,657
And in further proof that Fresno was not standing still but slowly developing her resources, despite drought and flood years, the following assessment figures are quoted for the first twenty years :
Year.
Property Value. Total Taxes.
1856
$431,403.60
$ 7,345.96
1860
931,007.00
14,895.86
1864
728,040.00
18,753.19
1868
2,366,025.00
55.143.40
1872
5,556,801.00
69,460.01
1876
8,292,918.00
136,431.48
The mining and lumber industries, the growth of agriculture, which had made a promising beginning, and the location of the military post here for the entire valley region had attracted a population, which had to transact its public and court business at Mariposa as the county seat, going thither from the farthermost end of the territory, involving a tedious and costly roadless journey over steep and rugged mountains and at times across dan- gerous streams. This was a growing source of expense to the individual, as well as to the taxpayers, for which those in the southernmost section on the San Joaquin received little return. The distance was so great and the isolation so marked that little attention was paid this section in the matter of roads or bridges or public needs-the territory was a source of revenue to Mariposa County while receiving comparatively no return. The county's territory was so immense, the revenue so limited in view of the sparse population and the many pressing demands of the new region, and the conditions so unsettled that the mother county could really not do much in a tangible way.
These conditions could not be worse but might be improved with home government and the spending of the tax revenue nearer home. They led to the county organization movement, and a petition to the legislature of 1856, resulting in the enabling statute of April 19 and the creative enactment of May 26. In petition and acts the original spelling of the county's name was "Frezno," a phonetic version that was soon abandoned. Millerton as the then most populous center was regarded as the logical place for the county seat-in fact could not then have had a rival. To organize the new county, seven commissioners were named in the act-Charles A. Hart, Ira McCray, James Cruikshank, H. A. Carroll, O. M. Brown, J. W. Gilmore and H. M. Lewis. The last named two were absent from the meeting at McCray's hotel on May 26, 1856, to organize and order for June 9 an election for county officers and to vote on county organization, which was accepted as a foregone conclusion. Cruikshank, a lawyer, was chairman and Carroll secretary of the commission, and the county legal machinery was duly set in operation. The first mentions of the new county are in the legislative proceedings and in the State Register for 1857, a publication on the Blue Book order. The latter's mention is reproduced as a present day curiosity :
FREZNO COUNTY (County Seat-Millerton)
Frezno County, organized 1856. Boundaries: North by Merced and Mariposa, east by Utah Territory, south by Tulare, and west by Monterey.
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HISTORY OF FRESNO COUNTY
TOPOGRAPHY-This county was formed from portions of Mariposa, Merced and Tulare, and contains that section of the mining region known as the extreme Southern Mines. The agricultural land in the county is situated in the vicinity of King's River, and is represented to be well adapted for grazing purposes. Number of acres in cultivation, including the Reservations, 2,000.
LEGAL DISTANCES-Not yet established by law (from Millerton to Stockton about 140 miles).
OFFICERS
Office.
Name.
Residence.
Salary.
County Judge.
Chas. A. Hart
Millerton
$2,500
District Attorney
J. C. Craddock
Millerton
1,000
County Clerk and Recorder .. J. S. Sayles Jr
Millerton
1,000
Sheriff and Tax Collector .. W. C. Bradley
Millerton
1,000
Treasurer
Geo. Rivercombe
Millerton
1,000
Assessor
John G. Simpson.
Millerton
1,000
Surveyor.
C. M. Brown.
Millerton
1,000
Coroner.
Dr. Du Gay.
Millerton
Fees
Public Administrator
James Smith.
Kings River
Fees
Supervisor.
John R. Hughes
Millerton
Per diem
Supervisor.
John A. Patterson
Kings River
Per diem
Supervisor
John L. Hunt
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