History of Merced County, California with biographical sketches of prominent citizens, Part 11

Author: Parker, J. Carlyle; Elliott & Moore
Publication date: 1881
Publisher: San Francisco : Elliott & Moore
Number of Pages: 366


USA > California > Merced County > History of Merced County, California with biographical sketches of prominent citizens > Part 11


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The Mr. Donner who had charge of one company, was an


Illinoisian, sixty years of age, a man of high respectability and abundant means. His wife was a woman of education and retincluent, and much younger than he.


Of course these were soon utterly destitute of food, for they conld not tell where the cattle were buried, and there was no hope of game on a desert so piled with snow that nothing without wings could move. The number of those who were thus storm-stayed, at the very threshold of the land whose winters are oue long spring, was eighty, of whom thirty were females, and several, children. Much of the time the tops of the cabins were below the show level.


FORLORN HOPE PARTY.


It was six weeks after the halt was made that a party of fifteen, inchiding five women and two Indians who acted as guides, set out on snow-shues to cross the mountains, and give notice to the people of the California settlements of the condi- tion of their friends. At first the snow was so light and feathery that even in snow-shoes they sank nearly a foot at every step. On the second day they crossed the " divide," finding the snow at the summit twelve feet deep. Pushing forward with the courage of despair, they made from four to eight miles a day.


Within a week they got entirely out of provisions; and three of theni, succumbing to cold, weariness, and starvation, had died. Then a heavy snow-storm came on, which compelled them to lie still, buried between their blankets under the snow, for thirty-six hours. By the evening of the tenth day three more had died, and the living had been four days without food. The horrid alternative was accepted-they took the flesh fromn the hones of their dead, remained in camp two days to dry it, and then pushed ou.


On New Years, the sixteenth day since leaving Truckee lake, they were toiling up a steep mountain. Their feet were frozen. Every step was marked with blood. On the second of January, their food again gave out. On the third, they had nothing to eat but the strings of their snow-shoes. On the fourth, the Indians eloped, justly suspicious that they might be sacrificed for food. On the fifthi, they shot a deer, and that day one of their number died. Soon after three others died, and every death now eked out the existence of the survivors. On the seventeenth, all gave out, and concluded their wanderings useless, except one. He, guided by two friendly Indians, dragged himself on till he reached Johnson's Ranch on Bear river, the first settlement on the western slope of the Sierras, when relief was sent back as soon as possible, and the remaining six survivors were brought in next day. It had been thirty- two days since they left Donner lake. No tongue can tell, no pen portray, the awful suffering, the terrible and appalling straits, as well as the noble deeds of heroism that characterized this march of death. The eternal mountains, whose granite


THE TRAGIC FATE OF THE DONNER PARTY.


mark the last resting place of this borbi party.


RFLIFE PARTIE- THTED OUT


The story that there were immigrants pri-ling on the other side of the nowy barrier ran swiftly down the Sacraments valley to New Helvetia, But Captain Sutter, at his own expenses, tittel ont an expedition of men and of me ill with provisions, to cross the mountains and relieve them It run on to San Francisco, and the people, rallying in putdie meeting raised fifteen hundred dollars, and with it fitted out another expedition. The naval commandant of the port tittel out still others.


The first of the relief parties, under Captain J. P. Tucker, reached Truckee lake on the nineteenth of February. Ton of the people in the nearest camp were dead. For four weeks those who were still alive had fel only on bullocks hides. At Donner's camp they had last one hide remaining. The visitors left a small supply of provisions with the twenty-nine whom they could not take with them, and started back with the remainder. Four of the children they carried on their Imneks.


Second of the relief parties, under J. F. Reed, reached Truckee lake on the first of Murch They immediately started back with seventeen of the sufferers; but, a heavy snow-storm overtaking them, they left all, except three of the children, on the road. The third party, under John Stark, went after those who were left on the way; found three of them dead. und the rest sustaining life by feeding on the flesh of the dead.


The last relief party reached Donner's camp late in April. when the mows hul melted so that the earth appeared in spots, The main entin was empty, but some miles distant they found the last survivor of all lying on the calin floor smoking his pipe. "He was ferocious in aspect, savage and repulsive in manner. His camp-kettle was over the fire and in it his meal of human flesh preparing. The stripped bones of his fellow- sufferers lay around him. He refused to return with the party, and only consented when he saw there was no escape."


"This person was Lonis Keseberg, who has been execrated as a emmibal, and whose motive in remaining behind has been aseribed to plunder. Never until now has he made any 1


attempt to refute these stories, He says :-


" For nearly two months I was alone in that dismal cabin. * * * Five of my companions had died in my cabin, and their stark and ghastly bodies lay there day and night, seemingly gazing at me with their glazed and staring eyes. I was too weak to move them had I tried. I endured a thousand deaths. To have one's sntfering prolonged inch by inch; to be deserted. forsaken, hopeless; to see that loathsome fool ever before my 'yes was almost too much for human endurance."


For two months he livel there entirely alone, boiling the


tahi Ti dal compania When the last relief party came they found him the D'e survivor


If he were guilty of the crimes charnel to him he has cur. tainis paid the penalty To niee his own work: Wherever I have gone people have eric 1. 'Stone him' stone him " Esen little children in the streets have mocks I meant thrown stanley at ind as 1 pas 1. Only a man conscious of his own innocence would not have sneeninlesl to the terrilde things which have lugn said of me would not have committed suicide Montiti- ration, disgrace, disaster, and unheard of misfortune have fol- los and overwhelmed me."


Kesbury has lost several fortunes, and is now living in poverty at Brighton, Sacramento county, with two idiotic children.


PATE OF DONNER AND WIFE.


When the third relief jentty arrived ut Donner Inke, the solo survivia's at Aller Crrek were George Conner, the C'aptain of the company, and his hervir wife, whose devotion to her dying hustand caused her own death during the last and fearful days of waiting for the fourth relief. George Donner knew he was dying, and urged his wife to save her life and go with her litth. ones with the third relief, but she refused. Nothing was nure heart-rending than her sad parting with her beloved little ones, who would their childish arms lovingly around her neck and besought her with mingled tears and kisses to join them. Hurt duty prevailed over affection, and she retraced the weary dis- tance to die with him whom she had promised to love and honor to the end.


Mrs. Donner was the last to die. Her husband's body, care- fully laid out and wrapped in a sheet, was found in his tent. Circumstances led to the suspicion that the survivor (Ke-berg) had killed Mrs. Donner for her flesh and her money; and when "he was threatened with hanging, and the rope tightened around his neck, he produced ove, five hundred dollars in gold, which, probably, he had appropriated from her store."


STRANGE AND EVENTFUL DREAM.


George Yount was the pioneer settler of Napa county, llc dreamed that a party of immigrants were show-bound in the Sierra Nevada, high up in the mountains, where they were suffering the most distressing privations from cold and want of foud. The locality where his dream had placed these unhappy mortals, he had never visited, yet so clear was his vision that he described the sheet of water surrounded by lofty peaks, deep-covered with snow, while on every hand towering pine trees reared their heads far above the limitless waste. In his sleep he saw the hungry human being- ravenously tear the flesh from the bones of their fellow creatures, slain to satisfy their craving appetites, in the midst of a gloomy desolation. He dreamed his dream on three successive nights, after which he related it to others, among whom were a few who had


EARLY DISCOVERIES OF GOLD.


been ou hunting expeditions to the Sierras. The wished for a precise description of the scene foreshadowel to him. They recognized the Tracker, now the Donner lake. On the strength of this recognition Mr. Yount fitted out a search expedition, and, with these men as guides, went to the place implicated; and, prodigious to relate, was one of the successful relieving parties to reach the ill-fated Donner party.


SCENE OF THE DISASTER.


Of the eighty-seven persons who reached Donner lake, ouly forty-eight escaped. Of these twenty-six are known to be living in this State and in Oregon.


The best description of the scene of the disaster was given by Edwin Bryant, who accompanied General Kearney's expe- (lition in 1847 to bury the remains. He says: "Near the principal cabins I saw two bodies entire, with the exception tlint the allomens had been cut open and the entrails extracted. The fleshi had been either wasted by famine or evaporated by exposure to the dry atmosphere, and they presented the appear- auce of mnunnies. Strewn around the cabins were dislocated and broken skulls (in some instances sawed asunder with care, for the purpose of extracting the brains), human skeletons, in short, in every variety of mutilation. A more revolting and appalling spectacle I never witnessed. The cabins were burned, the bodies buried, aud now there is nothing to mark the place save the tall stumps, from ten to twenty feet in height, which surround some of the rocks on the lake's shore."


The Discovery of Gold.


No history of a county in California would be complete without a record of the rush to this coast at the time of what is so aptly named the " gold fever."


The finding of gold at Coloma by Marshall was not the real discovery of the precious metal in the territory. But the time and circumstances connected with it, together with the exist- iug state of affairs, caused the rapid dissemination of the news. People were ready and eager for some new excitement, and this proved to be the means of satisfying the desire. From all parts of California, the coast, the United States, and in fact the world, poured in vast hordes of gold-seekers. The precious metal had been found in many places.


.DR. SANDELS' SEARCH FOR GOLD.


1843 .- In the summer of 1843, there came to this coast from England, a very learned gentleman named Dr. Sandels. He was a Swede by birth. Soon after his arrival on the coast, the


Doctor visited Captain Sutter. The Captain always thought there must be mineral in the country, and requested Dr. Sandels to go out into the mountains and lind him a gold mine; the Doctor discouraged him by relating his experience in Mex- ico, and the uncertainty of mining operations, as far as his knowledge extended, in Mexico, Brazil, and other parts of South America. He advised Sutter never to think of having any- thing to do with the mines; that the best mine was the soil, which was inexhaustible. However, at Sutter's solicitation, Dr. Sandels went up through his grant to Hock Farm, und thence through the Butte mountains up the Sacramento valley, as far as the location of Chico.


While passing over the black adobe land lying between the Butte mountains and Butter ercek, which resembled the gold wash in Brazil, Dr. Sandels remarked :- " Judging from the Butte mountains, I believe that there is gold in this country, but I do not think there will ever be enough found to pay for the working." Dr. Sandels was hurried, as the vessel upou which he was to take passage was soon to sail, and he could not spare the time to pursue luis search to any more definite end.


GEN. BIDWELL KNEW OF GOLD.


1844 .- When General Bidwell was in charge of Hock Farm, in the month of March or April, 1844, a Mexican by the naine ol' Pablo Gutteirez was with him, having immediate supervision of the Indian vaqueros, taking care of the stock on the plains, " breaking" wild horses, and performing other duties cominon to a California rancho. This Mexican had some knowledge of gold mining in Mexico, where he had lived, and after returning from the mountains on Bear river, at the time mentioned, he informed General Bidwell that there was gold up there.


SUTTER'S SAW-MILL.


1847 .- Captain Sutter always had an unconquerable desire for the possession of a saw-mill, by which he could himself furnish the necessary material for the construction of more inproved buildings than the facilities of the country could at that time afford. Around his fort, in 1847, was a person named James W. Marshall, who had a natural taste for mechanical contrivances, and was ahle to construct, with the few crude tools and appliances at hand, almost any kind of a machine ordinarily desired. It was to this man that Sutter intrusted the erection of the long-contemplated and much-needed saw- mill. The contract was written by Mr. John Bidwell, then Captain Sutter's secretary, and signed by the parties. Marshall started out in November, 18+7, equipped with tools and pro- visions for his men. He reported the distance of the selected site to be thirty miles, but he occupied two weeks in reaching his destination in Coloma. In the course of the winter a dam and race were made, but, when the water was let on, the tail-


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MARSHALL'S DISCOVERY OF GOLD.


rare way too narrow. To widen and doopen it Marshall let in a strong current of water directly to the rare, which late a large baxly of wind and gravel to the font


MAISHALL'S DISCOVERY OF GOLD.


184%. On the 19th of January, 15th, Marshall observed some glittering particles in the race which he was curious enough to examine. le called five carpenter, on the mill to ry them; but though they talked over the possibility of its being gobl, the vision did not inthanw them


One Inwp weighed about seventeen grains. It was malle- able, heavier than silver, and in all semprety resembled gold About 4 o'clock in the evening Marshall exhibited his find to the circle composing the mill company laborers. Their names were Jmues W. Marshall, Wimmer, Mrs. A. Winner, J. Bar- ger, Ira Willis, Sydney Willis, A. Stephens, James Brown, Ezkiah F. Persone, Il. Big- ler, Israel Smith, William Johnson, George Evans, (. Bennett and Wil- liam Scott. The conference result- ed in a rejection of the iden that it was gold. Mrs. Wimmer tested it by boiling it in strong lye. Mar- shall afterwards tested it with nitric acid. It was gohl, sure enough, and the discoverer found its like in all the sur- rounding gulches wherever he dug for it. The secret could not be long kept. It was known at Yerba Buena three months after the discovery.


TWO IMPORTANT EVENTS.


thought would prove to be col. It hi prove to to gold, and there was a great deal more where that came from. General Bilwell writes " I myself tint took the new to San Fran- cisco I went by way of Sonuna. I told tieneral Valleju. H. told me to way to Suffer 'that he he pat the gold would flow into his pure as the water through his mill-race. "


WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN.


We cannot observe the coincidence of the date of this great discovery, with that of the negotiation of the treaty of peace with Mexico, by which California was acquired by the United Statens, without thinking, What if the gold divenvery had come first! What if the events of the war had postponed the con- clusion of peace for a few months? What if Mexico had heard thre news before agreeing upon terms? What if Mexico's large ereditor, England, had also learned that there was a- bundance of gold here in California ? Who can tell when. in that case, the would have ben peace, and upon what terms, and with what disposi. tion of territory :


SITTER'S MILL, WIBEKE GOLD WAS DEC WERED.


THE DISCOVERY DOUBTED.


Iu the bar room at Weber's Hotel in San Jose, ouc day in February, 1848, a man came in, and to pay for something he had purchased, offered some gold-dust, saying that gold had been discovered at Sutter's Mill on American river, aud all were going to work. The people were very incredulous and would not believe the story. An old Georgia miner sail that what the man had was really gohl, and requested him to investi- gate the matter. When he arrived at Sutter's Mill, he asked Sut- ter regarding it, and the Captain assured him that it was a cer- tainty, and that a man could make five dollars a day. He carried the news to San Jose and the place was almost deserted, every one hastening to the mines.


The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, by which California was reded to the United States, was conchided in Mexico, on February 2, 1848. It proves to have been on that very day, the second of February. IS48, that, here in California, 1 The people were suspicious regarding the quality and amount of the gold. As the weeks passed, confidence was gained and the belief that there inight possibly be precious minerals in other localities was strengthened. Marshall rides in from Sutter's Mill, situated at what is now Coloma, forty miles to Sutter's Fort, his horse in a foam and himself all bespattered with mud; and finding Captain Sutter alone, takes from his pocket a ponchi from which he pours upon Prospectors gradually pushed out beyond the narrow limits the table about an ounce of yellow grains of metal, which he , of the first mining district, and thus commenced the opening


58


FIRST DISCOVERY OF GOLD NOT CREDITED.


up of the vast mining fields of California and the Pacifie coast.


A SPECK OF GOLD.


A Frenchman fishing in a prospect hole for frogs for his breakfast, at Mokelunne Hill in November, 1848, discovered a speck of gold on the side of the excavation, which he dug out with his pocket-knife and sold for $2,150.


Three sailors who hadl deserted took out $10,000 in five days on Weber creek. Such strokes of good fortune turned all classes into miners, including the lawyers, doctors and preachers.


The exports of gold-dust in exchange for produce and merchandise amounted to $500,000 by the 25th of September. The ruling price of gold-dust was $15 per ounec, though its intrinsie value was from $19 to $20.


MERCHANTS REFUSE GOLD-DUST.


A meeting of citizens, presided over by T. M. Leavenworth and addressed by Samuel Brannan, passed resolutions in Sep- tember not to patronize merchants who refused to take gold- dust at $16 per ounce. A. memorial was also sent from San Francisco to Congress in that month for a branch mint herc. It stated, among other things, the opinion that by July 1, 1849, $5,500,000 worth of dust at $16 per ounce would be taken out of the mines. The figures were millions too low.


ADVANCE IN REAL ESTATE.


Real estate in San Francisco took a sudden risc. A lot on Montgomery street, near Washington, sold in July for $10,000, and was resold in November with a shanty on it for $27,000. Lots in Sacramento, or New Helvetia, also came up to fabulous prices that winter. By the month of October the rush from Oregon caused the Oregon city papers to stop publication. In December, the Kanakas and Sonorians came in swarms. A Honolulu letter, November 11th, said :-


"Such another excitement as the news from California cre- ated here the world never saw. I think not less than five hundred persons will leave before January Ist, and if the news continues good, the whole foreign population except mission- aries will go."


The news did continue good, and they came, some mission- aries included. Soon there came up from the mines complaints of outrage and lawlessness, mostly against Kanakas and other foreigners. How well they were founded, to what they lcd, and how they were suddenly and summarily silenced, is a story that covers a very interesting part of the history of California and the progress of eivilization in America.


On the 20th of May the Californian issued a slip stating that its further publication, for the present, would ccase, because nearly all its patrons had gone to the mines.


SAN FRANCISCO DESERTED.


A month later there were but five persons-women and


children-left in Yerba Buena. The first rush was for Sutter's Mill, since christened Coloma, or Culluma, after a tribe of Indiaus who lived in that region. From there they scattered in all directions. A large stream of them went over to Weber creek, that empties into the American some ten or twelve miles below Coloma. Others went up or down the river. Some, more adventurous, crossed the ridge over to the north and middle forks of the American.


By the elose of June the discoveries had extended to all the forks of the American, Weber creek, Hangtown creck, the Cosumnes (known then as the Makosume), the Mokelumne, Tuolumne, the Yuba (from uvas, or yuvas-grape), called in 1848 the "Yuba," or " Ajuba," and Feather river. On July 15th the editor of the Californian returned and issued the first number of his paper after its suspension. It contained a description of the mines from personal observation. He said :-


" The country from the Ajuba (Yuba) to the San Joaquin, a distance of about one hundred and twenty miles, and from the base toward the summit of the mountains, as far as Snow Hill [meaning Nevada], about seventy miles, has been explored and gold found on every part. There are uow probably thrce thousand people, including Indians, engaged in collecting gold. The amount collected by each man ranges from $10 to $350 per day. The publisher of this paper collected with the aid of a shovel, pick, and a tin pan, fromn $44 to $128 per day- averaging $100. The gross amount collected may excced $600,000; of which amount our merchants have received about $250,000, all for goods, and in eight weeks. The largest piece known to be found weighs eight pounds."


NUMBER OF MINERS IN AUGUST.


1848 .- On the 14th of August the number of white miners was estimated at four thousand. Many of them were of Stephenson's Regiment and the disbanded Mormon Battalion. The Californian remarked on that day that "when a man with his pan or basket does not average $30 to $40 a day, he moves to another place."


Four thousand ounces a day was the estimated production of the mines five months after the secret leaked out. In April the price of flour here was $4 per hundred. In August it had risen to $16. All other subsistence supplies rose in the same proportion. Here is part of a letter from Sonoma, to the Cal- ifornian, Angust 14th :-


" I have heard from one of our citizens who has been at the placers only a few weeks, and collected $1,500, still averaging $100 a day. Another, who shut up his hotel here some five or six weeks since, has returned with $2,200, collected with a spade, pick, and Indian basket. A man and his wife and boy collected 8500 in one day."


Sam Brannan laid exclusive claim to Mormon Island, in the American, abont twenty-eight miles above its mouth, and levied


59


THE GRAND RUSH FOR THE GOLD MINES.


a royalty of thirty per cent on all the gold taken there by the Mormons, who paid it for a while, but refused after they came to a better understanding of the rules of the mines. By Sep- tember the news had spread to Oregou and the southern coast, and on the 2d of that month the Californian notes that one hundred and twenty-five persons had arrived in town "by ship" since August 26th. In the "Dry Diggings " near Auburn-during the month of August, one man got $16,000 out of five eart-loads of dirt. In the same diggings a good many were colleeting from $800 to $1,500 a day.


In the fall of 1848, John Murphy, now of San Jose, diseov- ered Murphy's Camp Diggings in Calaveras, and some soldiers of Stephenson's Regiment discovered Rich Gulch at Mokelumne Hill. That winter one miner at Murphy's realized $80,000. It was common report that John Murphy, who mined a num- her of Indians on wages, had collected over $1,500,000 in gold- dust before the close of the wet season of 1848.


The following notice of the discovery is from the Culifor- nian, of San Franeiseo, on the 19th of April, 1848 :-


NEW GOLD MINE .- It is stated that a new gold mine has been discovered on the American Fork of the Sacramento, sup- posed to be [it was not] on the land of William A. Leidesdorff, Esq., of this place. A specimen of the gold has been exhibited and is represented to be very pure.


May opened with accounts of new discoveries. The Cali- fornian of May 3d said :- " Seven men, with picks and spades, gathered $1,600 worth in fifteen days." That was a little more than $15 per man per day. On the 17th of May the same paper said :-


" Many persons have already left the coast for the diggings. Considerable excitement exists here. Merchants and meehanies are closing doors. Lawyers and alealdes are leaving their desks, farmers are neglecting their erops, and whole families are forsaking their homes, for the diggings."




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