USA > California > Napa County > History of Napa and Lake Counties, California : comprising their geography, geology, topography, climatography, springs and timber, together with a full and particular record of the Mexican Grants, also separate histories of all the townships and biographical sketches > Part 43
USA > California > Lake County > History of Napa and Lake Counties, California : comprising their geography, geology, topography, climatography, springs and timber, together with a full and particular record of the Mexican Grants, also separate histories of all the townships and biographical sketches > Part 43
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H. H. Harris
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Biographical Sketches.
down the Sacramento to Sutters Fort. The object of dividing the party was, that those who remained with the teams might have provisions enough to last them through. The horseback party secured their own provisions as they went along. At Fort Laramie the party had secured the services of that noted old trapper and hunter Joseph Walker, to pilot them through the mountains, paying him the sum of $300 therefor. From Fort Hall the party with the teams, of which Mr. Baldridge was one, proceeded to the Humboldt River, near the head of the north fork, and followed that stream to the sink ; thence south by way of Carson, Walker, and Owens Lakes, on the east side of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. At Owens Lake they left their wagons, not being able to proceed further with them. They had with them a full set of saw-mill irons, including three sash saws, and these were cached there. Some years ago some miners unearthed them, and they were the subject of much speculation as to how they got there, and who could have buried them in that out of the way place. They then packed their goods on mules and rode their horses, and proceeded on their way. They went along on the eastern side of the Sierras until they came to what is known as Walker's Pass, east of where Visalia now stands. Here they crossed the mountains, arriving at the summit at eleven o'clock, December 3, 1843. The snow was then six inches deep, and soon after it was so deep as to bar the passage altogether. They pushed on into the valley, and then started for Sutters Fort. Walker insisted on crossing the Tulare Val- ley, stating that there was an abundance of game in the mountains on the west side of it, and water in it. So finally they consented to go, and they were three days and nights without anything to eat or any water to drink, the valley proving to be a barren desert. Colonel Chiles and his party arrived some time previous to this at Sutters Fort, and with three men he proceeded to Walkers Pass to meet the party, but failed to find them. At the end of the third day McIntosh succeeded in killing a mountain sheep, which was the first thing they had found that was eatable during the trip across the valley. When they got to the west side of the valley they found game very plentiful, consisting of deer and antelope, which were as thick as sheep, also wild horses, which were very fat, and so palatable that their meat was preferred to that of either deer or antelope. Walker kept bearing off to the westward, and the first they knew they were very close to Monterey. Mr. Baldridge and Atkinson went to that place to purchase passports, and it took them three days to get them, owing to the indolence and indifference of the Mexican officials. At last, growing exasperated, he used some Saxon oaths which had the desired result. By this time the rest of the party had gotten so far away that they never saw them again as a whole. Julius Martin and others stopped in that vicinity or a little farther north, while others came on to Sutters Fort. Mr. Baldridge and " Old Wheat " came up to Gilroy's,
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and there they met with James M. Hudspeth, now a resident of Green Valley, Sonoma County, and Alexander Copeland, who were at work at that place, and they provided them with fresh horses and escorted them as far as the Pueblo de San José. Chas. Weaver then took them to Juan (John) Liver- more's place, and thence they proceeded across the San Joaquin River, near where Stockton now stands, and thence to Sutters Fort, where they met the most of their party, and also Colonel Chiles, who had returned from Walkers Pass. Just at this time General Sutter was about to dispatch the schooner " Sacramento," a craft which had been included in his famous pur- chase of the Russian effects at Fort Ross in 1841, to Napa Embarcadero to get lime from Nicolas Higuerra, and Colonel Chiles, Mr. Baldridge, Miss Yount, and the Vines family were given passage upon the vessel. But all this tedious journey was not without its pleasures and its romances as well, one of the latter of which it is well to record in this connection. When the party had gotten well out upon the plains they fell in with an Englishman and his family, consisting of a wife and a sixteen-year old daughter, by the name of Eyer, who were bound for Oregon. The man was brutally cruel towards his family, it being no uncommon thing for him to severely casti- gate both wife and daughter. Mr. Baldridge was younger then than he is now, and his heart may have been a little more tender, and his sym- pathies a little more easily wrought upon; but be that as it may, he saw a sweet-faced, innocent girl subjected to the brutal treatment of a father with a vicious and capricious temper, and his chivalrous nature resented the insult thus given to injured innocence, and he resolved to liberate the girl from the abject bondage of her inhuman father. He asked Mrs. Julius Martin if she would take the girl in her charge and care for her on the way to California if he could succeed in inducing her to come with them. To this that excellent lady readily consented, so he proceeded to the camp of the Eyer family, and consulted the mother on the subject. She was only too glad to give the girl a chance to escape the outbursts of the father's wrath, and the consequent punishments. He then made the proposition to the girl, who "jumped at the chance " to get out of the reach of her father's stinging lash and heavy fist. Accordingly, she was transferred, bag and baggage, to the California party; and the poor mother was left to hear the brunt of rage, which evidently welled up in torrents when the father discovered what had taken place. When the Martin family decided to stop at Gilroy, Miss Yount prevailed upon the girl, Mary Eyer, to accompany her to her father's home in Napa Valley ; and accordingly, when Mr. Baldridge arrived at Sutters Fort, he found them both at that place. We now leave our heroine, for we must go to look for the hero. While Mr. Baldridge has already shown himself a true hero, and was destined to do yet more noble and unselfish deeds, yet he is not the hero
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of this truthful romance. We must go back twelve years, and take the reader to the then frontier town of Lexington, Missouri, then the rendez- vous of many of the trapping and hunting parties that made periodical peregrinations into the almost unknown, and but little traveled, mountains and wildernesses that lay beyond toward the setting sun. In 1831, there arrived in Lexington a party of thirty men, under command of Captain Wyatt, bound for Oregon. They were all old sailors, and were dressed in uniform as marines, and marched out of town in grand style, and on into the dim haze of the wide, outstretching prairie. Along with the party, in the capacity of private secretary and book-keeper for Captain Wyatt, was a young Scotchman, of genteel appearance, and a man of evident intelli- gence. His name was John Cinclair. Among those who stood upon the street, and saw this party pass through the town of Lexington, was Wil- liam Baldridge, then a stripling boy of only twenty summers. The party passed on, and of its history but little is known. Captain Wyatt was the man who built Fort Hall. Cinclair went to Oregon, and thence to the Sandwich Islands, where he was married to a Kanaka or native woman. He then came to San Francisco, and engaged in business; and finally located on the place now known as Sinclair's ranch, near Sacramento; and was at Sutters Fort when the party, of which Mr. Baldridge was a member, arrived. In the meantime his Kanaka wife had died leaving one child, a bright girl of some five years, who could talk almost a language for each year of her life. In Mr. Baldridge's protégé, his veritable "Prairie Flower," Cinclair saw all that his heart desired, a woman of his own language and blood, and he forthwith laid seige for her hand and heart. Like the dutiful child that she was, she consulted her guardian, Mr. Baldridge, who after making due inquiries in regard to the character he sustained, gave his con- sent, and they were married, and the match proved to be a fortuitous one in every respect. Truly " there is a destiny that shapes our ends, rough hew them though we may." Mr. Baldridge worked at his trade of mill-wright for the first year or two after his arrival here. In 1845 Colonel Chiles and he made preparations to put up a mill in Santa Clara County, getting out all the timbers and shafting at the Yount Saw Mill, but the Micheltoreno Revolution broke out at that time, and the project had to be abandoned. In 1845 Colonel Chiles got his grant from the Mexican Government for the Catacula Rancho, and Mr. Baldridge being a partner in it, they went upon it and began operations, taking a band of cattle into the valley and building a house there. In 1846 the indistinct mutterings of threatening troubles with the Mexicans began to be heard, and the American settlers were all agog to learn what it would culminate in. Neighbors lived far apart, and communication between them was rare, especially in such out of the way places as Chiles Valley. One day in June, Mr. Baldridge and Mr. Thomas
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Wesley Bradley, took a mule and went over to the Sandstone Mountains, (the Blue Ridge,) east of Berryessa Valley, to get some grindstones which he had previously cut out. Two poles were cut and fastened on either side of the mule like the thills of a buggy, and the ends were allowed to drag on the ground. The stones were lashed securely to these poles, and a genuine Indian vehicle was thus constructed. That night they camped on the west side of Putah Creek in a clump of willows, and while sitting by the fire after partaking of their evening repast, and discussing the aspect of the impending difficulties with the Mexicans, Mr. Baldridge spoke up suddenly and said, "We will know all about it before we leave this camp." "Why, what makes you think so," exclaimed his companion. "I don't know," he replied, "but something tells me that we will." They continued talking for perhaps an hour, when they suddenly heard the tramp of horses' feet, and some one shout out, " Hold up; don't come here." They recognized the voice of Captain John Grigsby, and immediately went to him, making themselves known. He was accompanied by William Elliott, and they had been to Sutters Fort to have a consultation with General Fremont, and were then passing back into Napa Valley by this little-fre- quented route, and in the night, so as to avoid being seen by the Mexicans and thus arousing their suspicions. The trail led up to a steep bank of the creek, and turned abruptly to one side and passed down into it; but Grigsby's horse had gone right over the bank in the dark, hence the exclamation quoted above. And so Mr. Baldridge's prophecy was fulfilled there and then. Who can tell whence came the impression that so soon became a verity ? Mr. Baldridge proceeded home, and, on the day following the cap- ture of Sonoma, he and Colonel Chiles started for Sutters Fort, being anxious to join Fremont's force and engage in the active campaign. That night they stopped at William Gordon's on Cache Creek, and during the night a courier came by on his way to Fremont's camp, stating that a large force of Mexicans were marching toward Sonoma for the purpose of recap- turing it. Mr. Baldridge and Colonel Chiles set out at once to go to the relief of the American party, and arrived at Sonoma on the 16th. He remained at the town of Sonoma until Fremont started to Sutters Fort to begin the active campaign. The 4th of July was celebrated at Sonoma, and the Declaration of Independence was read by Lieutenant Woodworth, of the United States Navy, from a book belonging to Mr. Baldridge, which he had brought across the plains, and which he still has in his possession as a relic of those by-gone days. On the 5th an organization of the American volunteers was effected. Mr. Baldridge was chosen chairman of the meet- ing which was held for this purpose, and John Bidwell was secretary. The force was divided into three companies, and the captains were voted for viva voce, resulting in the election of John Grigsby-who remained in charge of
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Sonoma with his company-and John Ford and Granville P. Swift, who took their companies upon the campaign with Fremont. Mr. Baldridge was elected orderly sergeant of Captain Swift's company at this time. On the 6th the whole force, including Fremont's men and the volunteers, took up the line of march for Sutters Fort. Fremont and his men went by way of Soscol, Green Valley, and Knights Landing, while the two companies passed through Berryessa Valley, for the purpose of gathering up some horses. They found none, however. They proceeded down Cache Creek to a point opposite Sutters Fort, where they crossed the river in small boats. They dismounted, and began making preparations for camping near the fort. Mr. Baldridge, desiring to procure some supplies from the fort, took his rifle in his hand and proceeded to the door, which, to his great surprise, he not only found shut, but also barricaded. This was an unu- sual state of affairs, for the doors of the fort usually stood open for all who chose to enter. He knocked loudly at the door, and an Indian, who was a guard, told him that he could not enter. Just then General Sutter opened the wicket of the door, and on seeing who it was, opened the door, saying : " I surrender to you ; I held out as long as I could, but you were too strong for me." Mr. Baldridge could not make out the meaning of such a queer expression, for there stood two large field pieces facing the door, besides other guns at the embrasures, and a lot of small arms. The truth was that Sutter was a Mexican officer, and as such had to make a show of resistance, at least, to the " Americanos," although he was heart and soul in sympathy with them. And so it was that the subject of this sketch added one more romantic adventure to his already long list, and to him can truly be given the honor and credit of capturing a well armed fortress single-handed. A man by the name of William Scott brought the news of the war with Mexico to Sutters Fort. From that place Mr. Baldridge proceeded with Fre- mont's Battalion to Monterey, where he was first appointed and then elected by the members of the company to the position of Lieutenant of Company " C," Fremont's Battalion, which position he honorably filled till the close of the war. From Monterey they went in vessels to San Diego, and there made an incursion or two into the interior, but were not in any very hard- fought battles, and were at Cauango at the time of the surrender. It was generally supposed by the soldiers that they would see Pico's forces drawn up in grand array, and that they would march into camp and lay their arms at the feet of the victors, as they had seen pictures in their old his- tories of the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown. What, however, was their surprise and consternation, about 10 o'clock in the morning, to see a couple of " Greasers " come over the hill, each with a riata fastened to the horn of his saddle, to the other end of which was a mountain howitzer. That virtually closed the war on California soil. At San Diego the marines
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were taken ashore first, to capture the place, and the volunteers were kept in the background. In the plaza a crowd of people congregated to see the strange soldiers, and among them was a dashing-looking personage, mounted on a well caparisoned horse. Finally, he attracted the attention of Lieutenant of Marines Maddox, and he inquired who he was. The man overheard the inquiry and answered, "I am Andreas Pico, and I will see you later." With this he rode away, leaving the Lieutenant to swear at his own stupidity in not being able to capture the leader of the Mexican forces when he was in the midst of his vaunted marines. Mr. Baldridge assisted in constructing the breastworks that are still to be seen on Fort Hill, in Los Angeles. At the close of the war he returned to civil pursuits, and in 1852 moved upon his present place, and has since followed farming and stock raising, and is to-day one of Napa's most honored and respected citizens, and a gentleman it is certainly a pleasure to meet. He is a Master Mason, and is an honorary member of Jerusalem Lodge, No. 1, organized in that city by Robert Morris, in 1875, being probably the only member of that lodge in California. He is still unmarried.
BARNETT, ELIAS JOEL. Son of Jesse and Lavinia Clark Barnett, was born in Pine Grove, in Lawrence County, Ohio, June 19, 1849, where he resided till the spring of 1851, when, with his parents, he moved to Hanging Rock, same county; and at the end of one year they moved to Haverhill, Scioto County. In 1854, with his parents, he crossed the plains to California, and settled in Pope Valley, and resided with his parents till 1875, when he began for himself, purchasing at that time his present estate, consisting of three hundred and twenty acres of land, where he has since been engaged in farming and stock raising. Mr. Barnett marrien October 10, 1875, Miss Anna Wallace, who was born in Benton County, Arkansas, March 23, 1849. By this union, they have Ida May, born August 18, 1876 ; Henry, born October 31, 1878 ; Ada Lena, born January 13, 1881.
BAILEY, PETER D. A native of Ireland, emigrated to America in 1841 and settled in Ohio. His occupation while in that State was assistant engineer on the Zanesville and Maysville turnpike road, and school teaching. In November, 1844, he moved to Jackson County, Missouri, and there engaged in buying and selling real estate, and school teaching. May 10, 1849, he started with a pack train across the plains to California, arriving in Sacramento August 8th of that year. From Sacramento he proceeded to the mines on the Yuba River, where he mined till November 1st. He then came to Napa and remained till the spring of 1850, when he once more returned to the mines on Feather River, where he remained till October. He then returned to Napa and embarked in farming, which he continued till 1876. He then retired from business, since which time he has not been engaged in any business whatever. Mr. Bailey is unmarried.
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Biographical Sketches.
BROWN, JACOB B. Was born in St. Martins, New Brunswick. Re- sided at his birthplace until fourteen years of age. At the age of eighteen months his father died, leaving his mother with a family of twelve children. The mother died when he was seventeen years of age. Then moved to St. Johns, New Brunswick, and was bound an apprentice to a firm named Harris & Adams. Served six years, three years in a blacksmith shop, and three years in a machine shop. At the expiration of that time he per- suaded his brother, W. H. Brown, to start in business, which he did, and worked in company with him for two years. Then started for Boston, Massachusetts. He worked in Boston and Chelsea at three dollars per day. December 4, 1849, started for Bath, Maine, and sailed in the bark " Emma " for California, under contract with a company that brought out the steamer " H. T. Clay," to pay his passage on which he agreed to work thirty days, putting the machinery in said boat. He worked his thirty days, and at the expiration of that time he was paid three hundred dollars a month to finish putting in machinery and run the same from San Francisco to Sacramento. February 1, 1851, he started for the mines, on the north fork of Yuba River, Poverty Bar, and worked three months. He then returned to San Francisco and placed his money in the bank, and continued his trade of machinist and blacksmith, receiving eight dollars a day for several months. He then moved to Bidwells Bar, and embarked in mining, re- maining there until the first of June, 1852. On the discovery of the " Rich Bar diggings," on Butte Creek, he proceeded there, but remained only a short time, having but little success. He drew his money out of Adams Express Company's Bank only a few days before that institution failed. He then removed to Scotts Bar on the north fork of the Yuba, and con- tinued mining, having to put in a flume, and paid one hundred dollars per thousand for the lumber, and then carrying it one mile from the top of the mountain. Having finished the construction of the flume he proceeded to work, and washed one pan of dirt, which cleared him sixty dollars. A heavy storm coming on the river rose to a torrent, and the trees floating down carried away his flume. Mr. Brown again found himself financially ruined and fifty dollars in debt. Borrowing some money he again returned to Bidwells Bar, where he got employment in a saw mill at one hundred and fifty dollars a month. He remained there until the spring of 1853, the company then failing. He then started a blacksmith shop at Bidwells Bar under the firm name of Brown & Spear, continuing until 1854, when he was burned out, again losing nearly everything. He then mined awhile at a new digging called "Sky High," meeting with good success, and then bought an interest in a hotel, the " Mountain House No. 1," eighteen miles from Bidwells Bar, and followed this with good success until the following spring, and then sold out. He then bought a train of pack mules, which he
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ran for three years. He followed mining and running hotel until 1860, when we next find him erecting a quartz mill at Bull Frog, Plumas County, running it but a short time. He again bought a lot of pack mules, and continued packing until 1864. He then moved to Indian Valley, Plumas County, and started a blacksmith shop, and here he continued until 1874. He then sold out on account of ill-health, and moved to Napa Valley, locating in Calistoga, and continued at his trade, and in 1876 bought his present property, erecting thereon the buildings he now occupies, and is now doing a prosperous business. Mr. Brown married in Taylorville, Plumas County, in March, 1869.
BUSSENIUS, H. R. The subject of this sketch was born in Hanover, Germany, Province Hanover, August 31, 1820, and there received his edu- cation at the Gymnasium in Lüneburg, and afterward graduated from the Johanneum College, in the spring of 1840. The following five years Mr. Bussenius spent in visiting different parts of the globe, arriving in San Diego in March, 1841, and spent some two years on this coast and in Central America. In 1845 he returned to his native country. He graduated as apothecary in Hanover, and engaged in the drug business for three years. In February, 1848, Mr. Bussenius again crossed the ocean to America, first locating in Wisconsin, and engaged in farming, where he resided for one year ; but the climate proving too cold and severe for him, he then, in com- pany with his brother, started for California, crossing the plains and arriv- ing September 20, 1849, and first located in Nevada County, where he was engaged in mining, and afterward in a drug store in Nevada City, until 1873. We next find Mr. Bussenius in St. Helena, Napa County, engaged in his present business of druggist, on the corner of Main street and Railroad avenue. Mr. Bussenius was united in marriage in Nevada County, at Blue Tent, December 26, 1861, to Miss Johanna Gebhard, daughter of Mrs. Dr. Pfeiffer Stone, Oakland, a native of Mainz, Germany. The names of their children are Robert, Adolph, Lillie, and Ernst.
BRUN, JEAN ADOLPH. This gentlemen, whose portrait appears in the body of this work, was born in France, July 25, 1845, and is the son of Jean Brun and Jeanne Delphine Delaveaux. He resided in France until 1872, having had much experience in his native country in wine, cider, and oil making. In the last-named year he came to Montreal, Canada, where he remained for fourteen months, being engaged in the manufacture of pho- tographic materials. He then went to England, and after a stay of thirty days in that country he sailed for Australia. Here he engaged in the same business, and continued in it for eight months. In September, 1874, he came to California, and shortly afterward came to Napa County, and began as a laborer, being engaged in several cellars as wine-maker. In 1877 he
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Biographical Sketches.
formed a partnership with Mr. Jean Chaix, and began his wine cellar at Oakville, a full description of which will be found in the proper place. In 1870 Mr. Brun took an active part in the great Franco-Prussian war, being in the service for a period of sixteen months. He was married October 23, 1880, to Miss Emma Mermoud, who was born in San Francisco, September 10, 1860.
BERINGER, JACOB L. Was born in Mainz, Germany, May 4, 1845, and is the son of Louis and Marie Gruber Beringer. He resided at his birth- place until he was twenty years of age, receiving in the meantime his edu- cation and also learning the cooper's trade and wine-making. In 1865 he went to Berlin and there took charge of a wine cellar for Messrs. Tim & Kloske, in which capacity he spent two years. In 1867 he went back to Mainz and took charge of the wine cellar of J. A. Harth & Co., where he had learned his trade. In 1868 he came to New York and was engaged by Truchess & Winkenbach as foreman in their wine cellar and remained with them for one year. He then opened a depot for German wines and the famous seltzer water, which he maintained until 1872. He then came to California and took charge of Charles Krug's wine cellar and retained that position until 1878. In 1877 he erected his present cellar, and in the fol- lowing year he moved upon his place and has since then been engaged in the manufacture of wine. A full description of the place will be found elsewhere. The senior member of the firm is Frederick Beringer, the well- known malt dealer of No. 40 Whitehall street, New York. Mr. Beringer was elected to a position on the Board of Trustees of St. Helena in 1878. He was married April 5, 1879, to Miss Agnes Tscheinig, a native of Austria, who was born February 19, 1853. They had one child, which died in its infancy.
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