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CALIFORNIA AS IT IS & AS IT MAY BE OR A GUIDE TO THE GOLD REGION
BY F. P. WIERZBICKI, M. D.
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY GEORGE D. LYMAN
Drawings by Valenti Angelo
THE GRABHORN PRESS SAN FRANCISCO 1933
Copyright 1933, by The Grabhorn Press.
RARE AMERICANA SERIES NUMBER 8
To George D. Lyman for his Life of Wierzbicki and to Valenti Angelo whose drawings decorate its pages, The Grabhorn Press expresses its thanks for their assistance in the production of this book. Douglas S. Watson Editor
Y e Exiles, roaming through the world so helpless and long,When will your weary feet find rest, O broken-hearted throng!The wild dove finds its hidden nest, the worm its native clod,But Poland's son can only claim of earth a burial sod!
— Julian UrsynNiemcewicz.
WIERZBICKI
THE BOOK AND THE DOCTOR
WE'RE going to get out a new edition of Wierzbicki's ‘California,‘“ said Ed Grabhorn one night as we lingered after a Roxburghe Club meeting, “and I would like you to write the introduction.”
“Who was this Wierzbicki?” I asked. “I know next to nothing about him.”
“That's nothing unusual,” laughed Ed. “With the exception of his book on California—and it was a first—and the fact that he was an exiled Pole and a physician, neither does anyone else.”
“An exiled Pole and a physician,” I repeated after him, “and he wrote a guide-book to the gold regions.” My curiosity was whetted. I wanted to know more about this medical man who had afforded California literature a starting-point.
That night when I went home I climbed up to my book-room, took out of a locker a cardboard box in which I kept the rarest of my California imprints, snipped the strings that bound it and turned over the contents until I came to the booklet I was seeking—a square—looking pamphlet bound in orange-colored wrappers. I took it out of the box and held it to the lamp light to read the title-page:
CALIFORNIA AS IT IS, AND AS IT MAY BE, or, A GUIDE TO THE GOLD REGION.
F. P. WIERZBICKI, M. D. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
SECOND EDITION. SAN FRANCISCO:
Printed by Washington Bartlett, No. 8 Clay-Street. 1849.
Even with all that high-sounding title-page it would hardly be called a book. It was more a pamphlet—small octavo in size, sewn loosely together with coarse white cotton thread, and bound crudely within the folds of what looked surprisingly like a sheet of orange-colored wallpaper—once glazed—now discolored. I counted the pages. There were seventy-six of them—sere and yellow, frayed and foxed. So old that as I opened them up they gave forth a musty odor. So brittle that as I
Across the front cover, in fast-vanishing ink, I read an inscription left by a former owner: “The first book written in English to be printed North of Mexico and West of the Rockies.”
Directly below inprinted numerals was the date, “1849.”
That inscription challenged my attention. Could it be possible, I wondered, as I turned the book over, that this little pamphlet was the first book written in English and published in the West?
Surely the printed word in California had a greater antiquity than that. How about Jacob Baegert's “Nachrichten von der Amerikanischen Halbinsel Californien”? And Francisco Palou's “Vida del Venerable Padre Fray Junipero Serra”? I had always understood that the Padre had written the life of his benefactor Serra at the Mission de los Dolores, in 1787, and that it was the first book written in San Francisco. I was positive about it. But when I checked my surmise against the book itself, I found that, although the “Vida” was written in the San Francisco mission, it was printed in Mexico. Jesuit Baegert speaks for himself. Perhaps his book was written in California in 1772 but it was published in Mannheim.
From them I turned my attention to the colossal output in books that flooded the market following the gold discovery on January 24, 1848. Surely in that deluge of ink and paper I would find one little book printed in California before Wierzbicki. I examined hundreds of them. Any one might have been written in California, but, without exception, every one was printed in “the States,” France, England, Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Poland, Russia, even in the Balkans!
“One of the best contemporary accounts of the early days of the gold rush,” ran the legend describing the book at the Henry E. Huntington sale of Americana. At that auction, at Anderson's Galleries, New York, January, 1923, a copy of the first edition brought $280. At the Braislin sale, the second edition of the same book, containing two more chapters than the first edition of the same year, one on the “Natives of California,” another on “Medical Observations upon the People and Country,” brought the fabulous sum of $410.
Still another copy sky-rocketed to $660.
I marveled at the book. At that rate each page of the pamphlet was worth about $10! Every word had a market value of at least five cents! In three quarters of a century Wierzbicki had attained the rank of a best seller.
I found myself more curious than ever regarding Author Wierzbicki. Who was he? What had he been? I began a search for biographical data.
In Holynski's “La California,” I found a paragraph. Holynski, a fellow Pole, had known Wierzbicki in California.
“Un Polonais," he wrote, “a eu la gloire, et je l'en remercie au nom de la Pologne, de commencer la litterature Californienne par un livre qu'on lit avec plaisir
Except for that paragraph, and a brief mention in Bancroft's pioneer register, not another biographical word could I find about Author Wierzbicki.
I could hear the statistician making noises in his throat.
“Why, you know, all those files were destroyed at the time of the great fire in 1906.”
“Is there no record of any kind?” I pursued.
“Perhaps,” said the statistician. “If the doctor chanced to be buried by N. Gray & Company, the pioneer funeral directors of San Francisco, you will find a record of his interment in the ‘Book of the Dead”—their register of every burial they have made since 1850.”
On the wings of hope I flew to N. Gray & Company.
“I want to locate the grave of a Polish doctor—Felix P. Wierzbicki,” I told the young woman in the office at Gray's. “Perhaps you have a record of where he was buried. He was born in Poland—so you'll probably find him in the Catholic Cemetery.” I watched as she ran a slender finger down the index of the dead. “No,” she said, “not in the Catholic Cemetery. But—here he is, on Lone Mountain.” As she spoke she jotted some words on a slip of yellow paper and handed it across to me. I read:
“Laurel Hill—Chain Plot—Tier 3—Grave 55.”
I thanked her kindly and hurried away.
I hailed this discovery with considerable joy. Now, I told myself, I would learn who Wierzbicki was, where he was born, when he died. All anticipation, I headed my motor-car toward Lone Mountain.
Up Pine Street, through the Bush Street gates to Laurel Hill, I sped. At the office—braked to a stop.
“The Chain Plot,” I said to the superintendent. “I am looking for the Chain Plot.” At the same time visualizing
“The Chain Plot—“ repeated the superintendent, as if endeavoring to recall some long-forgotten part of Lone Mountain. “The Chain Plot? Oh yes—over the hill yonder—beyond the mausoleums of those Washoe millionaires.” He indicated a spot to the right. When I still hesitated, “Come along,” he said, “I'll show you.”
Across a mound-marked turf, as undulating as waves on a sea, we walked. And as we walked I was telling the superintendent about Wierzbicki. How he wrote the first guide book to the gold region. That it was published in old San Francisco. That it was valued by book collectors and those who cherished an unvarnished account of California in 1849. About the Grabhorn reprint and the introduction I was hoping to write. “I must locate his grave,” I said conclusively, “and get the dates of birth and death from it. The introduction depends upon them. Without dates,” I assured him, “there is no possibility of preparing a suitable introduction.”
All this time we were climbing a weed-choked path. Wild birds were singing and scolding over their nests in nearby yews. Earthworms were burrowing through upturned sods. Gates sagged and grated on rusty hinges. Blades of grass, like points of green swords, poked their spears through the mold of last year's leaves. On every side was the continuous cycle—beginning—end— beginning again. “The bird has a nest—the worm a clod—each man a country,” I quoted, “but the exile only a grave surrounded by chains.”
We reached the brow of the hill. Over the high walls along California Street came the clangor of heavy traffic. Lone Mountain was far from being a peaceful spot. Beyond
Before a long, moldering heap of ruined turf the superintendent had come to a stop. “The Chain Plot,” he said, indicating the disarray before me.
“The Chains?” I asked. “Where are they?”
“Long since rusted away, and parted—too much fog and damp on Lone Mountain,” he said.
“‘Tier 3,” “I read from the yellow paper. The superintendent looked about. He couldn't even locate Tier 1. Everything was leveled or in the process of being leveled to the dust. “Eighty years is a long time in this damp,” he said. “Neither iron nor marble can weather mold. This is the first plot on Lone Mountain. The pioneers of old San Francisco lie here.” I looked over the walls and down on the shining roofs of the city. And I wondered if anything still stood that these dusty tenants had builded.
There were graves all about us. To the right—to the left— before—behind—wrecked—uncared-for mounds and fell depressions. Marble slabs leaned this way—that. Some toppled half forward—some leaned far back—others, having lost their foundations, had pitched completely over. I peered into their ancient faces—trying to read their inscriptions — white — gray — rusty inscriptions. Repeating, as I did so: “Felix Paul Wierzbicki. Felix P. Wierzbicki,” that in the confusion of the new names my eyes rested upon, I might not forget the one I sought, “F. P. Wierzbicki—F. P. Wierzbicki. F. P. W.”
“Here's 55,” called the superintendent. I hurried forward. He was hovering over a sunken spot.
“The marker?” I asked.
“Wood,” he replied. To prove it, he picked up a nearby stick, crumbled it and blew away the dust with a breath.
I was disappointed. He turned to go. I had expected more from the Chain Plot. Exiled—and the doctor couldn't even claim a sod. The Polish poet had been wrong—the wild bird might have a nest—the worm a clod—any man a country—but Wierzbicki hadn't even a grave. I summed up the situation. There was nothing left of the doctor but a few hundred words the bibliomaniacs fought over in auction rooms. The book was worth $600. But its author was not worth even a ruined gravestone.
Feeling a bit cynical, I returned down the weed-choked path. Down that same path up which Wierzbicki's friends had brought him to the Chain Plot, I thought. They didn't even put up a marker to his memory. A fine lot of friends! Back I threw a reproachful look. A clump of myrtle with shining leaves that was cascading over a low white marker, half hiding it, caught my eye.
“Back in a moment,” I said to the superintendent as I swept myrtle and sand aside, disclosing a low white stone on which was carved three initials: “F. P. W.” I read them again: “F. P. W.”
Shall I name the feeling that possessed me? It was extravagant. Perhaps Balboa, when he gazed on the bosom of the Pacific, felt it. Satisfaction, out of all proportion to the low white foot-marker I gazed upon, welled within me.
“Have you a knife?” I called.
In answer, the superintendent flashed forth a long pruning-knife. I grasped it by the haft and plunged the blade here and there into the mound until I felt, and heard, iron rasp against rock.
“There,” triumphantly from the superintendent as his ear caught the sound, “the headstone!” Together we rolled sand, dirt and myrtle aside. The base of a shivered funeral urn, from which the urn itself had been broken away,
I looked up. From a near-by tree—a spreading oak or cypress—a limb was missing. I had it. One night there had been a tempest on Lone Mountain with driving wind and pelting rain. That branch had snapped loose and fallen across Wierzbicki's grave, severing the chains, breaking the urn from its base, the stone from its foundation, and the slab, like a plummet dropped in water, had sunk foot first into soft unresisting sand and buried itself.
“Got a shovel?” I asked.
Deep into the mound I sank the blade. Again iron grated harshly against stone. I shoveled away the sand. The top of a marble slab disclosed itself—gray-colored—and, because it had been so long buried, slimy to the touch. We tugged at it, the superintendent and I. This way. That. It was slippery. There was nothing on which to get a hold. It resisted our combined efforts and scarcely budged. We grasped at it more firmly and moved it violently back and forth. I must have those dates.
Upward we pulled. The sand loosed its hold. We felt it give. With a sucking noise the square top of a marble slab emerged, ever so slightly, above the level of the mound. I leaned forward to read—shall I confess?—with what exultation:
SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF DR. FELIX P. WIERZBICKI
I have never thought I could feel joy on reading the name of any man—not even an arch enemy—had I one—carved on his tombstone—let alone smile triumphantly while doing it. Yet when I beheld that of Wierzbicki a feeling closely akin to rejoicing seized me. I felt more like
“Higher-higher,” I called. “There is more carved below, and I can't read it yet.” The superintendent tugged with might and main, but made little impression. The sand sucked at the marker and it slipped out of sight. I went to his assistance. Like two possessed, we struggled with that piece of marble. Perspiration in riculets coursed down our faces. Sand sunk into our shoes. But little by little the sand slackened its hold. Inch by inch we raised the tablet. Again I leaned over to read:
"Born in Charniawce, Poland, January 1, 1815
Died December 26, 1860
Highly esteemed by all who knew"
There I had it in a brief statement. What I had sought to know. The summation of Wierzbicki's life. The date ofh is birth. The period of the grave. And a concise appraisal of his life. The epitaph, not a flowery one such as a man like Wierzbicki would have despised, but a brief, austere one such as he would have approved. I was elated. Fortified with those dates, I told the superintendent, the rest would be possible. In the records at the Bancroft and State Libraries, and Polish archives, my problem would be solved.
So, as the tombstone pointed out, I found that Wierzbicki was born at Charniawce, province of Wolhynia, Southeast Poland, New Year's Day, 1815. His father was but just home from Napoleonic wars. A few days later Pan Wierzbicki took his infant son to the Catholic Chapel in the village and had him baptized Felix Paul.
Wierzbicki's father was known in Charniawce as a DZIEDZIC—a nobleman—the proprietor and heir of the village in which he lived. In the thatched cottages that
Pan Wierzbicki sent Felix to the village school. When he was fifteen years old Felix was in high school preparing to enter the medical college at Warsaw. By that time, 1830, both school and university were hotbeds of revolution. Every boy in them had but one ideal, the breaking of the chains that bound Poland to Russia. In the dusk of a November twilight, with cries of “Death to Tyranny!” twenty university youths crept up the stairs of the Belvidere, bent on the assassination of the Grand Duke Constantine.
Revolution broke out. Immediately all Poland was aflame. Felix threw down his books to join a regiment that was being recruited in Wolhynia and marched away with the revolutionists.
At dawn, on the 10th of February, 1831, Felix went into his first battle, the memorable one of Grochow, fought within sight of the walls of Warsaw. It was a day of horror. On the 26th of May he fought in the terrible hand-to-hand conflict at Ostrolenka—a struggle fearful to witness. Felix called it a Polish victory but, as the Poles withdrew from the field, the Russians considered the victory theirs. Thus began the siege of Warsaw. On the 8th of September a white flag appeared above the ramparts and the hopes of Polish youth became a lost cause. To Felix the face of Poland was covered in dust.
Then Patriot Wierzbicki began to witness horrible things. By thousands his compatriots were exiled to Siberian Steppes. Suckling babes were snatched from maternal breasts and impaled on Cossack lances. All Poland resounded with the shrieks of her agonized women.
The regiment in which Felix had fought retreated into
In his reactions to the defeat Felix got it into his head that Jesuit aggressions had betrayed Poland's cause. “They have sapped the foundations of liberty,” he stormed, “abolished truth with lies.” In this frame of mind he renounced the faith of his fathers.
For three years Patriot Wierzbicki was interned in Austria. When he was nineteen he was liberated, not to return to his parents at Charniawce, but to go into life-long exile.
In 1834 he found himself in America. As a Polish exile, the Congress granted him a tract of farming land in the State of Illinois. But as a farmer the youthful Wierzbicki was not a success. He had no money with which to develop his grant. Penniless and alone, the exile was given a home in an American family. They were good people and helped him to acquire an education. Then he began teaching school so as to earn money sufficient to continue a medical education. For a while he taught French in a New England academy. To pursue still further the cause of medicine he wrote a book, “The Ideal Man — a Philosophical Treatise Between Two Friends Upon the Beautiful, the Good, and the True as Manifested in Actual Life.” This was followed with elementary books on French, Polish, and German grammar. No stone was left unturned that would yield a medical degree.
Neither during these efforts did he forget his distressed country. Heart, pen and eloquence were always at her service. When the fifteenth anniversary of the breaking out of the Polish Revolution of 1830 was celebrated at a huge fete in New York he was one of the speakers of the occasion. During the same year he wrote four articles on Poland and her problems which were published in the American Whig Review. The first appeared in the May number. The last in the August. With these writings he hoped to make the calumnies cast upon his country redound upon the heads of her enemies.
At last, with the moneys obtained from writing and teaching, Felix entered upon his medical career and was graduated. Somewhere in Connecticut—say the Polish records. Where—when—who knows?
In the year 1846 Dr. Wierzbicki was practicing in Providence, Rhode Island. He was against drugging his patients with calomel and quinine as was the fashion of the day. Thus he became a pioneer of the principles of hydropathy. All pathological conditions, he claimed, would respond to water internally administered or externally applied.
Just as he was getting well started, out broke the Mexican War. President Polk was determined on the conquest of California. He appointed Jonathan D. Stevenson, a New York politician, Colonel of the California expeditionary forces and called for volunteers. Troops were wanted, he proclaimed, not only to free California but to occupy the province, as colonists, as soon as it was freed. The project of freeing California appealed to Dr. Wierzbicki. At the call he gave up his practice and hurried to New York to investigate.
There the doctor found his friend, Captain Francisof the California Volunteers. Wierzbicki enlisted on condition that he would be elected a sergeant of the company under Captain Lippett. At the same time he applied to the War Department for the post of regimental surgeon.
On the morning of August 1st, Sergeant Wierzbicki in a neat uniform, gray pantaloons with scarlet stripe up the seam, a short blue coat with scarlet trimmings on the sleeves, and a zouave cap, marched with Company “F”
“Who goes there?” one night challenged the sentinel on duty.
“A friend,” came the reply.
“Then say ‘Newport,’ or I'll shoot.”
Came September 5th. The regiment was drawn up in hollow square formation. A chain of sentinels was needed to keep spectators at respectful distance. Dr. McVicar, the chaplain of the Island, made his appearance in the midst of the troops. Sergeant Wierzbicki's name was called. When he stepped up, Dr. McVicar presented him with a Bible. “In behalf of the American Bible Society,” he said to Wierzbicki, “go to California not only with a sword, but with the olive branch of peace.”
Applicants for the posts of surgeon and assistant surgeon of the California Regiment were so numerous that Sergeant Wierzbicki failed to obtain the coveted appointment. In view of this disappointment and his medical training, Colonel Stevenson detached him from Company “F" and made him Hospital Steward aboard the transportship Loo Choo. At the same time the Colonel advised him to retain his Sergeancy in Company “F” and offered hope of a future medical appointment.
Secretly at dawn on September the 26th the California conquering flotilla with Hospital Steward Wierzbicki aboard the Loo Choo slipped down the Narrows. It was a noble sight. The Perkins, Susan Drew and Loo Choo had all yards manned, all sail spread. Fort Columbus, on Governor's Island, spat forth a parting salute. The Loo Choo returned the compliment. The regimental band played “The Girl I Left Behind Me.” When the Loo Choo reached
Crossing the Gulf Stream, everybody aboard the Loo Choo was taken deathly ill. Hospital Steward Wierzbicki had his hands full bathing and compressing. One night a soldier in the delirium of fever jumped overboard and was lost. There followed the usual excitement of rounding Cape Horn: flying fish, racing dolphins, spouting whales and menacing icebergs. Hurricane alternated with doldrums, a girl baby was born to the wife of a sergeant—for there were a number of women on board—and christened “Alta California.” One of the finest lads in the regiment fell overboard and was drowned. One of the worst ne'er-do-wells was swept into the sea and saved.
Overcome with attending excitement, an officer had a stroke of apoplexy, died, was sewn in tarpaulins and given to the depths. For days, at the Equator, the Loo Choo was becalmed. Not a ripple on the sea, not a shred of canvas moved.
The Perkins and Susan Drew sailed on toward their destination.
It was an interminable passage-this voyage to California. Three months—four months—five months dragged on leaden keel. It seemed to Hospital Steward Wierzbicki that he would sail on forever. Came a March day of 1847. A sailor went aloft into the crow's nest.
“Land ho!” he shouted.
“Where away?” called the mate.
“Starboard bow,” came the reply.
That afternoon the headlands of California burst into view. Steadily the Loo Choo crept toward the Golden Gate. Standing at the gun wales on March 26, Hospital Steward
As she glided through the Gate the Loo Choo had all sails set—even the topgallant. Over at Sausalito, taking in water, was a hide drogher. The Perkins and Susan Drew had already arrived. The Loo Choo dropped anchor opposite Clark's Point. From the gun wales nothing was in sight but sand hills as drear as any steppe in Siberia. Over them an ocean gale raced. In the running rigging of the Loo Choo, drawn taut as harp strings, it sang dirge like music.
Not even six months at sea could rob Yerba Buena's shores of their bleakness. In little valleys between sand dunes Hospital Steward Wierzbicki could see Spanish women in rebosos, as gay as any shawl in Warsaw's Rynek, washing clothes. On the waterfront was the one-story adobe of Howard and Mellus, and the Stars and Stripes floating over the old Custom House. Nothing else could he have seen, but crude corrals and a few adobes near shore.
On his arrival at the Presidio, Wierzbicki found himself reduced to the ranks. That was a blow. There had occurred a vacancy in the medical corps. But, forgetful of his promises, Colonel Stevenson filled the post with a man who had acted as hospital steward aboard one of the other transports. Private Wierzbicki felt aggrieved. He had been deceived. He was better qualified to fill the vacancy than the man appointed. There was no hope now of becoming an army surgeon. Worse, he had been reduced to the ranks without cause and with no forewarning of the blow that was in store for him. On March 31st, by official orders, he was transferred from Captain Lippett's Company to Company “H.” But the crowning catastrophe came when Private Wierzbicki was put to work making the Presidio barrack habitable for the troops that were to hold San Francisco.
There followed for Private Wierzbicki a monotonous run of days—of tides and ebbs—of reveilles and taps. For six hours a day—three in the morning, three in the afternoon—he drilled on the slippery adobe of the parade.
By April 12, 1847, Private Wierzbicki could stand it no longer. He sat himself down and penned an appeal to his Excellency, Governor-General S. W. Kearny, the only authority in California that could release him from his “sad position.” He wrote in the third person. “It would have been under any circumstance, the remotest from his mind to enter any army as a private; and that, at this moment, thus seeing himself placed by a concatenation of causes not foreseen by him,—he sees his future prospects are blasted, particularly so, if he be retained in service as
“The undersigned knows that in his present capacity he cannot render the country any service which cannot be rendered much better by thousands of others, while if he be released from the service, he may serve his country in a much more efficient manner as his professional pursuits would enable him to promote good feelings between the natives of California and the citizens of the United States.
“Under the circumstances the undersigned feels himself constrained to ask not for reinstatement in the office of Sergeant to which he was legally elected—but for a full discharge from the service—believing that neither his adopted country would require from him such a sacrifice of personal interest that might involve the prospects of his whole life—as this blasting of his professional career would imply—nor would his General doom him to such a fate.”
General Kearny lent a sympathetic ear to Private Wierzbicki's appeal. “There being no vacancy of (a medical capacity),” wrote the General, “his situation is a very disagreeable one and his case, one of great disappointment,” and he referred the matter to Colonel J. D. Stevenson.
“I have no knowledge whatever of any promises ever having been made Sergeant Wierzbicki as to medical employment,” retorted the Commander. “I have no hesitation in saying that he is perfectly useless as a soldier and in that capacity can be of no service to the Government.”
On April 28, 1847, by special order No. 10, Hdqrs. 10th Military Dept., Calif., Private Wierzbicki was discharged and returned to civil life.
Next, Dr. Wierzbicki was visiting in Sonoma with GeneralSo greatly did the General appeal to the doctor that he gave him a copy of his work,” The Ideal Man."
Then came January 24, 1848, and the discovery of gold on Rio de los Americanos.
FELIX P. WIERZBICKI
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Then commenced busy medical days. About the premises, Wierzbicki was forced to be nurse as well as doctor. His practice smacked of the emergency type; gun-shot and knife wounds preponderated, although there was typhoid and dysentery aplenty. All his cases he handled successfully on the principles of hydropathy. He was still against drugs. Calomel, quinine and opium particularly—still the three chief weapons of every medical man of the period. Opiates masked disease. Quinine reduced fever, that was all. As for calomel he was against the idea that it was of help in biliary conditions. He took a prominent
Besides writing and practicing medicine, the doctor found time during quiet periods to indulge his hobby for treating metals. He developed his knowledge to the point that his services were often in demand by the United States branch mint in San Francisco. He was working there late in December, 1860, when he was taken down with a cold.
At the time he was living at Mrs. Leland's—a boarding house for men—at 190 California Street between Kearny and Dupont Streets, for thus the numbers then ran. His cold grew worse. On a day, shortly before Christmas, he found himself so ill that he could not go to work. His friends sent for a doctor to examine him. “Congestion of the lungs,” diagnosed the medic. “You must stay in bed and take these medicines,” he said to the patient; and he left several prescriptions behind him. But Patient Wierzbicki had little confidence in drugs and refused to have the prescriptions filled. Hydrotherapy was the only thing that would help him. He was gradually recovering when he decided that he must have a vapor bath. A favorite Muscovite remedy in these cases, he said.
Without the knowledge of friend or physician, he hide himself to a Turkish bathing establishment. His doctor heard of it and remonstrated with him. But, strange to say, if anything, Wierzbicki found himself much better when he awakened on Christmas morning. His improvement convinced him of the efficacy of vapor baths.
It was a beastly rainy Christmas morning. Feeling so well, Patient Wierzbicki chafed about staying in bed any longer. Outside, foghorns blew warningly and wind was
Hours later, the patient crept back to his room in great distress. Heart—stomach—what matter? He was in agony. He poured himself out a powerful emetic, gulped it down and threw himself, exhausted, upon his bed and gradually sank under the ordeal. Two hours after midnight—December 26, 1860—the date carved on that marble headstone in the lee of Lone Mountain—Patient Wierzbicki drew his last breath.
It was December the 27th that those friends who esteemed him so highly left the doctor in a well-ordered grave in the Chain Plot. It was acknowledged as the choicest spot on Lone Mountain—the best kept—the only one surrounded with black chains. But according to his friends nothing was too good for Felix Wierzbicki. When it developed that the doctor had left no estate these friends clubbed together and provided a white-marble slab for his head, the eulogy, a lowly marker and a clump of myrtle for his feet.
So have I followed Felix Paul Wierzbicki from New Year's Day, 1815, to Christmas night, 1860, and now I go back to the illustrious part he played in the summer of that glamorous year 1849. The fame of James Marshall's discovery had been heralded far and wide. Sailing ships from every quarter of the globe blocked San Francisco Bay with masts. Men of every tongue—incoherent between wonder and despair—were making babel of the streets. They had been led astray by false reports,
So he set to work. He wrote for days, for months. When the manuscript was finished he turned it over to Washington Bartlett, No. 8, Clay Street, to do the printing. Swiftly Bartlett turned out a small octavo-sized book of sixty pages.
Its leaves are crisp and fresh smelling. It is sewn with cotton thread. There is no bindery. So Bartlett binds the book with a square of orange-colored wallpaper. The book is an epitome of truth. It causes a great commotion along Clay Street. It is the first, original book written in English to be published in California. Men are curious about it.
Along Montgomery Street copies sell like hot cakes at five dollars a copy. Men like the truth! Respect it! Copies are broadcast over the world. The edition is exhausted. A second one is called for. To this one Wierzbicki sees fit to add additional matter: a chapter on “the Natives of California"—and because he is a medic and feels he can give other physicians useful advice—a final chapter on “Medical Observations Upon the People and Country.”
The second edition contains seventy-six pages. The sale of the book continues unprecedented. The newspaper scribes write glowing accounts of it. The Alta says that Wierzbicki's book is all that “it professes to be, with a good deal of authorship thrown in. It reviews the present condition of the country, its inhabitants and future prospects
Extracts from his book appear in the columns of all leading California papers. The sale is unprecedented for a first literary venture. It brings to its publisher some 8- to $10,000. Of course Wierzbicki profits very little by it. But the doctor is happy. He has told the truth about California. And truth, says the philosopher, shall make us free.
The chains have rusted and fallen away. The sand shroud has returned to cover his headstone; but the birds still sing on Lone Mountain—and in his book Felix Paul Wierzbicki, the Polish exile, and physician, defies the passing of Time.
GEORGE D. LYMAN.
W hile writing this sketch of D r. W ierzbicki, I happened upon the name of M iecislaus H aiman, author of P oland and the A merican R evolutionary W ar,” and assistant editor of the P olish U nion D aily, C hicago. T o M r. H aiman, I gratefully acknowledge assistance in rounding out my picture. A lso, am I indebted to M r. J ohn N ewbegin; to M r. C harles Y ale of L os A ngeles; to the N ew Y ork P ublic L ibrary and the L ibrary of C ongress; to Mr. G eorge B arron of the D e Y oung M emorial M useum; to M iss E lizabeth L yman for photographing W ierzbicki's grave; to M iss M abel G illis, M iss C aroline W enzel and M iss E udora G aroutie of the S tate L ibrary; and to M iss M artin of the B ancroft L ibrary. B ut my greatest debt of gratitude goes to my capable secretary, M iss K atharine Cusick. G. D. L.
CALIFORNIA AS IT IS AND AS IT MAY BE
THE residence of several years in the country together with his familiarity with its whole extent, not excluding the Gold Regions in which he passed more than four months rambling over its mountains, and even crossing the Sierra Nevada to the verge of the great Western Desert, give the writer of these pages a degree of confidence in the belief that by presenting this work to the public, notwithstanding the numerous books that have already appeared upon the subject, he supplies the desideratum so much needed at this moment, and renders justice to California that of late suffered a little in her reputation by the indiscretion of some of her friends.
THE AUTHOR.
SAN FRANCISCO, SEPT. 30, 1849.
TO THE SECOND EDITION
IT is Said that a good face is a good letter of introduction to a stranger. AcknowledgIng the truism that good appearances influence man's judgment at first-sight on many occasions, before he ascertains the real merits of an object,we feel somewhat constrained, should our reader be inclined to find fault with the modest attire of our work, to call his attention to the material difficulties and cost in the way of printing books in California, and we have no doubt he will be willing to excuse any deficiency that may be found in the physique of the volume.
It is the fashion with many writers of the day to write books for the benefit of the printer rather than the reader, either because they have no time to make concise books, “books that are books,” or because they design to impose upon the simple by a portly appearance of a folio, stooping to be measured by the quantity of words rather than ideas. Circumstances and our own inclinations led us to a different course, and our aim was to be brief, but convey as much as it was material to the subject we happen to touch upon.—We might have held the reins of our fancy loose, and let her ramble over the “lakes, rivers and green sward,” but we remembered that we were writing for men of business, who wish to have the questions they propound answered in a direct and concise manner. We trust we have not missed our object, and the reader will find that most of those questions which he would put to a friend familiar with the country we treat upon, are answered in this volume in some shape or other.
In this Second Edition of our work, we thought fit to introduce some additional matter, at the end of the former volume, judging it capable of giving some useful hints to some, at least, of our readers.
THE AUTHOR. SAN FRANCISCO, December 30, 1849.
CALIFORNIA AS IT IS AND AS IT MAY BE
THE country lying between the Sierra Nevada and the Pacific Ocean, & bounded at the north, though somewhat indefinitely, by the Oregon Territory, and at the south by the Lower California, confined by the late treaty of the two neighboring Republics to the line three miles south of San Diego, is known as Upper California, & country now engrossing the attention of the civilized world with its future importance. There is no other instance known in history where a country just emerging so to say, from obscurity, immediately acquired such complicated and multifarious relations, not only to the nation of whose territory it is only a small portion, but to the whole civilized world, as California
Before California can answer all those expectations, the realization of which the world with good reason looks for, an increase of population must be secured for her. To effect which it will not be very difficult, if to its natural advantages, the government of the Union will add its efforts to promote by every legislative and administrative measure the influx of new settlers. But in all its proceedings, liberality should be its motto, and none of that miserly policy that is afraid of losing an acre from its lands or a dollar from its treasury.
California holds in its bosom resources that no other country can boast of comprised in so small a territory—its mineral wealth, its agricultural capacity, its geographical position, conspire to make it in time one of the most favored lands. And it will lie in the power of the government either to accelerate or retard the unfolding of its future importance. When considered in point of mineral productions, if allowed to be developed by capitalists, California is capable of becoming an important centre of the commerce of the Pacific. Here we find in the neighborhood of the Clear Lake, about a hundred and twenty-five miles north of Sonoma, Lead, Copper, Sulphur and Saltpetre; on the south side of San Francisco Bay, Silver-mines have been found in the vicinity of Pueblo de San Jose; Quick-silver mines which are pronounced to be richer than those of Spain, are already being worked to a great profit in the same region; Coal strata have been also found in the coast range of mountains near Santa Cruz, in the neighborhood of the Mission San Luis Obispo, and near San Diego. California Coal seems to be in the
The labor expended in working these various mines would give a firm support to the agriculture of the country, which at this day is totally neglected. There is no country, probably, where the soil is so grateful to the hand that cultivates it. There is almost no plant, grain, or fruit that cannot be raised here. Rye grows wild on the skirts of the gold region towards the Sierra Nevada; oats cover completely the coast range of the mountains; wheat and corn grow luxuriantly on all the plains, notwithstanding it rains only in the winter season; potatoes, onions and every other kind of garden vegetables with very little care grow to a very large size and of excellent flavor. Some of these vegetables can be kept growing all the year round, such as onions,sui generis; it wants only to be known to be sought after by amateurs; and there is no doubt but its culture and the exportation of it will extend rapidly with the increase of commerce on this coast.
There is yet another branch of industry at which we have not heretofore so much as hinted, but which would prove for California one of the richest mines of which she could boast; we mean the raising of sheep. The climate of the country and much of its surface are admirably adapted for the purpose; in fact, as it proved a source of wealth to New South Wales, it would be equally so to California; a great similarity of climate of the two countries guarantees the result. In this way every portion of the country would be turned to advantage; the mountains now lying barren would be a grazing ground for the sheep; and the valleys now trodden exclusively by cattle and horses would be given up to the plough, and there would be no more live stock
The face of the country being broken up into mountains and having large valleys separating the two coast ranges of mountains into the sea coast range on the west, and the spurs of the Sierra Nevada on the east, offers an ample ground for the shepherd and agriculturist. The valleys south of San Francisco Bay lie almost parallel with the sea coast, gradually receding with it in a south-east direction. This gives an opportunity for the north-west winds, which prevail on the coast, to sweep over them, and thus temper the heat of the sun, renovate the air, and carry away over the snowy mountains any miasmata that might be suspended in the atmosphere, and which if left undisturbed might prove a prolific source of disease. This accounts for the extreme healthiness of the sea coast of California. The portion of the country that is less salubrious than the rest of it is confined between the Sacramento and the San Joaquin; fevers seem to be dominant there, yet even there people can get acclimated and enjoy good health for years. In point of climate San Francisco and San Diego present a striking contrast. The former being so much exposed to the north-west winds has a very disagreeable temperature; but it is nothing more than disagreeable, as fogs and winds have their periods there; it is however, far from being unhealthy; with ordinary care and prudence, one in a few months gets acclimated, and cannot but enjoy perfect health. Its
We may observe here in regard to the climate of California in general, that for the sake of health, summer dress should be entirely dispensed with; the nights throughout the coast are cold, and every new comer is more liable to suffer through neglect of this precaution than even the natives. Woolen dress is never oppressive here, but always beneficial. Strangers, if they suffer, owe their illness to the oversight of this fact, together with the excesses that some of them commit.
The agriculture of a country should be made the basis of every branch of industry and trade; these latter should, so to say, feed the springs of the former. In California every facility is offered to the farmer. The working of the various mines will guarantee him a profitable sale of all his productions. The exterior commerce naturally following the working of mines, will equally contribute its share in favor of the agriculture ist. The American whalers scattered throughout the Pacific Ocean to the number of nearly 700, will come to California for fresh provisions if they have the security that they will run no risk of losing their crews on their arrival there. It will be the duty of the Federal Government, as well as of the local authorities, to devise measures that will give this security to all shipping. The government squadron that will be constantly
Such are the unfailing sources from which the labor of the farmer will be liberally paid; but they are not the only ones. Every year will see them expand and always working for the advantage of the agriculturist. It is not necessary to be gifted with an extraordinary foresight to predict that as soon as the industry and enterprise of the Americans take a fair footing on this soil, the commerce of the country will grow daily; the trade with China, with the Islands of the Pacific, and with the whole western coast of America will be ere many years, in the hands of American citizens resident in California, which will be made a depot of the industry of the whole Union. To swell this commercial tide beating against the shores of California comes the railroad that must inevitably be built across the territory of the Union, and whose terminus must be on the Bay of San Francisco. It may take many years before this work will be accomplished, but we have no doubt of its being sooner or later entered upon. We have a particular right to express our faith in the accomplishment of the work, as we were the first, at least to our knowledge, who, five years ago, prophesied on a public occasion, the union of New York with San Francisco by means of the iron bars laid across the continent. At that time it was more difficult to foresee than it is now, and probably those who then smiled at
Although timber cannot be found on every spot thatstereotyped notions of farming, and using his intelligence, adapts himself to the climate and the state of the country, he will reap a golden harvest much more abundant than anywhere else; and even we would go farther and assert that he will do so with much less labor than in any of the States.
In connexion with the farming interest we cannot overlook the excellent state of natural roads throughout the country. A good road enables the farmer to dispose of his produce and greatly diminishes his rural labors. There are but a few, if any, countries that can boast of so good natural roads as California. From San Francisco down to San Diego, a carriage may pass along the valleys almost upon a beaten track, although everything in relation to roads is at present completely neglected. In Spanish times they were in a better state, for the priests then used to make their journeys to San Diego in carriages all along the coast. A very little labor would make them even now all that roads need be.
Not less important to the farming interest, as to every interest in the country, is a railroad uniting the States on the east side of the Rocky Mountains with the Pacific shores. The advantages of such a National work are numerous, and if the people and the government should pass, and the energy and enterprise of the American citizens are sufficient guarantees for its feasibility. The immense advantages in a commercial point of view to be derived from such an enterprise are indisputable. The trade of China, of the islands of the Pacific and the whole Western coast of America, will be brought so much nearer the Union that it will not fail to pour immense wealth into her lap. She will become really a formidable commercial rival of Great Britain, and a common carrier to the whole of Europe. It will bind the whole Union with more indissoluble ties; the sectional interests of each State will be mingled and merged in the common interest made fast to the Pacific shore. To California individually, such a railroad will be of great consequence, as it will make it a centre of an extensive commerce, and will bring to her a sufficient population to develop all her internal resources.San Miguel to Santa Fe; thence up the valley of the Rio del Norte to the mouth of the Abaca creek; thence up the creek to the town of the same name, and thence through a pine forest of low sandy hills ninety miles in length to the Rio de la Plata, which is a tributary of the San Juan. The latter is a tributary of the Colorado. It should cross the Colorado to the northwest side and proceed along the trail from Santa Fe to California to a point between the Mahahve river and the San Bernardino mountain; thence through about ten miles of low hills to the great valley of the San Joaquin; thence down that magnificent and fertile valley, about five hundred miles on a level, to the tide water of the Bay of San Francisco. By this route the road will pass over a dead level of about eight hundred miles at the eastern end, and about five hundred miles at the western; it will have no mountains to cross, will be nearly free from snow in all parts, will afford, for New Mexico, an outlet to both Oceans, and terminate at the best part of the western coast of America. The point of the terminus of the railroad is by an accident, so to speak, already selected with a good deal of discernment; it is called the New York of the Pacific, situated at the upper part of the Bay of San Francisco, known here as Suisun Bay. An enterprising company, at the head of which is Col. Stevenson, have bought a tract of land at the mouth of the San Joaquin, where it mingles its waters with those of the Sacramento, and are already building a town. Its situation for the terminus of the railroad is very advantageous; it is level; has abundance of land to expand upon; it is in the neighborhood of grazing farms; its climate is
But the railroad should not stop here; it should branch away along the shore to the point where now the town of Martinez is being laid out,—a very pretty site facing the straits of Carquinez; thence it should strike the valley of San Jose—one of the richest spots In California and which would support a million of industrious inhabitants—and following along the coast terminate at San Diego.
The advantages of uniting the two opposite points of the country by means of a railroad, will not only help its speedy settlement—an important consideration in many respects—but will be equal to gaining a free port on the coast of Mexico for the exclusive benefit of American citizens. By the means of Santa Fe
and San Diego, should the railroad be constructed as indicated above, the Union will have the command of the largest share of the Mexican trade.
So far as we know, and we have taken considerable pains to ascertain the fact, we may assert that there is no better route for a railroad from the States to California. No other passage through the Sierra Nevada can be found but the one we have indicated. There is none to be found between the heads of the SacramentoSierra Nevada —the region of granite, occasional lime-stone, and masses of sand-stone; snow lies for six months, accompanied with intense cold; the depressions of the mountains are filled up with it to such a degree that the tops of the highest trees only peep through it as if they were but so many insignificant bushes. In fine, the snow levels the tops of the mountains into a continuous plain, as it were, through which the melting sun alone, by degrees, can effect a passage towards the end of June or the beginning of July. This is the time when the Snowy Mountains can be traversed. The government a few weeks ago sent an expedition in search of such a passage through the Northern portion of the gold region about the head of the Sacramento river. We feel sure that the attempt will be fruitless.
It would be well, on the part of the government, to look for passages for military roads leading from the States to the Pacific, or to take advantage of those already discovered. There ought to be at least three such roads; one leading to Oregon, another to the north of California, striking at the head of the Bear Creek, and the third taking a southerly course to San Diego. These roads would offer great facilities to the emigrants from the States, who never should take the same track in large companies, on account of the scantiness of grass.Tuba and striking at the Bear Creek valley, till it reaches Johnson's farm on the confines of the plains. This road may be made better and much shorter, if it should follow from the ridge at the head of Bear Creek valley, striking at the head of the north fork of the same creek, and following it along a little towards the Yuba side, then again turning towards the Bear Creek, and continuing so till the hills acquire a more confused outline, and finally striking Johnson's farm. By this route the journey would be shortened several days, and the difficult descent at the junction of the North Fork of the Bear Creek with the same creek would be avoided.
The military roads thus disposed would give a security to the settlements from horse thieving Indians, who now frequently make incursions upon them, carrying away herds of horses and mules, and sometimes even pick up an unwary traveller on his journey. The present disposition of the troops is of no real service to the country. They are stationed in comfortable and quiet quarters in towns where they are the least wanted, and the thieving Indians are allowed to make nightly excursions into the settlements, and to infest the roads. Under the Spanish government there were different military posts established in the country, and the troops in detachments were made constantly to traverse the country in different directions from post to post, thus keeping always on the road, they kept in check the
Since the occupation of the country by the American forces, the inhabitants complained bitterly of the frequent depredations of the horse thieving Indians, but the powers that be, listened with indifference to them, and offered no effective remedy for the evil, and it does not seem probable that the present military authorities will do any better for the country, judging from the disposition they have made of the forces. The inhabitants, if they can combine, will have to take the subject into their own hands, for it is even doubtful whether the highest authorities of the Union will deign to look into the wants of the benighted ranchero of California. However, we will not lay the faults of the past government at the door of the present one; we will hope still a while longer for the best at its hands.
It is of no small importance to those who wish to settle in California to know the state of landed property in the country; it will be but following their wishes if we offer a few pertinent remarks upon the subject, which we will do after a few preliminaries. A line drawn from the coast eastward that would pass at the southern edge of the Clear-lake valley; then another that would go north and south, intersecting the former, touching the western side of the auriferous region, and following it down to the frontier line south of San Diego, may be considered as enclosing the inhabited portions
The government, therefore, cannot expect to find much in the settled portion of the country that should come under its immediate control in the shape of public lands. The land on the north and east sides of the imaginary lines we drew, is either unoccupied or inhabited by rambling tribes of Indians. We may say that the whole auriferous region is occupied by Indians in its whole extent, and the oak is the frontier line of the Indian dominions; beyond that line the undisputed possessions of the pine and the bear commence. The wild Indians of California are probably the most inferior race of all the Aborigines of the continent; they lack energy and spirit; they live on roots, acorns, pine-nuts, insects, and occasionally on game, when they can catch it, or on horse or mule flesh when they can steal it. North of the Bay of San Francisco, and between the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, some of the Indians live in the families of the settlers, or near their farms, working for their subsistence and an occasional blanket. These are called in Spanish, very properly, Indios manzos —(tame Indians.) The others live in the woods, rambling frequently from spot to spot and sustaining themselves in the way we have already mentioned.
On the south side of the Bay of San Francisco and the San Joaquin rivers, the Indians are more numerous, and particularly as we go further south they are more spirited and enterprising in thieving than those of the north; and those particularly on the southern frontier of California are brave and formidable. TheIndios manzos are sufficiently numerous in the settlements here, and some thousands of them were living at the Missions. The wild Indians in this portion of the country occupy the mountains back of the settlements; amongst them are now found in large numbers, those who, after the Mexican government succeeded in ruining the Missions, fled into the mountains and resumed their former life. In these mountains are found numerous beautiful valleys, well watered and full of game of every description; the climate is said to be very benign. It would be very difficult to estimate accurately the number of Indians, both tame and wild, in the country; we therefore will not offer any supposition of our own on the subject.
The government at Washington will find itself somewhat embarrassed in selecting a course of conduct with these Indians; they have been accustomed to a different system of management than that of the United States. They cannot be removed, in justice and humanity, from the country, for there is no place to remove them to where they could subsist; it would be dooming them to destruction; and it would be more humane to butcher them outright than expose them to a slow but sure extinction. The system that the Spanish government pursued with them seems to suit, at least the Indians of the country, better than the American way. It acknowledged no rights in them to the soil, but it sends out missionaries to gather them into the folds of the church, and to make settlements of them under the directions of the priests. In our opinion, the only safe and humane mode of bringing them within the pale of civilization, would be by establishing Protestant Missions, if you like,—but modeled somewhatlegal doors , as they think, of Congress into the territory of California. Whether Congress may please, in its wisdom, to think that it has a right to introduce slavery into its new territories or not, it matters not for California; she cares very little what Congress may do in forgetfulness of its duty towards her, but she is resolved to resist any such measure; and whoever entertains the question for a moment, either in the legislative halls or before the public, shows his ignorance of the disposition and unanimous determination of the inhabitants of California. The slaveholder who would come here with his legalized chattels, would find his sojourn very uncomfortable, and would lose completely on his speculation. The inhabitants of this country feel already indignant at the intrigues of the Southern gentlemen who prevented, in
Judging from the specimens of the laws proposed in Congress for the benefit of California, and which, thanks to the knowledge, wisdom and eloquence of Hon. T. H. Benton, Senator from Missouri, failed to go into effect, we fear that that honorable body is in danger of running on shoals in its legislative measures relating to this country, and particularly in laws affecting landed property. The gentlemen in Congress apply their American ideas of the value of landed property to a country that has been, so to say, born and raised under Spanish system of laws, and is totally different from any of the States in its domestic and civil arrangements. It would be impossible by any legislative act to change suddenly the character of former civil institutions of the country without committing outrageous injustice to its inhabitants, and even running the risk of raising
The Spanish and Mexican governments were liberal in giving facilities to acquire land, particularly in California. It was a common practice of the Mexican government that when a foreigner married a native he was recognized as a citizen, and by applying, could obtain a grant of land for a grazing farm of from a league to four leagues, or sometimes even more. As a general rule, the largest grazing farm that could have been granted under Mexican government, consisted of eleven leagues; there are, however, individuals that possess as many as thirty and forty leagues of land. Such large possessions are open to suspicion in regard to their being legal possessions, and into such the American government may inquire with more justice, as they are larger than even the necessities of California farmer's life could require. But small proprietors cannot have more than is absolutely necessary to their maintenance.
The landed possessions in California may be arranged into three categories, which sprang very naturally from the system of the colonization of the country. TherePueblo lands and ranchos, as they are called here, but in better Spanish they would be called haciendas, and in plain English, grazing farm lands of private individuals.
The settlement of California was owing to the will of a pious Countess in Mexico, who left an immense fortune to christianize the heathen inhabitants of this country. About the year of 1670, an expedition, led by a missionary priest, and escorted by a company of soldiers and settlers, landed on the shores of [Lower] California. The first attempts at colonizing the country were not successful, but by perseverence in repeated efforts the Spaniards at last succeeded in getting a foot-hold in this land. They gathered Indians about them, christianized them after their fashion, and made them manzos; soon, with their labor, Mission buildings were erected, farms put in order, cattle raised, and the Indians were instructed in various handicrafts. Finally, in course of time, through the whole length of the land, Missions were planted, and flourished; the priests grew fat and rich, and the Indians became tame and industrious, and were well taken care of. The country smiled with abundance and the people were happy. Soon, settlers came into the country and planted themselves, very naturally, near the Missions, on which, at first, they depended for their worldly goods; but by degrees they sprung into Pueblos, viz. towns. These towns had lands allotted to them by leagues, which were to be used in common by all the inhabitants for their cattle; or if any of them wished to till a piece of land, by an application to the alcalde, if there were no objections by the inhabitants, he received a permit from the judge so to do, and as long as he or his heirs occupied it, nobodyPueblos. This manner of disposing of town land, sanctioned by Mexican law, served as a precedent to the town authorities of San Francisco, Pueblo de San Jose, Santa Cruz and Monterey, when they, in 1847, disposed of a portion of the land belonging to those respective towns, giving perpetual leases to their possessors. This measure was particularly favorable to foreigners recently arrived in the country, as thus they were enabled to buy the rights of the natives who were not disposed to put much value upon so small parcels of land, and thereby the American interest was much promoted.
The land of the ranchos was always either a royal grant of Spain or of the supreme government of Mexico, or latterly of the Governor of California; all these grants practically had the same effect; the possessor of the tract of land thus granted was always in the full enjoyment of his rights and privileges, and no authority could disturb him in his possessions. As the country was frequently disturbed by revolutions, when it was not uncommon for one of the contending parties to burn up or carry away or destroy the archives of a town or even of the country, the land proprietors were not molested in their possessions, although they could not show their property enregistered in the records. Besides the officers of the Mexican government being proverbially negligent of their duties, may not have
Such being the disposition of landed property in California, the American government, if it be just and does not wish to create a general disaffection among the people towards itself, must recognize the actual possessors in their possessions by a summary act of legislation recognizing the rights they claim, and to prevent all future difficulties, giving them the fee-simple title to their possessions. The ranchos must be acknowledged to be the property of private individuals; the towns must have their rights to their town lands, and the Missions, if they yet have any Indians, ought to retain their tracts of land; or if these exist no longer, the church and public education have the next and best right to them. The lands of the Missions were always considered as Indian lands, or lands devoted for the benefit of the Indians living at the Missions; the priest was but a steward of the Mission. When the riches of the Missions excited the envy of some high persons in office, they set themselves to work to secularize them—and they succeeded under the Mexican government. The Missions were secularized and circumscribed, and received laymen for their administrators, who superintended and administered them so well that the riches of the Missions fled, their buildings were ruined, their Indians scattered, and at present scarcely their shadow is left; yet they do exist just to remind the world of
In view of the state of landed property of the country, there are three methods by the means of which California may receive an increase to its population without any violence to justice or law being committed. Supposing that the American government has recognized all titles to lands as it found them, then those who have no means of buying land from private individuals should receive liberal donations from the government, or settle in one of the towns where yet town lands exist, and taking advantage of the Mexican law by petitioning the alcalde, the settler could get land for his house and tillage, and being more industrious than the natives, he could even grow rich soon and enjoy his possessions as if they were his in fee simple. Those who have means could find tracts of land to buy, either enough only for themselves, or larger than they actually need, to be divided into farms of sufficient size and induce new settlers, by offering them liberal terms, to settle around them; by this arrangement both parties would be gainers.
In our view of the subject, we think the interest of the whole country would induce the government to use all means at its disposal to favor a prompt settlement of California, since the sooner it will be densely settled the sooner its vast resources will be developed, and the sooner the whole Union will reap advantages resulting from such a development.
IT is now nearly two years since the discovery of the gold mines in the country, and yet it is for the first time, we can say, that we are able to give a correct account of them, an account that can be relied upon. Heretofore we have heard nothing but Arabian Nights stories about the gold region, drawn, if possible, with more vivid colors than even the Asiatic fancy could conjure up. The whole civilized world became electrified with these surprising stories and set in motion, and every day brings strangers to our shore from the most distant regions of the earth. So far so good; but it may not be so, much longer, when crowds from Europe will begin to pour upon these shores. We feel it our duty, in view of bad consequences that all exaggerations
It is not to be understood that we are going to decry the mines; no, far from it; we mean to divest them of the mantle which heated fancy casts about them; and represent the simple truth without any poetic or- ornaments.
On the outset we wish it to be understood that we speak advisedly; we have surveyed, so to speak, the length and breadth of the mines by personal inspection and observation, at a great expense of our time, money and labor, and besides we claim the right to presume somewhat upon the authority of science.
The region which here is known as the gold mines, is closed on the east by the Sierra Nevada, or Snowy Mountains, running nearly north and south. Two large streams descend from the Sierra Nevada, one at the north called the Sacramento river, the other on the south known as San Joaquin. These two streams run, as if purposely to the apex of the triangle they enclose,
As these hills rise, vegetation becomes scantier. The range of mountains in which gold is found is distinguished by a uniformity of its vegetable kingdom, which is neither meagre nor very abundant. The oak predominates here, only now and then relieved by several varieties of the pine family. As the gold disappears, the reign of the pine and the granite extends. The depositories of gold look universally more smiling to the beholder than their barren neighbors; the former always have the figure described by the line of beauty, viz.: the curved line, be they ever so precipitous as they frequently are; a distinction never to be lost sight of. The extent of these auriferous hills is greater than the public know or imagine, but not in the direction it is supposed. They extend beyond the Sacramento and even San Joaquin, northwest of the former and southwest
At some remote period in the history of the globe, the same internal convulsions that heaved up the Sierra Nevada, have also upheaved the auriferous hills, which at first presented a naked surface to the atmospheric changes, by the influences of which, the quartz constantly breaking up, left free the precious metal on its surface. In the progress of time, the same atmospheric influences caused to accumulate on these hills soil which grew deeper with every decay of vegetation till it grew strong enough to support the majestic oak. The freed particles of gold thus became covered by the soil and mixed up with it, and the process of the separation of the metal from the stone was arrested. How gold was injected into the veins of quartz is more than we can say, but the fact that it was so in a liquid state, is beyond question, as we see it adapt itself to the sides of the stone in all imaginable forms, from the finest filament to the largest lump ever found, with a most
According to the strength of the current of water, the weight of the particles of gold, and the obstacles in the way, it is deposited in one or another spot, the lighter particles of course floating away the farthest from their original bed. As this process of gold deposition has taken place in some remote period of the earth's existence, hence we find all these deposits, generally speaking, covered with greater or smaller depth of soil, sand, gravel and stones. Strictly speaking, gold does not belong to the rivers—it was washed into them from the hills; hence it is useless to look for gold at the head of these streams, when the neighboring hills are not of the aurifemus nature; and we find this fact corroborated by our personal examination of the heads of the streams of the gold region. The same rule holds good, for the same reasons, in regard to the lower portion of a gold carrying stream, except that it is limited by the fact that light particles of gold may be deposited a considerable distance below their original source.
The mode of deposit being made clear, it will be
When this gold mania ceases to rage, individuals will abandon the mines; and then there will be a good opportunity for companies with heavy capital to step in; there will be enough of profitable work for them; and it is then that the country will enter on a career of real progress, and not till then. Such companies, with superior mechanical facilities to do much labor, in a short space, will be enabled to go over the whole mineral field, although already dug over by individuals, and reap yet a rich reward of their efforts. And when there will be no more gold washing to be done, then a new era in the mining of the country will commence—we mean a regular system of mining by sinking shafts into
If we had a voice in the Legislative Halls of the Union, with the knowledge of the whole country in general, and the mineral region in particular, we have—seeking to gratify no men nor set of men—we would say, divide the whole elevated portion of the land enclosed by the Sacramento and San Joaquin into a set of lots to be sold to mining companies at a very moderate price. The low lands or the plains of the same region should be divided into a separate set of lots, to be sold to those only who wish to establish themselves as farmers. To avoid all difficulty and confusion in giving boundaries to these lots, we would adopt the following plan: In the mining district proper, the elevated portion of the land, every lot should have for its centre the whole extent of one of the streams that fall either into the Sacramento or San Joaquin; the lateral boundaries of these lots would be the ridges on both the north and south side, that turn the minor streams and ravines into the principal ones selected as centres of the lots. These lots, unless they are as large as this division would make them, would not be worth the having; the land is worthless for any other purpose, except mining; and if this even should fail, then the only means left for the unfortunate buyers to save
By the above disposition of the mineral region, we conceive the country will be greatly benefitted. The mineral region being under the sole control of mining companies will exclude all private adventurers; thus first benefitting the commerce by checking the now unavoidable
We flatter ourselves we have said enough upon the subject in hand to clear up a little, the vision of the public that suffered itself to be blinded by the brilliancy of the California gold.
As we have above referred to Mr. T. N. Benton's speech, delivered in the Senate of the United States, January 15, 1849, on the subject of land titles and sale of gold mines in New Mexico and California, we give a place here to his substitute for the bill then before
“To recommit the bill to the Committee on Public Lands, with instruction to inquire into the expediency of reporting a bill for ascertaining the public and unappropriated lands in the territory of California, and for surveying and selling the same, and for granting donations to actual settlers, and permits to work the gold mines; and for that purpose to provide—
“FIRST. For the appointment of a recorder of land titles, who shall have the custody of all the public archives in relation to the disposition of the public lands, and shall record all the grants and all claims that shall be discovered, made known to him, and shall make two abstracts of the same, one to be sent to the General Land Office in Washington city, the other to be delivered to the Surveyor General of California, that he may lay down the grants and claims on a map to be retained in his office, and of which map a copy to be transmitted to the General Land Office, and another to be filed with the recorder of land titles in California.
“SECOND. To provide for the ascertainment of invalid grants or possessions, by authorizing a scire facias to be issued from the United States District Court against the party in possession to come in and hear the objections to his claim and to show cause why the grant should not be annulled, or the possession vacated in every case in which the recorder of land titles, upon consultation with the district attorney, or by orders from the General Land Office, shall be so instructed, shall be of opinion that the same is not valid under the treaty with Mexico, the law of nations, and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States—the decisions of the district court to be final, if against the United States, in all cases where the land in question shall be worth less than five thousand dollars. But no pueblo or rancheria Indians to be disturbed in their possessions, without special orders from the General Government.
“THIRD. To provide for the appointment of a surveyor general, and for the establishment of three land offices.
“FOURTH. To provide for donations of land to actual settlers, heads of families, widows, and single men over eighteen years of age, and an allowance of land for children under eighteen years of age, and for the wife in her own right, according to the provisions of the bill proposing donations to the settlers in Oregon, which passed the Senate January 3, 1843.
“FIFTH. To provide for preserving order in working gold mines, by appointing an agent to grant permits for working small lots, and settling summarily, and on the spot, all questions of boundary or interference among the diggers. The said permits to continue in force while the lot is worked,by the person receiving it, and to be limited to —— feet square.
It is not necessary for us to offer here any comments upon this substitute for the bill above alluded to, as we have already in anticipation expressed our opinion in relation to the measures to be adopted by the Government of the Union respecting land titles and gold mines in California.
ON arriving in California, the gold hunters, if we may be pardoned the expression, first touch the shore at San Francisco. There they look for information how and what are the means to get the precious pelf in large quantities, that they may not stay in the country too long; if they happen to have a letter to some one in the place, or if they meet an old friend, they put a thousand questions to him faster than he is able to answer them, evidently hurried by anxiety to lose no time and opportunity. Then they will tell him about their plans, how they are going to proceed in the business, what excellent machinery they bring from New York or some other place, to work with, and so forth. The Americans, and particularly those that call themselves, or are called, Yankees par excellence, have the reputation of putting many questions to people they happen to fall in with; but on this occasion, they are more, even than Yankees, in pouring upon the stranger they meet, their interrogatories. Now, we propose hereannoying and annoyed —we use the expression not to disguise the truth in obscure words, as it is really the plain fact—and anticipate all such questions by suitable information, upon which they can put at least some reliance, as we are neither a merchant, a trader, nor speculator in land or mines.
Neither San Francisco, the city of Sacramento nor Stockton are the places where reliable information is to be expected by one who proposes to go to the mines, as these places may be compared to the famous Dionysius' ear, where the gentlest whisper is re-echoed a thousand times. Interest and ignorance frequently conspire in circulating extraordinary stories of success, on very slender foundation, for some never have been in the mines at all, and have not the slightest idea of them, crediting everything they hear; others have their posts established on some particular spot, where, of course, the mines must be very rich. The trading portion of the inhabitants of these places see gold brought in in large quantities, but they never trouble themselves with how much labor it is got out, who has failed and who has succeeded; in fine, they hear only of constant success. The fact is, that while there are many who succeed, there are others who scarcely pay their expenses. This should not be withheld from the knowledge of a new comer, since in case of failure in his mining expectations, he will be somewhat prepared for such an event, and will be able to make the best of it.
The new comer, on preparing himself to start for the mines, first should know what he wants for his expedition. Many start lumbered with baggage, imagining that they cannot and must not forego the indispensable comforts of life. All baggage is a burden and heavy
This machine is a simple trough about nine feet
The provisions used by the miners consist of mess pork, bacon, hams, jerked beef, flour, sugar, tea, coffee, chocolate, beans, rice and dried apples, fresh beef and mutton whenever they can get it, which is sometimes the case, and deer meat when they can kill it. As much as one can, for the sake of his health, he should abstain from using much salted provisions in the mines, and to counteract their bad effect on the system, it is advisable to use vegetable acids, like lemon juice, which in the mines is sold bottled up; citric acid, which is more easy to carry, or even tartaric acid, dried apples, and other dried fruit serve the same purpose. In using these acids it is better to use them with water alone
Mess Pork,
Bacon,
Hams,
Sausages,
Sugar,
Tea,
Coffee,
Chocolate,
Beans,
Rice,
Dried Apples,
Jerked Beef,
Lemon Juice,
Saleratus,
Vinegar,
As the miner proceeds on his route and farther from San Francisco, he will find, as a general rule, that traders expect to make each a hundred per cent. profit upon the original price they paid. In this way it happens that in the remotest points of the mines he will
The last, although not of the least important articles for a miner, are arms. One need not be armed cap-a-pie in the mines, but a good rifle may be frequently useful to keep the evil minded at a respectable distance; or when in the woods, or far away in the mountains, an Indian may be in his way, or the grizzly bear, and then a fire-arm may be sometimes necessary. Colt's pistols are very convenient weapons. It is hardly necessary to say that he needs a few cooking utensils, with which he should be provided. A small hatchet may be equally necessary. In conclusion, we would say to the miner in one word, take no more with you than you absolutely need, that you may move lightly; as it may be sometimes necessary for you to go on foot. Thus equipped in all the necessaries, the miner will start on board of a launch, where he has to pay from 14 to 16 dollars passage money, and if he have much baggage, from 2 to 3 dollars per hundred weight freight, bound to the city of Sacramento, or to Stockton, according to his fancy. He is to provide himself with
On the Feather river and the Yuba, there were very good diggings; crowds of people, whites and Indians, have worked there for these two seasons; however, by going farther up these rivers some untouched spots may be found. We will remark here once for all, that the higher you go up the rivers the greater difficulties you will meet in getting over the ground, as they are more inaccessible; at the same time mules and horses are needed to carry you and your provisions, and you may also lack grass for your animals. But to know how far one may go up the rivers of the gold region, he must exercise his judgment, and he may depend on this fact,
The Bear Creek was not very rich in the precious metal, and now may be less so as it has been worked. On these rivers people generally were making an ounce per day, some much more; but how long it may continue so we are not able to say. These rivers being accessible for a considerable distance to waggons, diggers crowded there, as provisions were cheaper there than anywhere else. These rivers have their forks, or in other words, tributaries of more or less importance. Below the mouth of these forks it is well to look for deposits of gold in the main streams. The Bear Creek has a tributary called the North Fork, in extent probably from forty to fifty miles. The Yuba has two forks on the north bank of some importance. The distance from the Bear Creek to the Yuba in some places hardly can be more than ten miles. The general course of the Bear Creek is west by north nearly; it meets the Feather river about ten miles below the Yuba, which likewise mingles its waters with the latter. The Feather river, which heads far at the north, taking almost a parallel course with the Sacramento, runs on in a south-westerly direction, and having thus accumulated its waters is lost in the last mentioned majestic stream some distance below.
From the city of Sacramento, the miner has two routes before him, from which to select—he may start for the upper tributaries of the Sacramento, viz.: forColumba. The distance from Sacramento City to this town is 45 miles of tolerably good waggon road. There is no lack of traders; there is a saw-mill and a post-office. From this point the miner has to start with pack-animals if he wish to go up any of the rivers. The points known on the Middle Fork where a good many miners have been engaged are the Spanish Bar, higher up Ford's
To go from Sacramento City to the Mokelamy, the miner has to pass the Consumnes at Dailor's farm, about eighteen miles from the above place, and then farther south, the Dry Creek, from which the first trading post at the Mokelamy diggings may be about
Supposing our miner to have arrived at Stockton and he proposes to go to the Mokelamy, he would have to cross the Calaveras at the distance of about 15 miles, and strike the Mokelamy diggings 70 miles distant from the above mentioned town. If he should like to go south, he would find diggings on the Stanislaus, about 40 miles distant from Stockton; then he might pass on to those of the Tuolamy, 20 miles distant from the latter, and farther on he would meet at the distance of 30 miles with those of the stream La Merced, then at the distance of about 20 miles he would come to the stream Mariposa. In a direct line from Stockton to the Mariposa it may be from 80 to 90 miles. Throughout the gold region waggon tracks and trails are well worn out at present; at convenient distances on the roads, there are trading posts established where can be had water and pasture for animals, and where one can stop. At Sacramento City or Stockton teamsters are to be found who know all those routes, and take up miners' baggage to any place they like, if it be accessible to waggons. It would be impossible to describe the routes particularly, considering that theyper diem.
Now, we will suppose an inexperienced miner is arrived at the place of his selection in the mining district; we will suppose him also to have started for the mines in company with one who has had already some experience in the handling of the pick-axe, shovel and pan; for he must have a week or so of apprenticeship in order to be au fail with the practical part of the business.
On arriving at any spot containing gold deposits, the first step to be taken is to examine the general appearance of the country. The hills should be covered with brick-red soil—this should be a prevailing feature in them, although there may be now and then an exception to some portions of them; slate rock should be found, of whatever description, if not on the surface, at least on digging a few feet; but a general rule, when there is any below the surface, some of it will be seen above it in one direction or another. Likewise quartz should be found scattered about on the ground; quartz is a milk-white opaque stone, of considerable hardness; on these occasions it is generally veined with red streaks of more or less intensity of color. The presence of these three signs jointly is sufficient to authorize one to lookrocky bottom; he never should be satisfied with his work till he does come to a rock, which he should nicely scrape, sweep and collect, then wash the dirt and decide accordingly; if the rock be slate rock, he should split it and break it up, and then wash it, as it is in theprospecting, when he looks for places where he would work, as in so doing he at once gets familiar with the character of the earth in that region, and will know in what portion of it he should look for gold. It is considered by the miners at present, that if from a pan-full of dirt they are able to get a quantity of gold equal in value to fifty cents, they are satisfied with the result, and consider that they can make a little more than an ounce per day with a pan only. However, as the mines will be getting daily more and more worked out, they will have to be content with much less. But as yet, if they got only twelve and a half cents of gold from a pan of dirt, they do not think it is worth the trouble of getting it.
As a general rule, it is a practice among the miners to leave each digger a sufficient space for a hole, upon which nobody has a right to encroach; from four to ten feet they allow among themselves to be sufficient for each, according as they may be more or less numerous and as digging may be more or less rich. A tool left in the hole in which a miner is working is a sign that it is not abandoned yet, and that nobody has a right to intrude there, and this regulation, which is adopted by silent consent of all, is generally complied with. It is very seldom that any disputes about one's rights occur; and if they do, they are easily settled among themselves. In fact, as a general rule, miners heretofore have been law-abiding people; some excesses
The time for mining in dry diggings commences about the end of March and lasts till July, at which time water gets very scarce, and consequently digging becomes unprofitable, or even impossible. Some dig on the banks of rivers even in the spring when there is much water, but it is not a very profitable operation. The time when the rivers begin to fall by degrees is the month of June, and they continue falling till the next spring, when the melting snow again replenishes them. In August the snow from the mountains where they head, disappearing, they do not receive any new supplies, while the scorching sun keeps wasting them all the time, and in winter where it snows but does not rain they continue rather low; thus in winter time they are at their lowest ebb.—From the middle of September till the end of November is the best season for mining on the banks of rivers, as it is then that the lowest bars are uncovered, and even sometimes one may work in the very bed of the river itself. This is the time at which in many places, the current of a
The month of July, August and part of September are sickly in the mines, and particularly on the Feather river and the Yuba. The sickness is owing to the extreme heat and carelessness on the part of the miners; some of them work in the hottest hours of the day, and sometimes not protecting sufficiently their head and body from the scorching rays. Fevers, diarrhea and dysentery are the complaints commonly met with—occasionally scurvy shows itself; it is more apt to happen in winter time. But, however, whenever it occurs, it is owing entirely to the carelessness of the patient; a sufficient attention to the use of vegetable acids, as we have already mentioned, would prevent such occurrences.
To guard one's self against diarrhcea or dysentery, in consequence of cold, one should sleep under sufficient covering, and if not under a tent, he should wrap his head into a silk handkerchief on going to bed; in this way he will do much to prevent it, and particularly if he be of regular habits. But should one besmall quantity of dry fruit, such as prunes or dried apples, taken along with some farinaceous substance, may restore the bowels to their natural condition.
With these precautions, and with ordinary prudence, one is not in danger of being afflicted with any of those complaints very seriously. It is frequently necessary to work in water; for that purpose, high legged waterproof boots are useful; or if one works bare-foot he should avoid to feel much cold in them, and on concluding his work, he should dry them and put on shoes or boots. Some miners spend the winter in the mines,
Before we take leave of the miner, we will give him
BEFORE the occupation of the country by the Americans, its population was considered to amount to from thirty to forty thousand inhabitants, natives of the Spanish race, Indians and foreigners included; but since that time its growth appears to be magic, and particularly since the discovery of the gold mines; every corner of the world seems to contribute its share of inhabitants; every tongue almost is spoken in the streets of San Francisco. But this new population does not spread through the country to benefit it; it crowds only to the mines or the port of San Francisco. It consists chiefly of speculators and diggers, and some mechanics; of farmers we do not hear as yet. The town has led the van in growth; there is nothing similar on records; one may say without exaggeration that it has been inaugurated in one moment by some superhuman power,terra firma; goods of all descriptions are scattered on the shore in open streets that are too narrow for men, animals and carts that pass up and down. The freaks of fortune are equally as remarkable in this place as everything else connected with it; some men who two years ago had not a cent in their pocket, count by thousands now; property that a year ago could have been bought for five or six thousand dollars, now pays a rent of thirty thousand dollars per annum; mechanics who formerly were glad to get ajob at two dollars a day, now get from six to twelve; in fact, mechanics, and particularly carpenters, are the most independent aristocracy of the place. Strange as it may appear, yet in the midst of abundance of every kind, women are very scarce; the domestic circle does not exist here as yet; domestic pleasures are wanting, and house-hold duties are unfulfilled.
We touch here upon a subject which, if we allowed
The people of the country, of the Spanish race, possess a good deal of natural simplicity, but without that boorishness and grossness which characterize the lower order of some of the European nations; they are ignorant for want of opportunities of learning, but nature has not refused them capacities for acquiring knowledge;—they are obliging in their disposition and hospitable; the latter virtue, however, already begins to undergo some changes since the arrival of so many foreigners; yet among themselves, or those upon whom they look favorably, they preserve their good old custom. Their women are healthy, robust, good looking and hard working as a general rule; kindness is a universal feature among them; and if one had to choose between them and ordinary women of some civilized portions of the world, we do not hesitate to say that the Californian women would receive the preference, although in point of information they are deficient.
Their men are somewhat disposed to idleness, but this may be owing partly to the facility with which they were in the habit of getting a living, and which now will have to undergo some modification. As a nation, they are lively, and cannot be said to be vicious; in fine, they have sufficient good qualities to make up for their deficiencies. Such as these good people are, they do not offer much temptation to foreigners who have seen higher forms of civilization to become commingled wIth them, but they have some good elements among them, and if respectable families from the States and Europe would come out here, the different races would soon be mixed up, and make before many years one of the most pleasant societies. By such an immigration the country would gain vastly; because then so many
The greatest privations that a bachelor is in this country exposed to, consist in not being able to furnish himself with clean linen when he desires, as domestic service is so difficult to be kept up here for want of working women. To induce some of the few women that are here to condescend to wash their linen for them, they have to court them besides paying six dollars a dozen.
We know an instance of an inveterate bachelor who married a spinster because she refused to wash his clothes for him, but he was determined she should do it at any price, as he was a great lover of cleanliness; in this dilemma he resolved to pay her all he was worth, rather than forego his habit of cleanliness. He is in the habit of saying, “he who goes without a clean shirt on, keeps his conscience open to suspicion"—too severe a judgment upon us the inhabitants of this town.
When this uneven slope of the hill on which the town is situated shall be built up with fine and solid houses, what now looks dreary and desolate will then look very picturesque and smiling; so will it be with the society here; when elements that are now daily accumulating get through their fermentation and become settled, they also will present a smooth and transparent surface to the moral eye of the beholder, but as yet, one needs a little philosophy to bear him through the present that he may lean on the future.
In the moral aspect of the town, save some occurrences, there has been a good deal to wonder at—that in such a medley of races and tongues nothing very serious has happened to jeopardize its existence or to injureits prosperity, under existing circumstances, is very remarkable; its order and quiet has been only once disturbed for a few days by a set of men, chiefly from New York, who called themselves, very significantly, the “Hounds.” For a while they went parading the streets publicly, by day light, and breaking glass-ware in grog shops by night; when they commenced to commit outrages upon property, took the lives of some foreigners and violated the honor of some women, the citizens rose like one man, armed themselves and arrested them nearly all and put them in duress on board a man-of-war, to wait for their trial, after which they were disposed of according to their merits. Since that time order and quiet have prevailed, and more active measures have been taken to prevent another necessity to chase after any other pack of “hounds.”
The state of society in California has not yet arrived to that point of organized life where its most important movements can be stated, or represented in numbers for the especial satisfaction of the political economist. We will not therefore attempt anything of the kind, but we may however state in numbers a few facts in regard to the shipping in this port.
From the first of January, 1849, to the 30th of September of the same year, 509 vessels arrived in the harbor.
The sum total of passengers in the same space of time, 18,972.
In the month of August, ending on the 29th, the number
In one day, on the 29th of August, there arrived in San Francisco by merchant vessels, 654 male and 27 female passengers.
On the 24th of September 11,000 tons of shipping came into the harbor.
On the 30th of September there were 94,344 tons of shipping in the harbor.
The directions for entering the port of San Francisco that have been heretofore followed, being found incorrect, we give room to the correction of them, with which Capt. E. A. KING politely furnished us, together with regnlations of the port:
DIRECTIONS FOR ENTERING THE HARBOR OF SAN FRANCISCO.
In making the northern entrance, called Sausolito, keep the Fort and the island of Yerba Buena in one; in coming from the south and making the southern entrance, keep the island of Alcatrazes or Bird Island, touching the Fort. After the Fort bear south per compass, steer due east, (true) to avoid the flats which are making out from Belona's beach. No danger can be apprehended from Blossom Rock. In running into this harbor after passing the Fort, and having it bearing (true) south, good anchorage can be obtained from five and a half fathoms to three fathoms. At present there are no buoys, but in the latter part of next month there will be buoys on Blossom Rock, Anita Rock, on the shoals on the N. N. W. part of the harbor, and on the bank making out from Belona's beach. High water at Yerba Buena or San Francisco full and change 10 hours 34 minutes. Rise of spring tides 9 feet, neap tides 3 feet. Latitude of the Fort 37 deg. 48 min. 30 sec. N.; Longitude 122 deg. 27 min. 24 sec. W. Variation 15 deg. 36 min. E.
EDW. A. KING, Harbor Master.
SEPTEMBER 27, 1849.
REGULATIONS FOR THE HARBOR AND PORT OF SAN FRANCISCO.
ART. 1st. On the arrival of Merchant vessels at the port of San Francisco, a proper berth will be pointed out to the masters thereof, by the Harbor Master, when he boards them; and no master of a Merchant vessel shall shift his berth without permission from the Harbor Master, unless in case of extreme emergency, when he must report his having done so as early as possible at the office of the Harbor Master.
ART. 2d. Should it be the intention of a master of a vessel to discharge or receive on board any considerable quantity of merchandise, a berth will be pointed out to him as close to the landing places as the safety of the vessel and other circumstances will permit.
ART. 3d. After a proper berth has been pointed out, the master will then moor his vessel with two bower anchors across the tide, with thirty-five fathoms chain cable, with buoys attached in summer months, and fifty fathoms from the hawser hole in winter. December, January, February and March to be considered the winter months.
ART. 4th. If any vessel properly moored in the harbor shall have her anchors or cables over-laid by any
ART. 5th. When any Merchant vessel may be lying in a berth convenient for discharging, and she shall have completed her unloading or lading, such vessel shall, at the request of the Harbor Master, remove to a place designated, should her berth be required by any other vessel which may desire to load or discharge.
ART. 6th. Merchant vessels arriving with powder on board, must on arrival, report the same to the Harbor Master, in order that a secure berth may be pointed out.
ART. 7th. No ballast will be allowed to be thrown overboard. Any ballast which may be wanted to discharge, by application to the Harbor Master, a place of discharge will be designated, and any vessel requiring ballast, instructions will be furnished on application.
ART. 8th. All difficulties arising between ships relative to the foregoing rules, shall be settled before the Harbor Master.
ART. 9th. Disobedience to the orders of the Harbor Master, in the discharge of his duty will subject the offender to a fine of fifty dollars, to go towards the Hospital Fund, of the town of San Francisco.
ART. 10th. After mooring, ships must rig in jib and flying jib-booms.
ART. 11th. Forty-eight hours notice to be given at the Custom House before clearing.
ART. 12th. No fire arms to be discharged in the Harbor under penalty of Article 9th.
APPROVED:—
THOS. AP C. JONES, Comdr. U. S. N.
EDW. A. KING, Harbor Master.
Next to the port of San Francisco, in maritime importance, we must put the Bay of Monterey, with its two ancient towns of Monterey and Santa Cruz lying on the opposite shores of the bay. At present the mining operations being confined to the north of the Bay of San Francisco, the whole commerce is concentrated in that port; but ere long they will go farther south, and then the town of Monterey will be likewise benefitted by the trade with the mines, as its facility of communicating by land with all the points south of San Francisco promises it.
Monterey was, and is, as yet, the capital of the country, contains about two thousand inhabitants, principally natives and old established families of foreigners, who have not neglected to improve opportunities of making themselves rich. The soil in the neighborhood is good—the climate a hundred per cent. better than that of San Francisco. The situation of the town is very picturesque.
On the north side of the Bay lie the Mission and town of Santa Cruz, with a rich soil abounding in water and timber, as in its neighborhood, in the mountains, there are six saw-mills in operation. Building timber is easily and cheaply obtained here; land for building lots can be also procured at moderate prices. It is an excellent spot for mechanics to settle upon, as the sea offers them facilities for sending the produce of their hands into any portion of the country, while at the same time living is cheap, for everything in the way of provisions can be produced in the town.
Pueblo de San Jose is another old settlement, and has more than a thousand inhabitants within its jurisdiction, and is growing rapidly. By its position, in a
The town of South San Francisco [the settlement about Mission Dolores], about three miles south of the city of San Francisco, possesses the same advantages of the harbor as the latter, for all classes of vessels, with the superiority of being more sheltered from the prevailing winds and of having an abundant supply of water, not only for the use of its inhabitants, but for the shipping. The same depth of water extends along the shore from one town to the other. The country is picturesque, the site of the town is more regular than that of San Francisco; it commands a quarry of stone suitable for buildings, and it lies on the road from San Francisco to Pueblo de San Jose. Had the original settlers of San Francisco exercised their judgment before settling on that windy spot, they would have put their houses on the site of South San Francisco.— We have no doubt but it will soon have its share In the commerce of the Bay.
Benicia is a town situated on the north side of the strait of Carquinez, with great depth of water; ships can discharge there close to the shore without the aid
Martinez is a projected town on the opposite side to Benicia, and of which we have already spoken above.
Suisun is a town just springing up into existence on the north side of the bay of Suisun and right bank of the Sacramento; it is very advantageously situated for both commercial and agricultural purposes. It is eighty-five miles distant from San Francisco and fifty from Benicia; it has a rich soil and is well wooded; it possesses good water in abundance, and building stone is found in the neighborhood. The depth of water is sufficient to admit barks to lie close to the Shore. Its importance soon will be felt when the beautiful neighborhood of the Clear Lake shall be settled by enterprising farmers and miners. Its climate is mild and healthy.
Sacramento City, once the exclusive property of the well known and remembered by every stranger who appreciates hospitality, Capt. J. A. SUTTER, is situated on the east bank of the Sacramento river; vessels of seven hundred tons are lying close to the shore in the Stream. To show its growth and importance we need only state that on the first of May last it contained about fifteen houses and tents, the whole business with the mines being done at the Fort, which is about two miles distant from the city, and on the first of August
The town of Boston is situated in the fork made by the Sacramento and the American rivers in their junction, and its site extends along the shores of both of them. Its situation is a little elevated and free from inundation; the land is rich and well wooded; the same class of vessels that comes up to Sacramento City, can lie here with equal ease, being but a mile above the latter; the road that crosses the American river and leads to the Feather river, the Bear Creek and the Yuba goes through the town. It is laid out on the old site of an Indian Rancheria, a portion of which they still occupy.
The town of Washington is very beautifully situated on the same bank with Sacramento City, from which it is only nine miles distant up the river. The spot is well selected for an inland town where agriculture and trade with the mines must flourish; it is well provided with timber and a brook runs through it. The river craft and a steamboat run up to it.
Springfield is a town in project, close to the town of Vernon.— Vernon is at the junction of the Feather river with the Sacramento. It is in the vicinity of many “diggings,” with which it carries on a lively trade. At any season of the year there is four feet of water in the river, but for eight months the depth of water is eight feet.— River craft and a steamboat are constantly plying up to this place. Its vicinity is a rich and well wooded agricultural country.
The town of Sutter, situated two miles below, and on the same bank with Sacramento City, possesses the same advantages of the river and soil as the latter. It has already several houses put up.
New York of the Pacific, at the mouth of the San Joaquin, has been already spoken of above.
Stockton is a spot happily selected for an inland town of great importance, and already its present augurs well for the future.— Situated high up on the San Joaquin, accessible to river craft at all seasons of the year, cut through in different directions by four channels, communicating with the river, and admitting close to the shore vessels of the class of barks and brigs, of which thirteen are moored there at this very moment, surrounded by rich soil and extensive wood land, contiguous to numerous rich “diggings,” Stockton offers great advantages to a new settler, and many have already availed themselves of them. Its proprietor, Mr. Chas. M. Weber, by his liberal provisions for the public wants of the town, cannot fail to accelerate its prosperity.
The town of San Joaquin, situated on the river of the same name, at the highest point to which river steamers can come up at all seasons of the year, in the neighborhood of the rich mines of the Merced and Mariposa, to which a good waggon road can be easily made, offers superior advantages to settlers; its situation is picturesque, as it is on a rising ground; it is abundantly supplied with good water and grass all the year through, and its climate is salubrious. Its geographical position to the surrounding mining district guarantees it the command as a trading post, to at least one third of the gold region.
WE were once on the point of stopping short in our present lucubrations, thinking of following our own inclination, which leads us to prefer short speeches and concise books, to prolix and wandering harangues and folio volumes, in which thoughts are diluted after homoeopathic fashion, although fully aware that by so doing we may lose somewhat of the good will of those “literary gluttons” whose appetites could not be satisfied short of a ponderous volume of printer's ink spread over hundreds of pages. On a further reflection, however, we find that we will not depart, materially, from our views in this respect, by devoting a chapter on the social complexion of the country, which, if it be not useful, at least may interest the curious.
Although frequently man is capable of moulding circumstances to himself, yet it is more frequent that he
To describe a Californian without describing in part, at least, his horse, would be to leave the picture incomplete. The Californian horse, without having very marked traits of beauty or peculiarity, is a gracefully formed animal of moderate size, or much smaller than the generality of horses in the States, without, however, being entitled to the name of pony. He can endure a good deal of fatigue, and keeps in a good condition, living on much less than horses of many other countries do. Generally he is trained to gallop for miles, and to obey the Spanish bit to the least touch of the rein, which bit is in universal use here. The California saddle is no less a philosophical adaptation to the wants of the rider than many other peculiarities of these people. The materials entering into the construction and trimming of a California saddle, are as few and as simple as possible, yet offering a greater security and comfort to the rider and ease to the horse, than any of those contrivances known in the civilized world as saddles. The saddle-tree is made of light wood—willow principally—in the shape of old Spanish saddles, miserablelas armas de pello, which are two hairy goat skins, trimmed and ornamented, suspended on both sides of the pommel, and when necessary, spread round the waist of the rider to serve him as protection from cold or mud, make together a very dry and comfortable bed, of which a wearied traveller cannot but enjoy. These saddles, when finished in the best style, cost over a hundred dollars. In our opinion, there is no saddle for service and elegance that a gentleman can make use of, superior to a California saddle-tree, made by a good artisan and trimmed after the Mexican fashion. For the field labor, the plain California saddle answers very well; its pommel is equal to holding up the stoutest bullock.
The dress of a Californian is quite picturesque, andbotas. A hat, with a large brim and a high somewhat tapering top, covered with black oil silk, scarcely touching the crown of the head, underpinned by a wide black ribbon, crowns the dress and the man.—Sometimes he may put on a colored silk cravat, a vest and a broadcloth jacket, according to his means or fancy; the presence or absence of any of these garments makes very little difference to him, for he is above the fears of censure of fashion. A serape or a manga is always accompanying its owner, be it thrown gracefully overserape and the manga serve as a species of a cloak or a blanket; the former is made of twisted woolen thread of many colors, arranged in a certain plan or fancy of the artisan who makes them, about four feet broad and about eight or nine long, with an opening in the middle to admit the head in putting it on; The manga is made of broadcloth, is shorter and broader than the serape , is capable of a great variety of ornaments, as a gold galoon around the edges, velvet, and galoon and fringes arranged in a circular form, just to cover that portion of it which covers the shoulders, descending over them. It is lined throughout with some fancy calico. It is quite a striking and fantastic cloak when handsomely trimmed and wrapping gracefully the wearer. It may cost sometimes as high as five hundred dollars. The full dress of a Californian, got up in the best style and taste, with his horse and saddle, and silver mounted spurs and bridle, often cost towards fifteen hundred dollars. Thus fitted out on a prancing horse, a delight of his, the youthful Californian fails not in being an attractive object to his fair countrywomen. The spurs of a Californian are the gift of antiquity, probably from the times when Don Quixote or his compeers were living, they are so large and heavy; however, much can be said in praise of them.
The Californian women, although equally as fond of dress as their countrymen are, yet are dressed modestly, as a general rule; the simpler of them are content with a nicely washed linen or cotton white shirt, buttoned at the throat, or cut out to display a portion of a fine bust; a red flannel petticoat, over which isreboso, which is peculiarly a Mexican dress, is in universal use here with all women. It is remarkable how that piece of cotton-cloth finely wove, should supply the place of the warmest cloak to the Californian women; for in the coldest weather here, (which, by the bye, is not so cold as it may be elsewhere,) they know no warmer garment with which to cover their head, and shoulders. The reboso is an inseparable companion of a Californian woman. When it is made of silk, it is very pretty and expensive; it is about two feet broad and five or six long, with a fringed border at the ends.
The domestic duties, in all their multiplicity, devolve themselves in California much more upon women than men; the former, within the precincts of their houses, perform all the laborious duties of housewives, while the latter occupy themselves with field labors, with this advantage in their favor, that while the wife is all the time busy with taking care of her household, the husband only that small portion of time required for
The social relations of these good people are very simple, yet they are often marked with that which we may call the politeness of heart, which would reflect credit upon the most cultivated state of society; the sexes here are on very familiar terms, yet without grossness even among the least educated. On some public occasions, however, the monastic notions so peculiar to the generality of catholics elsewhere, mark the relative behavior of a female towards a male. The woman here must pretend to shun the company of a man, at least before the eye of the public. But here, as elsewhere, when this passes the bounds of real modesty, the sensible portion of even simple men, look upon it as a piece of silly stratagem. The will of a father here over his children, particularly his daughters, stands yet in that antique grandeur in which it stood once the world over, when the Jesuits wielded the cat-o'-ninetails over Christian nations, with this difference, however, that the father's ambition is not very aspiring, and the daughter's passions being not reared in a hothouse of artificial life, they never come to a serious clash. Putting the excesses of such authority out of question, it is beautiful to see among these people, the deference paid by the children to their parents and their elders.
The intercourse of these people among themselves, (be they more or less educated,) is carried on with aexquisitely civilized tone of voice, “there is plenty water in the pond.” However, by a little management, we did succeed in getting some water without going to the pond ourself. As we had to make a short stop, though much against our will, at the house, we found that the whole household was of a piece and its mistress particularly so. It would puzzle the greatest philosopher to account for the moral phenomenon of these people. Judging them by their manners, it would be somewhat difficult to identify their nationality, although it was clear they were not of the Spanish race; where they grew, that they could withstand the softening influences of civilization, and the light of Christianity, we never could satisfactorily determine in our own mind, and we leave the reader to solve it for himself. When a stranger arrives before the house of a Californian, he will surely hear an invitation to dismount and come in; and if he should find the inmates at a meal they
The ties of blood-relationship are very much respected by the Californians, even to a greater degree than anywhere else; it seems that the remotest family connexion gives them a peculiar title to the friendly offices of each other. The spiritual connexion is not less respected, and the title of a god-father, gives the child almost the rights of his own children to his care and affection. Sometimes a rich man finds it expensive to extend this title, as the whole family of the child may claim more from the compadre than he is willing to admit.
The life of a California ranchero or farmer is monotonous, as he lives alone with his family in the midst of widely extending fields or hills grazing his cattle; sometimes for twenty or even more miles there is no other house. It looks still more monotonous and uninviting to a foreigner bred in cities, when he sees the dingy mud walls of the farm house, surrounded by the carcasses of the cattle killed, hides extended in the process of curing and horns and white bones scattered about. But this picture is relieved frequently by the fair ones of the family sitting in front of the house, squatted on a mat or a hide in a Turkish fashion, plyingadobes, sometimes white-washed, sometimes not. Generally a large corridor is made in front, which may be considered their reception room; undoubtedly in fair weather the most pleasant portion of the building. The house frequently Contains but a few windows, (or rather openings in the walls, as glass windows are rare luxuries,) and sometimes none, the door performing the double function. The mud bricks are made of mud with cut-straw, put in a square form and dried in the sun. Their houses know no fire places; these are entirely a foreign innovation; they keep but one fire, by which they cook. Their mode of life may be better compared with a camp life than with the life of comforts that civilized nations lead. Still, however, they seem to thrive very well on it, and are content.
Their towns are a little in advance of their ranchos. There they find more attractions for life, more means of amusing themselves, however dull they may appear to foreigners. Monterey is the place that gave ton to the rest of the country; Santa Barbara, Pueblo de Los Angeles and San Diego only followed in its wake. In towns they have their balls, races, gambling, and church going, and church festivities—frequently all these on the same day. The people of this country are light hearted, disposed to amuse themselves and be happy; they have their own dances and their own music, which although it be rude, yet is not disagreeable to more cultivated ears. The waltz is a very great favorite dance with them, and they execute it frequently with a peculiar grace; they know other dances that are familiar elsewhere; but they also have their own jarabe, son
jota; the latter is a very graceful mixture of figures with the common waltz. When those, whose higher pretensions are universally acknowledged, give a ball, they invite their particular friends, and the generality of the citizens have the privilege to look on through the doors and windows, and they seem to enjoy as much as those inside, and none of them can tire out the other; the outsiders are not the first to go home.
The arts and sciences among these good people, of course, are only known by heresay, so to speak. Every thing of the kind is yet in a very primitive state, and yet they actually appear to know more than this condition would warrant; which must be owing in a measure to the intercourse they more or less have with foreigners, and their own good parts. The only art that is somewhat advanced among them, is that of saddle making.
Partly owing to the climate, and partly to the mixture of the Indian race with the European, the Californians are of a dark complexion, and have dark eyes and black or dark hair; and particularly so in the Pueblo de Los Angeles and its vicinity; yet there are many whose blood seems to be of pure Castilian origin, and these have a very clear skin, although they may have black or dark hair. Blue eyes are very rare among them. As a general rule, they are a comely people; and with a little more soaping and combing they could be made quite spruce looking; their men particularly have the peculiarly Spanish prejudice against soap and cold water. Their women, however, are not so much open to the above charge, they seem to be aware, as well as the women of more cultivated nations, that soap and water play an important part in the art of pleasing.tortilla, and their tooth-brush is dried beef, carne seca, which require good masticators. Their food is generally strong, substantial in its character, and in quantity, a looker-on might presume it even excessive. They know no epidemics here, and have no particular diseases; if they die, they fall a victim of a disease that might carry off any man under any climate. The fever, in its different modifications, may be considered as the most common destroyer of their life.
IT will not be out of place in connexion with what preceded, to offer on this occasion a few medical observations which have occupied our attention for some years past, and which are particularly illustrated on the people and the climate of this country; and we do so more willingly as we do not feel disposed to burden a medical library with a separate volume, and as the subject itself concerns more the patient than the physician, being of more vital importance to the former than the latter.
Reasons peculiar to ourself, and which it is not important to mention here, led us to observe the effects of the habitual use of tea and coffee upon the system, as well as the abuse of mercury. In our observations we embrace different nations of Europe and America, but California furnishes us the most conclusive and satisfactoryexperimentum crucis in our observations. The effects or results of tea or coffee when habitually used, are not direct nor immediate upon the teeth, but as concomitant and unavoidable consequences of a protracted derangement of digestive organs, bringing in its train vitiated secretions of the mouth which tinge the enamel, encrust the body of the teeth and
The way that these results are brought about by tea or coffee is the following. Tea is a drug acting in a manner peculiar to itself upon the nervous system, as we see it in the fact that it is capable of keeping one awake or sleepless, (taking into account, of course, its quantity, strength, and the degree of susceptibility of the person affected,) it removes the lassitude when taken after fatigue, it enlivens one at all times, or it may serve as an antidote to the usual consequences the morning next after a fit of hard drinking, and so forth. It cannot be denied that to a perfect digestion it is necessary, nay, it is even indispensable to have an easy mind, to be morally quiet, or in other words, to have the nervous system undisturbed by whatever causes, moral or physical. The drug in question is one of the physical causes when taken internally acting upon the nervous system and whose effects last for hours.—Hence, whether it be taken together with a meal or soon after, or in course of a day, it always disturbs the digestive process, and if the practice of indulging in it be persisted in, the consequences will be a permanent derangement of digestion in a greater or less degree, bringing in its train a host of symptoms of which all medical men are aware, and which it is not necessary to mention here, save one, as that came particularly under our notice; we mean the general waste of the body, the loss of that roundness of form which is essential to the beauty not only of man but of all animals; the waste and absorption of mammary glands in particular. These observations we have verified
In California among the native population, where there are no different classes in society, where habits are the same with all, a slight deviation from those habits can be easily traced in its consequences; and it is precisely the case that the effects we have above indicated, are clearly perceived upon those who having little more intercourse with foreigners than their neighbors, have adopted the habits of the latter in that particular—and this is not only true in regard to the gene eral emaciation, but to the uncleanliness of the teeth also. Where the artificial means to keep the teeth clean are resorted to, the effects in question cannot be so easily decided upon; but in the case of the Californians, it is not so difficult, as they do not know yet the means that art provides for the purpose.
Coffee equally exerts an influence upon the nervous system as tea, with a slight difference, however, to stop to discuss which it is not our purpose here, it suffices to say, that the former is more assailing in its effects upon the system than the latter, which is more insidious and permanent; the symptoms of uneasiness in the head which coffee is apt to produce in many
We are aware that many, as an argument against our position on the subject in question, would use the trite saying of the witty Frenchman when his physician pronounced coffee a poison. But we would say, in refutation of it, that it is not necessary to be possessed of much knowledge or acuteness of observation to pronounce upon the effects that follow directly and immediately upon an application of violent causes; an imbecile even can trace the link that there exists, as a cause and effect, between the feeling of pain he receives and the stick that may inflict it upon him; any one can, who takes a sufficient dose of arsenic to produce poisonous effects upon himself, ascribe them, as a chain of consequences following it, without being a physician, to the dose he took. But it will not be so, if, for instance, ignorant entirely of electro-magnetic power, he approaches the door of the cabinet of a natural philosopher, who mischievously charged his electric machine and connected it with the door-knob, touching which he gets knocked down. Being ignorant of the arrangement
Those that mix spirits with their tea or coffee, are the only ones who make a rational use of the beverage; as the spirits act as an antidote to either of the drugs, modifying, somewhat, their effects. We would not be, however, understood as advocating the use of spirits; far from it. They are all good in their places as medicines only. As a substitute for tea or coffee, chocolate may be used advantageously; it is not a drug; it possesses no remedial powers, in the proper sense of the word; it is only alimentative, nourishing by its natural oil and substance. And as an aliment, an excessive quantity must be guarded against, as it is the case with any other article of food. If it disagrees with people generally, as it does with some persons, the cause is within them, their digestive powers being weak, its oily particles
California has never seen so great a mortality as within the last year, among the strangers who arrived recently; and some would lay the blame to the climate. We, however, would deny it in toto, and assert it is the fault of the patient and his physician in most cases. The diseases that may be said to be incident to the climate, are tractable, and we had the good fortune to lose not a single case as yet, be it diarrhora, dysentery, fever and ague, or what may be called California fever—a confused type of all fevers. But we have treated our patients a little differently from the routine practice, from the injunctions of books and professors. If there be a climate unfavorable to the mercurial practice, it is that of California; nights being generally cold and damp throughout the country. Under such circumstances, carelessness on the part of the patient or the physician, may cost the former his life. We have been, therefore, induced at once to expunge mercury from the list of our remedies; and we did it willingly, as we do not believe in its peculiar and exclusive powers over the biliary secretions; we are able to command the same results with other means, whichtoo many such cases recently, to believe our treatment wrong, and particularly when the most inveterate cases, when there was sufficient strength left, have yielded in a few days in our hands. Whatever may bring on cold, causes diarrhoea or dysentery in this climate, particularly in persons recently arrived; of course there are other causes that may induce diarrhoea or dysentery as bad food, and so forth; cold, however, is most frequent here. In view of these facts, we treat the disease accordingly. and find no difficulty in managing it.
In fever and ague, we are not fond of using much sulphate of quinine, except merely to interrupt the periodicity of the disease, for which great doses are not required; this done, we cleanse the bowels thoroughly, then pay attention to the diet, which should be nourishing but light. A strict attention on the part of the patient to this rule for tWo or three weeks, improves him rapidly, and guards against a relapse. Under such a course of treatment as we have here briefly indicated, and which an experienced physician can easily comprehend, our patients recover without much delay. And
We have thought proper to add this medical observation to our pages, as we have found that many strangers, after the residence of but a few weeks or months, have already conceived erroneous opinions upon the subject, and which in the end might prove injurious to themselves as well as to the country; our residence here of several years has enabled us to form a more correctjudgment in this respect, and which may be at least of sufficient weight to counteract theirs.
END.
FOR THE STUDY OF THE LIFE OF
F. P. WIERZBICKI, M.D.
COMPILED BY GEORGE D. LYMAN
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3. ALLIBONE, S. AUSTIN: A C ritical
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E nglish
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.
4. ALTA (S an
F rancisco)
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D ecember 27, 1860, 1/2; ibid, 4/2
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5. ANDERSON GALLERIES CATALOGUE (N ew
Y ork)
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7. BEKEART, PHILIP BALDWIN: J ames
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14. HARDIE, JAMES ALLEN: M emoirs of
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18. KALUSSOWSKI, H.: (W ashington
, D. C.) says
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R achunki
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19. KUNASZOWS KI, HIERONIM: in his
Z yciorysy
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P owstania
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N ovember
( 1830
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A merican
P oles through correspondence
. W ierzbicki's biography was given by someone who knew him personally
. I t says:
"B orn in
W olhynia, came to
A merica, 1834
. S tudied medicine in
C onnecticut
. H e was the first
P ole to settle in
C alifornia which he described in a book
."
20. LIPPITT, FRANCIS J.: R eminiscences of
. P rovidence
, R. I., 1902. pp. 122
.
21. LYNCH, JAMES: W ith
S tevenson to
C alifornia, 1846
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R edonda
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L uis
O bispo
C o., 1896. pp. 65
.
22. LYMAN, GEORGE D.: T he
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C alifornia and
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. 23. LYMAN, GEORGE D.: S calpel
U nder
T hree
F lags in
C alifornia;
C alifornia
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Q uarterly
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, N o. 2
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.
24. MORRISON, LT. R.M.: MS. T he volunteer's vision (
E dwin
G rabhorn collection)
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.
25. MURRAY, HON. WALTER: MS. N arrative of a
C alifornia volunteer
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26. NEW YORK HERALD: A ugust 3, 1846;
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T he
C alifornia
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27. PALOU, FRANCISCO: R elacion historica de la vida y apostolicas tareas del venerable
P adre
F ray
J unipero
S erra, y de los misiones que fundo en la
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.
28. SACRAMENTO TRANSCRIPT: J une 21, 1850
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.ecember 27, 1860, 2/4
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30. STEVENSON, COL., J. D.: M emorial and
P etition of
. S an
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.
31. WAGNER, HENRY R.: C alifornia
I mprints
, A ugust, 1846-
J une, 1851
. B erkeley
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32. WAR DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, D. C.: B ridges
, C. H. T o
M iecislaus
H aiman, letter dated
J uly 14, 1930
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R oll of
C ompany
H, C aptain
J ohn
B. F risbie
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V olunteers
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. M uster
R oll of
C ompany
F, C aptain
F rancis
J. L ippitt
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A pril 13, 1847
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S tevenson's regiment in
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. M c
K inley
, J ames
F.: L yman
, G. D., L etter dated
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33. WIERZBICKI, FELIX PAUL: T he
I deal
M an:
A C onversation between
T wo
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B eautiful, the
G ood, and the
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A ctual
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34. WIERZBICKI, FELIX PAUL: “T hree
C hapters on the
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.” A merican
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M ay
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35. WIERZBICKI, FELIX PAUL: “B righter
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P oland
."
A merican
W hig
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, V ol. 4, pp. 188-199
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.
36. WIERZBICKI, F. P. TO KEARNY, GOVERNOR-GENERAL S. W.: MS. letter dated
S an
F rancisco
, A pril 12, 1847
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.
37. WIERZBICKI, FELIX PAUL: C alifornia
A s
I t
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38. WIERZBICKI, FELIX PAUL: C alifornia
A s
I t
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A s
I t
M ay
B e, etc
. S econd
E dition
, S an
F rancisco
, D ecember 30, 1849. pp. 76
. B ancroft
L ibrary