Armies of fleas
Leave the mission
Clover
Wild mustard
A carreta
Family travelling
Arrive at Pueblo de San Jose
Capt. Fisher
Description of the Pueblo
The embarcadero
Beautiful and fertile valley of the Pueblo
Absence of architectural taste in California
Town squirrels
Fruit garden
Grapes
Tropical fruits
Gaming rooms
Contrast between California and American
gamesters
Leave San Jose
Beautiful avenue
Mission of Santa Clara
Rich but neglected lands
Effects of a bad government
A senora on the road-side
Kindness of Californian women
Fast riding
Cruel treatment of horses
Arrive at the mission of San Francisco
A poor but hospitable family
Arrive at the town of San Francisco
W.A. Leidesdorff, Esq., American
vice-consul
First view of the bay of San Francisco
Muchachos and Muchachas
Capt. Montgomery
U.S. sloop-of-war, Portsmouth
Town of San Francisco; its situation,
appearance, population
Commerce of California
Extortion of the government and traders.
September 19. Several
Californians came into the mission during the night
or early this morning; among them the husband of our
hostess, who was very kind and cordial in his greetings.
While our man Jack was saddling and
packing the mules, they gathered around us to the
number of a dozen or more, and were desirous of trading
their horses for articles of clothing; articles which
many of them appeared to stand greatly in need of,
but which we had not to part from. Their pertinacity
exceeded the bounds of civility, as I thought; but
I was not in a good humour, for the fleas, bugs, and
other vermin, which infested our miserable lodgings,
had caused me a sleepless night, by goring my body
until the blood oozed from the skin in countless places.
These ruinous missions are prolific generators, and
the nurseries of vermin of all kinds, as the hapless
traveller who tarries in them a few hours will learn
to his sorrow. When these bloodthirsty assailants
once make a lodgment in the clothing or bedding of
the unfortunate victim of their attacks, such are
their courage and perseverance, that they never capitulate.
“Blood or death” is their motto; the
war against them, to be successful, must be a war of
extermination.
Poor as our hostess was, she nevertheless
was reluctant to receive any compensation for her
hospitality. We, however, insisted upon her receiving
a dollar from each of us (dos pesos), which
she finally accepted; and after shaking us cordially
by the hand she bade us an affectionate adios,
and we proceeded on our journey.
From the Mission of San Jose to the
Pueblo of San Jose, the distance is fifteen miles,
for the most part over a level and highly fertile plain,
producing a variety of indigenous grasses, among which
I noticed several species of clover and mustard, large
tracts of which we rode through, the stalks varying
from six to ten feet in height. The plain is
watered by several arroyos, skirted with timber,
generally the evergreen oak.
We met this morning a Californian
carreta, or travelling-cart, freighted with
women and children, bound on a pleasure excursion.
The carreta is the rudest specimen of the wheeled
vehicle I have seen. The wheels are transverse
sections of a log, and are usually about 2-1/2 feet
in diameter, and varying in thickness from the centre
to the rim. These wheels are coupled together
by an axletree, into which a tongue is inserted.
On the axletree and tongue rests a frame, constructed
of square pieces of timber, six or eight feet in length,
and four or five in breadth, into which are inserted
a number of stakes about, four feet in length.
This frame-work being covered and floored with raw
hides, the carriage is complete. The carreta
which we met was drawn by two yokes of oxen, driven
by an Indian vaquero, mounted on a horse. In
the rear were two caballeros, riding fine spirited
horses, with gaudy trappings. They were dressed
in steeple-crowned glazed sombreros, serapes
of fiery colours, velvet (cotton) calzoneros,
white cambric calzoncillos, and leggins
and shoes of undressed leather. Their spurs were
of immense size.
The party halted as soon as we met
them, the men touching their heavy sombreros,
and uttering the usual salutation of the morning, “Buenos
dios, senores,” and shaking hands with us
very cordially. The same salutation was repeated
by all the senoras and senoritas in the carreta.
In dress and personal appearance the women of this
party were much inferior to the men. Their skins
were dark, sallow, and shrivelled; and their costume,
a loose gown and reboso, were made of very
common materials. The children, however, were
all handsome, with sparkling eyes and ruddy complexions.
Women and children were seated, a la Turque,
on the bottom of the carreta, there being no
raised seats in the vehicle.
We arrived at the Pueblo do San Jose
about twelve o’clock. There being no hotels
in California, we were much at a loss where to apply
for refreshments and lodgings for the night.
Soon, however, we were met by Captain Fisher, a native
of Massachusetts, but a resident of this country for
twenty years or more, who invited us to his house.
We were most civilly received by Senora F., who, although
she did not speak English, seemed to understand it
very well. She is a native of the southern Pacific
coast of Mexico, and a lady of fine manners and personal
appearance. Her oldest daughter, about thirteen
years of age, is very beautiful. An excellent
dinner was soon set out, with a variety of the native
wines of California and other liquors. We could
not have felt ourselves more happy and more at home,
even at our own firesides and in the midst of our
own families.
The Pueblo de San Jose is a village
containing some six or eight hundred inhabitants.
It is situated in what is called the “Pueblo
Valley,” about fifteen miles south of the southern
shore of the Bay of San Francisco. Through a
navigable creek, vessels of considerable burden can
approach the town within a distance of five or six
miles. The embarcadero, or landing, I
think, is six miles from the Pueblo. The fertile
plain between this and the town, at certain seasons
of the year, is sometimes inundated. The “Pueblo
Valley,” which is eighty or one hundred miles
in length, varying from ten to twenty in breadth, is
well watered by the Rio Santa Clara and numerous arroyos,
and is one of the most fertile and picturesque plains
in California. For pastoral charms, fertility
of soil, variety of productions, and delicious voluptuousness
of climate and scenery, it cannot be surpassed.
This valley, if properly cultivated, would alone produce
breadstuffs enough to supply millions of population.
The buildings of the Pueblo, with few exceptions,
are constructed of adobes, and none of them have
even the smallest pretensions to architectural taste
or beauty. The church, which is situated near
the centre of the town, exteriorly resembles a huge
Dutch barn. The streets are irregular, every man
having erected his house in a position most convenient
to him. Aqueducts convey water from the Santa
Clara River to all parts of the town. In the main
plaza hundreds, perhaps thousands, of squirrels, whose
abodes are under ground, have their residences.
They are of a brownish colour, and about the size
of our common gray squirrel. Emerging from their
subterraneous abodes, they skip and leap about over
the plaza without the least concern, no one molesting
them.
The population of the place is composed
chiefly of native Californian land-proprietors.
Their ranchos are in the valley, but their residences
and gardens are in the town. We visited this afternoon
the garden of Senor Don Antonio Sugnol. He received
us with much politeness, and conducted us through
his garden. Apples, pears, peaches, figs, oranges,
and grapes, with other fruits which I do not now recollect,
were growing and ripening. The grape-vines were
bowed to the ground with the luxuriance arid weight
of the yield; and more delicious fruit I never tasted.
From the garden we crossed over to a flouring-mill
recently erected by a son-in-law of Don Antonio, a
Frenchman by birth. The mill is a creditable
enterprise to the proprietor, and he will coin money
from its operations.
The Pueblo de San Jose is one of the
oldest settlements in Alta California. Captain
Fisher pointed out to me a house built of adobes,
which has been standing between 80 and 90 years, and
no house in the place appeared to be more substantial
or in better repair. A garrison, composed of
marines from the United States’ ships, and volunteers
enlisted from the American settlers in the country,
is now stationed here. The post is under the
command of Purser Watmough, of the United States sloop-of-war
Portsmouth, commanded by Captain Montgomery. During
the evening I visited several public places (bar-rooms),
where I saw men and women engaged promiscuously at
the game of monte. Gambling is a universal
vice in California. All classes and both sexes
participate in its excitements to some extent.
The games, however, while I was present, were conducted
with great propriety and decorum so far as the native
Californians were concerned. The loud swearing
and other turbulent demonstrations generally proceeded
from the unsuccessful foreigners. I could not
but observe the contrast between the two races in
this respect. The one bore their losses with stoical
composure and indifference; the other announced each
unsuccessful bet with profane imprecations and malédictions.
Excitement prompted the hazards of the former, avarice
the latter.
September 20. The
morning was cloudy and cool; but the clouds broke
away about nine o’clock, and the sun shone from
a vapourless sky, as usual. We met, at the Pueblo,
Mr. Grove Cook, a native of Gerrard county, Ky., but
for many years a resident of California. He is
the proprietor of a rancho in the vicinity. We
determined to leave our mules in charge of Mr. Cook’s
vaquero, and proceed to San Francisco on hired horses.
The distance from the Pueblo de San Jose to San Francisco
is called sixty miles. The time occupied in performing
the journey, on Californian horses at Californian
speed, is generally six or seven hours. Procuring
horses for the journey, and leaving our baggage, with
the exception of a change of clothing, we left the
Pueblo about eleven o’clock A.M.
The mission of Santa Clara is situated
about two and a half miles from the town. A broad
alameda, shaded by stately trees (elms and
willows), planted by the padres, extends nearly
the entire distance, forming a most beautiful drive
or walk for equestrians or pedestrians. The motive
of the padres in planting this avenue was to
afford the devout senoras and senoritas a shade from
the sun, when walking from the Pueblo to the church
at the mission to attend mass. A few minutes
over the smooth level road, at the rapid speed of our
fresh Californian horses, brought us to the mission,
where we halted to make our observations. This
mission is not so extensive in its buildings as that
of San Jose, but the houses are generally in better
repair. They are constructed of adobes;
the church was open, and, entering the interior, I
found the walls hung with coarse paintings and engravings
of the saints, etc., etc. The chancel
decorated with numerous images, and symbolical ornaments
used by the priests in their worship. Gold-paper,
and tinsel, in barbaric taste, are plastered without
stint upon nearly every object that meets the eye,
so that, when on festive occasions the church is lighted,
it must present a very glittering appearance.
The rich lands surrounding the mission
are entirely neglected. I did not notice a foot
of ground under cultivation, except the garden inclosure,
which contained a variety of fruits and plants of the
temperate and tropical climates. From want of
care these are fast decaying. Some excellent
pears were furnished us by Mrs. Bennett, an American
lady, of Amazonian proportions, who, with her family
of sons, has taken up her residence in one of the
buildings of the mission. The picture of decay
and ruin presented by this once flourishing establishment,
surrounded by a country so fertile and scenery so
enchanting, is a most melancholy spectacle to the passing
traveller, and speaks a language of loud condemnation
against the government.
Proceeding on our journey, we travelled
fifteen miles over a flat plain, timbered with groves
and parks of evergreen oaks, and covered with a great
variety of grasses, wild oats, and mustard. So
rank is the growth of mustard in many places, that
it is with difficulty that a horse can penetrate through
it. Numerous birds flitted from tree to tree,
making the groves musical with their harmonious notes.
The black-tailed deer bounded frequently across our
path, and the lurking and stealthy coyotes
were continually in view. We halted at a small
cabin, with a corral near it, in order to breathe
our horses, and refresh ourselves. Captain Fisher
had kindly filled a small sack with bread, cheese,
roasted beef, and a small jug of excellent schiedam.
Entering the cabin, the interior of which was cleanly,
we found a solitary woman, young, neatly dressed,
and displaying many personal charms. With the
characteristic ease and grace of a Spanish woman, she
gave the usual salutation for the hour of the day,
“Buenas tardes, senores caballeros;”
to which we responded by a suitable salutation.
We requested of our hostess some water, which she furnished
us immediately, in an earthen bowl. Opening our
sack of provisions, we spread them upon the table,
and invited the senora to partake of them with us,
which invitation she accepted without the slightest
hesitation, and with much good-nature, vivacity, and
even thankfulness for our politeness. There are
no women in the world for whose manners nature has
done so much, and for whom art and education, in this
respect, have done so little, as these Hispano-American
females on the coast of the Pacific. In their
deportment towards strangers they are queens, when,
in costume, they are peasants. None of them, according
to our tastes, can be called beautiful; but what they
want in complexion and regularity of feature is fully
supplied by their kindliness, the soul and sympathy
which beam from their dark eyes, and their grace and
warmth of manners and expression.
While enjoying the pic-nic
with our agreeable hostess, a caballada was
driven into the corral by two vaqueros,
and two gentlemen soon after came into the house.
They were Messrs. Lightson and Murphy, from the Pueblo,
bound for San Francisco, and had stopped to change
their horses. We immediately made ready to accompany
them, and were soon on the road again, travelling
at racehorse speed; these gentlemen having furnished
us with a change of horses, in order that we might
be able to keep up with them.
To account for the fast travelling
in California on horseback, it is necessary to explain
the mode by which it is accomplished. A gentleman
who starts upon a journey of one hundred miles, and
wishes to perform the trip in a day, will take with
him ten fresh horses and a vaquero. The
eight loose horses are placed under the charge of the
vaquero, and are driven in front, at the rate
of ten or twelve miles an hour, according to the speed
that is required for the journey. At the end of
twenty miles, the horses which have been rode are discharged
and turned into the caballada, and horses which
have not been rode, but driven along without weight,
are saddled and mounted and rode at the same speed,
and so on to the end of the journey. If a horse
gives out from inability to proceed at this gait,
he is left on the road. The owner’s brand
is on him, and, if of any value, he can be recovered
without difficulty. But in California no one
thinks of stopping on the road, on account of the
loss of a horse, or his inability to travel at the
rate of ten or twelve miles an hour. Horseflesh
is cheap, and the animal must go as long as he can,
and when he cannot travel longer he is left, and another
horse is substituted.
Twenty-five miles, at a rapid gait
over a level and fertile plain, brought us to the
rancho of Don Francisco Sanchez, where we halted to
change horses. Breathing our animals a short time,
we resumed our journey, and reached the mission of
San Francisco Dolores, three miles from the town of
San Francisco, just after sunset. Between the
mission and the town the road is very sandy, and we
determined to remain here for the night, corraling
the loose animals, and picketing those we rode.
It was some time, however, before we could find a house
to lodge in. The foreign occupants of the mission
buildings, to whom we applied for accommodations for
the night, gave us no satisfaction. After several
applications, we were at last accommodated by an old
and very poor Californian Spaniard, who inhabited
a small house in one of the ruinous squares, formerly
occupied by the operative Indians. All that he
had (and it was but little) was at our disposal.
A more miserable supper I never sat down to; but the
spirit of genuine hospitality in which it was given
imparted to the poor viands a flavour that rendered
the entertainment almost sumptuous in my
imagination. A cup of water cheerfully given
to the weary and thirsty traveller, by him who has
no more to part with, is worth a cask of wine grudgingly
bestowed by the stingy or the ostentatious churl.
Notwithstanding we preferred sleeping on our own blankets,
these poor people would not suffer us to do it, but
spread their own pallets on the earth floor of their
miserable hut, and insisted so strongly upon our occupying
them, that we could not refuse.
September 21. We
rose at daylight. The morning was clear, and our
horses were shivering with the cold. The mission
of San Francisco is situated at the northern terminus
of the fertile plain over which we travelled yesterday,
and at the foot, on the eastern side, of the coast
range of mountains. These mountains are of considerable
elevation. The shore of the Bay of San Francisco
is about two miles distant from the mission.
An arroyo waters the mission lands, and empties
into the bay. The church of the mission, and
the main buildings contiguous, are in tolerable repair.
In the latter, several Mormon families, which arrived
in the ship Brooklyn from New York, are quartered.
As in the other missions I have passed through, the
Indian quarters are crumbling into shapeless heaps
of mud.
Our aged host, notwithstanding he
is a pious Catholic, and considers us as heretics
and heathens, gave us his benediction in a very impressive
manner when we were about to start. Mounting our
horses at sunrise, we travelled three miles over low
ridges of sand-hills, with sufficient soil, however,
to produce a thick growth of scrubby evergreen oak,
and brambles of hawthorn, wild currant and gooseberry
bushes, rose bushes, briers, etc. We reached
the residence of Wm. A. Leidesdorff, Esq., late American
vice-consul at San Francisco, when the sun was about
an hour high. The morning was calm and beautiful.
Not a ripple disturbed the placid and glassy surface
of the magnificent bay and harbour, upon which rested
at anchor thirty large vessels, consisting of whalemen,
merchantmen, and the U.S. sloop-of-war Portsmouth,
Captain Montgomery. Besides these, there were
numerous small craft, giving to the harbour a commercial
air, of which some of the large cities on the Atlantic
coast would feel vain. The bay, from the town
of San Francisco due east, is about twelve miles in
breadth. An elevated range of hills bounds the
view on the opposite side. These slope gradually
down, and between them and the shore there is a broad
and fertile plain, which is called the Contra Costa.
There are several small islands in the bay, but they
do not present a fertile appearance to the eye.
We were received with every mark of
respectful attention and cordial hospitality by Mr.
Leidesdorff. Mr. L. is a native of Denmark; was
for some years a resident of the United States; but
subsequently the captain of a merchant vessel, and
has been established at this place as a merchant some
five or six years. The house in which he resides,
now under the process of completion, is the largest
private building in the town. Being shown to
a well-furnished room, we changed our travel-soiled
clothing for a more civilized costume, by which time
breakfast was announced, and we were ushered into a
large dining-hall. In the centre stood a table,
upon which was spread a substantial breakfast of stewed
and fried beef, fried onions, and potatoes, bread,
butter, and coffee. Our appetites were very sharp,
and we did full justice to the merits of the fare
before us. The servants waiting upon the table
were an Indian muchachito and muchachita,
about ten or twelve years of age. They had not
been long from their wild rancherias, and knew
but little of civilized life. Our host, however,
who speaks, I believe, nearly every living language,
whether of Christian, barbarian, or savage nations,
seemed determined to impress upon their dull intellects
the forms and customs of civilization. He scolded
them with great vivacity, sometimes in their own tongue,
sometimes in French, Spanish, Portuguese, Danish, German,
and English, in accordance with the language in which
he was thinking at the moment. It seemed to me
that the little fat Indians were more confused than
enlightened by his emphatic instructions. At the
table, besides ourselves and host, was Lieutenant
W.A. Bartlett, of the U.S. sloop-of-war Portsmouth,
now acting as Alcalde of the town and district of
San Francisco.
The Portsmouth, Commander Montgomery,
is the only United States vessel of war now lying
in the harbour. She is regarded as the finest
vessel of her class belonging to our navy. By
invitation of Lieutenant Bartlett, I went on board
of her between ten and eleven o’clock. The
crew and officers were assembled on deck to attend
Divine service. They were all dressed with great
neatness, and seemed to listen with deep attention
to the Episcopal service and a sermon, which were read
by Commander Montgomery, who is a member of the church.
In the afternoon I walked to the summit
of one of the elevated hills in the vicinity of the
town, from which I had a view of the entrance to the
bay of San Francisco and of the Pacific Ocean.
A thick fog hung over the ocean outside of the bay.
The deep roar of the eternally restless waves, as
they broke one after another upon the beach, or dashed
against the rock-bound shore, could be heard with great
distinctness, although some five or six miles distant.
The entrance from the ocean into the bay is about
a mile and half in breadth. The waters of the
bay appear to have forced a passage through the elevated
ridge of hills next to the shore of the Pacific.
These rise abruptly on either side of the entrance.
The water at the entrance and inside is of sufficient
depth to admit the largest ship that was ever constructed;
and so completely land-locked and protected from the
winds is the harbour, that vessels can ride at anchor
in perfect safety in all kinds of weather. The
capacity of the harbour is sufficient for the accommodation
of all the navies of the world.
The town of San Francisco is situated
on the south side of the entrance, fronting on the
bay, and about six miles from the ocean. The
flow and ebb of the tide are sufficient to bring a
vessel to the anchorage in front of the town and carry
it outside, without the aid of wind, or even against
an unfavourable wind. A more approachable harbour,
or one of greater security, is unknown to navigators.
The permanent population of the town is at this time
between one and two hundred, and is composed almost
exclusively of foreigners. There are but two
or three native Californian families in the place.
The transient population, and at present it is quite
numerous, consists of the garrison of marines stationed
here, and the officers and crews attached to the merchant
and whale ships lying in the harbour. The houses,
with a few exceptions, are small adobes and frames,
constructed without regard to architectural taste,
convenience, or comfort. Very few of them have
either chimneys or fire-places. The inhabitants
contrive to live the year round without fires, except
for cooking. The position of San Francisco for
commerce is, without doubt, superior to any other
port on the Pacific coast of North America. The
country contiguous and contributory to it cannot be
surpassed in fertility, healthfulness of climate,
and beauty of scenery. It is capable of producing
whatever is necessary to the sustenance of man, and
many of the luxuries of tropical climates, not taking
into the account the mineral wealth of the surrounding
hills and mountains, which there is reason to believe
is very great. This place is, doubtless, destined
to become one of the largest and most opulent commercial
cities in the world, and under American authority
it will rise with astonishing rapidity. The principal
merchants now established here are Messrs. Leidesdorff,
Grimes and Davis, and Frank Ward, a young gentleman
recently from New York. These houses carry on
an extensive and profitable commerce with the interior,
the Sandwich Islands, Oregon, and the southern coast
of the Pacific. The produce of Oregon for exportation
is flour, lumber, salmon, and cheese; of the Sandwich
Islands, sugar, coffee, and preserved tropical fruits.
California, until recently, has had
no commerce, in the broad signification of the term.
A few commercial houses of Boston and New York have
monopolized all the trade on this coast for a number
of years. These houses have sent out ships freighted
with cargoes of dry goods and a variety of knick-knacks
saleable in the country. The ships are fitted
up for the retail sale of these articles, and trade
from port to port, vending their wares on board to
the rancheros at prices that would be astonishing
at home. For instance, the price of common brown
cotton cloth is one dollar per yard, and other articles
in this and even greater proportion of advance upon
home prices. They receive in payment for their
wares, hides and tallow. The price of a dry hide
is ordinarily one dollar and fifty cents. The
price of tallow I do not know. When the ship
has disposed of her cargo, she is loaded with hides,
and returns to Boston, where the hides bring about
four or five dollars, according to the fluctuations
of the market. Immense fortunes have been made
by this trade; and between the government of Mexico
and the traders on the coast California has been literally
skinned, annually, for the last thirty years.
Of natural wealth the population of California possess
a superabundance, and are immensely rich; still, such
have been the extortionate prices that they have been
compelled to pay for their commonest artificial luxuries
and wearing-apparel, that generally they are but indifferently
provided with the ordinary necessaries of civilized
life. For a suit of clothes, which in New York
or Boston would cost seventy-five dollars, the Californian
has been compelled to pay five times that sum in hides
at one dollar and fifty cents; so that a caballero,
to clothe himself genteelly, has been obliged, as
often as he renewed his dress, to sacrifice about
two hundred of the cattle on his rancho. No people,
whether males or females, are more fond of display;
no people have paid more dearly to gratify this vanity;
and yet no civilized people I have seen are so deficient
in what they most covet.