California battalion
Their appearance and costume
List of the officers
Commence our march to Los Angeles
Appearance of the country in the vicinity
of San Juan
Slaughter of beeves
Astonishing consumption of beef by the
men
Beautiful morning
Ice
Salinas river and valley
Californian prisoners
Horses giving out from fatigue
Mission of San Miguel
Sheep
Mutton
March on foot
More prisoners taken
Death of Mr. Stanley
An execution
Dark night
Capture of the mission of San Luis
Obispo
Orderly conduct and good deportment of
the California battalion.
November 30. The
battalion of mounted riflemen, under the command of
Lieutenant-Colonel Fremont, numbers, rank and file,
including Indians, and servants, 428. With the
exception of the exploring party, which left the United
States with Colonel F., they are composed of volunteers
from the American settlers, and the emigrants who have
arrived in the country within a few weeks. The
latter have generally furnished their own ammunition
and other equipments for the expedition. Most
of these are practised riflemen, men of undoubted
courage, and capable of bearing any fatigue and privations
endurable by veteran troops. The Indians are
composed of a party of Walla-Wallas from Oregon, and
a party of native Californians. Attached to the
battalion are two pieces of artillery, under the command
of Lieutenant McLane, of the navy. In the appearance
of our small army there is presented but little of
“the pomp and circumstance of glorious war.”
There are no plumes nodding over brazen helmets, nor
coats of broadcloth spangled with lace and buttons.
A broad-brimmed low-crowned hat, a shirt of blue flannel,
or buckskin, with pantaloons and mocassins of
the same, all generally much the worse for wear, and
smeared with mud and dust, make up the costume of
the party, officers as well as men. A leathern
girdle surrounds the waist, from which are suspended
a bowie and a hunter’s knife, and sometimes
a brace of pistols. These, with the rifle and
holster-pistols, are the arms carried by officers and
privates. A single bugle (and a sorry one it
is) composes the band. Many an embryo Napoleon,
in his own conceit, whose martial spirit has been excited
to flaming intensity of heat by the peacock-plumage
and gaudy trappings of our militia companies, when
marching through the streets to the sound of drum,
fife, and brass band, if he could have looked upon
us, and then consulted the state of the military thermometer
within him, would probably have discovered that the
mercury of his heroism had fallen several degrees
below zero. He might even have desired that we
should not come
“Between the wind and
his nobility.”
War, stripped of its pageantry, possesses
but few of the attractions with which poetry and painting
have embellished it. The following is a list
of the officers composing the California Battalion: Lieut.-colonel
J.G. Fremont, commanding; A.H. Gillespie,
major; P.B. Reading, paymaster; H. King, commissary;
J.R. Snyder, quartermaster, since appointed a
land-surveyor by Colonel Mason; Wm. H. Russell, ordnance
officer; T. Talbot, lieutenant and adjutant; J.J.
Myers, sergeant-major, appointed lieutenant in January,
1847.
Company A. Richard
Owens, captain; Wm. N. Loker, 1st lieutenant, appointed
adjutant, Feb 10th, 1847; B.M. Hudspeth, 2d lieutenant,
appointed captain, Feb 1847, Wm. Findlay, 2d lieutenant,
appointed captain, Feb 1847.
Company B. Henry
Ford, captain; Andrew Copeland, 1st lieutenant.
Company C. Granville
P. Swift, captain; Wm. Baldridge, 1st lieutenant;
Wm. Hartgrove, 2d do.
Company D. John
Sears, captain; Wm. Bradshaw, 1st lieutenant.
Company E. John
Grigsby, captain; Archibald Jesse, 1st lieutenant.
Company F. L.W.
Hastings, captain (author of a work on California);
Wornbough, 1st lieutenant; J.M. Hudspeth, 2d do.
Company G. Thompson,
captain; Davis 1st lieutenant; Rock, 2d do.
Company H. R.T.
Jacobs, captain; Edwin Bryant, 1st lieutenant (afterwards
alcalde at San Francisco); Geo. M. Lippincott, 2d do.,
of New York.
Artillery Company. Louis
McLane, captain (afterwards major); John. K.
Wilson, 1st lieutenant, appointed captain in January,
1847; Wm. Blackburn, 2d do. (now alcalde of Santa
Cruz).
Officers on detached Service and
doing Duty at the South. S. Hensley,
captain; S. Gibson, do. (lanced through the body at
San Pascual); Miguel Pedrorena, do., Spaniard (appointed
by Stockton); Stgo. Arguello, do., Californian
(appointed by do.); Bell, do. (appointed by do.),
old resident of California (Los Angeles); H. Rhenshaw,
1st lieutenant, (appointed by do.); A. Godey, do.
(appointed by do.); Jas. Barton, do. (appointed
by do.); L. Arguello, do., Californian (appointed
by do.).
After a march of six or eight hours,
up the valley of the arroyo, through a heavy
rain, and mud so deep that several of our horses gave
out from exhaustion, we encamped in a circular bottom,
near a deserted adobe house. A caballada,
of some 500 or 600 loose horses and mules is driven
along with us, but many of them are miserable sore-backed
skeletons, having been exhausted with hard usage and
bad fare during the summer campaign. Besides
these, we have a large number of pack-mules, upon
which all our baggage and provisions are transported.
Distance 10 miles.
We did not move on the 1st and 2d
of December. There being no cattle in the vicinity
of our camp, a party was sent back to the mission,
on the morning of the 1st, who in the afternoon returned,
driving before them about 100 head, most of them in
good condition. After a sufficient number were
slaughtered to supply the camp with meat for the day,
the remainder were confined in a corral prepared
for the purpose, to be driven along with us, and slaughtered
from day to day. The rain has continued, with
short intermissions, since we commenced our march on
the 30th of November. The ground has become saturated
with water, and the small branches are swollen into
large streams. Notwithstanding these discomforts,
the men are in good spirits, and enjoy themselves in
singing, telling stories, and playing monte.
December 3. The
rain ceased falling about 8 o’clock this morning;
and, the clouds breaking away, the sun cheered us once
more with his pleasant beams. The battalion was
formed into a hollow square, and, the order of the
day being read, we resumed our march. Our progress,
through the deep mud, was very slow. The horses
were constantly giving out, and many were left behind.
The young and tender grass upon which they feed affords
but little nourishment, and hard labour soon exhausts
them. We encamped on a low bluff, near the arroyo,
timbered with evergreen oak. Distance 8 miles.
December 4. I was
ordered with a small party in advance this morning.
Proceeding up the valley a few miles, we left it, crossing
several steep hills sparsely timbered with oak, from
which we descended into another small valley, down
which we continued to the point of its termination,
near some narrow and difficult mountain gorges.
In exploring the gorges, we discovered the trail of
a party of Californians, which had passed south several
days before us, and found a horse which they had left
in their march. This, doubtless, was a portion
of the party which captured Mr. Larkin, and had the
engagement between Monterey and St. Juan, on the 17th
ult. The main body coming up, we encamped at
three o’clock. The old grass around our
camp is abundant; but having been so much washed by
the rains, and consequently exhausted of its nutritious
qualities, the animals refused to eat it. The
country over which we have travelled to-day, and as
far as I can see, is mountainous and broken, little
of it being adapted to other agricultural purposes
than grazing.
Thirteen beeves are slaughtered every
afternoon for the consumption of the battalion.
These beeves are generally of good size, and in fair
condition. Other provisions being entirely exhausted,
beef constitutes the only subsistence for the men,
and most of the officers. Under these circumstances,
the consumption of beef is astonishing. I do not
know that I shall be believed when I state a fact,
derived from observation and calculation, that the
average consumption per man of fresh beef is at least
ten pounds per day. Many of them, I believe, consume
much more, and some of them less. Nor does this
quantity appear to be injurious to health, or fully
to satisfy the appetite. I have seen some of
the men roast their meat and devour it by the fire
from the hour of encamping until late bed-time.
They would then sleep until one or two o’clock
in the morning, when, the cravings of hunger being
greater than the desire for repose, the same occupation
would be resumed, and continued until the order was
given to march. The Californian beef is generally
fat, juicy, and tender, and surpasses in flavour any
which I ever tasted elsewhere. Distance 10 miles.
December 5. I rose
before daylight. The moon shone brightly.
The temperature was cold. The vapour in the atmosphere
had congealed and fallen upon the ground in feathery
flakes, covering it with a white semi-transparent
veil, or crystal sheen, sparkling in the moonbeams.
The smoke from the numerous camp-fires soon began to
curl languidly up in graceful wreaths, settling upon
the mountain summits. The scene was one for the
pencil and brush of the artist; but, when the envious
sun rose, he soon stripped Madam Earth of her gauzy
holiday morning-gown, and exposed her every-day petticoat
of mud.
Our march to-day has been one of great
difficulty, through a deep brushy mountain gorge,
through which it was almost impossible to force the
field-pieces. In one place they were lowered with
ropes down a steep and nearly perpendicular precipice
of great height and depth. We encamped about
three o’clock, P.M., in a small valley.
Many of the horses gave out on the march, and were
left behind by the men, who came straggling into camp
until a late hour of the evening, bringing their saddles
and baggage upon their shoulders. I noticed, while
crossing an elevated ridge of hills, flakes of snow
flying in the air, but melting before they reached
the ground. The small spring-branch on which we
encamped empties into the Salinas River. The country
surrounding us is elevated and broken, and the soil
sandy, with but little timber or grass upon it.
Distance 12 miles.
December 6. Morning
clear and cool. Crossed an undulating country,
destitute of timber and water, and encamped in a circular
valley surrounded by elevated hills, through which
flows a small tributary of the Salinas. The summits
of the mountains in sight are covered with snow, but
the temperature in the valleys is pleasant. Distance
15 miles.
December 7. Ice,
the first I have seen since entering California, formed
in the branch, of the thickness of window-glass.
We reached the valley of the Salinas about eleven
o’clock A.M., and encamped for the day.
The river Salinas (laid down in some maps as Rio San
Buenaventura) rises in the mountains to the south,
and has a course of some sixty or eighty miles, emptying
into the Pacific about twelve miles north of Monterey.
The valley, as it approaches the ocean, is broad and
fertile, and there are many fine ranchos upon it.
But, higher up, the stream becomes dry in the summer,
and the soil of the valley is arid and sandy.
The width of the stream at this point is about thirty
yards. Its banks are skirted by narrow belts
of small timber. A range of elevated mountains
rises between this valley and the coast. A court-martial
was held to-day, for the trial of sundry offenders.
Distance 8 miles.
December 8. Morning
cool, clear, and pleasant. Two Californians were
arrested by the rear-guard near a deserted rancho,
and brought into camp. One of them turned out
to be a person known to be friendly to the Americans.
There has been but little variation in the soil or
scenery. But few attempts appear to have been
made to settle this portion of California. The
thefts and hostilities of the Tular Indians are said
to be one of the causes preventing its settlement.
Distance 15 miles.
December 9. The
mornings are cool, but the middle of the day is too
warm to ride comfortably with our coats on. Our
march has been fatiguing and difficult, through several
brushy ravines and over steep and elevated hills.
Many horses gave out as usual, and were left, from
inability to travel. Our caballada is diminishing
rapidly. Distance 10 miles.
December 10. Our
march has been on the main beaten trail, dry and hard,
and over a comparatively level country. We passed
the mission of San Miguel about three o’clock,
and encamped in a grove of large oak timber, three
or four miles south of it. This mission is situated
on the upper waters of the Salinas, in an extensive
plain. Under the administration of the padres
it was a wealthy establishment, and manufactures of
various kinds were carried on. They raised immense
numbers of sheep, the fleeces of which were manufactured
by the Indians into blankets and coarse cloths.
Their granaries were filled with an abundance of maize
and frijoles, and their store-rooms with other necessaries
of life, from the ranchos belonging to the mission
lands in the vicinity. Now all the buildings,
except the church and the principal range of houses
contiguous, have fallen into ruins, and an Englishman,
his wife, and one small child, with two or three Indian
servants, are the sole inhabitants. The church
is the largest I have seen in the country, and its
interior is in good repair, although it has not probably
been used for the purpose of public worship for many
years. The Englishman professes to have purchased
the mission and all the lands belonging to it for
300 dollars.
Our stock of cattle being exhausted,
we feasted on Californian mutton, sheep being more
abundant than cattle at this mission. The wool,
I noticed, was coarse, but the mutton was of an excellent
quality. The country over which we have travelled
to-day shows the marks of long drought previous to
the recent rains. The soil is sandy and gravelly,
and the dead vegetation upon it is thin and stunted.
About eighty of our horses are reported to have given
out and been left behind. Distance 20 miles.
December 12. To
relieve our horses, which are constantly giving out
from exhaustion, the grass being insufficient for their
sustenance while performing labour, the entire battalion,
officers and men, were ordered to march on foot, turning
their horses, with the saddles and bridles upon them,
into the general caballada, to be driven along
by the horse-guard. The day has been drizzly,
cold, and disagreeable. The country has a barren
and naked appearance; but this, I believe, is attributable
to the extreme drought that has prevailed in this region
for one or two years past. We encamped near the
rancho of a friendly Californian the man
who was taken prisoner the other day and set at large.
An Indian, said to be the servant of Tortoria Pico,
was captured here by the advance party. A letter
was found upon him, but the contents of which I never
learned. This being the first foot-march, there
were, of course, many galled and blistered feet in
the battalion. My servant obtained, with some
difficulty, from the Indians at the rancho, a pint-cup
of pinole, or parched corn-meal, and a quart
or two of wheat, which, being boiled, furnished some
variety in our viands at supper, fresh beef having
been our only subsistence since the commencement of
the march from San Juan. Distance 12 miles.
December 13. A rainy
disagreeable morning. Mr. Stanley, one of the
volunteers, and one of the gentlemen who so kindly
supplied us with provisions on Mary’s River,
died last night. He has been suffering from an
attack of typhoid fever since the commencement of our
march, and unable most of the time to sit upon his
horse. He was buried this morning in a small
circular opening in the timber near our camp.
The battalion was formed in a hollow square surrounding
the grave which had been excavated for the final resting-place
of our deceased friend and comrade. There was
neither bier, nor coffin, nor pall
“Not a drum was heard,
nor a funeral note.”
The cold earth was heaped upon his
mortal remains in silent solemnity, and the ashes
of a braver or a better man will never repose in the
lonely hills of California.
After the funeral the battalion was
marched a short distance to witness another scene,
not more mournful, but more harrowing than the last.
The Indian captured at the rancho yesterday was condemned
to die. He was brought from his place of confinement
and tied to a tree. Here he stood some fifteen
or twenty minutes, until the Indians from a neighbouring
rancheria could be brought to witness the execution.
A file of soldiers were then ordered to fire upon
him. He fell upon his knees, and remained in
that position several minutes without uttering a groan,
and then sank upon the earth. No human being could
have met his fate with more composure, or with stronger
manifestations of courage. It was a scene such
as I desire never to witness again.
A cold rain fell upon us during the
entire day’s march. We encamped at four
o’clock, P.M.; but the rain poured down in such
torrents that it was impossible to light our camp-fires
and keep them burning. This continued nearly
the whole night, and I have rarely passed a night more
uncomfortably. A scouting party brought in two
additional prisoners this evening. Another returned,
and reported the capture of a number of horses, and
the destruction of a rancho by fire. Distance
12 miles.
December 14. The
battalion commenced its march on foot and in a heavy
rain. The mud is very deep, and we have been compelled
to wade several streams of considerable depth, being
swollen by the recent rains. At one o’clock
a halt was ordered, and beef slaughtered and cooked
for dinner. The march was resumed late in the
afternoon, and the plain surrounding the mission of
San Luis Obispo was reached in the pitch
darkness of the night, a family in the canada
having been taken prisoners by the advance party to
prevent them from giving the alarm. The battalion
was so disposed as to surround the mission and take
prisoners all contained within it. The place was
entered in great confusion, on account of the darkness,
about nine o’clock. There was no military
force at the mission, and the few inhabitants were
greatly alarmed, as may well be supposed, by this
sudden invasion. They made no resistance, and
were all taken prisoners except one or two, who managed
to escape and fled in great terror, no one knew where
or how. It being ascertained that Tortoria Pico,
a man who has figured conspicuously in most of the
Californian revolutions, was in the neighbourhood,
a party was despatched immediately to the place, and
he was brought in a prisoner. The night was rainy
and boisterous, and the soldiers were quartered to
the best advantage in the miserable mud houses, and
no acts of violence or outrage of any kind were committed.
The men composing the Californian
battalion, as I have before stated, have been drawn
from many sources, and are roughly clad, and weather-beaten
in their exterior appearance; but I feel it but justice
here to state my belief, that no military party ever
passed through an enemy’s country and observed
the same strict regard for the rights of its population.
I never heard of an outrage, or even a trespass being
committed by one of the American volunteers during
our entire march. Every American appeared to
understand perfectly the duty which he owed to himself
and others in this respect, and the deportment of the
battalion might be cited as a model for imitation.
Distance 18 miles.