Tremendous rain
Mission of San Luis Obispo
Gardens
Various fruits
Farm
Cactus tuna
Calinche
Pumpkins
Trial of Tortoria Pico
Procession of women
Pico’s pardon
Leave San Luis
Surf of the Pacific
Captain Dana
Tempestuous night
Mission of St. Ynes
Effects of drought
Horses exhausted
St. Ynes Mountain
View of the plain of Santa Barbara and
the Pacific
A wretched Christmas-day
Descent of St. Ynes Mountain
Terrible storm
Frightful destruction of horses
Dark night
What we are fighting for
Arrive at Santa Barbara
Town deserted.
December 15. The
rain fell in cataracts the entire day. The small
streams which flow from the mountains through, and
water the valley of, San Luis Obispo, are
swollen by the deluge of water from the clouds into
foaming unfordable torrents. In order not to trespass
upon the population at the mission, in their miserable
abodes of mud, the church was opened, and a large
number of the soldiers were quartered in it. A
guard, however, was set day and night, over the chancel
and all other property contained in the building,
to prevent its being injured or disturbed. The
decorations of the church are much the same as I have
before described. The edifice is large, and the
interior in good repair. The floor is paved with
square bricks. I noticed a common hand-organ
in the church, which played the airs we usually hear
from organ-grinders in the street.
Besides the main large buildings connected
with the church, there are standing, and partially
occupied, several small squares of adobe houses, belonging
to this mission. The heaps of mud, and crumbling
walls outside of these, are evidence that the place
was once of much greater extent, and probably one
of the most opulent and prosperous establishments
of the kind in the country. The lands surrounding
the mission are finely situated for cultivation and
irrigation if necessary. There are several large
gardens, inclosed by high and substantial walls, which
now contain a great variety of fruit-trees and shrubbery.
I noticed the orange, fig, palm, olive, and grape.
There are also large inclosures hedged in by the prickly-pear
(cactus), which grows to an enormous size, and makes
an impervious barrier against man or beast. The
stalks of some of these plants are of the thickness
of a man’s body, and grow to the height of fifteen
feet. A juicy fruit is produced by the prickly-pear,
named tuna, from which a beverage is sometimes
made, called calinche. It has a pleasant
flavour, as has also the fruit, which, when ripe,
is blood-red. A small quantity of pounded wheat
was found here, which, being purchased, was served
out to the troops, about a pound to the man.
Frijoles and pumpkins were also obtained, delicacies
of no common order.
December 16. A court-martial
was convened this morning for the trial of Pico, the
principal prisoner, on the charge, I understood, of
the forfeiture of his parole which had been taken
on a former occasion. The sentence of the court
was, that he should be shot or hung, I do not know
which. A rumour is current among the population
here, that there has been an engagement between a
party of Americans and Californians, near Los Angeles,
in which the former were defeated with the loss of
thirty men killed.
December 17. Cool,
with a hazy sky. While standing in one of the
corridors this morning, a procession of females passed
by me, headed by a lady of fine appearance and dressed
with remarkable taste and neatness, compared with
those who followed her. Their rebosos
concealed the faces of most of them, except the leader,
whose beautiful features, dare say, she thought (and
justly) required no concealment. They proceeded
to the quarters of Colonel Fremont, and their object,
I understood, was to petition for the reprieve or
pardon of Pico, who had been condemned to death by
the court-martial yesterday, and whose execution was
expected to take place this morning. Their intercession
was successful, as no execution took place, and in
a short time all the prisoners were discharged, and
the order to saddle up and march given. We resumed
our march at ten o’clock, and encamped just before
sunset in a small but picturesque and fertile valley
timbered with oak, so near the coast that the roar
of the surf breaking against the shore could be heard
distinctly. Distance seven miles.
December 18. Clear,
with a delightful temperature. Before the sun
rose the grass was covered with a white frost.
The day throughout has been calm and beautiful.
A march of four miles brought us to the shore of a
small indentation in the coast of the Pacific, where
vessels can anchor, and boats can land when the wind
is not too fresh. The surf is now rolling and
foaming with prodigious energy breaking
upon the beach in long lines one behind the other,
and striking the shore like cataracts. The hills
and plains are verdant with a carpet of fresh grass,
and the scattered live-oaks on all sides, appearing
like orchards of fruit-trees, give to the country
an old and cultivated aspect. The mountains bench
away on our left, the low hills rising in gentle conical
forms, beyond which are the more elevated and precipitous
peaks covered with snow. We encamped about three
o’clock near the rancho of Captain Dana, in
a large and handsome valley well watered by an arroyo.
Captain Dana is a native of Massachusetts,
and has resided in this country about thirty years.
He is known and esteemed throughout California for
his intelligence and private virtues, and his unbounded
generosity and hospitality. I purchased here a
few loaves of wheat bread, and distributed them among
the men belonging to our company as far as they would
go, a luxury which they have not indulged in since
the commencement of the march. Distance 15 miles.
December 19. The
night was cold and tempestuous, with a slight fall
of rain. The clouds broke away after sunrise,
and the day became warm and pleasant. We continued
our march up the valley, and encamped near its head.
The table-land and hills are generally gravelly, but
appear to be productive of fine grass. The soil
of the bottom is of the richest and most productive
composition. We crossed in the course of the
day a wide flat plain, upon which were grazing large
herds of brood-mares (manadas) and cattle.
In the distance they resembled large armies approaching
us. The peaks of the elevated mountains in sight
are covered with snow. A large number of horses
gave out, strayed, and were left behind to-day, estimated
at one hundred. The men came into camp bringing
their saddles on their backs, and some of them arriving
late in the evening. Distance 18 miles.
December 20. Parties
were sent back this morning to gather up horses and
baggage left on the march yesterday, and it was one
o’clock before the rear-guard, waiting for the
return of those, left camp. The main body made
a short march and encamped early, in a small hollow
near the rancho of Mr. Faxon, through which flows
an arroyo, the surrounding hills being timbered
with evergreen oaks. The men amused themselves
during the afternoon in target-shooting. Many
of the battalion are fine marksmen with the rifle,
and the average of shots could not easily be surpassed.
The camp spread over an undulating surface of half
a mile in diameter, and at night, when the fires were
lighted, illuminating the grove, with its drapery
of drooping Spanish moss, it presented a most picturesque
appearance. Distance 3 miles.
December 21. Clear
and pleasant. A foot march was ordered, with the
exception of the horse and baggage guard. We marched
several miles through a winding hollow, passing a
deserted rancho, and ascending with much labour a
steep ridge of hills, descending which we entered a
handsome valley, and encamped upon a small stream about
four miles from the mission of St. Ynes. The
banks of the arroyo are strewn with dead and
prostrate timber, the trees, large and small, having
been overthrown by tornados. The plain has suffered,
like much of the country we have passed through, by
a long-continued drought, but the composition of the
soil is such as indicates fertility, and from the
effects of the late rains the grass is springing up
with great luxuriance, from places which before were
entirely denuded of vegetation. A party was sent
from camp to inspect the mission, but returned without
making any important discoveries. Our horses are
so weak that many of them are unable to carry their
saddles, and were left on the road as usual.
A man had his leg broken on the march to-day, by the
kick of a mule. He was sent back to the rancho
of Mr. Faxon. Distance 15 miles.
December 22. Clear
and pleasant. Being of the party which performed
rear-guard duty to-day, with orders to bring in all
stragglers, we did not leave camp until several hours
after the main body had left. The horses of the
caballada and the pack-animals were continually
giving out and refusing to proceed. Parties of
men, exhausted, lay down upon the ground, and it was
with much urging, and sometimes with peremptory commands
only, that they could be prevailed upon to proceed.
The country bears the same marks of drought heretofore
described, but fresh vegetation is now springing up
and appears vigorous. A large horse-trail loading
into one of the cañadas of the mountains on
our left was discovered by the scouts, and a party
was dispatched to trace it. We passed one deserted
rancho, and reached camp between nine and ten o’clock
at night, having forced in all the men and most of
the horses and pack-mules. Distance 15 miles.
December 23. Rain
fell steadily and heavily the entire day. A small
party of men was in advance. Discovering in a
brushy valley two Indians armed with bows and arrows,
they were taken prisoners. Learning from them
that there was a caballada of horses secreted
in one of the cañadas, they continued on about
ten miles, and found about twenty-five fresh fat horses,
belonging to a Californian now among the insurgents
below. They were taken and delivered at the camp
near the eastern base of the St. Ynes Mountain.
Passed this morning a rancho inhabited by a foreigner,
an Englishman.
December 24. Cloudy
and cool, with an occasional sprinkling rain.
Our route to-day lay directly over the St. Ynes Mountain,
by an elevated and most difficult pass. The height
of this mountain is several thousand feet. We
reached the summit about twelve o’clock, and,
our company composing the advance-guard, we encamped
about a mile and a half in advance of the main body
of the battalion, at a point which overlooks the beautiful
plain of Santa Barbara, of which, and the ocean beyond,
we had a most extended and interesting view. With
the spy-glass, we could see, in the plain far below
us, herds of cattle quietly grazing upon the green
herbage that carpets its gentle undulations.
The plain is dotted with groves, surrounding the springs
and belting the small water-courses, of which there
are many flowing from this range of mountains.
Ranchos are scattered far up and down the plain, but
not one human being could be seen stirring. About
ten or twelve miles to the south, the white towers
of the mission of Santa Barbara raise themselves.
Beyond is the illimitable waste of waters. A
more lovely and picturesque landscape I never beheld.
On the summit of the mountain, and surrounding us,
there is a growth of hawthorn, manzinita (in bloom),
and other small shrubbery. The rock is soft sandstone
and conglomerate, immense masses of which, piled one
upon another, form a wall along the western brow of
the mountain, through which there is a single pass
or gateway about eight or ten feet in width.
The descent on the western side is precipitous, and
appears almost impassable. Distance 4 miles.
December 25. Christmas-day,
and a memorable one to me. Owing to the difficulty
in hauling the cannon up the steep acclivities of the
mountain, the main body of the battalion did not come
up with us until twelve o’clock, and before
we commenced the descent of the mountain a furious
storm commenced, raging with a violence rarely surpassed.
The rain fell in torrents, and the wind blew almost
with the force of a tornado. This fierce strife
of the elements continued without abatement the entire
afternoon, and until two o’clock at night.
Driving our horses before us, we were compelled to
slide down the steep and slippery rocks, or wade through
deep gullies and ravines filled with mud and foaming
torrents of water, that rushed downwards with such
force as to carry along the loose rocks and tear up
the trees and shrubbery by the roots. Many of
the horses falling into the ravines refused to make
an effort to extricate themselves, and were swept
downwards and drowned. Others, bewildered by the
fierceness and terrors of the storm, rushed or fell
headlong over the steep precipices and were killed.
Others obstinately refused to proceed, but stood quaking
with fear or shivering with cold, and many of these
perished in the night from the severity of the storm.
The advance party did not reach the foot of the mountain
and find a place to encamp until night and
a night of more impenetrable and terrific darkness
I never witnessed. The ground upon which our
camp was made, although sloping from the hills to
a small stream, was so saturated with water that men
as well as horses sunk deep at every step. The
rain fell in such quantities, that fires with great
difficulty could be lighted, and most of them were
immediately extinguished.
The officers and men belonging to
the company having the cannon in charge laboured until
nine or ten o’clock to bring them down the mountain,
but they were finally compelled to leave them.
Much of the baggage also remained on the side of the
mountain, with the pack-mules and horses conveying
them, all efforts to force the animals down being
fruitless. The men continued to straggle into
the camp until a late hour of the night; some
crept under the shelving rocks and did not come in
until the next morning. We were so fortunate as
to find our tent, and after much difficulty pitched
it under an oak-tree. All efforts to light a
fire and keep it blazing proving abortive, we spread
our blankets upon the ground and endeavoured to sleep,
although we could feel the cold streams of water running
through the tent and between and around our bodies.
In this condition we remained until
about two o’clock in the morning, when the storm
having abated I rose, and shaking from my garments
the dripping water, after many unsuccessful efforts
succeeded in kindling a fire. Near our tent I
found three soldiers who had reached camp at a late
hour. They were fast asleep on the ground, the
water around them being two or three inches deep;
but they had taken care to keep their heads above
water, by using a log of wood for a pillow. The
fire beginning to blaze freely, I dug a ditch with
my hands and a sharp stick of wood, which drained
off the pool surrounding the tent. One of the
men, when he felt the sensation consequent upon being
“high and dry,” roused himself, and, sitting
upright, looked around for some time with an expression
of bewildered amazement. At length he seemed to
realize the true state of the case, and exclaimed,
in a tone of energetic soliloquy,
“Well, who wouldn’t
be a soldier and fight for California?”
“You are mistaken,” I replied.
Rubbing his eyes, he gazed at me with
astonishment, as if having been entirely unconscious
of my presence; but, reassuring himself, he said:
“How mistaken?”
“Why,” I answered, “you are not
fighting for California.”
“What the d l, then, am I
fighting for?” he inquired.
“For TEXAS.”
“Texas be d d;
but hurrah for General Jackson!” and with this
exclamation he threw himself back again upon his wooden
pillow, and was soon snoring in a profound slumber.
Making a platform composed of sticks
of wood upon the soft mud, I stripped myself to the
skin, wringing the water from each garment as I proceeded.
I then commenced drying them by the fire in the order
that they were replaced upon my body, an employment
that occupied me until daylight, which sign, above
the high mountain to the east, down which we had rolled
rather than marched yesterday, I was truly rejoiced
to see. Distance 3 miles.
December 26. Parties
were detailed early this morning, and despatched up
the mountain to bring down the cannon, and collect
the living horses and baggage. The destruction
of horse-flesh, by those who witnessed the scene by
daylight, is described as frightful. In some
places large numbers of dead horses were piled together.
In others, horses half buried in the mud of the ravines,
or among the rocks, were gasping in the agonies of
death. The number of dead animals is variously
estimated at from seventy-five to one hundred and fifty,
by different persons. The cannon, most of the
missing baggage, and the living horses, were all brought
in by noon. The day was busily employed in cleansing
our rifles and pistols, and drying our drenched baggage.
December 27. Preparations
were commenced early for the resumption of our march;
but such was the condition of everything around us,
that it was two o’clock, P.M., before the battalion
was in readiness; and then so great had been the loss
of horses in various ways, that the number remaining
was insufficient to mount the men. One or two
companies, and portions of others, were compelled
to march on foot. We were visited during the
forenoon by Mr. Sparks, an American, Dr. Den, an Irishman,
and Mr. Burton, another American, residents of Santa
Barbara. They had been suffered by the Californians
to remain in the place. Their information communicated
to us was, that the town was deserted of nearly all
its population. A few houses only were occupied.
Passing down a beautiful and fertile undulating plain,
we encamped just before sunset in a live-oak grove,
about half a mile from the town of Santa Barbara.
Strict orders were issued by Col. Fremont, that
the property and the persons of Californians, not
found in arms, should be sacredly respected.
To prevent all collisions, no soldier was allowed to
pass the lines of the camp without special permission,
or orders from his officers.
I visited the town before dark, but
found the houses, with few exceptions, closed, and
the streets deserted. After hunting about some
time, we discovered a miserable dwelling, occupied
by a shoemaker and his family, open. Entering
it, we were very kindly received by its occupants,
who, with a princely supply of civility, possessed
but a beggarly array of comforts. At our request
they provided for us a supper of tortillas, frijoles,
and stewed carne seasoned with chile colorado,
for which, paying them dos pesos for four, we
bade them good evening, all parties being well satisfied.
The family consisted, exclusive of the shoemaker,
of a dozen women and children, of all ages. The
women, from the accounts they had received of the
intentions of the Americans, were evidently unprepared
for civil treatment from them. They expected
to be dealt with in a very barbarous manner, in
all respects; but they were disappointed, and invited
us to visit them again. Distance 8 miles.