City of Angels
Gardens
Vineyards
Produce of the vine in California
General products of the country
Reputed personal charms of the females
of Los Angeles
San Diego
Gold and quicksilver mines
Lower California
Bituminous springs
Wines
A Kentuckian among the angels
Missions of San Gabriel and San Luis Rey
Gen. Kearny and Com. Stockton leave
for San Diego
Col. Fremont appointed Governor of
California by Com. Stockton
Com. Shubrick’s arrival
Insurrection in the northern part of California
suppressed
Arrival of Col. Cooke at San Diego.
La Ciudad de los Angeles is the largest
town in California, containing between fifteen hundred
and two thousand inhabitants. Its streets are
laid out without any regard to regularity. The
buildings are generally constructed of adobes
one and two stories high, with flat roofs. The
public buildings are a church, quartel, and government
house. Some of the dwelling-houses are frames,
and large. Few of them, interiorly or exteriorly,
have any pretensions to architectural taste, finish,
or convenience of plan and arrangement. The town
is situated about 20 miles from the ocean, in a extensive
undulating plain, bounded on the north by a ridge
of elevated hills, on the east by high mountains whose
summits are now covered with snow, on the west by the
ocean, and stretching to the south and the south-east
as far as the eye can reach. The Rio St. Gabriel
flows near the town. This stream is skirted with
numerous vineyards and gardens, inclosed by willow-hedges.
The gardens produce a great variety of tropical fruits
and plants. The yield of the vineyards is very
abundant; and a large quantity of wines of a good
quality and flavour, and aguardiente, are manufactured
here. Some of the vineyards, I understand, contain
as many as twenty thousand vines. The produce
of the vine in California will, undoubtedly, in a short
time form an important item, in its exports and commerce.
The soil and climate, especially of the southern portion
of the country, appear to be peculiarly adapted to
the culture of the grape.
We found in Los Angeles an abundance
of maize, wheat, and frijoles, showing that
the surrounding country is highly productive of these
important articles of subsistence. There are no
mills, however, in this vicinity, the universal practice
of Californian families being to grind their corn
by hand; and consequently flour and bread are very
scarce, and not to be obtained in any considerable
quantities. The only garden vegetables which
I saw while here were onions, potatoes, and chile
colorado, or red pepper, which enters very largely
into the cuisine of the country. I do
not doubt, however, that every description of garden
vegetables can be produced here, in perfection and
abundance.
While I remained at Los Angeles, I
boarded with two or three other officers at the house
of a Mexican Californian, the late alcalde of the
town, whose political functions had ceased. He
was a thin, delicate, amiable, and very polite gentleman,
treating us with much courtesy, for which we paid
him, when his bill was presented, a very liberal compensation.
In the morning we were served, on a common deal table,
with a cup of coffee and a plate of tortillas.
At eleven o’clock, a more substantial meal was
provided, consisting of stewed beef, seasoned with
chile colorado, a rib of roasted beef, and a
plate of frijoles with tortillas, and
a bottle of native wine. Our supper was a second
edition of the eleven o’clock entertainment.
The town being abandoned by most of
its population, and especially by the better class
of the female portion of it, those who remained, which
I saw, could not, without injustice, be considered
as fair specimens of the angels, which are
reputed here to inhabit. I did not happen to
see one beautiful or even comely-looking woman in the
place; but, as the fair descendants of Eve at Los
Angeles have an exalted reputation for personal charms,
doubtless the reason of the invisibility of the examples
of feminine attractions, so far-famed and so much looked
for by the sojourner, is to be ascribed to their “unavoidable
absence,” on account of the dangers and casualties
of war. At this time, of course, everything in
regard to society, as it usually exists here, is in
a state of confusion and disorganization, and no correct
conclusions in reference to it can be drawn from observation
under such circumstances.
The bay of San Pedro, about twenty-five
miles south of Los Angeles, is the port of the town.
The bay affords a good anchorage for vessels of any
size; but it is not a safe harbour at all times, as
I have been informed by experienced nautical men on
this coast. San Gabriel River empties into the
bay. The mission of San Gabriel is about twelve
miles east of Los Angeles. It is represented
as an extensive establishment of this kind, the lands
surrounding and belonging to it being highly fertile.
The mission of San Luis Rey is situated to the south,
about midway between Los Angeles and San Diego.
This mission, according to the descriptions which
I have received of it, is more substantial and tasteful
in its construction than any other in the country;
and the gardens and grounds belonging to it are now
in a high state of cultivation.
San Diego is the most southern town
in Upper California. It is situated on the Bay
of San Diego, in latitude 33 deg. north.
The country back of it is described by those who have
travelled through it as sandy and arid, and incapable
of supporting any considerable population. There
are, however, it is reported on authority regarded
as reliable, rich mines of quicksilver, copper, gold,
and coal, in the neighbourhood, which, if such be
the fact, will before long render the place one of
considerable importance. The harbour, next to
that of San Francisco, is the best on the Pacific
coast of North America, between the Straits of Fuca
and Acapulco.
For the following interesting account
of Lower California I am indebted to Rodman M. Price,
Esq., purser of the U.S. sloop-of-war Cyane, who has
been connected with most of the important events which
have recently taken place in Upper and Lower California,
and whose observations and opinions are valuable and
reliable. It will be seen that the observations
of Mr. Price differ materially from the generally
received opinions in reference to Lower California.
“Burlington, N.J., June 7, 1848.
“Dear Sir, It affords
me pleasure to give you all the information I have
about Lower California, derived from personal observation
at several of its ports that I have visited, in the
U.S. ship Cyane, in 1846-47.
“Cape St. Lucas, the southern
extremity of the peninsula of Lower California, is
in la deg. 45’ N., has a bay that affords
a good harbour and anchorage, perfectly safe nine
months in the year; but it is open to the eastward,
and the hurricanes which sometimes occur during July,
August, and September, blow the strongest from the
southeast, so that vessels will not venture in the
bay during the hurricane season. I have landed
twice at the Cape in a small boat, and I think a breakwater
can be built, at small cost, so as to make a safe
harbour at all seasons. Stone can be obtained
with great ease from three cones of rocks rising from
the sea, and forming the extreme southerly point of
the Cape, called the Frayles. Looking to the future
trade and commerce of the Pacific Ocean, this great
headland must become a most important point as a depot
for coal and merchandise, and a most convenient location
for vessels trading on that coast to get their supplies.
Mr. Ritchie, now residing there, supplies a large
number of whale-ships that cruise off the Cape, annually,
with fresh provisions, fruits, and water. The
supplies are drawn from the valley of San Jose twenty
miles north of the Cape, as the land in its immediate
vicinity is mountainous and sterile; but the valley
of San Jose is extensive and well cultivated, producing
the greatest variety of vegetables and fruits.
The sweet and Irish potato, tomato, cabbage, lettuce,
beans, peas, beets, and carrots are the vegetables;
oranges, lemons, bananas, plantains, figs, dates,
grapes, pomegranates, and olives are its fruits.
Good beef and mutton are cheap. A large amount
of sugar-cane is grown, from which is made panoche,
a favourite sugar with the natives; it is the syrup
from the cane boiled down, and run into cakes of a
pound weight, and in appearance is like our maple-sugar.
“Panoche, cheese, olives,
raisins, dried figs, and dates, put up in ceroons
of hide, with the great staples of the Californians hides
and tallow make the export of San Jose,
which is carried to San Blas and Mazatlan, on the
opposite coast. This commerce the presence of
the Cyane interrupted, finding and capturing in the
Bay of La Paz, just after the receipt of the news
of war on that coast in September, 1846, sixteen small
craft, laid up during the stormy season, engaged in
this trade.
“I cannot dismiss the valley
of San Jose, from which the crew of the Cyane have
drawn so many luxuries, without alluding to the never-failing
stream of excellent water that runs through it (to
which it owes its productiveness) and empties into
the Gulf here, and is easily obtained for shipping
when the surf is low. It is now frequented by
some of our whale ships, and European vessels bound
to Mazatlan with cargoes usually stop here to get
instructions from their consignees before appearing
off the port; but vessels do not anchor during the
three hurricane months. The view from seaward,
up this valley, is beautiful indeed, being surrounded
by high barren mountains, which is the general appearance
of the whole peninsula, and gives the impression that
the whole country is without soil, and unproductive.
When your eye gets a view of this beautiful, fertile,
cultivated, rich, green valley, producing all the
fruits and vegetables of the earth, Lower California
stock rises. To one that has been at sea for months,
on salt grub, the sight of this bright spot of cultivated
acres, with the turkeys, ducks, chickens, eggs, vegetables,
and fruit, makes him believe the country an Eldorado.
Following up the coast on the Gulf side, after passing
Cape Polmo, good anchorage is found between the peninsula
and the island of Cerralbo. Immediately to the
north of this island is the entrance to the great
and beautiful bay of La Paz. It has two entrances,
one to the north and one to the south of the island
of Espiritu Santo. The northern one is the boldest
and safest for all craft drawing over twelve feet.
The town of La Paz is at the bottom or south side of
the bay, about twenty miles from the mouth. The
bay is a large and beautiful sheet of water.
The harbour of Pichelinque, of perfect mill-pond stillness,
is formed inside of this bay. The Cyane lay at
this quiet anchorage several days.
“Pearl-fishing is the chief
employment of the inhabitants about the bay, and the
pearls are said to be of superior quality. I was
shown a necklace, valued at two thousand dollars,
taken in this water. They are all found by diving.
The Yake Indians are the best divers, going
down in eight-fathom water. The pearl shells
are sent to China, and are worth, at La Paz, one dollar
and a half the arroba, or twenty-five pounds.
Why it is a submarine diving apparatus has not been
employed in this fishery, with all its advantages
over Indian diving, I cannot say. Yankee enterprise
has not yet reached this new world. I cannot say
this either, as a countryman of ours, Mr. Davis, living
at Loretta, has been a most successful pearl-fisher,
employing more Indians than any one else engaged in
the business. I am sorry to add that he has suffered
greatly by the war. The country about La Paz is
a good grazing country, but very dry. The mountains
in the vicinity are said to be very rich in minerals.
Some silver mines near San Antonio, about forty miles
south, are worked, and produce well. La Paz may
export one hundred thousand dollars a-year of platapina.
Gold-dust and virgin gold are brought to La Paz.
The copper and lead mines are numerous and rich.
To the north of La Paz are numerous safe and good
harbours. Escondida, Loretta, and Muleje are
all good harbours, formed by the islands in front of
the main land.
“The island of Carmen, lying
in front of Loretta, has a large salt lake, which
has a solid salt surface of several feet thickness.
The salt is of good quality, is cut out like ice,
and it could supply the world. It has heretofore
been a monopoly to the governor of Lower California,
who employed convicts to get out the salt and put it
on the beach ready for shipping. It is carried
about a quarter of a mile, and is sent to Mazatlan
and San Blas. A large quantity of salt is used
in producing silver. To the north of Muleje,
which is nearly opposite Guymas, the gulf is so much
narrower that it is a harbour itself. No accurate
survey has ever been made of it indeed,
all the peninsula, as well as the coast of Upper California,
is laid down wrong on the charts, being about twelve
miles too far easterly. The English Government
now have two naval ships engaged in surveying the Gulf
of California.
“On the Pacific coast of the
peninsula there is the great Bay of Magdalena, which
has fine harbours, but no water, provisions, or inhabitants.
Its shores are high barren mountains, said to possess
great mineral wealth. A fleet of whale-ships have
been there during the winter months of the last two
years, for a new species of whale that are found there,
represented as rather a small whale, producing forty
or fifty barrels of oil; and, what is most singular,
I was assured, by most respectable whaling captains,
that the oil is a good paint-oil (an entire new quality
for fish-oil). Geographically and commercially,
Lower California must become very valuable. It
will be a constant source of regret to this country,
that it is not included in the treaty of peace just
made with Mexico. We have held and governed it
during the war, and the boundary of Upper California
cuts the head of the Gulf of California, so that Lower
California is left entirely disconnected with the
Mexican territory.
“Cape St. Lucas is the great
headland of the Pacific Ocean, and is destined to
be the Gibraltar and entrepôt of that coast, or
perhaps La Paz may be preferred, on account of its
superior harbour. As a possession to any foreign
power, I think Lower California more valuable than
the group of the Sandwich Islands. It has as many
arable acres as that group of islands, with rich mines,
pearl-fishing, fine bays and harbours, with equal
health, and all their productions. As a country,
it is dry, mountainous, and sterile, yet possessing
many fine valleys like San Jose, as the old mission
establishments indicate. I have heard Todas Santos,
Commondee, Santa Guadalupe, and others, spoken of as
being more extensive, and as productive as San Jose.
“I am, most faithfully and truly, yours,
“RODMAN M. PRICE.”
In the vicinity of Los Angeles there
are a number of warm springs which throw out and deposit
large quantities of bitumen or mineral tar. This
substance, when it cools, becomes hard and brittle
like resin. Around some of these springs many
acres of ground are covered with this deposit to the
depth of several feet. It is a principal material
in the roofing of houses. When thrown upon the
fire, it ignites immediately, emitting a smoke like
that from turpentine, and an odour like that from
bituminous coal. This mineral, so abundant in
California, may one day become a valuable article
of commerce.
There are no reliable statistics in
California. The traveller is obliged to form
his estimate of matters and things chiefly from his
own observation. You can place but little reliance
upon information derived from the population, even
when they choose to answer your questions; and most
generally the response to your inquiries is “Quién
sabe?” (who knows?) No Californian troubles
his brains about these matters. The quantity
of wines and aguardiente produced by the vineyards
and distilleries, at and near Los Angeles, must be
considerable basing my estimate upon the
statement of Mr. Wolfskill, an American gentleman
residing here, and whose house and vineyard I visited.
Mr. W.’s vineyard is young, and covers about
forty acres of ground, the number of vines being 4,000
or 5,000. From the produce of these, he told me,
that last year he made 180 casks of wine, and the same
quantity of aguardiente. A cask here is
sixteen gallons. When the vines mature, their
produce will be greatly increased. Mr. W.’s
vineyard is doubtless a model of its kind. It
was a delightful recreation to stroll through it,
and among the tropical fruit-trees bordering its walks.
His house, too, exhibited an air of cleanliness and
comfort, and a convenience of arrangement not often
met with in this country. He set out for our
refreshment three or four specimens of his wines, some
of which would compare favourably with the best French
and Madeira wines. The aguardiente and
peach-brandy, which I tasted, of his manufacture,
being mellowed by age, were of an excellent flavour.
The quantity of wine and aguardiente produced
in California, I would suppose, amounted to 100,000
casks of sixteen gallons, or 1,600,000 gallons.
This quantity by culture can be increased indefinitely.
It was not possible to obtain at Los
Angeles a piece of woollen cloth sufficiently large
for a pair of pantaloons, or a pair of shoes, which
would last a week. I succeeded, after searching
through all the shops of the town, in procuring some
black cotton velvet, for four yards of which I paid
the sum of 12 dollars. In the United States the
same article would probably have cost 1.50 dollar.
For four dollars more I succeeded in getting the pantaloons
made up by an American tailor, who came into the country
with General Kearny’s forces. A Rocky Mountain
trapper and trader (Mr. Goodyear), who has established
himself near the Salt Lake since I passed there last
year, fortunately arrived at Los Angeles, bringing
with him a quantity of dressed deer and elk skins,
which were purchased for clothing for the nearly naked
soldiers.
Among the houses I visited while here,
was that of Mr. Pryor, an American, and a native of
Louisville, Ky. He has been a resident of the
country between twenty and thirty years, but his Kentucky
manners, frankness, and hospitality still adhere to
him.
I remained at Los Angeles from the
14th to the 29th of January. During this time,
with the exception of three days, the weather and
temperature were pleasant. It rained one day,
and during two days the winds blew strong and cold
from the north-west. The nights are cool, but
fires are not requisite to comfort. The snow-clad
mountains, about twenty-five or thirty miles to the
east of us, contrast singularly with the brilliant
fresh verdure of the plain.
On the 18th of January General Kearny,
with the dragoons, left for San Diego. There
was understood to be a difference between General Kearny
and Commodore Stockton, and General Kearny and Colonel
Fremont, in regard to their respective powers and
duties; which, as the whole subject has subsequently
undergone a thorough investigation, and the result
made public, it is unnecessary for me to allude to
more particularly. I did not converse with General
Kearny while he was at Los Angeles, and consequently
possessed no other knowledge of his views and intentions,
or of the powers with which he had been invested by
the President, than what I derived from report.
On the 19th, Commodore Stockton and
suite, with a small escort, left for San Diego.
Soon after his departure the battalion was paraded,
and the appointment of Colonel Fremont as governor
of California, and Colonel W.H. Russell, as secretary
of state, by Commodore Stockton, was read to them
by Colonel Russell. It was announced, also, that,
although Colonel Fremont had accepted the office of
chief civil magistrate of California, he would still
retain his military office, and command the battalion
as heretofore.
Commodore Shubrick, however, arrived
at Monterey on the 23rd of January, in the U.S. ship
Independence, and, ranking above Commodore Stockton,
assumed the chief command, as appears by the date of
a general order published at Monterey, and written
on board the United States ship Independence, on February
1st, thanking the volunteers for their services, and
announcing the restoration of order. For I should
state that an insurrection, headed by Don Francisco
Sanchez, had broken out in the upper portion of California
some time towards the last of December, which had
been put down by a detachment of marines and volunteers.
The insurgents had committed some outrages, and among
other acts had taken prisoner Lieutenant W.A.
Bartlett, acting Alcalde of San Francisco, with some
other Americans. An account of the suppression
of this affair I find in the “Californian”
newspaper of February 6th, 1847, from which it appears,
“that a party of one hundred and one men, commanded
by Captain Ward Marston, of the United States marines,
marched from San Francisco on the 29th December in
search of the enemy, whom they discovered on the 2nd
of January, about one hundred in number, on the plains
of Santa Clara, under the command of Francisco Sanchez.
An attack was immediately ordered. The enemy was
forced to retire, which they were able to do in safety,
after some resistance, in consequence of their superior
horses. The affair lasted about an hour, during
which time we had one marine slightly wounded in the
head, one volunteer of Captain Weber’s command
in the leg; and the enemy had one horse killed, and
some of their forces supposed to be killed or wounded.
In the evening the enemy sent in a flag of truce, with
a communication, requesting an interview with the
commanding officer of the expedition the next day,
which was granted, when an armistice was entered into,
preparatory to a settlement of the difficulties.
On the 3rd, the expedition was reinforced by the mounted
Monterey volunteers, fifty-five men, under the command
of Captain W.A.T. Maddox, and on the 7th, by
the arrival of Lieutenant Grayson with fifteen men,
attached to Captain Maddox’s company. On
the 8th a treaty was concluded, by which the enemy
surrendered Lieutenant Bartlett, and the other prisoners,
as well as all their arms, including one small field-piece,
their ammunition and accoutrements, and were permitted
to return peaceably to their homes, and the expedition
to their respective posts.”
A list of the expedition which marched
from San Francisco is given as follows: Captain
Ward Marston, commandant; Assistant-surgeon J. Duval,
aide-de-camp. A detachment of United States marines,
under command of Lieutenant Tansil, thirty-four men;
artillery, consisting of one field-piece, under the
charge of Master William F. De Iongh, assisted by
Mid. John M. Kell, ten men; Interpreter John Pray;
mounted company of San Jose volunteers, under command
of Captain C.M. Weber, Lieutenant John Murphy,
and acting Lieutenant John Reed, thirty-three men;
mounted company of Yerba Buena volunteers, under command
of Captain William M. Smith, Lieutenant John Rose,
with a small detachment under Captain J. Martin, twelve
men.
Thus ended the insurrections, if resistance
against invasion can properly be so called, in Upper
California.
On the 20th January, the force of
sailors and marines which had marched with Commodore
Stockton and General Kearny left Los Angeles, to embark
at San Pedro for San Diego. On the 21st a national
salute was fired by the artillery company belonging
to the battalion, in honour of Governor Fremont.
On the 22nd, letters were received from San Diego,
stating that Colonel Cooke, who followed General Kearny
from Santa Fe with a force of four hundred Mormon
volunteers, had reached the neighbourhood of that
place. Having applied for my discharge from the
battalion as soon as we reached Los Angeles, I received
it on the 29th, on which day, in company with Captain
Hastings, I set out on my return to San Francisco,
designing to leave that place on the first favourable
opportunity for the United States.