Progress of the town of San Francisco
Capt. Dupont
Gen. Kearny
The presidio
Appointed Alcalde
Gen. Kearny’s proclamation
Arrival of Col. Stevenson’s
regiment
Horse-thief Indians
Administration of justice in California
Sale of lots in San Francisco.
Wherever the Anglo-Saxon race plant
themselves, progress is certain to be displayed in
some form or other. Such is their “go-ahead”
energy, that things cannot stand still where they
are, whatever may be the circumstances surrounding
them. Notwithstanding the wars and insurrections,
I found the town of San Francisco, on my arrival here,
visibly improved. An American population had flowed
into it; lots, which heretofore have been considered
almost valueless, were selling at high prices; new
houses had been built, and were in progress; new commercial
houses had been established; hotels had been opened
for the accommodation of the travelling and business
public; and the publication of a newspaper had been
commenced. The little village of two hundred
souls, when I arrived here in September last, is fast
becoming a town of importance. Ships freighted
with full cargoes are entering the port, and landing
their merchandise to be disposed of at wholesale and
retail on shore, instead of the former mode of vending
them afloat in the harbour. There is a prevailing
air of activity, enterprise, and energy; and men,
in view of the advantageous position of the town for
commerce, are making large calculations upon the future;
calculations which I believe will be fully realized.
On the 15th I dined on board the sloop-of-war
Cyane, with Commander Dupont, to whom I had the good
fortune to be the bearer from home of a letter of
introduction. I say “good fortune,”
because I conceive it to be one of the greatest of
social blessings, as well as pleasures, to be made
acquainted with a truly upright and honourable man one
whose integrity never bends to wrongful or pusillanimous
expediency; one who, armed intellectually
with the panoply of justice, has courage to sustain
it under any and all circumstances; one
whose ambition is, in a public capacity, to serve
his country, and not to serve himself; one
who waits for his country to judge of his acts, and,
if worthy, to place the laurel wreath upon his head,
disdaining a self-wrought and self-assumed coronal.
Capt. Dupont is a native of Delaware; and that
gallant and patriotic state should feel proud of such
a son. He is one of whom all men, on sea or on
land, with whom his duties as an officer or citizen
of our republic brings him in contact, speak well;
and whose private virtues, as well as professional
merits, are deserving of the warmest admiration and
the highest honours.
Although I have long known Gen. S.W.
Kearny from reputation, and saw him at Los Angeles,
I was here introduced to him for the first time.
Gen. K. is a man rising fifty years of age. His
height is about five feet ten or eleven inches.
His figure is all that is required by symmetry.
His features are regular, almost Grecian; his eye is
blue, and has an eagle-like expression, when excited
by stern or angry emotion; but, in ordinary social
intercourse, the whole expression of his countenance
is mild and pleasing, and his manners and conversation
are unaffected, urbane, and conciliatory, without the
slightest exhibition of vanity or egotism. He
appears the cool, brave, and energetic soldier; the
strict disciplinarian, without tyranny; the man, in
short, determined to perform his duty, in whatever
situation he may be placed, leaving consequences to
follow in their natural course. These, my first
impressions, were fully confirmed by subsequent intercourse,
in situations and under circumstances which, by experience,
I have found an unfailing alembic for the trial of
character a crucible wherein, if the metal
be impure, the drossy substances are sure to display
themselves. It is not my province to extol or
pronounce judgment upon his acts; they are a part of
the military and civil history of our country, and
as such will be applauded or condemned, according
to the estimate that may be placed upon them.
But I may be allowed to express the opinion, that no
man, placed under the same circumstances, ever aimed
to perform his duty with more uprightness and more
fidelity to the interests and honour of his country,
or who, to shed lustre upon his country, ever braved
greater dangers, or endured more hardships and privations,
and all without vaunting his performances and sacrifices.
On the 16th, in company of Gen. Kearny,
Capt. Turner, and Lieuts. Warner and Hallock,
of the U.S. Engineer Corps, I rode to the Presidio
of San Francisco, and the old fortification at the
mouth of the bay. The presidio is about three
miles from the town, and consists of several blocks
of adobe buildings, covered with files. The walls
of most of the buildings are crumbling for the want
of care in protecting them from the annual rains;
and without this care they will soon become heaps
of mud. The fort is erected upon a commanding
position, about a mile and a half from the entrance
to the bay. Its walls are substantially constructed
of burnt brick, and are of sufficient thickness and
strength to resist heavy battering. There are
nine or ten embrasures. Like everything
else in the country belonging to the public, the fort
is fast falling into ruins. There has been no
garrison here for several years; the guns are dismounted,
and half decomposed by long exposure to the weather,
and from want of care. Some of them have sunk
into the ground.
On the 20th I was waited upon by Gen.
Kearny, and requested to accept the office of alcalde,
or chief magistrate, of the district of San Francisco.
There being no opportunity of returning to the United
States immediately, I accepted of the proposed appointment,
and on the 22d was sworn into office, my predecessor,
Lieut. W.A. Bartlett, of the navy, being
ordered to his ship by the commanding officer of the
squadron.
The annual salute in celebration of
the birthday of the immortal and illustrious founder
of our republic, required by law from all the ships
of the navy in commission, in whatever part of the
world they may be at the time, strikes us more forcibly
when in a far-off country, as being a beautiful and
appropriate tribute to the unapproachable virtues and
heroism of that great benefactor of the human race,
than when we are nearer home, or upon our own soil.
The U.S. ships in the harbour, at twelve o’clock
on the 22d, each fired a national salute; and the day
being calm and beautiful, the reports bounded from
hill to hill, and were echoed and re-echoed until
the sound died away, apparently in the distant gorges
of the Sierra Nevada. This was a voice from the
soul of WASHINGTON, speaking in majestic and thunder-tones
to the green and flowery valley, the gentle hills
and lofty mountains of California, and consecrating
them as the future abode of millions upon millions
of the sons of liberty. The merchant and whale
ships lying at anchor, catching the enthusiasm, joined
in the salute; and for a time the harbour and bay
in front of the town were enveloped in clouds of gunpowder
smoke.
General Kearny left San Francisco,
in the frigate Savannah, Captain Mervine, on the 23d,
for Monterey, and soon after his arrival at that place
issued the following proclamation:
PROCLAMATION TO THE PEOPLE OF CALIFORNIA.
The President of the United States having
instructed the undersigned to take charge of the
civil government of California, he enters upon his
duties with an ardent desire to promote, as far as
he is able, the interests of the country and the
welfare of its inhabitants.
The undersigned has instructions from
the President to respect and protect the religious
institutions of California, and to see that the
religious rights of the people are in the amplest manner
preserved to them, the constitution of the United
States allowing every man to worship his Creator
in such a manner as his own conscience may dictate
to him.
The undersigned is also instructed to
protect the persons and property of the quiet and
peaceable inhabitants of the country against all
or any of their enemies, whether from abroad or at
home; and when he now assures the Californians that
it will be his duty and his pleasure to comply with
those instructions, he calls upon them all to exert
themselves in preserving order and tranquillity, in
promoting harmony and concord, and in maintaining the
authority and efficiency of the laws.
It is the wish and design of the United
States to provide for California, with the least
possible delay, a free government, similar to those
in her other territories; and the people will soon
be called upon to exercise their rights as freemen,
in electing their own representatives, to make such
laws as may be deemed best for their interest and
welfare. But until this can be done, the laws
now in existence, and not in conflict with the constitution
of the United States, will be continued until changed
by competent authority; and those persons who hold
office will continue in the same for the present,
provided they swear to support that constitution,
and to faithfully perform their duty.
The undersigned hereby absolves all the
inhabitants of California from any further allegiance
to the republic of Mexico, and will consider them
as citizens of the United States; those who remain
quiet and peaceable will be respected in their rights
and protected in them. Should any take up arms
against or oppose the government of this territory,
or instigate others to do so, they will be considered
as enemies, and treated accordingly.
When Mexico forced a war upon the United
States, time did not permit the latter to invite
the Californians as friends to join her standard,
but compelled her to take possession of the country
to prevent any European power from seizing upon
it, and, in doing so, some excesses and unauthorized
acts were no doubt committed by persons employed
in the service of the United States, by which a few
of the inhabitants have met with a loss of property;
such losses will be duly investigated, and those
entitled to remuneration will receive it.
California has for many years suffered
greatly from domestic troubles; civil wars have
been the poisoned fountains which have sent forth
trouble and pestilence over her beautiful land.
Now those fountains are dried up; the star-spangled
banner floats over California, and as long as the
sun continues to shine upon her, so long will it
float there, over the natives of the land, as well
as others who have found a home in her bosom; and
under it agriculture must improve, and the arts
and sciences flourish, as seed in a rich and fertile
soil.
The Americans and Californians are now
but one people; let us cherish one wish, one hope,
and let that be for the peace and quiet of our country.
Let us, as a band of brothers, unite and emulate each
other in our exertions to benefit and improve this
our beautiful, and which soon must be our happy
and prosperous, home.
Done at Monterey, capital of California,
this first day of March,
A.D. 1847, and in the seventy-first year
of independence of the
United Suites.
S.W. KEARNY
Brig.-Gen., U.S.A., and Governor of California.
The proclamation of General Kearny
gave great satisfaction to the native as well as the
emigrant population of the country. Several of
the alcaldes of the district of my jurisdiction,
as well as private individuals (natives of the country),
expressed, by letter and orally, their approbation
of the sentiments of the proclamation in the warmest
terms. They said that they were heartily willing
to become Americans upon these terms, and hoped that
there would be the least possible delay in admitting
them to the rights of American citizenship. There
was a general expectation among natives as well as
foreigners, that a representative form of territorial
government would be immediately established by General
Kearny. Why this was not done, is explained by
the recent publication of General Scott’s letter
to General Kearny, dated November 3rd, 1846, of which
Colonel Mason was the bearer, he having left the United
States on the 7th November. In this letter General
Scott says:
“As a guide to the civil governor
of Upper California, in our hands, see the letter
of June 3rd (last), addressed to you by the Secretary
of War. You will not, however, formally declare
the province to be annexed. Permanent incorporation
of the territory must depend on the government of
the United States.
“After occupying with our forces
all necessary points in Upper California, and establishing
a temporary civil government therein, as well as assuring
yourself of its internal tranquillity, and the absence
of any danger of reconquest on the part of Mexico,
you may charge Colonel Mason, United States first
dragoons, the bearer of this open letter, or land
officer next in rank to your own, with your several
duties, and return yourself, with a sufficient escort
of troops, to St. Louis, Missouri; but the body of
the United States dragoons that accompanied you to
California will remain there until further orders.”
The transport ships Thomas H. Perkins,
Loo Choo, Susan Drew, and Brutus, with Colonel Stevenson’s
regiment, arrived at San Francisco during the months
of March and April. These vessels were freighted
with a vast quantity of munitions, stores, tools,
saw-mills, grist-mills, etc., etc., to be
employed in the fortification of the principal harbours
on the coast San Francisco, Monterey, and
San Diego. The regiment of Col. Stevenson
was separated into different commands, portions of
it being stationed at San Francisco, Sonoma, Monterey,
Santa Barbara, and Los Angeles; and some companies
employed against the horse-thief Indians of the Sierra
Nevada and the Tulares.
As good an account of these horse-thief
Indians, and their depredations, as I have seen, I
find in the “California Star,” of March
28th, 1847, written by a gentleman who has been a resident
of California for a number of years, and who has been
a sufferer. It is subjoined:
“During the Spanish regime,
such a thing as a horse-thief was unknown in the country;
but as soon as the Mexicans took possession, their
characteristic anarchy began to prevail, and the Indians
to desert from the missions. The first Indian
horse-thief known in this part of the country was
a neophyte of the mission of Santa Clara, George, who
flourished about twenty years ago. He absconded
from his mission to the river of Stanislaus, of which
he was a native. From thence he returned to the
settlements, and began to steal horses, which at that
time were very numerous. After pursuing his depredations
for some time, he was at last pursued and killed on
his return from one of his forages. The mission
of Santa Clara has been, from that time to the present
day, the greatest nursery for horse thieves, as the
Stanislaus river has been and is their principal rendezvous.
I have taken some pains to inquire among some of the
most intelligent and respectable of the native inhabitants,
as to the probable number of horses that have been
stolen between Monterey and San Francisco within the
last twenty years, and the result has been that more
than one hundred thousand can be distinctly enumerated,
and that the total amount would probably be double
that number. Nearly all these horses have been
eaten! From the river of Stanislaus, as a central
point, the evil has spread to the north and south,
and at present extends from the vicinity of the Mickelemes
River on the north, to the sources of the St. Joaquin
on the south. These Indians inhabit all the western
declivity of the great snowy mountains, within these
limits, and have become so habituated to living on
horseflesh, that it is now with them the principal
means of subsistence.
“In past time they have been
repeatedly pursued, and many of them killed, and whole
villages destroyed, but, so far from being deterred,
they are continually becoming more bold and daring
in their robberies, as horses become scarcer and more
carefully guarded. About twenty persons have
been killed by them within the knowledge of the writer.
Among others, Mr. Lindsay and Mr. Wilson were killed
by them not long ago. Only about one month since,
they shot and dangerously wounded four persons employed
on the farm of Mr. Weber, near the Pueblo of St. Joseph,
and at the same time stole the horses of the farm,
and those also from the farms of Captain Fisher and
Mr. Burnal, in the same vicinity; in all, about two
hundred head. Within the last ten days numerous
parties of them have been committing depredations on
many of the farms in the jurisdiction of the Contra
Costa, and scarcely a night passes but we hear of
their having stolen horses from some one. Three
days ago, a party of them were met by some young men
who had been out catching wild horses on the plains
of the St. Joaquin, but as they were mounted on tired
animals, they were only able to recapture the stolen
horses, but could not overtake the thieves.”
It has not been within the scope of
my design, in writing out those notes, to enter into
the minute details of the conquest and occupation
of California by the forces of the United States.
To do so would require more space than I have allowed
myself, and the matter would be more voluminous than
interesting or important. My intention has been
to give such a sketch of the military operations in
California, during my residence and travels in the
country, as to afford to the reader a general and
correct idea of the events transpiring at the time.
No important circumstance, I think, has escaped my
attention.
Among the officers of the army stationed
at San Francisco, with whom I became acquainted, were
Major Hardie, in command of the troops, Captain Folsom,
acting quartermaster-general in California, and Lieutenant
Warner, of the engineer corps. Lieutenant Warner
marched with General Kearny from the United States,
and was at the battle of San Pasqual. I have
seen the coat which he wore on that occasion, pierced
in seven different places by the lances of the enemy.
He did not make this exhibition himself; and I never
heard him refer to the subject but once, and then
it was with the modesty of a veteran campaigner.
The corps of topographical engineers
accompanying General Kearny, under the command of
Captain Emory, will, doubtless, furnish in their report
much interesting and valuable information. Mr.
Stanley, the artist Of the expedition, completed his
sketches in oil, at San Francisco; and a more truthful,
interesting, and valuable series of paintings, delineating
mountain scenery, the floral exhibitions on the route,
the savage tribes between Santa Fe and California combined
with camp-life and marches through the desert and
wilderness has never been, and probably
never will be, exhibited. Mr. Stanley informed
me that he was preparing a work on the savage tribes
of North America and of the islands of the Pacific,
which, when completed on his plan, will be the most
comprehensive and descriptive of the subject of any
that has been published.
Legal proceedings are much less complex
in California than in the United States. There
is no written statute law in the country. The
only law books I could find were a digested code entitled,
“Laws of Spain and the Indies,” published
in Spain about a hundred years ago, and a small pamphlet
defining the powers of various judicial officers,
emanating from the Mexican government since the revolution.
A late Mexican governor of California, on being required
by a magistrate to instruct him as to the manner in
which he should administer the law within his jurisdiction,
replied, “Administer it in accordance with
the principles of natural right and justice,”
and this is the foundation of Californian jurisprudence.
The local bandos, or laws, are enacted, adjudicated,
and executed by the local magistrates, or alcaldes.
The alcalde has jurisdiction in all municipal matters,
and in cases for minor offences, and for debt in sums
not over one hundred dollars. In cases of heinous
or capital offences, the alcalde has simply an examining
power, the testimony being taken down in writing,
and transmit-to the juez de primera instancia,
or first judge of the district, before whom the case
is tried. Civil actions, for sums over one hundred
dollars, must also be tried before the juez de primera
instancia, and from him there is an appeal to the
prefect, or the governor of the province. The
trial by hombres buenos, or good men, is one
of the established legal tribunals when either of the
parties demand it, and is similar to our trial by
jury; the difference being in the number, the hombres
buenos usually consisting of three or five, as
they may be ordered by the magistrate, or requested
by the litigants, and our jury of twelve. With
honest and intelligent magistrates, the system operates
advantageously, as justice is speedy and certain;
but the reverse of this, with corrupt and ignorant
magistrates, too frequently in power, the consequences
of the system are as bad as can well be imagined.
The policy of the Mexican government
has been to encourage in certain localities the erection
of pueblos, or towns, and for this purpose they have
made grants of land to the local authorities, or municipalities,
within certain defined limits, to be regranted upon
application, in lots of fifty or one hundred varass,
as the case may be, to persons declaring their intention
to settle and to do business in the town. For
these grants to individuals a certain sum of money
is paid, which goes into the treasury of the municipality.
The magistrates, however, without special permission,
have no power to grant lots of land within a certain
number of feet of or below high-water mark. The
power is reserved to be exercised by the governor
of the province. It being necessary for the convenient
landing of ships, and for the discharging and receiving
of their cargoes, that the beach in front of the town
of San Francisco should be improved with wharfs, etc.,
etc., and that titles should be granted to individuals
who otherwise would make no durable improvements.
As magistrate of the town, in compliance with the
request of numerous citizens, I solicited from General
Kearny, the acting governor, a relinquishment, on
the part of the general government, of the beach lands
in front of the town in favour of the municipality,
under certain conditions. This was granted by
the Governor, who issued a decree dated 10th March,
permitting the sales by auction of all such grounds
adjacent to the water-side as might be found adapted
to commercial purposes, with the exception of such
lots as might be selected for the use of the United
States government, by its proper officers. The
sales accordingly took place, the lots were eagerly
purchased, and the port has already become a place
of considerable commercial activity.