GENERAL OBSERVATIONS UPON THE COUNTRY.
First settlement of the missionaries
Population
Characteristics of white population
Employments
Pleasures and amusements
Position of women
Soil
Grasses
Vegetable productions
Agriculture
Fruits
Cattle
Horses
Wild animals
Minerals
Climate
Flora
Water-power
Timber
Religion.
It was during the month of November,
1602, the sun just retiring behind the distant high
land which forms the background of a spacious harbour
at the southernmost point of Alta California, that
a small fleet of vessels might have been seen directing
their course as if in search of a place of anchorage;
their light sails drawn up, while the larger ones,
swelling now and then to the action of the breeze,
bore them majestically along, forcing their way through
the immense and almost impenetrable barrier of sea-weed,
to a haven which, at the remote period stated, was
considered the unexplored region of the North.
The fleet referred to hauled their wind to the shore,
and, passing a bluff point of land on their left,
soon came to anchor; but not until the shades of night
had cast a gloom over the scene so recently lighted
up with the gorgeous rays of a setting sun.
This was the commencement, or rather
preliminary mark, of civilization in this country,
by the Spaniards, (if so it can be called,) and on
the following morning a detachment was landed, accompanied
by a friar, to make careful investigation of the long
ridge of high land which serves as a protection to
the harbour from the heavy north-west gales. They
found, as reported, an abundance of small oak and other
trees, together with a great variety of useful and
aromatic herbs; and from its summit they beheld the
extent and beauty of the port, reaching, as they said,
full three leagues from where the vessel lay at anchor.
A large tent was erected on the sandy beach, to answer
the purposes of a church, where the friar might perform
mass, and by directions of the commanding officers,
the boats were drawn up for repairing, wells were dug,
parties were sent off to cut wood, while guards were
placed at convenient distances to give notice of the
approach of any hostile force. The latter precaution
was hardly carried into effect, ere a large body of
naked Indians were seen moving along the shore, armed
with bows and arrows. A friar, protected by six
soldiers, was dispatched to meet them, who, making
signs of peace by exhibiting a white flag and throwing
handfuls of sand high into the air, influenced them
to lay aside their arms, when, affectionately embracing
them, the good old friar distributed presents of beads
and necklaces, with which they eagerly adorned their
persons. This manifestation of good feeling induced
them to draw near to where the commander had landed
with his men, but perceiving so large a number, they
retreated to a neighbouring knoll, and from thence
sent forward to the Spaniards ten aged females, who,
possessing apparently so much affability, were presented
immediately with gifts, and instructed to go and inform
their people of the friendly disposition cherished
for them by the white strangers. This was sufficient
to implant a free intercourse with the Indians, who
daily visited the Spaniards, and bartered off their
skins and furs in exchange for bread and trinkets.
But at length the time arrived for the fleet to depart,
and they proceeded northward, visiting in their course
Monterey and Mendocino, where the same favourable result
attended the enterprise as at other places, and they
returned in safety to New Spain.
So successful had been the character
of this expedition throughout the entire period of
its execution, that an enthusiasm prevailed in the
minds of the Spaniards, which could only be assuaged
by an attempt to conquer and christianize the inhabitants
of that distant portion of the American continent.
Many were the fruitless results of the Spanish adventurer numerous
were the statements of his toil and labour, till at
length a formidable attempt, under the patronage and
direction of Don Gaspar de Portala and Father Junípero
Serra, successfully achieved the desired object for
which it was planned and executed.
At San Diego, where, a century and
a half before, the primitive navigators under Cortez
communed with the rude and unsophisticated native there,
where the zealous devotee erected his altar on the
burning sand, and with offerings of incense and prayer
hallowed it to God, as the birthplace of Christianity
in that region upon that sainted spot commenced
the spiritual conquest, the cross was erected, and
the holy missionaries who accompanied the expedition
entered heart and soul upon their religious duties.
Successful in all they undertook, their first establishment
in a short time was completed, and drawing around
it the converted Indians in large numbers, the rude
and uncultivated fields gave place to agricultural
improvement the arts and sciences gradually
obtained foundation where before all was darkness,
and day after day hundreds were added to the folds
of the holy and apostolic church. Thus triumphantly
proceeded the labours of the Spanish conquerors!
In course of time other institutions were founded
at Santa Barbara, Monterey, and San Francisco, where
at each place a military fortress was erected, which
served for their protection, and to keep in check
such of the natives who were disinclined to observe
the regulations of the community.
The natives formed an ardent and almost
adorable attachment for their spiritual fathers, and
were happy, quite happy, under their jurisdiction.
Ever ready to obey them, the labour in the field and
workshop met with ready compliance, and so prosperous
were the institutions that many of them became wealthy,
in the increase of their cattle and great abundance
of their granaries. It was no unusual sight to
behold the plains for leagues literally spotted with
bullocks, and large fields of corn and wheat covering
acres of ground. This state of things continued
until the period when Mexico underwent a change in
its political form of government, which so disheartened
the feelings of the loyal missionaries, that they
became regardless of their establishments, and suffered
them to decline for want of attention to their interests.
At length, civil discord and anarchy among the Californians
prepared a more effective measure for their destruction,
and they were left to the superintendence of individuals
who plundered them of all that was desirable or capable
of removal. Thus, the government commenced the
robbery, and its hirelings carried it out to the letter,
destroying and laying waste wherever they were placed.
In order to give the inhabitants a share of the spoils,
some of them were permitted to slaughter the cattle
by contract, which was an equal division of the proceeds,
and the contractors were careful, when they delivered
one hide to a mission, to reserve two for themselves,
in this way following up the example of their superiors.
This important revolution in the systematic
order of the monastic institutions took place in 1836,
at which period the most important of them possessed
property, exclusive of their lands and tenements, to
the value of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
At the present day they have but a little more than
dilapidated walls and restricted boundaries of territory.
Notwithstanding this wanton devastation of property,
contrary to the opinion of many who were strongly in
favour of supporting these religious institutions,
the result proved beneficial to the country at large.
Individual enterprise succeeded as the lands became
distributed, so that the Californian beheld himself
no longer dependent on the bounty of his spiritual
directors, but, on the contrary, he was enabled to
give support to them, from the increase and abundance
of his own possessions.
Subsequent to the expulsion of the
Mexicans, numbers of new farms were created, and hundreds
of Americans were scattered over the country.
Previous to 1830, the actual possessions of horned
cattle by the rancheros did not exceed one
hundred thousand; but in 1842, according to a fair
estimate, made by one on the spot, the number had increased
to four hundred thousand; so that the aggregate is
equal to that held by the missions when in their most
flourishing condition. The present number is
not much, if any, short of one million.
Presuming a statistical knowledge
of this country, before and after the missionary institutions
were secularized, may be interesting, I will insert
the following returns of 1831 and 1842, to contrast
the same with its present condition:
1st. In 1832 the white population
throughout Alta-California did not exceed 4,500, while
the Indians of the twenty-one missions amounted to
19,000; in 1842, the former had increased to 7,000,
and the latter decreased to about 5,000.
2nd. In the former year, the
number of horned cattle, including individual possessions,
amounted to 500,000; in the latter, to 40,000.
3rd. At the same period, the
number of sheep, goats, and pigs, was 321,000; at
the latter, 32,000.
4th. In 1831 the number of horses,
asses, mules, etc., was 64,000; in 1842 it was
30,000.
5th. The produce in corn, etc.,
had decreased in a much greater proportion that
of seventy to four.
The amount of duties raised at the
customhouse in Monterey, from 1839 to 1842, was as
follows, viz.:
1839 85,613 dollar 72,308 dollars
1841 101,150 dollars
1842 73,729 dollars.
The net amount of revenue seldom exceeding
in any year eighty thousand dollars; so that, when
a deficiency took place, to supply the expenditures
of government, it had been usual to call upon the missions
for aid.
The value of the hides and tallow
derived from the annual matanzas may be estimated
at 372,000 dollars. These two commodities, with
the exception of some beaver, sea-otter, and other
furs, comprise the most important part of the exportations,
which in addition, would augment the value of exports
to 400,000 dollars.
The permanent population of that portion
of Upper California situated between the Sierra Nevada
and the Pacific, I estimate at 25,000. Of this
number, 8,000 are Hispano-Americans, 5,000 foreigners,
chiefly from the United States, and 12,000 christianized
Indians. There are considerable numbers of wild
or Gentile Indians, inhabiting the valley of the San
Joaquin and the gorges of the Sierra, not included
in this estimate. They are probably as numerous
as the Christian Indians. The Indian population
inhabiting the region of the Great Salt Lake, Mary’s
River, the oases of the Great Desert Basin, and the
country bordering the Rio Colorado and its tributaries,
being spread over a vast extent of territory, are
scarcely seen, although the aggregate number is considerable.
The Californians do not differ materially
from the Mexicans, from whom they are descended, in
other provinces of that country. Physically and
intellectually, the men, probably, are superior to
the same race farther south, and inhabiting the countries
contiguous to the city of Mexico. The intermixture
of blood with the Indian and negro races has been
less, although it is very perceptible.
The men, as a general fact, are well
made, with pleasing sprightly countenances, and possessing
much grace and ease of manners, and vivacity of conversation.
But hitherto they have had little knowledge of the
world and of events, beyond what they have heard through
Mexico, and derived from the supercargoes of merchant-ships
and whalemen touching upon the coast. There are
no public schools in the country at least
I never heard of one. There are but few books.
General Vallejo has a library with many valuable books,
and this is the only one I saw, although there are
others; but they are rare, and confined to a few families.
The men are almost constantly on horseback,
and as horsemen excel any I have seen in other parts
of the world. From the nature of their pursuits
and amusements, they have brought horsemanship to a
perfection challenging admiration and exciting astonishment.
They are trained to the horse and the use of the lasso
(riata, as it is here called) from their infancy.
The first act of a child, when he is able to stand
alone, is to throw his toy lasso around the neck of
a kitten; his next feat is performed on the dog; his
next upon a goat or calf; and so on, until he mounts
the horse, and demonstrates his skill upon horses and
cattle. The crowning feat of dexterity with the
riata, and of horsemanship, combined with daring
courage, is the lassoing of the grisly bear.
This feat is performed frequently upon this large and
ferocious animal, but it is sometimes fatal to the
performer and his horse. Well drilled, with experienced
military leaders, such as would inspire them with
confidence in their skill and prowess, the Californians
ought to be the finest cavalry in the world. The
Californian saddle is, I venture to assert, the best
that has been invented, for the horse and the rider.
Seated in one of these, it is scarcely possible to
be unseated by any ordinary casualty. The bridle-bit
is clumsily made, but so constructed that the horse
is compelled to obey the rider upon the slightest
intimation. The spurs are of immense size, but
they answer to an experienced horseman the double
purpose of exciting the horse, and of maintaining the
rider in his seat under difficult circumstances.
For the pleasures of the table they
care but little. With his horse and trappings,
his sarape and blanket, a piece of beef and a tortilla,
the Californian is content, so far as his personal
comforts are concerned. But he is ardent in his
pursuit of amusement and pleasure, and these consist
chiefly in the fandango, the game of monte, horse-racing,
and bull and bear-baiting. They gamble freely
and desperately, but pay their losses with the most
strict punctuality, at any and every sacrifice, and
manifest but little concern about them. They
are obedient to their magistrates, and in all disputed
cases decided by them, acquiesce without uttering
a word of complaint. They have been accused of
treachery and insincerity. Whatever may have been
the grounds for these accusations in particular instances,
I know not; but, judging from my own observation and
experience, they are as free from these qualities
as our own people.
While the men are employed in attending
to the herds of cattle and horses, and engaged in
their other amusements, the women (I speak of the
middle classes on the ranchos) superintend and perform
most of the drudgery appertaining to housekeeping,
and the cultivation of the gardens, from whence are
drawn such vegetables as are consumed at the table.
These are few, consisting of frijoles, potatoes,
onions, and chiles. The assistants in
these labours are the Indian men and women, legally
reduced to servitude.
The soil of that portion of California
between the Sierra Nevada and the Pacific will compare,
in point of fertility, with any that I have seen elsewhere.
As I have already described such portions of it as
have come under my observation, it is unnecessary
for me here to descend to particulars. Wheat,
barley, and other small grains, with hemp, flax, and
tobacco, can be produced in all the valleys, without
irrigation. To produce maize, potatoes, and other
garden vegetables, irrigation is necessary. Oats
and mustard grow spontaneously, with such rankness
as to be considered nuisances upon the soil.
I have forced my way through thousands of acres of
these, higher than my head when mounted on a horse.
The oats grow to the summits of the hills, but they
are not here so tall and rank as in the valleys.
The varieties of grasses are greater
than on the Atlantic side of the continent, and far
more nutritious. I have seen seven different kinds
of clover, several of them in a dry state, depositing
a seed upon the ground so abundant as to cover it,
which is lapped up by the cattle and horses and other
animals, as corn or oats, when threshed, would be with
us. All the grasses, and they cover the entire
country, are heavily seeded, and, when ripe, are as
fattening to stock as the grains which we feed to
our beef, horses, and hogs. Hence it is unnecessary
to the sustenance or fattening of stock to raise corn
for their consumption.
Agriculture is in its rudest state.
The farming implements which have been used by the
Californians, with few exceptions, are the same as
were used three hundred years ago, when Mexico was
conquered by Cortez. A description of them would
be tedious. The plough, however, which merely
scratches the ground, is the fork of a small tree.
It is the same pattern as the Roman plough, two thousand
years ago. Other agricultural implements are
of the same description. The Americans, and other
foreigners, are, however, introducing the American
plough, and other American farming tools, the consequence
of which has already been, to some extent, to produce
a revolution in agriculture. The crops of wheat
and barley, which I saw about the 1st of June, while
passing through the country on my journey to the United
States, exceeded in promise any which I have seen
in the United States. It was reported to me that
Captain Sutter’s crop of wheat, for 1847, would
amount to 75,000 bushels.
The natural vegetable productions
of California have been sufficiently noticed in the
course of this work, for the reader to form a correct
estimate of the capabilities of the soil and climate.
It is supposed by some, that cotton, sugar, and rice,
could be produced here. I do not doubt but there
are portions of the country where these crops would
thrive; but I question whether, generally, they could
be cultivated to advantage. Nearly all the fruits
of the temperate and tropical climates are produced
in perfection in California, as has before been stated.
The principal product of the country
has been its cattle and horses. The cattle are,
I think, the largest and finest I ever saw, and the
beef is more delicious. There are immense herds
of these, to which I have previously referred; and
their hides and tallow, when slaughtered, have hitherto
composed the principal exports from the country.
If I were to hazard an estimate of the number of hides
annually exported, it would be conjectural, and not
worth much. I would suppose, however, at this
time (1847), that the number would not fall much short
of 150,000, and a corresponding number of arrobas
(25 pounds) of tallow. The average value of cattle
is about five dollars per head.
The horses and mules are correspondingly
numerous with the cattle; and although the most of
them are used in the country, considerable numbers
are driven to Sonora, New Mexico, and other southern
provinces, and some of them to the United States,
for a market. They are smaller than American
horses, and I do not think them equal for continuous
hard service; but on short trips, for riding, their
speed and endurance are not often, if ever, equalled
by our breed of horses. The value of good horses
is from ten to twenty-five dollars; of mares, five
dollars. The prices have, however, since the
Americans came into the country, become fluctuating,
and the value of both horses and cattle is increasing
rapidly.
The wild animals of California are
the wild-horse, the elk, the black-tailed deer, antelope,
grizly bear, all in large numbers. Added to these
are the beaver, otter, coyote, hare, squirrel, and
the usual variety of other small animals. There
is not so great a variety of small birds as I have
seen elsewhere. I do not consider that the country
presents strong attractions for the ornithologist.
But what is wanting in variety is made up in numbers.
The bays and indentations on the coast, as well as
the rivers and lakes interior, swarm with myriads
of wild geese, ducks, swans, and other water birds.
The geese and ducks are a mongrel race, their plumage
being variegated, the same as our barn-yard fowls.
Some of the islands in the harbour, near San Francisco,
are white with the guano deposited by these
birds; and boat-loads of eggs are taken from them.
The pheasant and partridge are abundant in the mountains.
In regard to the minerals of California,
not much is yet known. It has been the policy
of the owners of land upon which there existed minerals
to conceal them as much as possible. A reason
for this has been, that the law of Mexico is such,
that if one man discovers a mine of any kind upon
another man’s land, and the proprietor does not
work it, the former may denounce the mine,
and take possession of it, and hold it so long as
he continues to work it. Hence the proprietors
of land upon which there are valuable mineral ores
conceal their existence as much as possible.
While in California I saw quicksilver, silver, lead,
and iron ores, and the specimens were taken from mines
said to be inexhaustible. From good authority
I learned the existence of gold and copper mines,
the metals being combined; and I saw specimens of coal
taken from two or three different points, but I do
not know what the indications were as to quality.
Brimstone, saltpetre, muriate and carbonate of soda,
and bitumen, are abundant. There is little doubt
that California is as rich in minerals of all kinds
as any portion of Mexico.
I have taken much pains to describe
to the reader, from day to day, and at different points
during my travels in California, the temperature and
weather. It is rarely so cold in the settled portions
of California as to congeal water. But twice
only while here I saw ice, and then not thicker than
window-glass. I saw no snow resting upon the ground.
The annual rains commence in November, and continue,
with intervals of pleasant springlike weather, until
May. From May to November, usually, no rain falls.
There are, however, exceptions. Rain sometimes
falls in August. The thermometer, at any season
of the year, rarely sinks below 50 deg. or rises
above 80 deg.. In certain positions on the
coast, and especially at San Francisco, the winds
rise diurnally, and blowing fresh upon the shore render
the temperature cool in midsummer. In the winter
the wind blows from the land, and the temperature at
these points is warmer. These local peculiarities
of climate are not descriptive of the general climate
of the interior.
For salubrity I do not think there
is any climate in the world superior to that of the
coast of California. I was in the country nearly
a year, exposed much of the time to great hardships
and privations, sleeping, for the most part, in the
open air, and I never felt while there the first pang
of disease, or the slightest indication of bad health.
On some portions of the Sacramento and San Joaquin
Rivers, where vegetation is rank, and decays in the
autumn, the malaria produces chills and fever, but
generally the attacks are slight, and yield easily
to medicine. The atmosphere is so pure and preservative
along the coast, that I never saw putrified flesh,
although I have seen, in midsummer, dead carcasses
lying exposed to the sun and weather for months.
They emitted no offensive smell. There is but
little disease in the country arising from the climate.
The botany and flora of California
are rich, and will hereafter form a fruitful field
of discovery to the naturalist. There are numerous
plants reported to possess extraordinary medical virtues.
The “soap-plant” (amole) is one
which appears to be among the most serviceable.
The root, which is the saponaceous portion of the plant,
resembles the onion, but possesses the quality of cleansing
linen equal to any “oleic soap” manufactured
by my friends Cornwall and Brother, of Louisville,
Ky.
There is another plant in high estimation
with the Californians, called canchalagua,
which is held by them as an antidote for all the diseases
to which they are subject, but in particular for cases
of fever and ague. For purifying the blood, and
regulating the system, I think it surpasses all the
medicinal herbs that have been brought into notice,
and it must become, in time, one of the most important
articles in the practice of medicine. In the
season for flowers, which is generally during the
months of May and June, its pretty pink-coloured blossoms
form a conspicuous display in the great variety which
adorn the fields of California.
The water-power in California is ample
for any required mill purposes. Timber for lumber
is not so convenient as is desirable. There is,
however, a sufficiency of it, which, when improvements
are made, will be more accessible. The timber
on the Sierra Nevada, the most magnificent in the
world, cannot be, at present, available. The
evergreen oak, that grows generally in the valleys,
is not valuable, except for fuel. But in the
cañadas of the hills, and at several places
on the coast, particularly at Santa Cruz and Bodega,
there is an amount of pine and fir, adapted for lumber,
that will not be consumed for a long time.
The religion of the Californians is
the Roman Catholic, and, like the people of all Roman
Catholic countries, they appear to be devotedly attached
to the forms of their religion. That there are
some, I will not say how many, paganish grafts upon
the laws, formalities, and ceremonies, as prescribed
by the “Holy Church Universal” for its
government and observance, is undeniable, but these
probably do not materially affect the system.
The females, I noticed, were nearly all devoutly attached
to their religious institutions. I have seen,
on festival or saint days, the entire floor of a church
occupied by pious women, with their children, kneeling
in devout worship, and chanting with much fervency
some dismal hymn appertaining to the service.
There are but few of the Jesuit fathers who established
the missions now remaining in the country. The
services are performed at several of the churches
that I visited, by native Indians, educated by the
padres previous to their expulsion by the Mexican
government.