Many accounts of the Vigilance Committee
of San Francisco have been published, but all of them,
so far as I have seen, were from the pen of members
of that organization, or else from persons who favored
it. As a consequence their accounts of it were
either partial, to a greater or less degree, or imperfect
otherwise; and much has been omitted as well as misstated
and misrepresented otherwise. I was not a member
of the Vigilance Committee, nor was I a member of
the opposing organization, known as the Law and Order
body, of which General Sherman was the head and Volney
E. Howard next in rank. I have never been in favor
of mob or lynch-law in any form, and, therefore, had
neither sympathy with nor disposition to join the
Vigilance Committee. And while I was earnestly
in support of Law and Order, I did not feel that I
could better subserve that cause by joining the organization
formed at that time, for the avowed purpose of maintaining
the one and enforcing the other. I had many friends
on each side, and I also knew many in each organization
who were unworthy of fellowship in any good or honorable
cause or association; and some of these bore prominent
rank in each organization. As was said of the
Regulators of Texas, who directed their energies chiefly
against horse thieves and robbers, that some of the
worst and most guilty of them hastened to join the
band, in order to save themselves from arrest and
the rope or bullet, likewise were there some prominent
in the Vigilance Committee of 1856, who undoubtedly
joined it for similar reasons to escape
the terrors of the organization; and the Executive
Committee was not exempt from these infamous characters.
The Executive Committee, forty-one
in number, was thus composed in membership: William
T. Coleman, James Dows, Thomas J. L. Smiley, John P.
Monrow, Charles Doane, James N. Olney, Isaac Bluxome,
Jr., William Meyers, Charles Ludlow, Christler,
Richard M. Jessup, Charles J. Dempster, George R.
Ward, E. P. Flint, Wm. Rogers, Aaron M. Burns, Miers
F. Truitt, W. H. Tillinghast, W. Arrington, Charles
L. Case, J. D. Farwell, W. T. Thompson, Eugene Dellesert,
J. K. Osgood, J. W. Brittan, Jules David, C. V. Gillespie,
Calvin Nutting, E. Gorham, N. O. Arrington, F. W.
Page, O. B. Crary, L. Bassange, D. Tubbs, Emile Grisar,
E. B. Goddard, Henry M. Hale, Chas. Ludlow, M. J. Burke,
J. H. Fish, C. P. Hutchings, J. Seligman.
W. T. Coleman was President, Thomas
J. L. Smiley Vice-President and Prosecuting Attorney,
John P. Morrow, Judge Associate, James Dows, Treasurer,
Wm. Meyer, Deputy Treasurer, Isaac Bluxome, Jr. the
notorious “33” Secretary.
Charles Doane was Grand Marshall, James N. Olney,
Deputy Grand Marshall, R. T. Wallace was Chief of Police,
John L. Durkee, Deputy Chief.
The military organization of the Vigilance
Committee, rank and file, numbered nearly 5,000 men.
Several of the Executive Committee were alien residents
who never became citizens; and in the Committee, serving
as troops, as police, and in other lines, were a large
number of aliens, not naturalized, many of whom had
not acquired sufficient proficiency in the English
language to speak it or understand it. The military
body comprised four regiments infantry
and artillery together with battalions
of cavalry, pistol companies and guard of citizens.
A medical staff was duly organized. The roster,
as here given, is copied from a recent publication
in the Alta, stated to be authentic. The dashes
which mark omission of the names, appear as they are
placed in the Alta:
Charles Doane, Major-General. Staff officers:
N. W. Coles,
Quartermaster-General and Colonel of Cavalry; R. M.
Jessup,
Commissary-General and Colonel of Infantry; Aaron
M. Burns, Deputy
Commissary-General and Lieutenant-Colonel of Infantry;
James Dows,
Paymaster-General and Lieutenant-Colonel of Infantry;
William Meyer and
Eugene Dellesert, Paymaster-Generals and Majors of
Infantry; Cyrus G.
Dwyer, Adjutant and Inspector-General and Major of
Infantry: Henry
Baker, Quartermaster and Major of Infantry; R. R.
Pearce and M. McManus,
Assistant Quartermasters and Captains of Infantry;
J. W. Farrington,
Assistant Commissary and Captain of Infantry; R. Beverly
Cole, Surgeon
of the staff and Major of Infantry; Geo. C. Potter,
aid to Major-General
and Major of Cavalry; N. B. Stone, A. M. Ebbetts,
T. M. Wood, O. P.
Blackman, George R. Morris, T. A. Wakeman, Felix Brissac,
C. H. Vail and
George R. Ward, aids to Major-General and Majors of
Infantry, James B.
Hubbell, John M. Schapp and B. F. Mores, aids and
secretaries to
Major-General and Captains of Infantry, J. N. Olney,
Jr., aid and
secretary to Major-General and First Lieutenant of
Infantry; James N.
Olney, Brigadier-General; R. S. Tammot, Henry Jones
and R. M. Cox, aids
and Captains of Infantry.
Artillery Thomas D. Johns, Colonel; J.
F. Curtis, Lieutenant-Colonel;
R. B. Hampton, Major; Company A, J. Mead Huxley, Captain;
Company B,
James Richit, Captain; Company C, H. C. F. Behrens,
Captain; Company D,
J. H. Hasty, Captain; James F. Curtiss, Lieutenant-Colonel,
commanding
Reserved Artillery.
Battallion Cavalry Frank Baker, Major;
First Squadron, G. G. Bradt,
Captain; Second Squadron, J. Sewell Read, Captain.
Infantry First Regiment, Colonel;
J. S. Ellis, Lieutenant-Colonel;
John A. Clark, Major; J. P. H., Wentworth, Quartermaster;
H. H. Thrall,
Adjutant; L. S. Wilder, Commissary; R. M. Cox, Sergeant-Major;
H. W. F.
Hoffman, Quartermaster’s Sergeant and composed
of eight companies, viz:
Company A, W. C. Allen, Lieutenant commanding; Company
B, H. L. Twiggs,
Captain; Company C, A. L. Loring, Captain; Company
D, J. V. McElwee,
Captain; Company One,, J. M. Taylor, Captain; Company
Two (Riflemen), L.
W. Parks, Captain; Company Three, Jonathan Gavat,
Captain, Company
Seven, Geo. H. Hossefros, Captain.
Battallion Citizens Guard Belonging to
First Regiment, composed of A,
B, C, and D, G. F. Watson, Major.
Second Regiment J.
B. Badger, Colonel; J. S. Hill, Lieutenant-Colonel;
A. H. Clark, Major, Giles H. Gray, Quartermaster; E.
B. Gibbs, Adjutant; F. A. Howe, Commissary; Sergeant-Major;
Judah Alden; Quartermaster-Sergeant, and composed
of eight companies, viz: Company Six, W. R. Doty,
Captain; Company Twelve, C. G. Bailey, Captain; Company
Eight, Godfrey, Captain; Company Four,
A. H. King, Captain; Company Five, C. R. Bond, Captain;
Company Ten, J. Wightman, Lieutenant commanding; Company
Eleven, George Gates, Captain; Company Nine, J. Wood,
Captain.
Third Regiment H.
S. Fitch, Colonel; Caleb Clapp Lieutenant Colonel; ,
Major; , Quartermaster; , Adjutant; ,
Commissary; , Sergeant-Major; ,
Quartermaster-Sergeant, and composed of eight companies,
viz: Company Thirteen, E. J. Smith, Lieutenant
commanding; Company Fourteen, W. E. Keyes, Captain;
Company Fifteen, , Lieutenant commanding;
Company Sixteen, B. S. Bryan, Captain; Company Seventeen
(Riflemen), C. E. S. McDonald, Captain; Company Eighteen,
P. W. Shepheard, Captain; Company Nineteen, R. H.
Bennett, Captain; Company Twenty, S. Gutte, Captain.
Fourth Regiment Francis J. Lippitt, Colonel;
John D. G. Quirk,
Lieutenant-Colonel, , Major;
, Quartermaster; B. L. West,
Adjutant; , Commissary;
, Sergeant-Major; , Quartermaster’s
Sergeant, and composed of eight companies, viz:
Company Twenty-five, J.
Sanfrignon, Captain; Company Twenty-eight, L. Armand,
Captain; French
Legion, Villaseque, Major; Company
Twenty-four, W. H. Patten,
Captain; Company Twenty-seven, C. H. Gough, Captain;
Company Twenty-one,
S. Meyerbock Captain; Company Twenty-three, J. T.
Little, Captain;
Company Thirty, W. O. Smith, Captain; Company Twenty-two,
J. L. Folger,
Captain; Company Twenty-nine, S. L. Harrison, Captain;
Company
Twenty-six, , Captain.
Pistol Battalion Two companies, commanded
respectively by Captains
Webb and E. S. Gibbs.
The roll of Division N is thus given:
J. A. Collins, Commander, Geo. G. Whitney, 1st Lieut.
W. H. Parker, 2d
L’t, J. H. Mallett, Orderly Sergeant, R. R.
H. Rogers, Second Orderly
Sergeant, Wm. H. Wood, Third Orderly Sergeant, Charles
D. Cushman,
Fourth Orderly Sergeant. Privates D.
Morgan, Jr., P. G. Partridge,
John Burns, E. W. Travers. Giles H. Gray, Martin
Prag, John Wright,
James Wells, Jas. W. White, Judah Alden, Alfred
Rix, J. W. Farrington,
W. L. Waters, W. F. Hall, J. T. Bowers, J. L. N. Shepard,
Lucius Hoyt,
David Laville, H. A. Russell, E. Stevens, Theo.
B. Cunningham, M.
McMannis, Wm. H. Gibson, Edmund Keyes, George T. Bohen,
I. M. Bachelder,
R. T. Holmes, W. F. Shankland, B. Argyras, John R.
Chute, John S.
Davies, James McCeny, Geo. H. Tay, Sohn Bensley, L.
Bartlett, Joseph W.
Housley, Robert Wells, Samuel Fullerton, Newell Hosmer,
J. J. Lomax, G.
K. Fitch, Wm. Hayes, Robert A. Parker, Samuel Soule,
A. Wardwell, Isaac
E. Davis, M. McIntyre, F. E. Foote, Thomas A. Ayres,
William K.
Blanchard, J. F. Eaton, J. Frank Swift, J. O. Rountree.
These names of Secretaries of the
Committees of the Executive Committee are added:
On Evidence J. H. Titcomb and D. McK
Baker; on Qualification E. T. Beals.
First, as to the cause or pretence
for the organization of the Vigilance Committee:
It is declared by its ex-members and supporters, or
apologists, that it was necessary for the reason that
the law was not duly administered; that the Courts,
the fountains of justice, were either corrupted or
neglectful of their duties; that Juries were packed
with unworthy men in important criminal cases, that
there were gross frauds in elections, by which the
will of the people was defied and defeated, and improper
and dishonest men, some of them notorious rogues,
were counted in and installed in public office; and
that there was a class of turbulent offenders who
had the countenance, if not the support of judges
and officials in high places, and who, therefore, felt
themselves to be above or exempt from the law.
Tennyson has well remarked that there is no lie so
baneful as one which is half truth. So it is
in respect to these alleged reasons for the organization
of that Vigilance Committee. It is not true that
the Courts were corrupt, neglectful or remiss.
Judge Hager presided in the Fourth District Court,
and his integrity and judicial qualifications, or judgments,
have never been questioned or impeached. Judge
Freelon presided as County judge; the same can be
remarked of him. There was no material fault alleged
against the Police Court. It is true, however,
that in important criminal cases, and sometimes in
civil suits, the juries were often packed. But
why? I will state: Merchants and business
men generally had great aversion to serve on juries,
particularly, in important criminal cases, which are
usually protracted; and the jury were kept in comparative
close condition, because their time was too valuable,
and their business interests required their constant
attention. They preferred, therefore, to pay
the fine imposed, in case they were unable to prevail
upon the Judge to excuse them. Jury fees were
inconsiderable in comparison with their daily profits;
but it was the loss of time from their business which
mainly actuated them. Yet these fees were sufficient
to pay a day’s board and lodging, and to the
many who were out of employment, serving on a jury
was the means to both. There is, in every large
community, the class known as professional jurymen hangers
about the Court, eagerly waiting to be called.
There were men of this kind then; there are more than
enough of them still loitering about the Courts, civil
and criminal. San Francisco is not the only city
in the United States in which defendants in grave
criminal cases have recourse to every conceivable
and possible means, without scruple, to procure their
own acquittal, or the utmost modification of the penalty,
by proving extenuating circumstances, or that the
indictment magnifies the crimes. This was true
of 1856; here, as elsewhere in the land; it is equally
true now. Had the merchants and solid citizens
then drawn as jurors, fulfilled their duty to the
cause of justice, to the conservation and maintenance
of law and order, they would have had no cause or
pretence for the organization which they formed.
The initial fault was attributable to themselves;
the jury-packing they complained of was the direct
consequence of their own neglect of that essential
duty to the State, in the preservation of law and order;
and they cannot reasonably or justly shift the onus
from themselves upon the Courts.
Concerning the frauds in election:
yes, there were frauds, outrageous frauds, at every
election; repeaters, bullies, ballot-box stuffing,
and false counts of the ballots to count out this
candidate and count in the one favored of the “boys.”
More than one member of the Vigilance Executive Committee
had thorough knowledge of all this, for the very conclusive
reason that more than one of them had engaged in these
frauds, had not only participated in them directly
and indirectly, but had actually proposed them; employed
the persons who had committed the frauds, and paid
these tools round sums for the infamous service.
The reward of these employers and accessories before,
during and after the frauds, was the office that was
coveted; and the “Hon.” prefixed to their
names was as the gilt which the watch stuffer applies
to the brass thing he imposes upon the greenhorn as
a solid gold watch. Out of the Committee, of
the Executive Committee, the detectives of that body
might have unearthed these honorable and virtuous
purifiers and reformers; with them, perhaps others
whose frauds were no less wicked and criminal; but
in business transactions, and not in political affairs.
One of the Executive Committee had served his term
of two years in the Ohio State Prison for forgery;
here in San Francisco he had, during two city elections,
been the trusted agent and disburser of a very heavy
sack in the honest endeavor to secure the nomination,
and promote the election, of his principal to high
office, yet this pure man was honored by his associates
of the Committee, and became singularly active in pressing
the expatriation of some of the very “ruffians
and ballot-box-stuffers” he had patronized and
paid. He had learned that “dead men told
no tales.” This pure-character did not
stand alone in his experience of penal servitude,
as birds of a feather, and he was under no necessity
of examplifying Lord Dundreary’s bird, to go
into a corner and flock by himself. That some
turbulent offenders, and largely too many of them,
defied the law, is likewise true. But that they
were countenanced or favored by the Judges, is utterly
without truthful foundation. And it is remarkable
that, of all the men hanged or expatriated by the Committee,
only two had ever been complained of or arraigned before
the Courts for any crime of violence; not one of them
all had been here accused or suspected of theft or
robbery, or other felony. This is more, as I have
just above stated, than can be said of some of the
forty-one members of the Executive Committee.
And among the members of the rank and file of the
five thousand or six thousand enrolled upon the lists
of the Committee of natives and English-speaking
citizens or residents there were scores
of scoundrels of every degree, bogus gold-dust operators,
swindlers and fugitives from justice. Of the members
of other nationalities some of whom had
not been in the country long enough to acquire English I
have no occasion to pass remark; but the fear of communism
and disturbance, from the increase of its incendiary
votaries in our country, east and here, cannot be
lessened or composed by the recollection of the conduct
of many of the same nationalities who then swelled
the ranks of the Committee troops.