Alexander Combs Erkson was one of
the pioneers of 1849, having left the state of Iowa
in the month of May, when he assisted in organizing
a company known as the “Badger Company”
at Kanesville, the object being mutual assistance
and protection. This company joined the Bennett
party mentioned so prominently in this history, at
the Missouri, and traveled with them or near them
to the rendezvous near Salt Lake where the new company
was organized for the southern trip taken by the Death
Valley party, the Jayhawkers and others. As the
experience of Mr. Erkson was in some respects different
to that of the parties mentioned, he having taken
a different route for a part of the way, it was thought
best to embody it in this history. The following
was dictated to the editor of this book, and as Mr.
Erkson died before the written account could be revised
by him, it is the best that can possibly be obtained.
MR. ERKSON’S STATEMENT.
“We arrived at the Mormon camp
near Salt Lake, Salt Lake City, in the month of August.
Several of us went to work getting out lumber for
Brigham Young while we were waiting and resting.
The mormons all advised us not to undertake to go
on by the northern route, and as the travelers gathered
at this point they canvassed the situation. We
used our teams when we were at work for Brigham and
assisted in building a dam across a canon where he
intended to build a woolen mill. I earned about
a hundred dollars by my work, which was paid to me
in ten-dollar pieces of a gold coin made by the Mormons.
They were not like the U.S. coins. I remember
one side had an eye and the words ’Holiness
to the Lord.’
We entered into an agreement with
Capt. Hunt, a Mormon, to pilot us through, and
turned all our gold into that company, thus bringing
none of the Mormon gold with us. We went on with
the company as has been related in the foregoing pages,
till we arrived at Mt. Misery, so named by us,
when we took the back track, while Mr. Manley and the
others went on as they have related. We had meetings
by the light of a greenwood fire, and the matter was
talked up in little knots of people, and then some
one would get up and speak. One J.W. Brier,
a preacher, was the principal blower. ‘You
are going wrong!’ said he, We should go west,
and in six weeks we will be loaded with gold!’
Hunt got a little confused at a place
called Beaver Meadows, or Mountain Meadows, and thought
perhaps he could find a new road. Several men
were sent out to look, and some of us in camp played
ball for amusement while we were waiting. Hunt’s
men came back and said there were no prospects of
a new road, and he said he knew the southern route
and believed it would be safe to go that way.
He told us that we must decide the
next day. When we came to the road where we were
to separate he filed off on his road and the others
filed off on their road and then came back with their
whips in their hands. I had filed in after Hunt,
and they tried to convince me that I was very wrong.
A Mr. Norton of Adrian, Mich., promised Mrs. Erkson
a horse to ride if she would go, and so I left Hunt
and turned in on the other road, the hindmost wagon.
This is going back a little with the history and bringing
it up to Mt. Misery. On my way back from
Mt. Misery I climbed up on a big rock and inscribed
the date No, 1849.
In our journey we came to what is
called ‘The rim of the Basin,’ and traveled
along on that a distance till we came to the Santa
Clara River and saw where the Indians had raised corn
and melons. We followed on down that stream and
found our teams gradually failing. Noting this
we decided to overhaul our loads and reject a lot
of things not strictly necessary to preserve life.
I know I threw out a good many valuable and pretty
things by the roadside. I remember six volumes
of Rollin’s Ancient History, nicely bound, with
my name on the back, that were piled up and left.
We followed along near the Santa Clara River till it
emptied into the Virgin River. It was somewhere
along here that we first saw some Yucca trees.
The boys often set fire to them to see them burn.
The Virgin River was a small stream
running on about the course we wanted to travel, and
we followed this course for thirty or forty miles.
We found plenty of wood and water and mesquite.
After awhile the river turned off to the left, while
we wanted to keep to the right, so we parted company
there. We heard of a river beyond which they called
the ‘Big Muddy’ and we went up a little
arroyo, then over a divide to some table land that
led us down to the Big Muddy. We made our wagons
as light as possible, taking off all the boards and
stakes we could possibly get along without. Wm.
Philipps and others were placed on short allowance.
They had an idea that I had more provisions in my wagon
than I ought to have, but I told them that it was
clothing that we used to sleep on. I divided
among them once or twice. When we reached the
Muddy we stopped two or three days for there was plenty
of feed. It was a narrow stream that seemed as
if it must come from springs. It was narrow between
banks, but ran pretty deep, and a streak of fog marked
its course in the morning. We understood it was
not very far from where we left the Virgin River to
the Colorado, some said not more than fourteen miles
and that the Colorado turned sharply to the south at
that point. Mr. Rhynierson and wife had a child
born to them on the Virgin River, and it was named
Virginia.
It was a gloomy trip the whole time
on the Muddy. I lost three or four head of cattle,
all within a day and a night. Mrs. Erkson walked
to lighten the load, and would pick all the bunches
of grass she saw and put them on the wagon to feed
the oxen when we stopped. I let them pass me
and stopped and fed the cattle, and slept ourselves.
It was said that we ran great risks from Indians,
but we did not see any. I had at this time only
two yoke of oxen left.
We overtook the party next morning
at nine o’clock, having met some of them who
were coming back after us. All were rejoiced that
we had come on safely. Here I met Elisha Bennett
and told him my story. He said he could sell
me a yoke of oxen. He had a yoke in J.A.
Philipps’ team and was going to take them out.
He said nothing in particular as to price. I
said that I wanted to see Mr. Philipps and talk with
him about the matter, for he had said Bennett should
not have the cattle. I went over to see him and
spoke to him about Bennett’s cattle and he told
me they had quarreled and I could have them, and so
we made a bargain. I gave twenty dollars for
the cattle, the last money I had, and as much provisions
as he could carry on his back. They were making
up a party to reach the settlements at the Williams
ranch, and I made arrangements for them to send back
provisions for us. About thirty started that
way young men and men with no families with
them.
I got along very well with my new
team after that. It was about forty miles from
water to water, and I think we camped three times.
At one place we found that provisions had been left,
with a notice that the material was for us, but the
red-skins got the provisions. We struck a spring
called-, a small spring of water, and a child of
some of the party died there and was buried.
We then went more nearly south to
find the Mojave River, for we hoped to find water
there. It was very scarce with us then, We had
one pretty cold day, but generally fine weather, and
to get along we traveled at night and a party struck
the Mojave. Here there was some grass, and the
mustard was beginning to start up and some elder bushes
to put forth leaves. I picked some of the mustard
and chewed it to try to get back my natural taste.
Here the party divided, a part going to the left to
San Bernardino and the remainder to the right to Cucamunga.
I was with the latter party and we got there before
night.
Rhynierson said to one of the party ’Charlie,
you had better hurry on ahead and try to get some
meat before the crowd comes up.’ Charlie
went on ahead and we drove along at the regular gait
which was not very fast about these times. We
saw nothing of Charlie and so I went to the house
to look for him and found him dead drunk on wine.
He had not said a word to them about provisions.
That wine wrecked us all. All had a little touch
of scurvy, and it seemed to be just what we craved.
I bought a big tumbler of it for two bits and carried
it to my wife. She lasted it at first rather
gingerly, then took a little larger sup of it, and
then put it to her lips and never slopped drinking
till the last drop was gone. I looked a little
bit surprised and she looked at me and innocently
asked ’Why! Haven’t you
had any?’ I was afraid she would be the next
one to be dead drunk, but it never affected her in
that way at all. We bought a cow here to kill,
and used the meat either fresh or dried, and then
went on to the Williams, or Chino ranch. Col.
Williams was glad to see us, and said we could have
everything we wanted. We wanted to get wheat,
for we had lived so long on meat that we craved such
food. He told us about the journey before us
and where we would find places to camp. Here
we found one of the Gruwells. We camped here a
week, meeting many emigrants who came by way of Santa
Fe.
We went on from here to San Gabriel
where we staid six weeks to rest and recuperate the
cattle. In the good grass we found here they all
became about as fat as ever in a little while.
Here the party all broke up and no sort of an organization
was kept up beyond here. Some went to Los Angeles,
some went on north, trading off their cattle for horses,
and some went directly to the coast. We went
to the Mission of San Fernando where we got some oranges
which were very good for us. There is a long,
tedious hill there to get over. We made up ten
wagons. By the time we reached the San Francisquito
Ranch I had lost my cattle. I went down to this
ranch and there met Mr. and Mrs. Arcane getting ready
to go to San Pedro. We came north by way of Tejon
pass and the Kern River, not far from quite a large
lake, and reached the mines at last. I remember
we killed a very fat bear and tried out the grease,
and with this grease and some flour and dried apples
Mrs. Erkson made some pretty good pies which the miners
were glad to get at a dollar and even two dollars
apiece.”
Mr. Erkson followed mining for about
a year and then went into other business until he
came to Santa Clara Valley and began farming near
Alviso. He has been a highly respected citizen
and progressive man, He died in San Jose in the spring
of 1893.
THE EXPERIENCE OF EDWARD COKER.
Edward Coker was one of a party of
twenty-one men who left their wagons, being impatient
of the slow progress made by the ox train, and organized
a pack train in which they were themselves the burden
carriers. They discarded everything not absolutely
necessary to sustain life, packed all their provisions
into knapsacks, bravely shouldered them and started
off on foot from the desert to reach California by
the shortest way.
Among those whom Mr. Coker can recollect
are Capt. Nat. Ward, Jim Woods, Jim Martin
of Missouri, John D. Martin of Texas, “Old Francis,”
a French Canadian, Fred Carr, Negro “Joe”
and some others from Coffeeville, Miss., with others
from other states.
Mr. Coker related his experience to
the Author somewhat as follows:
“One other of the party was
a colored man who joined us at the camp when we left
the families, he being the only remaining member of
a small party who had followed our wagon tracks after
we had tried to proceed south. This party was
made up of a Mr. Culverwell who had formerly been
a writer in a Government office at Washington, D.C.,
a man named Fish claiming to be a relative of Hamilton
Fish of New York, and another man whose name I never
knew. He, poor fellow, arrived at our camp in
a starving condition and died before our departure.
The other two unfortunates ones died on the desert,
and the colored man reported that he simply covered
their remains with their blankets.
I well remember that last night in
camp before we started with our knapsacks and left
the families, for it was plain the women and children
must go very slow, and we felt we could go over rougher
and shorter roads on foot and get through sooner by
going straight across the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
Our condition was certainly appalling. We were
without water, all on the verge of starvation, and
the three poor cattle which yet remained alive were
objects of pity. It seemed almost a crime to
kill the poor beasts, so little real food was there
left on their skeleton frames. They had been
so faithful and had plodded along when there seemed
no hope for them. They might still serve to keep
the party from starvation.
It was at this camp that Mr. Ischam
died. The night before our departure he came
wandering into camp and presented such an awful appearance,
simply a living skeleton of a once grand and powerful
man. He must have suffered untold agony as he
struggled on to overtake the party, starving and alone,
with the knowledge that two of his companions had perished
miserably of starvation in that unknown wilderness
of rocks and alkali.
Our journey on foot through the mountains
was full of adventure and suffering. On our arrival
at the shores of Owen’s Lake not a man of the
party had a mouthful of food left in his pack, and
to add to our difficulties we had several encounters
with the hostile Indians. There was a fearful
snow storm falling at Owen’s Lake on the evening
that we arrived there, and we could make no fire.
The Indians gathered around us and we did not know
exactly what to make of them, nor could we determine
whether their intentions were good or bad. We
examined the lake and determined to try to ford it,
and thus set out by the light of the moon that occasionally
peeped out from behind the clouds, while the red devils
stood howling on the shore.
The following morning we found what
was then known as the Fremont Trail, and by the advice
of some friendly Indians who came into our camp, we
kept the “big trail” for three days and
came to Walker’s Pass. While on this trail
we were followed at night by a number of wild Indians,
but we prudently avoided any collisions with them
and kept moving on. Going on through the pass
we followed the right hand branch of the trail, the
left hand branch leading more to the south and across
a wide plain. We soon came to a fair-sized stream,
now known to be the south fork of the Kern River,
which we followed until we came to its junction with
a larger river, the two making the Kern River.
Here we were taken across by some friendly Indians
who left the Missions farther west during the Mexican
war and took to their own village located at the foot
of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. At this village
we were on exhibition for several hours with an audience
of five hundred people or more, of the red men, and
on the following morning we commenced the ascent of
the mountains again, the Indians furnishing us with
a guide in the person of an old Pi-Ute. He brought
us over the range, through the snow and over the bleak
ridges, in the month of December, 1849, and we made
our first camp at an Indian village in Tulare Valley,
a few miles south of where Porterville now stands.
From this Indian village we walked
on until we arrived at the present site of Millerton
on the south bank of the San Joaquin River. Our
sufferings were terrible from hunger, cold, and wet,
for the rains were almost continual at this elevation,
and we had been forced several times to swim.
The sudden change from the dried-up desert to a rainy
region was pretty severe on us. On our arrival
at the San Joaquin River we found a camp of wealthy
Mexicans who gave us a small amount of food, and seemed
to want us to pass on that they might be rid of us.
I can well believe that a company of twenty-one starving
men was the cause of some disquietude to them.
They gave us some hides taken from some of the cattle
they had recently slain, and from these we constructed
a boat and ferry rope in which we crossed the river,
and then continued our journey to the mining camp
on Aqua Frio, in Mariposa county.
It is very strange to think that since
that time I have never met a single man of that party
of twenty-one. I had kept quite full notes of
the whole trip from the state of New York to the mines,
and including my early mining experience up to the
year 1851. Unfortunately this manuscript was
burned at the Russ House fire in Fresno, where I also
lost many personal effects.”
In the year 1892 Mr. Coker was living
in Fresno, or near that city, in fairly comfortable
health, and it is to be hoped that the evening of his
days, to which all the old pioneers are rapidly approaching,
may be to him all that his brightest hopes pictured.