This gave me the best kind of an opportunity for seeing the
country, which was very sparsely populated indeed, except by a
few families at the various Missions. We had no wheeled
vehicles, but packed our food and clothing on mules driven
ahead, and we slept on the ground in the open air, the rainy
season having passed. Frémont followed me by land in a few
days, and, by the end of May, General Kearny was all ready at
Monterey to take his departure, leaving to succeed him in
command Colonel R. B. Mason, First Dragoons. Our Captain
(Tompkins), too, had become discontented at his separation
from his family, tendered his resignation to General Kearny,
and availed himself of a sailing-vessel bound for Callao to
reach the East. Colonel Mason selected me as his
adjutant-general; and on the very last day of May General
Kearny, with his Mormon escort, with Colonel Cooke, Colonel
Swords (quartermaster), Captain Turner, and a naval officer,
Captain Radford, took his departure for the East overland,
leaving us in full possession of California and its fate.
Frémont also left California with General Kearny, and with him
departed all cause of confusion and disorder in the country.
from that time forth no one could dispute the authority of
Colonel Mason as in command of all the United States forces on
shore, while the senior naval officer had a like control
afloat. This was Commodore James Biddle, who had reached the
station from China in the Columbus, and he in turn was
succeeded by Commodore T. Ap Catesby Jones in the
line-of-battle-ship Ohio. At that time Monterey was our
headquarters, and the naval commander for a time remained
there, but subsequently San Francisco Bay became the chief
naval rendezvous.
Colonel R. B. Mason, First
Dragoons, was an officer of great experience, of stern
character, deemed by some harsh and severe, but in all my
intercourse with him he was kind and agreeable. He had a large
fund of good sense, and, during our long period of service
together, I enjoyed his unlimited confidence. He had been in
his day a splendid shot and hunter, and often entertained me
with characteristic anecdotes of Taylor, Twiggs, Worth,
Harney, Martin Scott, etc., etc., who were then in Mexico,
gaining a national fame. California had settled down to a
condition of absolute repose, and we naturally repined at our
fate in being so remote from the war in Mexico, where our
comrades were reaping large honors. Mason dwelt in a house not
far from the Custom-House, with Captain Lanman, United States
Navy; I had a small adobe-house back of Larkin’s. Halleck and
Dr. Murray had a small log-house not far off. The company of
artillery was still on the hill, under the command of
Lieutenant Ord, engaged in building a fort whereon to mount
the guns we had brought out in the Lexington, and also in
constructing quarters out of hewn pine-logs for the men.
Lieutenant Minor, a very clever young officer, had taken
violently sick and died about the time I got back from Los
Angeles, leaving Lieutenants Ord and Lesser alone with the
company, with Assistant-Surgeon Robert Murray. Captain William
G. Marcy was the quartermaster and commissary. Naglee’s
company of Stevenson’s regiment had been mounted and was sent
out against the Indians in the San Joaquin Valley, and
Shannon’s company occupied the barracks. Shortly after General
Kearny had gone East, we found an order of his on record,
removing one Mr. Nash, the Alcalde of Sonoma, and appointing
to his place ex-Governor L. W. Boggs. A letter came to Colonel
and Governor Mason from Boggs, whom he had personally known in
Missouri, complaining that, though he had been appointed
alcalde, the then incumbent (Nash) utterly denied Kearny’s
right to remove him, because he had been elected by the people
under the proclamation of Commodore Sloat, and refused to
surrender his office or to account for his acts as alcalde.
Such a proclamation had been made by Commodore Sloat shortly
after the first occupation of California, announcing that the
people were free and enlightened American citizens, entitled
to all the rights and privileges as such, and among them the
right to elect their own officers, etc. The people of Sonoma
town and valley, some forty or fifty immigrants from the
United States, and very few native Californians, had elected
Mr. Nash, and, as stated, he refused to recognize the right of
a mere military commander to eject him and to appoint another
to his place. Neither General Kearny nor Mason had much
respect for this kind of “buncombe,” but assumed the true
doctrine that California was yet a Mexican province, held by
right of conquest, that the military commander was held
responsible to the country, and that the province should be
held in statu quo until a treaty of peace. This letter
of Boggs was therefore referred to Captain Brackett, whose
company was stationed at Sonoma, with orders to notify Nash
that Boggs was the rightful alcalde; that he must quietly
surrender his office, with the books and records thereof, and
that he must account for any moneys received from the sale of
town-lots, etc., etc.; and in the event of refusal he (Captain
Brackett) must compel him by the use of force. In due time we
got Brackett’s answer, saying that the little community of
Sonoma was in a dangerous state of effervescence caused by his
orders; that Nash was backed by most of the Americans there
who had come across from Missouri with American ideas; that as
he (Brackett) was a volunteer officer, likely to be soon
discharged, and as he designed to settle there, he asked in
consequence to be excused from the execution of this (to him)
unpleasant duty. Such a request, coming to an old soldier like
Colonel Mason, aroused his wrath, and he would have proceeded
rough-shod against Brackett, who, by-the-way, was a West Point
graduate, and ought to have known better; but I suggested to
the colonel that, the case being a test one, he had better
send me up to Sonoma, and I would settle it quick enough. He
then gave me an order to go to Sonoma to carry out the
instructions already given to Brackett.
I took one soldier with me,
Private Barnes, with four horses, two of which we rode, and
the other two we drove ahead. The first day we reached
Gilroy’s and camped by a stream near three or four adobe-huts
known as Gilroy’s ranch. The next day we passed Murphy’s, San
Jose´, and Santa Clara Mission, camping some four miles
beyond, where a kind of hole had been dug in the ground for
water. The whole of this distance, now so beautifully improved
and settled, was then scarcely occupied, except by poor
ranches producing horses and cattle. The pueblo of San
Jose´ was a string of low adobe-houses festooned with red
peppers and garlic; and the Mission of Santa Clara was a
dilapidated concern, with its church and orchard. The long
line of poplar-trees lining the road from San Jose´ to Santa
Clara bespoke a former period when the priests had ruled the
land. Just about dark I was lying on the ground near the well,
and my soldier Barnes had watered our horses and picketed them
to grass, when we heard a horse crushing his way through the
big mustard-bushes which filled the plain, and soon a man came
to us to inquire if we had seen a saddle-horse pass up the
road. We explained to him what we had heard, and he went off
in pursuit of his horse. Before dark he came back
unsuccessful, and gave his name as Bidwell, the same gentleman
who has since been a member of Congress, who is married to
Miss Kennedy, of Washington City, and now lives in princely
style at Chico, California.
He explained that he was a
surveyor, and had been in the lower country engaged in
surveying land; that the horse had escaped him with his
saddle-bags containing all his notes and papers, and some six
hundred dollars in money, all the money he had earned. He
spent the night with us on the ground, and the next morning we
left him there to continue the search for his horse, and I
afterward heard that he had found his saddle-bags all right,
but never recovered the horse. The next day toward night we
approached the Mission of San Francisco, and the village of
Yerba Buena, tired and weary–the wind as usual blowing a
perfect hurricane, and a more desolate region it was
impossible to conceive of. Leaving Barnes to work his way into
the town as best he could with the tired animals, I took the
freshest horse and rode forward. I fell in with Lieutenant
Fabius Stanley, United States Navy, and we rode into Yerba
Buena together about an hour before sundown, there being
nothing but a path from the Mission into the town, deep and
heavy with drift-sand. My horse could hardly drag one foot
after the other when we reached the old Hudson Bay Company’s
house, which was then the store of Howard and Mellus. There I
learned where Captain Folsom, the quartermaster, was to be
found. He was staying with a family of the name of Grimes, who
had a small house back of Howard’s store, which must have been
near where Sacramento Street now crosses Kearny.
Folsom
was a classmate of mine, had come out with Stevenson’s
regiment as quartermaster, and was at the time the
chief-quartermaster of the department. His office was in the
old custom-house standing at the northwest corner of the
Plaza. He had hired two warehouses, the only ones there at the
time, of one Liedesdorff, the principal man of Yerba Buena,
who also owned the only public house, or tavern, called the
City Hotel, on Kearny Street, at the southeast corner of the
Plaza. I stopped with Folsom at Mrs. Grimes’s, and he sent my
horse, as also the other three when Barnes got in after dark,
to a corral where he had a little barley, but no hay.
At that time nobody fed a horse, but he was usually turned out
to pick such scanty grass as he could find on the side-hills.
The few government horses used in town were usually sent out
to the Presidio, where the grass was somewhat better. At that
time (July, 1847), what is now called San Francisco was called
Yerba Buena. A naval officer, Lieutenant Washington A.
Bartlett, its first alcalde, had caused it to be surveyed and
laid out into blocks and lots, which were being sold at
sixteen dollars a lot of fifty varas square; the
understanding being that no single person could purchase of
the alcalde more than one in-lot of fifty varas, and one
out-lot of a hundred varas. Folsom, however, had got his
clerks orderlies, etc., to buy lots, and they, for a small
consideration, conveyed them to him, so that he was nominally
the owner of a good many lots. Lieutenant Halleck had bought
one of each kind, and so had Warner. Many naval officers had
also invested, and Captain Folsom advised me to buy some, but
I felt actually insulted that he should think me such a fool
as to pay money for property in such a horrid place as Yerba
Buena, especially ridiculing his quarter of the city, then
called Happy Valley.
At
that day Montgomery Street was, as now, the business street,
extending from Jackson to Sacramento, the water of the bay
leaving barely room for a few houses on its east side, and the
public warehouses were on a sandy beach about where the Bank
of California now stands, viz., near the intersection of
Sansome and California Streets. Along Montgomery Street were
the stores of Howard & Mellus, Frank Ward, Sherman & Ruckel,
Ross & Co., and it may be one or two others. Around the Plaza
were a few houses, among them the City Hotel and the
Custom-House, single-story adobes with tiled roofs, and they
were by far the most substantial and best houses in the place.
The population was estimated at about four hundred, of whom
Kanakas (natives of the Sandwich Islands) formed the bulk. At
the foot of Clay Street was a small wharf which small boats
could reach at high tide; but the principal landing-place was
where some stones had fallen into the water, about where
Broadway now intersects Battery Street. On the steep bluff
above had been excavated, by the navy, during the year before,
a bench, wherein were mounted a couple of navy-guns, styled
the battery, which, I suppose, gave name to the street. I
explained to Folsom the object of my visit, and learned from
him that he had no boat in which to send me to Sonoma, and
that the only chance to get there was to borrow a boat from
the navy. The line-of-battle-ship Columbus was then lying at
anchor off the town, and he said if I would get up early the
next morning I could go off to her in one of the market-boats.
Accordingly, I was up
bright and early, down at the wharf, found a boat, and went
off to the Columbus to see Commodore Biddle. On reaching the
ship and stating to the officer of the deck my business, I was
shown into the commodore’s cabin, and soon made known to him
my object. Biddle was a small-sized man, but vivacious in the
extreme. He had a perfect contempt for all humbug, and at once
entered into the business with extreme alacrity. I was
somewhat amused at the importance he attached to the step. He
had a chaplain, and a private secretary, in a small room
latticed off from his cabin, and he first called on them to go
out, and, when we were alone, he enlarged on the folly of
Sloat’s proclamation, giving the people the right to elect
their own officers, and commended Kearny and Mason for nipping
that idea in the bud, and keeping the power in their own
hands. He then sent for the first lieutenant (Drayton), and
inquired if there were among the officers on board any who had
ever been in the Upper Bay, and learning that there was a
midshipman (Whittaker) he was sent for. It so happened that
this midshipman had been on a frolic on shore a few nights
before, and was accordingly much frightened when summoned into
the commodore’s presence, but as soon as he was questioned as
to his knowledge of the bay, he was sensibly relieved, and
professed to know everything about it.
Accordingly, the long-boat
was ordered with this midshipman and eight sailors, prepared
with water and provisions for several days’ absence. Biddle
then asked me if I knew any of his own officers, and which one
of them I would prefer to accompany me. I knew most of them,
and we settled down on Louis McLane. He was sent for, and it
was settled that McLane and I were to conduct this
important mission, and the commodore enjoined on us
complete secrecy, so as to insure success, and he especially
cautioned us against being pumped by his ward-room officers,
Chapman, Lewis, Wise, etc., while on board his ship. With this
injunction, I was dismissed to the ward-room, where I found
Chapman, Lewis, and Wise, dreadfully exercised at our profound
secrecy. The fact that McLane and I had been closeted with the
commodore for an hour, that orders for the boat and stores had
been made, that the chaplain and clerk had been sent out of
the cabin, etc., etc., all excited their curiosity; but McLane
and I kept our secret well. The general impression was, that
we had some knowledge about the fate of Captain Montgomery’s
two sons and the crew that had been lost the year before. In
1846 Captain Montgomery commanded at Yerba Buena, on board the
St. Mary sloop-of-war, and he had a detachment of men
stationed up at Sonoma. Occasionally a boat was sent up with
provisions or intelligence to them. Montgomery had two sons on
board his ship, one a midshipman, the other his secretary.
Having occasion to send some money up to Sonoma, he sent his
two sons with a good boat and crew. The boat started with a
strong breeze and a very large sail, was watched from the deck
until she was out of sight, and has never been heard of since.
There was, of course, much speculation as to their fate, some
contending that the boat must have been capsized in San Pablo
Bay, and that all were lost; others contending that the crew
had murdered the officers for the money, and then escaped;
but, so far as I know, not a man of that crew has ever been
seen or heard of since. When at last the boat was ready for
us, we started, leaving all hands, save the commodore,
impressed with the belief that we were going on some errand
connected with the loss of the missing boat and crew of the
St. Mary. We sailed directly north, up the bay and across San
Pablo, reached the mouth of Sonoma Creek about dark, and
during the night worked up the creek some twelve miles by
means of the tide, to a landing called the Embarcadero.
To maintain the secrecy which the commodore had enjoined on
us, McLane and I agreed to keep up the delusion by pretending
to be on a marketing expedition to pick up chickens, pigs,
etc., for the mess of the Columbus, soon to depart for home.
Leaving the midshipman and
four sailors to guard the boat, we started on foot with the
other four for Sonoma Town, which we soon reached. It was a
simple open square, around which were some adobe-houses, that
of General Vallejo occupying one side. On another was an
unfinished two-story adobe building, occupied as a barrack by
Brackett’s company. We soon found Captain Brackett, and I told
him that I intended to take Nash a prisoner and convey him
back to Monterey to answer for his mutinous behavior. I got an
old sergeant of his company, whom I had known in the Third
Artillery, quietly to ascertain the whereabouts of Nash, who
was a bachelor, stopping with the family of a lawyer named
Green. The sergeant soon returned, saying that Nash had gone
over to Napa, but would be back that evening; so McLane and I
went up to a farm of some pretensions, occupied by one Andreas
Hoepner, with a pretty Sitka wife, who lived a couple of miles
above Sonoma, and we bought of him some chickens, pigs, etc.
We then visited Governor Boggs’s family and that of General
Vallejo, who was then, as now, one of the most prominent and
influential natives of California. About dark I learned that
Nash had come back, and then, giving Brackett orders to have a
cart ready at the corner of the plaza, McLane and I went to
the house of Green. Posting an armed sailor on each side of
the house, we knocked at the door and walked in. We found
Green, Nash, and two women, at supper. I inquired if Nash were
in, and was first answered “No,” but one of the women soon
pointed to him, and he rose. We were armed with pistols, and
the family was evidently alarmed. I walked up to him and took
his arm, and told him to come along with me. He asked me,
“Where?” and I said, “Monterey.” “Why?” I would explain that
more at leisure. Green put himself between me and the door,
and demanded, in theatrical style, why I dared arrest a
peaceable citizen in his house. I simply pointed to my pistol,
and told him to get out of the way, which he did. Nash asked
to get some clothing, but I told him he should want for
nothing. We passed out, Green following us with loud words,
which brought the four sailors to the front-door, when I told
him to hush up or I would take him prisoner also. About that
time one of the sailors, handling his pistol carelessly,
discharged it, and Green disappeared very suddenly. We took
Nash to the cart, put him in, and proceeded back to our boat.
The next morning we were gone.
Nash being out of the way,
Boggs entered on his office, and the right to appoint or
remove from civic office was never again questioned in
California during the régime.
Nash was an old man, and
was very much alarmed for his personal safety. He had come
across the Plains, and had never yet seen the sea. While on
our way down the bay, I explained fully to him the state of
things in California, and he admitted he had never looked on
it in that light before, and professed a willingness to
surrender his office; but, having gone so far, I thought it
best to take him to Monterey. On our way down the bay the wind
was so strong, as we approached the Columbus, that we had to
take refuge behind Yerba Buena Island, then called Goat
Island, where we landed, and I killed a gray seal. The next
morning, the wind being comparatively light, we got out and
worked our way up to the Columbus, where I left my prisoner on
board, and went on shore to find Commodore Biddle, who had
gone to dine with Frank Ward. I found him there, and committed
Nash to his charge, with the request that he would send him
down to Monterey, which he did in the sloop-of-war Dale,
Captain Selfridge commanding. I then returned to Monterey by
land, and, when the Dale arrived, Colonel Mason and I went on
board, found poor old Mr. Nash half dead with sea-sickness and
fear, lest Colonel Mason would treat him with extreme military
rigor. But, on the contrary, the colonel spoke to him kindly,
released him as a prisoner on his promise to go back to
Sonoma, surrender his office to Boggs, and account to him for
his acts while in office. He afterward came on shore, was
provided with clothing and a horse, returned to Sonoma, and I
never have seen him since.
Matters and things settled
down in Upper California, and all moved along with peace and
harmony. The war still continued in Mexico, and the navy
authorities resolved to employ their time with the capture of
Mazatlan and Guaymas. Lower California had already been
occupied by two companies of Stevenson’s regiment, under
Lieutenant- Colonel Burton, who had taken post at La Paz, and
a small party of sailors was on shore at San Josef, near Cape
San Lucas, detached from the Lexington, Lieutenant-Commander
Bailey. The orders for this occupation were made by General
Kearny before he left, in pursuance of instructions from the
War Department, merely to subserve a political end, for there
were few or no people in Lower California, which is a
miserable, wretched, dried-up peninsula. I remember the
proclamation made by Burton and Captain Bailey, in taking
possession, which was in the usual florid style. Bailey signed
his name as the senior naval officer at the station, but, as
it was necessary to put it into Spanish to reach the
inhabitants of the newly-acquired country, it was interpreted,
“El mas antiguo de todos los oficiales de la marina,” etc.,
which, literally, is “the most ancient of all the naval
officers,” etc., a translation at which we made some fun.
The expedition to Mazatlan
was, however, for a different purpose, viz., to get possession
of the ports of Mazatlan and Guaymas, as a part of the war
against Mexico, and not for permanent conquest.
Commodore Shubrick
commanded this expedition, and took Halleck along as his
engineer-officer. They captured Mazatlan and Guaymas, and then
called on Colonel Mason to send soldiers down to hold
possession, but he had none to spare, and it was found
impossible to raise other volunteers either in California or
Oregon, and the navy held these places by detachments of
sailors and marines till the end of the war. Burton also
called for ree¨nforcements, and Naglee’s company was sent
to him from Monterey, and these three companies occupied Lower
California at the end of the Mexican War. Major Hardie still
commanded at San Francisco and above; Company F, Third
Artillery, and Shannon’s company of volunteers, were at
Monterey; Lippett’s company at Santa Barbara; Colonel
Stevenson, with one company of his regiment, and the company
of the First Dragoons, was at Los Angeles; and a company of
Mormons, ree¨enlisted out of the Mormon Battalion,
garrisoned at San Diego–and thus matters went along throughout
1847 and 1848. I had occasion to make several trips to Yerba
Buena and back; and in the spring of 1848 Colonel Mason and I
went down to Santa Barbara in the sloop-of-war Dale.
I spent much time in
hunting deer and bear in the mountains back of the Carmel
Mission, and ducks and geese in the plains of the Salinas, As
soon as the fall rains set in, the young oats would sprout up,
and myriads of ducks, brant, and geese, made their appearance.
In a single day, or rather in the evening of one day and the
morning of the next, I could load a pack-mule with geese and
ducks. They had grown somewhat wild from the increased number
of hunters, yet, by marking well the place where a flock
lighted, I could, by taking advantage of gullies or the shape
of the ground, creep up within range; and, giving one barrel
on the ground, and the other as they rose, I have secured as
many as nine at one discharge. Colonel Mason on one occasion
killed eleven geese by one discharge of small shot. The
seasons in California are well marked. About October and
November the rains begin, and the whole country, plains and
mountains, becomes covered with a bright-green grass, with
endless flowers. The intervals between the rains give the
finest weather possible. These rains are less frequent in
March, and cease altogether in April and May, when gradually
the grass dies and the whole aspect of things changes, first
to yellow, then to brown, and by midsummer all is burnt up and
dry as an ash-heap.
When General Kearny first
departed we took his office at Larkin’s; but shortly afterward
we had a broad stairway constructed to lead from the outside
to the upper front porch of the barracks. By cutting a large
door through the adobe-wall, we made the supper room in the
centre our office; and another side-room, connected with it by
a door, was Colonel Mason’s private office.
I had a single clerk, a
soldier named Baden; and William E. P. Hartnell, citizen, also
had a table in the same room. He was the government
interpreter, and had charge of the civil archives. After
Halleck’s return from Mazatlan, he was, by Colonel Mason, made
Secretary of State; and he then had charge of the civil
archives, including the land-titles, of which Frémont first
had possession, but which had reverted to us when he left the
country.