Page 1 is blank. [plate entitled: Entrance to the Golden Gate.] [end of page f864t25_002p.jpg] CALIFORNIA LIFE 1LLUSTRATED BY REV. WILLIAM TAYLOR, OF THE CALIFORNIA CONFERENCE. AUTHOR OF "SEVEN YEARS' STREET PREACHING IN SAN FRANCISCO." "INFANCY AND MANHOOD OF CHRISTIAN LIFE," THE MODEL PREACHER," " ADDRESS TO YOUNG AMERICA," RECONCILIATION: OR, HOW TO BE SAVED," ETC. When a traveller returneth home, let him not leave. the countries where he hath travelled altogether behind him. Lord Bacon. Then shalt thou, lay up gold as dust, and the gold of Ophir as the stones of brooks."-JoB xxii, 24. SIXTEEN ENGRAVINGS NEW EDITION, REVISED AND CORRECTED, COMPLETING AN 1SSUE OF THIRTY- TWO THOUSAND. NEW YORK: PHILLIPS & HUNT. CINCINNATI: WALDEN & STOWE. [end of page f864t25_003.gif] PREFACE. 53,4358 THE, best recommendation of the former editions of this is the fact that 34,000 copies have been sold. This new edition contains a supplement exhibiting California as it is now, in contrast with what it was thirty years ago-one of the most striking, contrasts in the history of the world. [end of page f864t25_004.gif] CONTENTS. CHAPTER I MISSIONARY LIFE. First View of California Coast-Entrance through the Golden Gate"Let go the Anchor- Lassoing a Bullock- Wonderful California News by Mr. M. - Prices - Wages - Gold - Gamblers - One Church and that a Jail - One Preacher and he a Gambler First Impressions of San Francisco - The Canvas City - Vain Search for Methodists - 11 No such Creatures in the Place"- Bark Hebe, Captain Stetson - His Men left to the Mercy of the Patagonian Indians -Their Rescue J. H. Merrill-" Brother Finley" -John Troubody -Father White's Family-Shanty with Blue Cover,-First Sermon -First Class-Meeting - Its Peculiarities - Palmer J. Whiting, the Shepherd Boy - Our Oregon Chapel - No House for the Preacher - Captain Otis Webb, the noble Outsider - John B. Seidenstricker - His Dreams and Hardware -Collins and Cushman - Life in the Redwoods - Preacher building a House - Carpenter's Wages- Home - Rats- Garden--~' Greens ffty Cents a Fork"- Chickens ~ Milk -Egg Currency -Cheap Cow Hard Winter, etc PAGE 13 CHAPTER II. MISSIONARY LIFE-CONTINUED. Oregon and California Mission Conference -The Superintendent -Gambler's Donation -Preacher taken down by a Stage Actor -Captaln Gelson - Church Lots out of Town -- Dedication of First Methodist Episcopal Church -Rev. William H. Hatch 11 in the Lurch"Bal [end of page f864t25_005.gif] 6 CONTENTS. timore California Chapel -Early Church Organizations, and Pioneer Missionaries -Revs. T. Dwight Hunt, 0. C. Wheeler, S. Woodbridge, (Where is the Capital of California?) J. W. Douglass, S. H. Willey, Alfred Williams, J. A. Benton, Drs. Vermehr and Mines -Stranger's Friend Society - Charity Hospital - City Fathers - Sacrifice of City Property - San Francisco Bible Society - Colonel M'Kee, Indian Agent -Number of Indians in California - Their Colonization PAGE 52 CHAPTER III MISSIONARY LIFE - CONTINUED. First Quarterly Meeting-Salary of Preacher-Rev. J. Doane -First Preaching to the Gamblers - Infant Society - Its Peculiarities - Scarcity of Females - The Pioneer Family - Alfred Love and the Grizzly Bear -Specimen Members of our First Society: John Troubody, Willet M' Cord, L. F. Budd, (who wouldn't rent his House to a Rum-seller,) Alexander Hatler, J. B. Bond, D. L. Ross, R. P. Spier, W. H. Coddington, (the Sabbath-keeping Butcher,) Robert Beeching, (the MusiCian who wouldn't play for thirty Dollars per Night,) Isaac Jones, (who would rather starve than set Type on Sunday)- Early Local Preachers - Exhorters - Class-leaders - Second Class organized - First Sunday-school -First Watch-meeting- Arrival of "the Methodist Company"- Their Shipwreck in the Bay- Calvin Lathrop Wheeling Firewood-The "Darkey" who struck the Gold Lead in Negro Hill 77 CHAPTER IV. MISSIONARY LIFE-CONTINUED. First Visit to Sacramento City - Band of Elk - Dr. Grove W. Deal - Rev. Isaac Owen - Sufferings of his, Family - Rev. James Corwin - Preaching in the Baltimore California Chapel -Flood of Waters -City Submerged - Chapel swept from its Foundations - Stock drowned - Liberality Of SteAmboat Companies - Mules not preachers - Rev. Mr. Owen's Family driven by the Flood to San Francisco - 44 Sister Merchant " - Presiding Elder st a Washtub -The smoking Preacher who wouldn't help his wife - J. Bennett - First visit to San Jose and [end of page f864t25_006.gif] CONTENTS. Santa Cruz - 11 In the Mud') - Early Settlers of San Jose - First Itin erant Horse - His " ups and downs" - Asa Finley- Chicken for Break fast-California Shepherd Dogs-Mountain Scenery-First Church Arbitration -First "Protracted Meeting' I in Santa Cruz -Lost in the Night - Waked up the Indians - Prayed with the Gamblers - A Night with the Hunters - Return Home PAge 104 CHAPTER V. MISSIONARY LIFE-CONTINUED. 'A Screw loose" with Sister Merchant-She claims the Preacher's House-Lights and Shades of Insanity - Daniel Webster's Private Secretary in the Hospital -Insane Asylum in Stockton- - Preacher's Trunk broken open in Daylight He fell on his Knees and begged us to kill him Itinerant Horse eating Ray at fifteen Cents a Pound - "Book Concern of the Pacific" -Death of Rev. Mr. Owen's Daughter - Rev. William Roberts - Death of William H. Stevens - " Daddy's dead, and I don't know what to do with him" -Dr. Deal in the Legislature - New Church - Horse-race - Shark -catching -Hospital Scenes -Clearing the Track for old Grizzly - Quarterly Meeting in Santa Cruz - 11 The Stranger taken in" - Arrival of Missionaries from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South -Two Methodist Organizations - J. D. Hoppe - Birthday Reflections 182 CHAPTER V1. SOCIAL LIFE IN CALIFORNIA. Its Nature and essential Conditions - The latter wanting -Adam's single Wretchedness - His ten thousand California Sons - Tearful Adieus -Telescope of manifest Destiny -Initiation of 11 Green-horns" - California, Lodging-house -Bunks -Third Plague of Egypt-Blankets passed round-Rev. Mr. Trumbull and the Fleas- Ranches -Social Life "dried up" -Why? -Despondent ones-Mr. P.'s Bonnets Men didn't want them -Hole in Captain Wooley's Pocket- Money leaked out - Shanty robbed - Dog-days - "Every Dog has his Day" -S. S. dying on the Sand-hill-H. S. in the Station-house-Substitutes for Wives, Sisters, and Daughters -The Harmonious Family - [end of page f864t25_007.gif] 8 CONTENTS. Social Life superseded by Excitement -Excitants -Ordinary and Extraordinary-Prices -Wages-" Big Lumps," etc.-Tippling -Gambling - Great Ventures - House of the strange Woman - Soiree - Temple 0, Virtue-Sunday Amusements-The Mission- Russ's Garden - Oakland Horse-racing Bear and Bull-fighting- Specimen of Ethics -Dueling PAGE 161 CHAPTER VII SOCIAL LIFE -CONTINUED. Sunday Traffic-Liberal Catholic- Excursions - Dog-fight -Going to Heaven by Steamboat- 11 The Sagamore -Her Explosion - Horrible Tragedy -Philip Groves - Fandangoes - Circuses, Monkey Shows, etc. - Excitants extraordinary - Political Mass-meetings' etc. - Lynch Law- Ship Challenge -Captain W.'s " Persuader 1---11 New Diggings Gold Bluffs"- Pacific Mining Company - Gold by th& Ship-load - Dr. H. on " Short Allowance ll- Letters from Home - Joseph Stocker - Bachelors - Written Order for a Wife - Courting by Proxy - Mar riage on Sight- Disproportion of the Sexes - Great Evil - Men newly Rigged - D. 0. Shattuck's Family on the Wreck of the 11 North Amer ica'-Arrival of Families and betrothed Ones -Disappointment and Agony -Variety of touching Scenes 184 CHAPTER VIII HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. Depot Of Death- Preacher begging to see his dying Brothers - The old Tar' " Pay R00ms 17~44 Lower Wards 17 - Careless Nurses - Dreadful Disease Prevailing Mortality -I'Dead Cart -Captain Lock Sleeping with Corpses-44Foul Play with the Dying"-Captain Welch refusing to have his Leg cut off-John Purseglove scrambling away from Death- charity of the Church_ Free-Masons - Odd-Fel lows scurvy Patients-Medicine froin the Sand-hills-Grateful "Spaniard Hopefulness and Hopelessness of Death-bed Repentance - United States Marine Hospital Doctor M'Millen Preaching in the Dining Room Conversion of J.H. Perry 217 [end of page f864t25_008.gif] contents. CHAPTER IX. EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. Former Ideas of I I Californy " -Impression of early Emigrants-Vast Desert-Adventurous Farmers-Potato Mania like Gold Fever-John had "no Idea the World was so big"-Comparitive Extent of California -Agricultural Resources- Statistical Exhibit of Products in 1856,1 Some Punkins"-Three Dollar Apple- Fruit ~a~ind Fruit Trees Grapes-Live Stock-Wild Game-Fisheries--Lumber Business Number and Cost of Saw-Mills-Number and Cost of Grist-mills Manufactories of various Kinds- -Ferries and Bridges--Mineral Products: Silver, Copper, Iron, Magnetic Iron, Platinum, Chromium, Gypsum, Nickel, Antimony, Cinnabar, Bitumen, Coal, Marble, Granite, Buhr Stones, and Gold -Discovery of Gold, and aggregate Yield to the present Time- -Various Modes of Mining illustratedNumber and Cost; of Quartz-mills-'- Rich Diggins "-Length and Cost of Canals and Ditches-" California Register PAGE 247 CHAPTER X. CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. Seed-time and Harvest -Surishine and Showers -Extremes of Heat and Cold -Remarkable Transparency of the Atmosphere- Thunderstorms out of the Question- Advantages of the Dry SeasonIllustrative Burlesque, how the " Yankee's Dog lost his Tail. "_ "Pilot Peak"-" Jo's" extraordinary Adventures- Singular Case of Freezing to Death-A Sagacious Dog -Rev. S. D. Simonds in a Snowstorm-J. A. Brooks-His Conversion-His 'Ministerial Labours-His Courtship -His Tragical End -Climate of Unrivalled Excellence . I PAGE. 277 CHAPTER XI. LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. Industry of the 'Miners -Faith, Hope, Energy-" Live Yankee Com pany~-" Good Prospects"-' Miner's Orphan Boy ~Not all success ful - why? - Packing - Prospecting - Social Condition - Effect [end of page f864t25_009.gif] 10 CONTENTS. of Female Influence-Moral Condition-.Not anxious to go to Heaven -Stage-coach and Elijah's Horses -How they keep Sunday Meetings and Laws- Best Christian in the Mountains -Preaching at Long Bar-Old Captain wouldn't pray- Congregation got drunk Their Liberality-Preacher Merchant-His back Door ajar on Sunday -His Bar- Success- Reverses -Brother H.'s Store-Wouldn't sell on 8unday- Called an old Fool-" Boys " advertised him -Made his 11 Pile "-Good Qualities of Miners -Liberality -Contempt for mean little Things -Thb live Chicken Roaster-His Sentence--- Alameda Butcher -No, Riots in California as; in Eastern Cities- -Riot in Wash ington City.-'Murder of a Miner's Wife -Murderer hung by Judge Lynch- Hanging of Jenkins-Better Day coming- Freedom of Speech-Night Preaching in the Streets of Sonora and Jamestown Opposition Line-Permanence of 'Mining Operations -Success ot the Gospel-Improvement ol. Society-Fall of the Gambling Goliah- Better Observance of the Sabbath PAge, 304 CHAPTER XII CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. God's two leading Modes, of Evangelizing the World- Importance of Foreign Missions- A. M. Brown -A Persecutor-Dying with Cholera in Constantinople -Picked up by a MissionARy-Converted-A Preacher-Sent to the Sandwich Islands-God's grand Design in sending Heathens to the Gospel- Success of Home Missions among the, Africans~ Scandinavians, Germans, ete.-Representatives of all Nations in California-Effiect of Yankee Civilization- -John Chinaman "just same von Melican Man"-Preaching in M'Ginnis's Store Chinese Reporter-Translation, of his Notes-The Gospel preached to the Representives of all Nations at once-Scene described in the "A nnals of San Francisco -Text recorded in the Sand-bank Keeper of the Gate to Hell-Whisky Barrel Pulpit-Great Variety of the Audience-11 What's the News?"-Slighted Irishman-St. Patrick -Italian, Refugees -Defence of Spanish Boy -Maltese-Manilla, Men's Donation, to the Preacher-The Prussian-" De Handt of Got is on me"- De pig Snake--" De Debil'-His Conversion-Shipped "to go and,tell Mudder"-Methodist Kanakas.-Obstructions--ultimate triumph PAGE 331 [end of page f864t25_010.gif] CONTENTS 11 CHAPTER XIII. STATISTICS. Modern California life in Contrast to the Olden Times -Agricultural Products - Manufactories - Mineral Resources, Operations, and Products in Gold. Silver, Coal, Copper, Quicksilver, Borax, aud Sulphur Ship Building - California Railroads-Great Central Pacific Railroad -The Company's Charter and Route.-What has been done-Means for Construction, its present Operations and Prospects -Progress and Education in California - Development of Physical Resources - Internal Improvements - Religious Life and Need of the Californians PAGE 3 [end of page f864t25_011.gif] LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. ENTRANCE TO THE GOLDEN GATE .............................................2 SAN FRANCISCO IN 1849 {1849/00/00}, FROM THE HEAD OF CLAY- STREET 18 A STREET SCENE ON A RAINY NIGHT 46 INTERIOR OF THE ELDORADO 79 SACRAMENTO CITY 105 CALIFORNIA LODGING-ROOM 166 CITY OF OAKLAND 181 CITY HALL ON FEBRUARY 22, 1851;{1851/02/22} 191 THE POST -OFFICE, CORNER OF PIKE AND CLAY STREETS 202 ARRIVAL OF A STEAMSHIP 212 UNITED STATES MARINE HOSPITAL 242 NEW WORLD MARKET, CORNER OF COMMERCIAL AND LEIDSDORFF STREETS 258 SUTTER'S MILL 266 HANGING OF JENKINS ON THE PLAZA 325 CHINESE FEMALES 340 CHINESE MERCHANTS 344 [end of page f864t25_012.gif] CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. CHAPTER I. MISSIONARY LIFE On the 21st day of September, 1849 {1849/09/21}, the captain of our noble ship said We are now in latitude about five miles north of the Golden Gate. Never having entered the port of San Francisco, I thought it best to run a few miles north, and feel my way down the coast till I could find the entrance." We could at that moment distinctly hear the breakers, but were enveloped in so dense a fog that the men at the look-out could not see the length of the ship ahead. The breeze was dying away, and to proceed on our course was very hazardous, for if we should get too far in shore," and have no wind to enable us to tack, and wear off, a current setting in might carry us on to the rocks. We therefore stood off " a while, hoping the fog would rise., but [end of page f864t25_013.gif] 14 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. it did not. The breeze, however, sprang up a little, and Captain Wilson said "We'll head on toward those breakers, and see what we can find. That shrill command, "'Bout ship," sent a thrill of commingled hope and fear to the hearts of the entire ships company. There we were, in untried seas, running through a fog, which utterly darkened the field of vision - in every direction, right toward the breakers, whose thunder pealed its warning notes into our cars with increasing distinctness as we advanced. But we had unshaken confidence in the skill of our commander, and said, "Go on." We had tried him, during a long voyage round Cape Horn; had witnessed his perfect self-possession as he stood amid the wreck of our masts and rigging which had been thrown down in tangled prostration on the deck of our noble ship by the sudden burst ,of a "white squall; had seen him convert his deck into a shipyard, and make masts, yards, and rigging, and refit, without putting into port, or losing a days sail; and again we said to our grand old captain in the fog, Go on." So on and on we went till, as suddenly as. striking a sunken reef, we ran out of the darkness into the brightest day of Californias sunshine. The whole coast, as far as the eye could reach, was, in a moment, spread out to the rapturous gaze of one, hundred, passengers, who had not seen the land but once for one hundred and [end of page f864t25_014.gif] 15 MISSIONARY LIFE fifty-five days. The scene was transporting beyond description. There lay the land we had longed. for; over us, were the brightest skies we ever had seen; around us were myriads of ducks and pelicans, and other fowls of the sea in vast variety. Beneath us were several whales spouting and playing about,.our ship, often coming within thirty feet of us. Some of the passengers discharged their revolvers at them. witbout any apparent effect. Thus entertained we sailed down the coast, ran without a pilot through the Golden Gate,* and just as the sun was sinking below the horizon of the great Pacific our sails were. furled, and the command was given, let go the anchor During our voyage of Five months and three days we heard no tidings from California, except at. Valparaiso. There we were informed, by "The latest news from San Francisco," that lawless anarchy reigned, that there was no security for life or property, and that the few families who had the had fortune to go to California had been obliged to leave, not excepting even the family of the territorial governor. Such news reminded me of the I sayings of some of my friends, who had charged me with cruelty for taking my family to that barbarous land. Under these., circumstances we were all very anx *see Frontispiece [end of page f864t25_015.gif] 16 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ious to know the facts about California life. The first thing that arrested our attention after flnding our moorings, by way of variety, after the frequent shouts of Sail ho!" or, A whale! a whale!" was the lassooing of a bullock on the north side of Telegraph Hill," then a wild wood, now a populous part of the city of San Francisco. It was now too late for the passengers to go ashore that night, all being strangers in a strange land; but soon a Mr. M., a brother of one of our passengers, boarded our ship, and we all gathered around him to hear the news.He brought marvelous things to our ears. No war in the country, but peace and plenty, and fortunes for all who could work or gamble expertly that clerks were getting in San Francisco two hundred dollars per month, cooks three hundred per month ; the gamblers were the aristocracy of the land; gambling being the most profitable, hence the most respectable business a man could follow. I asked the gentleman whether or not there were any ministers of the Gospel or churches in the place? "Yes," said he, "we have one preacher, but preaching dont pay here, so he quit preaching and went to gambling. There is but one church in town, and that has been converted into a jail." Some one told him that I was a minister, and had the frame of a church aboard. He advised by all means to sell the church, assuring me that I could [end of page f864t25_016.gif] Page 17 is blank. [Plate entitled: San Francisco in 1849, From the head of Clay Street.] [end of page f864t25_018.jpg] MSSIONARY LIFE. 19 make nothing out of it as a church, but I could sell it for ten thousand dollars. I told him my church was not for sale. I afterward found his assertions in regard to wages true; in regard to the gamblers nearly true; but his ecclesiastical history false, except that the school-house on the Plaza, which had been used as a preaching place, was then used for a jail. With our evening repast of news from Mr. M. we retired to rest, hoping on' the morrow to spy out the land ourselves. The next morning, Saturday, September 22, {1849/09/22} I went ashore in company with Captain Wilson and Robert Kellan. When we reached the summit of the hill above Clark's Point, we stopped and took a view of the city of tents. Not a brick house in the place, and but few wooden oners, and not. a wharf or pier in the harbor. But for a few old adobe houses, it would, have been easy to imagine that the whole city was pitched the evening before for the accommodation of a vast caravan for the night; for the city now contained a population of about twenty thousand, and I felt oppressed with the fear that under the influence of the gold attraction of the mountains, those tents might all be struck some morning, and the city suddenly leave its moorings for parts unknown. But my business ashore was to see whether I could find any lovers of Jesus, and, especially, any bearing the name of Methodist, who could tell me how the land [end of page f864t25_019.gif] 20 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. lay, and of the whereabouts of my fellow-missionary, Rev. Isaac Owen, who had started with his family over the plains" before I sailed from Baltimore, and whom I expected to find on my arrival. I was in. troduced to the business firms of Dewitt & Harrison, Bingham, Reynolds, & Co., and Finley & Co., and Spoke to many other persons; and everywhere I went made diligent inquiry whether or not there were any Methodists in the city? but everywhere learned that no such creatures lived in the place, or if they had neither seen nor beard of them. After prosecuting my fruitless Methodist hunt till noonday, I fell in with Captain Stetson, master of the bark Rebe, from Baltimore, and accepted his invita-- tion, to dine with him aboard his vessel. I had seen his passengers as. they embarked in Baltimore for the land of gold," and saw him set sail on his California voyage, and listened now with mournful interest to the captains narrative of his eventful and in some respects In attempting to pass through the Straits of Magellan he had been obliged to cast ,anchor, and await a favorable wind to enable him to While there, some of his to go a-shore. I believe there were seven of them who had taken their guns to have a little pleasure on the shores of Patagonia. But during their absence arose, which swept the bark from her moorings. She dragged her [end of page f864t25_020.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 21 anchors until her chains parted, and was then driven before the blast into the Atlantic Ocean. All the captain's earnest efforts to get back to his lost men proved ineffectual. Having no anchors left he could not make a near approach to the land, in that stormy region, so he was under the painful necessity of leaving his adventurous sportsmen to the rigors of a Cape Horn winter, and to the tender mercies of the Patagonian Indians, considered the most merciless of their kind. Happily-, however, for the poor fellows, after enduring great sufferings from cold, hunger, and Indian barbarity, they finally escaped in a vessel that was passing through the Straits, At Valparaiso the captain supphed his bark with anchors. While there he became acquainted with Rev. Dr. Vermelir, en, route to California as a missionary from. The Protestant Episcopal Church. The doctor and his family had been so hadly treated on the ship in wbieb they had rounded the Cape, that the good people of Valparaiso made up a purse for the doctor, and secured a passage for himself and family to San Francisco in the bark Hebe. Captain Stetson, as a Christian gentleman, brought them on, in comfort, to their destination. After dinner I again went ashore, and renewed my Metliodist search. Hearing one speak of Merrill's2 Hotel, I was reminded of a published letter [end of page f864t25_021.gif] 22 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. I had read, from the pen of Rev. William Roberts, giving an account of his short sojourn to San Francisco, on his way, as missionary to Oregon, in 1847 {1847/00/00} ; and of his having organized a little Sunday school here, appointing J. H. Merrill superintendent. It occurred to me that this might be the same Merrill; so I hastened to find Merrill's Hotel, on Stockton street, where the City Hospital now stands. Finding Mr. Merrill, I ascertained sure enough was the man referred to by Brother Roberts. He said he was not a Methodist himself, but he knew of a number of them in the city; and yonder," said he, "is their new church, pointing to an uncovered frame on a neighboring hill. There is a Methodist family," continued be, there in that adobe house; and Mr. Finley, the head of the family, is sick, and I have no doubt would be glad to see you." I will be pleased to call on them," said I. So Mr. Merrill went with me, and introduced me to brother and sister Finley. I was delighted that I had found at least one good Methodist family in and talked very freely with Brother about the interests of our common Methodism on the Pacific coast, and asked them many questions. I then had a good season of prayer at the bedside of Brother Finley; after which they frankly informed me that I was mistaken in [end of page f864t25_022.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 23 regard to their Church relationship; that they were ffot Methodists exactly, but Campbellites. I covered my disappointment as well as I could, but felt glad that I had made their acquaintance, for I had come to the conclusion that they were a kind and good family, whatever they might be called; an opinion I have never changed during a subsequent acquaintance of seven years. As I was taking my leave of these my first Methodist acquaintances, I was met at the door by a plain-looking man, five feet eight, and was introduced to him as Brother John Troubody. He is a Methodist," said Sister Finley with a smile; and such I found him to be, a truebody in every respect, true as a personal friend, and true to the interests of the Church. He introduced me to Rev. O. C. Wheeler, the Baptist minister of the city, who invited me to fill his pulpit the next day at 11 A. M. Brother Troubody then introduced me to Brother Asa White's family. Brother White was a local preacher from Illinois, more recently from Oregon. His sons and daughters, of whom he had a large family, were sociable and kind, and were all, except two small boys, members of the Church. They lived in the woods, in Washington-street, near Powell, in the neighborhood of where our chapel was being built. Their habitation was a small rough board house, one story high, covered with blue cotton cloth. It was [end of page f864t25_023.gif] 24 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. known in familiar Methodist parlance, as the shanty with the blue cover, and was the rallying point of Methodism in the city, where the prayer and class-meetings were held every Sabbath, conducted by Brother White, who had authority from Rev. William Roberts, the superintendent of the Oregon and California Mission Conference," to do the best he could in collecting and holding the little society together till the missionary should arrive. Brother Roberts organized a small class in San Francisco in 1841{1841/00/00}, on his way to Oregon. The class consisted of Alexander Hatler and wife, Aquila Glover and wife, and three or four others. Brother Glover was appointed the leader, but being a timid man, he never led the class after Brother Roberts left, and no class-meetings were held there, as Brother Hatler and others informed me, till the spring of 1849 {1849/00/00}, when Brother White arrived from Oregon. he settled his family first in a blue tent, in the woods, near the corner of Jackson and Mason streets. Into this tent the scattered sheep were immediately gathered, . and regular class-meetings were held from that time. Elihu Anthony, a local preacher, who lived a short time in the city, and settled in Santa Cruz, assisted in these meetings, but Brother White was the responsible leader. The class numbered, upon my arrival, about twenty and the traveling Methodist adventurers [end of page f864t25_024.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 25 made an additional average attendance of about thirty. At Brother White's I received a letter from Brother Roberts, informing me that I was appointed to San Francisco, and that my fellow-missionary, Brother Owen, was "appointed to Sacramento City and Stockton." Altogether that was to me an afternoon of thrilling interest, and contrasted hopefully with the unfruitful efforts of my forenoon adventure. I returned to our ship in the evening with a full budget of news for the entertainment of my waiting family. Oceana, our beautiful little missionary girl, born on the South Atlantic, off Rio' de la Plata," in the region of pamperos and storms, was now about three months old. Native country she had none; the sea had been her home, the land she had never yet seen. Her mother, nearly exhausted monotonous wear and tear of sea life, and the wasting effects of chronic diarrhea, was hardly able to walk ashore, but the idea of getting off ship, and of finding a resting-place on the land, was so exhilarating that the next morning, Sunday, September 23d {1849/09/23}, she accompanied me to Mr. Wheeler's church on Washington-street, where I preached on the divinity of Jesus, from the text, " What think ye of Christ?" There was profound attention and good order dur- [end of page f864t25_025.gif] 26 CALIFORNIA LIF E ILLUSTRATED. ing the sermon, with one exception. A rough-looking man, a little beyond the meridian of life, seemed to take offense at my arguments in favor of the divinity of Christ, and cried out in the midst of my discourse "I don't believe it! I don't believe it!" Wait, my old friend, " said I, till I get through, and let us take it one at a time." But he continued to mutter to those about him I till Mr. Wheeler arose and commanded him to hush instantly or leave the house! He'got up abruptly, and walked out, and I proceeded. That occasion was to me, and I believe to many, a "season of refreshing from the presence of the Lord." We dined with Brother Troubody, who then lived in a small house on Washington-street. He soon afterward built the first brick dwelling in the city, on the corner of Washington and Powell streets; a four-story house, about twenty-six by fifty feet, in which be still lives. At three P. M. we attended class-meeting in the shanty with the blue cover." The place was full of men, and many stood outside the door. Their experiences were characterized, by originality, freshness, and thrilling interest. Some had crossed the plains;" from a voyage round Cape Horn; others were some had, on their passage across the Isthmus, seen scores of their friends swept away by the malignant [end of page f864t25_026.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 27 fevers of Panama. All had seen sights, encountered dangers, made hairbreadth escapes from death, and they were overflowing with gratitude that out of all the Lord had brought them by his love." All had loved ones far away, who had been praying for them. Their prayers had been answered ; but their friends did not dream that they, in California, were in a Methodist class-meeting. They thought that California was but another name for Pandemonium; that nothing could be done there without the consent of the god of the country, alias, the devil; and that he never would allow a Methodist class-meeting to be held there. Indeed they could hardly believe the testimony of their own senses, and realize that in California they were then enjoying an old-fashioned class-meeting. I will note an experience or two as a specimen. Palmer, from New-York, said I used to be happy in God, but I backslid. When I departed from the Lord I got into trouble, and the further I went from him the more my troubles increased. Everything seemed to go ill. with me, so I made up my mind to leave New-York and make a voyage round Cape Horn to California, and thus get rid of my troubles. But I had been out to sea but a few days when I found, to my sorrow, that I had brought all my troubles with me, and left all my comforts behind. My health was had, my head and heart [end of page f864t25_027.gif] 28 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. were sick, and my distress became intolerable. I then remembered that Jesus had said Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest;' so I carried my burden to Jesus, and he took away my load of guilt and sorrow. Glory be to his name, forever! We had a long, tedious voyage, but my soul has been happy in God. As soon as I came ashore I inquired where I could find a Methodist class-meeting. I happily fell in with a man who pointed out this cabin, and said 'That is the place you are hunting for. Brethren, I was so glad to bear of such a place in California that I could hardly wait to walk up the bill to get here. I ran, and O how sweet it is, after being cooped up with the wicked during a long voyage round Cape Horn, to get to such a place as this I It is heaven to my soul! Glory be to God I" The old man, with repeated exclamations of "Glory to God!" took his seat and wept aloud. They were tears of joy and gladness. After leading the class inside the shanty," I led the outsiders, among whom I found James Whiting, a native of Buenos Ayres, South America, who had been converted to God through the instrumentality of our missionary there, Rev. D. D. Lore. James told us a simple, sensible, touching story of his life as a shepherd boy in orphanage. He was brought up with the sheep, lived' among them, [end of page f864t25_028.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 29 slept among them in the open field; and while watching his flocks by night" had often gazed I at the stars, and thought of God, but saw no star to point him to Bethlehem. His soul was in darkness until the missionary found him and led him to Jesus. He had descended from American parents, but had never before trod North American soil, nor mingled with his Father's brethren in a class-meeting; and though there was no room for him in the house, he was contented to stand outside and listen, for he would rather be a door-keeper in the house of God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness." Being perfectly familiar with the Spanish language, be became a valuable helper in my work; sometimes going with me through the hospitals to talk to sick Spaniards about Jesus, and occasionally exhorting the Spanish portion of my street audiences, and giving them 'Bibles and tracts in their own language. He is still a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church in San Francisco, and doing well. That was a class-meeting never to be forgotten. The rustic appearance of the men, and the pointed, lively impression of their narratives on my mind, are in my memory like a favorite old picture, to which tbe successive roll of years adds but increasing interest. We spent the following week in learning California prices and modes of life, and in trying to secure a house in which to live. Captain Wilson kindly invited [end of page f864t25_029.gif] 30 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. us to remain aboard ship until we could make arrangements for housekeeping, and allowed us the free use of his boat in passing to and from the land. The lowest price of boat hire for the shortest distance was one dollar per passenger. We learned prices in part by little experinients in buying. Mrs. Taylor said to a dealer in potatoes How much do you ask per peck for your potatoes?" We sell nothing by measure here," replied he, for man or beast. Everything is bought and sold by weight, maam." Well, what do you ask per pound for potatoes?" "Fifty cents per pound, ma'am." "I'll; take a pound to begin with," said she, laying down the money; and be gave her for fifty cents but one potato. I priced some South American apples, nearly as tough as leather; fifty cents apiece. We ascertained that fresh beef was selling for fifty cents per pound; dried apples, seventy-five cents per pound; Oregon butter, two dollars fifty cents per pound ; flour, fifty dollars per barrel; and provisions of every kind pro-portionably high. None of these things moved us, however, for we had brought with us a year's supply of all the substantials of life. The only difficulty with us was to get a house in which to live. Rev. O. C. Wheeler, I learned, was paying five hundred dollars a month rent for such a house as we needed, a small [end of page f864t25_030.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 31 one-and-a-half story house, containing four or five rooms. That was frightful, for I only had money enough, including the missionary appropriation for our support for a year-seven hundred and fifty dollars to pay rent, at that rate, for about two months. There stood in the neighborhood of our chapel a one-story rough board shanty, about twelve feet square, with a shed roof of the same material, promising, altogether, but very little protection from the storms of approaching winter; but I thought as a last resort I would try and get my wife and babes into it till something better could be obtained. I learned that the rent for the shanty was forty dollars per month. I immediately apphed for it, but lo! it had been secured for the personal occupancy of a reverend Episcopal brother, in "the regular succession;" and I, a poor irregular, was left to do the best I could. I then spoke of building a little house, but lumber was selling for from three hundred to four hundred dollars per thousand feet. To pay such prices, and, build a house with my little stock of funds was out of the question. In the mean time I had my household goods and provisions taken ashore, paid ten dollars per drayload to have them hauled up on the, hill near the chapel, and there they lay piled up in the open air for a fortnight. That was prior to the advent of petty rogues in California. [end of page f864t25_031.gif] 32 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. On my second Sabbath, at eleven A. M., I again occupied the pulpit of Brother Wheeler, and had a gracious meeting. At three P. M. we had another great class-meeting in the shanty with the blue cover. " Many of the brethren with whom we had prayed, and sung, and shouted the Sabbath before had gone to parts unknown; but a new recruit had come in of the same sort. After class the question was raised, "How shall our preacher get a house to live in?" It was decided that the only way was to build one; and then an effort was made in the class to see how much could be raised toward that desirable end. But the sojourners were strapped, and the resident brethren had subscribed all they felt able to give toward the chapel, and could do but little for a parsonage, so the effort resulted in a subscription amounting to twenty-seven dollars, perhaps enough to buy the nails and binges. The prospect for a residence in the land of our adoption, as we supposed for life, was very dark; but I never had doubted that God sent me to California, and felt a comfortable assurance that in some way he would provide for us. Captain Otis Webb, son of old Father Daniel Webb of the Providence Conference, though nothing himself but a high-minded outsider, (the Lord bless the outsiders ! I have found among them some of the best friends I ever had in my life,) hearing of our situa-tion sent its word that he was building a house near [end of page f864t25_032.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 33 our chapel, which would be finished in a week, and that we were welcome to the use of it, rent free, for a month. So after remaining a fortnight in port aboard ship, enjoying the hospitality of Captain Wilson, we moved into the new house of Captain Webb, a one-and-a-half story house, containing five rooms, and would have rented for about four hundred dollars a month. Thus the evil day, in regard to shelter, was postponed for a month at least. We were, however, without fireplace or stove; but, through a propitious dream of John B. Seidenstricker, of Baltimore city, we had a supply of table furniture, and some good ovens and skillets. About the time of our appointment as missionaries to California, John dreamed one night that he had given us free access to his hardware store for a supply of everything we might need in our new home; so in the morning when be awoke he dressed himself, and hastened immediately to us his dream and give it a practical fulfillment, which he did with a free good-will. The Lord bless him! It was neither the first nor the last act of Christian kindness we have received at his hand. So building' a camp-fire out of doors, we brought our ovens and skillets into use. That did pretty well until the rains began to descend upon us, and then for a sick wife to stand over a drowning fire was not exactly the thing. We had room in doors for a stove, but a small cooking-stove was worth at least one hundred dollars. [end of page f864t25_033.gif] 34 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Happily for us in this emergence, the firm of Collins & Cushman, in San Francisco, presented us with a good new cooking-stove, just the thing we then most needed. I paid three dollars per joint for the necessary pipe, and five dollars for a common tin coffee-pot. The question now was, What shall we do at the end of the month?" Some said, as the Missionary Society had sent us there they would be bound to support us. I replied that the Missionary Society Never had, and never could support a man at California rates; that my rent alone for a year would be about five thousand dollars, to say nothing of other expenses; that the society, moreover, was in debt, and that I never expected to draw on them for a dollar while in California. I said to the brethren that if nothing better opened I would take my ax and wedge, and go to the Redwoods, fifteen miles dis-tant across the bay, and get out lumber for a house, And build it myself. They said I could not do it; but could suggest no other way of getting a house. A brother who had located from the traveling ranks to try his fortunes in California, said " Poor Brother Taylor will work himself sick, and that will end the matter. It had been better for him to come to California on his own hook as I did.') I said that I had come in the order of Providence, and that I did not believe that God would allow my family to suffer for want of shelter. [end of page f864t25_034.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 35 I saw no other way, however, but to go to the Redwoods,- and leave the result with the Lord. Alexander Hatler, a brother from Missouri, who, with his good wife, had emigrated to that land before gold was discovered, said he would go with me, and help me get out lumber. So on Tuesday, the 10th of October {1849/10/10}, we set sail for the Redwoods, in company with some of Father White's family, who had a shanty in the woods, where the old man and his sons spent much of their time, getting out and hauling lumber. We landed where the town of San Antonia is now located. We then had five miles to walk, and climb a mountain, carrying our packs of blankets, provisions, and working tools. We reached the shanty a little after dark. Brother Hatler and I put our stock of provisions into the family mess, and were admitted as guests, with the privilege of wrapping in our own blankets, and sleeping on the ground, under the common shelter. After supper we listened to Father White's thrilling backwoods stories till bedtime; and then at the family altar we made the tall forests vocal with our song of praise. The next morning Brother Hatler and I found a large log that some woodsman had abandoned, which we thought could be worked to good advantage. We drove all our wedges into it but [end of page f864t25_035.gif] 36 CALIFORNIA LIF E ILLUSTRATED. could not split it, so it took us till noon to chop our wedges out. A heavy rain then set in, which continued till the next morning. On Thursday we worked till noon on another log. Being very large we had to bore it, and burst it open with powder; but it was too cross-grained for our purpose. We then selected a large tree, and chopped at it till dark. The next morning brought our giant of the forest to the ground; but, alas! we could not work it. It was difficult to find a tree with straight grain and easy to split; but the trees, were so large, many of thern measuring twelve feet in diameter, that when a good one was opened it yielded almost a yardful of lumber. But we did not succeed in getting the right tree. On Friday P. M. we returned to the landing, so as to take the land breeze early on'Saturday morning,and be in the city in time for the appointuieilts of the Sabbath. We lay on, the beach that night, in the open air, to gaze at the stars, listen to the howling Of the coyotes, (a small species of wolf,) or the gabble of multiphed thousands of wild geese, and the quacking of wild ducks, or meditate, or sleep, as we felt inclined. I took my turn at each of these, especially the last The city brethren were not at all disappointed with the result of out trip to the woods. It was just as they expected; but I surprised them by telling [end of page f864t25_036.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 0 37 them that I was not at all discouraged, and meant to try it again the next week. That was my fourth Sabbath in the city, and the second to preach in our new chapel. It was crowded that day, and we had a memorable season. I made provision for my appointments on the following Sabbath, so as not to be under the necessity of returning from the woods for a fortnight. Brother Hatler could not leave his business to return with me to the Redwoods, so I had to depend on my own muscles and skill alone. That week I wrought very hard, and was a little seared one night, as the following extract from my journal will show "Friday, October 19, 1849 {1849/10/19}.-We are here on the territory of grizzly bears and wild cats, which are frequently seen by the wood-choppers. I had some expectation of a visit from a grizzly last night. We butchered a calf in the evening, which we had. purchased from a Spaniard, and had it in the shanty. I lay before the open door, and thought if bruin should come in to get some veal I would have the honor of his first salutation. But, thought I, the God who saved me from the dangers of the deep will surely keep the bears off me. With these reflections I fell into a sweet sleep. "After mid-night I was suddenly awakened by a poise outside the hut. I sprang up, saying to myself There the bear, sure enough when in he came; [end of page f864t25_037.gif] 38 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. but, to my comfort, I found it one of the men of the shanty. Such are many of the dreadful bears we encounter in this life. On Friday, the 19th of October {1849/10/19}, I went to a woodmans tent, to sharpen my draw-knife, and found there a man, by the name of Haley, very far gone with diarrhea. Soon as I mentioned the subject of religion to him he burst into tears, and cried like a child. He told me that he had once enjoyed religion, and had been a member of the Baptist Church; but, in his wanderings in these Western wilds, he had got off the track, and lost his religion. I prayed with him, and he promised to give his heart, there and then, to God. When I called to see him the nextday I found him rejoicing in the love of Jesus. " O, I'm so glad," said he, "that you called in yesterday to see me I had thought of sending for you, but I felt so guilty I could not have the courage to do so ; but now I feel that God, for the sake of Jesus, has pardoned all my sins. My soul is happy I am not afraid to die now." Poor fellow I expected him to die within a few days, but afterward learned that he recovered. Three years after this, one night, at the close of meeting in the Bethel, in San Francisco, a man introduced himself to me, and asked me if I remembered praying with a dying man in the Redwoods, in 1849 {1849/00/00} MISSIONARY LIFE. [end of page f864t25_038.gif] 39 I replied Yes, sir, I do." Said he "I am that man; and my soul is still happy in God." I believe this was the first man I was permitted to lead to Jesus in California. A little of my Redwood experience is noted in my journal of Saturday, October 20 {1849/10/20}, as follows I experience a good degree of the love of God in my soul this evening; but I should feel better could I spend the approaching Sabbath at some point more important. O that my house were built, and my family settled, that I might be wholly given up to the great work of my mission. I feel, however, that I am working, now, in this Redwood, for the Missionary Society and the Church, and that, by the labor of a few weeks, I can live without another draft on the funds of the society. O my Master, help me in my work of avoiding expense to the Missionary Board, and in my work of saving sinners in California !" It may not be amiss here to insert another bit of experience from my Journal "Sunday morning, October 21, 1849 {1849/10/21}. -For retirement and meditation I have strolled out to the top of a high hill. The sky is clear as crystal, and the sun is shining with a California radiance, unknown in other lands. O this is a delightfal Sabbath, and I, have just been waking the echoes of the wilderness with that sweet song [end of page f864t25_039.gif] 40 CALUORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. 'Welcome sweet day of rest, That saw the Lord arise,' etc. Looking eastward I see a dense forest of huge redwood timber; doubtless the veritable cedars of Lebanon. West and north, hills and mountains stretch to the uttermost line of the ken of vision, and the scene, in its barrenness and sterility of appearance, is only reheved here and there by a small oasis, and" by the herds of cattle feeding on the dry grass. Southward the whole valley, for fifty miles, is filled with fog. It looks as though a firmament of white broken clouds had dropped from the heavens, and settled over the whole region of the Bay of San Francisco and its adjacent vales. Here I stand on a summit above the clouds. Many walk beneath those summit clouds in comparative darkness, while I bathe in the brightest sunlight. It is well for every lover of Jesus to rise above the world, and dwell on the Mount of Holiness, walking I in the light as God is in the light., "A Little to my right are two graves. There sleep the dust and buried hopes of two California adventurers. Whence were they? What their names? Who are their parents? Do they yet live to inquire after their sons in the far West? What was the character of these sons, ? What the circumstances of their death ? Where now, are their souls'? These are questions which arise in my mind, but no voice [end of page f864t25_040.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 41 responds. This is a lonely, solemn place. Its loneliness is increased by the numerous vultures which are floating through the air over my head, and the hoarse croaking of the raven. O my Master, bless me, and keep me wholly thine! My dear sick wife and babes, I leave in thy hands!"' I may here add that I preached that Sunday under the shade of a large redwood tree to twenty-five woodsmen. One of my hearers, a man of forty-five years, heard preaching that day for the last time. He soon afterward took suddenly ill, and died, and was added to the two lonely strangers on the neighboring hill. The ensuing week I finished my work in the woods. My scantling, which I bought in a rough state, split out like fence.rails, I hewed to the square with my broadax. I got my joists from a man who had a saw-pit. I made three thousand shingles, and gave thein. for twenty-four joists, seventeen feet long. I bought rough clapboards six feet long, and shaved them down with my draw-kinfe for weather-boarding; and thus got in the woods all the materials for a two-story house sixteen by twenty-six feet, except flooring, doors, and windows. I bought the doors from a friend at a reduced price, eleven dollars per door. The windows one-dollar per light, ten by twelve inches. It cost me twenty-five dollars per thousand feet to get my lumber hauled to the landing, and the regular price of freight from there to [end of page f864t25_041.gif] 42 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. the city was forty dollars per thousand feet; but by, hiring a boat and working myself, I got it done for less than half that price. After digging a foundation on the church lot, rear of the chapel, and getting my lumber ready for building a parsonage, I was led to change my, choice of location by the following facts, as noted from my journal "Friday, October 26 {1849/10/26}.-I have all along designed building a parsonage on the church lot, thinking that when the brethren should get through with the chapel debt, they might refund to me the actual cash I expend in the building. But I find that, though I save more than half the cash cost of such a house by my own labor, it will nevertheless cost more money than the brethren will feel able to pay, and much more probably than they would have to two years hence for a house that will suit thern much better for a parsonage.* Moreover, if I build on the church lot, we shall have to carry all the water we use up a long, steep bill; or, if brought to us, it will cost us twelve cents per bucket. If, therefore I can get a lot convenient to water, and build on my own account, and thereby save the society the enormous rents or present rents of building a parsonage I shall be doing the church a good service in that regard, *Brother Simonds built there three years afterward a better parsonage for less than half the cost of my house.MISSIONARY LIFE. [end of page f864t25_042.gif] 43 and may on the property save myself from heavy loss in the end.'! In the mean time Brother Hatler bought a lot, and built a house for himself and family on street, above Powell, and proposed to me, if I would buy the next lot adjoining and build, and be his neighbor, he would dig a good well at our door, and would advance me the money to pay for my lot, and let me refund it when I could, without interest. So I bought a lot next door to Brother Hatler, twenty-three by one hundred and thirty-seven and a half feet, for twelve hundred and fifty dollars. Brother Hatler, being a carpenter, gave me instruc- tion and some help in building my house. I hired a few carpenters to hasten the business, as the wet season was upon us, till I got the house under roof. I paid my carpenters twelve dollars a day, and while they were at work for me, the men of their craft in the city struck for higher wages, sixteen dollars a day, threatening a penalty, which I need not mention, on any carpenter who should work for less; so I had to come up to the figures of sixteen dollars per day. So soon, however, as I got my house under roof, I dismissed my men, and did the rest of the work- with my own hands, except occasionally a brother passing along would give me a few hours' work, Clarkson Dye, now proprietor of the Tremont House, New-York, put up my stairs. Treat Clark gave me [end of page f864t25_043.gif] 44 CA11FORNIA LIFE ILLUSIRATED. a day or two; but I wrought daily from dawn till dark myself till it was finished. While digging the foundation I found the stakes of the original Methodist blue-tent. It happened that I was building on the very spot where Father White had pitched his blue-tent in which be held the first class meetings in the spring of 1849 {1849/00/00}. So we seemed to, be on consecrated ground. If it had not been before, it certainly was afterward, by the glorious class-meetings and bright conversions in our pioneer house. In six weeks from the time we moved into Captain' Webb's house we moved into our own and thus avoided paying one cent of rent. I had two rooms up stairs to rent, to help pay for the building, and had one fitted up for strangers, and especially for preachers, if we ever should be favored with the com-pany of any. We had just got it furnished when Rev. J.Doane and his wife, missionaries for Oregon arrived, and rejoiced to find so good a " prophet's room" in San Francisco. But we waited more than a year before the first recruit of missionaries for Cali-foinia arrived. A forcible entry was made into my house as soon as I got it tinder roof, by an immense immigration from all climes of the rat tribe. Their multitude almost equaled that of the frogs of Egypt, and they were everywhere, in " bed-chambers," " ovens, " and kneading troughs." We -could scarcely walk the [end of page f864t25_044.gif] Page 45 is blank. [Plate entitled: A Street Scene on a Rainy Night.] [end of page f864t25_046.jpg] MISSIONARY LIFE. 47 streets at night without being brought into contact with them. I brought one to an untimely end one night by accidentally. setting my foot on it in the street. I have seen them swimming in the bay, from ship to ship, and when pursued they would dive and swim under water like minks. Mrs. Taylor had a. beautiful counterpane, presented to her by friends in Baltimore, which she laid away carefully for safe keeping. One night, as she was taking it up for examination, she found it cut full of holes, and out sprang two China rats, white as cotton, with bright colored eyes surrounded by a streak of red. Having never seen any of that color before, their appearance produced quite a sensation in the family; we succeeded in capturing one, of them, and having heard that if a singed rat were turned into a nest of rats they would all leave the house, we tried the experiment on our China fellow. We gave his white coat a good singeing, not, however, so as to hurt his feelings, and let him go. I really thought that the unsightly appearance of his ratship, and the smell of fire he bore away with him, would be a caution to all the family. His China friends took the hint and left, but the huge gray and black rats stood their ground and held possession of the premises. Those who could build rat-proof houses were highly favored among men. I used to see this notice on the door of a little house built over a well Shut the door and keep [end of page f864t25_047.gif] 48 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. the rats out of the well, the nasty things." But long. ago the rats, rogues, and gamblers have been reduced to great straits in that city, and are now seen but seldom. In addition to building materials for our house, I brought from the woods material to fence in the back part of our lot for a garden. But says one, "Are you a carpenter and gardener too? I am neither one nor the other, but I had faith in God,' and lacked not confidence in my own muscles, and in my skill to direct them in building, digging, and, whatever else was necessary for a living in the land to which we had been sent to labor for 'God. Our garden flourished so that in a few weeks from the commencement of the rains in October, we had turnips, greens, and lettuce in abundance, a luxury enjoyed, I believe, by but one other family in the city. A restaurant keeper, passing by our garden one day said to Mrs. Taylor "I would like to buy some of your greens, madam; what do you ask for them ?" "We have not offered any for sale," she replied, "but as we have more than we neeed, you can have some at your own price." Said he, " I will give you ten dollars for a water-pail full." He took them, paid the money, and in a few days returned for more. Mrs. Taylor filled his pail again, and told him she would not take ten dollars for them, but would be well satisfied with eight. She then [end of page f864t25_048.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 49 asked him how he could afford to pay such prices ? " Well," said he, "I boil the greens slightly, with a little bacon, and get for them, when ready for use, fifty cents a fork. I make a very good profit on them." We were now pretty well fixed, but Mrs. Taylor thought our little home would.look more homelike if we could have a few chickens. So she apphed to a neighbor lady who had a good stock of poultry, and the lady'replied that she would be happy to accommodate her, and as she was the missionary's wife, she might have them at a reduced price. "How much, Mrs. C., will you charge me for a rooster and two hens?" "You can have the three, madam, replied Mrs.C.,"for eighteen dollars." Mrs.Taylor paid the price demanded, and brought home the fowls. I built a house for their accommodation, and put a lock on it to secure them at night, but some hungry fellow came along a few nights afterward, pulled a board off the rear end of the house, and carried away the cock and one of the hens, and we saw them no more. The remaining hen soon paid for herself in eggs. Having to buy milk for our little Oceana, we got a supply daily from a neighbor, at the low rate of one dollar per quart. One dollar and a quarter per quart was the selling price, but being missionaries [end of page f864t25_049.gif] 50 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. we were specially favored. Our milkwoman did business also in the egg line, and offered us six dollars per dozen for all we had to spare. She gave us but six dollars, because she bought to sell again, for nine dollars per dozen. So when it was not convenient for us to pay money for milk, we found convenient currency in eggs, at fifty cents apiece. In the course of human events our milkwoman moved away, and we bought for milk some kind of for chalk mixture that made our little girl sick; so I sent to Sacramento City, where good cows could be got cheap, and bought a cow for two hundred dollars and then we had plenty of good milk of our own. Such was life in California in 1849 {1849/00/00}. I have gone thus into detail, not to exhibit mine as a peculiar case, for it was not so, but simply to illustrate California life. As for sufferings I had none. My labors in house building were simply a good acclimating process, which increased my physical power, and prepared me the more effectively to endure the ministerial toil to which I was called. As for comforts, I was better off than most of my neigbors. We had a comfortable home, while the great mass of our city folks" lived in very inferior shanties and tents. I have often gone out in the morning after a stormy night, and found whole rows of tents lying flat on the ground, and scattered in every direction [end of page f864t25_050.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 51 by the merciless blasts of winter; and many of my brethren in the ministry, at a later day, suffered probably greater trials and hardships than I did at the beginning. The Lord bless and reward them, for he only knows how great and varied have been the trials of missionary life in California. [end of page f864t25_051.gif] 52 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. CHAPTER II. MISSIONARY LIFE - CONTINUED. WHEN the organization of the Oregon and California Mission Conference " was authorized by the General Conference of 1848 {1848/00/00}, Rev. WILLIAM ROBERTS, who had been sent as missionary to Oregon the year before, was appointed superintendent of the missionary work in both territories; a good appointment, for he is a capable, noble brother, and a faithful minister of the Gospel; but his services were in great demand in Oregon, and being, fully committed to the work there, and having his family and home there, more than seven hundred miles distant from San Francisco, he was only able to render to California annual visit of a few weeks. His first visit as superintendent was in the summer of 1849 {1849/00/00}, during which he preached in San Francisco, Sacramento City, Coloma, and perhaps at other points. A friend, who heard him preach at Coloma, says that Rev. Mr. Damon, from the Sandwich Islands, preached that day in the same house, and a hat Collection " of one hundred and thirty dollars was [end of page f864t25_052.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 53 raised, to be divided eqnally between the two preachers, to defray their traveling expense. In the hat" was found a twenty and a ten-dollar piece, carefully folded in paper, on which was written, "I design the twenty dollars for Mr.Roberts, because he fearlessly dealt out the truth against the gamblers. The ten dollars are for Mr. Damon." Signed by the leading gambler of the town. Without casting the slightest reflection on Brother Damon, for I believe him to be a faithful man of God, I would remark that the conduct of the gambler is a good illustration of a prominent characteristic of Californians generally, however wicked; for while they will not endure low abuse, they want a man, and especially a minister of the Gospel, to speak out the whole truth fearlessly, boldly, and to make thorough work of whatever he undertakes. I heard of a would-be preacher in California, who tried to become "all things to all men" in a sense that the great apostle would not approve. He fell in company with a fine-looking man, whom he took to be a gambler, and made himself very agreeable to him indeed, till finally the latter remarked " The old fogies at home would be horror-stricken to see a man of your cloth associating so familiarly with one of iny profession." O," said the preacher, "I look upon your profession in a very different light from that of most [end of page f864t25_053.gif] 54 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ministers. California is a peculiar country; a country of chance in every department of business; and games of chance are about on a par with everything else, and gambling has been made honorable here by the many honorable men who have engaged in it." "By Harry!" rejoined the other; " do you mean to insinuate that I am a gambler? If I were a gambler I wouldn't show myself in decent society. I belong to the stage; but I want you to understand that I'm no gambler," and, turning on his heel, he cut the acquaintance of his fawning friend. The justly mortified preacher found that he had set his moral standard too low for California common sense, and quite undershot his mark. I will in justice say, that I know of no regular missionary of any denomination in California who the part of the preacher just referred to. Brother Roberts on this trip secured from Captain Sutter the donation of a church lot in Sacramento City; and hearing that I was bringing with me, via Cape Horn, the frame of a church from Baltimore that it, on arrival, had better be shipped to Sacramiento City, and he would, immediately on his return have one for San Francisco, framed and shipped from Oregon. Captain gelson set apart for the Methodist Episcopal Church in Francisco, a fifty vara lot, one hundred and thirty-seven and a half feet square, [end of page f864t25_054.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 55 near the corner of Montgomery and Pine-streets; but "it was away over in the sand-hills, quite out of town;" and the brethren, bought, for two thousand dollars, the half of a fifty vara lot on Powell-street, on which to erect the forthcoming church. Captain Gelson then sold the said fifty vara lot for one thousand dollars, and subscribed that amount to the new church enterprise on Powell-street. The church site on Powell-street was, like Mount Zion, "beautiful for situation ;" the top of a high hill, above the town, cominanding a grand view of the bay and surrounding country, and requiring nearly all who desired to worship there to say Let us go up to the house of the Lord." But the going up was so heavy a business that the location for a church was, for several years, very unfavorable indeed. A large number of families having since settled on that and on other hills still further west, it has become a very good location for a church. The Gelson lot, however, which was twice as large, and was sold for half the price of this, was within less than four years in nearly the center of the city, and one of the best church sites in it, but could not be bought for less than thirty thousand dollars . On this visit to California Brother Roberts brought with him his blankets, sleeping and traveling gear, and on his arrival bought and rigged up a niule. and thus traveled on the foal of an ass" in primi- [end of page f864t25_055.gif] 56 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. tive independent style, carrying a Bible in one hand and a good Colt's revolver in the other. The Bible he had occasion to use every day, the blankets every night, but happily for him and for all the hostile foes he encountered, the sight of the fire-dog" was enough. On his next visit, a few months later, he brought his blankets again; but we informed him that he need not untie them, as California had so risen in the scale of civilization, and had so advanced in internal improvements, that she could furnish at least one bed, blankets and all, for the ministers who might visit her shores. He ascertained that it was even so, and saw no more of his blankets. On my arrival in Sail Francisco I found the frame of the said church from Oregon up, and the floor laid; size, twenty-five by forty feet. There was as yet no regular board of trustees; but Brothers Troubody, Hatler, White, and others were " building a house for the Lord." earnestly at work. They had paid eleven hundred dollars freight on the lumber frolia Oregon, and were paying the carpenters as the work proceeded, so that when the church was finished they, owed nothing except the cost of the lumber in Oregon, which was nearly fifteen hundred dollars. Some montlis afterward, when Brother Roberts presented lumber bill, they raised and paid over nearly five hundred dollars, and turned over to Brother [end of page f864t25_056.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 57 Roberts Captain Gelson's thousand dollar subscription. This, the second Protestant, and first Methodist church built in California, was dedicated the third Sunday after my arrival, October 8th, 1849 {1849/10/08}. I preached the dedication sermon to a crowded house, from. "The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and bill shall be made low, and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places plain. And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together ; for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it." I was assisted in the dedicatory services by Rev. O. C. Wheeler, Baptist minister; Rev. Alfred Williams, Presbyterian; and Rev. T. Dwight Hunt, Congregationalist. These were all the Protestant pastors in the city at that time, except Rev. Alr. Mines and Rev. Dr. Vermehr, who, though friendly enough in social life, did not, being Episcopal clergymen, give us an ecclesiastical fraternization. But the three brethren above named all extended to me a hearty welcome on my arrival, and afterward ever exhibited gentlemanly courtesy, and the good-will of a common Christian brotherhood. In connection with our dedication service, we ded- [end of page f864t25_057.gif] 58 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. icated our little missionary girl to the Lord by baptism. Born on the ocean on otir voyage round Cape Horn, we called her Oceana. The ordinance was administered by Rev. William H. Hatch. Brother Hatch had that year located from the New-England Conference, and became the chaplain of a large mining company which arrived in San Francisco in the fall of 1849 {1849/00/00}, in the ship Araetus, Captain Wooley. They were going to dig a mint of gold, establish a colony, build a church ; and Brother H, for his services as chaplain, was to share eqnally in the profits with those who were to dig the gold. It was a magnificent arrangement. I met with this ship's company at Valparaiso, en route to California, and there, by the politeness of Brother Hatch, taking a peep through their telescope of manifest destiny, I saw the beautiful vision of their dreams. But soon after their arrival in California, as was invariably the case with large mining companies in those days, they disagreed with each other, disbanded, and every one took his own course. Brother Hatch had made no calculation on going to manual labor. His prospects of success and usefulness were built alone on the unity and success of the company; but now it was all broken up, and he was left in the lurch, which was almost as shocking to his nervous system as to his bright hopes, and lee-lurched him so low in a spell of sickness, that for weeks it [end of page f864t25_058.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 59 was very doubtful whether he ever would right up again. Poor brother, I really pitied him. There he was, nearly six thousand miles from his family, out of funds, out of health, but few friends, and they constantly engaged in looking out for themselves; no home, no employrnent, and expense of a mere subsistence enormous. The brother was in a had case, and somehow, whenever an itinerant Methodist preacher locates, however pure his motives, and afterward gets into adversity, he shares in the sympathy of his friends about as largely as did Jonah when swallowed by the whale. To make the matter worse, the unhappy sufferer is very apt to join with his friends in reproaching hiniself. When Brother Hatch got able to work a little, he had, from necessity, to take the position of a waiter in the mechanic's boarding-house, front which some slanderer reported at home that he was selling rum. There was, however, no bar in the establishment, being simply an eating-house, and Brother Hatch was engaged in the very honorable business of washing dishes, setting table, etc. He afterward went to the mines, and I learned had good success in digging gold ; and what was better, regained a Higher degree of health than he had enjoyed for years before. From an intimate personal acquaintance with Brother Hatch during, most of his sojourn of a couple of years in California, I have to say of him, that [end of page f864t25_059.gif] 60 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSIRATED. however great his mistake in locating, I believe, through all his humiliating reverses and subsequent prosperity, he conducted himself as a Christian gentleman, and as a minister preached frequently, and always with faithfulness and acceptability. He is a good Gospel preacher, and immediately on his return to his family resumed his work as an itinerant in the New-England Conference. Our congregations being too large for our little church, we made, in the early part of 1851{1851/00/00}, an addition to the rear end of it, twenty feet in depth by thirty-five in width, giving the house the form of the, letter T. This enlargement cost about sixteen hundred dollars. In 1854 {1854/00/00} the original church was sold and moved off the lot, and a fine wood edifice erected, fifty by eighty feet, at a cost of about fifteen thousand dollars. The old church is now used as a dwelling on an adjoining lot. THE BALTIMORE CALIFORNIA CHAPEL, though second in its erection by a few weeks, was the first Protestant church ever prepared for California use. It was framed in Baltimore by John W. Hogg, in February, 1849 {1849/02/00}, having doors, windows, tin roof, and everything furnished, just ready, like the materials of Solomon's temple, for being put up. The friends in Baltimore. not only thus provided a [end of page f864t25_060.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 61 church, but paid all the freight on it to San Francisco. Whole amount contributed, eleven hundred and ninety eight dollars and seventy-four cents. Of this North Baltimore Station paid four hundred and sixty-four dollars. The rest was made up in Light, Eutaw, Fayette, and Charles-street Churches, with a few private donations. The largest subscriptions was fifty dollars, by Durias Carter. It cost upward of five hundred dollars to freight this little chapel from San Francisco to Sacramento City, an amount exceeding the freight from Baltirnore to San Francisco; but it was a godsend to the Sacramentans, for they greatly needed a church, and lumber there was four hundred dollars per thousand feet. Prior to the erection of the church they had preaching under an oak-tree, and sometimes in a blacksmith's shop. Though the Methodists were the first Protestants to explore California as a missionary field, Rev. William Roberts and Rev. J. H. Wilbiir, Methodist missionaries to Oregon, having as early as May, 1847 {1847/05/00}, visited San Francisco, Monterey, and other points, and made earnest appeals to the Church on the importance of sending MiSSiOnaries there immediately; and though the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, as early as May, 1848 {1848/05/00}, authorized the organization of the Oregon and California Mission Conference," and the appointment of two missionaries for California that year, still, in the [end of page f864t25_061.gif] 62 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. order of time, we were considerably behind other denominations in occupying the field. Rev. T. D. HUNT, who had for some time been in the service of the "American Board of Comissioners of Foreign Missions," arrived in Sall Francisco, from the Sandwich Islands in October, 1848 {1848/10/00}. "Three days after his arrival he was formally invited by the prominent citizens of the place, of every religious persuasion, to reside among them and act as chaplain of the town for one year, dating from November 1, 1848 {1848/11/01}. A salary of two thousand five hundred dollars was voted at the public meeting as compensation for his services, and was promptly subscribed, and paid in quarterly installments. The school-house on the Plaza was appropriated by the town as the place of public worship, and services were at once held in it at eleven o'clock A.M., and half past seven P.M. of every Sabbath." Acting thus as chaplain for the town, Mr. Hunt did not organize a Church until July, 1849 {1849/07/00} when he organized the "First Congregational Church." Their first house of worship, size about twenty-four by forty feet, was built on the corner of Jackson and Virginia streets, and was dedicated February 10, 1850 {1850/02/10}; four months after the dedication of our chapel on Powell-street. They subsequently built a brick church on the corner of California and Dupont [end of page f864t25_062.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 63 streets, where they now have a flourishing society and Sunday school, under the pastoral care of Rev. Mr. Lacy, Mr. Hunt having returned to the State of New-York. The steamship California, which arrived in San Francisco, February 28, 1849 {1849/02/28}, brought four missionaries from New-York, namely, Rev. O. C. Wheeler, a Baptist, Rev. S. Woodbridge, an Old School Presbyterian, Rev. J.W. Douglass, and Rev. S. H. Willey, both New School Presbyterians. Rev. O. C.WHEELER immediately commenced operations in San Francisco, and on June 24, 1849 {1849/06/24}, organized the "First Baptist Church." They soon afterward built a church on Washington street, between Dupont and Stockton streets, size about thirty by fifty feet, which was the first Protestant church built in California. They have since erected a brick edifice on the same site, in which Rev. B. Drierly officiates as pastor, Rev. Mr. Wheeler having, gone to Sacramento City. Rev. S. WOODBRIDGE established a Church in Benicia, where he still resides as pastor. He was chaplain of the California Legislature, during the sojourn of that migratory institution in Benicia; for the location of the State Legislature was, for several years, one among the ten thousand contingences of California life. San Jose was first fixed by law as the capital of the state. Subsequently General M. G. [end of page f864t25_063.gif] 64 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Vallejo, a wealthy Castilian, himself one of the legislators, living north of the Bay of San Francisco, offered, I believe, nearly half a million of dollars for public buildings, etc., if they would locate the capital in a city bearing his name, to be laid out, and built on the shore of Napa Straits," opposite Mare Island, where the Pacific Navy Yard is now located. His proposition was accepted, and the next session of the Legislature appointed to be held in the new city that was to spring up during the year. The magnificent paper City of Vallejo" was forthwith surveyed and plotted, containing beautiful parks, and all the modern improvements, and a rare opportunity for investment afforded to everybody who wished to be property holders in the great metropolis of the state. The next year, when the law-makers assembled in the new capital, they were not exactly satisfied with the new State House, nor the accomodations afforded by the town for their comfort; in short, they believed that the general had not fulfilled his contract with, them, and about arrived at the conclusion that high offer was predicated on the sale of city property, which had not been so productive as was anticipated, and they did not feel like waiting till the money could be made in that way. Benicia, a rival town seven miles distant from Vallejo, then put in a bid for the job of accommodat - [end of page f864t25_064.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 65 ing that honorable body, and through some log-rolling process succeeded. Benicia was then the permanent capital of the state, and her real estate commanded good prices. San Jose, however, still claimed by constitutional right to be the capital; but nobody could answer the simple question, Which is the capital of California?" After a tremendous amount of heaving on the political windlass the government anchors were weighed, and the Legislature permanently moored in Sacramento City. Land speculators made a capital thing out of these removals of the capitol; but the expense to the state was enormous, beyond my present means of computation, and many a poor fellow who wanted a home in the State capital was hadly taken in. REV. J. W. DOUGLASS preached a year or two in San Jose, and afterward became editor and publisher of "The Pacific," a religious paper published in San Francisco. Mr. Douglass subsequently returned to New-York, and the said paper is now edited by Rev. Mr. Brayton. Rev. S. H. WILLEY landed at Monterey, and remained there a year and a half. During his stay there the convention that framed the State Constitution met in Monterey, and Mr. Willey officiated as chaplain. He subsequently went to San Francisco and organized the The Second Presbyterian Church" in that city, of which he is still pastor. [end of page f864t25_065.gif] 66 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Rev- ALBERT WILLIAMS arrived in San Francisco, in the steamship Oregon, April 1, 1849 {1849/04/01}. After preaching a few times in the public school-house on the Plaza, he organized, on the 20th of May {1849/05/20}, the " First Presbyterian Church, " composed at that time of six members. On the west side of Dupont-street, between Pacific-street and Broadway, they pitched a large tent, which had been the marquee of a military company in Boston, and in it during the remainder of the dry season of 1849 {1849/00/00} they statedly held their meetings. It was plainly but neatly furnished with matting, pulpit, seats, and seraphine, and afforded accommodations for about two hundred persons.Mr. Williams also taught a small school in this tent. Their first church was built on Stockton-street, near the corner of Broadway, and was dedicated on the 19th of January, 1851 {1851/01/19}. The materials had been purchased and framed by the liberality of friends in New-York, so the society in San Francisco had to pay nothing on the materials, except the freight from NewYork, the respectable little item of three thousand dollars; and putting up and finishing the church cost ten thousand dollars more. It was of the early Gothic style of architecture, thirty-five feet wide by seventy-five feet in depth, and would seat eight hundred persons. So Mr. Williams, after waiting more than a year and a half, had now the best church in the state, and a good congregation. They, however enjoyed [end of page f864t25_066.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 67 their fine house birt five months, when the sixth great San Francisco fire laid it in ashes. By the 12th of October, 1851 {1851/10/12}, they had another, though a very plain one, ready for use on the same site, which still stands, and is now occupied by the same society under the pastoral care of Rev. Dr. Anderson, Mr. Williams having returned to the East. Rev. J.A. BENTON, Congragationalist, arrived in the summer of 1849 {1849/00/00}, and organized a church in Sacramento City, of which he is still the pastor. Rev. F.S. MINES, and Episcopal clergyman, also arrived the summer of 1849 {1849/00/00}, and organized "Trinity Church", the first of his denomination in California. They built a small chapel next door north of the Methodist chapel on Powell-street, which was ready for use about January 1st, 1850 {1850/01/01}. They afterward sold out to the rev. Mr. Prevaux, Baptist minister, for an academy, which he successfully established, and built of corrugated iron a more commodious church on Pine-street, between Montgomery and Kearney-streets. Mr. Mines died in 1852 {1852/00/00}, the only clergyman who has ever deceased in that city. Rev. Dr. Wyatt is his successor. Rev. Dr. VERMEHR, also an Episcopal clergyman, arrived, via Cape Horn, a few days before I did, in September 1849 {1849/09/00}. He organized "Grace Parish" in April 1850 {1850/04/00}. "Grace Chapel" was opened for wor- [end of page f864t25_067.gif] 68 CALIFORINTIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ship on December 30th, 1849 {1849/12/30}, 01, Powell-street, about one square north of Trinity Church." It was superseded by a commodious wood edifice near the same site, which was opened in July, 1851 {1851/07/00}. Dr. Vermehr afterward took charge of a school in Sonoma, and was succeeded by Bishop Kip. Of these pioneer missionaries, the two Episcopal clergymen named, and the Rev. Messrs. Hunt, Wheeler, and Williams, were, as before stated, the only pastors established in San Francisco on my arrival; and with the two exceptions before men- tioned, they received me with a cordial greeting as a co-laborer with them in the great work of evangelization in California. I know not that a discordant note was ever struck to disturb the har- mony of our mutual friendly relations. As evidence of the fraternal feelings existing between us) we all dedicated our respective churches at twelve A.M. to afford the other congregations opportunity to get through with their regular morning services in time for the people to attend, and the ministers to par- ticipate in the dedicatory services. We also in those days had a ministers' meeting every Monday morning, where we prayed for each other, and for our respective charges, and exchanged words Of mutual comfort and encouragement. We also discussed questions of general interest, and project- ed plans for promoting our common cause in Cai- [end of page f864t25_068.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 69 ifornia; for example, the organization of a 'Strangers' Friend Society." The winter of 1849-50 {1849/00/00} - {1850/00/00} was a very severe one for that climate, and especially so because the people were but very poorly provided with shelter to protect them from the heavy rainstorms. Provisions, too, were scarce, and prices enormuously high; many, too, were without money, and friendless; consequently, there was a vast amount of suffering and sickness, of which inany died. For the rehef of destitute and sick strangers, the "Strangers' Friend Society" was organized in our church in Powell-street, about February 1st, 1850 {1850/02/01}. Brothers Hunt, Wheeler, and Williams, with their congregations, all took an active part in this society, and it was the means of affording temporary rehef to many sufferers. Thee society was not continued beyond lite emergences of that winter; but another important movement grow out of it, which, if it had been suceestiful in the accomplishment of its ends, wonld have resulted in great good to the city, and to thousands of sick strangers. The principle of farming out the care of the sick to the lowest bidder, on which the city fathers were acting, was deplored by reflecting men as a great evil. The city was then paying five dollars per day for the care of each charity patient. The physician's honesty and sympathy might lead him to give each patient five dollars' worth of attention, [end of page f864t25_069.gif] 70 CALIFORNIA LIFE, ILLUSTRATED. or his cupidity might restrict him to one dollar's worth of care to each patient, and cause the other four dollars to go into his own pocket. Such, was thought by many to be too great a temptation to set before even an honest California doctor. At a public meeting of " The Strangers' Friend Society," at the Baptist Church, on the 19th of February, 1850 {1850/02/19}, a committee was appointed to- draft and present a memorial to the City Council, praying for the erection by the city of a charity hospital. The committee consisted of the Revs. Wheeler, Hunt, Williams, and J. B. Bond, E. Townsend, Dr. Logan, and myself. The committee, after various meetings, prepared, their memorial, to which was appended a plan illustrating the character of the contemplated, hospital, and a constitution for its government, all of' which were duly presented to the City Council. The city fathers seemed well pleased with our suggestionis and Plans, and said it would be just the thing needed if they had the money to carry it into effect; but, for want of funds, they respectfully declined to act. They, however, continued to pay out from four hundred to six hundred dollars per day for the care of the sick, even at the reduced rate of four dollars per day each patient. It was not many months, until a debt of sixty-four thousand dollars hung over tthe city for the care-of her sick strangers, for the recovery of which suit was instituted and a judg- [end of page f864t25_070.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 71 nient given against the city, under which at least two million dollars' worth of city property was sacrificed; enough to have built half a dozen charity hospitals, and to have supported them by endowment for fifty years. But though our memorial was not honored by the City Council, it had a manifestly, good effect on the management of the city hospital, by calling general attention to the subject of hospital abuses. The fears of those concerned in it were excited, their movements were watched more closely by their employers and by the public generally, and the sick consequently received better attention. Another work in which we had hearty concert of action, was the organization of the Bible Society, of which the "Annals of San Francisco," a book full of valuable historical matter, published by Appleton & Co., New-York, has the following notice " On October 30th, 1849 {1849/10/30} , a meeting of citizens friendly to the formation of a 'Bible Society,' was held in the Methodist Episcopal Church in Powell-street, at which Rev. T. Dwight Hunt presided, and Mr. Frederic Billings acted as secretary. Addresses were delivered by F. Buel, agent of the 'American Bible Society,' Messrs. F. Billings, and W. W. Caldwell; and on motion of Mr. William R. Wardsworth, the 'San Francisco Bible Society,' auxiliary to the 'American Bible Society," was, organized, a constitution adopted, and the following officers [end of page f864t25_071.gif] 72 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. chosen, whom we recognize as the early laborers on this field, and who, with characteristic zeal, frankly joined hands, irrespective of sect or denomination President, John M. Findley; vice-presidents, Rev. Dr. Ver Mehr, Rev. Albert Williams, and Rev. William Taylor; treasurer, W. W. Cald. well; secretary, Frederic Buel. Since its organization the society has been steadily engaged in its appropriate work of supplying the Scriptures to the citizens of the state, and has issued from its depository about ten thousand volumes, [1854] {1854/00/00} in the different languages spoken in the state and adjacent territories, the majority by sale, and the remainder by donation to those unable to purchase. This, institution has ably commended itself to the spirit of catholic Christianity by the universal circulation of that book within. which its doctrines are coniprehended. Other societies, for the same purpose, established in the interior, have materially aided this object. "The depository of the society was destroyed by fire on the morning of the 26th of April, 1853 {1853/04/26}; in place of which a new fire-proof brick building has been erected on the lot belonging to the society, No. 376 Stockton-street, between Union and Green-streets. "The officers for 1854 {1854/00/00} are President, Hon. D. O. shattuck; vice-presidents, Rev. B. Brierly, Rev. M. C. Briggs, and Rev. S. H. Willey; secretary, [end of page f864t25_072.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 73 F. Buel; treasurer, E. P. Flint; executive committee, Colonel D. S. Turner, Major A. B. Eaton, Nathaniel Gray, George Wydoff, and R. P. Spier." When Colonel M'Kee, one of the Indian agents appointed by the government at Washington to treat with the California Indians, was about to enter upon the discharge of his duties, he came to our ministers' meeting to consult them as to the best mode of reaching and civilizing the red men of the Pacific. We discussed the subject at large, and all concurred in the views of the colonel, namely to colonize them on reservations, and place them under competent tutors, appointed by government, who should teach them husbandry and mechanism, and protect them against the rum-selling, extortionary, peddling fraternity of mean white men, who had been such a curse to all the Indian tribes of the East; and then, as soon as practicable, employ teachers to teach them science, and tben missionaries to teach them salvation. Such was, in substance, the plan there submitted and concurred in, and we all prayed over it, and Committed it to the care of the red man's God and ours. The plan has met with much opposition from three classes. First, from the Indian exterminators, who maintain that nothing can be done successfully to elevate, or long to perpetuate the red race; that [end of page f864t25_073.gif] 74 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED., while they exist they will ever be a treacherous and' troublesome foe, and therefore the sooner they are all killed off the better. Second, from those who are jealous of the Indian's claim to the little tracts of land embraced in the reservations; and, third, from those who disapprove of government interference with the Indian's wild mode of living and native liberty. Some of the last named class urge their objections no doubt from honest motives, but others from selfishness, because the plan, if properly executed, will debar them from their favorite mode of taming and civilizing the Indians, namely, by selling them rum, and robbing them of their furs or their gold dust. But the colonization plan, notwithstanding all opposition, has, for the time it has been in operation, been successful beyond all precedent in Indian history. In October, 1856 {1856/10/00}, I got the following statistics in San Francisco, in the office of Col. T. J. Henly, superintendent of Indian affairs in California "The number of indians now collected and residing on reservations is, at Klamath................................2,500 Nome Lackee........................2,000 Mendocino............................500 Fresno....................................900 [end of page f864t25_074.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 75 Tejon..................................................................700 Nome Cult Valley, attached to Nome Lackee 3,000 King's River, attached to Fresno 400 "Making in all ten thousand. The number of Indians not connected with the reservations cannot be correctly estimated. The following statement is made up from the most reliable information I have been able to obtain Ou and attached to reservations, as above 10,000 In San Diego and San Barnardino Counties ...... 8,000 Los Angelos, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Monterey, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz Counties 2,000 Tulara and Mariposa ..........................................................2,000 Tuolumne, Calaveras, San Joaquin, Alameda, and Contra Costa Counties 4,100 Sacramento, Eldorado, and Placer Counties 4,500 Sutter, Yuba, Nevada, and Sierra Counties 8,500 Butte, Shasta and Siskiyou Counties 5,500 Klamath, Humboldt, and Trinity Counties 6,500 Mendocino, Colusi, Yolo, Napa, Sonoma, and Marin Counties .....................................1,500 " Making the total number of Indians within this superintendence sixty-one thousand six hundred." I learn that during the year 1857 {1857/00/00} another thousand Indians have been gathered in, and settled on the reservations. To illustrate the practical operation of this plan of colonization I here insert the following testimony concerning the Nome Lackee Reservation, [end of page f864t25_075.gif] 76 CALIFORNIA LIFE, ILLUSTRATED. from the official report of Mr. Charles E. Fisher, the assessor for Teltama County " I cannot close this report without speaking of the healthy and flourishing condition Of Nome Lackee Reservation, which is situated twenty miles West of the Sacramento River, at the foot of the Coast Range. Under the management of V. E. Geiger, it is in a more flourishing condition than ever before. Mr. Geiger is much beloved by the Indians, and keeps them under the strictest discipline; but still they are contented and happy. Between thirty and forty thousand bushels of grain were raised on the reservation this year, the work being all done, by the Indians. Under the management of Mr. Geiger it will be but a short time till all the Indians in the northern part of California will be safely settled on the reserve." I am sorry to say that the plan, so far as it relates to schools, and the preaching of the Gospel among the Indians on the reservations, has not as yet been carried into effect. I hope it will be very soon; for, however dull the parents may be, the children, are bright and capable of elevation. O how my heart, has bled for them, as I have witnessed their sports, and listened to their merry shouts, as they skipped Over the, hills I loved them as myself, being my brethren; and longed to see them enjoy my privileges of enlightenment and salvation. [end of page f864t25_076.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 77 CHAPTER III. MISSIONARY LIFE - CONTINUED. As we before stated, Rev. William Roberts organized a small class in San Francisco, in the summer of 1847 {1847/00/00}, which was reorganized in the spring of 1849 {1849/00/00}, by Brother Asa White. The first quarterly meeting in California was held in our chapel on Powell-street. It commenced by the organization of a quarterly conference, on Saturday night, December 2, 1849 {1849/12/02}. John Troublody, Alexander Hatler, and Willet M'Cord were elected stewards. Resolutions were passed, expressing thanks to the Missionary Board for sending them a missionary, and pledging themselves for his support,, beyond the appropriation they had already made. The said new board of stewards fixed my salary and table expenses at two thousand dollars per year, including the missionary appropriation of seven hundred and fifty dollars, I finding and furnishing my own house. On the, Sunday of our quarterly meeting Rev. J. Doan, missionary, en route to Oregon, preached at [end of page f864t25_077.gif] 78 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. eleven o'clock A. M. That morning I announced that I would preach at three o'clock P. At, on the Plaza. It was a startling announcement, which greatly excited the fears of some of the brethren ; for nearly all the gamblers in the city were located round the Plaza, in the best houses the city afforded. An idea of the prestige of the gambling fraternity, and the magmificence of their saloons in those days, may be obtained from the accompanying cut, representing, to the life, the interior of the El Dorado, a large gambling-house, at the northeast corner of the Plaza. The tables, loaded with gold and silver, you cannot see for the multitude; but in the rear end of the saloon you see, elevated on a stage, a band of the best musicians the country could furnish, sending forth their melody in such sweetness and variety as to crowd the house, and hold in admiration the promiscuous masses in the streets. I have heard them sing and play, "Home, sweet, sweet home," till homeless wanderers, by hundreds, would stand entranced, seeming to live for a time in the embrace of loved ones, surrounded by all the sweet associations of the past. Alas it was but the song of the siren. On the right may be seen the beautifully ornatmented bar, with splendid mirrors in the rear, around which many a jolly circle of hopeful young prodigals drank to each other's health the deadly draught [end of page f864t25_078.gif] [Plate entitled: Interior of the El Dorado.] [end of page f864t25_079.jpg] Page 80 is blank. MISSIONARY LIFE. 81 Such places were crowded, especially on Sunday, with men of all nations, the most daring and reckless, perhaps, in the world ; and such was their dominant influence, that when they shot a man dead, as they frequently did, there were no arrests, and bothing said, but that " C. B. was killed last night in the Parker House." The brethren knew that if the gamblers should regard my attempt to preach on the Plaza, thrilling every one of their saloons with the echoes of an un- welcome Gospel, as an interference with their busi- ness, and should shoot me down, there would be no redress. It would simply be said, "The gamblers killed a Methodist preacher." At the appointed time I was on the Plaza, accompanied by Mrs. T and a few friends. I got Mrs. T. a chair, and put her in care of Dr. B. Miller, and appropriated a carpenter's workbench, which stood in front of the largest gambling-saloon in the place, as my pulpit. At that moment Clarkson Dye, thinking I might need some protection against the rays of the burning sun, went across to Brown's Hotel, and asked for the loan of an umbrella to hold over the preacher. He was met with the reply I won't let my umbrella be used for such a purpose, but if I had some rotten eggs I'd give them to him." He had to pay nine dollars per dozen for eggs, and couldn't afford to throw them at the preacher. [end of page f864t25_081.gif] CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. 82 Taking my stand on the work-bench I sang., "Hear the royal proclamation, The glad tidings of salvation, Publishing to every creature, To the ruin'd sons of nature. Jesus reigns, he reigns victorious .Over heaven and earth most glorious, Jesus reigns ! " See the royal banner flying, Hear the heralds loudly crying, Rebel sinner, royal favor NOW is offerd by the Saviour. Jesus reigns, etc. "Hear, ye sons of wrath and ruin, Who have wrought your own undoing; Here is life, and free salvation, Offer'd to the whole creation. Jesus reigns, etc. "'Twas for you that Jesus died, For you he was crucified, Conquer'd death, and rose to heaven, Life eternal's through him given. Jesus reigns, etc. "Here is wine, and milk, and honey, Come and purchase without money; Mercy, like a flowing fountain, Streaming from the holy mountain. Jesus reigns, etc. [end of page f864t25_082.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 83 "For this love, let rocks and mountains, Purling streams and crystal fountains, Roaring thunders, lightning blazes Shout the great Messiah's praises. Jesus reigns, etc. " Turn unto the Lord most holy, Shun the paths of sin and folly; Turn, or you are lost forever, O now turn to God your Saviour I Jesus reigns, etc." By the time the song ended, I was surrounded by about one thousand men. Restless hundreds, always ready for the cry, "A whale! a whale!" or any other wonder under the sun, came running from every direction, and the gambling-houses were almost vacated. I had crossed tbe Rubicon, and now came the tug of war. Said I, Gentlemen, if our friends in the Atlantic states, with the views and feelings they entertained of California society when I left them, had heard that there was to be preaching this afternoon on Portsmouth Square, in San Francisco, they would have predicted disorder, confusion, and riot; but we who are here believe very differently. One thing is certain, there is no man who loves to see those stars and stripes floating on the breeze, (pointing to the waving flag of our Union,) and who loves the institutions fostered under them; in a word, there is no true [end of page f864t25_083.gif] 84 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. American but will observe order under the preaching of God's word anywhere, and maintain it if need be. We shall have order, gentlemen. Your favorite rule in arithmetic is the rule of loss and gain. In your tedious voyage round the Horn, or your wearisome journey over the plains, or your hurried passage across the Isthmus, and during the few months-of your, sojourn in California, you have been figuring under this rule; losses and gains have constituted the theme. of your thoughts and calculations. Now I wish most respectfully to submit to you a question under vour favorite rule. I want you to employ all the mathematical power and skill you can command, and patiently work out the mighty problem. The question may be found in the twenty-sixth verse of, the sixteenth chapter of our Lord's Gospel by St. Matthew. Shall I announce it ? What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul ?" Every man present was a "true American" for that hour. Perfect order was observed, and pro- found attention given to every sentence of the ser- mon that followed. That was our first assault. upon the enemy, in the open field in San Francisco, and the commencement of a seven year campaign, Which is illustrated in my book on "Street Preaching. in San Francisco," I preached in the chapel that evening to a crowded house, and four men. [end of page f864t25_084.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 85 presented themselves at the altar as seekers of salvation. I preached every night during that week, and three persons professed to experience religion ; the first revival meeting in California. The little society was greatly refreshed, and especially encouraged by the fact that God could and did convert sinners in that land of gold and crime, a thing almost as incredible, even among Christians, at that time in California as the doctrine of the resurrection among the Sadducees. We had, upon the whole, though minus a presiding elder, a good old-fashioned quarterly meeting, never to be forgotten. During the fall of 1849 {1849/00/00} we had but one class, which met every Sunday at three o'clock P. M. It contained but about thirty members; the meetings, however, were swelled by a constant stream of immigrating, Method ism, to an average attendance Of sixty persons, and frequently numbering as high as ninety. We had but very few females, a lack we keenly felt; for the great man, Moses, could not got along well without a sister to help him; and the Great Prophet, of whom Moses was a type, needed Marys and Marthas, and Joannas, who stood by him, I mid shame and scorn.1 to the death, the last to listen to his dying groans, the first to hail his welcome rising, and bear the coronation tidings of the King of Glory to their poor, frightened, desponding brethk~n* [end of page f864t25_085.gif] 86 CALIFORNIA LI17E ILLUSTRATED. What could the great apostle to the Gentiles have done but for the help of Pbebe, Priscilla, and others, of whom he says "I entreat thee also, true yokefellow, help those women which labored with me in the Gospel, whose names are in the book of life." But there, in California, we had to do the best we could with the assistance of but very few sisters. I had one, thank the Lord, who stood by me in every battle; but in a class-meeting of ninety persons we could number only two or three ladies. Yet we had glorious meetings notwithstanding, for they all had Mothers, wives, or sisters far away, whose influence followed them across the continent, and over oceans) and there, vibrating on every nerve, stirred the tender sensibilities of their souls, and caused them, on the, utterance of that sweet but mighty word Home, to weep like children. By a rapid association of kindred thoughts their minds were carried forward to the longed for meeting again with distant loved ones, and the possible doubt of not meeting them again on mortal shores, led them to the anticipation of the glorious meeting of friends on the shores of immortality, and the inseparable and unceasing friendships of a home in heaven. Their uplifted hands,streaming eyes, and joyous shouts told of their far-reaching hope and faith, which pierced through the darkness of death, and fixed their unclouded gaze on the glories of God's own home, and them [end of page f864t25_086.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 87 Those class-meetings, composed of Christian adventurers from every land, were intellectual, social, and, religious feasts, full of heaven and glory. I never expect to see any more exactly like them. In that infant society there were some noble men; I will here notice a few of them. ASA WHITE, now past the meridian of life, a hardy sun-tanned pioneer of the woods, was a man of good Common sense, and very generous heart, a local preacher of moderate abilities, a good exhorter, full of fire. He had three married daughters with him at that time, who, with his good wife and two of his sons-in-law, were all zealous Methodists. They could have a good meeting any time, whether any- body else came or not. They were closely bound together as a family band, by mutual confidence and ardent affection, and could have made a fortune, and done a great deal of good in almost any place in California, had they settled down, but they had been pioneers all their lives, moving westward in the van of early emigration, and having reached the western limit of the continent, they spent their time in moving up and down the shore, now in Oregon, now in California, then again to Oregon, then back again to California, men, women, and children, all of the same mind, and all moving together. They seemed, by their constant migra- tions, to say that we had a new continent of [end of page f864t25_087.gif] 88 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. unbroken forests, unscathed by the axe of civilizadon, well stocked with Indians, panthers, wildcats, bear, deer, elk, raccoons, and opossums, that we miglit spend our days in crossing it, and entertain ourselves in shooting game, felling timber, building log cabins, and in surprising pioneer Methodist preachers with our backwoods refinement and extra ordinary sympathy and kindness. ALFRED LOVE, the unconverted son-in-law in the family, came the nearest making a permanent settlement in California of any of them. He was a very kind-hearted fellow, a sincere friend to the cause of religion, and I often tried to persuade him to be reconciled to God. He admitted the truth of all I said, but still pursued his own course. One day he went out into the mountains alone to take a hunt. In working his way through a chaperel thicket, he suddenly stumbled on a huge grizzly bear. The grizzly put after him at fall speed. Alfred dropped his gun, and ran for life, but soon perceived by the cracking of the brush behind him, and the heavy footfall of old bruin, that he was rapidly gaining on him. His course led him across a deep ravine, in the bottom of which was a deep cut washed oat by the winter torrents. He had no time to get round it., and in attempting to jump across the cut, his foot slipped, and down he fell to, the bottom. As he struck, the terrors of death got [end of page f864t25_088.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 89 hold of him, and be found trouble and sorrow. There was no hope in further effort, so he lay in motionless affright, expecting the grizzly to separate his joints within a minute. Happily for him the bear leaped the cut right over him, and went on his course, I suppose wondering what had become of his man. After the bear passed out of sight, Alfred crawled out, and made tracks in the opposite direction. I heard him say afterward " While I lay there every moment expecting the bear to jump on me, I was so sorry I had not taken Mr. Taylor's advice, and given my heart to the Lord, while I had opportunity; but I thought it was all over with me then." JOHN TROUBODY is by birth an Englishman, but crossed the water with his wife in early manhood. He lived a while in Pennsylvania; then in Missouri; and moved across the plains to California in 1847{1847/00/00}, or 1848 {1848/00/00}. He appears, to be a slow man in everything, but be steps so cautiously and constantly, that he always comes out about even with the fastest in every race. He has acquired a handsome property in California. A man of unbending religious integrity, a true friend of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and has never forgotten the rock whence he was hewn, nor the hole of the pit whence he was digged." His wife was also a member of the Church, and their house may be set down, I think, as the first Methodist preacher's home in California. [end of page f864t25_089.gif] 90 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. WILLET WCORD, from Sing Sing, New-York, was by no means a noisy Methodist. He always had on hand a dish of wit and pleasantry for the social circle, and was always in his place in the class-room and prayer-meeting. L. F. BUDD was a remarkably simple-bearted, inoffensive, conscientious brother, of generous, refined feelings, and stern integrity. He had spent several years in Costa Rica, Central America, as commercial agent for some mercantile firm, and was instrumental in leading a wealthy coffee planter there to Christ. This planter corresponded regularly with Brother Budd in San Francisco. I used to read his letters with great interest. They were full of spirit and life, and earnest prayers for the redemption of the Central American states from the chains of sin and superstition. I am sorry I have forgotten the planter's name. Budd went from Costa Rica to California, in the employ of the same house; and in the palmiest days of San Francisco for money-making, gave his time to his employers at a small salary, fixed according to Eastern rates, till the term of his engagement expired. He then invested his earnings in a house, which was to let for several months before it was occupied, while he had applications for it almost every week. He always inquired "For what purpose do you wish to rent my house?" "I want to keep a boarding-house and a bar." [end of page f864t25_090.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 91 To which He always replied, "I can't let my house for the sale of grog." Finally a man, who greatly desired the house, tried to argue him out of his position. Said he " Budd, I don't see why you should be so squeamish here in California; why, you are worse than the old fogies at home. The people will have liquor; somebody will supply the demand, at great profit, and I may as well do it and make money as anybody; and now I'll give you three hundred dollars per month for, your house, and will take good care of it; and what does it matter to you what I use it for, if I return it in good order?" Said Brother Budd, in reply My dear sir, the curse of God is hanging over this rum-traffic land all its abettors, and my policy is to stand from under." He had no family, but being very anxious again to see his sisters and other kindred in the East, he wound up his business in 1853 {1853/00/00}, and on his homeward passage sickened and died. He was a great admirer of the ocean. I have often heard him tell of the blessed seasons of communion with God he enjoyed in Costa Rica, as he strolled daily along the ocean- shore from sunset till dark in quiet meditation. When the sea shall give up her dead, L.F. Budd will beyond a doubt have a glorious resurrection. ALEXANDER HATLFR, from Missouri, one, of my earliest and best California friends, with a heart full [end of page f864t25_091.gif] 92 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. of kindness, which felt that no sacrifice was too great for the altar of his friendship, was so unassuming and timid that he never did much in public religious exercise, But he was a man of unblemished moral character, and a liberal supporter of the Church. His wife is the exact counterpart of himself. J. B. BOND, son of Dr. Thomas E. Bond, deceased, did not- make a loud profession of religion, and yet he was foremost in every good work, distributing tracts, visiting the sick, attending class, praying in ,the prayer-meetings, and giving his money freely to the Church and the poor. We missed him greatly when he returned to New-York. D. L. ROSS, our " most excellent Theophilus," good humored and pious, a sincere lover of God and of Methodism, was one of the strongest pecuniary bulwarks of our Church enterprises in California. We hoped to have retained him and his amiable wife; but after a few years they weighed anchor, and returned to Now-York. The Lord reward them here, and in the day of eternity give them a mansion in heaven. R. P. Spier (I will not call him an old bachelor, for he is not so old but that there is still hope in his case) is as pure and conscientious, I believe, as was Joseph in Egypt; very cautious and correct in everything he does, though better qualified for bookseller and stationer" than governor of Egypt. He went into [end of page f864t25_092.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 93 a mercantile copartnership in Stockton, California, at one time, but when the other partners resolved to sell rum he promptly withdrew. He renders so much service in carrying out the details of the pastoral work, keeping the church-register in order, visiting delinquent and sick member, etc., that we sometimes call him Bishop Spier. WILLIAM HENRY CODIINGTON, from Sing Sing, NewYork, almost a beardless youth, opened a butchershop on Kearney-street. Sabbath-breaking was almost universal throughout the land, and I don't suppose that my other butcherhad as yet dreamed of keeping the Sabbath in California; but young Codington hung Up in a prominent, place in his shop this sign "THIS MARKET CLOSED ON SUNDAYS." I know several butchers who were then considered very wealthy, doing a great business seven days in the week, who have since gone into insolvency, and some of them into an untimely grave, while Brother Codington has acquired a handsome property, married a good wife to help in its enjoyment, and grown up a man of God, and a pillar in the Church. ROBERT BEECHING had a hard time of it in crossing the plains. The first Sunday morning after his arrival in San Francisco he met me at the church door, apologized for his rough appearance and threadbare clothing, and told me of his sufferings and reverses on his way to the land of [end of page f864t25_093.gif] 94 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. gold. Said he I've been accustomed to weay decent clothes in New-York, and I feel ashamed to go into church looking as I do; and yet I love Jesus, and want to be with his people." I saw in him, at a glance, a man, a Christian, a gentleman, and, taking him by the hand, conducted him to the "highest seat in the synagogue." He being a fine musician, some gamblers offered him' thirty dollars per night if he would play in their saloon. There he was, five thousand miles distant from his family, minus friends, money, and employment. By playing, an instrument, which was his delight even at home, he could make thirty dollars every night; how quickly he might make his pile," return to his family, and do good with his money. It was a well-circumstanced temptation, and he was almost led to a parley with the enemy. That week, when be came to class at my house on Jackson-street, he related in the meeting the facts as above given, and said, "' Truly God is good to Israel, even to such as are of a clean heart. But as for me ' my feet were almost gone; my steps had well nigh , slipped; for I was envious at the foolish, when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.' I have thought, 'Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hand's in innocency.' I have at least tried to serve Go'd for many years; but in my great trials I seemed to be almost forsaken. 'Behold, these are [end of page f864t25_094.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 95 the ungodly who prosper in the world; they increase in riches.1 When I thought to know the reason of this, it was too painful for me; until I came to this sanctuary of God; now understand I their end. 'Surely they stand in slippery places, and shall be brought to desolation, and utterly consumed with terrors.' 'But thou, my God, art my portion forever. Whom have I in heaven but thee, and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee."' , His tall, manly form, flowing tears, sweet commanding voice, all contributed to produce an effect in the class-roorn which I cannot describe. He then sang a triumphant song of Zion, which thrilled every heart. ISAAC JONES was a Welsh local preacher, and by trade a printer. He was employed in the office of the "Evening Picayune," and made a special agreement with the proprietor of that journal that he should never be called on to work on Sunday Some weeks afterward his employer said to him one Saturday night "Jones, the steamer has just arrived, and we have so much new matter to set up that I want you to lend a hand with the boys, and set up a few thousand ems to-morrow." "My dear sir," replied Jones, "I am willing to work till twelve o'clock to-night, and commence work again at one o'clock,on Monday morning; but you know I told you in the commencement that it [end of page f864t25_095.gif] 96 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED was against my principle, to work on Sunday, and we made an agreement to.that effect." O well, never mind, go on in your own way, said the proprietor. A few weeks after his employer came in late one Saturday night, and said to him again Now, Jones, its no use-talking; you see what a quantity of matter we have to set up for the next issue, and a great deal of it must go in type to-morrow. It has to be done, and you may just as well help to do it as- for the other boys to do it all. The fact is, I won't have a man about me unless he is willing to work at all times.whenever he is needed." "Well," said Jones, "I shall be very sorry to lose my situation, for it is very expensive living here, and I am dependent on the daily labor of my hands for the support of my family; but if my continuance in your office and my support depend upon my working on the Sabbath, I'll beg my bread from door to door, or if need be I'll starve in the streets rather than desecrate God's holy day." After bustling round among the type-stands, a while, the proprietor replied "well, Jones, you are a good workman and an honest fellow, and 1 don t want 'You to leave me." Jones's triumphant death and that of his good. wife, Mary, are noticed. in my "Seven years' Street Preaching in San Francisco [end of page f864t25_096.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 97 WILLIAM PHILLIPS and his son JOHN were English hardware merchants, and true as steel. I mention these few names in Sardis, [Californiaj which have not defiled their garments," simply as specimen illustrations of a large class of sin-hating, God-fearing men in our first society in San Francisco, and of a noble band of martyr spirits to be found in perhaps all the early Church organizations of the country, of different denominations. In popular esteem in those days religion was at a large discorunt. There were no inducements to make a stalking-horse of religion; hence, hypocrites and milk-and-water Christians stood aloof. , Asa White and Colonel Allen from Kentucky, Robert Kellan, M. E. Willing, Calvin Lathrop, and James M'Gowan were our early local preachers in San Francisco. Our early classleaders were Richard T. Hoeg, Horace Hoag, and J. W. Bories, William Gafney, now of the California, Conference, and H. Hoag were exborters. Our second class in the Powell-street Charge wasi organized about January, 1850 {1850/01/00}, arid met every Tuesday evening at my house in Jackson-street. Wo had glorious meetings there, in which souls were occasionally converted to God. A small Sunday school was organized in our church in the fall of 1849 {1849/00/00}, of which Robert Kellan was superintendent. It was a weak and delicate plant in Zion, but we watered and cultivated it, and it lived and grew, and is now quite, a [end of page f864t25_097.gif] 98 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. tree, bearing fruit to the glory of God. As was before mentioned, Rev. William Roberts, missionary, en route to Oregon, organized a small Sunday school in San Francisco in 1847,{1847/00/00} appointing J. H. Merrill superintendent. I have before me an original letter from Roberts to Merrill in regard to it, which, as a matter of history, I will here insert " MONTEREY, May 27, 1841. DEAR SIR - I hereby send to you the library of primary Sunday-school books, of which I spoke when at San Francisco. They were found yesterday, and the captain of the Commodore Shubrick, I expect, will bring them to you without charge. There are one hundred and three volumes of books, one dozen cards, and one dozen catechisms, and also one register or receiving-book. These books are the property of the Sunday School Union of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and I place them in your band's for the use of the school under your care, with the hope that God's blessing may rest upon this effort to bless the youth of the land. I am yours respectfully, " WILLIAM ROBERTS." That Sunday school, numbering about twenty scholars, was kept up, as Mr. Merrill informed me, through the summer of 1847 {1847/00/00}, soon after which gold was discovered, which caused a general stampede of both [end of page f864t25_098.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 99 parents and children. I found the said Sunday school library in care of Brother White on my arrival, and we appropriated it to the use of the school organized in 1849 {1849/00/00}, as above described. The first " watch-night meeting" ever held in California came off in our Powell-street Church, at the closing of that eventful year, 1849 {1849/00/00}. I extract the following from my journal in regard to it "January 1, 1850 {1850/01/01} .-On last evening I preached in our chapel to about thirty persons, and held a watchmeeting. Though our meeting was not large, it was an occasion of great interest. After sermon, from the text, What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits toward me? ' I will take the cup of salvation, and call upon the, name of the Lord. I will pay my vows unto the Lord now in the presence of all his people," we occupied some time in the relation of Christian experience. A majority of all present spoke of the benefits they had received at the hands of God during the past year, and especially while encountering the dangers of the deep or of the desert. exercises were concluded as the new year was being ushered in, by soleninly singing on our knoics the covenant hymn Come, let us use the grace Divine, And all, with one accord, In a perpetual covenant join Ourselves to Christ the Lord," etc. Hymn 1054, Methodist Hymn Book [end of page f864t25_099.gif] 100 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. About this time the " Methodist Company," in the, ship Arkansas, Captain Shepherd, arrived. According to their advertisement in New-York, the company was to be composed entirely of Methodists, and , many joined it with that understanding, thinking it the rarest chance that ever was to get to California without being brought into contact with the wicked rabble that mixed in with promiscuous companies. But when they got out to sea and gathered the flock together, they soon found that the goats outnumbered. the sheep. The voyage, socially and morally, was by no -means a pleasant one; and I have no doubt that many of them adopted St. Paul's conclusion---. that to be freed " altogether " from " fornicators, covtous, extortioners, or idolaters." then must ye needs to go out of 'the world." The night of their arrival., in the Port of San Francisco, before they could land, a heavy gale caught their ship, which dragged her anchors, and was carried by the violence of the storm till she struck Bird Island. There they were in midnight darkness thumpin among the breakers; and for a time they thought the , whole ships companymust perish right there in their destined port; but by cutting away the masts they finally succeeded in saving the hull, cargo, and passangers. The, captain was subsequently known in San Francisco as Judge Shepherd. He brought a few very mean men to California; but also some as noble and [end of page f864t25_100.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 101 good, perhaps, as ever landed in that port; such men, for example, as Calvin Lathrop, who for seven years was favorably known in California in the 'various relations of minister of the Gospel, Bible-class leader, gold digger, and clerk, and who filled so efficiently and satisfactorily for years the office of publishing agent of the California Christian Advocate. He has returned to his family in New-York, but is a thorough Californian still, and pants for the pure breezes of the Pacific. I wish it suited his family to go; he is needed in California. It was several weeks after my arrival in San Francisco before I heard anything of my fellow-missionary, Rev. Isaac Owen, who had started with,his family across the plains " about the time I sailed from Baltimore. I felt great solicitude for his welfare, having heard much of the hazards of the overland route to California. After a few weeks, however, my mind was relieved by the news of his safe arrival in Sacramento City. Nearly, four months had now elapsed, and yet we had not seen each other, neither having had time to visit the other. Friday, the fourth of January, 1850 {1850/01/04}, found me making preparations to go to Sacramento City to see my colleague. First, I had to provide for my pulpit tho Sabbath I should be absent, and I found a supply in James M'Gowan and M. E. Willing, local preachers, lately arrived in the ship Arkansas. Second, I had [end of page f864t25_101.gif] 102 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. to lay in a good supply of firewood to keep my wife and babies warm during my absence. Wood in the market was forty dollars per cord, and very poor stuff at that. I couldn't afford to burn wood at those rates. The sand hills back of where I lived had been thickly covered with evergreen scrub oaks, but they had all been cut off, clean as a newly-mown meadow. I, however, took my ax and went to work on a stump, and soon found, to my agreeable surprise, that more than half the tree was under ground; that the great roots spread out horizontally just under the surface; so I had a good supply of wood at the simple cost of cutting, and loading it on my wheel-barrow land rolling it home. I had made a rare discovery, but, like the darkey who first struck the rich gold lead in "Negro hill," I soon had plenty of men to share my fortune. The said colored man, I am told, went into the mines to dig some gold for himself, and thinking the " diggins "all free for everybody, he struck into the first good-looking place he came to. Presently along came a rough looking miner, who said, angrily, What are you doingthere in my claim, you black rascal ? " O massa, I didn't know dis are your claim !" He then went off a little way, and saw a hole in which he thought he might find gold, so he jumped, [end of page f864t25_102.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 103 into it and went to work; but immediately a man came running at him, in a rage, and shouted "Get out o' my hole, you cursed nigger, or I'll knock your head off!" Lor'sa, Massa, me didn't know,dis are your hole I "Good Lor'sa, Massa, where must I go?" " Go up on the top of that hill, and dig," replied the miner, not dreaming that there was gold there; for as yet the value of hill diggings had not been found out. But the poor old colored man went on the hill, and "sunk a shaft," (just like digging a well) and wrought there several months, when it was discovered that he had struck a "rich lead, " and was taking out the big lumps." He then soon had plenty of company to share in his rich discoveries. The hill was afterward known as "Negro hill," and has yielded hundreds of thousand's of dollars. By Friday night I had my arrangements all made for an early start next mormng for Sacramento City. [end of page f864t25_103.gif] 104 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED CHAPTER IV. MISSIONARY LIFE - CONTINUED. ON Saturday, January 5, 1850 {1850/01/05}, at 7 o'clock A.M. I embarked on the steamer Senator for Sacramento, City, a distance of one hundred, and twenty-five miles. As we ascended the Sacramento River we saw a large band of elk. They ran along the bank of the river in our direction, several hundred yards, seeming as desirous to look at us as we were to look at them. On the sharp crack of a rifle in the hands of one of our passengers they changed their course, and gave its a', wider berth, and soon disappeared in their own wild, Woods. A buck elk, with a bead of full-grown horns, leaping over the hills, is a majestic looking animal. Arriving in Sacramento City at 7 o'clock P.M., I was conducted by a stranger through one vast mud-hole of nearly half a mile to the house of Dr. Grove W. Deal. I had known the doctor well in Baltimore, and loved him much; saw him about a year before embark for California in the schooner Sovereign, via Panama, and often, during a tedious, voyage round Cape Horn, comforted myself with [end of page f864t25_104.gif] [Plate entitled: Sacramento City.] [end of page f864t25_105.jpg] Page 106 is blank. MISSIONARY LIFE. 107 the anticipated joy of meeting him on my arrival in San Francisco. This, however, was the first sight I had got of him in California. The doctor, I had learned, had done a great deal of faithful preaching "under the oak" in Sacramento City; and prior to Brother Owen's arrival, exercised a shepherd's care over the few sheep in the wilderness." He had also succeeded well in his practice as a physician, besides some good trading "strikes," so that I did not find him in a tent, nearly up to his knees in mud, like most of his neighbors, but occupying one of the best houses in the city. It was a small, two-story frame-house, rough boards outside, and canvas lining inside. The first floor was occupied as a store, owned by the doctor, William Prettyman, another old Baltimore friend, and a young man whose name I have forgotten. They had in the store an assortment of clothing, dry goods and groceries, hardware, miners' tools and drugs, books and stationery, and such other varieties as the denizens of a new country were likely to need. The upper story was used as a reception-room, parlor, doctor's office, dormitory, etc. In the rear of the store was a shed made of rough slabs; the floor was of matting, to hide the mud, and to keep the passengers above ground; this was the wash-room, storage-room, kitchen, dining-room, etc. There I received a hearty welcome, and found a noble-hearted, jovial set of fellows, and there we [end of page f864t25_107.gif] 108 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. talked, and ate, and slept, and thanked the Lord and talked again. The conversation now turning on the days of other years, and the loved ones on the other side of the continent, and now on the wonderful country into which our lot had fallen, and then the stirring incidents of the voyage, and the ever exciting "news of the day." On Sabbath I accompanied the doctor to our Baltimore California, chapel," and was there introduced to Brothers Owen and Corwin. I will not attempt to give a history of Brother Owen. Dr. Thurston, who, for the last five years,' has been gathering materials in California for a book, asked Brother Owen to give him a sketch of his life for his book. After looking over a list of autobiographic notices in the doctor's book, by different ministers, and observing that special reference was mado to the cities in which they had lived, and the colleges in which they had graduated, he penned something like the following Isaac Owen was born in Vermont, raised in Coon range on White River, in the wilderness of Indiana; costumed in buckskin, fed on pounded cake; educated in a log school-house. First book, Webster's spelling-book; first lesson in two syllables, commencing with 'Baker.' Converted in the woods, licensed to preach on a log ; first circuit, then called Otter Creek Mission, embraced a part of five counties. Last heard of, a missionary in Cali- [end of page f864t25_108.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 109 fornia, and on a review of his life has no apologies to offer for having been born." Brother Owen is a thick-set, rotund man, about five feet ten inches high, eyes and hair black, face round, with an easy, pleasant smile on his countenance., He is a good preacher, voice clear and strong, his preaching earnest and practical, characterized by clear Scripture expositions and familiar illustrations. Besides a thorough, practical education in real life, he has made himself quite familiar with his Greek Testament. He is a man of indomitable energy and perseverance. I once beard Bishop Morris say of him that Owen never gives up; he always does what he undertakes; if he can't do it one way be will another." He is apt in expedient in every emergency. He says he never was lost but once, and that was when a little boy. He was away in the wilderness alone; night was settling down upon him; the woods were full of wolves, wild cats, and panthers; and he knew not which way to go. After a little cogitation an expedient struck him. He cut a rod, caught his dog, and gave him a severe flogging, then letting the dog go, he instinctively cut for home as fast as he could run, and young Owen after him at the top of his speed. He thus got his bearings, and safely reached home a little after dark. He says he never was in "straitened circumstances" but once. He had been out on a hunt, [end of page f864t25_109.gif] 110 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. and got his buckskin trowsers very wet; coming home very wet and cold, he got into the fireplace of one of the old-fashioned wide chimneys, and stood by a blazing fire to warm himself. Being very much chilled, he could not feel the beat at once, till he felt something drawing very tightly about his legs; and now the heat seemed to be taking the skin. off him; lo) his trowsers were drawn up into crisp, searing and singeing him; but though he juniped round, and cried for help, he could not pull them off. Said he 1 found myself that time in decidedly straitened circumstances." Brother Owen is one of the greatest beggars in,, the world. He was for five years the agent of the Indiana Asbury University; so that besides natural talent for it, he is thoroughly skilled in the business. When he thinks a certain portion of a man's money ought to be appropriated to a special church enterprise in which he is engaged, (and he always has one such on hand,) and gets after him, that man had just as well, like old Dan Boone's coon, give up at once. Rev. James Corwin had been a member of the same conference (Indiana) with Brother Owen, and located to accompany him to California, first, to help him with his family across the plains, and, secondly, to enter into the itinerant work, with him on the Pacific. [end of page f864t25_110.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 111 He is a preacher of medium talent, faithful as a pastor, acceptable to the people, and very useful, not only in getting sinners converted, but in building churches and parsonages. He has no family of his own, but builds for those who have. After helping Brother Owen to build a parsonage for his family in Sacramento City, he took an appointment, and has been in the regular work ever since. On the Sabbath, morning above referred to, at Brother Owen's request, I preached to a full house, from, God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." Brother Owen preached at three P.M., and I again in the evening. The next day the doctor and I dined with Brother Owen's family, and a sumptuous dinner it was, too; roast pork, sweet potatoes, and a variety of good things, hardly to be expected in California at that day. Brother Owen and wife had hardly recovered from the wear and tear of their long journey aerom the plains. They had a hard time in getting to California, and a sad reverse after their arrival. , Though I could hear nothing of them for several weeks after my arrival, they had reached the northern part of the territory about the same time- that I reached San Francisco; and he preached near where the town of Grass Valley is now located, on the San10 Sabbath in which I commenced, operations in the [end of page f864t25_111.gif] 112 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Bay city. Thence he came on by land as far as Benicia, en route to San Francisco, and there learned that he had been appointed bythe superintendent to, Sacramento City, nearly one hundred miles back in the direction he had come. They were all nearly ,worn out, and to haul their effects back that distance, with a broken-down ox-team, was too much to think of enduring, so they engaged a sail-vessel to take their things to Sacramento City, and thus reheve their broken-down animals. The vessel was capsized, and they lost nearly everything they had in the world, all the supphes they had hauled across the continent. When they got to Sacramento City, therefore, they were destitute of everything but the rough traveling clothes in which they appeared. They lived for a short time in a small tent, but Brother O. soon got able to move around among the people, and went to work with hi's usual zeal. In a short time the chapel was up and ready for use, and he was at the time of my visit in a new parsonage, that cost about five thousand dollars. The society was in prosperous condition, and they had pledged themselves to give their minister a salary of four thousand dollars; one thousand dollars of which, however, Brother Owen appropriated toward the payment for the parsonage. We walked and talked together for several days [end of page f864t25_112.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 113 and laid the basis of an intimate and solid mutual friendship, which has remained unbroken to the present time, and will, I have no doubt, last forever. We also matured plans for future operations. A book depository was to be established, and the country supphed with a pure religious literature; academies and a university were to be founded for the education of the rising generation ; but at present we had to explore, and organize societies, so far as possible, without neglecting the charges to which we had been appointed. We agreed that I should, in addition to my work in San Francisco, travel south to San Jose and Santa Cruz, and organize societies; and that he should do what he could north of San Francisco, and thus prepare the way for other missionaries. We spent a part of Wednesday, the ninth of January {1850/01/09}, in Dr. Deal's upper room; and, in the afternoon, when we came down to return to the parsonage, lo ! a river came rolling down the street, meeting us. Half the city was already submerged, and the swelling flood basted to bury the remainder. A wagon happened to pass near us at that moment, and Brother Owen paid the driver two dollars to take him a couple of blocks, whence he got a boatman to ferry him home. I took refuge in the doctor's house till after tea ; but as the tide was still rising, and as I preferred to go to sea in, a boat, rather than a house, I commended my Baltimore [end of page f864t25_113.gif] 114. CALIFORINIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. friends to the mercy of the floods, and waded as best I could to the steamer Senator, and put up for the night. The scene next morning is briefly described in my journal as follows Thursday, January 10, 1850 {1850/01/10}.-This morning I went up on the foretop of a store-ship anchored near our steamer, to take a survey of an entire city under water. I could not discover a single speck of land in sight, except a little spot of a few feet on the levee near our boat. The boatmen were navigating the streets in whale boats in every direction." That day I returned to San Francisco, accompanied, by Brother Corwin, who was on his way to Stockton, where he organized a society, and built a church and parsonage, partly by subscription and in part by his own hands ; he, like, the great Prophet of Nazareth,. being a carpenter as well as a preacher. We paid for our meals aboard the Senator two dollars each; the price of a state-room'for one night was ten dollars; the fare alone from San Francisco to Sacramento City was thirty dollars. Charles Minturn, the agent in San Francisco, gave me a free passage up; and through the mediation of Captain Gelson I obtained a similar favor in Sacramento City, by which on that single trip I saved sixty dollars. Brother Corwin, however, not being considered exactly in the regular succession, had to pay his fare [end of page f864t25_114.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 115 Captain Gelson, as one of the owners of the steamer M'Kiln, that plied between the two cities named, offered a free passage to all regular ministers -those sent out as missionaries, or those having pastoral charges. I believe in that way the precedent was established; at any rate it became a custom with the owners and agents of steamboats running ou the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers to give to all regular ministers a free ticket; and when the "California Steamboat Navigation Company" was organized they adopted that as an item in one of their bylaws. They subsequently thought that was abused; that preachers multiphed too the wants of the country; in other words, who were not pastors, and possibly not pre all took advantage of it. It was said, for example, that a man too passage on a Sacramento boat for himself and a lot of mules. When the captain demanded his fare he replied, "I'm a preacher, sir." "Indeed!" said and, pointing to the mules, inquired, " and are preachers, too I" The captain's office and settle." In consequence of these abuses the company passed a resolution making it necessary for all ministers wishing to thravel on their boats to apply to the president of the company, who would, on the evidence that they were ministers, give them a free ticket. [end of page f864t25_115.gif] 116 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Upon the whole, the liberality of California Steamboat companies toward ministers of the Gospel stands unrivaled in the history of steamboat navigation, and has saved to the preachers (all of them poor enough in regard to means) an expense in travcling amounting to an aggregate of thousands of dollars. Stage proprietors in California have also shown a commendable liberality in the same way. The Sacramento flood prevailed for days, bearing on its heaving bosom the tents and small buildings of the city, and a large proportion of their stock, consisting principally of horses, mules, cows, and which had been brought over the plains by hundreds. There was but little opportunity of saving the stock, because the valley, for the width of several miles, and in length for more than' a hundred Miles,. was an unbroken sea of water. The dwellers of the inundated city took refuge in the second ,stories of the few houses that remained, and in boats and in the vessels that lay at anchor in the river. Our Baltimore chapel was carried from its foundations into the street) but not seriously injured Brother Owen and family, after a few days' imprisopment in the upper story of their parsonage, determined to Move to San Jose Valley, a distance of -one, hundred and seventy-five miles, and seek a place of resdience on dry land. Sacramento city was inundated two or three times, which led to the [end of page f864t25_116.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 117 construction of a strong levee around it, and it is hence frequently called the "Levee City." Much sickness prevailed there in early days, and thousands of sturdy adventurers sleep their last sleep on her low grounds; but it bas become a very beautiful and healthful city, with a population, within eight years, of between twenty and thirty thousand. On the 17th of January {1850/01/17} Brother Owen and family arrived in San Francisco, on their way to San Jose Valley. To give themselves some time for recuperation and preparations for their new home in San Jose, they made a temporary settlement in "Asa White's house with the blue cover," which, naturally enough, in view of the migratory character of its owners, was vacant at that time. Having Brother Owen in the city to fill my pulpit. I embraced the opportunity to fulfill a promise to visit San Jose and Santa Cruz. Mrs. Taylor being out of health, and having the care of her babes and household duties, I thought it necessary to get some one to assist her during my absence. A Sister Merchant, an old maiden lady, had arrived a few before, having made the voyage of Cape passing the dreary hours of the trip in composing poetry. She was sincerely pious, no doubt, and uttered many shrewd and and sensible saying; and yet it was evident somewhere in her mental constitution there was a screw loose; she still was regarded [end of page f864t25_117.gif] 118 CALIFORNIA LIFE, ILLUSTRATED as a valuable helper in the family; she said she could do everything in that line that could be desired. So I thought it would be a fine arrangement to have Sister Merchant as company for Mrs. Taylor, and to reheve her of The housework till I should return. The idea of a regular servant in a preacher's family, when servants got larger salaries than preachers, was out of the question. The preachers and their wives had to serve each other, and both together serve the children and, the people. I know a California presiding elder who used to roll up his sleeves, and spend a day over the wash-tub as regularly as he went to quarterly meeting. I have turned out many a washing of clothes, and baked many a batch of bread, and think I understand the details of'kitchen-work better than I do book-making There were, however, preachers in California who would not hazard their ministerial dignity in the kitchen, or over the wash-tub, but were contented to let their wives struggle through all such drudgery alone, at whatever hazard Mrs. Taylor tells the following in regard to one of this class "I said to a missionary on arriving, whose delicate wife seemed ill-fitted for the labor and toil of Pioneer life, 'You will have to help do the washing.' "Not I," replied the brother; and to my certain knowledge he never did. How appropriate ! how [end of page f864t25_118.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 119 considerate! a delicate female toiling at the tub over her dear lord's linen, while he sits complacently reading or puffing his havana, now and then yawning from pure laziness, and inquiring, 'Dear, when will dinner be ready?' as if there were a cook in the kitchen, or a nurse minding the infant, whose cries were heart-rending to the sympathizing mother. A man should not wonder if his gentle, sweet Mary, by such multiphed cares, unassisted in the course of time seem unlike the youthful, happy girl he took from the old folks at home." Sister Merchant was very much pleased with the idea of living in the Preacher's family-always, loved the preachers and their wives. She had been sick, but had fully recovered, and was ready to take all the work off Mrs. Taylor, and nurse the baby too."' I thought myself highly favored in getting my pulpit and my family so well provided for during my contemplated absence of two weeks, and myself well provided with a traveling companion in the person of Brother J. Bennett, an exhorter in our Church, who was then on his way from the mines in Coloma to his family in Santa Cruz. On Saturday, January 19th {1850/01/19}, at half past nine A. M., we took passage aboard a little steamer for San Jose; distance, fifty miles, forty-two by water and eight by land; fare, twenty-five dollars each on the steamer, and [end of page f864t25_119.gif] 120 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. five dollars per stage for the land travel to the town. We reached the embarcadero at five P. M., and concluded to save our stage fare by working our own passage thence to the town. After three hours hard wading through mud and water to our knees, we reached Widow White's house, within half a mile of town, and there obtained supper and lodging. Next day, at eleven A. M., I preached in the house of old Mr. Young, from Fear not, for they, that be with us are more than they that be with them." We had a refreshing class-meeting ,after 'preaching, consisting of more than " twelve persons." Several American families, principally from Kentucky and Missouri, had settled there as early as 1846 {1846/00/00}, and others later; in all now numbering about thirty, among whom were several Methodist families) namely William and Thomas Campbell, and families, Captain Joseph Aram, a member of the convention that framed the constitution of the state, and family. Old Mr. Young was not then a Methodist, but his wife was, and their house was the preaching-place and the preacher's home. Charles Campbell, a local preacher, had been preaching there regularly for several months. "'Several Cumberland Presbyteriarian families also united with us, until such time as it might be practicable for them to organize for them [end of page f864t25_120.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 121 selves; of whom were J. M. Jones and Asa Finley with their excellent wives, and others. That night I preached at Mr. Young's again, and many rejoiced with tears that the long desired day had come, when they should hear the voice of a regular minister, and be gathered into a fold, and receive the ordinances of the Lord's house. The next day Brother Bennet and I tried to get a home to carry us over the creeks and rivers, and assist us on our way to Santa Cruz; distance, thirty miles by mule trail across the rugged coast-range of mountains. We might have walked, but did not like to wade the streams; and besides, Brother Bennet had a heavy miner's pack," which we had carried alternately the Saturday night before until we thought it decidedly cheaper to employ the aid of a little horse-power. We found that the cheapest rate at which we could hire a horse was eight dollars per day, and as I did not expect to return for ten days, a very short calculation convinced us that that would not pay." Finally we succeeded in buying, for eighty dollars, a young red horse, very poor, hair all turned the wrong way, his mane pulled out by the roots, and his head nearly off. He had been tied to a mule, which ran away with him, and dragged him, half a mile by the neck; and really, if he had not been a better horse than his appearance indicated, it [end of page f864t25_121.gif] 122 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. would have killed him. Much has been said about the fine, fat horses of the itinerancy, and verily if the legions of Methodist cavalry connected with the nine thousand three hundred and forty traveling preachers Of the United States were marshaled in one grand cavalcade, we should hardly know which most to admire, the noble horses or their heroic, self-sacrificing riders. However illustrious the line of itinerant horses in California may become, let it be remembered that the specimen we have exhibited is the bead of the succession, the bona fide St. Peter of the whole fraternity; being the first member of that tribe ever admitted into the itinerancy in that territory, excepting, of course, the mule Brother Roberts used on one of his visits from Oregon, and afterward, sold to Brother Owen on sight unseen, but has never been seen since by any of the parties claiming. So as it is not best to keep the Church in doubt as to the true head, which would lead to endless and useless discussion, it is better to decide the question at once in favor of the red horse. There were at the time of our purchase plenty of good horses out on the plains, but not available In time for our purposes; so we did the best we could. In the afternoon we rigged up our young charger to go on our journey a few miles, and lodge at the house Of William Campbell. When we got to [end of page f864t25_122.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 123 Pueblo Creek, which was greatly swollen by the late heavy rains, we both mounted our new horse, but by the time he got us fairly into the stream, he fell down, and gave us both an immersion, and I thought would bave drowned, if we had not helped him up. We then led him by the rein, and waded out, and proceeded on our way, rejoicing that it was as well with us as it was." Arriving at Brother Campbell's at nightfall, we immediately sent out an appointment for preaching that night, and got in all the neighborhood, consisting of three families and six travelers, and had a good meeting. After preaching we went and spent the night with Asa Finley and family. They treated us with great kindness, and gave us an early breakfast of chickens and eggs, reputed to be a favorite dish with the preachers ; the first and only place where I received such fare in California for nearly two years. The mountain scenery of that day's travel was beautiful, and grand beyond description. Now a grove of redwood trees of immense size, and now a vast field of wild oats, cut in every direction with the traits of deer and grizzly bears. Crossing the foot-hills we passed a large herd of sheep, guarded by a shepherd's dog, who alone had the care of the flock. He kept between us and his sheep, and gave us to understand, by his growl [end of page f864t25_123.gif] 124 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ing, that we must keep a respectful distance, and not meddle with him or his charge. Those dogs are very common in California, and guard the sheep committed to their care with ceaseless vigilance day and night. But for them the coyotes, which are very numerous, would make dreadful havoc among the sheep. I heard of a California dog that took special care of the weak lambs of his flock, and was frequently seen to pick up the lagging lamb, and carry it in his mouth to its mother. Such illustrious examples in the canine tribe excite feelings of profound contempt against those lazy dogs that do nothing but eat, and sleep, and snap at the children. Ascending to the mountain summit, the view was enchanting. Looking eastward We saw the splendid valley of San Jose, adorned in its beautiful new dress Of green, spotted over with large bands of cattle, horses, mules, and sheep. Looking westward, over mountain peaks, foot-bills, and valleys, a distance of twelve or fifteen miles, there lay the great Pacific, spread out in silent grandeur as far as our ken could scan the horizon, and six thousand miles beyond. Night overtook us in the mountains; and, having no moonlight, we had no small difficulty in finding our way out. At Santa Cruz I found a class of about twenty members, among whom were four local preachers. One of the preachers was a young man of consider [end of page f864t25_124.gif] MISSIOINARY LIFE. 125 able talent, and was employed at a salary of two thousand dollars a year to teach the village school; and, at the request of the society, had taken the relation of temporary pastor and preacher until they could be supphed by a regular missionary. The society got aloug very prosperously till a short time before my visit, when a dispute arose between two of the most prominent members about a town lot. Party strife was now at the flood, and the little heritage of the Lord, it was feared, was about to be swept away. The Sunday before an altercation arose in the class-meeting, in which a number of members left the house, saying they did not wish to be considered members any longer. The elected preacher in charge tendered his resignation, the meeting was broken up by confusion, and many pios souls went home weeping, and "thought htat all was lost, and they never shouls again have any more good meeting." The arrival of a missionary just at that juncture was regared as opportunely provedential. We went to work immediately, as per Discipline, and had the case arbitrated, and although the breach was not healed at once, the society was reheved and reunited, and the way prepared for the preaching of the Gospel. On Saturday, at eleven A.M., I preached tin the house of Elihu Anthony form, "Therefore, leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on [end of page f864t25_125.gif] 126 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. unto perfection." Preached again at night. Sunday, at half past nine A. M., we held a love-feast, and a joyful feast it was. Preached at eleven A. M. in the school-house, on the Divinity of Christ, to a crowded house. Several Spanish families were present, and seemed to be greatly interested. After sermon I administered the sacraments of baptism and of the Lord's Supper. About twenty persons partook of the emblems of the broken body and shed blood." of their blessed Lord I for the first time in California, and a majority of them had been in the country ever since 1847 {1847/00/00}. They had longed for such a privilege in their new home, and now their tears, and sobs, and shouts told of the gladness of their hearts. After preaching that night, two of Brother Bennet's daughters presented themselves as seekers of religion, the first female penitents I had seen in California. I made a plan of preaching appointments for the local preachers, and left the work in their hands till I should return in the spring. I was much pleased with my visit. Santa Cruz is a delightful place, situated on the north side of Monterey Bay, enjoying a pleasant sea-breeze, in the midst of one of the most fertile spots in the country. The American portion of the population at that time was composed principally of families who had settled there before the gold discovery, and had their children growing tip around them, and hence the place MISSIONARY LIFE. [end of page f864t25_126.gif] 127 was more home-like than any other place I had seen in the territory. They had also the best school., and largest Sunday school, in the country. There were the Anthony, Case, Bennet, and Hecox families, and others that I took real pleasure in visiting. On Tuesday, the 29th of January {1850/01/29}, I retraced my steps alone over the mountains to San Jose Valley. It rained on me the whole day, and for several hours in the morning the fog was so dense that I was in great doubt as to what direction I was steering. The narrow. mountain path was in many places very steep, slippery, and dangerous. In one such place my little horse fell down, and finding that he was on the eve of taking a roll down the mountain, I sprang off on the upper side, and let him have his roll to himself. Such a slide would probably have killed a common horse, but the little fellow was very tough, and like some unpromising young preachers I have seen, there was a great deal of out-come " in him, for I learned be afterward made a fine horse. I met two Spaniards oil the mountain, who asked me for matches, and wanted me to stop and talk, but I did not like the looks of the fellows much, and made no tarrying. By the time I got through the mountains night overtook me, and that part of the valley being a vast sea of water and mud, I lost my way. In trying to find Brother Finley's place, I came to an Indian but, and had a great fight with [end of page f864t25_127.gif] 128 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. half a dozen dogs. I waked up the Indians, but they could not understand my language, nor I theirs. Finally, at a late hour, I reached the Mission Of Santa Clara," now a flourishing town, and the seat of our university. I put up at an old adobe house, bearing the name of Reynolds' Hotel, and was conducted to the bar-room, where a jolly set of gamblers were engaged in card-playing. After getting myself warmed, and refreshed by a pretty good supper, the gamblers having finished their games for the night, I engaged them in conversation about California life, and sobered them down a little by a description of the condition of sick adventurers in the San Francisco hospitals. None of them knew me, but they treated me with respect, as most, Californians will always treat any man who behaves himself, and attends to his own business. Finally one said "Well, boys, let's go to bed. Agreed," responded another. Said I Gentlemen, if you've no objections, I propose that we have a word of prayer together before we retire." They looked at each other and at me a moment, in evident surprise, when the bar-keeper, who was standing behind his bar, waiting an opportunity to sell to each fellow a retiring "nip " for twentyfive cents per head, said "I suppose, sir, there's no objection." [end of page f864t25_128.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 129 " Thank you, sir," said I, and added And now let us all kneel down, as we used to do with the old folks at home, and ask the Lord for his blessing." I believe that every gambler of them kneeled down, as humbly as children, and I had a blessed season in praying for them, and for their mothers and sisters, whom they might or might not ever see on mortal shores; but that the wandering adventurers in California, with their mothers and sisters at hoine, might all give their bearts to God, believe in Jesus, and be prepared for a happy greeting on the other shore, and a home in heaven. They took no more nips that night, but slipped off to bed, mute as mice. I afterward met one of them in San Jose, and he took off his hat by the time he got within a rod of me. I said nothing to them on the subject of gambling. The next day I exchanged my little red horse for one that could carry me through the mud without falling down, at the hazard of his own neck and mine, and gave thirty dollars to boot. The next night I preached again at Mr. Young's in San Jose, had a good audience and profitable meeting. On Thursday morning I started for San Francisco, distance fifty miles, through mud and water, a great part of the way, up to my horses knees. I passed Whisman's before noon, the only public road, or private one either, except two or three [end of page f864t25_129.gif] 130 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. " Spanish ranchos." I knew not where I was to spend the night, but determined to go as far as I could, and to stop wherever my horse gave out. Never having traveled that route, I went several miles out of my way; but met a Spaniard who kindly put me on my course. About nine o'clock at night I reached San Franciskito Creek, which was booming and overspreading its banks. It made such a roaring and crashing that I tried in vain to get my horse into it, and the darkness was so dense that I could not tell where I was to land if he had gone in. Turning back I saw a light not far distant, and, approaching found it to be a hunter's camp, occupied by three men, two of whom were very drunk. They granted me permission to lodge with them, that is, to warm by their fire, and sleep on the ground in a blanket they loaned me. I staked my horse out to grass; for though the valley was flooded, it was covered with new grass, about eight inches high, and returning to the fire, the drunker man of the two met me, and said, "I want to have a word with you," and, staggering round behind the tent, he took my arm, and said, "Stranger, you mustn't mind anything that man there may say to you. He's a clever feller, but be's pretty drunk to-night. Stranger, you mustn't mind him." [end of page f864t25_130.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 131 After I seated myself by the fire the three men told their experience. The details were too horrible to be repeated. When they got through they wanted me to tell mine so I gave them a little of my experience. As I proceeded they stared at me, and finally one of them said, You're a preacher, ain't you ?'I Yes," I replied; "I pass for one." "O, good Lord, didn't ye catch us ?" said they, with sundry apologies for their vulgar talk in the presence of a preacher. We didn't dream there was a preacher in the country." After that they gave me extra attention, and I left them, after an early breakfast, feeling that I owed them a debt of gratitude, and homeward I went, expecting to find Mrs. Taylor quite recruited in health by the opportune aid of good Sister Merchant. [end of page f864t25_131.gif] 132 CALIPORNIA LIFE ILLUTSTRATED. CHAPTER V. MISSIONARY LIFE-CONTINUED. ON my return from Santa Cruz I learned fliat Sister Merchant, instead of being servant in family, had assumed to be mistress, and had all hands, with a neighboring family added, to wait on her. The day after I left by some means, several more screws got loose about her; indeed, she became crazy, and refused to do anything; said that "the Lord's children are kings and priests," and that she " was one of them sure," and that it did not become kings and priests to be doing housework. She also refused to leave; said that the house was the Lord's, and that she was the Lord's, and had a right to stay there as long as she pleased; was astonished that Mrs. Taylor should have the audacity to speak to her about leaving the house of her heavenly Father; she knew Brother Taylor wouldn't do such a thing; that Brother Taylor was more sanctified than Sister Taylor, andthat he would settle the question of right between thern as soon as he got home, that he would." She took possession of an upper room, which had [end of page f864t25_132.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 133 just been rented for fifty dollars per month, and refused to give it lip to the person who had rented it, or to anybody else, and there remained day and night, demanding, her meals regularly, and all other needful attention, and kept Mrs. Taylor and the children awake a good share of every night with her songs and prayers. Having no home nor friends, Mrs. Taylor would not have her turned out of doors, but patiently did her bidding. It was some time after my return before we could get her comfortable quarters elsewhere. In the mean time she righted up, so as to look out for herself. So much for our first experience with servants in California. At that time we had no asylum for the insane in California, and yet such was the constant overstretching of mind and muscle, that a great many persons became deranged, and their condition was indeed deplorable. Some such were sent to the hospitals, some to the "Prison Brig," and some were confined in private outhouses, with about as much care as a wild animal would command. I remember one in the hospital who thought he was in prison verbally detailing all the horrors of false imprisonment, dragged away from his family, and imprisoned for life, without ever letting him know whith what offense he was charged. He wept and bewailed his desolate condition, nobody to plead his [end of page f864t25_133.gif] 134 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. cause, and no hope of ever seeing his wife and children again." When I would assure him that he was not in prison, but being unwell he was placed in that house, which the city had kindly provided for sick strangers for medical treatment, and that he would soon be well, and could then go and see his family, " O, is that it ! O, I'm so glad I I'm so glad!" he would rejoice a minute, and then slide back into his hopeless prison. Another I used to see in the hospital, said he was Daniel Webster's private secretary. He was always cheerful, and polite as a French dancing-master. He was constantly receiving company. " Good morning, Commodore Perry. I'm very happy to see you so unexpectedly. Walk in, walk in, Commodore. Give me your cap, and be seated. I'll call Mr. Webster. I know he'll be delighted to see you. He was speaking of you only this morning at the breakfast table. I was just reading Commodore, as you came to the door, one of your dispatches from the seat of war. That was a dreadful fight you had with the Philistines ! The American navy never had such a contest before, and never before achieved so glorious a victory ! All glory to the American navy ! all honor to Commodore Perry ! Let the stars and stripes float forever ! I say." Those two poor fellows were both harmless, and [end of page f864t25_134.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 135 occupied places in large wards lilled with sick men. But I used to see a man who was considered dangerous. He was tightly laced in a strait-jacket, und bound down to the ground room in the hospital, dark, damp, cold, and cheerless as Hades. Poor fellow, how I pitied him in my very soul! A Captain B. was taken to a hospital near where I lived, and was confined in a stable. He complained of very had treatment, and at all hours could hear his ravings. He tore off his own clothes, and must have suffered from cold. Mrs. Arington living near, getting permission of the doctor to visit the captain, and give him his meals occasionally, took him in hand and treated him kindly; he ceased his ravings, and spend much of his time in lauding the dear woman who became his friend when he had none. He subsequently recovered. In January, 1852 {1852/01/00}, a state Lunatic Asylum was commenced in the city of Stockton, which has since recieved annual appropriations by the State Legislature for improvements, and for the cure of the insane. The appropriations for the year 1854 {1854/00/00} amounted to one-hundred and fifty-three thousand dollars. Eighty thousand of that ammount was for the erection of a main building, which is thus described in the "An- [end of page f864t25_135.gif] 136 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. nual Reports of the Officers of the Insane Asylum of the State of California for the year 1854 {1854/00/00}." The main building, just erected and finished, is a brick structure, seventy feet square, three stories high. The first story is fifteen feet in the clear, contains eight rooms and two halls, fourteen feet wide. The second story is twelve feet in the clear, contains sixteen rooms, with halls same as in the first story. The third story is eleven feet in the clear, contains eighteen rooms, with halls same as in the lower stories. There is a ventilator in every room, flues in all the rooms in the first story, and in all the principal rooms in the second and third stories. The height of the top of the spire from the ground is one hundred and nine feet, and height of top of pediment ,from the ground is sixty-one feet." Table IV of said report, "shows the number of admissions, recoveries, discharges, deaths, and the number remaining in the hospital at the close of each year since the organization of the institution," up to the close of 1854 {1854/00/00}' 1852 {1852/00/00} 1853 {1853/00/00} 1854 {1854/00/00} TOTAL. Admissions 124 222 305 651 Recoveries 52 110 150 812 Deaths 10 12 21 43 Discharges 52 110 150 312 Remaining 62 103 134 299 A German gardener came to me, saying that he had hired himself for a year, at a hundred dollars per [end of page f864t25_136.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 137 month, to a Scotch gardener at the mission," and begged me, as a favor, to draw up an article of agreement for him, which, as a matter of accommodation, I did. Then, after getting it signed, he begged me, with the Scotchman's consent, to take care of it for him, so I locked it up in my private trunk. During my absence at Santa Cruz our little babe was taken very ill, and Mrs. Taylor, having no one to Send for the doctor, went to the door, hoping to see sonw one pass whom she might send for a physician. Just as she got to the door she met the German gardener, accompanied by another, who demanded of her the said article of agreement. It is with Mr. Taylor's papers," said she, "locked up in his trunk, and he has the key in his pocket, so you can't get it till he returns." "We must have it, " said they, and if you don't give it up peaceably, we'll take it by force." The sick babe was crying in the kitchen, the crazy, woman was singing and shouting up stairs, and there were two savage-looking men contending against one sick woman. Mrs. Taylor replied "I told you before that the paper was in that trunk, and I can't get it. If it is your mind to break open the trunk, you do it at your own risk," and with that she left them, and went to her babe. They then broke open my trunk by knocking the bottom out, Of it, and after rummaging through all my papers, letters, memoran- [end of page f864t25_137.gif] 138 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. da, etc., found their paper and left. So Mrs. Taylof had a fine opportunity for the development and exercise of her patience during my absence. The trunk breakers afterward learned that they had laid themselves liable to prosecution, and soon after I returned the gardener came to apologize, and offer to pay for the trunk. Colonel Nevins happened to be at my house when he came in. I told the fellow that I would not accept pay for the trunk; that to come in my absence, and frighten my sick family, and break open my trunk in that manner, was an offense not to be wiped out by pay trunk, and, continued I, here is Colonel Nevins, an old practitioner at the bar, I'll turn you over to him, and let him put you through as you deserve. The colonel heard the statement of , the case and said to him "My dear fellow, you have got yourself into a had fix; you, are guilty of a state prison offense; the evidence is all clear; a very plain case, and we'll have you in the chain-gang in less than thirty-six hours." The old fellow dropped on his knees, and weeping like a whipped child, begged us to kill him; said he had never been arrested for any offense in his life, had always tried to support a good character, and now in his old days to be put into the chain-gang was worse than death." So we had compassion on him, and after further admonition dismissed the case [end of page f864t25_138.gif] MSSIONARY LIFE. 139 On going through the hospital, on my return, I was shocked to see what sad havoc death had made among the poor fellows with whom I had sympathized and prayed the day before I left the city. Having added a horse to the number of my family cares, I had occasion to take some new lessons in California prices. Bought it sack of barley, one hundred and fifty pounds, for fifteen dollars. Bought a hundred pounds of hay, miserable stuff too, for fifteen dollars, and carried it all home on my horse at one load. But having promised to preach occasionally at San Jose and Santa Cruz, and take the pastoral oversight of them, I found it cheaper to keep a horse, even at those rates, than to pay the enormous fare of public conveyances. February 10th, 1850 {1850/02/10} Brother Owen and I, assisted by a few brethren, dug the foundation, and commenced the erection of a small book-room, adjoining our church on Powell-street. Carpenters' wages were so enormously high, twelve dollars per day, that we did most of the work with our own hands. Brother Owen, after his appointment to the missionary work in California, spent some time in collecting funds and books, and shipped for California about two thousand dollars' worth of books. They arrived per ship Arkansas, and on January 16th, 1850 {1850/01/16}, I got them ashore, paying for lighterage five dollars per ton--fifteen dollars. They were discharged from the [end of page f864t25_139.gif] 140 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. lighter on the sand beach, foot of California street, whence I had to heave the boxes fifty yards, to get them where they could be loaded on a dray. Paid forty dollars to have them hauled to my house on Jackson-street, where they remained unopened till February 16th {1850/02/16}, when we had them hauled to our new book-room. This was the nucleus of The Book Concern of the Pacific ;" and in the midst of our toil in establishing it, we contemplated with a good deal of satisfaction its future greatness and usefulness. As I was resident in the city, it devolved on me to attend to the books, which I did at the expense of a great deal of time and toil, in connection with the multiphed duties of the pastorate. It was so expensive hauling, that I generally packed on my shoulder the boxes and packages we sent out to order from the book-room to the boat, more than half a mile; but I thought nothing of time and labor, if we could thereby establish a good book depository, and supply the coast with a sound religious literature; for next to the preaching of a pure Gospel, we considered that most important for the redemption of the country from error and sin. While Brother Owen's family still occupied Father White's shanty in San Francisco, their little daughter, two years old, took croup, or something similar, and on February 13th {1850/02/13} died. It was a beautiful child, and having carried it over the plains, it had become [end of page f864t25_140.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 141 an early partner in their toils and sufferings, and had endeared itself to the family to a greater degree, perhaps, than children ordinarily do at that age. To see the old missionary and his wife join when they stood at Hymen's altar, and bow together over their dying babe, and impress on its fading cheek the parting kiss, was indeed touching for adequate description. bowed his head, and received the shock like a man of God inured to trial; but Sister Owen, dear woman had been so worn down by hardship and toil, and her nervous system was so shattered, that the light- ning bolt seemed to strike through her soul. The shock to her was so heavy that she has never fully recovered from its effects. She is still a sensible, pious woman, but evidently a wreck, physically, what she has been in her days of sunshine and hope. Brother Treat Clark made her little girl's coffin, and I, assisted by Brother Hatler, dug her grave; and there, on the northwest corner of Church lot, we buried the little jewel of Jesus the first member of our mission to leave us ; a hostage taken by the Master to bind that wayworn family more firmly to the land of their adoption, and to commit them more fully to the work of its redemp tion from sin and error. Brother Owen built a small one-story house, half a mile east of the town of San Jose', into which he [end of page f864t25_141.gif] 142 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. moved his family; and leaving them in care of his father-in-law, he on the 2nd of March {1850/03/02} returned alone to his charge in Sacramento City. The waters having assuaged, he had his church brought back to her moorings, and fulfilled the duties of his charge, in the absence of his family, till the close of that conference year. On the 2nd of March, 1850 {1850/03/02}, while I was at working the book-room, Brother Troubody and a good-looking stranger came in, and I was introduced for the first time to Rev. William Roberts, our superintendent. The great pleasure of meeting a fellow-laborer, experienced by those in distant fields, where such meetings are like angel visits, can hardly be conceived by any but the subjects of it. Brother Roberts put up with us, and occupied our prophet's room. We felt it a great privilege to enjoy his company, not only on account of the novelty of it, but especially because he is a Christian gentleman of, high orderone of the Lord's noblemen. He preached in our chapel at eleven A. M. next day, from, Whosoever shall confess me before men, him shall the Son of man also confess before the angels of God." It was a pointed, practical sermon, which was to me as manna to the hungry soul. He preached again at night an excellent sermon on the witness of the Spirit. That day, at three P. M., I preached, from a pile of lumber on Mission-street the funeral sermon of William H. MISSIONARY LIFE. [end of page f864t25_142.gif] 143 Stevens, who had died the day before, leaving it, lliq distant home, Winnebago County, Illinois, a wife six children. Death in California in those days seeined clothed with extraordinary terrors, any of the mitigating circumstances attending the death-scenes of old settled communities.No kind sister's hand to wipe the death-sweat from the brow; nor affectionate wife to impress on the parting kiss, and whisper words of peace in the ear of the dying; no gathering of the children around the departing father to receive his last, solemn charge, catch his last smile and lingering look. A little boy, for example, was seen crying in of San Francisco early one rainy morning in winter of 1849 {1849/00/00}- 50 {1850/00/00}, and a man said "Little boy, what's the matter witli you?" "Daddy's dead, and I don't know what to do with him!" The lad conducted the man into a small tent, and there lay his dead father all alone. It was said that he owned a farm in Missouri, and had plenty of friends at home; but lingered and died, unknown to any but his little boy. The circumstances attending the protracted illness of Brother Stevens were was triumphant over all by the grace of Jesus, and said when dying, "Tell my wife I die in peace, and go home to heaven. I expect to meet her and the [end of page f864t25_143.gif] 144 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. children there." This death-scene is described in detail in my Seven Years' Street Preaching in San Francisco," p. 363. Brother Roberts spent nearly four weeks in California at that time, two Sabbaths in San Francisco, and the rest of his time in Stockton and Sacramento City. He sailed for Oregon on the 29th of March {1850/03/29}. On the same day I made my second visit to San Jose, accompanied by my family. We were met on our arrival by our old friend, Dr. Grove W. Deal, who was a representative from Sacramento in the Territorial Legislature, then in session in San Jose The doctor filled his seat in the Legislature during the week, and preached the Gospel to his fellow-law-makers on the Sabbath. I shall not attempt to report the good which he may have accomplished there, except to say that a bill for the incorporation of Church property was presented, in which it was provided that the trustees should be elected by the society, and the doctor had it so amended as to recognize any board of trustees duly elected or appointed according to the rules or discipline of the Church they might represent. I saw an, example six years afterward, of the practical importance of that amendment. An effort was made in a lawsuit to ignore the legal existence of a Methodist board of trustees. The lawyer on tho other side said [end of page f864t25_144.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 145 " This is not a legal board of trustees, because they never were duly elected by the society." True, " replied another, they were not elected by the society, but they were duly appointed by the preacher in charge." " Yes, " answered the other, but, according to the statute, they must be elected by the society." He had not read the statute lately, if ever, and did not know that when it was being molded it had passed through the hands of a Methodist preacher. He was then requested to read the statute, and he found, to his disappointment, that it decided against him the point on which he had hung all his hopes of success in the suit. On Saturday the 30th {1850/03/30}, .I accompanied Doctor Deal to the Assembly Hall, and witnessed the election of the first district judges in the territory. Next day preached at Mr. Young's and, and also in the Senate Chamber. After preaching in the morning we had a blessed class-meeting. A Frenchman and his Spanish wife were in class, and upon Campbell's recommendation were admitted into society on probation. They soon afterward moved away, and I know not what became of them. On Monday, April 1 {1850/04/01}, I opened a subscription for the erection of a Methodist Episcopal Church in San Jose. That ws election day for county officers, and hence a day of great excitement in town, [end of page f864t25_145.gif] 146 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. but more especially because of a celebrated horserace, which came off that afternoon. An American by the name of Hedgepeth, and a native Californian by the name of Pico, ran against each other for a prize of ten thousand dollars on each side. Such a stake was in keeping with the times, and such a scene the highest intellectual entertainment that could engage the attention of the masses. Hedgepeth took the prize. I was abroad among the people making interest for my new church enterprise, but would not turn my head to see the race, which to many was matter of as great surprise as my apparent want of interest in the shark catching- on my voyage to California. One Sunday, in the South Pacific, just after preaching,, I was seated on deck reading the Bible, when lo, a.cry, "A shark ! a shark!" All hands ran abaft to see the great man-eater of the deep. Many said to me as they passed, Come and see the shark; he's a rouser." Several baited hooks were thrown out, swallowed, and bitten off. At one time they hooked it, and drew it up to the taffrail, when the line broke, and down it dropped. Finally they harpooned it, and, in the midst of universal shouting and hurraing, it was'drawn aboard. It was a huge monster. Colonel Myers, returning from the scene, said to me, as I sat still reading the word, Did you not see the shark ?" [end of page f864t25_146.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 147 No, Sir, " said I "Why not?" said he, with great surprise. "I was engaged," replied I, "in reading the word of the Lord, which to me is of more importance than shark killing, especially on the Sabbath;" and added "Colonel, if I were engaged in conference with a king on important business, and should in the midst of his conversation, on the occurrence of some trivial excitement, catching a shark, for example, jump up and leave him abruptly, I would be treating him with great disrespect, would it not? I have just been reading a message from, and holding a conversation with the GREAT KING, and I think to stop short and run away to see a fish killed on a holy day, would not be treating him with becoming courtesy" True," said be; that's consistent; you're right. So in the great horse-race excitement I was engaged in preparing to build a house for the Lord and I did not wish. to give countenance to such entertainments. After spending a couple of days in San Jose soliciting for our new church, and getting on subscription about two thousand dollars, I returned to San Francisco. My visit to the hospital the day after my return is thus noted in my journal "APRIL 5, 1850 {1850/04/05}.-Visited hospital this P.M.Eight or ten persons have died during my brief [end of page f864t25_147.gif] 148 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. absence. C. W. Bradley, from Louisiana, died today while I was there. Said he, when dying 'I am ready; I resign all to Jesus. Tell my wife to meet me in heaven.' "Poor M., one of the men I rescued from the other hospital, (see Seven Years' Street Preaching in San Francisco," etc., p. 66,) died cursing and swearing in the bitterest despair. " D. is an honest-looking pioneer, a man of good common sense and information; has been religiously educated, has a Methodist wife at home, but is sinking to the grave without salvation. He says It's so presumptuous, now that I'm dying, to offer myself to God; I cannot do it. It is impossible for me to receive pardon!' These are but specimens of a various multitude of cases. The day after the above was penned I was called to see Dr. G. He lay in a small shanty on a sand hill, near what is now the corner of Montgomery and Pine streets; and as his case will illustrate the condition of hundreds whom I have seen encounter death on those distant shores, I will give a brief description of it. He was an intelligent man, had been favored with good literary and religious educational advantages, had a pious wife at home; but there he was, an isolated stranger among strangers, reduced to penury, far gone with chronic diarrhea, utterly dispirited, no [end of page f864t25_148.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 149 hope in this life, and worse than all, no hope beyond the grave. Said he "I have always known it was my duty to serve God, and have had a great many invitations to accept of mercy through Christ; but, though outwardly moral, I have lived a great sinner against God all my Iife, and now I'm caught! I'm, caught at last! God is about to call me to judgment without mercy." I urged him to seek God's favor, and trust in the merits of Jesus. " Too late now," said he I have been so presumptuous and I wicked there's no hope for me. I sometimes catch at something that inspires a little hope, but again lose my hold, and all is darkness. There appears to be a thick veil between God and my soul; a bar that I cannot got over. I feel that when I leave this world I shall have no home and no employment! I wish I never had been born! what purpose have I had an existence? The world, could have done without me; I've done no good in it! I might have been saved, but I refused; now I must be the personification of everything that is despicable, and wretched, and mean forever !" I talked, and sung, and prayed, and did everything I could to inspire a hope in the poor in the light of which he might find his way to the cross of Jesus, but all without effect. [end of page f864t25_149.gif] 150 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. At another time when I called to see him, for I saw him frequently, he said " I have been trying since you were here to seek Jesus, but I cannot find him." When I represented to him the mercy of God in Christ, be replied " God has given me commandments to keep, but I have broken them all my life. I often felt guilt and sorrow for my sins, but did the same things again, and now God has gone from me." I then gave him the Saviour's illustration of importunity in seeking, and his encouraging command and promise Ask and ye shall receive; seek and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." "I fain would ask," replied he; "but when I try I talk to vacancy, I find not the ear of God; I know not how to seek, and I cannot find the place to knock." Alas! thought I, poor Esau; birthright gone, and no place for repentance. How my soul pitied bim. I then said, " O my dear brother, you must not give yourself up to despair." It has given itself to me," said he; it covers my soul with the pall of death, and overwhelms me in darkness without hope." Soon after this interview, when death struck him he begged most imploringly Help me up ! O do help me up! Set me down on the floor." [end of page f864t25_150.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 151 He was helped out of bed by those present, gasped and died before they could get him back. What madness and folly to postpone the great business of life, for the accomplishment of which the Lord does not give us too much time nor strength, to such an hour, when time and strength have fled. Wednesday, April 10 {1850/04/10}, found me on my way a second time to Santa Cruz, to organize a quarterly conference, and hold a meeting that morning I sold a lot of Methodist books to a Brother Walker, to take to New South sold my horse to W. O. Johnson for one hundred and fifty-two dollars, reserving two trips on him to Santa Cruz, thereby securing the end without the risk and expense of keeping him. Bought save expense; amount saved, one hundred dollars; sold him to save expense; cost in country one hundred and ten dollars; brought in city one hundred and fifty-two dollars. afterward told me he was a lucky horse" for him; said after making ten thousand dollars in California, his livery stable was burned, and everything in it except Charley." He had to begin the world again with nothing but that horse, but started same business with him, and in two years regained all he had lost. I did better with that horse than I did with the mule on which I traveled a couple of months in the [end of page f864t25_151.gif] 152 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. mines. Bought the mule for ninety dollars, rode him about two hundred miles, and fell in with a "packer," who, claimed him, and proved property; but in consideration of my having bought him before in good faith, be sold him to me for fifty dollars. When I returned from the mountains I put him in charge of a man who had a ranch " on Sacramento River, to have him recruited, and took his receipt. When I sent to get the mule, the ranch" was still there, but the man, mule, saddle, bridle, and all, "had gone to other diggins," and I have not heard of them since. The following scrap from my journal notes an incident of that trip to Santa Cruz "Friday, Aprii 12, 1850 {1850/04/12}.-On my way to quarterly meeting in Santa Cruz; now seated at one P.M. under the shade of an ancient oak, which stands on the summit of the coast range of mountains between San Jose Valley and the Pacific Ocean, from which both are in view. I am in the midst of one of nature's grand pasture fields of wild oats and grass. While my horse is grazing, having taken my cold lunch alone, I have just had a precious season of prayer I on the mount.' Jesus often went up into a mountain to pray. I have prayed on many a Mountain on both the Eastern and Western slopes of the continent, and have always found the mount a good place for prayer. Its pure air, its grand im- [end of page f864t25_152.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 153 pressive scenery, its altitude, bearing you away heavenward far above the din and bustle of the babbling world beneath. Jesus had a reason for going Up into a mountain to pray. I now mount my horse and travel on very warm. have to walk a great deal, because of the roughness and danger of the way. Half past four P. M., have just got through the mountain, and seated myself in the midst of one of nature's most beautiful flower-gardens to rest. "The Lord has lavished more beauty on California than upon any spot I have ever seen. The perfect transparency of her atmosphere, the salubriousness of her climate, the sublimity of her mountains, the invigorating freshness of her ocean breezes, the beauty of her valleys, and the variety and extent of her native flower-gardens, carpeting hill and dale. for miles together with all the colors of light, are quite without a parallel anywhere in Uncle Sam's' dominions, if not in the world. For a couple of miles back, as I came through a dense chaperel thicket, I have been on the track, of a grizzly bear. His track, by measurement, was fourteen inches long and seven wide; he must have been a monster. I was on the look-out at every turn of the path to see him start up before me, and wondered whether or not he would clear the track. The path was cut so deeply by the winter torrents, [end of page f864t25_153.gif] 154 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. and was in many places so narrow, that there was no chance to wheel and retreat. I, however, felt but little fear, for I regard old grizzly as one of my Father's domestics, and can't hurt me without his consent; still, if I saw him coming, and had room, I should be like the fellow I heard of a few days ago. He got rather close to an old grizzly in this very mountain, and bruin took after him as fast as he could run, and the fellow almost killed his mule getting out of the way ; but he cleared the track, and saved his mule meat and his own as well." Organized and held our quarterly conference on Saturday, April 13th {1850/04/13}, at four o'clock P. M. Renewed the preaching license of E. Anthony, A. A. Hecox, H. S. Loveland, and Enos Beaumont; and at that meeting licensed Alexander M'Lean to exhort. He afterward became a very useful young preacher in California, but feeling it his duty to take a course at the Biblical Institute in Concord, we very reluctantly gave him up, hoping that he would afterward go into the work in California. He took his course; I believe graduated, and is still a preacher, though not in the itinerant work. I am decidedly in favor of a thorough preparation of mind arid. heart for the work of the Christian ministry; but when a man is called of God to preach the Gospel, and in the order of Providence is as actively and efficiently committed to the work- as was Brother M'Lean, I very much [end of page f864t25_154.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 155 question whether it is his duty to leave the regular work to go to Concord, Jericho, or anywhere else. I have no doubt that Brother M'Lean is useful wherever he is, but I think he ought to be wholly devoted to the ministry. He is a very capable young man. On my way to the meeting above referred to, I put up at a public house, where they made no charge except for my horse, and invited me to stay with them whenever I could; said they were "always glad to see the preachers." Returning, I spent a night at the same place, and took with me three travelers, who designed going elsewhere. My host talked very kindly to me, but charged us all alike, five dollars and fifty cents each for our night's lodging and breakfast. I could not account for the change of his conduct toward me, unless, 1st, his covetousness got the mastery of his "kind feelings for the preachers;" or, 2d, his wife, who seenied to be the personification of grasping cupidity, charged him to charge me. He was like a Christian an old sailor tells about. "There is a clothing merchant up in Boston," said Jack, "who keeps that command in the Scriptures where it says, 'Thou shalt take the stranger in.' I was a stranger and he took me in had on a pea-jacket I bought of him." On my return to San Francisco, I learned that the first missionaries from the Methodist Episcopal [end of page f864t25_155.gif] 156 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Church, South, Dr. Jesse Boring, and Brothers Pollock and Winn had arrived. Up to that time, Methodism in California had been as true to its native instincts-devotion of heart, to God, and the union of a common brotherhood, through that favorite nursery of Christian sympathy, the class-meeting -as the needle to the pole; a unit; no North nor South ever mentioned. The only question they ever asked me on their arrival, anywhere from Maine to Florida was, Are yon a Methodist preacher?" Yes, sir, I pass for one." "I thought so," was generally the reply, followed by another, " shake hands," and a hearty, mutual congratulation on the enjoyment of the blessings and privileges of our common Methodism on the Pacific coast. And I really thought by burying all local prejudices, and by uniting the cool, calculating beads of the North, and the warm hearts of the South in one body, and then have that body invested with the characteristic energy of California life, and then have all sanctified to God, we would raise up on the'Pacific coast the greatest people in the world. I must say, therefore, that I looked with fearful apprehension upon an effort to make twain" of that which, I thought, for the honor and efficiency of our common Methodism in California, should be, but ONE. I.immediately went, however, and called on the newly arrived brethren of the Church, South. [end of page f864t25_156.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE. 157 My feelings and views in regard to them are expressed in my Journal as follows Thursday, April 18, 1850 {1850/04/18}.-Learned on my return to-day, that the representation of the Southern Church had arrived, and in company with Dr. B. Miller, I called and spent an hour with them. They avow neutrality on the slavery question; say they do not believe that slavery ever will exist.in California, but that the Church, South, as a Christian Church, claim the privilege of sending missionaries to China, California, or wherever they think they can do good. I take them to be Christian men, and true ministers of the Gospel, and as such I shall treat them till they convince me that I am mistaken. There is a great work for Christian men and ministers to do in California, and if the Lord has sent these men here to help do it, I pray that be may open their way for harmonious action with other Churches, and give them great success in saving souls; if the Lord has not sent them here, I hope he will send them back where they came from, and the sooner the better. I shall leave them in his hands, and not attempt to drive them away. I shall give them a welcome to my pulpit and to my heart., as men of God, while they act as such. Brother Pollock was stationed in Sacramento City, and was cordially, received by Brother Owen, who not only invited him to his pulpit, but gave him a [end of page f864t25_157.gif] 158 CALIFORNIA LIFE, ILUSTRATED. list of the names of all his members who had come from the South. I did not feel like going quite so far as that. Many of my members were from the South, and I loved them. They had joined my Church voluntarily, without a word of persuasion, and I thought now, if they wish to leave and join the Church South, they may report themselves and go as they came. One or two felt it their duty to go, and I did not blame them. 'The greater number thought it their duty to remain with us, and I thought they did right to do so. But I am clearly of the opinion, that however sincere and holy the ministers of both parties, one organization of Methodism in California would accomplish at least twice the amount of good in the salvation of sinners, and the redemption of that land, than the two are accomplishing, or can accomplish. True, we have not spent much time and ammunition in fighting each other, and never expect to; but our relative position is such that there are hundreds, and probably thousands, who would have been warm, friends of either branch had it been alone, who will commit themselves to neither, situated as we are. I will illustrate the truth of this view of the subject by a specimen case. J. D. Hoppe, a merchant in San Jose, member of the convention that framed the constitution of the state, a friend to Methodism, had been a Church member in Missouri,. [end of page f864t25_158.gif] MISSIONARY LIFE 159 gave me a subscription of one hundred dollars for our church there, and verbally promised two hundred dollars more as we progressed in the work; but afterward, hearin-a of the arrival of the Southern representation, he said to me "By the organization of two Methodist Churches in California you are going to have collision and strife, and I'll have nothing to do with either party of you. I'm sorry I promised to help you with your church. The hundred dollars I subscribed I'll pay," handing it to me at the same time; but I'll subscribe no more, and pay no more to either party of you." I believe he kept his word to the day of his death. The poor fellow died in San Francisco about three years after, from burns received in the explosion of the steamer Jenny Lind." I believe a legion of similar illustrations could be produced. The chapel we built in San Jose during the summer of 1850 {1850/00/00} is still in use by a flourishing society and, Sunday school a good station, giving support to a preacher and family. As a bit of personal experience in California, I will insert a birthday notice from my journal " Thursday, May 2, 1850 {1850/05/02}. I am this day twenty nine years of age. How astonishing to me that I am entering my thirtieth year. I feel like a boy. I have not at all, as yet, realized my aspirations and spiritual attainment, nor my ideal of manhood. [end of page f864t25_159.gif] 160 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. If I may judge of the future by the past, I shall never learn much from books. Inestimable treasure lies locked up in my library, but I do not take time to count it out and use it; always intending to do so, but-always attending to other duties, such as visiting the sick, looking after Book Depository, answering the ten thousand questions asked by strangers, just arriving, about California, etc., my time is cut up into so many fragments that it appears to be lost. I am spread over so much surface that I cannot concentrate what I consider effective force at any one point. O Lord, in whatever else I am disappointed, let me live in thee, and win souls to Christ ! Twenty-nine years more, and I will probably be dead; nay, alive for evermore." [end of page f864t25_160.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 161 CHAPTER VI. SOCIAL LIFE IN CALIFORNIA. SOCIAL life indeed! Precious little of that article found or even tolerated in California for Years. California was a vast social Sahara. The element of social life, to be sure, is inherent in our being, and has, perbaps, a more prominent and varied manifestation in human life, than any other principle essential to humanity. most appropriate sphere of manifestation is in well ordered family. It gives vitality and felicity to connubial, paternal, maternal, and filial relationships. It constitutes the integral bond which unites the family together, the severance of which is as the lightning bolt entering a man's soul. The man or woman in whom this principle is dead is a misanthrope, and abides in darkness, uncheered by one ray of light or hope; loves neither father, nor mother, nor brother, nor sister, nor son, nor daughter; a miserable being all alone in the world. The man who has no appropriate object on which to exercise his social affections, is a Selkirk, lonely island, surrounded by an ocean waste, fit [end of page f864t25_161.gif] 162 CA11FORNIA, LIFE ILLUSTRATED. emblem of the deep, dark void of his own restless soul. Look, for example, even at Father Adam in Eden. A brand new creation, all beaming in untarnished glory, and by the Creator himself pronounced "good," spread out before him. But among the teeming millions of animated nature, all moving in their pristine strength and beauty, there was not found a helpmeet for poor Adam, though he sought one diligently. The Lord saw that he was in a had state of single wretchedness and said, It is not good that the man should be alone I will make him a helpmeet for him." When Adam awoke from that deep sleep," and set his eyes on an object worthy his love, the most beautiful creature he ever saw in his life, part of himself, for himself, and all his own, loving him, and waiting to be loved by him, his paradise was complete; and Father Adam has ten thousand sons in California to-day, any one of whom would, be most happy to sleep such a sleep as that, and to have. two ribs taken out, if need be, could he but wake up in possession of a helpmeet. Alas! poor fellows, they have often slept a deep sleep," and dreamed something about extracted ribs, and waked but to stare out on their own isolated wretchedness. The tearful adieus of fathers, and sons, and brothers, as they departed for California, told of the deep gushing fountains of social sympathy and affection which swelled their hearts. For weeks afterward [end of page f864t25_162.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 163 they gazed daily, with tearful interest, at the mementoes from loved ' ones, already painfully distant; but they had launched out on unexplored seas of wealth-seeking adventure, and must look ahead. Many were without moral quadrant, compass, or chart, but all had the telescope of manifest destiny, through which they could see in the distance the auriferous mountains. Dark clouds sometimes intercepted their vision, but their edges were so beautifully fringed by the sunshine of hope that they only added grandeur to the scene. Each one felt as certain of getting there, and of making his pile," as did the prophet Balaam, when trotting over to Mount Peor; but, poor fellows, how many of thern, like the prophet, were driven to the wall." Having reached the land of gold, and the flurry and surprises of the arrival over, then came the initiation of the "green horns," as they were familiarly called, into the mysteries of California life, which was a very interesting, and in many cases a very serious affair. Some meeting friends there, had but little difficulty; but many arrived destitute of both friends and funds. All, however, soon learned that to succeed in California, every man must be self reliant and independent, a brave on his own account. flome reflections and associations brought painful contrasts to view, and led to gloomy forebodings, and must hence be dismissed from their minds. [end of page f864t25_163.gif] 164 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Those who put up at the hotel, at thirty dollars per week," found no soft beds in rosewood, with downy pillows, but occupied " bunks " made of rough boards, on the side of the wall, shelving one above another, as in emigrant ships. I have seen not only the walls of hotel lofts thus lined with bunks, but large cribs of them, extending up to the roof of the house, covering the entire floor, except narrow passages giving access to them. Sheets were a superfluity not indulged in; pillows were of straw; mattresses, where they had any, were of the same; but in many cases the sleeper lay on the board which held him up off his follow-sleeper beneath. I tried one night to sleep in one, which, unfortunately for me, was covered with cross slats, evidently designed for a mattress; but the last-mentioned very important article, in such a case, was not there. Turning and rolling on these slats, I longed for the morning. The soft side of a board, compared with them, would have been a luxury. To the foregoing sleeping arrangements, if you add a few coarse gray blankets, you will have an original California lodging-house furnished. I heard it positively asserted by many, who had been made tremblingly sensible of the fact, that in some houses a few pair of blankets supplied a houseful of lodgers. As the weary fellows " turned in one after another, they were comfortably covered till they would fall [end of page f864t25_164.gif] Page 165 is blank. [Plate entitled: California Lodging-room.] [end of page f864t25_166.jpg] SOCIAL LIFE. 167 into a sound sleep, and then the blankets were removed to cover a new recruit, and thus they were passed round for the accommodation of the whole company. By way of variety, the adventurous lodgers in those pioneer hotels were frequently visited by the third plague of Egypt, accompanied by a liliputian host of the flea tribe, whose stimulating influence upon their subjects is represented in the accompanying cut. Any man who is not proof against fleas, or who cannot effect a good insurance on, his skin, had better keep away from old Spanish, towns and Indian villages. When I was at Valparaiso I preached for the Rev. Mr. Trumbull; spent an evening in his company, and heard hma relate a little of his experience with fleas. "When I first came to this place I feared the 'fleas would worry the life out of me. I could neither eat nor sleep, nor stay awake with any comfort.. But after a few weeks I got used to them, and now, I pay no attention to them. The biting of a dozen at once don't cause me to wince, nor lift my pen from my paper." Others, not willing to pay much for the mere name of boarding at the hotel," formed mess. companies, pitched their own tent, bought a skillet and coffee-pot, and kept bachelor's hall." This mode of life is familiarly known in California as "ranching." Their tent or cabin is called the ranch," from rancho," the Spanish name for a farm. A [end of page f864t25_167.gif] 168 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. large proportion of the miners still live in this wav,. "Ranchers" usually cook by turns; sleep in bunks furnished with a pair of blankets, and a few old clothes; a pair of trowsers rolled up witli an old coat, make a pretty good pillow. Wash-day " among the ranchers comes but seldom, and is never welcome; for there are no wives, nor daughters, nor Bridgets, to do the washing. In San Francisco, in 1849 {1849/00/00} -50 {1850/00/00}, there was but little washing done. Men had not yet learned how, and to have it done cost from six to nine dollars per dozen; so it was generally found cheaper to give their cheek-shirts a good wearing, (white was out of the question,) and then shed them off into the streets, and put on new ones. -I have seen dozens of shirts lying around in the streets and vacant lots, which had thus been worn once and never washed. There were yet other fortune-seekers who, instead of ranching in companies, went alone. How they lived I know not; but they slept each in a home-made cot, at each end of which was a fork, driven into the ground, in which lay a ridge-pole, with just enough of canvas stretched over it to cover the cot. The cot, tent, and all were not four feet high. There was one of this kind during the winter of 1849 {1849/00/00} - 50 {1850/00/00} near where I lived on Jackson-street. In the morning I could see the fellow crawl out of his cot from under his little tent, sometimes head foremost; at other times his feet would first appear. While I have seen large [end of page f864t25_168.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 169 tents carried before the blast, ridge-pole, rigging and all, this little tent, which looked like a covered grave, stood the storms of winter without moving a pin. The various classes thus described are not made up of the isolated cases, but represent the great mass of the early denizens of the golden land; men who wore check-shirts, and gray or red flannel, instead of coats; trowsers, fastened up by a leather-girdle, such as was worn by John the Baptist, and they were planted down to their knees into the coarsest boots the market afforded. These were the men who, but a few months before, were known among their friends at home as doctors, lawyers, judges, and mechanics, clothed in broadcloth and fine linen, each one a center of social light and life, around which daily revolved the beautiful and gay, fair daughters, sisters, and wives. How did tbese men so soon become rustics in California? What has become of their polish and social life? I'll tell you. A large class of California adventurers thought about home, and mourned their absence frorn. loved ones, till gloom and despair settled down on their souls. Hope died, energy and effort were paralyzed, and they became helpless and worthless. Some of this class moved round like specters a few months, and tben managed to beg, or otherwise secure their passage home to their ftiends. Whether social life ever had a sound revival in them I know not. [end of page f864t25_169.gif] 170 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. There was one of this class with whom I was acquainted, who took a shipment of bonnets to California in 1849 {1849/00/00}. There were very few American ladies in the country; the Spanish ladies wore no bonnets, so my friend P. found no sale for his bonnets. In vain he peddled them round among the men; no one wanted a bonnet. He had some money also, but knew not what to do with it. Once or twice a week he came to consult me as to what he had better do? Said I " My dear fellow, you must go to work; you cannot long bear California expenses unless you draw upon California resources. Moreover, if you continue to mope about the streets you will take the blues so badly that you'll die; you must do something. If you can't open a large store, open a stand on the sidewalk until you can do better; if you can't do that, go to work on the streets, roll a wheel-barrow at four dollars per day." "I can't work on the streets, " said- he; "I've always been accustomed to merchandising, and can't do manual labor; but I must go into business." "Very well," said I; "seek an opening to-day, and go at it." Some time after this, as I passed down Commercial street, I saw Mr. P. striding diagonally across the, street to meet me. His face seemed much elongated, and I expected to hear a sad tale. Approaching me he said [end of page f864t25_170.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 171 "Mr. Taylor, what shall I do I" choking with an agony of emotion. What's the matter now, Mr. P. I" " O said he, "I loaned. my money to my messmate. He said he wanted it but a few days, till I got ready to go into business, and now he's got my money and gone. I shall never see him again !" "Well, Mr. P.," I replied, I'm very sorry for you; but it's no use to mourn over lost money any more than over spilled milk. There's Captain Wooley whom I know well, who made a thousand dollars, and one day last week as he was leaving his ship he put his purse containing his one thousand dollars in gold dust into his pocket; but poor fellow, he has no wife with him to sew up the holes in his pocket, so as he has descending his ship's, ladder his purse, gold and all, slipped through a bole in his pocket into the bay. Well, sir, the captain said he never looked back, nor lost one minute grieving over it. He knew it was gone, and just went to work with great purpose of heart to make another thousand. And yesterday as I walked out on Montgomery-street, a man called me by name " Mr. Taylor, look here ; I made five thousand dollars, and had it hid away in my shanty here, and last night some rascal came and stole every dollar of it; so I'm just where I started. , But never mind,' continued he; I I'll go to work and make five thousand more, and will try and put it where the rogues [end of page f864t25_171.gif] 172 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. can't get hold of it.' And Mr. E., a friend of mine, who boarded up town, went down one morning to his auction store, which he had just filled with goods on his own account, but lo ! the store, goods and all were gone ! While he slept the whole were consumed by fire. Did he stop to mourn over his losses I No, sir; he got another place, and went into business before the setting of that day's sun. And here are hundreds of men who had made a fortune, and had it all invested in their storehouses and the goods that filled them, and in a single night the dreadful fires, we have had have laid them all. in ashes. Well, sir, in the midst of smoke and ruins a new store, phoenix like, springs right up, and is filled with goods by the time the smoke of their former fortunes has cleared away. So you see, Mr. P., if you would get along in California you must pick up courage and go to work, and stick to it fill success crowns your patient toil." Mr. P. soon afterward returned home, where he should have stayed in the first place. Another of this class came often to me to know " what he must do to be saved" from starvation I So I said to him one day Mr. L., a wag was once asked, " How many dog days are there?' His prompt reply was, " Every dog has his day.' Now, Mr. L., if you'll go to work, and be patient, I think you'll have your day in California, as Well as others." [end of page f864t25_172.gif] SOCIAL LIFE 173 He afterward succeeded much better, and attributed his success maily to that little piece of advice. But a great many of this class in their despondency gave up, and sought comfort in the intoxicating bowl, and vent doen to infamy and death. As I walked over the sand hills back of the city of San Francisco, I found SimonS. lying under a scrub oak, in rags, reduced by drunkenness and disease to the verge of the grave. As I exhorted him to give up strong drink, seek religion, go to work, and become a man, O how bitterly he wept; but, poor fellow, energy was gone, hope had fled, nothing left to stimulate an effort. H.S. a fine business man, with an interesting young wife and child in the city of B., was taken from the gutter by his friends again and again. They knew him at home and loved him, and greatly desired to save him, but finally, during one of those dreadful nights of storm and tempest in San Francisco, in the winter of 1849, {1849/00/00} he was picked up by the police, and put into a station-house on the Plaza for protection from the rain; and in the morning, when they went to wake him up, they found him cold in death. I need not multiply the notices of such cases, as I have seen them by hundreds by the waysides and in the hospitals. Their "name is legion." There was another large class of California adventurers, who, retaining their social life, and hope, and [end of page f864t25_173.gif] 174 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. energy, tried to substitute objects of social affection for the wives, sisters, and daughters they could not see. These substitutes consisted of pet dogs, cats, etc. A company of men ranching near where I lived on Jackson-street, had at one time a couple of grizzly bears, with which they spent their social hours. A pet coon made a pretty good companion for some, others preferred a caged wild cat, or California lion. One man, whom I used to see often, had a large family which accompanied him 'wherever he went. His family consisted of a bay horse, two dogs, two sheep, and two goats. Whenever I met one of 'that circle (and they were often seen in the, streets) I saw them all together, and they seemed to be a very harmonious family indeed. Now these animals seemed to be very mean substitutes for families "at home," but, poor fellows, what better could they do? But again, the largest class of wealth seekers in California seemed to ignore their social nature, and substitute for it California excitement. The social element of their souls seemed to be absorbed by raging thirst for gain, an excitement that burned with quenchless glow. The stimulants to excitement may be classed as ordinary and extraordinary. Among the ordinary were the daily excitements of business. . Enormous prices and wages; "happy hits and large strikes;" big lumps and rich dig, [end of page f864t25_174.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 175 gings found ;" fortunes made and lost; these constituted the themes of every-day talk, attended by a vast amount of bluster and patient toil. The day's work and supper over, and what next? "Sit down in that dirty ranch and think about home? Never! I'd take the blues in an bour, and be worthless for a week. Must have some entertainment." Where? At some friend's social fireside." " No such thing to be found within five thousand miles. Too far for this evening,. Come, boys, let's take a walk down town." They soon come to a drinking saloon splendidly ornamented and illuminated, and behind the bar a beautiful-looking woman. They stop and glance at her a moment, and think of sisters and fair loves at home. She's a confounded pretty girl, ain't she, Bill?" "She is, indeed; let's take a drink, and we'll get a good look at her." So they refresh their spirits at the bar. They next come to a gambling saloon, fitted up like a palace. From a stage in the rear end of the magnificent saloon, a band of the sweetest music sends forth its melody on the zentle stillness of summer's evening. In a front corner is a bar, where the wedful is displayed in all its deceptive and deadly varieties. From front to rear the tables are laden with gold, and crowding hundreds of every nation fill the aisles, both as spectators and participators. One evening sixteen thousand dollars' worth of gold dust was laid upon a [end of page f864t25_175.gif] 176 CALIFORNIIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. faro table as a bet. This was lost by the keeper of the table, who counted out the money to the winner without a murmur, and continued his business with a cheerful countenance, and apparently with as good spirits as though he had incurred no more than an ordinary loss. As high as twenty thousand dollars, it is said, have been risked upon the turn of a card. Five thousand, three thousand, and one thousand were repeatedly ventured. The ordinary stakes, however, were by no means so high as these sums, from fifty cents to five dollars being the usual amount; and thus the common day laborer could lay his moderate stake as stylishly as a lord."--Annals of San Francisco, p. 249. There, too, were beautiful women, dressed in silk and satin, lending enchantment to the scene, and enticing the unwary to the game. A little further on was the house of the strange woman," Magnificent without, beautiful within, furnished with Brussels, velvet, silk, and damask. Heavy furniture of rosewood, and walls hung with beautiful paintings; and music from pianoforte, melodeon, and harp; no house more prominent or beautiful for situation in the city. The mistress, beautified by all the magie touches of art, rode fast horses, proinenaded the streets, enticed many by "her much fair speech," who went "after her straightway, as an ox goeth to the, slaughter, or as a fool to the correction of the stocks" [end of page f864t25_176.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 177 The most of the virtuous women in California in early days had to look after their children and attend to housework, 'not generally being able to pay one hundred dollars per month for a servant to help them, and hence could not contribute much to the social 'life of the country. Thus virtue plodded through the streets, bearing burdens, while prostitutes, landed and caressed, became the ' leading conservators of social life, fanning its waning fires into ephemeral brightness by a magnificent display of their presence and deceitful. smiles. To sbow how the devil of licentiousness had encoiled himself under the foundations of society, and held in his deadly fangs its very vitals, we quote the following life-scene from-, the "Annals of San Francisco" See yonder house. Its curtains are of the purest white lace, embroidered, and crimson damask. the fixtures are in keeping, most expensive, most voluptuous, most gorgeous; the favorite ones with the same class of humanity, whose dress and decorations have been made so significant ever since the name of their city and trade, I Babylon.' It is soiree night. The 'lady' of the establishment has most polite invitations, got up on the finest and most beautifully embossed Dote-paper, to principal gentlemen of the city, including collector of the port, mayor, aldermen, judges of the county, [end of page f864t25_177.gif] 178 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. and members of the Legislature. A splendid band of music is in attendance. Away over the Turkey or Brussels carpet whirls the politician with some sparkling beauty, as fair as frail; and the judge joins in and enjoys the dance in compally with the beautiful but lost beings whom to-morrow he may send to the house of correction. Everything is conducted with the utmost propriety. Not an unbecoming word is heard, not an objectionable action seen. The girls are on their good behavior, and are proud once more to move, and act, and appear as ladies. Did you not know, you would not suspect that you were in one of those dreadful places so vividly described by Solomon; and were it not for the great proportion of beauty present, you might suppose yourself in a saloon of upper-tendom. "But the dance is over; now for the supper-table. Everything within the bounds of the market and the skill of the cook and confectioner is before you. Opposite, and by your side, that which nor cook nor confectioner's skill have made what they are, cheeks where the ravages of dissipation have been skillfully hidden, and eyes with pristine brilliancy undimmed, or even heightened by the spirit of the recent champagne. And here the illusion fades. The champagne alone is paid for. The soiree has cost the mistress one thousand dollars; and at the supper, and during the night, she sells twelve dozen of [end of page f864t25_178.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 179 champaigne at ten dollars a bottle! This is a literal fact, not an idea, nor a draft upon imagination, decorated with the colors of fancy." Pp. 668, 669. This horrible picture, said to be truthfully drawn from. real life, and from what I have seen outside, I have no reason to doubt it, tells a sad tale; but, thank the Lord, "Babylon has fallen! has fallen," and now above its scattered ruins the temple of virtue are towering, clearly defined in sunshine of a better day, and already exhibiting permanence, beauty, and grandeur, and still going up and hastening on to a glorious consummation,. Men and women of sterling integrity and purity steadily withstood the desolating tide of licentiousness that swept over the land, often at the hazard of life, some fidling in the struggle by the assassin's hand, until gambling was successfully put down by law throughout the state, and sunk under the odium of outraged public feeling, a thousand per cent. below par, and the whole fraternity of the strange woman" has shared about the same fate. Sunday amusements held a very prominent place among the entertainments of early days in California; consisting in horse-racing, bull-baiting, an occasional fight between a mad bull and a man', and more frequenfly between a bull and a grizzly bear. race-tracks, and first grand Sunday resort of San [end of page f864t25_179.gif] 180 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Franciscans, was at " Mission Doloros," about two miles from the city. There are now two plank roads leading to the mission, and omnibuses running every half hour. Several thousands of persons on a single Sunday sometimes visited it, to witness one or more of the scenes described. "Russ' Garden, about half way out on the mission road, which contains a large circular hall for the accommodation of pleasure-seeking parties, is a great rendezvous for Sabbath breakers, especially among the Germans. Bands of music, fiddling, dancing, Singing, feasting, and drinking constitute the principal entertainment there. The city of Oakland, across the bay, eight -miles distant, from San Francisco, became the rival of "Mission Dolores" in Sunday amusements. One day, in crossing the bay in the Oakland steamer Clinton," I saw a man posting on the side of the wheelhouse the following bill, in large letters "Great bear fight, in front of the American Hotel, in Oakland, between 'the red bear Sampson, and a large Grizzly, on Sunday, January 29, 1854 {1854/01/29}. The steamer Clinton will make two extra trips for the accommodation of the public." On Sunday I" inquired one of the uninitiated, who had recently arrived. "O yes," replied an intelligent-looking Englishman ; Sunday's a great day ; a great day here in California." [end of page f864t25_180.gif] [Plate entitled: City of Oakland.] [end of page f864t25_181.jpg] Page 182 is blank. SOCIAL LIFE 183 Nothing could be done," said the poster, "on a week-day." O no," answered the Englishman, if I were to have anything of the sort, I would certainly have it on Sunday; may just as well go to hell on Sunday as on any other day ; all going there anyhow. I look at the thing philosophically." Another then added " We are not burdened with religion here in California." The fact is," said the poster, " religion won't pay here in California." I consider this, in regard to the whole Sabbath breaking fraternity, as a fair specimen of California ethics. In connection with bull-baiting, bear-fighting, etc., we had, by way of variety, a duel occasionally, in which an editor or politician was sometimes killed, as were the bulls and bears, in the presence of the excited multitude. [end of page f864t25_183.gif] 184 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED CHAPTER VII. SOCIAL LIFE- CONTINUED. IN the early history of California cities and towns no Sabbath was recognized in merchandise and trade; and those who observed it at all observed it only as a holiday, the day for a " grand bust up," or for gunning, or a dancing party, or an excursion party, or some of the varieties before mentioned. I once called on a Roman Catholic in San Francisco for a subscription for a Methodist church " O yes," said he, " I'll give you a hundred dollars; I'm a Catholic, but I see the great advantages of churches in a community like this. I remember when nothing could be seen in this city on Sunday but the bustle of business, and nothing heard but the rattle of horse-hoofs, and the shouts of those engaged in or witnessing the race. But since churches have been erected, and the preaching of the Gospel introduced, Sabbath is fast becoming a quiet day; respectable business houses are closed, and horse-racing has been driven beyond the limits of the city. I go in for the multiplication of churches as the best means of improving society." [end of page f864t25_184.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 185 The embarkation of Sunday excursion parties, accompanied by a band of music, drew thousands of persons to the wharf to hear the music, and witness their departure. I frequently took- advantage of such occasions, by taking my stand in sight and hearing, and when the boat's hawsers were cast off, would strike up a loud song, and draw the returning crowd, and sound in their ears the tocsin of the coining judgments of a sin-avenging God, and present them with an offer Of Mercy through the Crucified. The excitement of such occasions afforded a fine opportunity of driving some strong appeals to the sinner's conscience. On one such occasion, just as I had sung up the crowd, a dog-fight occurred in the street fronting the next block, and a large part of my audience ran to see the fight, so that the programme of that moming's excitants would stand thus first, the excursion and music; second, the songs of the preacher; third,, the dog-fight; and fourth, another song from the preacher, which drew the audience back as soon as the dogs had finished their part. I then said to them, by way of introduction "Gentlemen, if I could come to you this morning and say, Ho! all ye who want to go to heaven, now's your time. A splendid line of celestial steamers will run, for a few days, from. San Francisco to the port of Glory, a country every way superior to Califomia, having in it the [end of page f864t25_185.gif] 186 CALIFORNIA ILLUSTRATED. richest gold diggings ever discovered, the very streets of the great city being paved with gold. In that country are oceans of lager beer and drinks of every kind, and all free; pretty women also, and pleasures in endless variety, exceeding the dreams of Mohammed as far as the brightness of the meridian sun exceeds the dim twinkle of the glow-worm! Programme for the voyage Embarcation amid the melody of the best band in the world. That music which so attracted you this morning not to be mentioned in the comparison. Appropriate entertainments for each week day, to be announced daily. Each Sunday to be celebrated, first, with a grand feast, closing with a rich profusion of lager beer, champagne, good old port, whisky punch, brandysmashes, Cogniae, hot Tom and Jerry, etc. Second, a game at cards. Third, a grand ball in the upper saloon. Fourth, a dog-fight on the upper deck. Fifth, a theatrical performance in the evening, closing with a magnificent farce. O my friends and fellow-citizens, if I could truthfully publish such an advertisement as that, I think about two sermons on the Plaza would suffice to convert the whole city, except some of those croakers who are always talking about death, hell, and judgment, and we would all quit this lower world of trouble, and take the steamer for heaven on her next trip." By that time I could bid defiance to all the dogs [end of page f864t25_186.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 187 in town. I had the crowd, and, perhaps, never gave a set of men a more faithful warning in my life. It turned out to be a very solemn and tearful meeting. The first steamboat built in California was called the Sagamore." On the 29th of October, 1850 {1850/10/29}, the admission of California as a state into the Union, was celebrated by grand processions of various public bodies, and the people generally, Americans, French, Italians, Chinese, etc., with the best of music and the thunder of heavy ordnance, and the fizzing and popping of fire-crackers, barrels of which were burned by the Chinamen. When all assembled on the Plaza, an oration was delivered by Judge Bennett, of the Supreme Court. One of the incidents of that day was the explosion of this first California built, steamer, the Sagamore. Just after leaving the wharf for Stockton, with a load of merry souls who had been participating in. the common joy, her boiler burst and broke to fragments all her top works from stem to stern. It was beheved that between thirty and forty persons were killed. I witnessed that tragedy, and tried to minister to the dying. Its details were horrible. I saw a man named Johnson, from Illinois, where he had a wife and two children, brought ashore with one leg torn off at the calf. He thought he would recover, but died in fifteen minutes. He had a brother-in-law who died as he was being carried [end of page f864t25_187.gif] 188 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. into the house where the other was dying. Another died as they brought him ashore. I saw a weeping Spanish woman, holding on her lap a man whose head had been split open, and his brains lay scattered on the wharf. Many more, badly wounded and burned, were taken to the hospital. (See Seven Years' Street-Preaching, etc., p. 90.) One poor fellow, with a broken leg, implored them not to take him to a hospital, saying, "For mercy sake, don't take me to a hospital, or I shall die. Take me to a good hotel, and employ a good physician to attend on me. I've got plenty of money, and will pay for everything that is done for me." Philip Groves, the shouting Methodist, was aboard in the midst of the explosion, and as he crawled up from under the broken timbers, he shouted, Halleluiah! I am ready! Glory be to God, I'm all right!" On examination he, found that he was not hurt; but his hat, containing some valuable papers, was gone. By and by a man came to him in the crowd,.and said Is this your hat, sir "Yes, sir." His papers were all safe, as he left them. He never knew bow his hat got ashore, unless it was blown on the wharf by the explosion. A Swedish sailor said to me the next day When the Sagamore was launched and fitted up, the captain invited everybody who wanted to , break the [end of page f864t25_188.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 189 Sabbath to come and take a Sunday trip in her. Her first run was for a Sunday excursion; God was displeased, and now we see what it has come to." The wreck was re-fitted, and called the The Boston." For a time she was used principally as a Sunday excursion boat. On one occasion they moored her near our Bethel Ship. Mrs. Taylor happened to be on deck when they were "making fast" to our ship, and said to the captain, "I wish you would not tie that Sabbath-breaker to our Bethel. I am afraid of her. I am daily expecting to see her explode, or take fire and burn up." Not long after she took fire across the bay, near Oakland, where her keel still hes embedded in the mud. A great many mishaps attended those Sunday excursions. "Spanish fandangoes " (a rude native dance) were very common in the early days of California. Fancy dress balls and masquerades soon came in vogue, and then followed the establishment of theaters, and an ever-changing variety of entertainments for the excited masses. In the mines, to this day, there are itinerant theatricals, minstrels, circuses, performers in legerdemain, dog and monkey shows, etc., constantly traveling to and fro, entertaining the miners at a dollar per head. I had a good deal of competition with these during a preaching tour I made through the mines in 1855 {1855/00/00}. At Springfield they had too much music for me, and left me but a small audience to [end of page f864t25_189.gif] 190 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. preach to. At Shaw's Flat they had. to wait till I had done preaching before they could get the crowd; so also at Smith's Flat they waited quietly till I dismissed my audience, and then tuned up. I heard many say after preaching at the last-named place, "I'll save my dollar to-night sure." I am no apologist for the moral degeneracy and ruin of thousands in California; but, in the light of the foregoing facts, it is easy to see how insidiously the foe insnared them. It is not at all remarkable that many fell. Among the excitements extraordinary may be named grand political gatherings and celebrations, a sweeping fire occasionally, vigilance committees. and the mass-meetings called together under the administration of Judge Lynch. Some idea of such exciting occasions may be gathered from the accompanying cut, which represents, a scene enacted at the City Hall in San Francisco February 22,1851 {1851/02/22}.1 On nineteenth {1851/02/19} of that month' the store of C. J. Jansen & Co. was entered about eight o'cl,ock P. M. by two men, who said they wanted to buy blankets. As Mr. Jansen, who was- in the store alone, turned to get the articles, he was knocked senseless to the floor with a "slung shot." The premises were robbed of two thousand dollars and the rogues fled. Two men, Windred. and Burdue, were next day arrested on suspicion, and lodged in jail under the, City Hall., By the, twentyfirst [end of page f864t25_190.gif] [Plate entitled: City Hall on February 22, 1851. {1851/02/22}] [end of page f864t25_191.jpg] Page 192 is blank. SOCIAL LIFE. 193 Jansen had so far recovered as to be able to give testimony, and, with but a shade of doubt, identified the two men under arrest as the robbers of the store, The frequent occurrence of such outrages, and the general behef that there was a large organized band of robbers and murderers confederated throughout the state, led to -a popular outburst of vengeance, and a demand for the prisoners by a crowd of eight thousand persons. At the request of Windred's wife, I with great difficulty pressed my way through the excited mass, and visited the, prisoners. Above the din and commotion of the multitude the shouts resounded from every direction, "Have them out! hang them The courts are sure to let them go !" Hang them now!" I spent some time with the prisoners, as they were expecting every minute to be dragged out and hung. After a few hours, on certain assurances from leading city authorities that the prisoners should be promptly tried and Justly dealt with, the crowd dispersed. Windred afterward broke jail and ran away. . Burdue was convicted, and sent to Marysville to be tried for the murder of Mr. Moore, sheriff of Auburn, and was there convicted and sentenced to be hung; but pending this sentence the San Francisco Vigilance Committee arrested the real murderer and robber for whom Burdue, from exact personal appearance, had [end of page f864t25_193.gif] 194 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. been mistaken; so Burdue was afterward released, and the guilty man hung. I was walking down Pacific wharf one Saturday afternoon, in company with Rev. S. D. Simonds, when we saw aboard the clipper ship Challenge," which had just come into port, a vast crowd of men. We supposed that they had come to see the splendid ship, and I remarked Brother Simonds, the deck of that ship will be a good place for me to preach to-morrow. If hundreds come to see her in the week, there will be thousands on Sunday, and I'll have an opportunity of preaching the Gospel to them." Good, " said he; we'll go aboard and get permission of the captain." So we went aboard, and hunted from cabin to forecastle and back again, but could find no captain. We soon learned that all the rest were hunting the captain too. Why, what's the matter here ?" said I. "Matter enough," replied one; Captain W. has killed several of his crew; and if you'll look into the forecastle you'll see such a battered up set of men as you never saw before." We're after the captain," responded one and another. We'll hang him to the yard-arm!" The object of our search being so different from that of the crowd, we suddenly left. It was said that the captain had an octagon shaped [end of page f864t25_194.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 195 stick, about four feet long, which he called his " persuader," and his persuasions were so earnest that several men died under the force of them. He, however, evaded the search of the exasperated crowd, concealed himself till the people were all drawn off by some other extraordinary excitement, and then came forward, stood his trial in court, and was acquitted. Another class of extraordinary excitements grew out of the wonderful gold discoveries that were continually being made, such as "Gold Lake," "Gold Bluffs"' "Australian Gold Fields," "Kern River Diggings," etc. The papers were filled with the wonderful tidings, ships were chartered, caravans formed, men by thousands would leave their business of whatever kind, and away to make their pile at once, without any further delay. The following account of the " Gold Bluff " excitement we extract from the "Annals of San Francisco" "January, 1851 {1851/01/00}.-San Francisco has been startled 'from its propriety' by news from the celebrated I" Gold Bluffs, I and during the greater part of this month has dreamed unutterable things of black sand, and gray sand, and cargoes of gold. A band of pioneers and prospecters had recently proceeded in the I Chesapeake' steamer northward to the Mamath River, near which, on the sea-shore, they fancied they [end of page f864t25_195.gif] 196 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. had found the richest 'and most extraordinary gold fleld that had ever been known. The sands of sea, far a broad space several miles in length, beneath cliffs some hundreds of feet high, appeared to be literally composed in one half at least of the pure metal. Millions of diggers for ages to come could not exhaust that grand deposit. Already a few miners had collected about the spot; but these were so amazed and lost., in the midst of the surrounding treasure that they knew not what to do. No man could carry more than seventy-five or a hundred pounds weight upon his back for any great distance; and with that quantity of pure gold it was ridiculous, so it was, to be content when numberless tons lay about. A brilliant reporter for the Alta California says ' The gold is mixed with black sand, in proportions of from ten cents to ten dollars the pound. At times when the surf is high the gold is not easily discovered; but in the spring of the year, after a succession of calms, the entire beach is covered with bright and yellow gold. Mr. Collins, the secretary of tle Pacific Mining Company, measured a patch of gold and sand, and estimates it will yield to each member of the company the snug little sum of $43,000,000, (say forty-three millions of dollars,) and estimate is formed upon a calculation that the sand holds out to be one tenth as rich as observation warrants them in supposing [end of page f864t25_196.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 197 "No digging even was required, since one had only to stoop a little, and raise as much as he wished of the stuff - half gold, half sand - from the surface of the beach. Back the adventurers hastened to San Francisco, where they had long been impatiently expected, and the glorious news ran like wild-fire among the people. "General John Wilson and Mr. John A. Collins, both of whom had been among the number of discoverers, frankly testified to the truth of these wonderful statements. The beach, they said, for a great distance, was literally strewn with pure gold. It was found in the greatest quantity in a certain kind of 'black sand' although the 'grey sand' which was rather more abundant, contained likewise a large proportion of the same black colored stuff, with its special share of gold. 'Mr. Collins,' says the poetic reporter, 'saw a man who had accumulatd fifty thousand poinds, or fifty tons, he did not recollect which, of the richest kind of black sand. "Such intelligence astounded the community. In a few days eight vessels were announced as about to sail for this extraordinary region. The magic phrase 'Gold Bluffs! Gold Bluffs!' everywhere startled the most apathetic , and aroused him with a galvanic shock. 'Gold Bluffs!' everywhere startled the papers among the shipping advertisements; they covered, on huge posters, the blank walls of houses [end of page f864t25_197.gif] 198 CALUFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. at the corners of the streets; they were in every man's mouth. A company was formed, called the 'Pacific Mining Company,' the shares of which instantly rose to a handsome premium. There seemed no doubt of their incalculable gains, since they showed numerous samples of the wondrous 'black sand,' where the golden particles lay and shone mildly as stars in the milky way innumerable. The company had already, by the greatest good fortune, secured a considerable number of miners' claims, embracing indeed the entire beach beneath the bluffs,' so that all was clear for inimediate operations. "The first damper to the hot blast that raged through the town, and from whence it spread and fired up distant countries, until the arrival of the next mail, was intelligence from the earliest miners, that they found it very difficult to separate first the black sand from the gray, and next the gold itself from the black sand, the particles of the precious metal being so remarkably fine. A little later it was found that the innumerable patches" of black sand began most unaccountably to disappear. Heavy seas came and swept them right away; and though it was hoped that heavier seas might soon bring them back again, the people got tired waiting for that event, and hastily fled from the place, ashamed of their hopes and credulity. Much serious loss was suffered by the " Gold Bluffs " piece of business. [end of page f864t25_198.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 199 The unfortunate ' Pacific Mining Company' had bought the Chesapeake, at a cost, for boat and repairs, of twenty dousand dollars; had run her up the coast several trips at the loss of as many thousand more; and afterward, when she had been injured in a storm, were glad to sell her for about two thousand dollars. There was coiisiderable gold at the Bluffs, but it turned out in the end to cost more trouble to gather than it was worth. Hence the place was abandoned, except by a few still hopeful individuals, after a few months' trial."-Pp. 311-314. Dr. H, a friend of mine, a very tall man from Missouri, was carried off by the "Gold Bluff " fever. When nearly ready to sail, he said to me Mr. Taylor, they tell me that I can easily make there eleven hundred dollars per day; but you. know I'm not easily moved by such reports, [moving then under a high pressure of excited hope at the rate of six knots per hour] I shall be satisfied," continued he, if I make three hundred dollars per day, and that I know I can do without any difficulty." A few months afterward the doctor returned to San Francisco almost in rags, out of money, and as lean as a pelican in the wilderness. He told me a sad story of his adventures, reverses, and sufferings. He had lost his all, had been shipwrecked, put on short allowance of water and food, and had nearly starved to death. [end of page f864t25_199.gif] 200 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. But though social life, as I have shown by the facts and illustrations under this head, was in many quenched by the tide of their reverses and sorrows; in many more ignored and superseded by the grasping spirit of the times and the excitements of the country; and though by others prostituted and abused, there always have been occasions when the springs of social life in California suddenly broke out afresh, like mountain rills after a thunder shower, and flowed, for a short season, with astonishing impetuosity. The monthly, and afterward semi-monthly, arrival of the mails, with letters from home, generally sufficed to open the fountains of social sympathy in the souls of the multiphed thousands of isolated wanderers scattered over the land. I took with me from Baltimore a large package of letters, round Cape Horn, from friends to their friends in California. At that time but few persons seemed to realize there was anything of California outside of San Francisco, and my going there was thought to afford the surest means of a safe conveyance of letters; for I would, of course, meet all their friends on my arrival, see them face to face, and deliver the letters in person. The said friends, however, were scattered possibly back through the mountains, and the coast, from San Diego to Puget Sound, a [end of page f864t25_200.gif] [page numbers 201 and 202 were skipped by printer in pagination sequence. Text continues without break on page 203] SOCIAL LIFE. 203 distance of more than a thousand miles, many of whom I never met in seven years. I met with Joseph Stocker, a good Baltimore friend of mine, a few months after my arrival, and handed him a letter from his wife. He had not seen her for nearly a year, and in all that time he did not received a letter from home. He broke the long-expected letter, and its effect upon him was wonderful. It did not jerk him out of his boots, exactly, but it did more; contrary to all his plans, and at a cost of immense sacrifice of business interests, it carried him, boots and all, out of the territory by the next steamer. I doubt if he indulged in the luxury of one good nights rest until he saw his wife and children. He soon after returned to California accompanied by his good wife and babes. The slow single file marches in front of the Postoffice, to, the windows of delivery, by long lines of anxious faces, formed several hours before the opening, of the office, furnished evidence of the social longings of their hearts. It was interesting to mark the countenances and conduct of men as they turned away from the delivery windows, at the horrible announcement, Nothing for you, sir.." or as they grasped and broke open the letters which brought them news from home. (California Post-office scenes are described at length in my "Seven Years',Street Preaching," etc., p. 282.) [end of page f864t25_203.gif] 204 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. But what contributed still more to revive and promote social life in California was tbe semi-monthly arrival of families. For a couple of years after the gold discovery but very few of the great mass of California adventurers had any thought of a permanent settlement in that country. They had generally given themselves about two years in which to make their pile," and return home. They therefore cared nothing about California except for her gold, and hence felt but little responsibility in regard to their conduct or character. Indeed very many had left their character at home, if they had any, as an old Missouri sinner said he left his religion. Said be "'I knew I couldn't carry my religion with me through California, so when I left home in Missouri I hung my religious cloak on my gate-post until I should return." After a couple of years' sojourn in California, very many began seriously to contemplate a permanent settlement in that country. They were delighted with the climate, and became deeply interested in the development of the immense' resources of the country, agricultural, mineral, and commercial, and in the growing greatness of their young giant state. Then such expressions as these became very common lf I had my family here I never would leave California; but I can't consent to bring my family to such a place. Everything is inviting, so far as the country, physi [end of page f864t25_204.gif] SOCIAL LIFE 205 cally, is concerned; but the social and moral condition of the people is so horribly had, I can't risk the education of my children in such a place." Very many found, too, at the end of their two years, that they had done nearly everything else but make their pile," and could not bear the mortification of returning without it; but having a fine prospect ahead, they were led at once to say O if I had my family here, and could settle down and take my time at it, I would make my fortune and live at ease in this most delightful climate in the world; but O, the moral and social condition of the country is horrible!" These and similar considerations, together with the fact that some families had been there from the first, and got along pleasantly, wife and children healthful and happy, led men by the hundred to the deterinination to go or send for their families, and make a home in California. As soon as they made up their minds to settle permanently in the country, their conduct underwent a great change for the better. They began earnestly to manifest interest in the establishment of schools and churches, the regular preaching of the Gospel, the better observance of the Sabbath, and whatever they thought would contribute to improve the social condition of society. Some, who could leave their business, went in person for their families; but many more,, not being able to leave without too great a [end of page f864t25_205.gif] 206 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED- sacrifice of time or money, sent for their families Single men, also, from similar considerations, came to similar conclusions in regard to permanent settlenient. Some having matrimonial engagements at home, began to arrange for their consummation with reference to a home in California. Others determened to live in California at any rate, and trust to getting a wife to share their fortunes, either from home or by good fortune from among the arrivals of fair ones, or from the divorcement or death of some fellow who had a wife in California. A great many young men have modestly but seriously requested my observation to find out, and my inediation to try and secure for thern, each a good wife. I once received a letter from a stranger, whom I had never seen, ** DEAR SIR-- You will please pardon the liberty- I take in addressing to you this note, and especially for introducing the subject it contains. "I I am a young man, twenty-nine years old, five feet four inch, high, possessing a sound constitution and good health; I have a good farm, well stocked, well improved, and all paid for. I want to make this my home; but I am a single man, living alone, but I find it not good to be alone, and I want a wife. I thought, as you live in that great port of entry, you [end of page f864t25_206.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 207 might be kind enough to recommend to me some lady who would make me a good wife. I would like to have one possessing good common sense, good disposition, and one who understands how to attend to household duties. I think I could make such a woman happy, and should not expect her to work beyond her own inclination. I am not very particular about beauty, nor whether she has a cent of money. If you can render me any service in, this matter, I shall be exceedingly obliged, and will, besides, remunerate you handsomely for your trouble. Please write me at your earliest convenience. " Yours respectfully." His proper signature and address were added, but, poor fellow, the demand was so great among my intimate acquaintances, and the supplys limited, that I could do nothing for him. If it had been practicable for a man to have opened an intelligence office," with a good supply of wives instead of servants, he would have had a run almost equal to the run on the banks in Wall-street a few months ago. Mr. S., a friend of mine, in the city of Sonora, negotiated for a wife, through a very respectable married lady in that city, to whom he was well and favorably known. The said lady had a niece in, the East, who she thought would suit, and be well suited in my frend Mr. S. So it was agreed that [end of page f864t25_207.gif] 208 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Mr. S. should write the said young lady, proposing marriage, and the offer of money to pay her passage to California, and accompany the letter with his daguerreotype, and that the aunt should also write giving all necessary information, etc. The young lady was requested to answer at her earliest convenience, and, if she acceded to the proposition, to accompany her acceptance with her daguerreotype. It seemed that the young lady had been desiring to go to California to see her aunt for a long time, and on receiving such news from a far country, made up her mind to go without delay. The next mail carried back her consent, and the likeness of her smiling face, and as soon as the passage-money could be sent from her unseen lover, she embarked for California. The two lovers were introduced to each other, and united together in the holy bands of matrimony, in the house of the aunt. I learn that they are, getting along very pleasantly, and are perfectly delighted with each other. If those humane soeieties now engaged in sending Eastern girls to the West as servants, could find it practicable to enlarge their business so as to send good girls of unblemished, certified character, to California for wives, I think it likely that a bachelor's fund could be raised in California, which would defray all the extra expense involved in the new department of the business. The thing would, of [end of page f864t25_208.gif] SOCIAL LIFE 209 course, have to be judiciously managed, and not connected with "bloomer fashions" and "women's rights," as was an attempted enterprise of this kind a few years ago. They should go in care of good families, letting the bachelor subscribers, and the said families, alone know who they are, or where to be found after their arrival. I merely throw this out as a suggestion, without stopping to mature, or to present any definite plan. It is, however, a subject of great importance. There are thousands of young men in California who, in their isolation, are going to ruin, who could be saved, and elevated to honorable citizenship, by the surplus of young ladies in the Eastern states who are worthy of good husbands. The Mexican war and the gold attractions of California, have drawn away so many thousands of young men from the Eastern States, that the over proportion of young ladies on this side of the continesnt equals, and perhaps greatly exceeds the over proportion of young men in California, and their separation is a great social, moral, and national evil, which ought, if possiblt, to be remedied. There were in California, according to the state census returns in 1856 {1856/00/00}, ins total aggregate population of five hundred and seven thousand and sixty seven, but seventy thousand females all told; while there were one hundred and seventy-five [end of page f864t25_209.gif] 210 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. thousand "men of war," men liable to military duty, between the ages of eighteen and forty-five. Now, in view of the foregoing facts, it is not difficult to conceive of the thrilling social effect of a semi-monthly arrival in San Francisco of wives, families and charming, virtuous Marys. An observer could always tell a month in advance when a man was expecting the arrival of his real or intended wife ; the old slouch hat, check shirt, and coarse outer garments disappeared, and the gentleman could be, seen on Sunday going to church, newly rigged from head to foot; with fine beaver or silk hat, white linen nice and clean, good broadcloth coat, velvet vest, patent-leather boots, his long beard shaven or neatly shorn, he looked like a new man. As the time drew near many of his hours were spent about the wharves or on telegraph hill, and every five minutes he was looking for the signal to announce the coming of the, steamer. If, owing to some breakage or wreck there was a delay of a week or two, then the suspense was awful beyond description. I remember how my good friend Hon. D. O. Shattuck, Judge of the Superior Court of San Francisco, who was awaiting the arrival of his family on the steamer North America," was agonized when be heard of the wreck of that steamer sixty miles below Acapulco. After much delay and suffering, however, they arrived in [end of page f864t25_210.gif] Page 211 is blank. [Plate entitled: Arrival of a Steamship.] [end of page f864t25_212.jpg] SOCIAL LIFE 213 When the arrical of a steamer, was thrown to the breeze, there was a general rush, and before the arrival gun was fired the whard was crowded with such men as we have described, accompanied by those who sympathized socially with them, to the number of sometimes from three to five thousand. The crowds became so great, and so annoying to the passengers by their perfect blockade of the wharf and streets, that the two steamships companies put up a gate at the head of each of their wharves to prevent the assemblage of such masses, and gave strict orders to the gate-keepers, to let none pass in unless they had families or friends aboard. But even after that enough had familites or wives in anticipation, or particular friends aboard, to crowd the wharves still. The fact is, men by hundreds assembled through social sympathy to witness the happy greeting of men and their wives who had not seen each other for years, accompanied by dancing and shouting for joy, embracing, kissing, laughing, and crying, all to the great amusement of the excited throng. The disappointment of those whose wives did not arrive at the time expected was almost like a thundershock. I knew a man well who boarded a steamer expecting to meet his wife, and the disappointment threw him into a spell of sickness, from which he did not recover for nearly a fortnight. [end of page f864t25_213.gif] 214 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. I knew another who came from the mines to meet his wife, waited several days in San Francisco for the arrival of the steamer, and then, instead of meeting his wife, he received a letter from her stating that she feared to make the voyage, and had indefinitely postponed it unless he would come home to accompany her. The poor man became almost deranged, now weeping with grief, now enraged, saying " I'll never send for her again, and I'll never go home as long as I live ! If she can get along without me I can get along without her. I'll go back to the mines, and live and die a hermit." Then after a pause he would add "But there are my children; I can't bear to give them up ! I don't know what to do, upon my soul I can't tell what to do!" I took the poor fellow to my house, and reasoned with him on the subject until I succeeded in reconciling him somewhat to his disappointment. After a few months his family arrived, and they are now happily situated on a good farm in San Jose Valley. My friend Brown, from Baltimore, had two disappointments before his wife arrived. At the time he expected her he boarded the steamer, and learned to his sorrrow that she was not aboard. He then thought the next steamer would bring her without ,A doubt, and at most he would have to wait only two weeks. Those were long, dreary weeks, but he was a good [end of page f864t25_214.gif] SOCIAL LIFE. 215 fellow, and waited patiently; and when the steamer got in he was on hand in good time, you may be sure. Rushing aboard he inquired " Is Mrs. Brown aboard ? is Mrs. Brown aboard?" " O yes," replied one who is in her state-room, No. --. He hastily took the circuit of the staterooms to find the number. Mrs. Brown heard in mean time that her beloved husband was aboard, and filled with ecstasies. Finally Brown found her stateroom and sprang in to embrace his wife, when O! shocking to their hopes! they found that it was neither of them; he was not the man, and she was not the woman! Soon after, however, his wife and family arrived and they are living happily together, and are exemplary members of the Methodist Episcopal Church in California. I had another Baltimore friend, ower. Having at home two very interesting daughters, and a second wife engaged, he sent three to come together to California. He put on his extras and went to greet his daughters and intended bride, but was met by his youngest daughter, who alone was left to tell the sad tale that the other two had suddenly sickened and died, and found a grave in the coral depths of the Pacific. That was a dark day for poor Wm. H. Middleton. Another [end of page f864t25_215.gif] 216 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. in friend of mi e, had his family coming out in that splendid clipper ship,, the Queen of the Seas." When she was due, I was told that he prepared a great feast, and invited about two hundred guests to celebrate the occasion of his wife's arrival. When he boarded the ship his little daughter met him, and pointed him to a box which lay in a boat on the hurricane deck, securely folded in tarpaulin, and said to him, "There's mother!" She had been a corpse for three months. But notwithstanding the distance and dangers, and extraordinary difficulties attending emigration to California, and the numerous deaths and disappointments recorded and not recorded, the yearly, caravans across the plains, and the semi-monthly arrivals in San Francisco, have sufficed already to dot the great social Sahara of California with more than ten thousand oases. By the introduction of good families, and the socializing and purifying institutions of the Gospel, living waters have broken "out in the wilderness, and streams in the desert." [end of page f864t25_216.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 217 CHAPTER VIII. HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES IN SAN FRANCISCO IN the fall of 1849 {1849/00/00}, as I walked down Clay-street, one day, my eye rested on a sign. in large red CITY HOSPITAL. I stopped and gazed at it till iny soal. was thrilled with horror. The letters looked as if they were written with blood, and I to myself, Ali! that's the depot of death, where the fast adventurers of California, young men in man- bood's strength, stricken down by the disease, are cast out of the train and There all their bright hopes and visions of and weal expire, and are buried forever. There are husbands, and sons, and brothers, thon- sands of miles from sympathizing kindred and friends, dying in destitution and brother to the sick stranger in California, and tiim of that heavenly Friend that sticketh than a brother?" The cross of intruding into strange hospitals, and offering my the promiscuous maws of the sick uations and creeds, was, to my unobtrusive nature [end of page f864t25_217.gif] 218 CALIFORNIA. LIFE ILLUSTRATED. very heavy, but I there resolved to take it up, a decision which I have never regretted. I went immediately to the said hospital and inquired for the physician who had it in charge; introduced myself to him, and told him the object of my call, to which he replied "I can readily appreciate your motives, but then you must know, sir, that we have very sick men in every room, who could not bear any noise. Anything like singing or praying might greafly excite them and make them worse. I would prefer that yon would not visit the wards unless some particular man wishes to see you." Well, doctor," I replied, "I certainly would not wish to do anything that would be injurious to any patient, but I have been accustomed to visit the sick, and think I so understand my business as to talk, and sing, and pray, or do whatever may seem appropriate, not only without injury to any one, but in a manner that will even contribute to the improvement, of their physical condition. By diverting their minds from the dark realities of their own condition and unhappy surroundings, and by interesting them in some new associations and themes of thought, I may impart to their minds vigor and hopep and mind, and heart, and will may unite with gathering strength, and make successful resistance against disease. Those who are hopelessly diseased cannot receive much injury from my visits while I may be [end of page f864t25_218.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 219 instrumental in benefiting their departing you please, doctor," I continued, "you can go with me, or send a man to point out the men whom you do not wish me to speak-, and to see that I do no injury to any one." Said the doctor " I have no time to go with, You and nobody to send." Another doctor present then added "It is not proper that he should go through the hospital." At that moment an old man, who had been sitting in the office listening to our conversation, said Doctor, there are many sick men in the hospital, who, I know, would be very glad to receive a visit from this gentleman; and if you will allow me, sir, I will conduct him through the rooms." The doctor replied Very well. Take him up stairs first, and then down to the lower wards." Ay, ay, sir," said the old tar, as he beckoned me after him up the stairs. He introduced me to every patient in the house, and made a greater over my arrival at the hospital than if the alcalde had visited them. I was first conducted through the " pay rooms;" the departments of those who, in or in part, paid for their keeping. Many small. rooms had but from two to four men in them. larger, had as many as twelve. I spoke to each patient, inquiring after their condition of health, the state of their souls. I then addressed a few words [end of page f864t25_219.gif] 220 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. of sympathy and religious instruction to all in the room collectively, sung a few verses in a soft strain, and prayed in an audible, but subdued tone, adapting the petition near as possible, to the wants of individual cases as I had learned them ; and so ,performing similar services in each room. Carter, of Baltimore, who gave me fifty dollars for my California chapel, also gave me ten dollars' worth of tracts, which I distributed principally in the hospital, to the great comfort of many who, to read, and nothing to. do but read. first seemed very inquisitive to know in visiting them, and many at first refused to take tracts, saying, I have no money ;" but when they learned from myself and my earnest old captain, that the Visit Was gratuitous, and my tracts the same, surprise and gratitude. Some of them said that they never supposed that anybody in California ever thought of doing anything but for money. After going through the pay rooms, I was next conducted across a yard to a seperate one-story building about thirty by forty feet in size, divided into two wards, each containing from forty to fifty sick men., Here the city patients, proper, were confined together as closely as possible, and allow room between their cots for one person to pass. I thought the up-stair rooms were filthy enough to kill any well [end of page f864t25_220.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 221 man, who would there confine himself for a short period; but I now saw that, in comparison with the others' they were entitled to be called choice room, for the privilege of dying in which a man who had money might well afford to pay high rates. But these "lower wards" were so offensive to the eye, and especially to the olfactories, that it was with great diffilculty I could remain long enough to do the singing, praying, and talking I deemed, my duty. The ordiriary comforts, and even the necessaries of life in California, in those days, were very rare and costly; and to the patients were things to be remembered in the experiencia of the past only to add by contrast, a keener edge to their present sorrows. The nurses were generally men, devoid of sympathy, careless, rude in their care of the sick, and exceeding,ly vulgar and profane. One hundred dollars per month was about as low as, anythitig in the ,shape of a man could be hired, and hence hospital nurses were not only the most worthless of men, but insufficient in number to attend adequately to their duties. I remember a poor fellow, by the name of Switzer, died in one of these wards, who told me that he lay whole nights suffering, in addition to the pains of mortal disease, the ragings of thirst, witbout it drop of water to wet his lips. A cup of tea Was set in the [end of page f864t25_221.gif] 222 - CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. evening upon a shelf over his head, but his strength was gone, and he had no more power to reach it than a man on a gibbet. He was a Christian, too, a member of the Congregational Church, and I have no doubt went from there to heaven. When he got to that country in which " there is no more death, neither sorrow nor crying," and looked back to the place where he left his corruptible body, the contrast must have filled him with unutterable surprise. The most prevalent-and fatal disease in California at that time was chronic diarrhea and dysentery, a consumption of the bowels, very similar, in its debilitating mortal effect upon the constitution, to consumption of the lungs. Men afflicted with this disease have been seen moping about the streets, looking like, the personification of death and despair, for weeks, till strength, and money, and friends were gone, and then, as a last resort, they were carried to the hospital, to pass a few miserable weeks more in one of those filthy wards, where they often died, I was told by the patients, in the night, without any one knowing the time of their departure. In the morning, when the nurses passed round, they found and reported the dead. A plain coffin was immediately brought, for a supply was kept on hand, and laid beside the cot of the deceased, and he was lifted from the cot just as be died, laid in the coffin, and [end of page f864t25_222.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 223 carried out to the dead cart, the driver of which was seen daily plodding through the mud to the graveyard, near North Beach, with from one to three corpses at a load. While many lingered on the confines of death for weeks, I have often seen men enter those horrible wards with apparently very slight indisposition, and within a few days wilt down and die. I wondered that any could survive in such a place for a longer period. The city was then paying for the care of those patients five dollars per day, an amount, one would think, sufficient to furnish a motive, if not to cure and discharge the patients, at least to 'Prolong their lives as long as possible; but I suppose they made as profitable a speculation out of the multiplication of new cases as they could do by protracting the lives of the old ones; and hence, no matter how fast they died, others took their places, who for a time, perhaps, required less attention. It turned out that the. old man who piloted me through the hospital on my first visit was an old ship master, Captain A. Welch. He introduced me that day to his friend Captain Lock, who died soon after, having after my visit professed to find peace through Jesus, and a preparation for heaven. Captain Welch told me that seeing his friend neglected, be said to the doctor Captain Lock has had no attention for forty-eight hours, and is dying from sheer neglect." [end of page f864t25_223.gif] 224 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Well," replied the doctor, let him die, the sooner the better. The world can well spare him, and the community will be relieved when be is gone. He died that night. Before his death he gave his clothing to his friend Captain Welch, but the captain told him he would not touch a thing he had while he was alive, but as soon as he was gone the nurse relieved the captain of any trouble with the effects of the deceased man. The doctor fell out with Captain Welch, because he spoke his mind so freely, and threatened to turn him out of the hospital. " Yes, " said Captain Welch, in reply, "I saw Captain - pay you for the ten days he had been in here eighty-six dollars, and after his death you collected the same bill from his friends, Now, sir, if you want me to show you up, just turn me out." The doctor then took his cot from him, and the captain said Doctor, where shall I I sleep, sir "Sleep there on the floor, " replied the doctor, Pointing to a corner where they laid out the dead, when it was too late in the evening, or the weather too bad, to remove them directly from their cot of death to the dead cart. The captain said- he lay there one night with four corpses around him, and could hardly get his breath. I have heard patients complain of very foul play toward those who had money, but sick men are apt [end of page f864t25_224.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 225 to be sensitive and suspicions, especially in such place as that, and I always hoped those things were not so had as represented; but from what I saw, I had my fears for the safety of any man's life, who had money, in the hospital at the time of which I speak. The hospital changed hands several times, however, within a few months, and one or two good pbysicians, and I believe honest and kind-hearted men, had for a short time the care of the sick, and were really working a reform in the old hospital, before tbe whole care of the city patients was, in 1850 {1850/00/00}, transferred to Doctor Peter Smith, in. a new hospital, near the, corner of Clay and Powell streets, where the sick had better accommodations, and more attention shown them. Old Captain Welch was in the old hospital over a year, and would doubtless have died if he had been confined to his room, but he was out where he could get. pure air most of his time. He had a very sore leg, and the doctor told him. that it was mortifying and would have to be amputated. Finally several doctors came into his room with a table, and a lot of surgical instrument, and said to him, " Come, captain, we want to lash you to this table, and take off that had leg of yours." "I won't have my leg taken off," replied the captain [end of page f864t25_225.gif] 226 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. "If you. don't," said the doctor, "you are a dead man, or as good as dead, for that leg is mortified now." Well, said the 'captain, if I die I'll die with both legs on me." The doctor became enraged, and said to him "If you don't obey orders immediately, and submit to the rules of this house, you shall leave it this day." Very well," rejoined the captain. "And that ver'y day," said the captain to me since, "I took up my sore leg and walked off with it, and have not been back since. He is the same Captain Welch who since received a medal from some New-York citizens for his success in rescuing a number of the poor survivors of the wrecked " steamer San Francisco" and is now employed as colporteur and Bible distributer in the city of New-York. John Purseglove, a good Methodist brother, who had just arrived in the city, sick and destitute, was sent to the hospital; but finding that be was sinking daily, and would soon die if be remained there, he prayed to the Lord to give him strength to get off his* bed and walk away. He said he believed the Lord Would help him, and according to his faith so was his effort, for he immediately crawled out, and without saying, a word to doctor, or ' nurse, or anybody, he scrambled away by the aid of a couple of sticks, determined, if he must die, to die somewhere else. Some of the brethren soon found him, and fitted up a [end of page f864t25_226.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 227 room for him and supphed his wants till he recovered. He believes to this day, that by leaving the hospital he slipped right out of the clutches of death. Sick and destitute members of our Church have generally been cared for by the brethren in San Francisco. I have, no recollection of more than three Methodists who died in the San Francisco hospital, and they were sick on their arrival, and had never been reported to the Church. Indeed there were but very few hospital patients connected with any Church. I met with many backsliders there who had once been Church members, but were not then. An extraordinary degree of liberality has always been shown by the masses of Californians toward the sick and destitute. But few men, it is true, would give their time even to carry a dying man out of the streets, but would freely give their money on application, Then again, the Order of Free and Accepted Masons, who organized a Lodge in San Francisco as early as October, 1849 {1849/10/00}, and now number five or six thousand members in the state, have done a vast amount of work, and expended several hundred thousand dollars for the relief of the suffering and destitute in California. The Independent Order of Odd Fellows, who organized about the same time, have fully measured up with the Masons, according to my best information, in numbers, charitable works, and liberality. [end of page f864t25_227.gif] 228 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Other charitable institutions have each done their Part, and the Churches of various denominations have displayed great liberality, not only for the rehef of their own destitute members, but in response to the calls of the suffering of every variety. A vast amount of money has been raised to pay the homeward passage of destitute maimed and sick men. I remember a case, for illustration, of a man by the name of Peter Deal, who in the summer of 1851 {1851/00/00} came one night to a love-feast in our church on Powell-street, and told a good story about his religious enjoyments, his afflictions, destitution, desire to go home to his family, etc. None of us had ever seen him before; but at the close of the meeting the brethren raised for him one hundred and forty dollars to pay his passage home. Similar calls, for passage-money were made, as regularly as the sailing of the steamers, on the Churches. generally, and the people at large, and wherever a hope of suecess presented itself. Many hundred dollars have been contributed by the crowds attending preaching on the Plaza to assist poor fellows who, by sickness or otherwise, were'disabled, to get back to their families and friends. To transcribe in detail the hospital scenes which have been daguerreotyped on the tablets of my mew, ory during a period of seven years in San Francisco, would make a volume so large, and so revolting to [end of page f864t25_228.gif] HOSMAL REMINISCENCES. 229 humanity in its delineations, that the reader would sicken and turn away from it before he could read half through it. Our purpose, therefore, is these reminiscences, is simply to present a few specimen scenes, and individual cases of hope and of despair occurring at different periods in the history of that city. As a general description, I would remark, the City Hospital of San Francisco, from 1849 {1849/00/00} up to the present, has always had a great variety of patients, ranging in number from one hundred to three hundred and fifty. The largest number of the patients were Americans, and foreigners who spoke the English language. The next in number were Frenchmen, and then Germans, and Spaniards, and Scandinavians, Russians, Portuguese, Italians, Turks, Islanders of various tribes, Chinamen, etc. MY usual mode of visitation was to speak personally to as many as possible; inquire into their condition and wants, bodily, spiritual, and otherwise; act as amanuensis for the sick and dying, recording last messages to friends at home; get letters out of the post-office, and convey them to the sick; carry messages to friends in the city; and ill very early days, when waiters were scarce, I often ministered to the bodily wants of the sick, dressed blisters, turned or raised patients, fixed their beds, gave them drink, and sometimes comforted the convalescing with a little of Mrs. Taylors good home [end of page f864t25_229.gif] 230 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. made bread, and gave them such advice as I thought might be useful to them. In the 'winter of 1849 {1849/00/00} -50 {1850/00/00}, we had a great many scurvy patinuts in the hospital; many of whom had been on long voyages, living for months on what tho sailors call old junk " and ship-bread; all the fresh meat they got was found in a live state in their bread. Poor fellows! they had come to a bad market, where potatoes were fifty cents per pound, and scarcely any other vegetables to be had at any price. There they were, confined in the had atmosphere of the hospital, swallowing drugs and dry provisions, sinking down and dying daily. One day, as I entered a large ward filled with such patients, I looked at them and thought a minute on their wretched condition, and then I said, " My friends, what are you doing here ? You are cooped up in this miserable place, without fresh air, without sunshine, without exercise, and without vegetable diet. You will die, the last man of you, if you don't get out of this place. You had better be turned out in San Jose Valley to graze, like old Nebuchanezzar, than pine away and die in such a place as this Now," said I, I'll tell you what will cure you. On those sand-hills back of the city there grows a, kind of wild lettuce," which I described to them. If you will go out and gather that lettuce and use it, with a little vinegar, it will cure you. I knew the open air, [end of page f864t25_230.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCE NCES. 231 and sunshine, and exercise would help them, and believed the prescribed salad the best thing for them within their reach. It was an interesting sigbt to see those poor fellows under tbe inspiration of a new hope, crawling out and scrambling up the hills in search of my prescribed cure. The next .week, when I called again to see them, I was really surprised to see how much their condition had improved. When I entered, some of the poor fellows wept, and others laughed, and after a grateful greeting they said "You've saved our lives, sir; your prescription has done us more good than all the medicines and all the doctors in the city could do for us." The most of them soon afterward recovered and left the hospital. As a spiritual adviser in my hospital visits, I generally addressed them personally, and tried to lead them to seek an acquaintance with the sinner's Friend. I then usually sung in each ward, in a soft tone, one, two, or three appropriate pieces, and prayed for them collectively and personally, so far as I had been able to learn their personal condition and war-is, and frequently, either before or after prayer, made some remarks in the form of an exhortation to be reconciled to God. I usually introduced religious exercises by saying If my brethren in affliction have no objections, we will sing a few verses and have a word of prayer together." I do not remember of ever hearing an objection [end of page f864t25_231.gif] 232 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. made but once, and that was by a poor man who became Very much ashamed of his conduct before the exercises were over. Many, to be sure, seemed careless and indifferent read novels while prayed, and never seemed to profit by what I said, but a large majority seemed to appreciate very highly my efforts for their good. Even foreigners, who could not understand my language, seemed greatly interested, especially in my singing. I was once traveling in San Jose. Valley, and passing in sight of a company of Spaniards, who had stopped at a spring of water to refresh themselves) one of them came running to me, and grasped my hand as though I had been a brother he had not seen for a dozen years. For a moment I could not tell how to interpret his conduct; but I immediately recogmized him as a man I had often seen in the hospital. He had been a great sufferer, and I had many times bent over him and inquired after his welfare, and it seemed that my attentions to him, or the singing, or something else, had made a deep impression on him. I think however, from all I could see and learn, that not more than an average of one hospital patient in thirty was a professor of experimental religion. About an average of one in every five showed signs of penitence; but of those not more than one in twenty made a profession of religion. [end of page f864t25_232.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 233 In my book on Street Preaching" there is a chapter of triumphant death scenes," in which is given a number of cases of hopeful conversion- to God among hospital patients; but those, alas! are but the exceptions, and not the rule. The rule is for men to die as they have lived. The question is often asked in regard to a departed friend "How did he die? Was he prepared?"' A more "appropriate inquiry is How did he live?" Tell me how he lived, and I'll tell you how he died," unless he is one of the rare exceptions referred to. I, however, never feel like giving a sinner up this side the gates of perdition, for we are not saved by works of righteousness which we have done, but by the mercy of God through the merits of Jesus; and if a man, even in the grasp of death, can fully submit to the will of God, and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ," I know of nothing to prevent his being saved from sin, and washed in the blood of sprinkling, and thus prepared for heaven. But the difficulty which I have seen illustrated in the experience of thousands of sick and dying men, consists in the fact that the principles and habits which have been developed and matured by a life of rebellion against God, are, according to the constitutional laws of mind, still strong and controlling in death, and the stronger, frequently, be [end of page f864t25_233.gif] 234 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. cause of the enfeebled, distracted condition of the soul amid the wreck of its tabernacle. The dreadful habit of procrastination, for example, is about as common and all-conquering in sickness and death as it is in life and health. I remember, after pleading with a dying man to give his heart to God, he said O, it's not worth while now; I'm getting better; I'll soon be well. I feel no pain at all, and nothing ails me now but want of breath. I can't breathe easy; but I'll soon be relieved of that." Poor man ! I could then hear distinctly the deathrattle in his throat, and yet he would not believe that there was any danger. In a few hours he was a corpse. I remember a fine-looking young man from NewYork, whom I tried hard to lead to Christ; and after talking, and singing, and praying with him, and doing everything I could to induce him to try and seek Jesus, I said to him "Now, my dear brother, when will you begin to pray, and try to give your heart to God ?" Well," said he, " I think I will make a commencement in about three weeks." The poor fellow, though he would not believe it, was dying then, and I knew it and hence continued to press the subject of a preparation on his attention he drew the cover over his head to escape my [end of page f864t25_234.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENES 235 appeals. A. few hours afterward be was covered with the pall of death. Young C. M. was accidentally shot, and immediately sent for me in such haste that the messenger stopped me in the midst of a street sermon, and entreated me to go at once and try to relieve the mind of the dying man. When I presented myself beside his bloody bed, he said Father Taylor, I'm glad you've come; but O I am in such pain I can't talk, nor pray, nor do any. thing now. Please call again in an hour; perhaps by that time I'll feel better." I prayed with him, and called again at the appointed time, and found him gasping in his last struggle. Without noting a hundred such cases, as I might, which have come under my own observation, I will, for the further illustration of the subject, add but one other case. He was a very genteel-looking man, who died with cholera in the hospital during the fall of 1850 {1850/00/00}. He was in a collapsed state when I found him. I said to him My dear brother, have you made your peace with God?" No, sir," answered he; "I can't say that I have." "Do you not pray to the Lord sometimes to have mercy on you, and for the sake of Jesus to pardon your sins?" [end of page f864t25_235.gif] 236 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. "No, sir." " Have you never prayed ?" " No, sir, never in my life." " You believe in the Divine reality of religion, and ,that we may have our sins all forgiven, and enjoy the conscious evidence of pardon, do you not?" " Yes, sir, I believe in religion, and think it a very good thing to have." He was calm and composed ; his dreadful paroxysms had passed, and the fatal work was done. He was then poised on an eddying wave of death's dark tide, which on its next swell would whirl him out of the bounds of time into the breakers of eternal seas beyond. I saw his peril, and pulled with all my might to bring the life-boat of mercy by his side. I got very near to him, and entreated him to try to get into it and save his soul, but I could not prevail on him to make an effort; under the force of the ruling habit of his life be coolly said "Well, I'll think about it." How true the sentiment of an English bard "Procrastination is the thief of time; Year after year it steals till all is gone, And to the mercy of a moment leaves vast concerns of an eternal state. But horrible to relate, that last moment on which hangs the soul's eternal destiny, is booked by the same insidious rogue, and then and forever all is lost ! [end of page f864t25_236.gif] HOSPITAL REIMINISCENCES. 237 Next to the horrible habit of procrastination, and closely allied with it, is that of indifference and moral insensibility, that dreadful state thus described by St. Paul "Having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness." This state of mind in some cases manifests itself in reckless self-deception, and in many more in the blindest stupidity and indifference in regard to the future of their souls. A dying sailor, originally from Buffalo, N. Y., whom I exhorted to be reconciled to God, said 1 don't think it makes much difference whether I have religion or not. I have always lived a straightforward, upright life, like other sailors, and I can't see what more is required." A very good-looking young man said, in reply to my entreaties on behalf of his soul "I have not prayed, and don't intend to. God Almighty can do with me what he likes; I shan't concern myself about it." He then turned over, shut his eyes to sleep, and woke up in eternity. When to this soul-destroying habit of indifference there is added a surfeit of drugs and opiates, there is but little more power of thought, feeling, prayer, or [end of page f864t25_237.gif] 238 CALIF ORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. repentance than might be expected of the dead. I have seen hundreds of poor fellows sleeping away their lives without any apparent consciousnes, danger; and I have heard men call this peaceful dying! J. M. died of cholera at a boarding-house kept by Scotchman, who sent for me to attend his funeral, and said to me on the occasion, in regard to the deceased "He was a good man. One Of the best men I ever had in my house, and be died in great peace. He did not speak a word for twenty-four hours before his death. Ah! he was a good inan; to be sure, he would take a glass of grog now and then, and was fond of a game of cards, and sometimes would swear a little, but he didn't mean any harm by that, for he was a good man, and died in great peace." A great many, however, of those whoin I have seen in the death struggle, shook off the apathy I have described, and awoke to the keenest sensibilities of conscience, and the most dreadful forebodings of future ill; but a large majority of such wrapped themselves closely in the mantle of despair, so dark and impervious that no ray of hope could reach their souls. A dying young man from Alichigau said, in an agony of emotion "O that I had sought religion when I might ! but I put it off, and now I'm so weak in body and mind it is no use to try. Too late now!" [end of page f864t25_238.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 239 A gentleman from Boston, very near his end, said to me "My friends are nealry all religious; I have passed through a great many revivals, and have had a great many pressing invitations and opportunities to seek religion. How easy it would then have been for me to have given my heart to God. What a fool I was. Why did I not embrace religion and be a happy man? I should then have been ready for this hour. But alas! I did not when I might, and now I cannot." A poor young man said as he was nearing the grave "When I try to pray my mind becomes deranged, and I'm so weak I cannot pray." When Mr., R. from Baltimore was seized with cholera, he sent for me to come and see him, and said to me, when I entered the room "My wife, who is a Christian woman, has been writing me ever since I came here to make your acquaintance, and attend your church, but I have not done it; and what is worse, I am about to leave the world without a preparation to meet God." He was a snobel-looking a man as could be found in a thousand, and knowing many of his friends in Baltimore I felt the greatest possible sympathy for him; my soul loved him, and I determined, if possible, to contest the devil's claim on him to the last moment of his life. But he was in despair, and after laboring with him about an [end of page f864t25_239.gif] 240 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. hour, in urging him to try, to fix his mind on some precious promise of the Bible, be said " There is but one passage in the Bible that I can call to mind, and that haunts me. I can think of nothing else, for it exactly suits my case ' He that being often reproved hardeneth his heart, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy.' Mr. Taylor," continued he, "it's no use to talk- to me, or to try to do anything further; I am that man, arid my doom is fixed." The next day when I entered his room he said to a couple of young men present, " Go out, boys; I want to talk to Mr. Taylor." Then he said "I have no hope, my doom is fixed; but, for the warning of others, I want to tell you something that occurred a few months ago. I was then in health. and doing, a good business, and a man said to me, ' Dick, how would you like to have a clerkship?' and I replied, 'I wouldn't have a clerkship under Jesus Christ! Now, sir, that is the way I treated Christ when I thought I did not need him; and now when I'm dying, and can do no better for this life, it's presumption to, offer myself to him. It is no use; he won't have me." Nothing that I could say seemed to have any effect toward changing his mind. A few hours afterward, when he felt the icy grasp of death upon his heart, he cried, Boys, help me out of this place I" [end of page f864t25_240.gif] HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 241 "O no, Dick, you're too sick, we cannot help you up-!" "O do help me up; I can't lie here." "O Dick, don't exert ),ourself so you'll hasteu Boys," said the poor follow, " if you don't help up, I'll cry murder !" and with that he cried at top of his voice, which was yet strong and clear, " Murder! murder! murder I" till life's tide ebbed out, and his voice was hushed in death. How dreadful the hazard of postponing the business of life, the great object for which life is given, to the hour when heart and flesh are failing! The City Hospital has changed hands many times, and its location has been changed nearly as often as its resident physicians. It has also changed its name, bearing for several years past the title of State Marine Hospital." No permanent improvements for the comfort of city patients have been made. The city has always borne the enormous tax of heavy rents and accommodations, with all other inconveniences opf renters. There have been several private hospitals in the city, Dr. Stout's and Dr. Shuler's being the most largely patronized; and the French citizens have built one that will accomodate perhapse one hundred patiends, on some kind of joint stock principle, in which each subscriber is entitled to its priviledges. [end of page f864t25_241.gif] 242 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. But the only permanent public building of thi, kind in the city is the UNITED STATES MARINE HOSPITAL. It is located on Rincon Point, on an elevation affording a grand view of the city and bay of San Francisco, the Contra Costa valleys and hills, and the coast range mountains. The city authorities conveyed to the United States six fifty vara lots, each one hundred and thirty-seven and a half feet square, as a site for the institution, and it was built by United States authority at a cost of two hundred and twenty thousand dollars, appropriated from a fund created by a tax on all American sailors, of twenty-five cents per month, which shipmasters are required to deduct from their wages, and pay at the custom-house. In return for this tax every sailor belonging to American vessels is entitled, in case of illness, to a certificate from the collector of the port, for admis- sion into the hospital which has been built, and is furnished and supported by his money, so that he enters not as a charity patient, but as one of the owners of the institution. The United States Marine Hospital in San Francisco will accommodate comfortably about five hundred patients, and is kept in the most perfect order; the floors, furniture, and everything almost as neat and clean as a new dollar. There is no regular chaplain in this hospital, but I introduced regular religious services there on Sab [end of page f864t25_242.gif] [Plate entitled: United States Marine Hospital.] [end of page f864t25_243.jpg] Page 244 is blank. HOSPITAL REMINISCENCES. 245 bath soon after it was built, which I kept up during most of my subsequent stay in California; and which are still kept up by local preachers, exhorters, and occasional visits from regular pastors. My first preaching appointment there is thus noted in my journal Monday, -December 26, 1853 {1853/12/26} .-When at the United States Marine Hospital last week, I made an arrangement with Dr. M'Millen the resident physician, to have -preaching there at nine o'clock every Sunday morning. The doctor was very cordial in his affirmative response to my proposition, and gave me choice of any room in the house. The dining-room being a very popular room with the convalescing sailors, convenient, easy of access, very clean, and well provided with seats, I selected that as the preaching-place, where the bread of life should be dispensed to hungry souls without money and without price. I accordingly went up yesterday morning, and found my chapel, the dining-room, in order, and at the ringing of the breakfast-bell the congregation assembled. At this time there are but about seventy patients there, and many of them are unable to leave their rooms; but we had an audience of thirty-five men of the sea, who listened with great attention, and many of them with tears, to a discourse from "O wretched man that I am ! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" There was [end of page f864t25_245.gif] 246 CALIFORNTA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. evidently a gracious influence felt by all on the occasion, and I am much pleased with the prospect of good at that appointment, by the Lord's help." Those who were unable to attend preaching I visitA in their wards, and sung, and prayed, and talked to them; but my ward visits were generally daring the week. I had been preaching very frequently in the City Hospital for several years prior to the opening of the United States Marine Hospital; but subsequently, while I continued my visits to the former through the week, I continued to preach only in the latter. A carpenter, by the name of J. H. Perry, employed as one of the hands in the erection of this magnificent building, embraced religion while at work up in the fourth story, and joined our Bethel Society, and became a very consistent Christian. If my space permitted it I might here record many incidents, and some hopeful conversions, among seamen, coming under my observation in connection with my visits to this noble institution. [end of page f864t25_246.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 247 CHAPTER IX. EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. WHEN I set sail for California in the spring of 1849 {1849/00/00}, the prevailing idea among the people generally seemed to be, that California was a small peninsula on the Pacific coast, a place of but little importance, except for the gold diggings which had been discovered there, which would be worked out in a few years, and then the country would be abandoned to the Indians and wolves; that everybody lived in San Francisco, and worked in the mines near by. I carried a large package of letters round Cape Horn, the writers of them beheving that thof the conveyance did not belong to thefast line, it was, nevertheless, the most reliable, as I would be certain to meet all their California friends on my arrival in San Francisco. The emigration of 1849 {1849/00/00}, though they found California an astonishingly large country, yet arriving there in the dry season, they regarded the entire territory, except a few irrigated garden spots, as a vast barren desert. But few persons, even after a sojourn of two [end of page f864t25_247.gif] 248 CAL1FORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. years there, could believe that California soil would produce grain or vegetables without irrigation. But few had faith enough to put the question to a practical test, and it was not until a few hopeful, adventurous farmers, who were willing to hazard their money and their reputation for soundness of mind, had made a fortune out of the products of their unirrigated fields, that the mass of, the people were gradually led to change their views. The potato-growing fever then set in, and raged like the gold mania. Hundreds of thousands of dollars were invested in the potato-crop. Fifteen cents per pound were paid for seed potatoes, and one hundred dollars per month paid each man to fence and prepare the land and attend to the crop. The result -was that the markets were glutted, the price of potatoes went down to the cost value of the sacks that contained them, and hundreds of thousands of tons of the finest potatoes in the world, dug and gathered into large cribs, lay and rotted, creating such a nuisance that it was feared that they would breed a pestilence in some localities. A friend of mine offered a man 'his crop if he would take them away. " O," replied the man, ' " I can do better than that; I can get them on the same terms nearer home, and save the freight." Another friend of mine lost fifty thousand dollars on a single crop. Some poor fellows paid very dear for the 'experience, but it convinced the people that [end of page f864t25_248.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 249 the great California desert was more productive than any fruitful land they had ever seen. No Californian now doubts tbat the agricultural resources of the country are immense beyond adequate computation, but I find masses of persons on the Atlantic side who have very limited views of California, both in regard to the extent of her domain, and her exhaustless resources. Many persons, whose views are based on a mere glance at statistical exhibits, remind me of a school-boy in Lexington, Virginia. He was regarded as a great proficient in the study of geography; always "stood head in his class." During vacation he made a visit to Staunton, a distance of thirty-five miles, to see his, aunt. On his return his associates hailed him Halloo, John! bow did you like your visit to Staunton?" O, I was perfectly delighted! I had no idea that the world was so big." That portion of the little peninsula we used to trace, in school-boy days, on the map of the Pacific coast, and spell out its hard name, "Californy," embraced in the State of California, extends along the coast from 32o 40' 13" to 41o 44' 41", north latitude, embracing a coast line, from San Diego to Crescent City, of about seven hundred miles, with an average width back to the Sierra Nevada Mountains, of about two hundred miles. The total area of the state, including lakes, bays, and precipitous mountains, is carefully estimated at [end of page f864t25_249.gif] 250 CAITFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ninty-nine millions, four hundred and sixty-three thousand, six hundred and eighty acres. To form a comparative idea of the extent of such a patch of land, take the states of Maine, Vermont, New-Hainpshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New-York, Pennsylvania, New-Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland, and spread them all out together on the broad bosom of California, and they will leave an uncovered margin of thirteen thousand seven hundred and seventy-four square miles. This surplus margin might be divided up into ten such states'as Rhode Island, and still you would have one hundred and seventy-four square miles left., which you might appropriate for Indian reservations." The amount of land in the State of California, adapted to the purposes of agriculture is estimated at forty-one millions, six hundred and twenty-two thousand, and four hundred acres, exclusive of the swamp and overflowed lands, estimated at five millions, which, when reclaimed, will produce every variety of crops. The amount of grazing land is estimated at thirty millions of acres, making a total of seventy-six millions, six hundred and twenty-two thousand acres of land, suitable for agricultural and stock-raising purposes. The amount of land inclosed for agricultural purposes is about six hundred and twenty-eight thousand acres. The area of gold mining land is variously estima- [end of page f864t25_250.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 251 ted at from eleven to fifteen millions of acres; sup. pose We say in definite numbers twelve millions $1 Which, added to the agricultural and grazing portions just named, would make an aggregate of eighty-eight millions, six hundred and twenty-two thousand four hundred acres of productive land in the State of California, leaving ten millions eight hundred and fortyone thousand two hundred and eighty acres, for the accommodation of grizzly bears and California lions. "In the year 1856 {1856/00/00} there were 578,963 acres in California cultivated in cereal grain. Wheat, 176.,963 acres, yielding, 3,979,032 bushels. Barley, 154,674 acres, yielding 4,639,678 bushels. . Oats, 37,602 acres, yielding ,263,359 bushels. The average yield 64 wheat in 1856 {1856/00/00} was twenty-tbree bushels per acre, -which, owing to the severe drought of the early part ot the season, was much less than that of previous years. The ordinary average is about thirty- bushels per acre taking the crop of the entire, state together. The average yield of barley is thirty bushels per acre. It frequently yields from fifty to seventyfive bushels per acre. The average yield of the. oat crop is thirty-three bushels per acre. Crops of grain have frequently averaged seventy-five bushels per acre; and a crop of thirty-two acres in Alameda County, which received a premium at the. State Agricultural fair for 1856 {1856/00/00}, averaged one. hundred and thirty4our.busheis to the acre.". [end of page f864t25_251.gif] 252 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. One peculiarity in California grain growing is, that two or three crops are generally raised from one sowing. After the first crop is harvested, and the field gleaned by the hogs, it is then closed up, generally without a replowing, or anything, till the next harvest-time, when a better crop is sometimes gathered than the first. In case of severe drought the second crop is the most reliable, from the fact that it takes root with the first fall rains before seeding-time commences, and comes earher to the harvest. The visiting' committee of the California Agricultural Society, in their report for the year 1856 {1856/00/00}, have the following notice of a field of barley Near Alviso, Santa Clara County, there is a field of barley, fifty acres in extent, which has averaged the present season forty-three bushels to the acre. This is the crop from a single sowing; it has received no special care, and rnay be regarded as a memorable example of a succession of volunteer crops." Two crops are almost invariably expected from one sowing; the third is not generally relied on. "The returns from thirty-four counties of the state exhibit the crop of Indian corn, of 1856 {1856/00/00}, at ,020 acres, averaging for the entire crop thirty-one bush, CIS per acre. Rye averages about thirty bushels per acre. Buckwheat about twenty-five bushels pei acre. Beans average about thirty bushels per acre, peas twenty-eight. The number of acres planted [end of page f864t25_252.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 253 in potatoes in the year 1856 {1856/00/00} are sixteen thousand four hundred and thirty-four, averaging, in Alameda County, seventy bushels ; Sacramento, one hundred; San Joaquin, two hundred; Siskiyou, one hundred; and Trinity, three hundred bushels per acre. - "The returns of twenty-two counties exhibit fourteen thousand seven hundred and three acres planted with vegetables. It is probable that the remaining counties will increase this amount to about forty-five thousand acres." Some rare specimens of vegetables and fruit were exhibited at the State Agricultural Fair of 1856 {1856/00/00}. I saw them myself, and have no doubt as to the correctness of the published statements in regard to them. There were exhibited, two pumpkins from Sacramento, weighing two hundred and ten, and two hundred and forty pounds." Those were "some punkins," were they not ? A beet, grown by Colonel Hall, of Sacramento City, weighing seventy-three pounds; a carrot, weighing ten pounds, measuring one foot and eight inches in circumference, and three feet and three inches in length. There were fifty in the sarne bed of equal size., seeds were sown on June 25th, and the carrots dug September 20tb. A tomato, seventeen inches in circumference; a squash, weighing one hundred and forty-one pounds; an onion, weigh [end of page f864t25_253.gif] 254 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. two pounds and fifteen ounces, and measurhig twenty inches circumference; a cornstalk, twenty-one feet, and nine inches in height; watermelons,. from near Nevada, twenty-seven gave an aggregato of five hundred and-fifty pounds; a sweet potato, from San Jose, weighing eleven pounds and two ounces; an 1rish potato, from Bodega, weighing seven and a quarter pounds; a bunch of potatoes, of the Oregon red variety, from a single eye, weighing ton. pounds.". I would here remark that in California the best potatoes are selected for seed, cut up carefully, and but one eye put in a hill. "Grapes, several bunches, weighing over four pouinds each; a citron lemon, sixteen and a half by eighteen and three quarters in circumfrence weighing two pounds and fourteen ounces, from Los Angeles; fig-tree, a slip one foot in length, and five eighths of an inch in thickness, was planted, April 1st, month-of September following was eleven feet-six inches. high, and nine and a quarter inches in circumfrence, and weighhing from seven to eight and a half ounces; there were thirty four of these large peaches on one tree; a apple, measuring fifteen and one third inches in [end of page f864t25_254.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA . 255 circumference each way, weighing twenty-three ounces, grown in the Yamhill Orchard." Those large apples are called " Gloria Mundi. Soon after their first appearance in the San Francisco markets I bought one of -hem for three dollars. I felt a little conscience-stricken for paying that much, for orle apple; but M rs. Taylor was in very delicate health at that time, and a little discouraged, so I thought that the sight of such a specimen of the "fruits of the land" would do her more good, and be cheaper than a doctor's prescription. I beheved we would get at least three dollars' worth of hope out of it) and then the apple itself would be clear gain, which would not be, upon the whole, a had speculation. Brother Owen and I were looking at some of those great apples one day, and the price seemed to take Owen aback. After expressing his surprise, said he to the fruit-vender "How much will you charge me for the privilege of smelling one of them?" Nothing at all, sir," replied the fruit man. "O that is very reasonable, indeed," answered Owen. I'll not buy any now, but will take a little of the odor." Hay is cut by the hundred thousand tons from the spontaneous growth of grass, clover, and wild oats, on the hills and valleys. [end of page f864t25_255.gif] 256 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. The sales of butter, cheese, and poultry in Sonoma County alone, during the season of 1856 {1856/00/00}, are estimated at five hundred thousand dollars. The soil of California, as proved by successful experiment, is well adapted to the production of cotton, tobacco, sugar-cane, sugar-beet and mulberry; and it is believed that rice will grow as well on her marsh lands as in China. California is also destined to become one of the greatest fruit-growing countries in the world, and great attention is being given to the cultivation of the best varieties. There are now growing in the orchards of the state three, hundred and twenty thousand five hundred apple-trees ; six hundred and nineteen thousand nine hundred and ninety-three peach-trees ; fifty-nine thousand one hundred and seventy-one peartrees; twenty-five thousand two hundred and sixtyfour cherry-trees; two hundred and seventy-one thousand eight hundred, and fifty-five of varieties not specified; and one million five hundred and thirty-one thousand two hundred and twenty-four grape-vines." There are but few countries so well adapted to stock raising of every kind as California. The valleys, and hills, and mountains are covered with grass and wild oats, and where stock can have free access to the range they will thrive the whole year without [end of page f864t25_256.gif] Page 257 is blank. [Plate entitled: New World Market, corner of Commercial and Leidsdorff Streets.] [end of page f864t25_258.jpg] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 259 being fed. The only period in the year when they are likely to suffer at all, is about one month, begining with the first fall rains. The grass matures and dries on the around, and remains good hay during the dry season, but is spoiled by the first rains; then, until the new grass is up, which i's but a few weeks, the pasturage is not good. The census returns of 1856 {1856/00/00} make the following exhibit of live stock in California "One hundred and six thousand nine hundred and ninety-one horses; thirty thousand six hundred and forty-one mules and asses; six hundred and eighty-four thousand two hundred and forty-eight cattle; two hundred and fifty-three thousand three hundred and twelve sheep; four thousand five hundred and forty-four goats one hundred and eightysix thousand five hundred and eighty-five swine -, two hundred and sixty-six thousand three hundred and thirty-six poultry. Wild game and fowl abound in California; elk, deer, grizzly bears, etc., wild geese, brants, duck, etc., by the hundred million. Fisheries are becoming a fruitful product of the California coast. "A company of Portuguese in Monterey have gone into the whale fishery along the coast, and have taken from whales which they have captured since March, 1856 {1856/03/00}, say eight months, sixteen thousand gallons of oil, which were sold for twelve thousand dollars." [end of page f864t25_259.gif] 260 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. " Salmon fisheries are carried on upon the Sacramento River for a distance of fifty miles, extending isouth from a point ten miles north of Sacramento City. The season embraces five months, from February to April, and from October to November, inclusive, of each year. There are about four hundred men engaged in this business, employing a capital of seventy-five thousand dollars. The number of salmon taken during the season of 1856 {1856/00/00} was estimated at four hundred and fifty thousand, nearly four thousand per day. The average weight is about fifteen pounds each, amounting in the aggregate to six million seven hundred and fifty thousand pounds, which, at twelve and a half cents per pound, the average price, of the sales' throughout the year, amounts to eighty-four thousand three hundred and seventy-fivedollars. There are several establishments at Sacramento engaged in the salting, smoking, and packinglof these fish for home consumption, and to supply the demand from abroad." The bays and rivers abound in sturgeon and other fish in almost endless variety. The lumber business is carried on extensively. Timber is not well distributed through the agricultural regions of the state; there are millions of acres, not only in the valleys, but on hills and mountains, without a tree or sapling; one vast meadow with a heavy growth of grass and,wild oats just ready for the [end of page f864t25_260.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 261 Plow, without even the obstruction of a stone ; but the farmer is dependent for fencing and fuel on other regions not quite so good for agriculture, so that the independent farmer " has to make terms with the independent woodsman of the mountains. There is an inexhaustible supply of timber in the Sierra.Nevada and coast range mountains, and much of it the heaviest timber ever seen since the flood. The product of lumber in several counties forms an important part of their resources. In Tuolumne County alone the sales are estimated to exceed eight hundred thousand dollars per annum. The number of mills in the state is three hundred and seventythree, of which one hundred and seventy are propelled by steam, and two hundred and two by water. Cost of erection estimated at two and a half millions of dollars. Aggregate capacity is about five hundred millions of feet per year." "In addition to the above, there are several mills in San Francisco and Sacramento employed in the sawing and dressing of lumber. The exports of lumber for 1854 {1854/00/00}, 1855 {1855/00/00}, 1856 {1856/00/00}, amounted in the aggregate to one hundred and ninety thousand and twenty-six dollars." The number of grist-mills in the state is one hundred and thirty-one. The aggregate run of stone two hundred and seventy. Sixty-sevem mills are Propelled by steam, and fifty-four by water. The [end of page f864t25_261.gif] 262 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. aggregate capacity per day of the water-mills is three thousand five hundred and fifty-two barrels; of the steam, five thousand two hundred and forty. Estimating the water-mills to be in operation six months of the year, and the aggregate capacity of the mills of the state is two million one hundred and seventy-four thousand nine hundred and sixty barrels per annum. The capacity of the mills of Sacramento, San Francisco, San Joaquin, and Santa Clara, is one million two hundred thousand barrels of flour per annum; twice the quantity necessary to supply the entire population of the state. The cost of the erection of the above mills is estimated at two million four hundred thousand dollars." There are various other manufactories in the state. The San Francisco Sugar Refinery, employing one hundred and fifty hands. San Francisco Cordage ano, Jakum Manufactery, in successful operation. The buildings connected with the works are of the most extensive and permanent character. Pioneer Paper-Mill, thirty miles from San Francisco in Marin County, with a capacity to turn off fourteen and a half toils per week. The cost of the establishment, complete, is about ninety-two thousand dollars." "Thereare fourteen iron founderies at present in operation in the state , several of which are of an [end of page f864t25_262.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 263 extensive character, and well supplied with all the appliances necessary for the manufacture of machinery of the heaviest description." There are eighteen Tanneries at present in the state, employing capital to the amount of ninety-four thousand dollars. The amount of capital employed by the different ferries of the state is estimated at three hundred thousand dollars. This amount does not include the cost of the steamers employed on the Sacramento and San Joaquin 'Rivers. There are one hundred and seventeen bridges constructed, the aggregate cost of which is about five hundred and fifty thousand dollars." Ship-building is becoming quite an important branch of business in San Francisco. There are distilleries enough in the state to produce a stream of liquid fire sufficient in volume and venom to kill all the people in it, the producers included. The limits of this work will not allow me to give a more definite and detailed account of the various manufactories above referred to, nor an enumeration of many others worthy of notice. The mineral products of California, so far as reported by the state geologist, Dr. Trask, are, in addition to that of gold, of which the world in general has been notified, as follows Silver, copper, iroil, sulphate of iron, magnetic iron, platinum, chromium, the (fine [end of page f864t25_263.gif] 264 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. chrome yellow, so highly prized, is manufactured from this mineral, gypsum, nickel, (a metal extensively used in the manufacture of German silver, for wares and household utensils,) antimony, cinnabar, or quicksilver. New-Almadeninine, in Santa Clara County, is believed to be the richest in the world, yielding at this time about twelve thousand pounds per week. Bitumen is found in large quantities in the southern part of the state. There cannot be less than four thousand tons of asphaltum lying upon the surface of the ground in the Counties of Los Angeles and Santa Barbara alone, within a few miles of the coast. Its value, delivered in San Francisco, would not be less than sixteen dollars per ton, equal in value to sixty-four thousand dollars." Nothing bar, 'been done in this line of business as yet, for the ,reason, I suppose, that induced Robert Sears, a friend of mine, to give up the lime-making business. Robert spent a year in the manufacture of lime in Santa Cruz, and sent a large shipment, the result of his year's toil, of as good lime as ever was produced, to San Francisco. He came up in company with me, from one of my Santa Cruz trips, to San Francisco, full of hope, to draw his money, but, alas for poor Bob I the lime-market was overstocked, and all the lime be had would pay but about half his freight bill. He immediately left for the mines, believing [end of page f864t25_264.gif] Page 265 is blank. [Plate entitled: Sutter's Mill.] [end of page f864t25_266.jpg] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 267 that if he could produce gold instead of lime, he would be sure of his money. Coal is found in abundance, and exhaustless stores of marble, grauite, and burr-stones. These are all regarded as sources of mineral wealth to the state, most of which are yet undeveloped, quicksilver and gold being the only two which have attracted much attention. Gold is the staple of the country. Its discovery was made by James W. Marshall, in Coloma Valley, about sixty miles east of Sacramento city, in the month of January, 1848 {1848/01/00}. This gold discovery was not subsequent to the treaty by which California was ceded to the United States, as has been asserted, in my hearing, by men in, high position, the said treaty not taking effect till the, 30th of May, 1848 {1848/05/30}; but the treaty was made before. the'news of the gold, reached the treaty-making parties. Marshall was employed by,Captain,Sutter, to build a saw-mill. In the prosecution of his work, he turned a stream of water from the river into the, tail-race, for the purpose of widening and deepening it by the strength of the current. After the water was shut off Marshall saw, at the foot of the race, some shining yellow stuff, which had been washed out and exposed to view by the action of the water snd gathering a handful of it, he ran away and told his employer. The echoes of his voice shook the world, and all nations responded to his thrilling [end of page f864t25_267.gif] 268 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. story, and sent their sons to assist him in digging his tail-race. The amount of treasure manifested at the port of San Francisco from 1849 {1849/00/00} to the close of 1856 {1856/00/00}, is three hundred and twenty-two millions, three hundred and ninety-three thousand, eight hundred and fifty-six dollars;" but besides that amount, millions have been carried away in private hands. I remember, a few years ago, a party of returning Californians, in being conveyed in a boat from the landing to the steamer in Virgin Bay, were capsized, and many of them sunk like lead, with the weight of the gold belted about their persons; while their poor brothers, who, perhaps, had no gold to carry, were picked up and saved. A lucky miner once fell into the San Juan River, and finding, that his bag of gold was too heavy for his body, he took it off, and clenched it in his teeth, but - it immediately put his head under, water, so he let go the hard earnings of years, and by the-greatest exertions saved his life; according to the devil's scripture, Skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for his I life." Job ii, 4. From the best available sources of information, it is estimated that the California gold mines have yielded, within the period above specified, "nearly six hundred millions of dolars" There are various modes of mining, some of the [end of page f864t25_268.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNA 269 most prominent of which I will mention. Early miners in California confined their operations almost exclusively to surface diggings" along the banks of the water-courses, or sufficiently near to be hauled to the streams for washing. At present deep diggings, by means of shafts and tunnels," into the hearts of the hills and mountains, are carried on very extensively. This mode requires capital, but is much more permanent and productive than surface digging. These drifts or adits are seldom less than three hundred feet in length, and generally range from ten to twelve hundred feet, and many of them large enough to use a horse within for carrying the " pay dirt" to the sluices without. Dr. Trask, state geologist, gives the following specimens of cost and profits of some successful operations of this kind "The cost of opening the Mameluke hill, near Georgetown, by the parties 'interested, exceeded forty thousand dollars, while the receipts for the same, during the period of little more than one year, has exceeded five hundred thousand. Another case is that of Jones's Hill, the opening of which has already cost above thirty-four thousand dollars, the receipts being above two hundred and eighty-four thousand dollars; and still another in the County of Nevada, (Laird's Hill,) the expense of opening which was nearly forty thousand dollars, while the receipts [end of page f864t25_269.gif] 270 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ftom it in June last had reached the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand; the resources of either are as yet in anything but an exhausted condition. "The above is mentioned only for the purpose of conveying a better idea of the expenses and profits of what is denominated deep mining in this state; and the localities named form but a small proportion of the aggregate of similar workings. In the counties of Nevada, Sierra, Placer, El Dorado, Amador, and Calaveras, there are scores of adits and other workings of similar dimensions, which have already cost sums varying in amount from ten-thousand dollars upward to the figures given above, and from which proportional profits have been derived." River diggings are carried on but about six months in the year, while the rivers are low. The mode is to divert the stream from its channel, so as to -work the river bed. This is done by wing dams," so constructed as to carry the stream all to one side, and open to mining purposes apart of the original channel; but more extensively by building a dam across the entire river, and by throwing the into a large "flume," constructed of timber and plank, in size and strength sufficient to carry the entire volume of the river. I saw one a little below Downieville, which carried the whole of [end of page f864t25_270.gif] EXTENT AND RESGURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 271 Yuba River for nearly half a mile. Along those flumes there are a great many water-wheels, as large as the under-shot wheels of grigt-mills, used for propelling various kinds of pumps for raising and carrying off the leakage and standing water in the original bed of the stream, and for raising water by means of buckets attached to the wheels, which is conveyed in small flumes to other mining localities in. the neighborhood, and also for pumping the water out of claims in the low grounds along the rivers. An immense flume, with its wheels, and pumps, and small flumes, together with the hundreds of men engaged in disemboweling the bosom of the ancient river, and dragging to light the hid treasures it had concealed) it may be, ever since the days of Noah, presents a very lively scene. All these works are generally swept away by the high tides of the former rains." The great desire, of the miners to work out their claims, generally keeps all hands busy in getting out the gold till the floods come, and then there is but little opportunity left for saving any fluming timber or accompanying appliances. , A member of a fluming company on the north fork of Feather River, told me that in the summer's work they did not -make enough to pay expenses till the last fortnigilt of the season, when, from beneath a single boulder [end of page f864t25_271.gif] 272 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. they took out thirty thousand dollars. He showed me the hole whence it was dug. As an illustration of the extent of such operationsv we note the following " A portion of Feather River, in the vicinity of Oreville, is at the present time under contract for a distance of two hundred thousand feet, at an expense of four hundred and ninety thousand dollars." Some idea of the extent to which quartz mining is carried on may be gained by an exhibit of the number and cost of the quartz mills employed. "The number of quartz mills in operation in the state is one hundred and thirty-eight, of which eighty-six are propelled by water, forty-eight by steam, and four by horse-power. The aggregate number of stamps connected with these mills is fifteen hundred and twenty-one. The cost of machinery is estimated at one million seven hundred and sixty-three thousand dollars." quartz rock is quarried out, broken up, stamped, and ground to powder, from which, by means of water and quicksilver, the gold dust is extracted. Hydraulic mining is also carried on very extensively. The mode is to convey through a canvas duck hose, a volume of about twenty inches of water, a fall Of from thirty to three hundred feet, which forces the water through an iron or brass inch and a [end of page f864t25_272.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 273 quarter nozzle, with a force that would knock a man down. This nozzle, in the hands of a miner who understands his business, directs the stream against the side of a mountain or bill, by which, in many localities, he can in one day wash down a thousand cartloads of dirt. He first directs the stream near the bed-rock," at the base of the hill he wishes to wasli down, and, by thus undermining it, causes a landslide." When the foundations are thus swept away, and the side of a hill, with its huge boulders and mighty trees, breaks and tumbles with a crash and thunder like the roar of artillery, all hands have to stand from under. I witnessed such a crash one day near Coon Hollow, in El Dorado County, and when I saw and heard the hill coming toward me, I, with all the rest, beat a hurried retreat; when distant about fifty yards, and increasing the distance as fast as I could, a stone, propelled by the force of the falling hill, struck me on the heel, and for days I halted like wrestling Jacob. The same water thus used to wash down the dirt, carries it through the sluices, and washes out the gold. The sluices, which are from twelve to eighteen inches deep, and as wide as deep, are made of plank, and extend in length from one to three hundred yards; in the bottom of them are cross bars, called "rifle boxes," to catch the gold, while all the gross material is carried away by the stream. Along these [end of page f864t25_273.gif] 274 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. sluices men are employed with forks and shovels, breaking the clods, throwing out the large stones; and otherwise assisting the water to disengage the gold from the mass of accompanying matter. Every day or two the good time for cleaning the sluices" comes, when everv variety of gold dust, and scales," and "grains," and " big lumps" are gathered. This mode of mining pays largely in mining land so poor that a man with "pick and shovel," could not from it earn his salt. Many locations which have been worked over by other modes of mining are profitably re-worked by this mode. Gold-mining of every description requires water, and hence the dry diggings could only be worked during the wet season, and the spring-time of dissolving snow, until, by artificial means, the water conveyed from the rivers over high mountains., and across deep canons, to those dry districts. The vast extent of rich mining country of this kind has given rise to a distinct department of business in mining operations, which furnishes employment for a great many water companies, and profitable investinent for a vast amount of money. The extent of this, department of business may be illustrated by the following statistical exhibit in regard to canals and ditches There are four thousand four hundred and five miles of artificial water courses for mining purposes in California, construct [end of page f864t25_274.gif] EXTENT AND RESOURCES OF CALIFORNIA. 275 ed at a cost of eleven million eight hundred and ninety thousand eight hundred dollars. In addition to these there are about nine hundred miles now in the course of construction. There are thousands of square miles of rich mineral land in the state, now lying almost valueless for the greater part of the year, which could, with the aid of enterprise and capital judiciously expended, be made valuable for mining purposes, and thereby secure an abundant return." It is proper to add, that the progress already made in the construction of these works has been,with but few exceptions, accomplished by the miners themselves." If the limits of this book would admit of itl I would insert a great many more facts and incidents in regard to mining operations. The information contained in this chapter in regard to the resources of California, is compiled principally from the official reports of Dr. Trask, state geologist, and the returns of the state census for the year 1856 {1856/00/00}. 1 have a number of those reports and census returns in my possession, but I am indebted for the compiling of most 'of the statistics of this chapter, and some remarks in quotation, to "The State Register and Year Book of Facts, for the year 1857 {1857/00/00}," a 12mo volume, published annually by Henry G. Langley and Samuel A. Matthews, of San Francisco, and Jamos Queen, of Sacramento City. The Register is the [end of page f864t25_275.gif] 276 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. most complete collection of California statistics of every kind ever published, and I would heartily commend it to every man who desires to study California. I shall now pass from the mines to ilustrate life among the miners. [end of page f864t25_276.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 27 7 CHAPTER X. CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. THERE are but two seasons in California, the wet and the dry. Seed-time and harvest, in the production of annual grains, come in about the same month's that they do in the Eastern States and Europe, except that in California the seed-time of wheat and barley continues, from October till March, and harvest frequently cominences in May. The " former rain " commences generally in October, falling in sufficient quantity to lay the dust and start the grass to growing. Still more rain falls in November. In December and January it rains heavily. February seems to divide the " former and later rain," during which there is but little. There are heavy rains in -March. The equinoctial storm, in which there is much wind, usually sets in on the 14th of March. There are a few showers in April, and sometinies a little rain in May, but not one shower thence until the next October. Any variations from this general statement will be [end of page f864t25_277.gif] 278 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. found, on examination, to come under the head of exceptions, and not the rule. A large proportion of the rain falls at night, with alternate clear days. It is not usual to have many wet days together. For the more definite information of those who desire to study the subject, I will insert an exhibit of clouds, rain, sunshine, cold and heat, from Meteorological Observations" made at San Francisco by Dr. Henry Gibbons, M.D., as given in the California Register." TABLE OF CLOUD AND MIST FOR 1856. {1856/00/00} Showing the proportionate time in each month when the sky .was Clear and cloudy, given in days; the number of days when the sky was clear, from sunrise to sunset, and the number cloudv, the number of days in which rain fell, and the number of days on whieh there was more or less mist [end of page f864t25_278.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 279 It will be observed in this exhibit that in the year 1856 {1856/00/00} there were but sixty-two "days' rain," and thirty-eight cloudy days, some of which were in dry season, when rain was out of the question, making in all one hundred dark days, and leaving two hundred and sixty-five bright days in the year, excepting transient clouds and mists brought from the ocean by the summer breezes, and carried but a short distance into the Interior of the country. The rain of 1856 {1856/00/00} was in quantity about a mean average with other years, being more than fell in 1851 {1851/00/00} and 1853 {1853/00/00}, and less than 1852 {1852/00/00}, 1854 {1854/00/00}, and 1855 {1855/00/00}, as may be seen in another exhibit by Dr. Gibbous. TABLE OF MONTHLY RAINS. Showing the amount of rain, in inches, in each month, from the autumn of 1850 {1850/00/00} to the spring of 1857 {1857/00/00}; also the mean quantity for each mouth in the year in that period.. [end of page f864t25_279.gif] 280 CALIFORINIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. The following is a TABLE OF EXTREMES OF HEAT AND COLD. Showing the greatest degree of heat, and the greatest degree of cold in each month, from December, 1850 {1850/12/00} , to March, 1857 {1857/03/00}. From the foregoing table it appears that the greatest degree of cold at Francisco, in six years, was twenty-five degrees, or seven below the freezing may be set down as the extreme of cold ever felt here. In three years the mercury did not fall to the freezing point. In 1853 {1853/00/00} the lowest point was 8 degrees above freezing. The extreme of heat was ninety- eight degrees, a very unusual temperature for San francisco, though much [end of page f864t25_280.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 281 below the greatest heat in the interior. In 1856 {1856/00/00} , the highest temperature was eighty-five, and in 1851{1851/00/00} the thermometer did not rise above eighty-four." San Francisco is in latitude, 37' 47' 55" N. in longi- tude 122' 22'54'West #s037 47N#e $s122 22W$e The climate of Stockton in San Joaquin valley, latitude, 37' 67' N., longitude, 1211 14! 26' West, #s037 67N#e $s121 14W$e though not so warm as the upper part of Sacramento Valley, may be set clown as a fair specimen of the climate of the interior of the State of California. From a table of meteorological observa- tions made in the State Insane Asylum in the city of Stockton, during the year 1854 {1854/00/00}, contained in the annual report of the officers of the said asylum, I extract the following Showing the extreme heat and cold, number of cloudy and rainy days, and the amount of water falling by inches. [end of page f864t25_281.gif] 282 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. It will thus be seen that the weather in Stockton is a little warmer in summer, and a little colder in winter than in San Francisco. The highest degree of heat being ninety-eight, while the highest degree of the same year in San Francisco was eighty-seven. The lowest degree in Stockton was eighteen, while the lowest degree in San Francisco at the same time was twenty-five. That, I remember, was the coldest season I experienced in San Francisco during a residence of seven winters. There were but sixty-seven cloudy and rainy days in Stockton during the year 1854 {1854/00/00}, leairing nearly three hundred days of uninterrupted sunshie. In Sacramento and Marysville the heat sometimes raises the mercury to one hundred and ten degrees, but however hot, such is the purity and bracing character of the atmosphere, that men work in the sun all day with impunity, seeming to suffer less from the heat than men do in our Atlantic cities, in a tempera- ture fifteen degrees lower. No matter how hot the clays may be, the nights in California are cool and refreshing. The Pacific Ocean on the West, and the Great Snow Mountains on the North and East, exert a modifying power over the temperature at all times, doubtday declines the equalizing in refreshing breath of mountains and ocean meet in the sun-heated vales, everywhere imparting vigour [end of page f864t25_282.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 283 and life to the weary and the faint. Men can sleep with impunity all summer on the ground, but they require to be well wrapped-up in blankets. It is a great country for sleeping. The summer heat of the mining mountains would be almost insupportable but for the fact that the canons or gulches and river beds are very deep and contain vast volumes of cool air, which, as the sun-rising heat rarifies the atmosphere of the long southern slopes of the mountains, roll up like a sea breeze. This fact, together with their proximity to vast bodies of perpetual snow, secures a good breeze, which must come just as certainly as the heat that sets it in motion. Those mountain breezes are delightfully pleasant. There is in California, especially during the wet season, a peculiar transparency of atmosphere. A man a mile distant looks as large as life. I have aften stood in San Francisco, and with the naked eye seen herds of cattle grazing in the Contra Costa valleys, distant eight miles. In commencing a day's travel by stage coach from the City of Stockton to Sonora, I saw in the morning a huge mountain on our line of travel, just out on the plain, distant apparently about twenty or thirty miles. After traveling directly towards it a distance of eighty miles, it all the time seeming to stand off about as far as it did in the morning when I first observed it, I learned tbat it [end of page f864t25_283.gif] 284 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. the travel of one hundred miles more would not bring us to its base. This atmospheric peculiarity gives an indescribable charm to landscape scenery, so that rambling through the Lord's great flower-gardens, which, with their endless variety of colours carpet the hills and vales in spring time, you feel as though you were in a fairy-land, and have ever and anon to correct the dreams of the imagination by the manifest realities of the life before your eyes. The purity of the atmosphere, I presume, will account for the fact, that, except in the extreme northern portions of the State, we have no thunder-storms in California. I have seen the atmosphere at sea, so humid and foul, that nothing apparently short of a thunder-storm could purify it; and when thunder came, the lightning seemed to roll the atmospheric impurity into balls and hang them to the ends of the yard arms of our ships, where, amid the terror and darkness of the scene, we could distinctly see them like balls of fire as large as my fist. But Californian atmosphere seems to have nothing in it to attract or feed a thunder storm. I never saw one during my residence there of more than seven years. I have heard the rumble of distant thunder as often as once or twice, during a winter or wet season, and even that, according to the testimony of the old Spaniards there, was a recent phenomenon. They say they never heard it thunder at all till the Yankees came among them. [end of page f864t25_284.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE 285 In the Central and Southern portions of the state it never snows except on the high mountain, never saw a particle of snow in San Francisco in seven winters. Grasses, grains, and vegetables Start into new life with the October and November rains. Annual grains, vegetables, and fruits come in, their appropriate seasons as in other countries, but all the variety of salads, turnips, cabbages, etc., luxuriantly and mature all through the winter. It is very common in the middle of January to cutting cabbage heads, and setting out plants at same time. The annual fruits, grains, grasses, etc., make growth through the wet season that carries them with opening spring to maturity before they are by summer drought. The grain is harvested, gathered together, and thrashed in the open field, and there piled-up without storehouse or barn, until taken to the mill or market. The grasses mature and remain on the ground, making a rich supply of good hay, "cured without rain," on which live-stock feed and fatten till the fall of the rains, which immediately bring up a new crop. The latter part of July and the months of and September are the barren season of the year the winter time of rest to the land-spring commencing with'the full rains. During those months for a good [end of page f864t25_285.gif] 286 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. supply of fresh vegetables we are dependent on irrigation. The dry season, which to many would seem a great inconvenience, is in many respects a great blessing. First, it is most favourable to all kinds of outdoor operations-no fear of interruptions from rains. Second, it is very favourable to live-stock, in preserving a good supply of "hay without rain," as free as all out of doors, during the necessary rest time of the land. Thirdly, the luxuriance of vegetation in our valleys with summer rains and heat would generate malaria, and produce malignant fevers; whereas, with the present arrangement the heavy growth of vegetation matures, and is dried up, and generally consumed before the rain falls. The prevailing fevers common in other fertile countries are seldom known in California. Again, the soil is adapted to the dry climate, retaining its moisture and sustaining vegetable life in its bosom through the severest droughts, and with the decline of summer heat sends forth its freshening springs of water before the rains commence. On the other hand, when travelling through a dusty highway, literally " returning to dust" before the appointed" time, so that you could hardly recognise your familiar friend, unless it be by his eyes, which like diamonds in a mud-hole shine out upon you, a little shower to lay the dust would be delight [end of page f864t25_286.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 287 ful. But upon the whole, if the vote for changing the climate in this regard was put to intelligent Californians, they would almost unanimously cast their votes in the negative-better let it remain just as the Lord has made it. In regard to the extremes of heat and cold within the State of California, it may with propriety be said, that we have both at the same time, with every variety of temperature between. I once read a burlesque on Californian climate, which I have since found to contain a great deal more truth in it than I supposed at the time. " A live Yankee," who had been all the way to California and back," returned to Boston about the time the nation was waked-up by the first news of California gold, " and was called to answer" a thousand questions about the land of gold, and to the question relating to the climate he said, " Gentlemen, you can select any kind of climate in California you want, from the freezing blasts of Greenland to the summer zephyrs of Italy. There is a certain mountain in California which divides eternal summer and winter, and right on its summit they meet and interchange their friendly greetings. Game is very abundant, and you can go to the north side of that mountain and hunt winter game, or to the south side and hunt summer game, just as you please; but I'll remind you that the sudden transition from one to the [end of page f864t25_287.gif] 288 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. other is sometimes attended with unpleasant consequences. For example, I took my dog one morning and went on the north side to hunt winter game. Towards noonday I concluded to cross over and try my luck with the summer game. I observed my dog as he was attempting to cross the line which divides eternal summer and winter, and, just as he ran his nose into summer heat, he stopped right on the line to pant, and while he stood there with his tongue out a few minutes his tail froze off." During the month of July, 1855 {1855/07/00}, while travelling through Sierra, Country I one day hitched my mule at the base of " Pilot Peak ' " on the fortieth degree of North latitude, and determined ' though alone, to have a view from its lofty heights. As I dragged myself up its southern acclivities the direct rays of midsummer sun seemed almost to dissolve me with fervent heat. When I reached the summit the frosty breath of old winter made me shiver, and advancing a few steps I came to the line of an unfathomable depth of snow, which had, possibly, ever since the flood covered the whole northern slope of the mountain. Well," said I to myself, " this must be the place where the Yankee's dog lost his tail." I wrote on that mountain the following note, which I extract from my note-book. " Pilot Peak, July 13th, 1855 {1855/07/13}. I am now seated on the pinnacle of Pilot Peak, said [end of page f864t25_288.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 289 to be the highest point connected with the Sierra Nevada Mountains- Here winter and summer meet -hot on the South and West side, while on he the banks of perpetual snow." little hard freezing weather anywhere in the state, except on the high mountain altitudes; but northern mining regions to a depth sometimes of from ten to twelve feet. I have of large frame houses worthless fragments by its weight. Those deep snows are of great value to the of water through the spring in the dry diggings, and keeping the rivers well fed through a part of the long summer drought. An old man in American Valley told me the fo1lowing in regard to his mining adventures and suffering. " Late in the fall of 1851 {1851/00/00}, a party of four besides myself was away in the mountains, north of this prospecting. One of the party had with him a beardless fellow, whom he said was his 'brother Jo" Soon after we had pitched our tent in a ccertain place there came on a snow storm, which continued till it was twelve feet deep. There we were, with a short supply of provisions, completely winter locked. Whe our provisions were nearly gone three of the party determinied to try and get out to soem settlement and obtain relief. I and Jo were left alone in the camp with [end of page f864t25_289.gif] 290 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED but a few days' provisions, which we hoped might relief could be sent to us. We have all gone, together but Jo's brother was he could not endure the severity of the travel, and I being an old man, they wished me to remain with Jo. Some days after they had left I and went out hoping to find game. As I struggled along through the snow about three miles from camp I saw something rising from a hollow below me, which looked like a little smoke or mist; approaching near to it I saw a large hole in the snow, in which there were three deer. They had trampled away about ten feet in diameter and they were fenced in. I shot them, and cutting off a piece of one got back to the camp before night, and we had a feast. Jo was a first-rate cook, and I thought, though the poor deer were starved nearly to death, it was the best venison I had ever tasted. The next morning we packed our deer into camp, and that timely supply, which was the means of saving our lives, was the only food we had till the breaking up of winter, when we got out of our mountain retreat. Jo was in great distress about his brother, and we searched and inquired for months before we gave them up, but never being able to hear a word from them, we were forced to the conclusion that the whole of our relief party perished [end of page f864t25_290.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 291 in the snow. Jo said he had an uncle who kept a public-house in the town of Auburn, and wanted me to go with him while he should visit his uncle; so I went. When we got there Jo left me in the reception-room, and I saw nothing of him for several hours. By-and-by I saw in the parlour a finely dressed lady whose face looked very familiar, and I said to myself, 'That must be Jo's sister, for they look as much alike as two peas! After a little she looked at me and smiled. It looked exactly like Jo's smile and I felt confused. She then said to me, I Don't you know me?' I No, Madam; your face is very familiar to me and it seems like I ought to know you, but I don't.' With that she burst into a flood of tears; I cried. too, I knew not why. When she recovered her self-possession she said,' I am the partner of your hardships and sufferings; my brother has, perished in the mountains, and you've been a father to me. You've called me Jo, my name is Josephine. My romantic and gold-loving inclinations led me to disguise my sex, and go in care of my brother into the mines to dig gold. The sequel you know; my brother is gone, and but for you I should have been gone too. I shall make my home here with my uncle's family, but I shall ever look upon you as a father!' I shall never be able to describe my feelings in that moment," said the old man, "I was overwhelmed [end of page f864t25_291.gif] 292 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. with a rush of complex emotion-surprise, grief, sympathy, and joy; I hardly know which predominated, bat never in all my life was I so completely overcome." A singular case of freezing to death, according to well-authenticated testimony in the papers, occurred a few years ago on Trinity Mountains, not very remote from Humbolt Bay. A frontier settler was awaked one stormy night by the howling of a strange dog. When he opened his door a large Newfoundland came to mim in a very friendly, but imploring manner, whining most piteously. He would walk off a few steps, then return and whine, and did everything but talk, till the man determined to follow him. He waked up a companion, , got a torchlight, and, at the midnight hour, they set off through the snow to follow their strange guide, they knew not whither. After traveling several miles into the mountains, the dog ran on some distance before them, and set up a pitiful howling, which, commingling with the deap moaning of the storm in the wild woods, woke up fearful echos in the midnight darkness. But the brave hearted hunters pushed on till, coming up guide, they found a woman frozen to death With a living infant in her bosom. The poor wrapped her shawl, around her babe, and it to her heart, perished in the storm. [end of page f864t25_292.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 293 Whether she was the only survivor of a deceased party, an escaped prisoner from the Indians, or who she was, or how she got there, they could not learn. The mother was buried, the child recovered, and, with its sagacious canine friend and preserver, was provided with a home. If variety is the spice of life, then Methodist itinerancy is well spiced, but the extremes of Californian climate add variety extraordinary to its ever varying, lights and shades. A preacher may be one year in the salubrious climate of San Jose Valley, and the next year shivering in the chilly blasts from Mount Shasta. Rev. S. D. Simonds was in the fall of 1856 {1856/00/00} taken from the editorial chair of theCalifornia Christian Advocate" in San Francisco, which, under the appointment of General Conference, he had honourably filled for severalyears' and sent to Mount Shasta district as presiding elder. His district contained sixty thousand square miles, around which he travelled on mule-back, and that over some of the highest mountains on the continent. In the mouth of December, while the good folks in the central and southern valleys are walking out over beautiful lawns, carpeted with a luxuriant growth of green grass, gathering flowers, Brother Simonds is on his mule trying to " coyote " his way through insurmountable snow-banks to get round his big dis [end of page f864t25_293.gif] 294 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSRATED. trict. I will introduce him through the " California Advocate," and let him tell his own, story about the cool, refreshing climate of his region. "Thursday, Dec. 10th {1856/12/10} -Arose early. The rain heavily during the night and appeared likely to continue all day. Snow lightly covered the in Shasta, and could be seen in heavy masses on the mountains round, a gloomy day for travelling; but now no time must be lost. I was soon on the road, splashing through the mud and rain, at the even pace of five miles an hour. At 12 o'clock had House, twenty-two miles, and come up with the express.- which left in the stage at an hour before me. The passengers took fresh mules, and I stopped to feed and rest my animal a short time. "That afternoon the ride up Trinity Mountain in the chilling rain was tedious. As I ascended, it became colder, and heat and cold held a divided dominion in the drops, half of each was ice and half of water. This peculiar consistency of the rain clothed the trees in pearl like sheets, and filled with twigs with beautiful ice clusters. A little higher up, the mass of ice on the trees became surprising. It appeared particularly remarkable in the pine, the whole top of which would be covered with ice and its cones thick plated with crystal. In many instances [end of page f864t25_294.gif] CALIFORNIA, SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 295 they looked at a distance like fanciful grouping of crystal pyramids. As you approached, the large branches became distinct, and the little strips of green covered with ice revealed the leaf, but the clusters of little leaves were here webbed together by plates of crystal, and hung like heavily ornamented fancy fans there, they reminded one of a curious many-finglered hand, of which the leaves were the bones and the- ice was the transparent flesh, and yonder again, they appeared like curtains of silver hung with magnificent tassels of crystal. Such delicate, charming, and massive frost work, combined and displayed to such admirable advantage, I never beheld. The whole tree tops swarmed with crystalline glories. Could these varied and marvellously beautiful forms be made permanent the world would come to gaze on them. Higher up the mountain (Trinity), the cold triumphed and the snow full fast and heavy, bending trees and breaking the more sturdy. Heavy limbs fell often to the ground, some across the path near me, broken by the sheer weight of the snow. Stopped about 6 o'clock, P.M.. for the night having travelled forty miles. Friday, December 11th {1856/12/11}.-Itrose at 4 o'clock A.M. storm, continued, rain in the valleys, snow on the muuntains. Started at 6 o'clock- in company [end of page f864t25_295.gif] 296 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. with the express train, the driver and three passengers-one a woman-to go over Scott Mountain. The road up the Trinity river was covered with snow, varying from four inches to a foot in depth, and a sort of sleet was constantly falling, and at times, either from genet-al or local changes in the air, would be snow and then rain, and then a mixture. The majority of us made eighteen miles by 11 o'clock, notwithstanding the had condition of the trail, leaving the woman and one passenger in the rear. We now fed our animals, warmed ourselves and ate dinner. Then each wrapping himself up as best he could, we started up Scott mountain. At first the snow was between two and three feet, but the marks of the trail where mules came along the evening before were visible. Our animals, however, made slow progress, while our feet constantly dragged in the snow. After repeated rests and efforts we had reached a point about three miles from the The foremost mule now gave out, and the driver thought we had better return, as in his judgment it would be impossible to reach the top. It was certain that the train from the other side would not be seen that day. They ought to have been over by noon to the house where we dined, and here we were half way up the mountain, and no train yet'. But I was anxious to go over, and proposed to tuke [end of page f864t25_296.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 297 the lead. To this he agreed, Saying he would go as long, as any of the company thought they could succeed, 'but he knew the mountain very well.' I pressed on with only an appealing look at the swearing muleteer. Now came the tug of war. The track was wholly invisible. The snow five feet deep and of that bothering consistency that will neither tread down nor stay out of the way. The more I and stamped, the thicker it grew. Then occasionally a tree which had fallen across the way was to be got over or around, and big limbs and other trees were falling here and there with a sudden break, sharp and quick as the report of a rifle. No premonition would be given but the silent snow flakes' last addition to the mass would at once cause the timber to yield, and the tree or limb, as the case might be, would come with a loud blow to the ground. If you were warned of the coming fall it would be use. The snow was so deep that you could stir, and any moment man and beast might perish. With a firm faith inside in the care God I could see and feel the outside terror. How grimly majestic and coldly frowning the tops, mountain appear! How the wind the gorges, like the groaning of nature in mad agony, and the pine trees sway here and there, and reheved Of the snow, the leaves stand up like the hair in [end of page f864t25_297.gif] 298 CA.LIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. awful fright. Now the animal feels the terror. He will struggle in the snow no longer. See how he looks up the mountain and sniffs the air this way and that and makes his mute appeals, trembling in every limb. Alas, poor brute ! It is now two miles to the top, an hour of severe labour has brought us to the last short quarter of a mile. 'If we go much further,' says the muleteer, 'our animals will give so completely out that we shall have to remain all night here, for then we cannot even get back.' At this sugg-estion, I leave my mule and try to get up the point I am on alone and look at the prospect beyond. I accomplish it with great difficulty, and seeing no sign of a trail, and my feet and hands perfectly benumbed with cold, I conclude to return. Ride back and reach the house about 7 o'clock, wet and cold sure ! " Saturday, December 12th {1856/12/12} .-Rain and sleet in the valley all last night, and continues all day. No one thinks of trying the mountain again. Feet and hands painful from the effects of the cold yesterday. Brother Simonds fared much better in that storm than did one of his preachers, J. A. Brooks, in a. snow storm the year before. He, poor fellow, went up into a mountain in the fall of 1856,{1856/00/00} and has not yet returned. My first acquaintance with Brother Brooks was at Smith's Flat. One night, [end of page f864t25_298.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 299 after preaching there, Brother Broolks introduced himself to me, and gave me a brief history of his life. He said that he embraced religion in early life. and got an education with a view of entering the Christian ministry, but about the time he should have gone into that work he shrank from the responsibility, joined a volunteer company, and went into the 'Mexican war, was in several engagements under General Scott. All through the war he maintained the form, and enjoyed some of the power, of godliness. He and a few others often had prayer meetings together during their campaign in Mexico, and often had occasion to visit the sick and dying and upon the whole got along much better in religious life than he had anticipated. At the close of the war he got his discharge, went directly to California. and engaged in the practice of law, in which he continued up to the period to which I have referred. During six years in California, though he maintained externally a good moral deportment, he had lost his religious enjoyment, had not joined Church, and had really in heart been in a back slidden state for years. "Last Sunday, P.M.," he, " I heard you preach in the street in Forest City. The truth was applied by the Holy Spirit to my heart. Like Peter I went away and wept bitterly. I have been praying and praising God nearly ever [end of page f864t25_299.gif] 300 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. since, for, blessed be His Holy name! He has again received me, and for Christ's sake has pardoned all my sins, and now all my former convictions of duty in regard to entering the ministry have returned, and press heavily upon my mind. I feel that I ought to prepare myself to work exclusively for God." Brother Brooks shortlyafterwards entered the ministry, and was stationed in the town of Auburn, where he laboured with acceptability as a minister of the Gospel till the close of the year, and was recommended from there to the California Conference as a suitable person to be admitted into the itinerant ranks of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He was, though but recently restored to the love of Jesus, a young man of fixed moral character, good intellectual development, and had acquired as a lawyer extensive experience in Californian life, and was, therefore, well adapted to the itinerant work in that country. On his way to Conference he spoke very gratefully of the goodness of God in sparing him many dangers to which he had been exposed, and bringing him to repentance. He said, if ever he should be stationed where it was practicticable to preach out-doors in " highways " and streets, and lanes, " of the city," he should certainly try to do it, for said he, "I have seen the good effects of it, and that sermon in the streets of Forest City was, [end of page f864t25_300.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE. 301 by the mercy of God, the means of saving me from hell, and of placing me in the position I now occupy. He was admitted into the Conference on probation, and appointed to Orleans' Bar, and afterward-, to Salmon Circuit, in the Mount Shasta district. Brother Brooks was engaged to be married to a young lady in Auburn, where he was stationed the preceding year. Late in the fall of 1856 {1856/00/00}, he went froin his circuit to Auburn, according to contract with the said young lady and her parents, to fulfil his marriage engagement. When the time appointed for celebration of the nuptials came, the parents of young lady took occasion to impose upon him a new condition in the engagement, viz., that he should give up the ministry and return to the profession of law. He most unhesitatingly declined to accept such terms, especially as they had not been mentioned till that late hour. The parents persisted in their demand, and said he should not have their daughter unless he submitted to it. He replied that the vows of God " were upon him, and that he was bound to give them precedence in everything. So at that point, by mutual consent the matrimonial engagement was annulled. The young lady presented to Brother Brooks a, splendid gold watch in token of her unabated affection for him. Passing triumphantly through that extraordi [end of page f864t25_301.gif] 302 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. nary trial of his moral power, he set off on his return to his field of labour. In attempting to cross the Salmon mountains on foot and alone, he was overtaken by one of those dreadful snow storms before described. A party who went in search of him found a place where he had built a fire by a fallen tree, and encamped for a night, and thought they found evidence of his having lost the trail, and instead of striking the only passable point in that part of the mountain, he had gone up into impassable barriers of perpetual snow and ice. There are in places immense fissures in those mountains of ice, and as these were probably concealed at the time by the recent fall of snow, it is believed that he stepped into one of those deep -fissures, and sank to unknown depths into the ice-bound mountain. The Lord buried him as He buried "Moses, "But no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day." He has for ever escaped the dreaded possibility of " corruption, earth, and worms." he is embalmed in the heart of a mountain iceberg, which has for centuries the dissolving power of summer heat, and in its cheerless grandeur till melted down the general conflagration which shall consume the echoing thunders of the last trump the mountains, upheave the oceans, and reverberate through the dark caverns of death, till [end of page f864t25_302.gif] CALIFORNIA SEASONS AND CLIMATE 303 the long line of Adam's sleeping millions shall wake to life again; then shall J.A. Brooks come forth from his mountain home, and live with God on tthe heights of the Celestial Glory.* The climate of California seems exactly to adapt that country to the varied representitives of the world, who are now seeking there a home. It is an appropriate rendezvous of the nations, where all can find a climate to correspond with that in which they were born, form the Greenlander to the Italian. It is the testimony of many living witnesses that "Italian skies and climate" are in no respect superior to Californian skies and climate. The climate of California is, upon the whole, beyond all question, the very best in the United States, and is not surpassed by that of any other country on the globe. ------------------------------ * Since the above was written, nearly two years after Mr. Brooks' ascent into the mountain, his bones, watch and a bundle of tracts were found, where he had frozen to death. [end of page f864t25_303.gif] 304 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED CHAPTER XI. LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. CALIFORNIA miners are a hardy, muscular, powerful class of men, possessing literally an extraordinary development of hope, faith, and patience, and a corresponding power of endurance. They have in my opinion done more hard work in California, within the last eight years, than has ever been done in any country by the same number of men, in the same length of time, and I think I may safely say double that length of time, since the world was made. All that is necessary to convince any man of -the truth of this position, is for him to travel through the mines and see what has been done, in the leveling.,of hills and mountains, filling up of valleys, the digging' of about five thousand miles of ditches and canals through Mountains on mountains piled, the construction of aqueducts across deep canons, or gorges, from mountain to mountain, and the hundreds of acres of " bed-rock under the mountains they have laid bare, and scraped and swept like a ship's deck. He will [end of page f864t25_304.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 305 be struck too, with the wonderful facility and force with which a miner moves his muscles. There is as much difference between the muscular action of a California miner and that of a man hired by tile month to work on a farm, as between the agonizing, aimless movements of the sloth and the pounce of the panther. As an illustration of miners' hope, faith, patience, and endurance, I will instance the " Live Yankee Company " of Forest City. I was informed when there that, as an experiment, they commenced a drift into the mountain 'between that city and Smith's flat. The mountain was so high that it was impossible to prospect it by sinking a "shaft" to the "bed rock," the nearest way to the heart of the mountain being in a line from the base. They soon encountered a strata of solid rock, as hard nearly as pig metal. The company having no capital outside of their muscular power and indomitable energy, had to get their provisions on credit, worked in that drift, boring, blasting, and digging for three years before they got the " color;" but struck, a lead at last, and were amply repaid for all their toil. They took out a single " lump", while I was there, worth seven hundred dollars. The miners are not all successful, but all abound in hope and energy. I seldom ever met with one who had not a "good prospect." No mat- [end of page f864t25_305.gif] 306 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. ter what his past disappointments and losses had been, he was going to do first rate as soon as he could get his,claim open, or his "Pay dirt washed out." Even the little boys of the country partake of this spirit. A "lucky miner," determined to take his family, back to the Atlantic side, came on as far as San Francisco, and while stopping at Hillman's Hotel, awaiting the day of embarcation, went out one night and fell among thieves, who robbed and murdered him. His body, three days afterward, was found in the bay. His poor widow was almost heartbroken, and her little miner boy, only four years old, when he heard that his pa' was dead, went to her and said, " Ma, don't cry! don't cry! we'll dit along. You won't have to beg, ma. Dist wait till I dit a little bigger, and I'll do up and dig a hole right down mountain, and det out the dold for you. Ma, don't cry; you won't have to beg." That all miners are not alike successful, is a fact growing Out of a variety of causes. Some chance to get richer claims than others. Some have better than others. Working in the rivers is very injurious to health. Those rivers are fed by the leak of mountains capped with perpetual snow, and are in midsummer almost as cold as ice-water. To wade and work in this ice-water from day to-day, the burning beat of summer sunshine, freezing lower extremities and scorching the brain, will [end of page f864t25_306.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 307 severely try any constitution ; but for the purity of the atmosphere, and general healthfulness of climate, very few could stand such exposure at all. A Baltimorean made five thousand dollars in mines, and started to go home to his family but was induced to go into a fluming Operation, summer in the river. He concluded that it was no nuse to go home with but five thousand by staying a few months longer he could double that amount. The operation was unsuccessful, and the poor man not only lost every dollar of his money, by working in the water so much lost his health, never got further homeward than to San Francisco,. I found him there in the charity hospital just as he was sinking to the grave. Many injure their health working in drifts, especially when they are working under leaky ground. I saw a tunnel, near Forest City, from which water came down continually, like rents, and one of the men engaged in it down with inflammatory rheumatism, unable a limb for weeks. A sick man not only time, but his purse, subject to the drainage of California rates of expenditure, very soon discharges all its dust. Again, in some mining districts the cost of living is enormous. There are large towns, of miners, away in. isolated regions so completely [end of page f864t25_307.gif] CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. 308 mountain-locked that the only way of, access to them is by mule trails winding round dangerous rock cliffs, and over mountain heights which, to the uninitiated, would seem to defy the daring of the chamois. Everything that is used in those regions-clothing, provisions, mining tools, and machinery-is packed on mule back. Packing has hence, become a very extensive and profitable business. A pack train usually numbers from thirty to one hundred mules, each carrying a burden of about three hundred pounds, of every imaginable shape-bales, barrels, boxes, crates, bags, and everything that the necessities or luxuries of a mining city could demand. To live in such regions, therefore, costs perhaps fifty percent. more than in places easy of access. Again, many miners are very reckless; they sport, and spree, and waste their hard earnings. Others, spend all they make in prospecting." The prospectors constitute a very large and useful class They are always dreaming of immense of undiscovered wealth. No matter how they are doing, when they get a few hundred ahead they must be off, with pick, and pan, and miner's pack, and seldom ever stop till their money is gone, and then they set to work in one place again till they can make "another raise." They are constantly discovering' new diggings," and open [end of page f864t25_308.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 309 ing immense treasures for others together and enjoy, while they continue to toil and go, and toil and go again, enduring the greatest hardship, and labor, and poverty; living on hope, but dying in despair. They are very much like their hardy pioneer brothers who led the van of Western emigration, lived in logcabins, supplied their families -with plenty of wild game and pounded cake," slept on their arms, and defended the outposts of civilization against savages and wild beasts ; an honest, generous, noble set of men, who deserve much, but get nothing more than a plain subsistence, and generally die in poverty. As a specimen of California prospecting, I will mention the case of my friend C. He arrived in San Francisco in 1850 {1850/00/00}, and got employment at Mission Dolores in the brick-making business, which was his trade, at seven dollars per day, with the promise of steady work by the year. After making a few hundred dollars he became dissatisfied. Said he "I've not seen my mother for several years, and I can't stay more than a year or two in California; and I see plainly enough that in that time seven dollars per day won't make such a pile as I want." So he gave up his situation and went to the mines, where he knew he could do better with even ordinary success, and besides, stand a chance to make some "big strikes." [end of page f864t25_309.gif] 310 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. I met with him a couple of years afterward, and said "Well, friend C., how do you get along? "O, pretty well," replied he; "I opened a first-rate claim in Mariposa County last year, but just as I got it in good working condition the water failed, so had to let it lie over. When the time came that could have worked it, I happened to be away up near Downieville, and having a good claim there I didn't go back to Mariposa. I have taken out a great deal of gold, but in prospecting from place to place I have spent it all ; but I have some good claims which will pay big by and by." Three years after that I met Friend C. in American Valley. Halloo, my old friend; how do you get along , " O, pretty well," replied he; "but I'm not ready to go home yet." "I presume your dear old mother would be glad to see you by this time." Yes., indeed, and I would be glad to see her; but I can't go home till I make something." " Well, how near are you ready?" , "I don't know. I have made money; but in traveling from place to place I have spent it all. I have been up to Oregon since I saw you, and had a first-rate farm there, if I could have stayed; but I had some rich claims in Mariposa, and thought I Ought to come down and look after them; [end of page f864t25_310.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINES. 311 but when I got there, I found that some fellows had jumped my claims, and I couldn't got out a great deal of trouble, so I then,. I afterward opened a good claim near Yreka; but my partner was a disagreeable, quarrelsom fellow, so I sold out for a mere song, and came away. I've got a good prospect near Elizabethtown, which I think will pay well when I get it opened." Another with whom I was acquaninted, who had not seen his family for six years, said to me one day" For five years I have set a time to go home about every six months; but every six months has found me either dead-broke, or doing so very well I could not leave." But few of this adventurous class, the prospectors, are likely ever to have enough at any one time to pay their passage home; with their mining skill, might make a fortune if they would remain in one place, and save their earnings. The social condition of a large proportion of the miners of California has been bad, but is now rapidly improving. Separated as they have been from all socializing home influences, and especially from virtuous female society, reduced to constant toil and the roughest modes of life, they became rustics, and many of them became very vulgar and profane. Many men of fine mind and good education have [end of page f864t25_311.gif] 312 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. laid all their intellectual strength under contribution for the manufacture of witticisms and vulgar sayings, adapted to the demand of a vitiated social taste, and spent their evenings in detailing them for the entertainment of the fun-loving crowds. The introduction of virtuous women and good families is working a hopeful social reform throughout the mining regions. I heard a letter carrier's salutation to a company of miners, which was vulgar and scandalous in the extreme. From the miners he came to the house at which I was stopping, and addressed the lady of the house in a most polite, chaste, and gentlemanly manner. The moral condition of the miners is by no means what it ought to be. But very few, of them are particularly anxious to go to heaven. I preached to an assembly of miners one Sunday afternoon in the streets of Placerville, a flourishing mining city of six thousand inhabitants. In front of my goods-box a stage-coach, which was crowded to its utmost capacity with as many of my auditors as were fortunate,enough to secure so good a seat. I endeavor to show the multitude before me their unfitness in their unregenerated state, their utter want of sympathy with God, or adaptation to the heaven. To illustrate the truth of my position" If God should dispatch a rail-car of Placerville this Afternoon to con [end of page f864t25_312.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 313 vey passengers direct to heaven, the conductor might whistle till the setting of the sun and not get one passenger. Heaven has no attractions for you. It is a Place to which you don't want to go. Why, if the flaming steeds of Elijah's chariot of fire were hitched on to that stage-coach, and the driver cracked his whip for the heavenly country, every fellow in it would jump out;" and in a moment the coach was cleared, every man in it leaped for the street in an apparent fright, from the apprehension that, perhaps, Elijah's horses might be hitched to the stage, and they taken off to glory, a place to which they did not wish to go. Sabbath-breaking and profane swearing are prominent in the catalogue of miners' offenses against Lord. Sunday in the mines was remembered only as a day for trading, recreation, spreeing, business meetings, and preparation for the business of the ensuing week. It was very common to see large cards hung up in boardingmhouses and business places, like this "All bills paid up here on Sunday." That was for miners to get their blacksmith work done, and lay in their supply of provisions for the week; the day for holding public meetings for the enactment of miners' laws, or other municipal business. Under a general statute, every mining district enacts its own [end of page f864t25_313.gif] 314 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. laws, by the voice of the majority, regulating all the mining claims of the district, as to size) conditions of pre-emption, etc. Under those laws they can, sue and be sued, and everybody has to conform to them. Mining companies and water companies also did a great deal of their collective business on that day; and promiscuous masses of all sorts assembled at the hotels and drinking saloons, to drink and spree without restraint. What was worse, the standard of moral law was thrown down, and its authiority lenied. When we remember that a large majority of those men were educated in a Christian country, and that many had even been professors of religion, it is easy to see how quickly even a Christian people will relapse into heathenism, if deprived of the wholesome restraints and elevating influences of the Gospel. In a preaching tour I made through the mines, as late as 1855 {1855/00/00}, I traveled nearly a week without the privilege of any Christian association, and I longed for the opportunity of shaking a Christian's hand', and of feeling the warming sympathy of a heart that loved Jesus. On entering a mining town I inquired in the hotel at which I put up, whether there were any professors of religion in that town. " Yes," answered the landlord, there is one. Mr. T., our blacksmith, is a good Christian man."\ And different boarders added "Yes, Mr. T. is a [end of page f864t25_314.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINNERS. 315 good man if ever there was one. .He has his family here, and everybody looks up to him." So, at my earliest convenience, Brother T. He received me very cordially, and introduced me to his family, all of whom looked very neat and respectable, and I rejoiced in the privilege of meeting so exemplary a Christian family away in those wild woods As soon as I took my seat I inquired how he was prospering in religious "Well, replied he, "I think I am getting along pretty well, considering all the circumstances; but not so well as I did in Illinois, where I enjoyed the public means of grace. My greatest drawbacks here are my having to work on Sunday. I support my family by blacksmithing, and the miners must have most of their work done on Sunday; and, to tell you the truth, I have worked in my shop here every Sunday except two for five years. One Sunday I was sick, and couldn't work; and one Sunday I went to hear the only sermon ever preached on this creek, which was delivered by Brother Merchant." "O," thought I, "shades of the fathers! if this is the 'best man in these mountains,' the Lord pity the worst." I traveled nearly a week before I found another Christian. He was an old ship-master, a good old [end of page f864t25_315.gif] 316 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. Methodist from Boston. I invited him to go to Long Bar, on north fork of Feather River, to hear me preach the following Sunday. At the appointed hour, Sunday morning, I had a large audience to preach to under the shade of an ancient pine. The sound of the Gospel had never echoed through those hills before. Looking over my audience I discovered my old captain, and felt glad to think that I had at least one praying heart, who could sympathize with my mission and my message of mercy. After meeting I asked the old captain to take a walk with me "up info the mountain to pray." I felt that I needed the warming influence of a little prayer-meeting, and I supposed be did too. Finding a suitable place, I sang a few verses and prayed; I then sang again, and tbinking I had got the good brother pretty warm, and that he in turn would contribute to the fire of my own heart, I called on him to lead in prayer. But I couldn't get a grunt out of him. Thought, I Poor old captain, he is dried up." I announced an afternoon appointment for preaching in the same place, and thought from the size of the morning audience, and the apparently good effect of the preaching upon them, that I would have a much larger congrezation, and a better time, at the second appointment. But, to my surprise and mortification, I did not have more than twenty hearers, [end of page f864t25_316.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 317 and when I cast about to know the cause, I learned that, according, to custom, nearly, the whole population of the neighborhood had by that hour of the day become too drunk to attend preaching. Such a variety of antics as they displayed beat anything I had ever witnessed. Next morning I found most of tbem sober, and ready to work; and to show their appreciation of my ministerial services, they gave me a donation for my Bethel cause of nearly one hundred dollars. The cases here given are to illustrate the general character of the miners in those regions. I found in nearly every place I visited honorable exceptions sober, serious men, who deeply deplored the prevailing wickedness of the miners; and everywhere I went there was a general expression of desire for the regular preaching of the Gospel, and the establishment of its institutions among them, and a liberal support for a preacher and his family was pledged. I found a few merchants, too, who would not sell goods on the Sabbath. A man of my acquaintance, who passed for a minister of the Gospel before he went to California, opened a provision store in the southern mines. He commenced business with the determination not to sell liquor, nor to break the Sabbath. He had a moderate degree of success on that principle, but nothing to compare with the success of his business competitors, who sold liquor and kept open on Sunday. His [end of page f864t25_317.gif] 318 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. pecuniary sense became shocked a great deal more by what he considered his losses, than his moral sense was comforted by his spiritual conquests. So, having mining friends to call and see him on Sunday, he was induced to leave his back door ajar, so that ally who desired might be accommodated with a pair of boots, or a week's provisions. That paid so well that he was induced next to leave his front door ajar. He then in a short time, in accordance with that vulgar, dangerous, but popular maxim, " May as well be hung for stealing an old sheep as a lamb," set his doors wide open, and added the liquors to his supply. He felt, that it was all wrong, but pleaded necessity, and thought that as soon as he could make a certain amount of money, he would quit the business, go home, and do good with his money. For a season he had extraordinary success, employed thirty yoke of oxen, all his own, on the road from Stockton to, his place of business, to supply his store with goods. He had besides several hundred head of valuable cattle. Finally, there came a night in which he was surprised by the Indians, who stampeded his cattle, burned up his store, goods and all, and the ex-reverend gentleman fled for his life, and begged his way down to Stockton as poor as Lazarus. He regarded his reverses, as a judgment for his apostasy, and repented his fall. When I made his acquaintance he was in [end of page f864t25_318.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS 319 the honorable business of milling, making flour to supply his neighbors with bread, and was bringing "forth fruits meet for repentance." I heard him in a public meeting give a tearful narration of the above facts. Brother H., a friend of mine, opened a provision store in the northern mines. The first Sunday after opening, a company of miners came to get a supply of provisions at the "new store", but to their surprise they found the doors closed, and going in the rear, they found the new merchant in his tent. "Halloo! old man, we've come to buy some provisions from you. We are very glad you have opened a new store in these diggings; it's what we have wanted here for a long time." "Well boys," Brother H., replied, "I have opened a store here, and intend to keep a good supply of everything you may need; but I want you to understand from the start, that I will never sell you any liquor, and will never sell you goods of any kind on Sunday." "Well, old amn, you may just as well pack up your duds and go home, for you can do nothing here on those terms. "You have a right ot your opinion, boys," replied Brother H., "but I intend to do right, whether I make anything or not. If I can't make a living without poisioning my neighbor by selling rum, and offending God by breaking his holy day, I'll [end of page f864t25_319.gif] 320 CALIFORINTIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. starve, or beg my way home ; but I intend to give it a fair trial before I abandon the effort." Old man, " rejoined the miners, we are hungry, we ate the last of our provisions yesterday evening, and have come to get something to cook for our breakfast. Let us have enough to satisfy our hunger to-day, and we will come to-morrow, and lay in a supply for the week." "Boys, you can fast and pray to-day," replied the old man, " and you'll learn, next time, to make timely provision for the wants of the Sabbath." With that the miners got mad and swore a while at the "old fool, " and left; but everywhere they went they told about an old fogy who had come up into the mountains to teach us all how to keep Sunday." They thus advertised him all through those mountains, and thinking men at once came to the conclusion that a man maintaining such a position must be an honest man. We can depend on the word of such a man as that. Rely upon it he won't cheat us." The result was that the better class of miners poured in upon him for supplies at Such a rate, that in a few months he made his pile," and returned East to his family. Wicked as were the mass of California miners they have always displayed some good qualities. They have all encountered hardships and sufferings, and most of them have hearts to sympathize with the [end of page f864t25_320.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 321 suffering. Though appeals to their charity are of almost daily occurrence, yet no man in real need, that I ever heard of, has ever yet made a fruitless call on the miners for help. They are magnanimous, too, in their liberality; but they have an utter abhorrence of little, mean things; for example There was a fellow at Smith's Flat, who, to gratify some secret brutal passion of his own, tied a chicken, and put it alive on the fire, and cooked it for his dinner. The, thing was made known in the town, and the miners immediately called a meeting, and unanimously passed a resolution to the effect that the chicken roaster's presence was no longer desirable in that camp, and that fifteen minutes be given him, after due notice from a committee appointed to notify him, for his disappearance from those diggings, never more to return. Several months elapsed at the time of my visit there, but up to that hour he had not been seen in those parts after the expiration, of the ominous fifteen minutes. A butcher in the town of Alameda received a similar notice from a similar court, giving him two hours. About the middle of his last hour I saw him driving away with his effects in a wagon. Among his movables were several live sheep, one of which got loose in the midst of the town, jumped out, and ran for life. The butcher and one of his men, pursued it a few squares, and finally shot it, threw it [end of page f864t25_321.gif] 322 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. into the wagon, and was out of sight by the time his hour had expired. Notorious rogues were often discharged from a town or mining camp in that way, while notorious murderers were hanged by the neck. Judge Lynch has transacted a great deal of business in Califonia. I designed inserting a chapter of facts and incidents illustrating the history of Lynch law and Vigilance Committee operations in California, and the natural and Providential laws under which those facts have been manifested, but my space in the present book will not admit of it. However much may be said in condemnation of Judge Lynch's court and its proceedings, there is this to be said in favor of the denizens of California, that riots, and a promiscuous shooting into the masses, killing the innocent with the guilty, such as have been enacted in Baltimore and other Eastern cities, have never been known in California. Such, for example, as I saw last May in Washington City, when, to quell an election riot that had occurred and passed over without any mortal effects three hours before, one hundred and ten hired soldiers, with muskets each loaded with ball and three buckshot, fired upon an unsuspecting crowd of citizens, instantly killing eight unoffending men, and wounding many others. That I witnessed, if, to be sure, getting up from my dinner-table just scross the street and standing behind a brick wall [end of page f864t25_322.gif] Page 323 is blank. [Plate entitled: Hanging of Jenkins on the Plaza.] [end of page f864t25_324.jpg] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 325 to avoid being shot myself, rnay be called witnessing it. Such riots, and such promiscuous shooting and killing I have never yet heard of in California. In the administration of California Lynch law, so far as I have known or heard, the thunderbolt of public fury has always fallen only on the head of the guilty man who by the enormity and palpable character of his crime. excited it and then not until after his guilt was proved to the satisfaction of the masses composing the court. For example A stranger called late one evening at the cabin of a miner who had his wife with him, and begged for lodgings, saying that he was a poor traveler, had been unfortunate in business, etc. The miner and his good wife pitied the poor stranger, took him in, and treated him to the best next morning after breakfast the miner had occasion to go away. a few miles, and left the man at his house. When he got out of sigbt, the accommodated stranger murdered the woman and proceeded to the house. Before he got quite through, however, with his nefarious work, the miner returned, saw what was done, and raised the alarm. The murderer was caught and tried. A meeting of miners was called to order, a judge appointed to try the case; witnesses were examined, and of the criminal proved, upon which the judge stated [end of page f864t25_325.gif] 326 CALIFORNTA LIFE TLIX-STRNTED. the case and submitted the question of life or death to the mass composing his court, who unanimously voted guilty, and death by hanging. The judge decided that the criminal should be allowed fifteen minutes in which to prepare for death. He was then hung by the neck to a tree. I give this fact without comment, simply to illustrate the character of Judge Lynch's proceedings. The accompanying cut will illustrate a similar tragedy, and the first of that kind enacted in San Francisco by the Vigilance Committee of 1851 {1851/00/00}. Jenkins was hung from a cross-beam at the south end of "the adobe on the Plaza," within a few feet of my pulpit. This is the Old Adobe " to which frequent allusion is made in my "Seven Years' Street Preaching in San Francisco," from the front veranda of which, as seen in the cut, I for several years preached to the excited varieties of the world. It is a fact, which I believe is generally admitted, that just in proportion as the law acquires power in California for the protection of her citizens, in that proportion Lynch law is dispensed with; and I believe that when the legal authority of the state attains to a degree of honorable dignity and strength sufficient for the accomplishment of its glorious ends throughout that commonwealth, Judge Lynch will resign forever decline re-election. I would remark further in regard to the miners, [end of page f864t25_326.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS. 327 and the same remarks will. apply to Californians generally, that they are a self-reliant, independent of men, who, in all matters of personal opinion and conduct, think, and speak, and do as they are inclined, and cheerfully extend the same privilege to each other and everybody else. Hence ministers of the Gospel, in California's worst days, were permitted to preach in bar-rooms, gambling-saloons, public thoroughfares, or wherever,they wished, without hinderance or disturbance. For example I went into the city of Sonora at nine o'clock one Saturday night, not knowing a, man in the place; and finding the streets crowded with miners, who had gathered in from all parts of the surrounding mountains, I felt a desire to tell thein about Jesus, and preach the Gospel to them ; so I got a brother whom I chanced to meet, to roll a box into the street, nearly in front of a large crowded gambling-house, and taking my stand, I threw out on the gentle zephyrs of that mild April night one of Zion's sweetest songs, which echoed among the hills, and settled down on the astonished multitudes like the charm of Orpheus. packed the street from side to side. Good order and profound attention prevailed, while the truth, in most, uncompromising terms, was being proclaimed. At the close of the exercises many, strangers to me, who had heard me preach in the streets of San Fran- [end of page f864t25_327.gif] 328 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATI'D. cisco, gave me a hearty greeting, among then, a notorious gambler, who shook my hand and welcomed me to the mountains. I preached in Jamestown one night under similar circumstances. I got permission of a butcher to convert his meat-block into a pulpit; I tried to have the butcher himself converted, but did not succeed in that, though he made very humble confessions, and, like Herod under the preaching of John, did many things." Selecting the best point for a crowd, I happened again to be in front of a large gambling-house. Some of the gamblers, thinking that I was putting on too strong an " opposition line," took offense and tried to run me off the track. They knew the character of the miners too well to attempt to confront preacher personally; so to try and scatter my audience, they tied some tin pans to a dog's tail, and him off with a clatter, they yelling after him. Stopping short in the midst of my sermon, I said There they go, poor fellows; they want to make their souls happy. Rather a poor intellectual entertainment, tying tin pans to a dog's tail; but I presume it's the best they can do, so we'll let them go and most of it." time they were out of sight, out of hearing, and the attention of my audience stimulated and improved.\ The social and moral condition of the California [end of page f864t25_328.gif] LIFE AMONG THE MINERS 329 miners has been gradually improving for the last four years. Mining operations have already assumed a degree of local permanency, which to many would be considered impossible. When a man opens a drift into a good lead he has before him, in working out his claim, profitable employment for a dozen years. The deep diggings, hydraulic and quartz mining are all carried on for years in the same locations; and in many places the miner can calculate in advance the returns of a year's labor, as certainly and definately as can the mechanic, merchant, or farmer. The mining towns commenced eight years ago, and which it was believed would be abandoned to the coyotes in two or three years, as the mines in those localities would be worked out, have generally gone on, increasing in size and permanence every year, and bear now as hopeful indications of living to the end of the world as do the agricultural and commercial towns. I am not speaking of the paper towns and citties peddled about in numberless scores by speculators, but which never had an existance except on their beautifully colored maps; the mining towns I have in my mind when instituting the above comparison are such as Nevada, Grass Valley, Coilumbia, Sonora, each containing an average of five thousand inhabitants; and a hundred others of various sized, equally prosperous and permanent. [end of page f864t25_329.gif] 330 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. The miners everywhere through the mountains are settling their families; schools and churches are rnultiplying in every direction. Besides the ministers of other denominations, who are doing a great work for God, there are upward of ninety itinerant preachers in connection with the California Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, who are sounding the jubilee trump from Dan to Beersheba, from Yreka to San Diego. Gambling has gone down, under the pressure of an indignant public sentiment, a thousand per cent. below par, and all the "hells " in the state were closed three years ago by the hand of the law. The great Goliath of Gath, the gambling fraternity of California, which defied all Israel for years, has fallen, and his decapitated carcass has been delivered over to the vultures. The Sabbath is honored much more now than formerly, and though many, very many and great evils remain, yet social and moral progress are now the order of the day in California. [end of page f864t25_330.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 331 CHAPTER XII. CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. God, in his word and in his providences, has revealed and established two leading modes of spreading the tidings of salvation to perishing sinners of distant lands. The first is to send the gospel to them in heathen lands, by his ambassadors; and the second is to send the Gospel in Christian lands, by his providences. The Divine authority of the first mode isfound in the great commission "Go ye into all the World, and preach the Gospel to every creature;" but the apostles receiving it were to tarry at Jerusalem, until endued with power from on high. By the time the power descended upon them, God, in his providence, developed the second mode. When the apostles came down from that celebrated upper room, that extraordinary protracted prayer-meeting, with hearts of love, and tongues of tire, lo ! right at the doors were assembled representative dwellers of at least least fifteen different nations. These all listened to Peter's great pentecostal sermon, and not only heard [end of page f864t25_331.gif] 332 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. and saw the wonderful works of God," but felt in their hearts, that very day, the power of pardoning grace, and away they went back to their homes, declaring everywhere the great things which had come to pass in the " Holy City," and holding forth," in the experience and conduct of a new life, the torch of redeeming love in the darkest and most remote portions of the earth long before the preachers had even noted one foreign mission on the plan of their appointments. God was beforehand with them then, as he has been ever since. The fact is, their views in regard to foreign missionary work and the redemption of the race were, as yet, so contracted, that they would not preach the, Gospel to any but Jews, even at home, until by the exhibition of the "great sheet," with its animals of every kind, St-Peter's sectarian shackles were unloosed, and he was compelled, by the direct command of God, to go and preach to the house of Cornelius. St. Paul was the first foreign missionary to go abroad and establish missions among the heathen, and make a practical demonstration of the first mode referred in nearly every place he visited, he found scattered abroad the pentecostal seeds of truth, which borne, as it were, on the wings of the wind by the efficient workings of the second mode. Without stopping to show that those two modes of missionary enterprise bear respectively, the sanctions [end of page f864t25_332.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 333 of Divine pfovidence in every age of the Church's history, I would simply say, that never, perhaps, since the days of St. Paul, have they been more clearly exhibited than at the present hour. The planting and sustaining of Christian missions among the heathen and semi-heatben nations of Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceanica, are in strict accordance with the first mode. Foreign missionary work, there- fore, is Scriptural in its authority, and therefore necessary, and must be sustained at whatever cost, however long we may have to wait to see the fruits of an abundant harvest. The practical results, how- ever, arising from the labors of foreign missionaries of all Christian denominations, are, upon the whole, hopeful and cheering. They survey and plot the unoccupied territories of Immannel's lands, establish militant posts, and garrisons for soldiers of the cross and bear the trtice-flag of redemption to the utter - most parts of the earth. Foreign missions are worth more than the cost of sustaining them, for the in- fluence they exert on the commercial adventurers and seamen of Christian nations. Many a prodigal son has been arrested and brought to Christ in foreign lands by Christian missionaries, who could not, perhaps, have been reached anywhere else. I will give one single case to illustrate this position. A. M. Brown, a sailor of my acquaintance, was ex- tremely wicked and profane, an avowed enemy of [end of page f864t25_333.gif] 334 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED., Christ and his Church, and especially of mission. aries in foreign fields. He openly opposed the mis- sionaries at the Sandwich Islands, Navigator's Islands, and other islands of the Pacific, and did everything in his power to throw obstructions in their way. From, the Pacific he shipped to Constantinople, and was there, a few days after leaving the vessel, seized with the cholera, and under the dreadful shock fell help- less and alone in the streets. I have heard him say "While I lay there in the Streets of Constantinople, dying, as I beheved, I thought on my past life, and awoke to a sense of my dreadful condition as a sin- ner; I felt that I should soon be in hell; despair, with all its horrors, seized my soul ; and thinking that it was then too late to pray, I said to myself, Why didn't I attend to that before ? Why didn't some one kindly warn me of my danger? I had a father, who once made a profession of religion, but he never told me what a dreadful thing it is to die in sin, and go to hell. Why didn't some preacher, or some Chris- tian friend tell me of all this? No man hath cared for my soul, and now I'm dying in the streets of a foreign city, and going to hell. And," said he, in an agony of despair, I cursed the day of my birth, and cursed my father for his neglect, and cursed the preachers and cursed the Church; and then my paroxysms of pain would come on, and I writhed un- der the scorching rays of the sun till life was almost [end of page f864t25_334.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD 335 gone; and when I had a little respite, my mother, and wept, and said, 'O , if I had a mother's care, or if I had anybody who could understand my language, I could tell them what to do for me, and I might yet live. The Turks would look at me, and jabber to each other and pass on. When all hope had gone from me, a man, whom I supposed to be an Englishman, or American came and looked at me, and I thought, O that he would speak to me in a language I can understand! He spoke to me; but, alas ! it was in the Turkish language. Seeing that I could not understand him, he addressed me in my own mother's tongue; such music never thrilled my, soul before, such words of kindness and sympathy as fell on my guilty ears. He conveyed to his house, and under his skillful treatment and care I was relieved in a few hours. That good Samaritan was an American missionary. He saved my life; and, more than that, he led me to Christ. Three days after my recovery,, while still at his house under his instruction, God, for , God, for Christ's sake, spoke my sins forgiven, and healed my soul." From that day Brown became a Christian. He war, for several years a local preacher in my charge in San Francisco, and one of the most efficient workmen I had. I received a request from the "Hawaiian Tract [end of page f864t25_335.gif] 336 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED Society," a few years ago, to send them a colporteur for Honolulu, Sandwich Islands. I sent them A. M. Brown, who fulfilled his engagement greatly to the satisfaction of the society, and successfully preached the Gospel in the very port where once he had so wickedly opposed it. But however important and glorious the foreign missionary work, I believe that the greatest achievements of American missionary enterprise are now in progress, and will ere long be accomplished, through the second mode, above indicated. The abundance of the sea" is now being "converted," and -used, more effectively than ever, for the great purposes of the Gospel. The nations are flowing together as they never did before, and flowing especially in all their variety to Protestant America. The tide of emigration from European nations has been rolling in for more than a century, and now the tide from Eastern heathen nations is bearing its tens of thousands to our Pacific shores. What glorious Gospel achievements have already been gained among those resident on our shores, and how wonderful the reflex power of them on kindred and friends in the various lands whence they came, and how many, like the "Parthians, and Aledes, and Elamites, and dwellers in Mesopotamia," etc., have gone back to tell of the wonderful works of God," through all the countries whence they came. Mark the success [end of page f864t25_336.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 337 of American Christian missions in the Republic of Liberia. See the success of Methodist missions among the Scandinavians in this country, and the missions now being successfully established by converted Swedes and Danes, in Denmark and Sweden. Especially note the extraordinary success of Methodist missions ainong the Germans, first in this country, and then, by a kind of reflex power, in the " Father-land, " waking up the German mind from the dreams of rationalism and dead formality. The German missionaries sent back from this country to Germany, have accomplished more good within the last twelve years, by preaching the Gospel in their vernacular language, than the same number of men of any other nation or language could have accomplished there in fifty years. They now have a mission conference there, which held its first session in September, 1857 {1857/09/00}, Bishop Simpson presiding. The Methodist mission in China was commenced about the same time that Brother Jacoby was sent, back to Germany, and after all the toil, and expense, and sacrifice of life which have been given tothe Chinese mission, those zealous missionaries have never yet been able to report the conversion of more than six Chinamen. I do not mean to institute any invidious comparisons, or to say one word against the Chinese mission. The mission is necessary and must be sustained, [end of page f864t25_337.gif] 338 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. but what I wish to say is, that if the Lord in his wise providence has no other mode for the conversion of China, it will be a long time before her three hundred and sixty millions of heathens will hear the Gospel. Let any man fond of arithmetical calculations tell us how many men, and how much money, and how long a period of time will be required for the conversion of the Chinese Empire by the present mode ? But let the wisdom and mercy of God be adored, he has another mode which is already beginning to shed the light of hope on the future , of China. The Missionary Society is supporting a few men in ,China,, who have to devote half a dozen years in acquiring the language so as to gain access to the Chinese mind, and then a dozen years more will be necessary to wear off their prejudices against foreigners, so as, to give them access to the Chinese heart. But, in the mean time, God in his providence has forty thousand long-cued fellows in California, at no expense to anybody, studying the English language, through which the Gospel message will reach their hearts, and then, they, by the thousand, it may be, can return on the principle we have illustrated, and carry the tidings of salvation to the perishing millions of their own land. True, but little has been done as yet, in the way of direct Christian effort, for the con. version, of the Chinese in California. Rev. William [end of page f864t25_338.gif] Page 339 is blank. [Plate entitled: Chinese Females.] [end of page f864t25_340.jpg] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 341 Speer, of the Presbyterian Church, formerly a missionary in China, built a good brick Chinese Church in San Francisco, organized a small society of Chinamen, preached to them for several years in their own language, organized a Sunday school among them, where they were taught the rudiments of the English language, and also, for a time, published a Chinese paper in San Francisco. Mr. Speer's health failing, he has for a season suspended his labors. Rev. Mr. Shuck, of the Baptist Church, formerly a missionary in China, has built a Chinese chapel in Sacramento City, where he, in connection with a pastoral charge of his own people, preaches to the Chinamen in their own language. Besides those two enterprises, I know of no direct organized effort for the salvation,of the men of China. A Methodist preacher takes, hold of one sometimes and teaches him letters, and gives him Gospel teaching. Rev. S. B., Rooney reported a very hopeful conversion of a chinaman at our conference in 1856.{1856/00/00} But though so little direct effort has been put forth, by the Church in this direction, still, much has been, done, and the way is being prepared, in the order,of Providence, for their' conversion by and by. They acquire our language with considerable facility They soon become impressed with our superiority over them, and soon begin to give up their prejudices and exclusiveness- When a Chinaman [end of page f864t25_341.gif] 342 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. arrives in San Francisco, with his turban cap, wide trowsers, and wooden shoes, he enters with the prevailing idea of his people, namely, that he belongs to the most enlightened, enterprising, and pious nation under the sun; but after he stares a few days at our magnificent buildings, gas-lighted streets, and machinery of various kinds, our splendid steamers, etc., and sees the enterprise and energy exhibited by Americans, and others whom he always before regarded as barbarians, he wilts right down like Jonah's gourd, feels as though he was nobody, and all his people in the same class with himself The next idea which seems to strike him, is that perhaps he may, having such models to work by, become somebody after all, "be same as von Melican inan;" and the next time you see him you discover that he has shed off his native costume as clean as a snake in spring-time, and has come out in full American rig-hat, coat, pants, and the biggest boots in town. The self-conceited, prejudiced, haughty Chinaman has been converted into von Melican man, " with a full desire and purpose to learn, and talk, and be "just same as any other Melican man." From that time he begins to learn the English language and pry into everything. I preached one night in the summer of 1855 {1855/00/00} in M'Ginnis's provision store-room, at Twelve Mile Bar, on the east branch of the North fork of Feather [end of page f864t25_342.gif] Page 343 is blank. [Plate entitled: Chinese Merchants.] [end of page f864t25_344.jpg] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 345 River. A large proportion of my congregation were Chinamen, who appeared to listen with great atten. tion. Among them there was a tall intelligent-looking fellow whom they called Chippee." I was told that he had been in the country only about six months. Chippee not only appeared to listen attentively, but took out his pencil and went to noting down such thoughts as he could gather from the discourse, on a piece of wrapping-paper which lay on the counter, as gravely as a New-York reporter. The next morning the clerk of the store observed him transferring his notes from the wrapping-paper into a book or journal, and asked him to translate them into English. Then said Chippee What you call him talk last night?" That was Mr. Taylor, from San Francisco," replied the clerk. He noted the name in his book, and then said, looking and pointing upward " What you call him,, Him-Fader, big Fader, up I up! What you call HIM?" We call him God," answered the clerk. So he noted that in his journal also. He then gave the following brief translation of his notes from the wrapping-paper, which I now have in my possession "tell all men, no gamble ; tell all men, no steal [end of page f864t25_345.gif] 346 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. em gold; tell all men, no steal em cargo; tell all men, no talk em lies; tell all men to be very good men. That was the first sermon Chippee ever heard, and those were the ideas he gathered from it. What the spirit of inquiry thus awakened in his mind may lead to, who can tell? But besides the forty thousand Chinamen referred to, whose numbers are every year increase, we have in California the representatives of all other nations. What St. Peter saw in vision, on the house-top of Simon the tanner., is exhibited in .fact, in California, and none of them common or unclean, nor excluded from the covenant of mercy, but all are subjects of redeeming love, and living objects of the Saviours sympathy and intercessions. What I said of the Chinese is true of the rest; they are learning our language and our civilization, and the way is opening for their reception of the Gospel, and thence they may bear the news to the ends of the earth. It has been my lot to preach the Gospel hundreds of times, if not to every creature, at least to specimen representatives of all the creatures, I suppose, of human kind in this lower world. The following account of preaching the Gospel to all the world in San Francisco is given in thre "Annals;" due allowance must be made for the writer's poetical allusion to the singing on the oc [end of page f864t25_346.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD., 347 Suddenly from the piazza of an old adobe on the Plaza arises the voice of one crying in the wilderness . He 'raises' a hymn in a voice which would be dreadful' in its power were it not melodious. Hark! you may hear the words half a mile off. The City Hall sends back the echo, like a sounding board. You may stand at the foot of Merchant street and distinguish every sentence: The chariot! the chariot! its wheels roll in fire!': Had the vehicle spoken of really rolled over the planked streets of the city, it is doubtful if the tumult of its lumbering wheels could have drowned the voice of him who was thus describing, in thunder-like music, its advent. That voice at once arrests attention. The loiterer turns aside from his careless walk, stops , and listens. The miner, in his slouched hat and high boots, hears the sounds of worship, recollects the day, thinks of the home and the dear ones far away, and of the hours when he too worshipped with them in the old church pew, in the country town, with the graves of the rude forefathers of village visible from the spot where he sat; the old elm-tree's bending gracefully beneath the weight of years, and foliage, over the dust of those who planted them ; and where he listened to the trembling words of the gray -haired old clergyman as he read, or spoke from that old-fashioned pulpit, and he joins the motley crowd. [end of page f864t25_347.gif] 348. CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUNSTRATE.D. The loafing Mexican arouses from his reverie, and from the smoke of his cigarette, gives an extra puff from his nostrils, throws, his variegated serape over his left shoulder, leans against the fence, and listens to words which he does not understand. "John Chinaman passes along, and, seeing books, and being of a literary turn, ceases to jabber in the language of Confucius, joins the outskirts of the coinpany, and risks the integrity of his yard-long queue among the 'outside barbarians! The Malay, with his red-pointed cap, stops a moment to wonder, and, perhaps, forgets a while the well-known trade of piracy when listening to a Gospel which he cannot comprehend. "It is not long ere there is a sufficient audience. The singing has brought together the congregation. There is room enough for all. The worship progresses. Prayer, singing, reading of the Scriptures, text and sermon follow. All can hear, all can see; there is no sexton nor usher, nor is one needed. It is a primitive service, very earnest, and by no means ridiculous." - P. 671. I think I never felt a greater thrill of pleasure in proclaiming a free Gospel to the human varieties of California, than I did one Sunday morning a few years ago on Long Wharf in San Francisco. It happened that morning, when the time came for my wharf appointment, that I was minus a text. I was [end of page f864t25_348.gif] 349 CALIFORNIA, AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. caught in the same embarrassing dilemma once before, on my way to preach on the Plaza, but as I passed along I saw a poor inebriate lying in the sand, with his face downward, drawing with every breath the sand into his nostrils, and as temperance sermon, were in order occasionally on the Plaza, being a place notorious for rum holes, I resolved, as I looked at the poor fellow, to preach that afternoon a sermon on temperance. When I had sung up my crowd, I said to them "You may find the text recorded on a sand-bank in front of the General Jackson House, in First-street." Then I said, 'It is usual in sermonizing to institute inquiries something like these I. What are the facts in this case? II. What are the causes or occasions of those facts? III. What are the consequences?" With that arrangement I proceeded and had a good time, but waked up a great excitement among, the rum-sellers. Opening our fires right at the mouth of tbeir dens, there was no popping at a man of,, or sham fighting. When I succeeded in making out a case, I pointed out my man, and the home thrust of the prophet Nathan to the guilty king of Israel! Thou art the man," was backed by the concentrated gaze of a thousand listeners. Stuch thrusts were hard to bear, but harder to resist, and the guilty, after one cry of complaint., usually got out of sight. [end of page f864t25_349.gif] 350 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. On the Sunday momiDg above referred to, I found no drunken man to suggest a, theme, but I met a brother who said, "Good morning, Brother Taylor; what's the news this morning?" "Good news, my brother, good news! Jesus Christ died for sinners." Said I to myself, I've got it." So on I went, and took my stand on the head of a whisky barrel in front of the worst rum hole in the city; if there could be a worse one, it would be at the opposite corner, just across the street. I guess the latter was the worst, for they would not let me preach in front of it. I preached there a few times, and the proprietor sent me word that I blocked up the street, and cut off access to his house, and he didn't want me to preach there anymore. The next Sunday after I received his message, I stood on a pile of wood about thirty feet from his door, and by way of apology for ehancing my pulpit, said to the people "That man there complains that I block up the entrance to his house, and forbids MY Preaching there any more. He is a gatekeecper of the way to hell, and is bound to keep the passage clear, so that all who are silly enough to go to hell ,may walk in without hinderance. He's a generous soul is he not ? Moreover, a man who steals God's holy day, and spends it in the work of hurnan destraction, can't afford to lose an hour of it." Then the proprietor of [end of page f864t25_350.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 351 the other side of the street, sent me word that I might preach in front of his place. He rued his bargain once or twice, and tried to run me off, but I stood fire, held my ground, and turned his empty whisky barrels to odd account by preaching perhaps a hundred sermons from them. On the occasion I was going to describe, I sung together a vast crowd, of such a variety of human kind as never was seen except in California. Peter's congrregation on the day of Pentecost, for variety, was but a small affair compared with it. Wben the song, ended, I said " Good morning, gentlemen;. I arn glad to see you this bright Sabbath of the Lord. What's the news? Thank the Lord, I have good news for you this inorning 'Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people."' I then addressed them as individual representatives of the different nations thus "My French brother, look here!" He looked, with earnest eye and ear, while I told him what Jesus had done for him and his people. " Brother Spaniard, I have tidings for you, senor," and told him the news and requested him to tell his people. My Hawaiian brother, don't you want to bear the news this morning? I have glad tidings of great joy for you, I tben told him the news, and that, his island should "wait for the law" of Jesus, together with otber isles. " John Chinaman, you, John, there [end of page f864t25_351.gif] 352 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. by that post, look here, my good fellow, I've got something to tell you," etc. Thus I traveled, as it were, over all creation calling by name all the representatives before me, and I felt unspeakably happy in the fact, that throughout creation's vast realm I could rot find a rebel to whom I could not extend the hand of hearty, Christian sympathy, and say, I have good news to tell you, my brother, "glad tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people." When I had got round, as I thought, an Irishinan in the congregation spoke out and said And may it plase, your riverence, and have ye nothing good for a poor Irisliman?" " Why," my dear Irish brother, "I ask your pardon, sir, " I replied, 1 did not mean to pass you by. Thank the Lord, I have good news for you, MY brother. Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every Irishman on the Emerald Isle; and let me tell you, my brother, that if you will this morning renounce all your sins, and submit, to the will of God, Jesus, your savior, will grant you a free pardon, and clean all the sins and all the devils, out of your heart as effectually as your people say St. Patrick cleared the snakes and toads out of Ireland." "Thank you, sir," said he, "I raly belave ivery word you say, and I'll try and be a betther man." There is, beyond a doubt, a spirit of inquiry at [end of page f864t25_352.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 353 work in the dark minds of heathen and semi-heathen foreigners in California, in regard to our institutions, civilization, and religion; and when they become our language, and with our Bible, the light will break upon them as upon the mind of Martin Luther, when he found the chained Bible. An intelligent-looking Italian came to me to know where he could get an Italian Bible. A Spanish, Bible will do," said he; "I can read Spanish pretty well, but I prefer an Italian Bible, as I want to read to my companions." He informed me that he was one of a party of twelve Italian refugees, who took part in the revolution of 1848 {1848/00/00}, and had to flee for their lives; said he and his party had been in California, eighteen months, and had often heard me preach, in the streets, and were anxious to become acquainted with our Bible and the Protestant religion. They liked the preaching So far as they, could understand it, and thought that was just the religion the Italians needed. I went with him, and, he got a Bible from a branch depository of that glorious institution, the American Bible Society. The Italian afterward told me that he and his companions were delighted with the great things they found in the Bible. He said they spent their evenings in reading and talking about it. Those fellows despised oppression. I saw a Spauiard in Clay-street one day beating his little boy. [end of page f864t25_353.gif] 354 CALIFornia LIFE ILLUISTRANED. Several of those Italians happened at the time to be on the opposite side of the street, and as soon as they heard the cries of the little fellow, they ran across the street, and knocked the Spaniard to the pavement almost as suddenly as if he had been shot, and charge of the boy. I happening to know the boy, took him by the hand and conveyed him to his mother. The next time I saw the Italians, they ran across the street to meet me, and inquired very particularly about the welfare of the little boy for whom they had fought. A company of Maltese lived near me for several years. I gave them a Testament, and told them about St. Paul's shipwreck and sojourn on their native island and how well their ancient ancestors treated the servant of God. They seemed as much delighted with the book as if I had given them the family records of their fathers. A company of Manilla men wintered near me during the winter of 1849 {1849/00/00} - 50 {1850/00/00}. I used to tell them about Jesus, and they attended my preaching in the highways" They could not, at that early day, understand much English, but to show their appreciation of their preacher, when in the spring they were about leaving for the mountains, they brought me a present, consisting of a variety of their native tools, etc. One Sunday, as I was preaching in Washington [end of page f864t25_354.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 355 street, I observed in the congregation an old Italian weeping. At the close of service he grasped my hand " O, dat what I like; tell everybody 'bout Jesus; I never saw such free preaching and free Jesus before. O, I likes it ! When you preach again ?" This afternoon, on the Plaza, at four o'clock," " I'll be there! I likes it!" Are you acquainted with Jesus?" said L "O yes, bless de Lord, I'se got him right in here," replied he, putting his hand on his breast; "I loves him wid all my heart." I saw him at preaching several times afterward. He always took his stand close in front of me and gazed, and listened, and wept, and seemed to enter almost into the spirit of good old Simeon. I.have no doubt he enjoyed the pardoning mercy, of God, and was ready like Simeon, at the call of his Master to say Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word for Mine eyes have seen thy salvation, which thou hast, prepared before the face of all people; a light to lighten the Gentiles, and the glory of thy people Israel." At an experience meeting in our Seamen's Bethel in San Francisco, a Prussian arose, and, said "I come to California to git golt ; now I don't care about de golt ; I want to find dat Yaesus you all [end of page f864t25_355.gif] 356 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. talk about. I believe he is my friend too, and I want to find him. De handt of God has been heavy upon me since I be in California; he shakes me, he shakes me now. I dream de odder night dat I was dying, and a great big snake had me, and just as my breadt was almost gone, Brodder Taylor came along and knock de snake away, and help me up. I didn't know Brodder Taylor den, but dis is de man dat knock do snake off, and dis is Brodder Taylor. De snake is de debil; O Brodder Taylor, all you brodders, will you pray for me, and help me get away from de debil, and find Yaesus ?" We all prayed earnestly for him, and he was clearly converted to God. As soon as he found Jesus, he said he wanted to go back to his own country to tell his mother about Jesus; and about a year afterward he took passage, saying he was home to tell his mother about Jesus. I have seen a number of Scandinavians converted in Francisco; and the first thing a converted young Dane, or Swede, or Norwegian talks about when he finds Jesus, is his "dear mudder." They want to go straightway and tell mudder " all about it. We have, in connection with Yreka station in Siskiyou County, about four hundred miles north of San Francisco, a class of, I believe, eighteen Methodist Kanakas, Sandwich Islanders. They have one of their own men for leader; and Brother Stratton, who was [end of page f864t25_356.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 357 pastor a couple of years, represented them in conference as being very pious and consistent, at~ tended class regularly, and contributed voluntarily support of their pastor. And while the masses of Americans around them paid no regard to the Sabbath, those converted heathens spent it only in songs of praise, and in other religious exercises. There are many hinderances to oppose Gospel among the heathen and semi-heathen of California, especially the example,of God-hating, Christ-rejecting, Sabbath-breaking, overreaching, profane English and Americans, the leading representatives of Protestant Christian nations, whose influence has spread over the land a universal moral blight, which for a time seemed to consume, locusts of Egypt, every green thing. But now, thank the Lord I the, spring-time of religious life has come; much that seemed to be has revived, and all over the country are seen buds and blossoms, and "fruit unto holiness"' and songs in the vales are heard, like the songs of the ancient captive people of God when returning and coining to Zion- Notwithstanding all past and present obstructions, the Church may command greater facilities for the conversion of the heathen in than she can have in a foreign field. Ju tile first place, as we have shown, their contact with American ingenuity and energy knocks their national [end of page f864t25_357.gif] 358 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. pride and prejudice into the dust, and they are almost imperceptibly, as by a ground swell, borne up on the tide of American civilization. They at once feel that they are dependents, and soon become imitators of their superiors. Thus some of the greatest obstructions to the foreign missionary's success are carried away before the Church makes a direct effort for their salvation. Again, a foreign missionary cannot, ordinarily, till after many years of labor, exhibit to the heathen the light of Christian example, except that of his own experience and conduct. He has no means of giving them an example of the practical effect of religion in society. There are many persons, even in Christian lands, who think- that religion is only suited for preachers and men of leisure, and not at all adapted to the active relations of business and social life, and such a conclusion would be, most natural to the mind of a heathen. To place a foreign missionary, therefore, on anything like equal footing, in this regard, with the Church in California, we must export to his field of labor Christian merchants and mechanics, blacksmiths, carpenters, etc., and Christian farmers and housewives, etc.; in short, a Christian colony. In California the heathen are learning, and will yet learn more perfectly to discriminate between the mere, subjects of Christian nations, and the Christians in fact; and there the missionary has at once [end of page f864t25_358.gif] CALIFORNIA AS A MISSIONARY FIELD. 359 the advantage of a living exemplification of Christianity in every department of business and social life, to set before his heathen brother. Let any man weigh the facts we have in part indicated, and he will see that the gold magnet of California was pointed by an all-wise and merciful Providence, for the purpose of attracting and enriching the nations, not in gold, but godliness; and that when these strangers and foreigners" shall have acquired our language, and some knowledge of the institutions of Christianity, a Pentecostal gust of glory may burst upon tbein, and they by thousands see and experience the wonderful works of God," and return to their homes God's own embassadors, to carry the truce flag of redeeming mercy to their perishing brethren, and declare to them in their own vernacular the royal proclamation of peace and pardon through the blood of Jesus. Upon a careful, review of the foregoing facts taken together with the proximity of California to the heathen millions of Asia, and Japan, and Oceanica, etc., and her constant inter-communication with them, I come to the deliberate conclusion that California is to-day, in the openings of Providence, the most important missionary under the sun. "The harvest is plenteous, but the laborers are few pray therefore the Lord of the harvest,, that he will send forth laborers into his harvest." [end of page f864t25_359.gif] Page 360 is blank. SUPPLEMENT 361 BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF CALIFORNIA AS IT IS. THIS book, which has had a circulation of 34,000, copies, is full of illustrative facts and incidents of California, as it was about thirty years ago. I now add a very brief exhibit of facts illustrative of what California is now. My facts are from most reliable sources, culled largely from a work entitled California as it Is," * written by seventy leading editors and authors, each representing the county in which he resides, and pub- by the San Francisco Call Company. The fifty-two counties of the State of California are indicated on the accompanying outline map by numbers, beginning with No. 1 at the top, not in the order of age, or relative importance, but for convenience of finding readily any number desired. The table indicating the population of each county, and distances of each principal town or county-seat Francisco contains information that need *Any person wishing fuller information than I assume to give, do well to order California as it Is - from the publishers, in cost, fifty cents. [end of page f864t25_361.gif] 362 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. not be repeated in the detailed summary exhibit of the counties in this chapter. I have, in the brief summary of each county, said but little about the Churches, but will remark here that the leading Churches of our nation-Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists, others-are waging war with sin and immorality. The Methodists, of course, are at work with characteristic earnestness in every town and village of any note throughout the state; so that as good school and Church privileges can be found in all parts of California as in any new State in the Union, and far exceeding most of them. I made a trip last January {1882/01/00} from San Francisco to Santa Cruz, which will furnish a contrast with my first trip to Santa Cruz, thirty-two, years and in those years by the railways which have been con. structed meantime-the Pacific Southern Pacific, California and Oregon, and their numerous branches which traverse the State from, Leaving San Francisco on a bright 1882 {1882/00/00}, I took the Alameda ferry across and up, San Leandro Creek to Alameda Poiat in forty minutes. [end of page f864t25_362.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 363 All aboard for Santa Cruz! " I thought of the tbrw I paid forty dollars for a steamer passage to the Embarca.dero, at Alviso, then waded eight miles through deep lylud and water to San Jose', where I bought the little "red horse" for eighty dollars to carry me across the mountains thirty miles to Santa Cruz. Now, with a through ticket for three dollars and fifty cents, I enter a modern rail car and am off. Dashing up five miles flitrough a forest of oaks, inter- spersed with beautiful gardens and homes, the whistle and call "Alameda! " bring us to a standstill for a few moments. Rolling across the salt marsh south- easterly we hear the call San Leandro !" On three miles further, " San Lorenzo!" On two miles further, "Russel's! " Eight miles furtber, Mount Eden !" Three infles, Alvarado!" On a mile, "Hall's! on five miles, "Newark!" Another mile "Maryls!" , Six miles further, "Alviso" This is the point where my forty-dollar steamer ticket landed me in the mud thirty-two years ago- Moving on at the sound of the whistle three miles, " Agnew's !" Three miles more, " Santa Clara!" where I spent a night and prayed with the gamblers thirty-two years ago., two miles further on, " San Jose !. " where I foundeda Church on the memorable trip with the red horse. Seven miles on, " Love Lady's! " Three miles more, "Los Gatos!" Two more "Alma!" Three more,"Wright's!" Here I had a tremendous climb over [end of page f864t25_363.gif] 364 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. high mountains on My former trips, but now straight through the mountains, by half a dozen tunnels, two of them about six hundred feet each in length. Sweeping on through the primeval forests of giant red-wood groves, we hear the shout of the conductor, Glenwood I " " Felton! Big Trees! " My, what trees! "Santa Cruz ! " Why, it is as dark as Egypt in its night of terror. Lo! we rush through a tunnel and stop right in its mouth in the bright sunlight of Santa Cruz, embleni of the tunnelof death and sudden emerzence into the light of an eternal heaven. [end of page f864t25_364.gif] Pages 365 & 366 are skipped in the printer's pagination. SUPPLEMENT. 367 [Table of Counties in State of California, Population of Each County, Principal Town and County Seat of Each County, & Distance of Each County Seat from San Francisco.] [end of page f864t25_367.gif] 368 CALIFORNAI LIFE ILLUSTRATED. DEL NORTE COUNTY, (No. 1 on the map.) - This country, as its name indicates, is in the extreme north part of the satate. It was settled as early as 1853 {1853/00/00} as part of Klamoth County, but became a separate county in 1857 {1857/00/00}. Crescent city is the county seat, 280 miles from San Francisco by water. A belt of fine timber-spruce, fir, redwood, cedar, hemlock, and myrtle-surrounds the town. There, are two saw-mills there which turn out 10,000,000 feet of lumber per annum, most of which is shipped to San Francisco. Two churches, three schools, Masonic, Odd Fellows, and Good Templar lodges, all well-sustained. Fine, healthy climate, and no paupers. Back from the coast this county contains good farming and grazing land, ranging in price from $2 to $30 It has also some interior villages and mining camps. SISKIYOU COUNTY, (No. 2 on the map.) - It was organized in 1852 {1852/00/00}, and contains 3,040 square miles. The coast range and the Sierra Nevada Mountains meet at this point, and are known here as the Salmon and Siskiyou Mountains, which are crowned by Mount Shasta, 14,450 feet high, and capped with perpetual snow. The valleys here are from 2,000 to 4,000 feet above the level of the sea. This county has been noted for its gold mining [end of page f864t25_368.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 369 It also contains silver, copper, iron, coal, and quicksilver. It has about a hundred mining ditches aggregating 600 miles in length, with 6 quartz mills, crushing annually over 40,000 tons of quartz. It, abounds in mountain streams and rivers, but not navigable by large vessels. The climate salubrious, average annual rain-fall 33 inches, and the valleys produce abundantly all varieties of grain and fruits of the temperate zone. Yreka, the capital, 465 miles from San Francisco, contains a population of 2,000. The whole population of the county is about 8,000. The California and Oregon Railroad passes through this county No. 3. MODOC COUNTY.-Founded in 1874 {1874/00/00}, and after the tribe of Alodoc Indians made famous as the murderers of Gen. Canby, Rev. E. Thomas, and others., This county is about 100 by 60, miles, in extent, and contains a succession of mountains and valleys, drained by Pitt River, with its tributaries. The soil of the valleys is rich, the climate bracing And healthful, farmers are prosperous. The population of the, county is about 3,000. The county-seat is Alturas, 501 miles distant from San Francisco. Its nearest railroad station is Reno, Nevada, 175 miles distant. No. 4. HUMBOLDT COUNTY.- This is a coast county in the north-west, containing an area of 2,800 [end of page f864t25_369.gif] 370 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. square miles, and a population of about 15,000, and assessed property valued at about $6,000,000. For general small farming, dairying, stock raising, and lumbering, it has but few rivals in the State. The average annual rain-fall is 32 inches; the mean temperature of January, 40 degrees, of July 58 degrees; no droughts or failure of crops. Eureka is its capital, 5,000 population. It is 222 miles from San Francisco by steamer, five days per week, at a cost of $10, or 300 miles by stage, at a cost of $16. The principal rivers of this county are Eel River, Mad, Van Duzen, Bear, Trinity, and Klamoth; Humboldt Bay is 12 miles long, and from 3 to 5 miles wide-the finest on the coast except that of San Francisco. Its important towns, besides Eureka, are Arcata, Ferndale, Robnerville, Trinidad, Hydesville, Table Bluff, Petrolia, SpriDgville, Blocksburg, and Garberville, in which schools and Churches are, fairly represented. No. 5. TRINITY COUNTY.-It is about 50 miles Wide, and about 150 in length; contains 3,000 square miles, and about 4,000 inhabitants. It is drained by Trinity River and its tributaries. Much of the land is best adapted to stock growing and farming, with an extensive mining belt, with several towns and mining camps. Its capital is Weaverville. I preached in the -streets of Weaverville in 1855 {1855/00/00}. It was then a [end of page f864t25_370.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 371 flourishing mining town. It is 355 miles distant from San Francisco. No. 6. SHASTA COUNTY.-This is a region of great mineral wealth, yet but partially developed, and some good farming country. It contains two and a half million acres, grand scenery of mountains and valleys, varied and bealtby ; but two seasons, the wet and the dry, an average annual rain-fall of about 70 inches. There are in this county 44 school-houses in as many districts, and about 50 teachers, one for each .50 scholars in the county. Redding has till recently been the terminus of the California and Oregon Rail-, road, 309 miles from San Francisco. Shasta, 1 miles from Redding, is the capital, with a population of 700 or 800. The population of the county is about 7,000. No. 7. LASSEN COUNTY.-Tbis county is on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada range of mountains, not to a great extent a mining, but stock-growing, farming, and a fine fruit-growing, county. It is about 100 miles long by V miles in width, and con'taiiis an area of 4,850 square miles. The average altitude of its valley-lands is about 4,000 feet above sea level, and its hiahest mountains are. 8,000 feet. Its principal bodies of water are Honey and Eagle Lakes. 1ts average temperature in summer is 80 degrees, in [end of page f864t25_371.gif] 372 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILUTSTRATED. winter about 45 degrees above zero. Its rain supply is not very abundant, but usually sufficient for crops. It has a population of about 2,500, of a quiet, industrious class. Susanville is the county town, a beautiful vil inhabitants, with daily communication by stage, connecting with the Central Pacific Railroad at Reno, Nevada. Lassen has an immense supply of large timber, of large timber pine, spruce, and fir. No. 8. MENDOCINO COUNTY.-This embraces a section of the Coast Range of mountains, about 4,000 feet altitude, with rich valleys adapted to farming and grazing. Its rivers are the Russian, Nevaro, Walhalla, Albion, Noyo, Rio Grande, and many others. It has immense resources in timber, with ,more than a score of saw-mills, yielding annnally more than 50,000,000 feet of lumber, and 15,000,000 shingles. It has nearly half a million sheep, and more than 50,000 acres of land under cultivation. A 1ar,ge portion of the land is still in the hands of the Government, and valued at from $3 50 to $4 50 per acre. It has a population of about 11,000, about 2 to the square mile. The temperature in winter is about 40 degrees above zero, in July about grees. Ukiah is, the county town, with a population of about,1,500. It is 121 miles from San Francisco, 90 [end of page f864t25_372.gif] SUPPLEMEN,T. 373 by rail, and 31 by stage. It has a large number of smaller towns and villages. No. 9. LAKE COUNTY. -This county is about 75 miles lonm and 25 wide, covering an area,of about 700,000 acres, consisting of mountains and foot-hills, with about 100,000 acres of first-class farming land in the valleys. The foot-hills grow to great perfection every variety of temperate zone fruits. It has also a belt of superior yellow pine, sugar pine, and fir timber. Two or three townships still belong to the Government, and open to purchasers at a low price. It also has quicksilver and sulphur mines that yield as now worked about 2,000 flasks per month. Lakeport, the county-seat, containing about 1,000 inhabitants, is on the margin of Clear Lake, a body of clear, pure water, 25 miles long and 12 miles wide -a third larger than the Sea of Tiberias-abounding in fish and fowl. There are several steamers on this lake. The three Blue Lakes, each about a mile in length and half a mile in width, are a few miles north. The climate is salubrious, and the mineral springs of Lake County attract about 20,000 health-seekens, annually. The resident population of the county is about 6,000. lmproved land sells at from $30 to $75 per acre. [end of page f864t25_373.gif] 374 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED, No. 10. TEHAMA COUNTY.-The eastern part of this county is covered by mountains of the Sierra Nevada range, and the western by Mt. Shasta of the Coast Range; the valley between them is the head of the great Sacramento Valley, and is drained by the Sacramento River, the largest river in California, being 465 miles long, and navigable for steamers and sailing vessels 310 miles to a point 36 miles above Red Bluff. The California and Oregon Railroad passes through this county along the water grade of the river. The mountain seenery is grand, Lassen peak, the highest, towering to the altitude of 11,000 feet. The climate salubrious, with temperature of 45 degrees in January, and 80 degrees in July; rain fall 30 inches per annum;yield of farming products enormous without irrigation; timber exhaustless. Red Bluff is the county-seat, with a population of 3,500. There are 38 other towns and villages in this county. There is some government land in this county still available for settlers, but there are .about 150,000 acres under cultivation, In one year the yield was as follows 72,114 acres in wheat, yielded 729,512 bushels; 43,510 acres in hay, yielded 48,950 tons; 15,554 acres in barley, yielded 234,906 bushels ; 1,250 acres in oats, yielded 28J 50 bushels; 650 acres in corn, 19,500 bushels; 600 acres in rye;, 7,200 bushels; 100 acres in peanuts, 190,000 pounds - 80 acres, in potatoes 210 tons ; 220 acres [end of page f864t25_374.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 315 sweet potatoes, 49 tons; 18 acres in Deans, 660 bushels; 12 acres in onions, 600 bushels. Annual products of wool about 200,000 pounds; of butter, 25,000 pounds; of honey, 4,000 pounds. Fruit crop $25,000. Five hundred acres in grape vines, With a product of grapes perverted into wine and brandy enough to demoralize a large proportion of the 7,000 inhabitants of the county. The live stock of the county includes 400,000 sheep; 13,000 horned cattle; 9,000 bogs; 5,000 horses; 600 mules; over 600 Angora and Cashmere goats. Its 9 saw-mills turn out 35,000,000 feet of lumber annually. The real estate owned in the county is valued at $2,000,000; improvements on it $1,000,000; personal property $1,500,000., No. 11. COLUSA COUNTY.-It spans the Sacramento valley just south of Tohama, and covers about 60 miles from north to south, and about 50 from east to west, and contains about 3,000 square miles. The California and Oregon Railroad passes through it. Colusa is the county-seat, with a population of nearly 3,000. There are about 20 other towns and villages in this county, a large number'of them along the banks of the river. Total population of the county about 13,000... Price of land ranges~ from $10 to $30 per acre. Annual export,of wheat-, [end of page f864t25_375.gif] 376 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. about $4,000,000 worth. No great gold mines discovered in this county, but large quantities of copper and quicksilver, but not developed. No. 12. YOLO COUNTY.-It extends from the Sacramento river on the east to the foot-hills of the Coast Range mountains on the west, and occupies one of the most fertile sections of the Sacramento valley. Woodland is the county-seat. The rain-fall is usually adequate, but for greater certainty of crops extensive irrigation has been introduced into this county. The Southern Pacific Railroad traverses the south-eastern portion of it. No. 13. BUTTE COUNTY.-This county is located on the eastern side of the Sacramento Valley. It contains an area of about 1,746 square miles, about 553,000 acres of which are mineral lands, about the same acreage of timber, and about 200,000 acres of good farming, and superb orchard-bearing lands. All these resources are being developed on a large scale; a single mining ditch of 25 miles, out of south fork of Feather River, cost $200,000. Its largest towns are Chico, Oroville, Bigcp,,s, Gridley, and Cherokee. Chico has a population of about 31000; its streets are broad, laid out at right angles, and lined with shade trees. It is accessible by steamers and by rail. [end of page f864t25_376.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 377 The rate of taxes in Butte is about $170 per $100. The average of the whole State is a little over $2 on each $100. There are 67 public school districts in Butte, with 67 school houses; children about 4,000, with 85 teachers-35 male and 50 female teachers; the former are paid $80 per month, the latter $70. The best valley lands have been taken up, but a large body of hill land is still open for settlement, and well adapted to farming, and especially to fruit growing. No. 14. PLUMAS Courry.-This county, with an area of 2,736 square miles, perches on the snowcapped peaks and nestles in the valleys and along tbe ice-cold streams of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Its principal valleys are the Big Meadows, Monntain Meadows, Indian, Genesee, American., Beckworth, and Meadow. The largest is 15 miles; long and 4 miles wide. The average elevation of these valleys is about 4,500 feet, with 40 inches of rain, and a rich soil, and a mountain climate surpassed by none in the world. People with moderate means, industrious habits, with a good constitution and a good conscience, may find a paradise in Plumas County equal to the best the Lord has provided for mortals here below. Quincy is the county-seat. It is accessible by stage lines connectin with the Central Pacific Rail [end of page f864t25_377.gif] 378 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. road at Oroville on the west, 65 miles distant, and Reno on the east. It has many small towns. Population of the county is about 6,000 No. 15. SONOMA COUNTY.-It has a sea-shore line of about 60 miles, with an average width of 25 miles. Of the 52 counties of the State, Sonoma ranks sixth in wealth and population. It ranks first as a grape and wine-producing county. Sonoma County contains an area of about 850,000 acres, of which lands valued at from $1 to $4 per acre, and suitable only for summer pasturage; 200,000 acres timber land; immense red-wood forests, valued at from $5 to $10 per acre ; and about 200,000 acres of rich valley land, valued at from $20 to $50 per acre. Assessed value of land and improvements about $13,000,000; personal oroperty about three and a quarter millions. The mean average rain-fall for twenty-five years has been 26 inches; ordinarily quite sufficient for all purposes. Sonoma County has 13 townships, and many thriving towns. Petaluma, with a population of 5,000, is its chief commercial emporitim.' Its streets are beautifully graded and well drained, and ornamented with shade trees. It is noted for its public schools, churches and benevolent institutions. Its [end of page f864t25_378.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 379 exports for a single year will serve to illustrate the variety of products abounding in this county wool, 150,000 pounds; butter, 3,750,000 pounds; cheese, 800,000 pounds; hay, 10,000 tons; tons; potatoes, 250,000 sacks - eggs, 100,000 dozen; flour, 7,000 barrels; cattle, 2,000 head ; hogs, 23,000 sheep, 10,000; calves, 12,000; fruit, 40,000 boxes; Paving stones, 200,000. Sonoma County has some rich quicksilver mines, one mine is yielding 300 flasks of metal per month. There are 103 school districts in this county; 110 school-houses, about 8,000 children, 170 teachers; average salary of teachers is $66 per month. Rate of taxation $1 50 on each $100 valuation of the property in the county. The snm total. raised in 1878 was $235,210 15; of which $88,633 38 was for the public schools; $40,538 for public roads; $31,256 to the State; $15,000 to the indigent and hospital fund, and $34,153 for general, county expenses. I traveled through this county 32 years ago, when, except a few Spanish ranches, the whole county was wild and unoccupied. The population, of Sonoma County now numbers about 33,000. No. 16. NAPA COUNTY .-This county is about 50 miles in length by a-bout 26 in width, containing 800 square miles. Of this about '10,000 is first grade land, which is assessed at an average value of about [end of page f864t25_379.gif] 380 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED $40 per acre; 30,000 second grade at about $14 per acre; 46,000 third grade at about $10 per acre, and 184)000 as fourth grade assessed at $2 34, Total valuation of all property in the county $8,000,ooo. Its population is put down at 14,000. The county, seat is Napa City, 5,000 inhabitants, a beautiful town at the head of steamboat navigation on distant from San Francisco but River, miles by steamer, also by rail and steamer via Vallejo City. In climate and productions it is quite similar to Sonoma County, and has many growing villages. No. 17. SOLANO COUNTY.-It is nearly 40 miles square, containing 670,000 acres, 100,000 of which are overflowed lands, bordering on the Sacramento River, Suisun and San Pablo bays; about one third of the latter any land in the State. It is been reclaimed, and is as good as called "Cow County," being more a grazing than a farming region. It has 12 townships and several prosperous towns, foremost among which is Vallejo; near to M are Island Navy Yard. I used to preach there occasionally a quarter of a century ago, and had among my hearers the commandant, Commodore Farragut, and Seven 'miles from Vallejo is the city of Benicia, one of the oldest in the State, located at Carquinez Straits. It has a good water frontage for more than half its circumfrence. [end of page f864t25_380.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 381 It is claimed that no county in the State can surpass Solano County in climate, soil and commercial advantages. It has a popoulation of about 20,000. No. 18. SUTTER CouxTy.-This county is called after Gen. A. Sutter, in whose mill-race the California gold was discovered by Mr. Marshall, January, 1848 {1848/01/00}. It is a good farming connty. Yuba City, on the west bank of Feather River, opposite Marysville, is the county-seat. It is surrounded by a good farming district, and, though small, it is rather a prosperous town. I spent rnanv pleasant days there over a quarter of a century ago, with my friend Captaiu Webb. No. 19. YUBA COUNTY.-Smee good farming lands and fine orchards in Yuba, but the farms and orchards of both Yuba and SutterCounties have suffered greatly from the d6bris from hydraulic mining filling up the rivers and overflowing the country. Marysville was a flourishing city 25 years ago, but has suffered great reverses - by fires., floods and railroads~-the former two destroying her property, the latter diverting the channels of her commerce. Yuba gold in the early days of placer mining in California was celebrated for its superior quality,'and was profuse in supply. Yuba is divided into 34, school districts, and has 47 schools. [end of page f864t25_381.gif] CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. No. 20. SIERRA is the Spanish word answering to our English word mountains and mountainous. So this county, as its name indicates, is perched high up in the Sierra Nevada range of mountains. A great mining region; hydraulic and quartz mining on there now on a large scale. Some quartz mills yield its pure gold A'30,000 per month. Most of the mining camps are far above snow line, at an elevation of 4,500 feet. TheNorth and Middle Yuba Rivers county, in canyons 2,000 feet deep. through mountain valleys of this county are rich in agricultural resources and fruits. It is rich in timber. Its climate is salubrious and healthful. No. 21. NEVADA COUNTY- It is located in the foot-hills between Sierra and Yuba Counties. Its area is 1,026 square miles. It has extensive gravel and quartz mining, and vast regions, both for mining and fruit-growing, are supphed with water by means of ditches, and flumes. There are in this county six wealthy ditch corporations. The South Yuba Canal Company have an aggregate of 139 miles of ditches. This county, too, has immense forests. It has many saw-mills. One mill cuts 14,000,000 feet per annum. Their lumber finds an outlet by the Central Pacific Railroad at Truckee. Grass Valley is the county-seat, with a population [end of page f864t25_382.gif] SUPPLIMENT. 383 of 7,500. I attended a camp-meeting at Grass Valley in, 1851 {1851/00/00}. Most of the ministers with whom I labored at that meeting-J. D. Blain, Isaac Owen, Elijah Merchant, and others-have gone from labor to reward. I spent a Sabbath in that city five years aggo, and preached thrice in the Methodist Church there, with mixed emotions of joy and sadness. No. 22. PLACER COUNTY.-Auburn and Dutch Flat are its principal towns. I remember well, in 1855 {1855/00/00}, on a preaching tour through this region, I had an appointment to preach here in the bar-room of the hotel where I put up. The miners gathered in large numbers before sundown, and had a game of ball. Then they surrounded me on the veranda,of the hotel, and sang a smutty song, with a design, I thought, to run me off the track. I stood quietly till they got through with their song, and then said " Now hold on, boys, and let me sing you a song." So I did my best, and so surprised and awed them that they all followed me into-the preaching-room, and listened with profound attention. Poor fellows! most of them, no doubt, are dead. This county can boast of its gold, good fruit, and fine climate. No. 23. EL DORADO COUNTY.-Placerville, the county-seat, was formerly known as Hangtown. I was preaching in the street there in 1855 {1855/00/00}, when I said, [end of page f864t25_383.gif] 384 CALIFORNIA. LIFE ILLI-TSTRATED. In your sins you are not fit for heaven. If there was a railroad all the way, and the train came along this afternoon, it might whistle till the setting of the sun, and not get a passenger. You don't want to go there. If the flaming steeds of Elijah were hitched on to that stage-coach," pointing to a coach that had been left there the day before, and was now filled up with a lot of my hearers for the sake of getting a seat, " yes, if the flaming steeds of Elijah were hitched on to that stage-coach, and the driver cracked his whip to start off to heaven, every fellow in it would jump out." The coach. was cleared in seconds. They seemed to think they might be taken off to heaven. This county is famous for its gold, its fruit, its timber, and its climate. No. 24. SACRAMENTO COUNTY.-Sacrarnento City contains a population of about 23,000. It now bears a very rural appearance, fine shade trees, beautiful gardens, some fine buildings, being the capital of the State, but none of the great rush of business as when I, saw it in 1849 {1849/00/00} and on to 1856 {1856/00/00}, though it is now the great railroad center of the State. The county has an area of 1,026 square miles, with a population of 40,000. It was considered an unhealthy section thirty years ago, but is now as healthy as any part of the State. [end of page f864t25_384.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 385 The mean temperature for January, 46.37; February, 50.55; March, 54.41; April, 59.52; May, 64.31; June 70.46; July, 73.48; August, 77.48; September, 69.10; October, 62.58; November, 53.56; December, 47.05. Sunstroke unknown in Sacramento. Their gardens are in perpetual bloom, and all the fruits of the temperate and semi-tropical zones grow to great perfection. There are many small towns in this county, and the agricultural and fruit-producing power of the county is immense beyond computation. No. 25. AMADOR COUNTY.-This county has immense timber resources in the upper part, with climate and soil suited to all kinds of fruits, temperate and semi-tropical. It has a water-shed dropping from an altitude of 8,000 feet from the north-east corner to 335 feet at Ione City, the terminus of railroad communication. Land ranges from $t 25 to $100 per acre. It has ten good towns, ranging from 200 to 1,200 in population. The people of this county have suffered greatly from land monopolies. No. 26. CONTRA COSTA.-This county borders on the Bay of San Francisco; its great resources of wealth are in agriculture, grazing, manufacturing, coal mining and commerce. [end of page f864t25_385.gif] 386 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. SAN JOAQUIN-.-This is the northern of the six counties located in the San Joaquin Valley, all famous for their agricultural resources, grapes and every other variety of California fruits. Stockton is its largest city. There is a singular coincidence between the temperature of that city and Naples. And so through every month in the year the temperature of those two cities is almost the same. Stockton is a beautiful city of 14,000 inhabitants. No. 28. CALIVERAS COUNTY.-This county is still famous for its mines, its timber, its agriculture, its good grazing, its fruits, and its big trees." I once met a Californian in Canada, and heard a Canadian ask him how those Calaveras trees were. O, said he, "there are trees there that measure twenty-five feet in diameter." O," said I, "they are much larger than that. The largest measures thirty-seven and a half feet in diameter. Yes," said the Californian, " I know that. I have measured them myself but I told a man in [end of page f864t25_386.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 387 York how big they were, and be said that he would not believe me if there was a rope around my neck and I was going to be hanged, so I thought while I was so far from home twenty-five feet was as high as I could dare to venture." No. 29., ALPINE COUNTY.-This county, as its name imports, has its home in Alpine altitudes, ranging from 4,000 to ,000 feet above the level of the sea., It covers an area, set on its, edges, of about 2,000 square nffle,4. Its general characteristics of climate and resources in gold, timber, farming and fruit growing, are similar to those of other mountain counties before described. No. 30. MONO COUNTY.-This is also a mountainous county, and contains an area of 4,176 square miles Mono Lake, in the center of the county, is 15 miles long and 10 wide. Among tbe mountain peaks of this county are Mount Dana, 13,627 feet high; iNfount Lyell, 13,217; Castle Peak; 13,000. Its principal resources are mineral, with some very fruitful valleys. Most of the land -is yet government, land, and valued at from $3 to $4 per acre. Its population is about 10,000 and growing steadily. No. 31. MARIN COUNTY.-Immediately north of the Golden Gate, about 40 miles coastwise and ex [end of page f864t25_387.gif] 388 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. tending 20 miles inland, and contains 330,000 acres. Some land available at $4 44 per acre, but the best has been taken up and much of it monopolized by a few rich men. Improved land ranges in price from $10 to $100 per acre. The principal business is dairying. It is common to rent the cows with the land; say one cow to eight acres, at from $20 to $33 for each cow per year, beginning in October. The tenant is required to raise a certain number of calves and a specified quantity of hay. The calves are brought up by hand and not allowed to run with the cows. Wages to milkers is from $25 to $35 per month, and. one man attends twenty cows, and helps in other varieties of work. 'There are in the county about 25,000 cows and 8,000 hogs. Marin has some valuable fisheries, produces bricks by the millions; manufactures paper and grows good vegetables and fruits, has some flourishing little towns, and two narrow-gauge railroads, and educational facilities equal to that of other counties throughout the State. No. 32. SAN FRANCISCO COUNTY.-It is bounded on the north by the Golden Gate, on the east by the Bay of San Francisco, on the south by San Alateo, County, and, on the west by the Pacific Ocean. It 'contains forty square miles, and the average value of [end of page f864t25_388.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 389 land throughout the county is $220 per acre. This is the least and the largest county in the State of California. A full description of San Francisco would fill a library. - I will give but a few illustrative items. Real and Pensonal Property, assessed value, for 1878 {1878/00/00} was $253,000,000. Real estate sales for the year, 2,600 in number, and realized about $15,000,000. Present number of buildings in the city, 30,000, of which 5,000 are of brick. When I went there, in 1849 {1849/00/00} it was a vast encampment of about 20,000 people, sojourning in teiits and shanties. The first two brick houses that ever appeared in that city were built for John Troubody, one of the pioneer members of my Church, in 1850 {1850/00/00}, namely his dwelling on the corner of Washington and Powell Streets, and a storehouse, with marble front, on Washington, between Kearney and Montgomery Streets. Now, 800 dwelling houses are put up annually. Conroy & O'Conner's block, recently built on Market-street, cost $110,000,. Population of the city, about 330,000. , Ninety thousand passengers arrive by sea and land annually, and a large proportion of them remain in the State. Public schools - 38,000 children enrolled, and probably 10,000 in private schools and colleges. Teachers in public schools, 672, and receive an aninual aggregate salary of $674,000. Total expenditure forpublic schools per year about $1,000,000. City mail carriers work for one year-mail letters, [end of page f864t25_389.gif] 390 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRXTED. 3,864,000. City letters delivered, 1,554,000, and 4,564,000 mail lett6rr,, and 2,000,000 city letters collected. Cost of Street Work for a year, $1,242,000, of which $912,000 was for permanent improvement of the public streets. Police Department.-5 captains, 12 detectives, 25 sergeants, 12 corporals, and 273 regular patrolmen. Hotels.-There are seventy-seven in the city, besides a much larger number of boarding-houses. The Palace Hotel, superb in its architectural symmetry and beauty, covers a whole block in the heart of the city, 3104 by 275 feet. It has a 'court in the center, after the Oriental style, with a carriage entrance from the street 50 feet wide. The court is roofed with glass at the top of the building, and surrounded at each story by a gallery 12 feet wide, upon which the rooms of the different elevations open. The dining-room is 200 by 55 feet in extent, the pavements are of black and white marble tiling, the windows and other inclosures of plate-glass, the doors and other woodwork solid and cabinet finished. The building is seven stories,,with sunshine in every room, and accommodations, including baths, for 1,100 guests. The water used is from two artesian wells, and the gas and ice in the establishment are manufactured in the cellar. Senator Sharon told me that he aimed to make this, the Finest hotel in the world and it is [end of page f864t25_390.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 391 conceded by all who have had opportunity to compare and know, that he did not miss his aim. Fire Department.-276 officers and men, 63 horses, 21,000 feet of carbolized hose, 1,247 hydrants, 55 cisterns, steamers, 8 hose carriages, 4 hook and ladder trucks, and the fire-boat Governor Irwin." , It is claimed that the, exports of this city are not surpassed in America, except by New York and Boston. Annual export of merchandise by sea is valued at about $35, 000,000, half of that value being\parfor wheat, shipped to Great Britain, Belgium, France) Australia, Spain, South America, New Zealand, China, Germany, Hawaiian Islands, British Co- lunibia, Tahiti, and Mexico. The relative quantity shipped to each of the countries named is indicated by the order in which the names are given. Merchan- dise sent east by rail valued at $23,000,000. The gold and silver export for 1878 {1878/00/00} was $35,000,000. Shipping.--Nearly 1,000 entries and over 1,000 clearances annually. -Import duties about $8,000,000. Receipts of treasure into the city for the year 1878 {1878/00/00} silver bullion, gold dust, bars, and coin, $70,000,000. Coinage of the San Francisco Mint, for the year 1878,{1878/00/00} 2,087,800 gold pieces, in value $36,209,500; of silver there were coined 14,088,000 pieces, valued at $13,977 1 000. Total coinage, $50,18,6,500. - Periodical Literature.-18 daily, 42 weekly, and monthly, besides many semi-weekly and semi- [end of page f864t25_391.gif] 392 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRANED. monthly publications. These are found in all the European languages, also in Hebrew and Chinese. Courts of Justice.-One poor alcalde 33 years ago; now there are 15 courts of justice. Churches.-None when I landed there in 1849 {1849/00/00} ; now there are 91 churches and many chapels, and many benevolent institutions. There are 15 private colleges and schools. Banks, 42; gas-light companies, 3; ice companies, 8; railroad offices, 21 ; river and bay steamboat lines, 23; street railroad companies, 13; water companies, 10; telegraph, 7; telephone, 2, etc., etc. The city has 312 incorporated manufacturing companies in great variety. No. 33. SAN MATEO.-This county occupies the 'peninsula' south of San Francisco County for a distance on a straight line of 42 miles, and contains an area of 292,500 acres, much of it good agricultural land, but largely monopolized by a few. It has a good supply of fine timber and an abundance of water. No. 34. ALAMEDA COUNTY.-It is divided into six townships Oakland, -Brooklyn, Alameda, Eden, Washington, and Murray. Oakland City, 25 years ago, had one broad street of, sand, with just enough of scattered ordinary houses, [end of page f864t25_392.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 393 to define it as a street. Now she has 200 miles of opened streets; 50,000 inhabitants, and $5,000,000 invested in manufactures. Oakland claims the finest climate and lowest death rate (12.50 per 1,000) in America. She has 28 churches; 8 street railroads; 9 periodicals, daily, weekly, monthly; a dozen high schools; 1,200 houses built now yearly, at a cost Of $2,500,000, and $25,000 in street improvements., The assessed value of property in Oakland is $28,000,000, and every thing moving on. The University of California is at Berkeley, 4 miles out from Oakland city. It has a campus of 200 acres, and has an endowment fund of $200,000. No charge for tuition. Ladies and gentlemen on the same footing. It now has between 500 and students. Brooklyn has been -absorbed by Oakland, and now constitutes the seventh ward of the city. Alameda is a pretty town of about 10,000 population. It is growning at the rate of about 300 houses per year. It is protected from the force and fury of the prevailing trade winds, which send their chilling blasts and clouds of dust through the streets of San Francisco and Oakland, by 2,000 acres-of live oaks, so that the climate of Alameda is equable and salubrious. Alameda is the home of my own dear wife and children, whom I had the pleasure of visiting at the beginning of this year. [end of page f864t25_393.gif] 394 CALIFORNIA LIFE, ILLUSTRXTED, No. 35. SANTA CRUZ COUNTY.-This is a small county, 40 by 15 miles. 40,000 acres of its richest river bottoms are occupied as dairy farms. The mountain lands are also very rich, covered with giant timber along the gulches, and the open portions with tall grass. I used to see the trails of the grizzly bears through the grass a long distance. Fruit in great variety grows to perfection on those mountains. Santa Cruz County ranks second only to San Francisco in her manufactures. It has saw-mills, cutting 36,000,000 feet annually. The San Lorenzo Flume has a capacity for transporting 60,000,000 feet of lumber per season. The flume for transporting timber is a California institution. The timbers and plank of which it is constructed are very strong, so as to contain a great current of water, which carries all this lumber out of the mountains with indescribable rapidity. There are 5 limekilns in this county, employing over 200 men; 4 large tanneries, and powder works turning out 12,000 kegs per mouth, etc. Santa Cruz City has a population of about 6,000. It is located at the mouth of San Lorenzo River; the business part of the town lies in a basin shut in by bluffs and hills, sheltering it from the cold northers. When I was there, last January, all varieties of flowers were in full bloom in the open gardens. The highest heat temperature is 88 degrees, the lowest 31 degrees above zero. [end of page f864t25_394.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 395 I found there a Methodist class, and formally organized them into a Church in the winter of 1850 {1850/00/00}. On my recent visit I had the pleasure of meeting a few of the 1849 {1849/00/00} pioneers -- Brother and Sister Anthony, Brother and Sister Heacock, and Mother Case. Brother Heacock met me and my family in San Francisco soon after our arrival, and reported us to Collins & Cushman, who sent us a good cooking stove, and to Captain Webb, who gave us a house to live in till I could build one. NO. 36. STANISLAUS COUNTY.-This, is one of the great wheat-producing counties of the San Joaquin Valley. It is traversed by 3 railroads. Modesto, a beautiful town of 3,000 inhabitants, is the countyseat. A farmer, 3 miles out from Modesto, makes the following showing in wheat products for one year His farm of 640 acres is valued at $12,800 Teams and implements 2,000 Hired help ................... 300 Seed wheat ................. 280 Cost of sacks .............. 285 Cost of threshing ........... 470 Cost of feeding teams ....... 360 Total cost for the year ....... 1695 Wheat sold in December, above cost of storage, at 6,408 Net profit, not counting his own labor of 5,293 [end of page f864t25_395.gif] 396 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED. That was a good year. Some years the crop is very light, when on short allowance of rain. About 300,000 acres for wheat are cultivated and yield annually about 5,000,000 bushels. All varieties of grain and fruits are produced in large quantity, and of superior quality. My dear son Ross, a witness for Jesus, is a partner in the storekeeping firm. of Madux & Taylor in Modesto. No. 37. MERCED COUNTY. - This county also spans the San Joaquin Valley, a width of 40 miles from the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains on the east, to the summit of the Coast Range on the West. Its soil is sandy loam, and its products the same as the other counties in this great plain. Merced, with a population of about 3,000, is the tounty-seat. This and most of the little towns of the county are located along the line of the Southern Pacific Railroad. Merced has 5 churches, and among its manufactures it has large woolen mills. Not depending wholly on the rain-fall, this county has some extensive irrigating canals tapping the San Joaquin and King's Rivers. No. 38. MARIPOSA COUNTY.-This is a mountainous mining county. The head waters of the Merced and Mariposa rivers are in this county. It contains some fine rivers, good valleys well. suited to [end of page f864t25_396.gif] SUPPLIMENT 397 farming, fruit growing and pasturage. The famous mining claim of John C. Fremont in this county, covers 40,000 acres. The world-renowned 'Yosemite Valley is in this county. No. 39. TUOLUMNE COUNTY. A Mountainous county, containing an area of about 2 000 square miles. Half a million acres of land open for settle-. ment. The soil along its rivers and foot hills ..is very productive, the climate salubrious. Sonorra. a thriving- little town of 1500 inhabitants, is the county seat. I dropped in there late one Saturday night in 1855 {1855/00/00}. The gambling saloons were in full blast and crowded with miners. I rolled a good, box into the, street and sang hundreds of them- together and preached the Gospel to them. Tuolumne is a - county of grand.,natural scenery No. 40. MONTEREY COUNTY,-This is a large county, 3,600 square miles. Monterey is an old historic town, but has never grown much. "'The Meth- odist" have a camp-ground of 100 acres two miles from the town, which, owing to genial climate, I picturesque scenery, good hunting, fishing, and sea-bathing, has become a great summer resort for health and pleas- ure-seekers. Farining land is abundant, and ranges in price from $5 to $50 per acre according,to improvements and quality. Salinas City, with a population of about 2,000, is the county-seat [end of page f864t25_397.gif] 398 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLITSTRATED. No. 41. FRESNO COUNTY.-is 150 by 65 miles in, extent, comprisin an area of nearly 10,000 square miles. It has a sandy loam soil, well adapted to all kinds of fruits-especially grapes. It is just being recovered from its wild state. Until within a few years this great plain was the pasture ground of immense herds of cattle and wild horses, but now it is being settled "with a rush." I visited two of my sons there last November. They were opening up a farm for which they paid $4 50 per acre. I visited them again in January, and found the same kind of land being sold at $10 per acre. This plain, like all ,the valleys of California, is open prairie, just ready -for the plow. The rain-fall there is light and unreliable, but nearly the whole county can be irrigated from King's River, which rises in the Sierra Nevada range east, near the base of Mt. Whitney, vying with Mt. Shasta for altitude and perpetual snow. All through the summer beat the toilers on the plain can see perpetual. snow on a long line of lofty peaks;. Fresno city is a young railroad town of nearly 3,000 inhabitants. It is rapidly growing and improving There are several colonies in Fresno County, making money by raising alfalfa clover, grapes and other fruits on little homesteads of 20 acres each. They are demonstrating the utility of irrigation and thorough cultivation, instead of a superficial attempt of running a big farm with small means. [end of page f864t25_398.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 399 No. 42. SAN BENITO COUNTY.-This thread of land is 81 by 10 miles, embracing an area of 810 square miles, divided into about 25,000 acres of rich garden land; 35,000 acres of first-class grain land; 46,000 acres of second-class grain land, and about 100,000 acres of third rate, suitable for vegetables, grain and fruits, with hill lands for pasturage. Hollister, the comity-seat, is a flourishing railroad town of about 4,000 population, There is an almond orchard of 40,000 trees in full bearing near the town of Hollister. No 43. TULARE COUNTY.-This county is bounded by Fresno on the north. It is about half as large as Fresno, but older in its settlement, with a fuller development of its immense agricultural and horticultural. resources. Vasalia, the county-seat, is a flourishing railroad town of about 4,000 inhabitants. No. 44. INYO COUNTY.-This is a new county, containing about 12,000 square miles, located on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, with the mineral, agricultural and horticultural resources common to the mountain counties of California. There is much land there to be possessed, as there are but about 1,000 people resident in the whole county. [end of page f864t25_399.gif] 400 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLU' STRATED. No. 45. SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY.-This county lies along the, Pacific sea-board, 10 miles, and extends back into the Coast Range mountains a distance of 60 miles, covering 2,025,000 acres. Much good land there in the market at from $3 50 to $5 per acre. It has no direct railroad connections, hence is not settled up so rapidly as some other counties, even less inviting. The city of San Luis Obispo, the county-seat, has a population of about 3,000. The assessed value of improved real and personal property in the county is put down at $6,500,000. Total population, 12,000. No. 46. SANTA BARBARA COUNTY.-This county also lies along the Pacific coast, embracing a number of islands used as sheep ranches. The land of the 'valleys is very productive, but requires irrigation, which is available. Santa Barbara, the county-seat, has a population of about 5,000. No. 47. VENTURA COUNTY, with an area of 1,096,000 acres, of which 175,000 are set down as good farming land, and 150,000 as good grazing land. There are about 80,000 acres under cultivation. Assessed value of property in, the county about $3,500,000. Among all varieties of products Ventura shipped [end of page f864t25_400.gif] SUPPLEMENT. 401 in one year 850,000 pounds of honey. I was several years in California before there was a bee in it. I remember well the stir made about the man who brought the first hive of bees via Isthmus of Panama to California. No. 48. KERN COUNTY.-This brings us back into the great San Joaquin Valley. Kern is a very large and rapidly developed county. Kern River supplies irrigation for nearly all the county, and all, that is claimed for any county in this great -valley can be put down for Kern also. Bakersfield, the courity-seat, is a railroad town of . about 2,000 people, and growing rapidly. No. 49. LOS ANGELES COUNTY contains an area of about 6,000 square miles. Its treeless hills, hollows, and plateaus have, in their wild state, a desert-like appearance, but by the improvements of the last 12 years the thirsty land has become pools of water," by irrigation, but, instead of reeds and rushes, the most beautiful gardens and orange orchards dot the desert with oases." The naturally treeless prairie plains of all the State are now also beautified by lines and groves of the Tasmanian "bluegum tree," which, in good soil, will make a diameter of 15 inches, and reach an altitude of 100 feet in 10 years. It is a beautiful evergreen, the leaf shaped like an apple leaf, which has a strong, [end of page f864t25_401.gif] 402 CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRNTED. pleasant aroma, with supposed valuable medical qualities. The trees themselves in a neighborhood are said to be a preventive of ague and fever. It is very hard wood, and grows straight and tall. I sent some seed from Australia about 18 years ago to my, wife in California. She planted it and called the attention of a horticultural friend of ours to its beautiful growth, and he wrote me to send him a pound of the seed, which I did. The seed is nearly as small as tobacco seed, not quarter the size of a mustard seed. That pound of seed, with what Mrs.Taylor planted before, has filled the country with the most beautiful ornamental trees in it, so that I have there more monuments to my memory than any man in California, though but few persons know how the eucaliptus got a start in California. The beautiful city of Los Angeles contains a population of about 15,000. No. 50. SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY.-It contains 23,472 square miles. The south-eastern portion is interspersed with a vast plain, hills, and mountains, destitute alike of timber or grass, but portions of it that have been cultivated and irrigated exhibit the greatest luxuriance of useful products, especially the semi-tropical fruits, oranges, limes, lemons, figs, olives, bananas, etc. It has some forest timber in its remote mountains. [end of page f864t25_402.gif] SUPPLIMENT. 403 "the latter day saints" founded a colony in this county, but abandoned it long ago to the latter-day sinners, with a good sprinkling of Methodist and Presbyterian saints. NO. 51. SAN DIEGO.-At the extreme South of the, State. It is a very large county, of mountains and desert plains, but has more than 30 valleys, from 2 to 15 miles long, of great fertility. The Southern Pacific Railroad passes throungh this county, and will help greatly in developing its resources. San Diego City-new town-;-is beautifully situated ,on the bay shore, and will become a great city. To all other resources in common with other southern counties of the State San Diego adds valuable fisheries. No. 52. SANTA CLARA COUNTY.-There are 832,000 ,acres of land in this county. About three fourths of is mountainous. The foot-hills have good fine orchards. The San Jose' Valley is famed as, the garden of California, and not surpassed in the world in fertility, climate, variety of production, and Healthfulness. It was an extremely. desert-like valley in the summer season when I first traveled it 33 years, threaded with li'ving streams of ago, but now it is pure water flowing from numerous artesian wells. San Jose, the county-seat, has a population of -about 18,000. Three miles distant is the beautiful rural town of Santa Clara, with a population of nearly [end of page f864t25_403.gif] CALIFORNIA LIFE ILLUSTRATED 404 4000. All around for miles is a perfect garden, where the roses bloom all through the year. Those two towns are connected by the famous "Alameda" a broad avenue with a row of shade trees on each side. About half way is located the University of the Pacific. The building is an elegant mopdern structure errected at a cost of $50,000. This was the first chartered college in California. Re. Isaac Owen was the projector and first agent of the institution; Rev. Edward Bannister its first president. Both have gone to heaven long since. The college was for years located in the town of Santa Clara, been steady and unremitting in its work for about 3- years. It afords equal facilities to male and female students', and has fulfilled a grand mission of its kind, and has a brightening future before it. All the towns in the county are well provided with schools. The' State Normal school buildings in San Jose' cost over "' The Santa College," to be built by the will and ,bequest of the late James Lick. is to be located in this, county; the observatory to be on Mt. Hamilton. A road of 27 miles to the summit and site of the observatory has been constructed by the county at a cost of $100,000. This observatory, when completed, will of its kind be classed as one of the great wonders Of the world. [end of page f864t25_404.gif]