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Last edited by MARC Bot
September 19, 2020 | History

Three years in California

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Walter Colton (1797-1851) of Vermont had a career as clergyman and journalist before sailing to California as naval chaplain of the Congress. In July 1846, Commodore Stockton named him alcalde of Monterey, a post to which he was elected a few months later. He remained in California until 1849, using his time to found the state's first newspaper and building its first schoolhouse. Three years in California (1850) contains Colton's memoirs of that period, including descriptions of the U.S. military occupation of California, social life and customs of Monterey, discovery of gold and firsthand impressions of the Sonora mining camp in the Southern Mines, visits to Stockton and San Jos,̌ John Charles Frm̌ont, the Constitutional Convention of 1849, and California missions.

Publish Date
Publisher
A.S. Barnes & Co.
Language
English
Pages
456

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Cover of: Three years in California
Cover of: Three years in California
Three years in California
1859, S. A. Rollo
in English
Cover of: Three years in California
Three years in California
1852, A.S. Barnes & Co.
in English
Cover of: Three years in California.
Three years in California.
1851, A.S. Barnes & co., H.W. Derby & co.
in English
Cover of: Three years in California [1846-1849]
Cover of: Three years in California [1846-1849]
Three years in California [1846-1849]
1850, A. S. Barnes
in English

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Table of Contents

CHAPTER. I.— The flag.— Meeting of citizens.— Disposition of forces— Col Fremont's band.— Alcalde of Monterey.- Indian mother.— Military leaders.— A California farm
Page 13
CHAPTER. II.— Fecundity of the Califomians.— First intelligence of the war — Wild Indians on board ship.— The chief.— First newspaper published in Cali- fornia.— Raising the materials.— The rival suitors.— Flight of Gen Castro — A Californian on horseback
Page 27
CHAPTER. III.— A thief obeying orders.— Game.— No penitentiary system.— The California cart on a gala-day.- The niuaway daughter.— Faith of th'e In- dians — Return from the war.— First trial by jury.— Indian and his squaw on the hunt.— Whales in the bay.— The two gamblers.— Ladies on horseback.— Merriment in death — The Englishman and his mistress
Page 39
CHAPTER. IV.— Funeral ceremonies.— Elected alcalde.— Flight of Gen Cas- tro.— Los Angeles taken.— Oven-bath.— Grog in a chimney .—The flea.— First rain.— Rising of the Califomians.— Measures of Com Stockton.— Mormons
Page 54
CHAPTER. v.— Fire on the mountains.— Emigrants.— Pistols and pillows — Leaders of the insurrection.— California plough.— Defeat at San Pedro.— Col Fremont's band.— The Malek Adhel.— Monterey threatened.— Soldier out- witted — Raising men — Bridegroom — Culprits
Page 72
CHAPTER. VI.— Santa Barbara taken.— Lieut Talbot and his ten.— Gambling in prison.— Recruits — A funny culprit — Movements of Com Stockton — Beauty and the grave.— Battle on the Salinas.— The captain's daughter — Stolen pistols.— Indian behind a tree — Nuptials in California
Page 89
CHAPTER. VII.— San Josfi garrisoned.— A California rain.— Escape of convicts —Shooting Edwards.— Two washerwomen.— Death of Mr Sargent.— Indlati hens.— Hunting curlew.— The California horse.— An old emigrant.— The grizzly bear
Page 106
CHAPTER. VIII.— Little Adelaida.— Col Fremont's battalion.— Santiago In love —Sentiments of an old Californian.— The prize Julia.— Fandango.— Winter climate —Patron Saint of California.— Habits of the natives.— Insiurection in the north — Drama in a church.— Position of Cora Stockton
Page 121
8 CHAPTER IX.— Day of the Santos Innoccntes.— Letting off a lake.— Arrival of the Dale with home letters.— The dead year.— Newly-arrived emigrants — Egg-breaking festivities.— Concealment of Chaves — Plot to captiu'e the al- calde
Page 134
CHAPTER X. — Destruction of dogs.— The wash-tub mail.— The surrender in the north.— Robbing the Californians — Death-scene in a shanty — The men who took up arms — Arrival of the Independence — Destitution of our troops — Captiu-e of los Angeles
Page 149
CHAPTER. XI.— AiTival of the Lexington.— The march to los Angeles, and battle of San Gabriel — The capitulation.— Military characteristics of the Cali- fornians — Barricades down
Page 163
CHAPTER. XII.— Return of T O Larkin.— The tall partner in the Califomian — Mexican officers — The Cyane — VV^ar mementoes — Drama of Adam and Eve.— Cai-nival.- Birth-day of Washington — A California captain.— Appli- cation for a divorce — Arrival of the Columbus
Page 173
CHAPTER. XIII.— The people of Monterey.— The guitar and runaway wife — Mother ordered to flog her son — Work of the prisoners — Catching sailors —Court of Admiralty.— Gamblers caught and fined.— Lifting land bounda- ries
Page 189
CHAPTER XIV. — A convict who would not work.— Lawyers at Monterey — Who conquered California.— Ride to a rancho.—Leopaldo.— Party of Cali- fornians.— A dash into the forests.— Chasing a deer.— Killing a bear.— Ladies with firearms — A mother and volunteer 19D CHAPTER XV.— A California pic-nic— Seventy and seventeen in the dance.— Children in the grove.— A California bear-himt.— The bear and bull bated — The Russian's cabbage head
Page 210
CHAPTER. XVI.— A Californian jealous of his wife.— Hospitality of the na- tives.— Honors to Guadalupe.— Application from a Lothario for a divorce.— Capture of Mazatlan.— Larceny of Canton shawls.— An emigrant's wife claiming to have taken the country.- A wild bullock in Main-street
Page 220
CHAPTER. XVII.— Rains in California.— Functions of the alcalde of Monterey —Orphans in California.— Slip of the gallows rope.— Blaking a father whip his boy.— A convict as prison cook.— The knacka.— Thom Cole.— A man robbing himself.— A blacksmith outwitted
Page 230
CHAPTER. XVIII.— First discovery of gold.— Prison guard.— Incredulity about the gold.— Santiago getting married.— Another lumpof gold.— Effects of the gold fever.— The court of an alciilde.— Mosquitoes as constables — Bob and his bag of gold — Return of citizens from the mines — A man with the gold cholic— The mines on individual credit
Page 242
9 ■wolves.— Watch-firps.— San ,Ios(i.— A fresh start.— Campinc; on the slope of a hill.— Wild features of the country.— Valley of the San Joaquin.— Band of ■wild horses
Page 257
CHAPTER. XX.— The grave of a gold-hunter.— Mountain spurs.— A company of Sonoranians.— A night alarm.— First view of the mines.— Character of the deposits.— A woman and her pan.— Removal to other mines.— Wild In- dians and theirweapons.— Cost of provisions.— A plunge into a gold river.— Machines used by the gold-diggers 2G9 CHAPTER XXI.— Lump of gold lost.— Indians at their game of arrows.— Camp of the gold-hunters.— A Sonoranian gold-digger.— i?abbath in the mines.— The giant Welchman.— Nature of gold deposits.— Average per man — New discoveries
Page 282
CHAPTER. XXII— Visit to the Sonoranian camp.— Festivities and gambling —The doctor and teamster.— An alcalde turned cook.— The miner's tattoo — The little Dutchman.— New deposits discovered — A woman keeping a monte table.— Up to the knee and nine-pence.— The volcanoes and gold.— Arrival of a bai'rel (5f rum ■ •
Page 295
CHAPTER. XXIII.—Natural amphitheatre.— No scientific clue to the deposits of gold.— Soil of the mines.— Life among the gold-diggers.- Loss of our caballada — The old man and rock — Departure from the mines — Travelling among gorges and pinnacles — Instincts of the mule — A mountain cabin
Page 309
CHAPTER. XXIV.— A lady in the mountains.— Town of Stockton.— Crossing the valley of the San Joaquin — The robbed father and boy — Ride to San Jos6 — Rum in California — Highwayman — Woodland life — Rachel at the ■well — Farewell to my camping-tree
Page 324
CHAPTER XXV. — Cause of sickness in the mines.— The quicksilver mines — Heat and cold in the mines — Traits in the Spanish character — Health of California ladies — A word to mothers — The pingrass and blackbii'd — The Redwood-tree.— Battle of the eggs
Page 339
CHAPTER XXVI. — The public domain — Scenery around Monterey — Vine- yards of los Angeles.— Beauty of San Diego.— The culprit hall.— The rush for gold — Land titles — The Indian doctress — Tufted partridge — Death of Com Biddle
Page 351
CHAPTER. XXVII.— The gold region.— Its locality, nature, and extent — For- eigners in the mines.— The Indians' discovery of gold.— Agricultural capa- bilities of California.— Services of United States officers.— First decisive movement for the organization of a civil government — Intelligence of the death of Gen Kearny
Page 365
10 —Fossil remains.— The two classes of emigrants.— Life in California.— Heads against tails
Page 377
CHAPTER. XXIX.— The tragedy at San Miguel.— Court and culprits.— Age and circumstances of those who should come to Calilbrnia — Condition of the professions.— The wrongs of California.— Claims on the Christian comratini- ty — Journalists •
Page 391
CHAPTER. XXX.— The gold-bearing quartz.— Their locality.— Richness and extent — The suitable machinery to be used in the mountains.— The court of admiralty at Monterey — Us organization and jurisdiction — The cases deter- mined — Sale of the prizes — Convention and Constitution of California — Difficulties and compromises — Spirit of the instrument
Page 403
CHAPTER. XXXI.— Glances at towns sprung and springing.— San Francisco — Benicia — Sacramento City — Sutter — Vernon.— Boston — Stockton — New York — Alvezo — Stanislaus — Sonora — Crescent City — Trinidad
Page 414
CHAPTER XXXII. — Brief notices of persons, whose portraits embellish this volume, and who are prominently connected with California afiairs
Page 425
CHAPTER. XXXIII.— The mission establishments in California.— Their origin, objects, localities, lands, revenues, overthrow — California Railroad
Page 439

Edition Notes

Published in
New York

The Physical Object

Pagination
456 p., [6] leaves of plates :
Number of pages
456

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL22895321M
Internet Archive
threeyearsincalif00colt

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