CSfDrttell IntBeraita ffiibrarg 3tifara. Nmb ^Jork CHARLES WILLIAM WASON COLLECTION CHINA AND THE CHINESE THE GIFT OF CHARLES WILLIAM WASON CLASS OF 1876 1918 3 1924 023 250 610 3 1 S // ■ /5 '.<^ ^ ;i^i^^'^ J'J- vf-K^-Ai-/ir A;.- ( fi i- '.■■%£ ^A. i3.) r ADVERTISEMENT. Across the Continent; A SUMMER'S JOURNEY TO THE Rocky Mountains, the Mormons, an0 the Pacific States, with speaker colfax. With a Full Map of all the Western TERRifcmiEs ANb THE Route Traveled. BY SAMUEL BOWLES, Editor of the Springfield ,( Mass.) Republican. Mr. BrOWLES went Overland to the Pacific Coast in Msy and Jane of tliis year, (i865y) in company with Hon. Schuyler Colfax, Speaker of the House of Representatives ; visited the Mining Re- gions of Colorado, Nevada and Californa; spent some time with the Mormons ; passed overland nortli to and through Oregon ; sailed up the Columbia River ; went throijgh Washington Territory and Puget Sound ; visited the British Provinces of the North ; traveled all over California; passed several weeks in San Eraneisco; and returned home by way of the Isthmus in September. The Party, of which he was a member, enjoyed unrivaled oppor- tunities for seeing all sections of this great Western Half of our Continent ; for knowing its people ; for witnessing its wonderful scenery; for studying its various resources and its strange develop- ments ; for learning the history and condition of its Mining Inter- ests ; in every way for becoming acquainted with all its material and> natural characteristics. No travelers were ever so cordially welcomed by citizens as were these, — ^the journey was a continued ovation, — ^and all the most intimate and authentic sources of infor- mation were freely opened to them. ADVERTISEMENT. The results of all these Observations and Experiences are given by Mr. Bowles, in the Letters which constitute this volume, with a freshness and fullness which have won for them, as published in The Springfield Republican, wide attention and much com- mendation. The New York Times says of them :— "The whole series is the ablest and most valuable Report ever made OP the Characteristics of the Western and Pacific por- tions OP our Union." In the volume the I-The Movement towards ths Sandwich Islands, v 12S kiv INDEX TO CONTENTS. LETTER XIV. Pio^ THE EIDE THROUGH THE SAGE BEUSH AND THE GREAT BASIN.— The Great Desert Basin of Utah and Nevada, and its Char- acteristics—A Quick Stage Bide through its Alkali Dust and over ita Mountains — The Taint of the Alkali — Experiences of the Ride—' Greeley and Hank Monk — Problems as to the Culture of this Be- gion— Its Redeeming Beauties in Mountains, in Atmosphere, and in Exhilarating Breeze, 131 LETTER XV. THE SILVER MINES OF NEVADA: AUSTIN AND VIRGINIA CITY.— Nevada the Child of California— Austin : its Location; its Soeial and Material Development — Classics in a Cellar — The Silver Mines in and aboiit Austin— Character of the Ore— Mills — Improve- ments and Expenses— New Mining Discoveries— Virginia and its History and Mines— The Famous Comstook Ledge — The Gould t Curry Mine, and its Statistics — Its Superintendent, Mr. Charles L. Strong — The Ophir, Savage, Empire, Yellow Jacket, and other Mines-JCost and Profit of the Virginia Ores — Number of Quartz Mills on the Comstock Ledge — California's Account with Nevada — Conclusions as to the Nevada Mines — Advice to Capitalists — A Rhode Island Example in Colorado — Doubtful Things Very Uncertain- Profanity Discouraged, 141 LETTER XVI. THE CONTINENT ACROSS.- The Ride over the Sierras— The Great , _ Ride Finished — Still the same Republic, the same Flag — ^Wonderful Homogeneity of the American People — The "Civilization of San Francisco and the Pacific Coasl^-The Material Prospects of City and Country— The Last Day in Nevada— Valleys of the Truckee, Washoe, and Carson— Steamboat Springs— Reception at Carson City— The Sierra Nevadas and their Beauties— Lake Tahoe— The Stage Ride over the Mountains from Lake Tahoe to Placerville— Hard and Watered Roads and Fast Horses— First Views of California Life, . . 15J LETTER XVII. OVERLAND TO OREGON.— A Pleasant Revelation in Oregon— The Overland Ride from California— Up the Sacramento Valley— Ohico — General Bidwell and his Farm— Red Bluffs and the Family of John Brown— The Trinity, Klamath, Rogue, and Umpqua Rivers— Shasta and Yreka— The Tower House and its Proprietor^— Mount Shasta and its Snow Fields — Jacksonville and its Gold Diggings^s-Pilot Knob^ The Forests— Pines and Firs — Oak Groves— The Mistletoe and the Spanish Moss — Joe Lane and Jesse Applegate — Farming in the Ump- qua Valley— Entrance to the Willamette Valley— Its Agricultural Wealth and its Rural Beauties— The Agriculture of Oregon— The Bains— The Summers and the Winters— The Townsand the People of the Willamette Valley— Portland : its Location and its Importancei, . 16» INDEX TO CONTENTS. XV LETTER XVIII. r^g^ THE COLUMBIA RIVER: ITS SCENERY AND ITS COMMERCE.— The Reach and Importance of the Columbia— Its Breach Through the Continental Mountains— Fort Vancouver and its History— Gen- eral Grant as Remembered Here— The Cascades- The Dalles— The Scenery of Mountain and River— Steamboats on the Upper Colum- bia—A Bit of Private Fun— The Scenery of the Columbia as com- pared with the Hudson, the Rhine and the Upper Mississippi — Mount Hood— The Great Mountain of Oregon— The Highest Peaks of the United States— The Oregon Steam Navigation Company— Its Rise, Progress and Purposes— Oregon's Pacific Railroad Cut Off— New Route-to the Carribou Country— Summing Up of Oregon— Its People and Their Promise, 184 LETTER XIX. THROUGH WASHINGTON TERRITORY.— From Portland to Monti- cello by Steamer- A Rough Road— A Hard Ride through the For- ests— Ferna, Blackberries and Snakes— Skookem Chuck — Olympia and Reception there— Pacific Tribute to the Stomach— Basis for a Religious Superstructure- Washington Territory— Its Namejand its Capabilities, "• • • • 191 LETTER XX. PUGET'S SOUND AND VANCOUVER'S ISLAND.— Great Lumber Market for the Pacific Coast— Saw-Mills and Ships on the Sound— r Victoria, and its English Features— British Taxes and Expendi- tures — Frazer River Gold Diggings— Prosperity of Victoria— Depot of the Hudson Bay Company— Grand Dinner to Mr. Colfax-^The^ San Juan Boundary Question— Summer Gardens under the Perpetual Snows— The Pacific Coast CUmate v&rsas that of New England, .... 201 LETTER XXI. BAN FRANCISCO: MR. COLFAX, AND HIS RECEPTION IN THE PACIFIC STATES.— Back to Frisco— Its Fascinations and its In- comparable Climate — The Town always "in the Draft" — The Loss of the Steamer Brother Jonathan — Speaker Colfax's Tour Complete — His Reception Described and Analyzed— His Speeches— The Mex- ican Question — His Speech at Victoria— Governor Bross and Mr. Richardson 213 LETTER XXII. THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIJl TREES.— First Impres- sions — The Great Natural Wonders and Beauties of the Western World— Distinguishing Features of the Valley— The Verdure of the Valley— Where the Zebra and Dr. Bellows' Church were Borrowed from— Various Shapes of the Mountain Rocks— The Water-falls of the Valley— The Journey to the Yosemite— Cession of the Valley and the Big Trees to the State of California— Our Party and its Experiences— The Excursion to the Big Trees : their Size : their Age : their Beauty: their Majesty, 223 XVi INDEX TO CONTENTS. LETTER XXIII. rAot. THE CHINESE ON THE PACIFIG COAST : OUE GRAND DINNER ' WITH THEM.— Number of Chinese Emigrants— What they Do— Raising Vegetables— Building the Pacific Railway— Servants in Families and Gleaners in the Coal Fields— How the White Men Treat them— Their Habits— Their Religion- Their Vices— How they are to be Refortned— The Chinese versus the Irish and the African — Chinese Merchants-^Their Intelligence and their Honesty-^A Din- ner with them — SpecSmen of Chinese Pigeon-English— How the Dinner Began, and how it Went On — The Chopsticks, and the Food— The Writer Rescued by the Police, and Taken Out to get "Something to Eat," 238 LETTER XXIV. THE GREAT THEME: THE PACIFIC RAILWAY.- How its Need is Felt— Anxiety for its Construction— The Hunger for "Home"— The Condition and Prospects of the Enterprise — Where Timber and Fuel are to come frqm — Routes over the Rocky Mountains — Frond Salt Lake to the Sierra Nevadas — What the Government has Donfe — , ; What the People are doing at each End — Lack of Enterprise and Progress at the ^ast — Superior Zeal and Progress at the West — Rival Routes over the Sierras^The W^on Roads and their Business — Mr. T. D. Judah and his Route for the Railroad — Rapid Progress up the Mountains— Four Thousand Chinese Laborers at Work — Five Tears Long Enough to Complete the Whole Line — ^Appeal to the Men of the Easii T 255 LETTER XXV. .COUNTRY EXCURSIONS: THE GEYSERS, VINEYARDS ANt) AGRICULTURE.— The Valleys of the Coast Range— How California is Constructed — Oakland — Fred Law Olmsted and Major Ralph W; Eirkham— The San Jose Valley and its Beauties- Excursion to tbe Geysers — Petalumar- Russian River Valley — Healdsburg — A Rare Whip and a Rare Drive— The Geysers Themselves — The Embodi- ment of H«ll— The Country in the Neighborhood— Napa Valley—' — Calistoga and Warm Springs — Sonoma Valley and its Vineyards — I California Wines- Champagne the Mother's Milk in CaliforniEt^Fa- cilit^es for Agriculture in California— Illustrative Crops, 2T4 LETTER XXVI. OF SAN FRANCISCO: BUSINESS MATTERS.— How San Francisco is Located^ItS Sand Hills and their Fickleness — Lone Mountain Cemetery— The City Gardens— Contrasts in Business and Social Lifb— Character of the Business Men — The Bankers — The Bank of Cali- 1 forniar— The Wells 4 Fargo Express and its Various Business— How it Rivals the Government in Carrying Letters — The Machine Shops and the Woolen Manufacturers- The Mission Woolen Mills and their Success with Chinese Labor — Cotton Manufactory and Other Industrial Enterprises — The Commerce of San Francisco, > 2SS INDEX TO CONTENTS. XVU LETTER XXVII. ^^^^ MIJJINQ IN CALIFORNIA; ITS VARIETIES, RESULTS. AND * PROSPEUrS.— Present Yield of the Mines of the Pauilio States- Processes sod Progress of Gold Seeking— The Soil Wnshings, the Deep Diggings, and Hydraulic Mining— Great Enterprises of the Latter— The Large Results— The VVasteof Nature bj Mining— '-Yuba Dam"iknd its Anecdote — The Quartz Mining and its Status— Grass Valley — Lola Montez,and the Uorse Milkman- Condition of Mining in Mariposa County— The Fremont Estate Come to Grief— General Prospects and Condition of Mining in California— The Idaho Mines —Mining in the Various States Compared— The Advantage for Cali- fornia—Personal Experiences in Visiting Mines — How We Went Into the Gould & Curry Mine, and How We Got Out, 302 LETTER XXVIII. SOCIAL LIFE IN SAN FRANCISCO: THE WOMEN: RELIGION AND MINISTERS.— Visit to the Cliff House— The Paeifio Ocean— The Seals and the Pelicans — A Ride along the Beach — The Chaos of Society in San Francisco — Domination of Materialism and Mascu- lini-m— The Women Savored with it— How the Ladies Dress— A Feminine Lunch Party— Actirity in Public Morals— Education and Religion- Churches and School-houses- Ambition for Smai t Preach- ers— Rev. Dr. Wadsworth, Rev. Dr. Scudder, Rev. Mr. Stebbins — The Country Parishes — Wide Field for Mis.^iionary Labor — The Pa- cific Railroad the Great Missionary of All — Rev. Mr. Stebbins* Views of California Life, 321 LETTER XXIX. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS: COST OF LIVING: THE CUR- KENCY QUESTION: THE MINT—Advantage of the Pacific Cli- mite for Invalids— Effects of the Climate upon reap- ers ; — you see them by the dozens in every little village, and they are the prominent feature of freight at the depots all along the raEroadSk The " Buck- eye-" is the favorite mower and reaper out here. The caterpillars are ruining the orchards along our route through Illinois and Missouri as painfully as at the East, and the farmers seem as indifferent ta their ravages. It is a sad sight — a thrifty young .^ orchard of apples, otherwise^ with half its trees stripped of all life by these pests, and the rest going in the same direction. But the overland coach waits ; General Connor has takeui command of our party ; and so, dear friends all, we sail out into this vast ocean of land., I shall think of you with every joy, and, possibly with selfish longing, with every pain. Do you think of me when the June roses open, with the dew of July mornings, with the fragrant cool of an August evening shower, when the katy-dids sing in September ; and, God willing, I shall be with you again ere the maples redden in OctO:ber» LETTER II. FROM THE MISSOURI TO THE PLATTE. Fort Kearney, Nebraska, May 24. A TRIFLE short of two days has bofne us two hundred and fifty miles, riding night and day, to this point, which is the junction of the Omaha, Nebraska City and Atchison roads for the grand central Over- land Route to Colorado and Utah and the Pacific Ter- ritories. Our road lay through the northern counties of Kansas and the southern of Nebraska; across the valleys of the Big and Little Sandy and the Big and Little Blue rivers ; and here we strike the Platte River, up which and its southern branch we continue till we reach Denver. We came through the region of the Indian surprises and attacks of last week, but met no hostile red-skin. We found abundant evidences, however, of their last year's swoop through the line, in ruins of houses and barns which they then burned, and stories of their terrible massacres. General Connor and his aid, Captain Jewett, are riding out with us on their way to Julesburg, the General's head-quarters, two hund- red miles farther west; and through the exposed parts of the line we had, as all the stages now have, "GALVANIZED YANKEES." II a guard of two to four cavalrymen. A few soldiers, with a half-dozen cool and well-armed passengers, are always enough to frighten off or drive, away any number of Indians less than a hundred. The red-skin fights shy, and only attacks where he is sure of little or no resistance ; and he is despised, as a foe, by all the military men and old stagers along the Plains. But the necessity of keeping up steady mail, and travel communication through this region, and of protecting the immense traffic in provisions, goods and machinery now in progress between the East and far West, enforces upon the government the duty of placing a strong military force all along the various leading roads, and then of sending out troops enough to drive the Indians to the far North and South, and keeping them there, or else of wholly exterminating them. Among the present limited number of troops on the Plain are two regiments of infantry, all from the rebel army. They have cheerfully re-enlisted into the federal service. We passed one of these regi- ments on the road yesterday, it having just come upon the line. They were all young but hardy looking men ; and the Colonel, who is of course from the old federal army, testified heartily to their subordination and sympathy with their new service. They are known in the army as "whitewashed rebs," or as they call themselves, "galvanized Yan- kees." Aside from the Indian question — ^which, indeed, gave only a pleasant zest to our progress, and taught us novices at which end to hold our pistols and 12 ACROSS THE CONTTNENr. rifles,r-we have had a most defightful ride so far. The weather has been clear and warm ; the com- pany intelligent and good natured; the food at the meal stations/ more excellent than thatof the hotels and restaurants on the railroads west of Chi' cago J the country and its scenes most novel and inspiring. We drove at an average of six miles an hour, including all stopsj, sometimes making full ten miles an hour on the road, in an easy and com- m:odious new Concord stage, such as are in use aH through this route, and with, horses as sprightly and in as good condition as you ever rode after in the good old days of staging- in the Connecticut River valley. Every ten or twelve miles we come to a sta- tion, sometimes in a village of log and turf cabins, but oftener solitary and alone; where we change horses ; and every two or three stations, we change drivers; but except fdr meals, for which half an hour is allowed, our stops do not exceed five miu- utes each. The country up to fifty miles of this point/ presents the characteristics of the finest prairie scenery of the West — illimitable stretches of ex- quisite green surface, rolling like long waves of the- sea, and broken at distances of miles by an inter- vale with a small stream, along whose banks are •scattered^ trees of elm and cotton-wood. Here and there is a "ranch" or farm with cultivated land, but these grow rarer and rarer — the uniform view is one wide roiling prairie, freshly green, spreading^ out as far as the eye can reach, with the distant fringe of thin forest by the water-course, and sending forth LIFE ON THE PLAINS. I3 and receiving the sun at morning and evening, as the ocean seems to discharge and accept it whea we travel its trackless space. No land cojdd be richer; no sight could more deeply impress you with the measureless extent of our country, and its unimproved capacities, than that which has been steadily before us for these two days. Within the last fifty miles, the soil grows thinner, the grass less rich, the sand hills of the Platte rise before the eye, and Plain, rather than Prairie, becomes the true descriptive name. The streams are few and scant, and the water muddy ; but wells give good drinking water all along the route, though oftentimes they have to be sunk as deep as fifty or seventy-five feet. It is too early yet for many of the prairie flowers ; but the rich, fresh green of the grass satisfies the eye. Scattered through it we catch frequent glimpses of the prai- rie hen, multiplying for the hunter's harvest in No- vember ; from its bare, last year's stalks floats out the liquid music of the larks ; the plover, paired as m Paradise, and never divorced even in this w'&st- ern country of easy virtue and cheap legislation, bob up and down their long necks, or flutter their wide wings in flight at every rod ; little blackbirds accompany you in great shoals; a lean, hungry- looking wolf steals along at a distance with one eye on you, and the other on the carcass of a horse or ox, dropped in sickness or fatigue from some passing train; away off near the horizon scamper most daintily and provokingly a half-dozen ante- lopes — too aear for restful palates, too far for wait- 14 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. ing rifles ; and over all and illuminating all floats an atmosphere so pure, so rare, so ethereal, as pic- tures every object with a pre-Raphaelite distinct- ness, makes distant things appear near, and sends the horizon far away in an unbounded stretch of slightly rounding green earth. Add to these a con* stant breeze, tempering the sun to a most grateful softness, and bearing an inspiring tonic to lungs "and heart ; sunsets and sunrises that rival Italy or the Connecticut valley ; a twilight prolonged as in England ; and a dryness and purity to the atmos- phere, that you certainly know not in New England, and guards the most exposed against colds, — and you may form some idea of -the life of our senses and sensibilities so far on this excursion. But I omit one great feature in the constant land- scape — the long trains of wagons and carts, with their teams of mules and oxen, passing to and fro on the road, going in empty, coming out laden with corn for man and beast, with machinery for the mining regions, with clothing, food and luxuries for the accumulating populations of Colorado, Utah and Montana, — ^for all these territories and the in- termediate populations draw their supplies from this quarter, and not from the California shore. The wagons are covered with white cloth ; each is drawn by four to six pairs of mules or oxen ; and the trains of them stretch frequently from one-quarter to one- third of a mile each. As they move along in the distance, they remind one of the caravans described in the Bible and other Eastern books. Turned out of the road on the green prairie, for afternoon' rest A STORM ON THE PLAINS. 1 5 or a night's repose, the wagons drawn around in a circle, as a sort of barricade against Indians or pro- tection against storm, and the animals turned loose t;o feed, and wandering over the rounding prairie for a mile — "cattle upon a thousand hills ;" at night their camp fires burning ; — in any position, or under any aspect, they present a picture most unique and impressive, indeed. I have seen nothing like it be- fore; and it summons up many a memory of ori- ental reading. Just now, these trains are moving more compactly than usual, for protection against Indian attacks ; but their numbers and the amount of goods they are hauling, give you an Idea of the magnitude and importance of the commerce across these Plains, that neither bare figures, nor parts of speech can impart. The mule trains make from fifteen to twenty miles a day ; and. the oxen about twelve to fifteen. They depend entirely upon the prairies for food as they go along ; and indeed the animals grow stronger and fatter as they move on in their summer campaign of work, coming out of their winter rest poor and scrawny, and going back into it' in the fall, fat and hearty. The chief sensation and experience of our ride so far was a storm of thunder and lightning, hail and rain, upon the Plains. Such storms are mem- orable in all travel or life in this country for se- verity ; and we had one of the very best of them. It struck us this morning, about six miles back, and just as we had come to the banks of the Platte. First came huge, rolling, ponderous masses of cloud in the west, massing up and separating into sections 1 6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, vn a'more majestic and threatening style than our party had ever before seen in the heavens. Then followed a tornado of wind. Horses, coach and es- cort turned their backs to the breeze, and bending, awaited its passing. It stripped us of every loose bit of baggage ; and we sent out scouts for their recovery. Next fell the hail, pouring as swift rain, and as large and heavy as bullets. The horses quailed before its terrible pain. Our splendid quar- tette of blacks careered and started over the prai- rie ; we tumbled out of the coach to save ourselves one peril, and so met the other — the fire of the heavenly hail; it bit like wasps, it stunned like blows. But horses and coach were to be saved j and after a long struggle, in which the coach came near overturning, and the horses to running away, in dismay and fright, and our driver and military friends . proved themselves real heroes, and every- body got wet, the hail subsided into a pouring rain, the horSes were quieted and restored to their places, and we got into a drowned coadh, ourselves like drowned rats, and hastened to refuge, over a prairie flooded with water, in this hospitable station. We are remaining here a few hours to dry our clothes and baggage, receive and send dispatches, see the quarters of the military establishment, over which Colonel Livingston presides, and put ourselves in order .for another two days' ride to Julesburg, half way to our first grand destination at Denver. Speaker Colfax is receiving every attention pos- sible from such people as there are along this line.j everybody seems to know him — many to be his old THE GRAND RIDE A TRIUMPH. 1 7 personal friends in Indiana; the stage proprietors and their agents are extending to him and his party every hospitality and courtesy ; and the military offi- cials only such protection as they are now accord- ing to all passengers, and such politeness as their good breeding is sure to suggest. For myself, I enjoy the grand ride much better than I expected ; but for the remaining twinges of sciatica, it would be unalloyed pleasure ; and the anticipated -sleepless night rides prove but small inconvenience. LETTER III. THROUGH THE PLAINS TO THE MOUNTAINS. Denver, Colorado, May 29. Our coach rolled into this town, the leading one of Colorado Territory, and lying under the very shadow of the Rocky Mountains, on Saturday noon, exactly "on time," and in less than five days from the Missouri River. It was a magnificent, uninter- rupted stage, ride of six hundred and fifty miles, niuch more endurable in its discomforts, much more exhilarating in its novelties, than I had anticipated. From Fort Kearney, where we struck ■ the Platte River, and finished the first third of the distance, we found the soil growing thinner and thinner ; the sand hills rose and rolled away in regular serial form, north and south ; and we passed on to and through the great Central Desert of the Continent, stretching from the far distant north to the Gulf of MexiiJo, and separating by four hundred miles of almost uninhabitable space the agriculturally rich prairies of the Mississippi valley, from the min- erally rich slopes and valleys of the Rocky Moun- tains. Yet not a desert, as such is commonly in- terpreted — not \Vorthless, by any means. The soil THE SOIL OF THE PLAINS. ig is fat, indeed, compared with your New England pine plains. It yields a coarse and thin grass that, green or dry, makes the best food for cattle that the Continent offers. It is, indeed, the great Pasture of the nation. This is its present use and its future profit. Now it supports the machinery of the com- merce of the two great wings of the nation, that it both separates and connects. Then — when rail- road shall supersede cattle and mules — it will feed us with beef and mutton, and give wool and leather immeasurable. Let us, then, not despise the Plains ; but turn their xapacities to best account. The Platte is a broad, shallow but swift river, fur- nishing abundant good water for drinking and for limited irrigation, but offering no possibilities of navigation — not even for ferriage. When it is too swift and strong for fording, it must be let alone, and a route on either shore kept, or the falling wa- ters waited for. The soil of the valley and of the Plains, which it crosses, is not by any means mere sand, but rather a tough, cold, sandy loam, with an admixture of clay. It is too cold and dry for corn and vegetables. Wheat and barley may be raised on its best acres, with the help sometimes of a sim- ple irrigation ; but the pasture is its manifest des- tiny and use. There is a steady, imperceptible rise from the Missouri to the Rocky Mountains ; half way, we get above the dew-falling point ; and here at Denver, at the base of the mountains, we are five thousand feet above the level of the sea. The days are warm, however; the sun pours down over its shadeless level with, a hot, burning power; but a 20 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. cool wind tempers its bitterness, and at night the air is absolutely cold. This is the universal rule of all our western country, beyond the Mississippi val' ley, and distinguishes the summers of its whole ex- tent from those of the East. This valley of the Platte, through these Plains, is the natural highway across the Continent. Other valleys and routes have similar advantages, but in minor degree : this unites the most ; for it is cen- tral — it is on the line of our great cities and our great industries. East and West, and it is the long- ' est, most continuous. A smooth, hard stage road is made by simply driving over it ; a railroad awaits only sleepers and rails. Here and there, at rare in- tervals, is a gully or dry creek or petty stream to cross ; but this, the longest and best stage road in the world, has not to-day a quarter of a mile of simplest bridging; and a railroad of six hundred and fifty miles would not need a mile. There is an occasional stretch of heavy sand ; after a rain also of temporary mud ; but at this season of the year a speed of ten miles an hour could easily be attained by horses, with proper relays and a light load, throughout the whole distance. This would reduce the transit to three da^ ; but with ponderous mails, a heavy coach, and six to fourteen passengers, the five days occupied in the journey constitutes a great triumph of stage management and horse-flesh ca- pacity. The region is substantially uninhabitable ; every ten or fifteen miles is a stable of the stage proprie- tor, and every other ten or fifteen miles an eating- WHAT WE HAD TO EAT. 21 house; perhaps as often a petty ranch or farm- house, whose owner lives by selling hay to the trains of emigrants or freighters ; every fifty or one hundred miles you will find a small grocery and blacksmith shop ; and about as frequently is a military station with a company or two of United States troops for protection against the Indians. This makes up all the civilization of the Plains. The. barns and houses are of logs or prairie turf, piled up layer on layer, and smeared over or between with a clayey mud. The turf and mud make the best houses, and the same material is used for mil- itary forts and for fences around the cattle and horse yards. Their roofs, where covered, are a foot thickness of turfs, sand, clay, an'd logs or twigs, with an occasional inside lining of skins or thick cloth. Floors are oftenest such as nature offers only; and, as at some of the Washington hotels, the spoons at the table do not always go around. Mex- ican terms prevail : an inclosure for animals is called a "corral ;" a house of turf and mud is of "adobe;" and a farm-house or farm a "ranch." Our meals at the stage stations continued very good throughout the ride ; the staples were bacon, eggs, hot biscuit, green tea and coffee ; dried peaches and apples, and pies were as uniform ; beef was oc- casional, and canned fruits and vegetables were fur- nished at least half of the time. Each meal was the same ; breakfast, dinner and supper were undistin- guishable save by the hour ; and the price was one dollar or one dollar and a half each. The devasta- tions of the Indians last summer and fall, and the 22 ACROSS THE -CONTINENT. fear of their repetition, form the occasion and excuse for enormous prices for everything now upon the Plains and in the Territories on this side the moun- tains. Twenty-five cents a pound has been charged the past year for transporting any sort of goods. The government and the stage company have paid ten and twelve dollars a bushel for corn, all of which has to be brought up from the Missouri and Missis- sippi valleys, and from seventy-five to one hund- red dollars a ton for hay. But General Connor means to emancipate himself from the hay specu- lators hereafter ; he has bought twenty-five mowing machines, which are to be distributed among the military stations, and used by the soldiers upon the generous common grass of the river bottoms for gathering a winter supply of hay. The stage com- pany is also pursuing the same policy. Wood costs on the Plains seventy-five dollars a cord, so distant are the thin forests that furnish it ; lumber, when it is used at all, which is rarely, for it must be freighted from one end or the other of the -route, one hundred and fifty to two hundred dollars a thousand; a wagon and team of oxen (five pairs) twenty to twenty-five ddllars a day ; common labor two and three dollars a day and board. And at Denver, the end of the route, here is a specimen of the prices to-day : potatoes twenty-five cents a pound or fifteen dollars a bushel ; flour fifteen and twenty cents a pound ; corn eighteen cents a pound or ten dollars a bushel; mechanics and laborers eight and ten dollars a day ; beef forty cents a pound, and hams fortyrfive to fifty cents ; girls as housb servants ten SCENES BY THE ROADSIDE. 23 dollars a week. These rates are likely to be cut down one third or one half during the present sea- son, however, as General Connor gives security to transportation across the Plains, and competition in freighting and merchandising works its legitimate influences. The ride from Fort Kearney gave us but few new- experiences. The "noble red man" disappointed both fear and hope. He gave us a wide berth; perhaps he had intuitive knowledge of our brave hearts and our innumerable Colts', Smith & Wes- sons', Remingtons', Ballards', and double-barreled shot-guns — certainly we. bristled with the munitions of war like a fortification prepared for assault ; more likely he saw the four cavalrymen that constantly galloped by our side frftn station to station, with pistols at holsters and rifles slung in the saddles, — for bloodthirsty as our red brethren are, when de- fenseless men or women or children come in their way, they have a holy horror of well-armed soldiers, breech-loading rifles, and magazine pistols. They easily learn and most faithfully practise the maxim of civilization, that discretion is the better part of valor. Animal and vegetable life, too, grew scantier ; the antelope eluded all rifle shot ; only a prairie heft was brought down ; We were too early foi: the buffalo, and not one crossed our path : as the Plains grew more barren, the prickly pear and the sage bush became plenty in their tough unfruitfolness ; the road was marked more frequently with the carcasses of oxen and horses — scarcely ever were we out of 24 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. sight of their bleaching bones ; occasionally the pa- thos of a human grave gave a deeper touch to our thoughts of death upon the Plains, deepened,, toe, by the knowledge that the wolf would soon violate its sanctity, and scatter the sacred bones of father, mother or child over the waste prairie ; — ^the wiser instinct of the Indian showed itself, once in a while, in the sepulture of their kindred above ground — for, rolling his dead in a blanket, he places the body in mid-air between two forked poles, ^ix or eight feet high, and so, if not poised for an upward flight, at least safe from vulture profanation ; — and anon we grew gay over the lively little prairie dogs, looking half rat and half squirrel, as they scampered through the grass or dove, with a low, chirruping bark, back into their holes. These %nimals are smaller and more contemptible than I had expected ; their holes, marked by a hillock of sand, are congregated in villages, sometimes extending a quarter or half a mile along the roadside. Only a pair occupy each hole, but we hear the same story, that earlier trav- elers record for us, that a snake and an owl share their homes with them. The snakes W6 did not see ; but the owl, a species no larger than a robin, solettin, stiff and straight, stood guard at many of the holes. We passed through an alkali region, where the soil for two or three feet seemed saturated with soda, and so poisons the fallen water that, if drank by man or beast after a shower, it is sure to be fatal. All the water of this region and the Plains has a savor of alkali or sulphur in it, but not to an un- A SOLDIERS BREAKFAST. 2$ healthy degree. We stopped at Fremont Spring, named for its discovery and use by the great ex- plorer, on his original trip through this region, and found it pure, sweet water, slightly marked with sulphur. We were not without our daily paper ; for we stopped the incoming stage and had the latest California journals, but, though they gave us fresh news from the Pacific shore, their eastern intelli- gence was indeed a twice-told tale. At the tele- graph stations, however, — for those bare but won- der-working poles and wires ran in sight all along the road, and kept us in their mysterious sympathy with friends and home, — we had a special privilege of reading the news as it ran East and West, and so we were up with the world, though so far out of it in all material drcumstance. We dropped General Connor, who had been our fellow passenger from Atchison, early Friday morn- ing, at Julesburg, where he has his head-quarters for the summer, and where the Platte River forks, one branch extending north to Fort Laramie and the South Pass through the mountains, and the other marking our southerly line to Denver. Julesburg is only a village of tents and turf forts and- barns, affording no facilities for a luxurious military life ; but it is well located for General Connor's plans for protecting the commerce of the Plains from the In- dians, and for punishing them for their past offenses and present threatenings against it. We took a parting breakfast with him in camp, just at sunrise, eating canned chicken and oysters off tin plates, and drinking our coffee with the brownest of sugar 26 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. and the most concentrated of milk, all in the sim- plest and most barren of border life. But we parted from him with real regret and a large respect. He had shown himself to us both a genuine gentleman and a valuable commandant ; and we found reason in our personal acquaintance to confirm the judg- ment of the people of all this region, that he is of all men, whom the government has assigned to the duty, the most fit and efficient for restraining the Ijidians, for protecting and developing the interests of government and people, for settling the Mormon problem, for giving order and unity to the incoher- ent and chaotic social and material life of all this vast region. General- Connor has been for two years in com- mand at Utah, and of his administtation there and his views of the Mormons, I shall have occasion to speak when I am on the spot It is only two months since he had assigned to him, also, the pro- tection of the Overland Routes across the Plains ; but everybody hereabouts notes with pride and con- fidence the change already introduced. The sol- diers have ceased to be thieves and bullies ; a new and better social tone is visible in all the mining re- gion ; the laws are better respected ; soldiers guard the whole central line of travel, and cavalrymen escort every stage — ^there is no longer any leal dan- ger, or will not be, so soon as a few more troops can be put in their places, in traveling or freighting over the maiji road from the river to the mountains ; the Indians will speedily be driven back to their res- ervations, and forced to submit to whatever terms the GENERAL CONNORS PERSONAL HISTORY. 2/ government may dictate ; prices will fall along the Plains and in the Territories on the eastern slopes of the mountains ; and all the business of this vast and rich region will receive, under certainty and safety, an impetus, and gain an uniformity, that have never before marked their history. Whether the In- dians shall be wholly exterminated ; or forced into submission and half civilization in limited territo- ries, undisputed for the present by the white ; or set to work upon the Pacific Railroad — these are not points for General Connor to decide. The choice belongs to the government at Washington. But General Connor will certainly restrain them from violence, and punish them for their barbarities. He believes they may be made useful in building the Pacific Railroad ; and he has proposed to fur- nish two thousand of one or two tribes, who have already submitted to his authorit}^ and whom he is now supporting at an enormous expense far distant from his base of supplies, to the railroad company for an experiment. General Connor has a personal history character- istic of America. He was born in Ireland, came. early to New York with his parents, enlisted in the> United States cavalry, when a young man, for ser- vice in our Indian territory, served out his regular? term, lived in Texas, rejoined the atmy during the Mexican war, and became a captain, removed to California, prospered in business as a farmer and otherwise, again took up arms for his country when the rebellion broke out, and was appointed colonel of a California regiment, and thence, by his well- 28 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. recognized experience and his services in this re- gion, was advanced to a brigadiership, and assigned, some two or three years ago, to the command of the military district of Utah. He is an intelligent and accomplished gentleman, in the prime of life and power, strict in discipline, clear and strong in thought and in its expression; and if willing to continue in the service, as I am sure the govern- ment ought to be most earnest to have him, and sustained in his policy, he will most honorably and usefully connect his name with the disposition of the two great questions of our national responsi- bility and duty in this quarter — the Mormons and the Indians. Twenty-five years ago, General Con- nor left Fort Leavenworth, on the Missouri River, a private in the United States regular army. Last week he visited it a second time, a Brigadier-gen- eral and the Commander of the District of the Plains, comprising a larger territory, and embracing more delicate and important responsibilities than any other single military district in the country. The contrast of the two facts tells the whole story of his character and his history, and sustains my judgment of him. The reception of Speaker Colfax and his party on their arrival here was very enthusiastic and flatter- ing. .They were met and welcomed by Governor Evans and other territorial officers and a committee of the citizens of Denver ; in the evening there was a large popular gathering to pay personal respect to the visitors; and Mr. Colfax, Mr. Bross, and Mr.- Richardson made eloquent and effective speeches. MR. COLFAX S SPEECH AT DENVER. 29 Mr. Colfax was especially happy and felicitous ; pub- lic speaking is as natural and easy to him as swim- ming to a duck; and he repeated President Lin- coln's parting suggestions and messages to the mi- ners with pathetic fidelity, and they were received with mournful interest and deep pleasure. Public and private courtesies are showered upon him and his friends. They start this morning for a visit to the mines and the mountains, which will occupy four days, when they will return here, and again take up their progress westward, in the long ride to Utah, next Saturday. They are all in good health and the best of spirits — not alcoholic — and very glad they came ; especially your s. b. 3*. LETTER IV. THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS AND THEIR GOLD MINES. Denver, Colorado, June 2. We have been spending an interesting week among the Rocky Mountains ; riding and driving up and down their rugged sides, thtough their nar- row valleys, and over their occasional plains; ford- ing their turbulent streams; gazing with never- ceasing delight upon their various forms of beauty, under cloud and storm and sunshine, their snow- capped peaks, their deep ravines and narrow gorges, their purpling, shadowed sides and tops, their high pinnacles of rock, monuments of Creation and His- tory; and then, descending into the golden mines, following tortuous veins of precious rock, hundreds of feet beneath the surface, tracing the specks of gold among the comparative dross of iron and cop- per and lead, hobnobbing with the dusty miners in their dreary workshops, faintly illuminated with oc- casional candles, and then, ascending to day and light again, watching the processes ^for extracting the wealth from the ore,: — the irresistible grinding of the "stamps, the washing with much water, the securing with copper and mercury, the after-delay- THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS VS. THE ALPS. 31 ing with blankets : all the rarest wonders and beau- ties of Nature, all the divinest patience of Labor and the faith of Knowledge, all the mysteries of Science and the intricacies of Art have been spread before us during these, crowded days among the mines and the mountains of Colorado. How the mind runs back to one's youthful, vague, mythical knowledge of the Rocky Mountains in their actual presence ! How difficult to realize that, whereas, twenty years ago, they and their location and character and the region about them were al- most unknown, now, two Weeks from home, I am sporting familiarly under their shadows, following tediously up their sides, galloping in the saddle around their summits, drinking from their streams, playing snow-ball in June with their imperishable snow. banks, descending into their very bowels, and finding companionship and society as various and as cultured and as organized as in New England; cities of thousands of inhabitants, not only at their bas^ but away up in their narrow valleys, eight and nine thousand feet above the sea level! All this seems dream-like, yet weary head and sore feet and stern statistics testify to the reality. ^ As to the mountains, as a natural spectacle, they are first cousins to the Alps. When the Pacific Railroad is done, our Switzerland will be at our very doors. All my many and various wanderings in the European Switzerland, three summers ago, spread before my eye no panorama of mountain beauty surpassing, nay none equaling, that which burst upon my sight at sunrise upon the Plains, when 32 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. fifty miles away from Denver ; and which rises up before me now as I sit writing by the window in this city, prom far south to far north, stretching around in huge semi-circle, rise the everlasting hills, one upon another, one after another, tortuous, pre- senting every variety of form and surface, evefy shade of cover and color, up and on until we reach the broad, snow-covered range that marks the high- est summits, and tells where Atlantic and Pacific meet and divide for their long journey to their far distant shores. To the North rises the king of the range. Long's Peak, whose top is fourteen thousand six hundred feet high ; to the. South, giving source to the Arkansas and Colorado, looms up its brother. Pike's Peak, to the hight of thirteen thousand four hundred feet. These are the salient features of the belt before us ; but the intervening and succeeding summits are scarcely less commanding, and not much lower in hight. Right up from Denver stands the mountain top that was the scene of Bierstadt's " Storm in the Rocky Mountains," and up and down these mountain sides were taken many of the stud- ies that he is reproducing on canvas with such de- light to his friends and fame for himself. No town that I know of in all the world has such a panorama of perpetual beauty spread before it as Denver has in thi;s best and broadest belt of the Rocky Moun- tains, that rises up from the valley in which it is built, and winds away to the right and to the left as far as the eye can see — fields- and woods and rocks and snow, mounting and melting away to the sky in a line often indistinguishable, and sending THE COLORADO GOLD MINES. 33 back tke rays of the sun in colors and shapes that paint and pencil never reproduced, that poetry never described. These are sights that the eye never tires of-^these are visions that clear the heart of earthly sorrow, and lead the soul up to its best and highest sources. Leaving nature for the material, beauty for booty, fancy for fact, I come to speak of the mineral wealth and development of this section of the Rocky Mountains. And, unless I deny the evidence of the senses, and the testimony of experience and knowledge, I must coincide in the inexhaustibleness of the one and the wonderfulness of the other. This whole vast range of mountains, that divides our Continent, seems indeed crowded with veins of rich mineral ore. They run into and through the hill-sides as the bars of a gridiron, — every hundred feet, every fifty feet, every twenty feet. There is no end to them in number ; there is no apparent limit to their depth ; one hundred feet, three hund- red feet, and four hundred feet have the miners sunk shafts^ and did we descend, but the veins of ore hold their course and their richness undimin- ished, oftenest enlarged. The chiefest development of these mines in this territory lies along and up the Clear CreeH, and cen- ters around its sources some forty miles up and in the mountains west from Denver. Here, along the -creek and some narrow gulches leading into it, within the space of five miles, is gathered a population of some six to seven thousand. The principal villages are Central City, Black Hawk and Nevada, holding 3 34 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. rank in the order named. These are most uncom- fortably squeezed into little narrow ravines, and stuck into the hill-sides, on streets the narrowest and most tortuous that I ever saw in America; some houses held up in dizzy hights on stilts, others bur- rowed into the stones of the hill, with a gold "lode" in the back yard, and often a well issuing from a rock of precious metals. But here these towns are, thriv- ing, orderly, peaceable, busy, supporting two of them each its daily paper, with churches and schools, and all the best materials of government and society that the East can boast of. Down in the close val- leys, and up the steep hill-sides to the very top, rise the mills for grinding out the gold, or the shanties that cover the shafts that lead down after the ore. Farther away, on the mountains, thick as ant- hills or prairie-dog-holes, and looking the same, are " lodes ' or leads of mineral, discovered, dug into, pre-empted, but not worked — hundreds, thousands of them, with fortunes or failures involved in their development, ready to be tried when the discoverer gets time or money, or turned over to a Wall street stock company of five millions capital. Forty or fifty miles below Denver, near what is called the South Park, a beautiful table-land of meadow and wood between Pike's Peak and the main range, is the second center of mineral devel- opment in Colorado territory; but this one upon Clear Creek is, as yet, the scene of largest improve- ment and population. Other sections of the terri- tory are probably as rich in valuable ore ; some are well believed to be much more so ; no part of the THE QUARTZ MILLS. 35 mountdns may be held wholly barren ; it happens only that these localities were most attainable, and were first lit upon by the edrly comers. What is called gulch mining, or washing the sand and soft and pulverized rock of the valley, for the gold that ages of rains have filtered out of the solid rock of the mountains, is about over in Colorado — ^we see only now its abundant ruins in sluices, piles of worked over earth, and the rotting simple machin- ery sometimes used; yet in some of the fresher gulches, this work is still profitable; and we saAV pan washings that turned out one, two and three dollars to the pan. I have a dollar's worth of gold dust that I saw washed out from about three quarts of earth, in less than ten minutes of time. The chief attention now is given to the solid mining ; but for various causes, principally from the high prices of labor and provisions, all mining here has been dull for nearly a year. Not more than twenty or twenty-five of the one hundred stamp mills in the territory are now at work. With labor and food from three to four times as high as at the East, growing mainly out of the interruption to com- munication by the. Indians, and the inflation of the currency last year, and the short supply of laborers because of the war, and with gold now reduced to nearly par,, mining hardly pays expenses. When expenses get back, as they are soon likely to do, to the currency standard, the business will again be- come profitable, and be actively resumed. Prepar- ations are fast making for this now, and mills and mines are being set in order, and resuming work. 36 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Another reason of tlie dull times is that much of the best property has been changing hands, passing from the early or original owners and workers into joint stock companies, owned mainly in the East, which in some cases are not conducting the busi- ness so wisely as their predecessors, and in others are stopping for a better labor and supply market, or to enlarge and improve their works; Again, it is believed the mining interest is on the eve of great improvements rn the procesises of extracting the gold from its associate metals and sulphides, and owners of mines and mills are experimenting in this direction, or are content to wait for the results of others' experiments. The common process of crushing the ore into fine powder, and then washing the same upon cop- per plates coated with quicksilver, which collects the disintegrated gold, or is supposed to, it is well ascer- tained gets but about twenty-five per cent, of all the precious metal. Three-quarters goes off in the " tail- ings," or' refuse, as they are called. With such a ■waste, only the most valuable of the ore pays iex- penses at such times as these. Good ore yields about one hundred dollars in gold per cord, or twelve dol- ^lars per ton, under the stamping and quicksilver pro- cess. This leaves a fair margin under favorable management, for getting out the ore «costs about forty dollars a cord, hauling five dollars, and crush- ing and extracting twenty dollars. Choice ores yield three hundred dollars a cord; but these are rare. The difficulty is not in separating the gold from the pure copper, iron or lead, or the quartz with which NEW INVENTIONS FOR EXTRACTING GOLD. 37 it is compacted ; bat the sulphurets of these metals, which suffuse and coat the whole, are the plague aad mystery. These cover and hold the gold in a stern chemical lock, how to break which in a simple, ef- fective way is the great study of the mineral chem- ists and mining capitalists. Various processes are on Jtrial ; one which we saw applies a hot flame and a brisk wind to all the pulverized ore, which changes its chemical character, burns up the sulphurets, and leaves the metals all free; then they are scoured, so as to brighten the gold, and then washed, as originally, in copper pans coated with quicksilver^ wHich, better than any other article in these days of paper currency and "forgotten coin, knows the gold when it sees it, and sticks to it with fraternal embrace. This process was getting twenty-five dolr lars a ton from the "tailings" or refuse of the old or common process, or twice as muph as was origi- nally obtained. Another process has obtained three hundred and seventy-five dollars from less than a ton of "tailings," which is probably many times what the original ore produced by the common stamping and washing. The object desired is to "desulphurize" the ore; both these inventions do this, though in different ways. When the thing is done, and this season can hardly pass until it is sat- isfactorily accomplished, we shall see the Colorado mines yielding from five hundred to eight hundred dollars per cord of ore, instead of from fifty to two hundred and fifty dollars as now. (A cord is rated at about eight tons, though different ores yary very much in weight.) This rate of production will at 4 38 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. once put a new phase upon the business, afford al- most any price for labor and supplies, redeem all the mining Companies from whatever present em- barrassments they feel, stimulate- the investment of capital in these mines with great rapidity, and even, by generous dividends, go far to excuse that vicious system of putting up a mining company's stock, to one, two, three and five millions, when the actual cash investment was not over as many hundreds of thousands. This last habit of parties interested in the mining business has had a most fatal influence upon the whole interest ; the small dividends upon large, many tinies watered capitals have erroneously representeid the state of the business ; and the suspicions and dis- trust, that the operation has surely scattered among outside capitalists, have hindered if not forbidden investments. Few or none of the companies now operating here have spent over two hundred and fifty thousand or three hundred thousand dollai-s for their mines, machinery and mills, yet their capi- tals are reckoned by millions ; and of course in hard times like these they can afford no adequate, seduc- tive dividends on such- swollen sums. How much better it would be to have the shares in a half mil- lion company, worth twice the par value, and receiv- ing dividends of twelve to fifty per cent., than with a nominal capital of two or three millions, the stock selling for seventy-five dollars per share, and receiv- ing small dividends with doubt and irregularity, no honest, sensible man can fail to see. I meet no manager of a mine here, whether an old miner or THE PRODUCT OF THE' COLORADO MINES. 39 an agent from the home capitalists, who does not condemn, as foolish in itself, a fraud upon the public, and a damage to the whole mining interest, this practice of making the nominal capitals from two to ten times the actual, in the generally vain hope of gulling the flats in Wall street or in New England country towns.' This mining business of the West is too promising in real profit, too legitimate and necessary to the national wealth and development, to be trifled with in this weak and wretched way. ^ The gross production of the Colorado gold mines is not correctly known. The United States mint reports only ten millions in all up to July first of last year. This puts the Territory next to California in total product, ranking her above North Carolina or Georgia in all their history ; but it gives her only a small proportion of the whole production of the nation from the beginning till now, — ^ten millions out of six* hundred millions, California being accred- ited with all but about forty millions of the gross amount. Other authorities give Colorado's total production as over fifty millions, accrediting her with twenty millions in a single year (1864;) but these figures are certainly as far the other way. An intelligent authority here (General Pierce, the sur- veyor-general of the Territory,) gives me the follow- ing estimates: 1862, ten millions; 1863, eight mil- lions ; 1864, five millions. The falling off" indicates nothing as to the real wealth of the mines, only changes in the business of producing, and the nat- ural results of high prices. The year 1862 embraced successful gulch mining, and the first of the .quartz 40 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. mining, under most favorable circumstances, follow- ing a year (1861) of depression and non-production far more fruitful of croakers than 1864 and the first half of 1865 have been. Just now the new Territo- ries of Idaho and Montana, in the far North, are drawing off the floating population, the gulch min- ers, and those eager for fortunes at a jump. The day of these is over here. Slow and sure is now the motto for Colorado, as for California. Her ca- pacity is proven, admitted; capital, science, labor and machinery will return twenty-five, fifty and one hundred per cent, on their investments; but gold .eagles are no longer picked up by the basketsfuU, and hundred thousand dollar fortunes in a day or a month, are not to be had here,= — ^but further on, if at all. The reports from Idaho and Montana, particu- larly the latter, are indeed astonishing; the gulch mining, discovered and developing in Montana, is reliably reported to me as far richer than any ever realized in California or Colorado, paying steadily an ounce of gold (sixteen to eighteen dollars) a day to the man, and in some gulches two and three ounces a.day. But these placers will soon be worked out ; these Territories, like their predecessors, will speedily come down to the hard-pan, and have to pick and powder and stamp and melt out their gold from the solid mountains that hold the original de- posits. Montana and Idaho, too, must hold out greater inducements at first, in order to secure their peopling and development, for the one is dependent on Oregon for supplies, and eight hundred miles IRON AND COAL IN COLORADO. 4J away fram a base at that; while Montana has to come this way for everything to eat and work with, and is at least one thousand six hundred miles away from railway and water communication. All reports, all facts, whether floating in the air from mouth to mouth, or ground out by hard expe- rience, and put down in black and white, go to sus- tain the broadest. and fullest meaning of the dying statement of President Lincoln, that the United States hold the treasury of the world; and establish beyond reasonable doubt, that the countries of and adjacent to the Rocky Mountains are freighted with the most precious of ores — gold first, next silver, in which Nevada and Utah are most conspicuous, and Colorado not found wanting, and then copper (with which the Colorado mineral veins are' richly loaded), and also lead, iron and coal. On the Plains, near the foot of the mountains, coal and iron are already found in abundant quantities, and are being mined and put to practical use. Found, too, just where they are most needed, to take the place of the wood, now fast being drained from the mountains, and furnish the material for the machinery necessary to work over the ore and make available the finer metals. Irrigation, already entered upon on a large scale, even here, will supply agriculture with its lacking ; and through and by all these means combining, and worked with the energy and enterprise of the Amer- ican people, stimulated by the great profits sure to be realized from wise and persevering use of the opportunities, the western half of the American na- tion will fast move forward in civilization and popu- 42 .' ACROSS THE CONTINENT. lation ; this wilderness will blossom as the rose, and the East and the West will stand alike equal and together, knowing no jealousy,, and only rivaling each other in their zeal for knowledge, liberty and civilization. But of what effect upon the currencies and the values of the world will be all this tide of gold and silver pouring into the lap of nations? Will their commerce and populations grow in ex- tent and want in equal proportions, and absorb what is to be so lavishly fed out to them .' Perhaps so. But these promises of the American nation and these resulting queries are rich in thought and study. LETTER V. OF PERSONS, NOT THINGS, Denver, Colorado, June 3. Our week in Colorado is ended ; we are off this morning for the seven days' stage ride north and west along the base of the Rocky Mountains, and through them at Bridger's Pass, to Salt Lake City, where we expect to worship with Brigham Young in his tabernacle on Sunday week. While here and in the adjacent mountains, Mr. Colfax has made half a dofen speeches, and redelivered his Chicago eu- logy upon President Lincoln, the latter at the re- quest of Governor Evans on the occasion of the national mourning (June ist,) for the loss of our lamented chief magistrate. He has been received with distinguished honor, made a most favorable impression, and encouraged the miners and people of the Territory in many ways by his presence and his words. Their compliments to him ended last evening by a grand gala supper at the principal ho- tel in this town, in which the leading officials of the Territory, General Connor, and the ladies and gen- tlemen of the village to the number of over one hundred participated. Though the tickets were 44 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. twelve dollars each, which is a fair specimen of prices this way, they were soon in earnest demand at an advance of three dollars. The entertainment proved a brilliant one in every respect ; various and bountiful and elegant as a feast ; graceful and grace- fully rendered by both ladies and gentlemen as a compliment; and humorous, eloquent, interesting, and inspiring in its speeches. We go on in our journey with a rich sense of the hospit^ity and the kindness, the enterprise and the intellectual and so- cial culture of the people of Colorado, both in its City of the Plains and its Cities of the Mountains. Never was progress in wealth, in social and political organization, in the refinements of American home life, more rapid and more marked than in the brief Jiistory thus far of Colorado. Soon she will enter the Union as a State, holding not only the elements but the acquired realities of a noble and proud one, and contributing largely, as she has steadily, done even as a Territory, to the common profit of the na- tion. From the beginning, Colorado has always sent more gold to the East than she has brought back in goods ; and she is destined to be permar nently a profitable partner in the household. Your readers may like to know more of my com- panions on this long journey before we go farther on. Let me introduce them. As a public man, everybody knows about Mr. Colfax ; how prominent and useful he has been through six terms in Con- gress, and how, by virtue of his experience, ability and popularity, he has come to be Speaker, and stands before the country one of its best and most PORTRAIT OF MR. COLF'AX. 45 promising statesmen. But tliis is not all, nor the best of the man. He is not one of those, to whom distance lends enchantment ; he grows near to you, as you get near to him ; and it is, indeed, by his personal qualities of character, by his simplicity, frankness, genuine' good nature, and entire devoted- ness to what he considers right, that he has princi- pally gained and holds so large a place on the public arena. Mr. Colfax is short, say five feet six, weighs one hundred and forty, is young, say forty-two, has brownish hair and light blue eyes, is a childless wid- ower, drinks no intoxicating liquors, smokes a la General Grant, is tough as a knot, was bred a prin- ter and editor, but gave up the business for public life, and is the idol of South Bend and all adjacent cies. There are no rough points about him ; kind* liness is the law of his nature; — while he is never backward in differing from others, nor in sustaining his views by arguments and by votes, he never is personally harsh in utterance, nor unkind in feeling, and he can have no enemies but those of politics, and most of these find it impossible to cherish any personal animosity to him; In tact, he is unbounded, and with him it is a gift of nature, not a studied art ; and this is perhaps one of the chief secrets of his success in life. His industry is equally exhaustless ; —he is always at work, reading, writing, talking, seeing, studying — I can't conceive of a single un- progressive, unimproved hour in all his life. He is not of brilliant or commanding intellect, not a genius, as we ordinarily apply these words ; but the absence of this is more than compensated by these 46 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, Other qualities I have mentioned, — ^his great good sense, his quick, intuitive perception of truth, and his inflexible adherence to it, his high personal in- tegrity, and his long and valuable training in the service of the people and the government. With- out being, in the ordinary sense, one of the greatest of our public men, he is certainly one of the most useful, reliable and valuable ; and in any capacity, even the highest, he is sure to serve the country faithfully and well. He is one of the men to be tenaciously kept in public life ; and I have no doubt he will be. Some people talk of him for president ; Mr. Lincoln used to tell him he would be his suc- cessor ; but his own ambition is wisely tempered by the purpose to perform present duties well. He certainly makes friends more rapidly and holds them more closely than any public man I ever knew; wherever he goes, the women love him, and the men cordially respect him ; and he is sure to be always a personal favorite, even a pet, with the people. The other official of the party, Lieutenant-Gov- ernor Bross of Illinois, is indeed our paterfamilias, our "governor." Hale and hearty in body and mind ; ripe with say fifty-five years and a wide expe- rience and .culture in school, college and journalism ; cheery in temperament, enjoying rough, out-door life like a true, unspoiled child of Nature ; sturdy in high principles ; unaffected and simple in manners and feeling as a child ; a ready and most popular stump speaker ; enthusiastic for all novel experience, we all give him our heartiest sympathy and respect, and constitute him the leader of the party. Our GOVERNOR BROSS AND MR. RICHARDSON. 47 best foot, we always put him foremost, whether dan* ger, or dignity, or fun is the order of the occasion. Governor BroSs was born in New Jersey, — and so says he never can be president, as the Constitution requires that officer to be a native of the nation ; lumbered on the Susquehannah ; went to Williams College, Massachusetts ; taught school in Franklin and Berkshire counties ; ditto and married in New York ; and, following the star of empire, went to Chicago, and, entering on the editorial profession, has gone on from small to great things, until he is now the senior proprietor and editor of the leading journal of the North-west, and the second officer in the State government of Illinois. Mr. Richardson of the New York Tribune has lived on the borders of Bohemia for many years, sometimes on one side, sometimes on the other, and presents all the contradictions of such an existence. Of eastern Massachusetts birth and early education, (with a brother who is the able conductor of the Boston Congregationalist) he learned while young to love the smell of the printing office and the ro- mance of the reporter's life, and ran the round of editorial experience in nearly all our western cities ; then was bitten by the passion for travel and border life; came out to Kansas for the Boston Journal; then to Colorado with Mr. Greeley, edited a news- paper out here during the early days of bowie knives and Colt's revolvers ; crossed the Plains half a dozen times ; went to Texas and New Mexico ; and finally, as the war came on, after making a secret tour of the South as a special correspondent for the Tribune, 48 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. became the head of the western and south-western army correspondents of that paper, and in under- taking to run the gauntlet of the rebel batteries at Vicksburg, when General Grant opened his final cam- paign in that quarter, was captured by the enemy;--' as their pet and special prisoner he went the rounds of their jails and pens, and after twenty months- servitude made his escape, and in a wonderful jour- ney of one month through the rebel country in win- ter, reached our lines in safety, and became a hero; Notwithstanding this long Bohemian life, amid rough people and in out-of-the-way places, Mr. Richardson imposes on you with the style and air of a man who has had a very narrow escape from the pulpit, and cherishes a natural hankering for it yet. Certainly you never would recognize in him a true child of Bohemia. He wears black broadcloth and "biled shirts," (the western phrase for white under-clothes,) does not chew tobacco, disdains whiskey, but drinks French brandy and Cincinnati Catawba, carries a good deal of baggage, does not know how to play poker, and shines brilliantly among the ladies. He is a young widower of less than thirty-five, of me- dium size, with a light complexion and sandy hair arid whiskCTS, and is a very companionable man. His large and peculiar experience in the West and in the South by field and flood, gives him a rich store of anecdote and illustration, with which he en- tertains us on our loiig stage rides. He is already famous before the country ; and his new book of ex- periences in the South will make him much more so. It is probable he will stay longer on the Pacific "a distinguished companion. 49 shore than the rest of the party, and perhaips revisit Utah, the Mining Regions and Mountains, with the view of making a book upon them another season. Looking-glasses are banished from overland bag- gage, and the fourth member of the party must, therfefore, remain tmsk'etched. But there is. a num- ber five, who ,is occupying too important a share in our experience, to be forgotten in any call of the roll. This is Mr. George K. Otis of New York, me special agent and representative of our hos.t, Mr. Holladay of the Overland Mdl and Stage Line; He accompanies us in the capacity of guide, phi- losopher and friend, whidh he most generously ful- fills. Himself, under Mr. Holladay, the organizer and manager of the stage line, he is acquainted with all this region and its people; and being a man of infinite jest and of free and generous nature, we lack nothing under his protecting Care, which a thoughtful generosity, nor a practical experience, ftoT abounding humor and wide intelligence can give us. His puns are sometimes "fearfully and Wonderfully made " ;' but he earns forgiveness by making himself a large share of our daily comfort and pleasure. Happy those who fall to the travel- ing companionship of Otis ! Accompanying so distinguished and popular a public officer as Mr. Colfax, we share mutually in the hospitalities extended to him ; we have access to the most intelligent sources of information ; we see and learn in a short time what ordinary private trav- elers could only gain by long and careful observa- tion and examination. Everywhere, so far, the S 4 56 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. people of the towns visited are bountiful in their courtesies; the journey is one continued ovation; public receptions and entertainments, and the choi- cest of private hospitalities are showered upon us ; and we find that neither the graces nor the culture of life are confined to the East. They flourish here among the Rocky Mountains as beautifully as in the priors of Boston, or the sweet groves of the Con- necticut yalley. Most agreeable of all our experiences here are the intelligent, active, earnest, right-minded and right-hearted young men and women we meet ; peo- ple, many of whom have been here for years, but, instead of losing anything of those social graces that eastern towns and cities are wont to think themselves superior in, have not only kept even pace in these, but gained a higher play for all their faculties, and ripened, with opportunity and incen- tive and necessary self-reliance, into more of man- hood and womanhood. Everywhere, too, I find old friends and acquaintances from the Connecticut valley ; and nowhere do I find them forgetting old Massachusetts, or unworthy her parentage. I see less drunkenness ; I see less vice here among these towns of the border, and of the Rocky Mountains, than at home in Springfield ; I see personal activity and growth and self-reliance and social development and organization, that not only reconcile me to the emigration of our young people from the East to this region, but will do much to make me encour- age it. To the right-minded, the West gives open opportunity that the East holds close and rare ; and THE OVERLAND STAGE LINE. $1 to such, opportunity is all that is wanted, all that they ask. The great Ovefland Stage Line, by.which we are traveling, was originated by Mr. William H. Russell of New York, and carried on for a year or two by himself and partners, under the name of Russell, Majors and Waddell. They failed, however, and some three years ago it passed into the hands of their chief creditor, Mr. Ben HoUaday, an energetic Missourian, who had been a successful contractor for the government and for great corporations on the Plains and the Pacific. He has since continued the line, improving, extending and enlarging it until it js now, perhaps, the greatest enterprise owned and pontroUed by one man, which exists in the country, if not in the world. His line of stages commence at Atchison, on the Missouri River : its first section extends across the great Plains to Denver, six hundr red and fifty miles ; from here it goes on six hundred piiles more to Salt Lake City, along the base of and through the Rocky Mountains at Bridger's Pass. From there to Nevada and California, about seven hundred and fifty miles farther, the stage line is owned by an eastern company, and is under the management of Wells, Fargo & Co., the express agents. All this is a daily line, and the coaches used are of the best stage pattern, well known in New England as the " Concord coach." From Salt Lake, Mr. Holladay runs a tri-weekly ?oach line north and west nine hundred and fifty miles through Idaho to the Dalles on the Columbia River in north- ern Oregon, and branching off at Fort Hall, also a 52 Across the eoStiNENT. tri-weekly line ta Virginia City in M6fltailk> foQr hundred miles more. From Denver, too, he haCs A SQbsidiary line into the niouhtain centers of Cen- tral City and Nevada^ about forty miles. Gver ail these routes he carries the mail, and is in the re- ceipt for this service of six hundred and fifty thbui sand dollars per annum from the government. His whole extent of staging and mail cantracts — not counting, of couiise, that uhdfer Wells, FafgO & Co., from Salt Lake west, — is two thousand seven hun- dred and sixty miles, to conduct which he owns some six thousand horsfes arid muleS and about two hun- dred and sixty coaches. All along the roiates he has built stations at distances of ten to fifteen mileSi he has to di-aw all his corn from the Missouri River;; mttch of his hay has also to be transported hun- dreds of miles ; fUel for his stations comes frequently fifty and one hundred miles ; the Indians last year destroyed or stole full half a million dollars' wortfl of his property, — barns, houses, animals, feed, &c. ; he pays a general superintendent ten thousand doU tars a year; division superintendents a quarter as much; drivers and stable-keepers get seventy-five dollars a month and their living ; he has to mend and in some cases make his own roads — so that, large as the sum paid by the government, and high as the prices for passengers, there is an immense outlayj &nd a great risk in conducting the enterprise. Dur- ing the last year of unusually enormous prices foi- everything, and extensive and repeated Indian raids, ■Mr. Holladayhas probably lost money by his stages The previous yeair was one of prosperity, and the MR. HOLLADAY AJJ0 IfitS STAGES. S| Aext is lUsely to be. But 'with ap iaunense a mar chine, exposed to so many chanees and unpertain^ ties, the returns must always be doubtful. Only a great man would assume such an enterprise; onl^ a strong man could carry it th,ro,ug|i, oyer such obT stacks as are constantly presented ; and the regu- larity, the proniptness and the uniform high state of the entire service, in general and particular, m,ake of the whole a matter of real wonder, and an oeeaf gipn of great credit to Mr. Holladay. It is very natural that he should be unpopular along his route, and be denounced as a monopolist, taking advantage ©f his monopoly to extort high prices and give small accommodations ; this is the universal experir ence of such great enterprises in a new country. But it would be difficult, if not impossible, through these infant and struggling years of this country, — where travel and business of all kinds are uflcertaii^ and irregular, and prices fluctuating, and the risk of losses from Indiarip and robbers very great, — to discover here or elsewhere the man or the means for the performance of this great service so perfectly as Mr. Holladay does it; and I am inclined to reckon him high among the agencies that are so fast de- veloping the great western Territories of the Rer public, and to doubt if many others in the commu- nity are doing their share in the work more fairly to the public than he is. The passenger fares by his stages are now, from Atchison to Denver one hundred and seventy-five dollars, to Salt Lake thr-fe hundred and fifty dollars, to Nevada five hundred ,4Qjlc^rs, to CaUfornia fiye hundred dollars, to Idal^? 54 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. five hundred dollars, to Montana five hundred dol- lars. These are much higher than they were two years ago, and will probably be reduced during the season, as safety fi-om the Indians and lower prices for food and corn are assured, from thirty-three to fifty per cent. Mr. HoUaday now resides in New York City, and is reported to be immensely wealthy, — say five mil- lions. He owns and runs, also, lines of steamships in the Pacific Ocean from San Francisco, north to Oregoft and British Columbia, and south to Mazat- l^n, Mexico, with contracts for the mails on both routes from our government or from Maximilian of Mexico. He conducts all this immense business successfully by the choice of able and trusty mana- gers to whom he pays large salaries. Mr. John E. Russell, formerly of Greenfield, Massachusetts, is his tonfidential secretary and financier at New York; Mr. George K. Otis is his special agent at Washing- ton ; Mr. William Reynolds, a life-long stage mana- ger, dating his education as such back to Chester W. Chapin, Horatio Sargent and Frank Morgan in Springfield, but since with large experience in the Soihth and California, is the general manager of the overland line, resident at Atchison; and his (Mr. HoUaday's) brother resides at San Francisco in charge of his steamships. Mr. HoUaday visits his overland line about twice a year, and when he does, passes over it with a rapidity and a disregard of expense and rules, characteristic of his irrepressi" ble nature. A year or two ago, after the disaster to the steamer Golden Gate on the Pacific shore. FAST RIDES OVER THE PLAINS. 55 by which the only partner he ever had, Mr. Edward Rust Flint, son of old Dr. Flint of Springfield, lost his life, and himself barely escaped a watery grave, he made the quickest trip overland that it is possi- ble for one man to make before the distance is shortened by railway. He caused himself to be driven from Salt Lake to Atchison, twelve hundred and twenty miles^ in six and one-half days, and was only twelve days and two hours from San Francisco to Atchison. The trip probably cost him twenty thousand dollars in wear and tear of coaches and injury to and loss of horses by the rapid driving. The only ride over the Plains, at all comparable with this, was that made by Mr. Aubrey, on a wager, from Santa Fe to Independence, seven hundred miles, in six and one-half days. But this was made on horseback, and when the rider reached his desti- nation, he was so exhausted that he had to be lifted from his horse. How exciting the thought of such rides as these across these open fields and through these mountain gorges, that make up the half of our Continent! LETTER VL A SUNDAY IN THE FOUNTAINS, ViRGiNJA Dale, Colorado, June J. There are no aristocratic distinctions between the days of the week west of the Missouri. The Broad Church rules here, and so broadly that even Saint Burleigh of your modern Florence would find hearty welcome, particularly from our red brethren, who would rate his scalp with its ornaments at the value of a dozen of the ordinary sort. Sundays are as good as other days, and no better. Stages run, stores are open, mines are dug, and stamp mills crush. But our eastern prejudices are not yet altot- g-ethe'r conquered by the "spirit of the age;" and so, on reaching here yesterday morning at sunrise, we commanded a twenty-four hours' halt. Possi- bly our principles had a point put to them by learn- ing from the down stage that Mr. " Lo, the poor Indian " had got loose up the line, stolen the horses, and interrupted communication. At any rate, — be the motive fear for our scalps or fear for our souls, — we followed the fashion of our forefathers, and slept through the day, some of us in the coach, the rest stretched out on the piazza of the only house in SWEET VIRGINIA BALE. 57 Virginia Dale ; clambering up a high rock in the evening to view the landscape o'er of valley, stream, snow-clad mountain, and far-distant plain, and cloS" ing out our observances with a more hearty than harmonious rendering of our small repertoire of psalm tunes. Lodgings are not extensive in this locality ; the Speaker borrowed a bed ; two slept in the coach ; and two of us rolled ourselves up in our blankets and took the floor. I hit upon a board whose hard side was accidentally put up ; and what with this, and hungry and dry and noisy stage drivers coming in at from two to four A. m., and less vociferous but quite as hungry invaders of our bodily peace in the form of vermin, the night brought more of reflec- tion than refection — to us. But we are off early this morning, having s'atisfied our Christian con- sciences, and learned that the Indians were cer- tainly still one hundred and fifty miles away, but leaving behind for a Monday's rest a fresh stage load of eager gold seekers and Salt Lake merchants, whom our scruples on the subject of Sunday trav- eling had thrown one day behind. But they were solaced by the arguments that we would make the paths straight for them above, that they must stop somewhere, and that here was the best food and the prettiest cook on the line. Virginia Dale deserves its pretty name. A pearly, lively-looking stream runs through a beautiful basin; of perhaps one hundred acres, among the moun-r tains, — ^for we are within the embrace of the great hills, — stretching away in smaath and rising pasture 58 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. to nooks and crannies of the wooded range ; fronted by rock embattlement, and flanked by the snowy peaks themselves ; warm with a June sun, and rare and pure with an air into which no fetid breath has poured itself, — it is difficult to imagine a more lova- ble spot in nature's kingdom. It is one hundred > miles north from Denver, half of the way along the ■ foot of the hills, crossing frequent streams, swollen and angry with the melting snows, and watering the only really green acres we have seen since leaving Kansas ; and half the road winding over and around and between the hills that form the approaches to the Rocky Mountains. Only the station of the "Stage line occupies the Dale; a house, a barn, a blacksmith shop ; the keeper and his wife, the latter as sweet, as genteel and as lady-like as if just trans- planted from eastern society, yet preparing bounti*- ful meals for twice daily stage-loads of hungry and dirty passengers ; . the stock-tender and his assist- ant, — these were all the inhabitants of the spot, and no neighbors within fifteen miles. For the day, our party and its escort, — the soldiers lying off on the grass by the water with their camp fire and their baggage wagon, — made unusual life, and gave a pe- culiar picturesqueness to the sequestered spot. How women, especially, can live contentedly in these out-of-the-way places on the borders, working hard and constantly, among rough and selfish men, and preserve their tender femininity, keep them- selves neatly and sometimes even gracefully dressed, and not forget their blushes under free compliments, would be passing strange, if we did not see it daily MORE OF COLORADO. 59 in our journey, and know it by the whole history of the sex. I certainly have seen young women out here, miles away from neighbors, knowing no society but their husbands and children and the hurried travelers, — depending on the mails for their chief knowledge of what the world is doing, — ^who could pass without apology ox gaucherie to presiding over a Boston dinner party or receiving in state at Washington. Not all, indeed, are such, but they are frequent enough to be noted with both surprise and pleasure. This is the northern border of Colorado. We pass to-day into Dacotah. Before parting with the former Territory, let me note a few facts about it and its people. Colorado has now not over twenty-five to thirty thousand population, which is five to ten thousand fewer than in i860. The adventurers are gone. What remain are the substantial, the earn- est, who have cast in their lot with the Territory, are satisfied with its promise, and are wisely work- ing for the construction of a State and their own estate. A very large proportion are men who came here four, five and six years ago, and have a reason for the faith that is in them. Last year, a move- ment to become a State failed, mainly because of the unpopularity of the men prominent in it, and candidates for its principal offices. It will be re- newed this year, under more favorable and prom- ising auspices. The population is too small, indeed, for a State ; but there are advantages in it, and ne- cessities, almost, for it, that justify both the people in seeking and the general government in recog- 6o ACBOgS THE CONTINJENT. nizing tl\e change. The Territory l;ia9 great intep- ests, iiatioftal indeed in character, .needing mare vigorous interpretation and espousal at Washing ton than can be secured by a delegate. The popui- lation is compact a#d enterprising and ambitious ; filling to assume the burden? of a government for themselves ; and appreciating the advautagea they will get from it. One especial motive with the Coleradians for snaking a State government is to get a judiciary of their own, that shall be both more intelligent aad Ji^^ependent than, that fyriaished by the Washing- ton authorities. The men sent oiit to these new - Territories as judges are not apt to be of a very high order either of morals or intellect. They are oft:e& hungry adventurers ; and their salaries bearing gesa,- erally no coniparison to the co^t of living in these remote regions, and large pecuniary interests oftea being involved in the questions brought before them,^as is especially the case in the mining Ter- ritories, — they are too apt to yield to the tempta- tions offered to them, and sell their judgments for a price. However this may be in Colorado's recent : experience, her best citizens are convinced that they can get a higher morality, a stricter justice, and a more intelligent lawfrora judges of their own selec^ tion and paying, than from those sent out here and paid by " Uncle Sam." A case has just occurred in the mining distrietSj not illustrating, as I know of, the venality ©f the federal judiciary, but calculated, at least, to bring it into coi?.tempt. General Fitz John Porter, f^moWi? A CASE OF "C'ON'TEMPT." 6l as General McClellan's pet, and notorious as ha^ng ■Jtfved his patron and his spite against General PopBi ■ better than his coointry and Ijer service, is out here as superintendent of some mines. He claimed a vein, that belonged to Smith & Parmalee, as the latter thought, and began working it. The other party resisted ; Judge Harding sustained Porter by an injunction against Smith & Parmalee ; but when- ever Porter's men undertook to work in the vein, they found it filled with such sulphurous and offen- sive smtjke that they could not stay in it, and had to come out. How the smoke came there, no one could tell ; but, as the veiii connected with the Smith & Parmalee mine, everybody could guess. Thereupon Smith & Parmalee were brought before Judge Harding on alleged " contempt of court," for smoking out the party of the other part : ttothmg eouM be proven against them, however ; but the most learned judge decided that the defendants had not disproven the alleged contempt, and so held them in five thousand dollars bail ! The judicious grieved, the unskillful laughed, and everybody said there could be no contempt too great for such a court as that. This Judge Harding is from Indiana, and was first sent by Mr. Lincoln to be Governor of Utah, but becoming offensive and ineflfective there, he was recalled, and given this judgeship to break his fall. But beside a broken character as a public officer, he brought hither such scandalous, Mormon ways of living, as to shock all shades of public opin- ion, which is now uniting to drive him out of the Territory, 62 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. As the great need of the business men and min- ers in Colorado is male laborers, so that of the housekeepers is female laborers or "help." House- keeping in lafge families — and children do accu- mulate surprisingly here— is a very serious burden to the wives and mothers. Their eastern sisters, in their direst woes with poor servants, can have but faint appreciation of the burdens of living and entertaining here, where cooks and waiting girls are not to be had at any price. We go to rich dinniers and bountiful teas at the hbmes of distin- guished and wealthy citizens, and sit and eat with- out the company of hostess or any other ladies. She and her friends are busy in the kitchen, and come out only to stand behind our chairs, and change the plates and pass the viands. There is an un- comfortable feeling in being thus entertained ; but it is the necessity of the country, and all parties make the best of it. The price of the commonest of female labor is two dollars a day and board. But the Colorado ladies have their compensations ; their husbands complain that they can get no goods, no machinery out from the States under a year from the time of orderihg — that all business, all progress must wait this long delay ; yet the ladies shine in the latest fashions of millinery and dress- making. Modes that were but just budding whfen I left home, I find in full blossom here. How it is done I do not understand — there must be a subtle telegraph by crinoline wires ; as the southern ne- groes have what they call a grape-vine telegraph. The burden laid upon all agriculture, the absolute IRRIGATION. 63 want of all horticulture as yet in all this country, are among its seriotis drawbacks. The winds, the sun, the porous yet unfriable soil, the long seasons of no or inadequate rain, leave 'all vegetation gray and scanty, except it is in direct communication with the water-courses. Trees will not live in the house yards ; house owners can have no turf, no flowers, no fruits, no vegetables — the space around the dwellings in the towns is a bare sand, relieved only by infrequent mosses and weeds. The grass is gray upon the plains ; cotton-wood and sappy pine are almost alone the trees of the inountain region ; no hard wood is to be found anywhere ; and but for the occasional oases by the streams, and the rich flowers that will spring up on the high mountain morasses, the country would seem to the traveler nearly barren of vegetable life. But what there is is rich in quality; the coarse andgray bunch grass of plain and prairie, of hill-side and rocks, afibrds the best of nutriment for horses, cattle and sheep ; they grow fat fast upon it in summer, and exist upon it in winter. Even here, where, in June we see snow on the hill-sides close to us, and shiver under double blankets at night, the cattle live out of doors through the long winter. It is, indeed, a rich grazing country, and will support its herds of thousands. Irrigation is a necessity for all extensive cultiva- tion of the soil, however; and the extent to which this is already being employed, and the amount of money invested in it, are occasions of surprise. But with the far distance of all competing production, 64 ACROSg THE CONTINENT. gaid the great fbrtility of the soil when thus develr oped, it will richly pay to carry water from th^ mountain streams miles on miles from their naturai courses, and spread it by little artificial rivulets over acres on acres of grains, potatoes and the other vegetables. A plan is in progress of execu* tion for bringing a large water-course some fifteen - miles around Denver, and letting it out in gentl^v fructifying strieams all over the town and its adja- cent farms and gardens. Then will this now barrea wilderness of store and house and sand blossom like the rose ; then can door-yards be green with grass, shaded with trees, and beautiful with flowers. Meantime, the people must live on canned fruits and vegetables from the East; and possess their esthetic souls in patience, for the rest, in magnifyr- ing their mountain viiew of charming yet constant beauty. The extensive and common use of these imported prodiactions of our eastern orchards and gardens in all the country vwest of the Missouri River, is most astonishing. They are on every ta- ble ; few New England housekeepers presfent such a variety of excellent vegetables and fruits, as we find everywhere heire, at every hotel and station meal, and at every private dinner or supper. Corn> tomatoes, beans, pine apples, strawberry, cherry and peach, with oysters and lobsters, are the most common ; and all of these, in some form or other, you may frequently find served up at a single meal. These canned vegetables and fruits and fish are (Sold, too, at prices which seem cheap compared with the cost of other things out here. * They range PKICES IN COLORADO. 6$ from fifty cents to one dollar a can of about two quarts. Families buy them in cases of two dozen each at twelve to fifteen dollars a case ; while away up in Montana, they are sold at only twenty-seven dollars a case. Colorado has four daily and four weekly papers, two each at Denver, and one each at Black Hawk and Central City, in the mining region ; and though their circulation is small — some five to seven hun- dred each — the large prices they get for subscrip- tions, for advertising and for printing, serve to sup- port them all liberally. Let me close with the current Colorado rates of staples and luxuries: Flour twenty cents a pound, meal twenty-three cents, hams fifty cents, lard forty cents, syrup five dollars per gallon, cheese seventy-five cents, coffee seventy-five cents, brown sugar forty-five cents, butter sixty cents, milk fifty cents per quart, best cigars fifty cents each, printing paper sixty-eight cents per pound, daily paper, per year, twenty-four dollars, weekly seven dollars, brooms one dollar, molasses four dollars and a half per gallon, boots fourteen dollars per pair, common labor, per day, five dollars. And here are some of the latest Montana prices, twelve hundred miles farther on : Flour fifty to sixty cents a pound, hams seventy-five cents, golden syrup eight dollars, cheese one dol- lar, crackers ninety cents, beans fifty cents, wood twelve to fifteen dollars per cord, lumber one hun- dred dollars per thousand. The high price and ter- rible quality of whisky and other liquors in all these distant Territories are operating as a very effective 6* 5 6& ACROSS THE CONTINENT. temperance agent. I see very little of them of of their effects anywhere.: Some of the vernacular; of the raOuntalns is suf- ficiently original and amusing to be reported, also. A "square" meal is the common term for^ a first- rate one; "shebang" means any kind of an estab- lishmentj store, hoUsej shop,, shanty; "outfit" has" a wider range, your handkerchief; your Suit of clothes; the cut of your hair, your team^ your whole posses- sions, or the most infinitesimal part or item there- of; and "affidavit" signifies anything else that these other terms, do not coveri LETTER VII. FROM DENVER TO SALT LAKE— THROUGH THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. Salt Lake. City, June 12. We finished early yesterday (Sunday) morning the second and severest third of the great stage- ride across th^ Continent. We are now two-thirds the way to California, and the rest of the journey seems easy compared to what has been passed oyer. It is through a more peopled country, freer from Indian raids, and will be relieved to us by more frequent resting-places. The distance from Denver to Salt Lake City is six hundred miles ; we Should have driven it in five days but for the Indians, who broke in upon the line before us and cleaned it out of horses for fifty miles, threw the country into confusion and travel into anxiety, and delayed our progress for two' or three days, so that we were in all seven days in the trip. But we just escaped more severe possible disaster; for the "pesky sar- pints," as they are not unnaturally reckoned by ev- erybody in the West, hovered close upon both our front and our rear; our escort drove off a band of them who 'were attacking'a train of repentant and 68 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. returning Mormons, right in our path ; and they swooped in upon a stage station the night after we passed it, stole all its horses, killed the two stock- tenders, also three of the five soldiers who were located there as guard, and severely if not mortally wounded the other two. But though our escort was small over this line, never over ten cavalrymen, and sometimes none at all, our coach came through unmolested. Whether these fresh Indian inroads in this quar- ter presage a general Indian war, are by pretended friendly tribes or those known to be inimical, are mainly for getting supplies of horses, which has seemed to be the principal object, or inspired by general hate and bloodthirstiness, or, so far as they have fallen upon the " Josephites" or deserting Mor- mons, have been directed by some of the leaders of the Latter Day Saints here to put a stop to this sort of depletion of their power and population ; whether they are by petty straggling bands, led by desperate white robbers, or are the advance couriers of all the warlike tribes of the Plains and the Moun- tains, — there is only one course to be pursued with regard to them, and that General Connor is now doing with new energy. He will guard and patrol the whole main overland road, as he has been do- ing the lower part of it, with cavalrymen and in- feotry, and give an escort to every stage ; from the military posts, every one hundred to two hundred miles along the route, he will send out scouting parties to track up the marauders ; if the raids and murders can be traced to friendly tribes, as has THE INDIAN QUESTION. 69 been done in one or two cases, he will demand those engaged in it, and failing to get them will seize and hang _ some of the principal chiefs ; — ^he will re- taliate quickly and sharply ; and then, with a large force, now gathering at Fort Laramie, he will go in pursuit of the great body of the hostile Indians in the North, and inflict upon them a sharp punish-^ ment ; — and so conveying to them all the knowledge of our power and purpose to make them peaceable, do the. best and only thing to secure their friend- liness. The government is ready to assist in their support, to grant them reservations, to give them food and make them presents; but it must and will, with sharp hand, enforce their respect to travel, their respect to lives and property, and their respect to trade throughout all thia region. And if this cannot be secured, short of their utter extermination, why extermination it must be. Else, we may as well abandon this whole region ; give up its settlement, its subjugation to civilization, its de- velopment to wealth and Christianity. It is the old eternal contest between barbarism and civiliza- tion, between things as they have been and are, and material and ^moral progress; and barbarism and barbarity must go to the wall, somewhat too roughly perhaps, as is always the case with new, earnest, material communities, but yet certainly. The Mor- mons have exhausted the Quaker policy towards the Indians ; have fed and clothed them for years, paying them in all ways heavy subsidies, in consid- eration of being let alone ; but they are growing tired of it, both because it is expensive, and is not ^O ACROSS THE CQNTI?^E.NT. sure of success. Only a few days ago, ^ome In- dians" attached the Mormons at "a settlement about eighty miles south of here, and Jdll^d eighteeii or twenty persons. Brigham Young and other offi- , cials of Church and S'tate went down to invest jgatp the matter and restore peace j they have just come back, repofiing success, and laying part of the blame oii the whites, hut still with less of the old disposition to subsidize the barbarians. Montana is disturbed with reports pf Indian put- rages; this whole region of mountains and plains is sensitive and suffering with the apprehensions or .the realities of their general recurrence ; commerce suffers; prices go up; emigration stops; a.nd alj the developnient of the great West is clogged. No wonder is it, then, that the entire white population of the Territories clamors for positive measures of restraint and punishment. The red man of reality is not the red man of poetry, romance, or philan- thropy. He is false arid barbaric, cunning and Cowardly, attacking only when all advantage is witi^ him, horriblfe in cruelty, the terror of women and children, impene.trable to nearly every motive buj: fear, impossible to regenerate and civilize. The Ayhites may of|:en he unjust and cruel in turn ; buj the balance is ' far against the Indian ; and the country jriust sustain ine government and General Connor in pursuing a vigorous offensive and defen- sive policy "towards him. Do not suppose, however, we lost sleep or rations, or eyes for passing scenery, as we rolled over the mountains, and passed the divide betweeni the great THE ANTELOPE AND TROUT. 7 1 oceans of Amerkai We rested proudly on our own prowess and- the rifles of our escort. Weliad immense faith in the double-barreled shot-gun of Governor Bross; and we created terrible alarm among some emigrants in our rear by firing at a mark in our front. So we ate our atttelope, when we could get it, and our "mountain chicken" (fried bacon) regularly, with faith in its undisturbed di- gestion, and, cuddled up each in his comer at night for equally reliable sleep. The canned fruits and vegetables and clean table-cloths disappeared for a time after Virginia Dale, but the antelope came in to soften the fall ; one of our escort shot one of the bounding beauties as he stopped, five hundred yards away, to gaze through his limpid, liquid eyes in won- der on our turn-out; and we found him and his successors most luscious eating— ^very delicate deer, tender, melting and digestible. The antelopes weigh from sixty to eighty pounds, are fawn-like in color and appearance, have short, branching horns, and are plenty at all seasons upon the high plains and in the mountains of the region. The elk, as large as a small cow, and with horns four to six feet long, and the black-tailed deer are rarer game ; this is not the season for shooting them ; and they cling closer to the mountains. Of fish we had but few ; trout were as abundant as fe- ver and ague in Indiana, but always a little way off, at the next brook or station. The soldiers at Fort Halleck had just made captive a cinnamon bear, which strayed down into camp from an adjoining mountain ; and our stage gave a wide berth to a 72 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. grizzly bear, which was taking his midnight nap in the middle of the road. The grizzly was the only animal that our courage and our double-barreled shot-gun were not equal to ; and he is, indeed, next to the Indian, the terror of all hunters. We missed, too, the sage hen, a favorite game of the region, but not of the season; rabbits scented our approach: and scooted away out of shot ; the retreat of the hungry, thievy-looking wolf was hastened by our balls ; only the ridiculous little prairie dogs and the funnier and littler squirrels — beautifully striped with black, and hardly bigger than a mouse — sported carelessly in our warlike presence. The scant, coarse vegetation of the Plains and of Denver's neighborhood- grew green and rich in our memory, as we came on north and west from Virginia Dale, entered the Laramie Plains, passed along on the snow line, crossed the mountain range at Bridger's Pass, and went out upon the country of the Bitter Creek. The Desert of the Mountains is far drearier and more barren than the Desert of the Plains. That seems redeemable and has its uses ; this is only for trying the patience and tax- ing the ingenuity of man. There is very little to redeem the middle two hundred miles of our ride from utter worthlessness for human service. The soil is sand, so saturated with alkali as to poison its water, and to give the earth the appearance, in spots, sometimes for large areas, of a fresh hoar frost or a slight snow. Grass is only a spasmodic tuft. The sage bush is the chief, almost onl^ vegetation — a coarse, wild form of our garden sage, growing THE DESERT OF BITTER CREEK, 73 rugged and rough from one to three feet high ; yet mules and cattle sometimes will eat it because they must or die, and it does make quick, hot fire for the emigrants' and wagon-drivers' kettles — but think of savoring your food with soap and sage tea ; think of putting a soap factory and an apothecary shop into one room, and that your kitchen ! Through all this inhospitable, barren region, there are no buildings save the stage stations; no inhabitants but the stock-tender and the station-keeper ; an occasional tented wigwam of half-breed or father of half-breeds . stands by a stream: we pass with pity the emi- grant's slow wagon and the mule train — hot and dusty and parched by day, cold and shivering and parched by night ;- — it is a wonder how people can go alive through this country at the rate of only twelve and fifteen miles a day, and finding food and drink as they go. But they do, year by year, thou- sands by thousands. Shall the Indian still add to the horrors of the passage, as he has and does ? The road, too, grows rough ; sluices and gulches are frequent and deep ; rocks begin to abound ; and the stage staggers about in a way frightful to all exposed parts of the body. Yet we do not seem to ' be going over the highest range pf mountains in the country ; we are passing rather through hardly per- ceptible rising valleys ; and though the mountains that guard us on either side grow nearer and lower to us, they always seem to be above us rather than under us. Striking the North Platte, as it first comes out of the mountains, but rough and rapid as are all the streams of the mountains at this season 74 ACROSS THE CQJITrNENT. of mel^ng snow, and some -thousand miles &ojn where we .partesd, company with it Lat Julesiurg on the Plains, to follogr its, southern sister to Denver; wepnter upon the night ride through Bridger's Pass, frpm the Atlantic to the Pacific slopes of the Rocky Mountains. You need to be toJd what you are do- ing. There is no _4qw hill-climbing; the horses trot the stage along ; And tibie soldier escort gallop behind. Not through valleys still, but apparently along and iip the b^ds of departed rivers, with mountain walls on either hand,T-T«ometimes ten-ot twenty miies wide, and again narrowing to rods, but oftenest miles in width; on one side bare, per- pendicular walls of rock, thrown into aH imaginable and unscientific combinations of the original or sub-original formations, and since, carved and Huied by wind and sand and rain into all and every shape that architectufe ever created, or imagina nities, its developed industries, and its unimproved possessions. Mr. Colfax's reception in Utah was excessive if not oppressive. There was an element of rivalry between Mormon and Gentile in it, adding earnest- ness and energy to enthusiasm and hospitality. First "a troop cpmeth," with band of music, and marched us slowly and dustily through their Camp Douglas. Then, escaping these, our coach was way- laid as it went down the hill by the Mormon au- thorities of the city. They ordered us to dismount ; we were individually introduced to each of twenty 84 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. of them ; we received a long speech ; we made a long one — ^standing in the hot sand with a sun of forty thousand lens-power concentrated upon us, tired and dirty with a week's coach-ride: was it wonder that the mildest of tempers rebelled? — transferred to other carriages, our hosts drove us through the city to the hotel ; and then — bless their Mormon hearts — they took us at once to a hot sul- phur bath, that nature liberally offers just on the confines of the city, and there we washed out all remembrance of the morning suffering and all the accumulated grime and fatigue of the journey, and came out baptized in freshness and self-respect. Clean clothes, dinner, the Mormon tabernacle in the afternoon, and a Congregational ("Gentile") meeting and sermon in the evening, were the other proceedings of our fir^ day in Utah. Since, and still continuing, Mr. Colfax and his friends have been the recipients of a generous and thoughtful hospitality. They are the guests of the city; but the military authorities and citizens vie together as well to please their visitors and make them pleased with Utah and its people. The Mor- mons are eager to prove their loyalty to the gov- ernment, their sympathy with its bereavement, their joy in its final triumph — which their silence or their slants ' and sneers heretofore had certainly put in some doubt — and they leave nothing unsaid or un- done now, towards Mr. Colfax as the representative of that government, or towards the public, to give assurance of their rightmindedness. Also they wish us to know that they are not monsters and PICNIC AT SALT LAKE. 85 murderers, but men of intelligence, virtue, good manners and fine tastes. They put their polygamy on high moral and religious grounds ; and for the rest, anyhow, are not ^willing to be thought other- wise than our peers. And certainly we do find here a great deal of true and good human nature and social culture ; a .great deal of business intelli- gence and activity ; a great deal of generous hos- pitality— ^besides most excellent strawberries and green peas, and the most promising orchards of apricots, peaches, plums and apples that these eyes ever beheld an3nvhere. They have given us a ser- enade ; and Mr. Colfax has addressed them at length with his usual tact and happy effect, telling them what they have a right to expect from the govern- ment, and reminding them that the government has the right to demand from them, in turn, loyalty to the Constitution and obedience to the laws, and complimenting them on all the beauty of their homes and the thrift of their industry. Governor Bross and Mr. Richardson also made happy ad- dresses, and the crowd of the evening, and the "distinguished guests" gave every sign of being mutually pleased with each other. We have been taken on an excursion to the Great Salt Lake, bathed in its wonderful waters, on which you float like a cork, sailed on its surface, and pic- nicked by its shore, — if picnic can be without wo- men for sentiment and to spread table-clothj and to be helped up and over rocks. Can you New Englanders fancy a "stag" picnic' We have been turned loose in the big strawberry patch of one of 86 ACROSS THE CONTINENX. ithe saints — ^yery worldly strawberries and more worldly appetites met and mingled; and we have had a peep into a moderate Mormon harem, but Jjeitig idtroduced to two different women of the same name, one after another, was more than I could stand without blushing. In Mormon etiquette. President Brigham Young is called upon ; by Washington fashion, the Speaker is ,alse called upon, and does not call — there was a question whether the distinguished resident and the idistinguished visitor would meet; Mr. Colfax, as was meet under the situation of affairs here, made •a. point upon it, and gave notice he should not call; ^whereupon .President Brigham yielded the question, and graciously came to-day with a crowd of high dignitaries of the churcK, and made, not one of ,Emerson's prescribed ten minute calls, but a gen- erous, pleasant, gossiping sitting of two hours long. He is a very hale and hearty looking man, young for sixty-four, with a light gray eye, cold and uncer- tain, a mouth and chin betraying a great and deter- mined will-handsome perhaps as to presence and features, but repellent in atmos.phere and without magnetism. In conversation, he is cool and quiet in manner, but suggestive in expressionj has strong and original ideas, but uses bad grammar. He was rather formal, but courteous, and at the last affected frankness and freedom, if he felt it not. To his foUowers, I observed he was master. of that pro- found art of eastern politicians, which consists in putting the arm affectionately around them, and tenderly inquiring for he^th of selves and families ; HEBER KIMBALL, ET AL. Sj and when his eye did sparkle an^ his lips soften, it was with most cheering, though not warming, ef- fect — it was pleasant hut did not melt you. Of his cornpanions, Heher C. Kimball is perhaps the most notorious from his vulgar and coarse speech. He ranks high among the "prophets" here, and is as unctuous in his manner as Macassar hair oil, and as pious in phrase as good old Thomas a Kempis: He has a very keen, sharp eye, and looks like a Westfield man I always meet at the agricul- tural fairs in Springfield. Dr. Bernhisel has an air of culture and refinement peculiar among his asso- ciates ; he is an old, small man, venerable, and sug- gestive of John Qudncy Adams, or Dr. Gannett of Boston, in his style. Two or three others of the company have fine faces — such as you would meet in intellectual or business society in Boston or New York, — ^but the strength of most of the party seems to lie in narrowness, bigotry, obstinacy. They look as if they had lived on the same farms as their fathers and grandfathers, and made no improve- ments ; gone to the same church, and sat in the same pew, without cushions; borrowed the same weekly newspaper for forty years; drove all their children to the West or the cities ; and if they went to agricultural fairs, insisted on having their pre- miums in pure coin. But the hospitality of Utah is not confined to the Mormons. The "Gentiles" or non-Mormons are becoming numerous and influential here, and, citizens and soldiers, comprise many families of culture and influence. They are made up of ofii- 88 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. cers of the federal government, resident represen- tatives of telegraph and stage lines, members of eastern or California business firms having branches, here, and a very fair proportion, too, of the mer- chants of the city. Some of the more intelligent ,of the disgusted and repentant Mormons swell the circle. They have organized a literary association, established a large and growing Sunday school, largely made up of children of Mormon parents, have Weekly religious services led by the chaplain at Camp Douglas, conduct an able and prosperous daily paper (the Union Vedette,) and in every way are developing an organized and effective oppositioii to the dominant power here; These people, united, earnest and enthusiastic as minorities always are, claim a share in entertaining Mr. Colfax and his friends, and gave them a large and most brilliant social party last night. They are not reluctant to show us their ladies, as the Mormons generally seem to be, and their ladies are such, in beauty and cul- ture, as no circle need be Ashamed of The enjoy- ment of this social entertainment of music, conver- sation, dancing and refreshments, was sadly and only broken by the announcement during the even- ing of the sudden death of the territorial governor. Judge Doty, formerly of Michigan and Wisconsin. LETTER IX. MORMON MATERIALITIES. Salt Lake City, June i6. The Necessity of all Agriculture, on the Plains, among the Mountains, on the Pacific shore, nearly all the western half of our Continent, is Irrigation. The long, dry summers, frequently months without rain, the hot sun and dry winds, the clayey charac- ter of the soil, all ensure utter defeat to the farmer's business, except he helps his crops to water by arti- ficial means. But in Utah, agriculture is the chief business ; its population of one hundred and twenty thousand inhabitants, live by it, prosper by it, have built up a State upon it. Irrigation is, therefore, uni- versal and extensive ; the streams that, pour down from the mountains are tapped at various elevations, the water carried away by canals, big and little, to the gardens and meadows cultivated, and thence, by numerous little courses, one in three or four feet, spread over the whole extent, over the grain, be- tween the rows of com, of trees, of vegetables; Individuals, villages, companies perform this work, as a less or greater scale of it is required. The water is apportioned among the takers according to go ACROS3 THE CONTINENT. their land or their payments. Each one gets his share ; and when the supply is scant, as is often the case, each one suffers in like degrpe. , Salt Lake City is thus irrigated, mainly from one mountain stream; bright, sparkling brooks course freely and constantly down its paved gutters, keep- ing the shade trees alive and growing, supplying drink for animals and water for household purposes, and delightfully coohng the summer air; besides being drawn off in right proportion for the use of each garden. Once a week is the rule for thus watering each crop ; to-day a man takes enough for one portfoH of his garden; to-morrow for another; and so through his entire possessions and the week. Under this regular stimulus, with a strong soil made up of the wash of the inountains, the finest of crops atre obtained ; the. vegetable bottom lands of your own Connecticut and of the western prairies cannot vie with the products of the best gardens and farms of these Pacific valieys, under this system of irriga- tion. Xhere needs to be rain enough in the spring or winter moisture remaining to start the seecfe, and there generally is ; after that, the regular sup- ply of water keeps the plants in a steady and rapid growth, that may well be supposed to produce far finer results, than the struggling, uneven progress of yegetetion under dependence upon the skies — a week or a month of rain, and then a like pro- longation of sunshine. The gardens m the cities and villages are tropical in their rich greenness and luxuriance. I do not believe the same space of ground anywhere else in the country holds so mudi THE IRRIGATION IN UTAH. 9I and so" fine fruit and vegetables as the city of Salt Lake to-day. The soil* of these valleys is especially 'favorable to the small grains. Fifty and sixty bushels is ^, very common crop of wheat, oats and barley ; and over ninety have been raised. President Young once raised ninety-three and a half bushels of whe^t on a single acre. I should say the same soil located in the East, and taking its chances without irriga- tion, would not produce half what it does here with irrigation. Laborious and expensive as the process must be, the large crops and high prices obtained for them make it to pay. Over all this country, that is forced to have an irrigated farming, there is no business that now pays so well, not even mining, and nowhere else in the whole Nation is agriculture so profitable. But the mountain snows do riot pro- vide half the water the valleys need. Many a broad and beautiful valley goes unredeemed from a dry, half-barren vegetation, for the lack of water to, be put upon it. Salt Lake City has exhausted its pres- ent supply, and now contemplates a grand canal from Utah Lake, thirty miles off, to provide water for its extending gardens and the wide valley below and beyond the city, — the most of which is now only a poor and growing poorer pasture, but which with irrigation will become as productive farming land as Kes under the shadow of the Republic. The country drained by the Great Salt Lake is about one hundred and fifty miles east and west, and two hundred and fifty north and south. Four or five large streams of fresh water pour into it; but it 92 , ACROSS THE CONTINENT. lias not a single visible outlet, and its water is one- fourth solid salt — two mysteries that mock science and make imagination ridiculous. Cither salt is found in the country ; there is a mountain of rock salt a few miles away ; and below in Arizona is a similar mountain whose salt is as pure as finest glass. President Young showed us a brick of it to- day, that excited Our surprise and delight as much as any novelty we have seen on our journey. The Ter- ritory of Utah covers the region drained by the Salt Lake, and perhaps one hundred miles more both in brpadth and length. But the Mormon settlements extend one hundred miles farther into Idaho on the north, and perhaps two hundred miles into Arizona on the south, clinging close, through their entire length of six hundred to seven hundred miles, to a narrow belt of country hardly more than fifty miles wide ; for on the east of this are the mountains, and to the west, the great Central American Desert, that forms part of the great internal basin of this section of the Continent, and leads the traveler on to the Sierra Nevada mountains of the Pacific States. These settlements are mostly small, counting in- habitants by hundreds, gathered about the course of a mountain stream ; but there are several places of considerable importance, as Provo at the South and Ogden City at the North. Their extension south into the valley of the Colorado, paves the way to the successful working of a favorite commercial , idea of the leading business men here, which is the use of the Gulf of California and the Colorado River, .which empties into it, for the great avenue of trade ; THE COLORADO ROUTE; FOR COMMERCE. 93 for bringing in the supplies of goods needed here, and for sending out such surplus products; agricul- tural and mineral, as these interior valleys are offer- ing. The Colorado is found to be navigable for steamboats for four hundred miles, or to within six hundred miles, of this city, and the substitution of' this reduced distance of land carriage, open all the year, through their own Territory, and up valley rc^ads, for seven hundred miles to San Francisco or over one thousand miles to the Missouri River, through deserts and over mountains, and often in- terrupted by rivers, is a manifest improvement and advantage for the commerce of this country,- that can hardly be overestimated. There are already steamers on the Colorado, and some of the mer- chanfs are having goods come over the route, by way of experiment. If it succeeds, as seems quite certain, then the heavy trade of Utah and its de- pendencies will come and go from New York by way of the Isthmus of Panama and around Cape- Horn, and merchants here, instead of having to buy a year's supply of goods at once, can market several times a year, and do business with much less capi- tal and at much greater advantage otherwise. The policy of the Mormon leaders has been to confine their people to agriculture ; to develop a self-sustaining, rural population, quiet, frugal, indus- trious, scattered in small villages, and so managea- ble by the church organization. So far, this policy has been admirably successful ; and it has created an industry and a production here, in the center of the western half of our Continent, of immense imr 94 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. portance anS value to the future gro-wtk of the re- gion. A few of the simpler manufactures have been introduced of late, but these are not in conflict with the general policy. There are three cotton mills, confined to cotton yarns, however, almost ex- clusively, and one woolen milL Probably there are a hundred flouring mills in the Territory also. Flour, the grains, butter, bacon^dried peaches, home- made socks and yam, these axe the chief articles produced in excess and sold to emigrants and for the mining regions in the North. Probably two hundred thousand pounds of dried peaches were sold for Idaho and Montana last year. Hides are plenty; there is a good tannery here; and also a manufactory of boots and shoes. Cotton grows abundantly in the southern settlements; and ex- periments with flax, the mulberry tree and the silk worm are all successful. As to mining, the influence of the church has been against it. There have been no placer or sur- face diggings discovered to offer temptations to the mass of the people ; and the leaders, affect to be- lieve that the ores so far found are not valuable enough to pay for working. They have a reason for discouraging mining, of course, in the sure con- viction that it would introduce a population and influences antagonistic to the order and power of the church. Iron, they admit, exists in large quan- tities, especially in the southern mountains, and they ,have made some attempts to develop it, but without great success, for the reason, as they say, that they had not the proper workmen and materials THE MINES OF MORMONDOM. 95 to do it with. But as to gold and silver, they are incredulous ; and not only that, but President Young argues that the world has many times more of both than it needs for financial purposes ; that the coun- try is poorer to-day for all the mining of gold and- silver in the last twenty years ; and that for every dollar gained by it, four dollars have been expended. But these views are not likely to gain wide acqui- escence. There is no reason to -doubt that the mountains of Utah are rich in the precious metals — - perhaps not so much so as other States apd Territo- ries, but still enough so to tempt miners and capital- ists to invest in the business of developing them in rivalry with Nevada and Colorado. So far, the dis- coveries have been chiefly of silver, in connection - with large deposits of lead and copper. Our party have spent two interesting days this week in an ex- cursion about forty miles into an adjoining beautiful valley, where some valuable developments have been made in this line. Most of the discoveries have been made by soldiei's in General Connor's com- m'and — ^volt^nteers firom the mining regions of Cali- fornia and JTevada — ^who have been stationed in this vicinity for the last two years; and most of those whose terms have expired have ^one to work to improve and develop them. We found among the various canyons or ravines of the Rush Valley a hundred or two of mines freshly discovered and worked out to various depths of ten to one hundred feet. Colonel George, who, in the absence of Gen- eral Connor to fight the Indians, is in command of the camp here, accompanied us, and saw the lodes g6 . ACROSS THE CONTINENT, for the first time. He is an old Nevada jninerj and he says these promise much better — fifty per cent better — than the famous silver mines of that young Stalte. There, fifty to one hundred dollars of silver from a ton of ore is considered highly profitable and satisfactory; here, the surface ore assays fronione hundred to five hundred dollars a ton, and in sev- eral cases lodes have been opened that assay from one thousand to four thousand dollars to the ton. The last figure is obtained from one just opened and named the New York lead. The farther the mines are worked, the richer grows the ore. The Mormons say they will soon work out; but the miners have faith, and are working away with all the capital and labor they can command. At pres- ent, the ore is easily worked, and does not demand expensive machinery like stamp mills and steam or water power. Smelting furnaces are the chief ne- ces^ty to reduce the ore to its elements, and sepa- rate the metal from the dross. As the mines are further worked, the ore will probably grow harder, and require more elaborate processes. General Connor, who is an old Californian, has large faith in these prospectings, has taken much interest in their development, and has located and is building up a town, called Stockton, pear them, in the Rush Valley. Here we found a population of perhaps two hundred, all "Gentiles^" many of ttiem old soldiers, and all full of faith and zeal in tgieir new enterprise. ' Major Gallagher, formerly of Qeneral Conhor's California regiment, is living here as the general's agent, and as farmer and miner on THE PROMISE OF UTAH. 97 his own responsibility. We spent the night at the " government reserves," two miles beyond Stockton, by the shore of Rush Lake ; these reserves being valuable lands selected some years ago by Colonel Steptoe, as likely to be needed for government uses, and now thus appropriated for supplies of wood for the camp in town and to pasture surplus horses. Here we met a rough but generous hospitality, a midnight supper, a roaring open firCj and beds^on the floor and in the stable-yards j but we slept soundly, ate heartily, and gathered sweetest of flowers amid a snow-storm on the hill-sides the next day, as we wandered about in search of the silver lodes. In the more remote parts of the Territory, other silver mines have been discovered, and are being worked with success. Their distance from markets, the necessity of more or less machinery foir their profitable operation, and the lack of capital among those who have discovered the lodes, are obstacles to their rapid development ; but judging frO;m aU 1 can see and learn, there is no good reason to doubt their great value, and sufficient cause to regard them as offering one of the best fields for wisely investing capital and labor in all the mining regions, and to predict ere long such an interest and excite- ment in regard to them, as will give "Utah a new population and rapid growth, and place her amon^ the first of the mining States. The antecedent, achieved development of her agricultural capacities, her settled population and her gathered and organ- ized civilization will then prove of a great advan- tage, and be properly appreciated. S 7 LETTER X. SALT LAKE CITY AND LIFE THERE.: Salt Lake City, Saturday, June 17. In the "great and glorious future" of our Fourth of July orations, when polygamy is extinct, the Pa- cific Railroad built, and the mines developed, Salt Lake City will be lyt only the chief commercial city of the mountains, the equal of St. Louis and Chicago, but one of the most beautiful residence cities and most attractive watering-places on the Continent. Its admirable location and early de- velopment secure the one ; its agreeable climate for eight months in the year, at least, and the surpass- ing beauty of its location, with its ample supply of water, its fruits and vegetables, will add the second ; tod joining to all these circumstances, its snow- capped mountains, its hot sulphur springs, and its Great Salt Lake, and we have the elements of the third fact. There are two principal sulphur springs, one hot enough' (one hundred and twenty degrees) to boij an egg, which is four miles from the center of the city, and the other just the right temperature for a hot bath, (ninety degrees,) which is close to the city, and is already brought into a large enclos- SALT LAKE CITY AS A WATERING-PLACE. 99 ure for free bathing purposes. Both these streams are large enough for illimitable bathing ; the water is as highly sulphurized and as clear as that of the celebrated Sharon Springs ; and its use, either for drinking or for baths, most effective in purifying the blood and toning up the. system. Other and snialler springs of the same character have been found in the neighborhood. Then the Lake opens another field of attractions ; it is a miniature ocean, about fifteen miles from the city, fifty miles wide by one hundred long, — the briniest sheet of water known on the Continent, — so salt that no fish can live in it, and that three quarts of it will boil down to one quart of fine, pure salt, — ^but most delicious and |pfreshing for bathing, floating the body as a cork on the surface, — only the brine must be kept from mouth and eyes under the penalty of a severe smarting ;^with its high rocky islands and crestfuU waves and its superb sunsets, picturesque and enchanting to look upon ; while its broad expanse offers wide space for sailing, and every chance for sea^sickness. Count up all these features for a watering-place ; and where will you find a Newport, a Saratoga or a Sharon that has the half of them ? So, ye votaries of fashion, ye rheumatic cripples, ye victims of scrofula and ennui, prepare to pack your trunks at the sound of the first whittle of the train for the Rocky Moun- tains, for a season at Salt Lake City. The city is regularly laid out into squares of ten acres each, and these into lots of one acre and a quarter, only farther subdivided in the business or loo ACROSS THE CONTINENT. more thickly populated streets. The bmlding ma- terial is mostly sun-dried bricks, (called adobe,) covered with plaster, and the houses are generaUgr of one story, covering much space and with as many front doors as the owner has wives. A few of the newer stores are built of stone, and are ele- gant and capacious within and without. Brighajm Young's establishment occupies a full square, and embraces several dwellings, a school house for his forty or fifty children, extensive stables, a grist mill, a carpenter's shop, and the "tithing" office. An opposite square is devoted to church purposes ; and here is the old Tabernacle, a new and larger one partly done, and the foundations of the great Tem- ple, which, if ever completed, according to the de- sign, will be the finest church edifice in America. Nothing is doing upon it now. Within the same enclbsure is the " Bowery," an immense thatch of green boughs, covering space for an audience of several thousands. Here the general Sunday ser- vices are held during the warm weather. Both these squares. President Young's and the church grounds, are enclosed by solid walls of mud and stones, twelve feet high, and walls of a like charac- ter are even used for fences about many of the resi- dences. There are very large mercantile interests here. Several firms do a business of a million dollars or more each, a year, and keep on hand stocks of goods of the value of a quarter of a million. They fre- queatly have subsidiary stores in other parts of the Territory to the number of four or six. Their BUSINESS AND PRICES IN DTAH. lOI freights are enormous, and sometimes their goods are a year on the way hither. One firm has just received a stock of goods, costing one hundred thousand dollars, that was bought in New York last June. It got caught on the Plains *by early snow, last fell, and had to winter on the way. Anoth^ leading merchant paid one hundred and fifty thou- sand dollars for fireights last year. One lot of goods, groceries, hardware, dry goods, eva-ythin^ was found to have cost, on reaching here, just one dollar a pound, adding to original purchase the cost of freighting, which from New York to this point averages from twenty-five to thirty cents a pound. It of- course requires large capital and courage to enter upon the mercantile business here under such circumstances. Prices, too, must rule high; and when the supply is short, as it was last year, and the demand large, great profits are realized; and again, with an overstocked market and a small sale^ there is danger of heavy losses. One concern made seventy-five per cent, profit last year, but this season promises poorly; and the stocks on hand cannot, in many cases, be sold for their cost. I give the ruling rates for some of the leading arti- cles, both of native production and imported : beef twelve to twenty cents, mutton twenty to twenty- five cents, pork fifty cents, bacon seventy-five cents, hams one dollar, wood eighteen dollars per cord, lumber one hundred dollars per thousand, butter fifty cents, sugar seventy-five to eighty-five cents, coffee one dollar to one dollar and ten cents, green tea (almost universal on the Plains and in the moun- 102 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. tains) three and a half to five dollars, tobacco two to two dollars and a half, axes four dollars and a half; heavy brown sheetings eighty-five to ninety cents, fine seventy-five to ninety cents, prints twenty-five to forty cents, dried apples sixty cents, dried peaches fifty cents, molasses three to three dollars and a half, gunpowder two dollars, day labor three dol- lars, mechanics three to five dollars, clerks twelve hundred to three thousand dollars a year. The only coal mines yet developed in the -Territory lie forty miles over the mountains east, on our road hither, and it costs twenty-five to thirty dollars a ton to transport it to the city, so that the price for it is thirty-five to forty dollars. It is a bituminous coal, and of very fair quality. Your readers would mistake if they supposed that these prices enforced any poverty in living among these people. There are not many abso- lutely poor ; and the general scale of living is gen- erous. In the early years of the Territory, there was terrible sufiering for the want of food ; many were reduced to the roots of the field for sustenance ; but now there appears to be an abundance of the substantial necessaries of life, and as most of the population are cultivators of the soil, all or nearly all have plenty of food. And certainly, I have never seen more generously laden tables than have been spread before us at our hotel or at private houses. A dinner to our party this evening by a leading Mormon merchant, at which President Young and the principal members of his council were present, had as rich a variety of fish, meats, vegetables, BRIGHAM YOUNGS THEATER. 103 pastry and fruit, as I ever saw on any private table in the East ; and the quality and the cooking and the serving were unimpeachable. All the food, too, was native in Utah. The wives of our host waited on us most amicably, and the entertainment was, in every way, the best illustration of the practical benefits of plui;ality, that has yet been presented to us. Later in the evening we were introduced to an- other, and perhaps the most wonderful, illustration of the reach of social and artificial life in this fax off city of the Rocky Mountains. This was the Theater, in which a special performance was impro- vised in honor of Speaker Colfax.' The building is itself a rare triumph of art and enterprise. No east- ern city of one hundred thousand inhabitants, — re- member Salt Lake City has less than twenty thou- sand, — possesses so fine a theatrical structure. It ranks, alike in capacity and elegance of structure and finish, along with the opera-houses and acade- mies of music of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and Cincinnati. In costumes and scenery, it is furnished with equal richness and variety, and the performances themselve^, though by kmateurs, by merchants and mechanics, by wives and daughr ters of citizens, would have done full credit to a first- class professional company. There was first a fine and elaborate drama, and then a spectacular farce, in both which were introduced some exquisite dan- cing, and in one some good singing also. I have rarely seen a theatrical entertainment more pleasing and satisfactory in all its details and appointments. I04 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, Yet the two principal male characters were by a day-laborer and a carpenter; one of the leading kdy parts was by a married daughter of Brigham Young, herself the mother of several children ; and several other of his daughters took part in the bal- let, which was most enchantingly rendered, and with great scenic effect The house was full in all its parts, and the audience embraced all classes of so- ciety, from the wives and daughters of President Yoang, — a goodly array, — and the families of the rich merchants, to the families of the mechanics and farmers of the city and valley, and the soldiers from the camp. President Young built and owns the theater, and conducts it on his private account, or on that of the church, as he does many other of the valuable and- profitable institutions of the Ter- ritory, such as cotton, saw and flour mills, the best farms, etc. ; and, as he is at no expense for actors or actresses, and gets good prices for admission, he undoubtedly makes a "good thing" out of it. Dur- ing the winter season, performances are given twice a week ; and the theater proves a most useful and popular social center and entertainment for the whole people. Its creation was a wise and benefi- cent thought. LETTER XI. THE POLYGAMY QUESTION. Salt Lake Oty, June i8. Our visit here closes in the morning. It has been very interesting, instructive and gratifying to us. We have had unusual opportunities for learn- ing the opinions of the Mormons, for studying their institutions, for measuring their culture and capac- ity, for observing their social, material and religious development, and for informing ourselves as to the conflict fast growing up between them and the non- Mormons who are rapidly accumulating in the com- munity. The leaders in the church and in society have been generous and constant in their hospi- tality, and frank in their conversation, partly, I will not doubt, from a hearty, human good feeling, and partly, no doubt, also, from anxiety as to the future policy of the government towards them and their institutiorts, and eagerness to propitiate political and public opinion in their favor.- We have attended the services at the Mormon Tabernacle on two suc- cessive Sabbaths, on one of which Brigham Young himself preached in exposition and defense of the doctrines of his church. Mr. Colfax and his friends I06 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, have also had two long interviews with Brigham Young and the other leaders of the church, in one of which the peculiar institution' of the people was freely and frankly but most earnestly discussed by- all. The testimony and opinions of the " Geiitiles," ahd of intelligent citizens, men and women, who, once Mormons, have now left the ,qhurch, have been freely offered to us, and gladly heard. Valuable facts and opinions have also been gathered from old and intelligent citizens, who have held a sort of in- dependent and neutral position, whcp are neither polygamists in theory or practice, nor members of the church, but who, either from motives of policy or qualities of temperament, have taken no part with the pronounced and denouncing "Gentiles." Nor have the opinions and feelings of women in polygamy been wholly denied^ to us ; though we have not been offered their society by their hus- bands with any particular generosity ; — ^this, indeed, being the only feature of their hospitality that has been measured and chary. The result of the whole experience has been to increase my appreciation of the value of their ma- terial progress and development to the nation ; to evoke congratulations to them and to the country for the wealth they have created and the order, fru- gality, morality and industry that have been organ- ized in this remote spot in our Continent ; to excite wonder at the perfection and power of their church system, the extent of its ramifications, the sweep of its influence ; and to enlarge my respect for the personal sincerity and character of many of the MORMONISM KOT POLYGAMY. I07 leaders in the organization ; — also, and on the other hand, to deepen my disgust at their polygamy, and strengthen my convictions of its barbaric and de- grading influences. They have tried it and prac- tised it under the most favorable circumstances, perhaps under the mildest form possible ; but, now as before, here as elsewhere, it tends to and means only the degradation of woman. By it and under it, she becomes simply the servant and serf, not the companion and equal of man; and the inevitable influence of this upon all society need not be de- picted. But I find that Mormonism is not necessarily polygamy; that the one began and existed for many years without the other; that not all the Mormons accept the doctrine, and not one-fourth, perhaps not one-eighth practise it; and that the Nation and its government may oppose it and pun- ish it, with6ut at all interfering with the existence of the Mormon church, or justly being held as in- terfering with the religious liberty that is the basis of all our institutions. This distinction has not been sufficiently understood heretofore, and it has not been consistently acted upon by either the gov- ernment or the public of the East. Here, by the people, who are coming in to enjoy the opportuni- ties of the country for trade and mining, and there, by our rulers at Washington and by the great pub- lic, this single issue of polygamy should be pressed home upon the Mormon church, — discreetly and with tact, with law and with argument and appeal, but with firmness and power. t08 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Ultimately, of course, before the influences of emigration, civilization and our democratic habits, aji organization so aristocratic and autocratic as the Mormon church now is must modify its rule; it m^st compete with other sects, and take its chance with them. And its most aristocratic and uncivil- ized incident or feature of plurality of wives must fell &Tit and completely before contact with the rest of the wtwrld, — marshalled with mails, daily papers, railroads and telegraphs, — ciphering out the feet that the men and women of the world are about equally divided, and applying to the Mormon patri- archs the democratic principle of equal and exact justice. Nothing can save this feature of Mor« monism but new flight and a more complete isola- tion. A kingdom in the sea, entirely its own, could only perpetuate it ; and thither even, commerce and democracy would ultimately follow it. The click of the telegraph and the roll of the overland stages are its death-rattle now; the first whistle of the locomotive will sound its requiem ; and the pick- ax of the miner will dig its grave. Squatter sov- ereignty will speedily settle the question, even if the government continues to coquette with it and humor it, as it has done. But the government should no longer hold a doubtful or divided position toward this ^eat crime of the Mormon church. Declaring clearly both its- want of power and disinclination to interfere at all with the church organization as such, or with the fet- ter's influence over its followers, assuring and guar- anteeing to it all the liberty and freedom that other DUTY OP THE GOVERNMENT. IO9 religious sects hold and enjoy, the government should still, as clearly and distinctly, declare, by all its action and all its representatives here, that this feature of polygamy, not properly or necessarily a part of the religion of the Mormons, is a crime by .the common law of all civilization and by the stat- ute law of the Nation, and that any cases of its ex- tension will be prosecuted and punished is such. Now half or two-thirds the federal officers in the Territory are pelygamists ; and others bear no tes- timony against it. These should give way to men who, otherwise equally Mormons it may be, still are neither polygamists nor believers in the practice of polygamy. No employes or contractors of the government should be polygamists in theory or practice. Here the government should take its stand, eahnly, quietly, but firmly, giving its moral sup- jKjrt and countenance, and its physical support, if necessary for fair play, to the large class of Mor- mons who are not polygamists, to missionaries and preachers of all other sects, who choose to come here, and erect their standards and invite followers ; and to that growing public opinion, here and else* where, which is accumulating its inexorable force against an institution which has not inaptly been termed a twin barbarism with slavery. There is no need and no danger of physical conflict growing up ; only a hot and unwise zeal and impatience on the part of the government representatives, and in the command of the troops stationed here, could precipitate that. The probability is, liiat, upon such no ACROSS THE CONTINENT. a demonstration by the government, as I have sug- gested, the leaders of the church would receive new light on the subject themselves, — ^perhaps have a fresh revelation, and abandon the objectionable fea- tur^e in their polity. No matter if they did not, — it would soon, under the influences now rapidly ag- •gregating, and thus reinforced by the government, abandoh them. ~. In this way, all violent conflict would, I believe, be successfully avoided ; and all this valuable popu- lation and its industries and wealth may be retained in place and to the Nation, without waste. Let them continue to be Mormons, if they choose, so long as they are not polygamists. They may be ignorant and fanatical, and imposed upon and swin- dled even, by their church leaders; but they are industrious, thriving, and more comfortable than, on an average, they have ever been before in the homes from which they came hither j and there is no law against fanaticism and bigotry and religious charlatanry. All these evils of religious benight- ment are not original in Utah, and they will work out their own cure here, as- they have done else- where in our land. We must have patience with the present, and possibly forgiveness for supposed crimes in the past by the leaders, because we have heretofore failed to meet the issues promptly and clearly, and have shared by our consent and protec- tion to their authors in the alleged wrongs. The conversation I have alluded to with Brighara Young and some of his elders, on this subject of polygamy, was introduced by his inquiring of Mr. DISCUSSION WITH BRIGHAM YOUNG. Ill Colfax what the government and people of the East proposed to do Avith it and them, now that they had got rid of the slavery question. The Speaker replied that he had no authority to speak for the govern- ment ; but for himself, if he might be permitted to make the suggestion, he had hoped the prophets of the church would have a new revelation on the subject, which should put a stop to the practice. He added further that, as the people of Missouri and Maryland, without waiting for the action of the general government against slavery, themselves be- lieving it to be wrong and an impediment to their prosperity, had taken measures to abolish it, so he hoped the people of the Mormon church would see that polygamy was a hindrance and not a help, and move for its abandonment. Mr. Young responded quickly and frankly that he should readily welcome- such a revelation; that polygamy was not in the original book of the Mormons; that it was not an essential practice in the church, but only a privilege and a duty, tinder special command of God ; that he knew it had been abused ; that people had entered into polygamy who ought not to have done so, and against his protestation and advice. At the same time, he defended the practice as having biblical atr- thority,'and as having, within proper limits, a sound, moral and philosophical reason and propriety. The discussion, thus opened, grew general and sharp, though ever good-natured. Mr. Young was asked how he got over the fact that the two sexes were about equally divided all over the world, and that, if some men had two, five,, or twenty wives, 112 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Others would h&vs to go without altogether. His reply was that there was always a considerable pro- portion of the men who would never marry, who were old bachelors from choice. But, retorted on^ are there any more of such than of women who choose to be old maids.' Oh yes, said he, most ungallantly; there is not one woman in a million who will not marry if she gets a chance ! One of the saints, who was pressing the biblical usage and authority for many wives as above all laws and con- stitutions, was asked as to the effect of the same usage and authority for human sacrifice, — ^would you, he was asked> if commanded by God, offer up your son or your enemy as a sacrifice, killing them? Yes, he promptly replied. Then the civil law would lay its hands upon you and stop you, and would be justified in doing so, was the apparently effective answer. In the course of the discussion, Mr. Young asked, suppose polygamy is given up, will not your govern- ment then demand more, — will it not war upon the Book of the Mormons, and attack our church organ- ization.' The reply was emphatically No, that k had no right, and could have no justification to do so, and that we had no idea there would be any dis- position in that direction. The talk, which was said to be the freest and frankest ever known on that subject in that pres- ence, ended pleasantly, but with the full expressicm, on the part of Mr. Colfax and his friends, of their hope that the polygamy question might be removed from existence, and thus all objection to the admis- BRIGHAM YOUNG ON THE REBELS. II3 sion of Utah as a State be taken away; but that, until it was, no such admission was possible, and that the government could not continue to look in- differently upon the enlargement of so offensive a practice. And not only what Mr. Young said, but his whole manner left with us the impression that, if public opinion and the government united vigor- ously, but at the same time discreetly, to press the question, there would be found some way to acqui- esce in the demand, and change the practice of the present fathers of the church. . The conversation was continued on the subjects of punishing the leading rebels, and of slavery in the abstract. Mr. Young favored slavery/^r se as estab- lished by Divine authority, but denounced the chat- tel system of the South ; and he opposed the hang- ing of any of the rebel chiefs as an unwise and aggravating policy. Now that peace is established, let all be pardoned, he said ; but early in or during the war) he would have disposed of the rebel chiefs that fell into the hands of the government with- out mercy or hesitation. Had he been President when Mason and Slidell were captured, he would have speedily put them "where they never would peep," and negotiated with England afterwards. He uttered this sentiment with such a wicked working of the lower jaw and lip, and such an almost demon-like spirit in his whole face, that, quite disposed to be incredulous on those matters, I could not help thinking of the Mountain Meadow massacre of recusant Mormons, of Danites and Avenging Angels, and their reported achievements. 8 LETTER XII. THE MORMON WIVES: OUR LAST BAY IN SALT LAKE CITY. , Salt Lakb City, June 18. How do the Mormon women like and bear po- lygamy ? is the question most people ask as to the institution. The universal testimony of all but their husbands is, that, it is a grievous sorrow and burden ; only cheerfully submitted to and embraced under a religious fanaticism and self-abnegation rare to behold, and possible only to women. They are taught to believe, and many of them really do believe, that through and by it they secure a higher and more glorious reward in the future world. " Lord Jesus has laid a heavy trial upon me," said one poor, sweet woman, " but I mean to bear it for His sake, and for the glory He will grant me in His kingdom." This is the common wail, the common solace. Such are the teachings of the church ; and I have no doubt both husbands and wives alike often honestly accept this view of the odious prac- tice, and seek and submit to polygamy as really God's holy service, calculated to make saints of themselves and all associated with them in the fu- ture world. POLYGAMY AND WOMAN. IIJ Still a good deal of human nature is visible, both among the men in embracing polygamy, and in their wives in submitting to it. Mr. Young's testi- mony on this point is significant. Other signs are not wanting in the looks and character of the men most often anointed in the holy bonds of matri- mony, and in the well-known disagreement of the wives in many families. In some cases they live harmoniously and lovingly together ; oftener, it would seem, they have separate parts of the same house, or even separate houses. The first wife is generally the recognized one of society, and fre- quently assumes contempt for the others, regarding them as concubines, and not wives. But it is a dreadful state of society to any one of fine feelings and true instincts; it robs married life of all its sweet sentiment and compaiiionship ; and while it degrades woman, it brutalizes man, teaching him to despise and. domineer over his wives, over all women. It breeds jealousy, distrust, and tempts to infidelity ; but the police system of the church and the community is so strict and constant that it is claimed and believed the latter vice is very rare. The effect upon the children cannot help being debasing, however well they may be guarded and educated. But it is a chief failing, even a scandal to the ■ Mormons, that, plentifully as they are pro- viding children, who swarm everywhere as did the locustsi in Egypt, they have organized no free school system. Schools are held in every ward of the city, and probably in every considerable village, in buildings provided for evening religious meet- il6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. ings under the direction of the local bishops, but a tuition fee is exacted for all who attend, and the poor are practically shut out. The anti-polygamists should agitate at once and earnestly to reform this evil, — it is a strong point against the dominant party, and a weak point in the welfare of the Terri- tory. It is a good and encouraging sign to learn from intelligent sources that, as the yxjung girls, daughters of Mormons, grow up to womanhood; they are indisposed to polygamy, and seek husbands among the " Gentiles " rather than among their own faith. The soldiers at Camp Douglas, near this city, are illustrating one of the ways in which polygamy will fade away before the popular principle. Two com- panies, who went home to California last fall, took about twenty-five wives with them, recruited from the Mormon flocks. There are now some fifty or more women in the camp, who 'have fled thither from town for protection, or been seduced away from unhappy homes and fractional husbands ; and all or nearly all find new husbands among the sol- diers. Only to-day a man with three daughters, living in the city, applied to Colonel George for leave to move up to the camp for a residence, in order, as he said, to save his children from polyg- amy, into which the bishops and elders of the church were urging them. The camp authorities tell many like stories ; also of sadder applications, if possible, for relief from actual poverty and from persecution in town. The Mormons have no poor- house, and say they have^no poor, permitting none SERVICES AT THE TABERNACLE. II7 by relieving all through work or gifts. But the last winter was so long and so severe, with wood at thirty and forty dollars a cord, that there was much real suffering, and the soldiers yielded to extensive demands upon their charity, that the church author- ities had neglected to fulfill, or absolutely denied. Your readers are aware, I suppose, that a large proportion, perhaps the majority, of the people of Utah are foreigners,— recruits by missionaries sent out over the whole world. The larger proportion are English, from the factory towns of Great Brit- ain. But Germans, Swedes, Finns, Scotch, Ice- landers, and even East Indians, are here. Mr. Young boasts that fifty different nationalities are represented among his people. The bulk of them all are of the peasantry, the lower classes of work- ing people at home ; and so the congregations of the Mormons do not exhibit the marks of high acuteness and intelligence. The audiences at the Tabernacle to-day and last Sunday, and at the the- ater last night, were what would be called common- looking people. The handsome girls were few ; the fine-looking women even fewer ; intelligent, strong- headed men were more numerous; but the great mass, both in size, looks and dress, was below the poorest, hardest-working and most ignorant classes of our eastern large tpwns. The gatherings and the services, both in speak- ing and singing, reminded me of the Methodist camp-meetings of fifteen or twenty years ago. The singing, as on the latter occasions, was the best part of the exercises, simple, sweet, and fervent. Ii8 ACROSS THE CONTINENT "Daughters of Zion/'as sung by the large choir last Sunday, was prayer, sermon, song and alj. The preaching last Sabbath was by Mr. Samuel W. Richards, who was of Massachusetts origin, but a Mcfrmon leader and missionary for many years. Beyond setting forth the superiority of the Mor- mon church system, through its presidents, coun- cils, bishops, elders and seventies, for ■ the work made incumbent upon Christians, and claiming that its preachers were inspired like those of old, his discourse was a rambling, unimpressive exhorta- tion, such as you may hear from a tonguey deacon in any country Baptist or Methodist meeting-house. The Bible, both old and new testament, is used with the same authority as by all Protestants ; the Mormon scriptures are simply new and added books, confirming and supplementing the teach- ings of the original Scriptures. The rite of the sacrament is administered every Sunday, water being used instead® of wine, and the distribution proceeding among the whole congregation, men, women and children, and numbering from three to five thousand, while the singing and the preaching are in progress. The prayers are few and simple, undistinguishablo, except in these characteristics, from those heard in all Protestant churches, and the congregation all join in the Amen. Brigham Young's preaching to-day was a very unsatisfactory, disappointing performance. There was every incentive to him to do his best ; he had an immense audience spread out under the "bow- ery" to, the number of five or six thousand; before BRIGHAM YOUNGS PREACHING. SIQ him was Mr. Colfax, who had asked him to preach upon the distinctive Mormon doctrines; around him were all his elders and bishops, in unusual ntunbers,; and he was fresh from the exciting dis- cussion of yesterday on the subject of polygamy. But his address lacked logic, lacked effect, lacked wholly magnetism or im'pressiveness. It was a curi- ous medley of Scriptural exposition and exhortation, bold and bare statement, coarse denunciation and vulgar allusion, cheap rant and poor cant. So far as his statement of Mormon belief went, it amounted to this: that God was a human, material person, with like flesh and blood and passions to ourselves, ®nly perfect in all things ; that he begot his son Jesus in the same way that children are begotten now ; that Jesus and the father looked alike and were alike, distinguishable only by the former being older ; that our resurrection would be material, and we should live in heaven with the same bodies and the same passions as on earth; that Mormonism was the most perfect and true religion ; that those Christians who were not Mormons would not nec- essarily go to hell and be burned by living fire and tortured by ugly devils, but that they would not occupy so high places in heaven as the Latter Day Saints; that polygamy was the habit of all the children of God in the earlier ages, and was first abolished by the Goths and Vandals who conquered and constructed Rome; that Martin Lifther ap- proved of it in a single ease at least ; that a clergy- man of the church of England once married a man , to a second wife while his first wife was living ; and I20 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. that in England now, if a man wanted to change his wife, he had only to offer her at auction and knock her off for a pot of beer or a shilling, and marry another. (This last statement called out a voice of dissent from an English working-face in the audience.) A good deal of boasting of thx; success of the Mormons, their temperance, frugal- ity and honesty, and a sharp denunciation of the "few stinking lawyers who lived down in whiskey street, and for five dollars would attempt to make a lie into a truth," were the only other noticeable fea- tures of fliis discourse of the president of the church of the Latter Day Saints. It was a very material interpretation of the statements and truths of scripture, very illogically and roughly rendered ; and calculated only to influence a cheap and vulgar audience. Brigham Young may be a shrewd busi- ness man, an able organizer of labor, a bold, brave person in dealing with the practicalities of life, — he must, indeed, be all of these, for we see the leviden- ces all around this city and country ; but he is in no sense an impressive or effective preacher, judged by any standards that I have been accustomed to. ' His audience, swollen one or two thousand more, could not have helped drawing a sharp contrast, — dull in comprehension and fanatically devoted tp: him as most of them probably are, — between his speech and his style, and those of Mr. Colfax, who, at a later hour this evening, delivered in the same place, by invitation of the church and city authori- ties, his Chicago Eulogy on the Life and Principles of President Lincoln. He spoke it without notes, ELECTIONS IN UTAH. 121 and with much freedom and fervor to an audience unused to so effective and eloquent a style, and more unused, we fear, to such sentiments ; and he received rapt attention and apparently delighted approval throughout the whole. Mr. Colfax's other and informal speeches here, and his whole inter- course with the authorities and people of all parties, considerate always, but frank and ever consistent with his principles, had won him the respect of all and the affection of many ; but the pronouncing of this eulogy has increased the feeling in his favor to a high enthusiasm. The election for territorial delegate to Congress from Utah occurs in August. Judge Kinney, who was sent here as judge by President Buchanan, and becoming agreeable to the Mormon leaders, was sent to Congress by them when superseded in his judgeship by Mr. Lincoln, has recently come back from Washington, and seeks re-election. But it is doubtful if Mr. Young decides to have him go again. He has indicated a purpose of returning Captain Hooper, an old and prosperous merchant here, whO' served the term before Judge Kinney, and who has lately sold out his business here, in order to go on a mission for the church to England.* He was popu- lar and useful in Congress before, is an intelligent, able man, and though a Mormon of many years' standing, has the principle and good sense to be content with one most excellent wife. These and other selections for office are of course nominally made by the people voting as 'in other States, and *Mr. Hooper has since been chosen to Congress. 6 122 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Teiritories ; but fhereal choice is made beforehand by the church authorities, and the vote is usually quite small. Only one case is known of the bish- op's ticket ever having been defeated. This was at a small country village in the choice for mayor; but the fact was not suffered to go abroad, — ^it was too dangerous an example. But adieu to Salt Lake and many-wive-and-much* children-dom ; to its strawberries and roses; its rare hospitality ; its white crowned peaks, its wide- spread valley, its river of scriptural name, its lake of briniest taste. I have met much to admire> many to respect, worshiped deep before its Na- ture, — ^found only one thing to condemn. I shall want to come again when the railroad can bring me, and that blot is gone. LETTER XIII. SOCIAL LIFE AMONG THE MORMONS. Austin, Nevada, June 22. I GO back to the Mormons, to add some facts and gossip, because their civilization is so remarkable, and because they and their institutions are about , to come into new and final conflict with the people and the government of the country. Polygamy in- troduces many curious cross-relationships, and in- tertwines the branches of the genealogical tree in a manner greatly to puzzle a mathematician, as well as to disgust the decent-minded. The marrying of two or more sisters is very common; one young Mormon merchant in Salt Lake City has three sisters for his three wives. There are several cases of men marrying both mother (widow) and her daughter or daughters; taking the "old woman" for the sake of getting the young ones ; but halving children by all. Please to cipher out for yourselves how this mixes things. More disgusting associa- tions are known,— even to the marrying of a half- sister by one Mormon. Consider, too, how these children of one father and many mothers, — the latter often blood relations, — ^are likely to become crossed 124 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, again in new marriages, in the second or third, if , not the first, generations, under the operation of this polygamous practice ; and it is safe to predict that a few generations of such social practices will breed a physical, moral and mental debasement of the people most frightful to contemplate. Already, in- deed, are such indications apparent, foreshadowing the sure and terrible realization. Brigham Young's wives are numberless ; at least no one seems to know how many he has ; and he has himself confessed to forgetfulness in the mat- ter. The probability is he has from sixteen to twenty genuine or complete wives, and about as many more women "sealed" to him for heavenly association and glory. The latter are mostly pious old ladies, eager for high seats in the Mormon heaven, and knowing no surer way to get there than to be joined on to Brigham's angelic proces- sion. Some of these sealed wives of his are the earthly wives of other men; but, lacking faith in their husbands' heavenly glory, seek to make a sure thing of it for the future by the grace of gracious Brigham. Down East, you know, many a husband calculates on- stealing into heaven under the pious petticoats of his better wife ; here the thing is re- versed, and women go to heaven because their hus- bands take them along. The Mormon religion is an excellent institution for maintaining masculine authority in the family ; and the greatness of a true • Mormon is measured, indeed, by the number of wives he can keep in sweet and loving and espe- cially obedient subjugation. Such a man can have • "a good thing for a poor man. I2S as many wives as he wants. But President Young objects to multiplying wives for men who have not this rare domestic gift. So there is no chance for you and I, my dear Jones, becoming successful ■ Mormons! In many cases, the Mormon wives not only sup- poii: themselves and their children, but help support their husbands. Thus a clerk or other man, with similar limited income, who has yielded to the fasci- nations and desires of three or four women, and married them all, makes his home with number one, perhaps, and the rest live apart, each by herself, tak- ing in sewing or washing, or engaging in other em- ployment, to keep up her establishment and be no charge to her husband. He comes around, once in a while, to make her a visit, and then she sets out an extra table and spends all her accumulated earnings to make him as comfortable and herself as charming as possible, so that her fraction of the dear sainted man may be multiplied as much as possible. Thus the fellow, if he is lazy and has turned his piety to the good account of getting smart wives, may really board around continually, and live in clover, at no personal expense but his , own clothing. Is not this a divine institution, in- deed ! When President Young goes on a journey through the Territory, on private or public business, he takes a considerable retinue with him, and always a wife and a barber. The former is more his servant than his companion in such cases, however. His house- hold is said to be admirably managed. A son-in- 126 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. law acts as commissary ; the wives have notitiing to do with the table or its supply ; and whenever they want new clothes or pocket money, they must go to this chief of staff or head of the femily bureau. Considering his opportunities, the head of tte .Church of Latter Day Saints has made a rather sorry selection of women on the score of beaut)?. Th^ oldest or first is a matronly-looking old lady, serene and sober; the youngest and present pet, who was obtained,, they say, after much seeking,^!? comely but common-looking, despite the extra mil- linery in which she alone of the entire family in<- dulges. The second president and favorite prophet of the church, Heber Kimball, who in church and theater keeps the cold from his bare head and the divine afflatus in by throwing a red bandanna hand?- kerchief over it, is even less fortunate in the beauty of his wives ; it is rather an imposition upon the word beauty, indeed, to suggest it in their presence. Handsome women and girls, in fact, are scarce among the Mormons of Salt Lake, — the fewer "Gentiles" can show many more of them. Why is this ? Is beauty more esthetic and ascetic ? Or, good-looking women being supposed to have more chances for matrimony than their plainer sisters, do they all insist upon having the whole of one man, and leave the Mormon husbands to those whose choice is like Hobson's.^ The only polyga- mist, into whose family circle we were freely admit- ted, had, however, Tound two very pretty women to divide him between them ; and I must confess they appeared to take their share of him quite resignedly, BRISHAM S CHILDREN. 127 if not amicably. Thejr were English, and of nearly equal years ; appeared together in the parlor and in public with their husband, and dressed alike ; but they had the same quiet, subdued, half-sad air that eharacterized all the Mormon women, young and old,^ that I saw in public or private. There is cer- tainly none of that "loudness" about the Mormon ladies, that an eastern man cannot help observing in the manners of our western women generally. . And I hardly think the difference is to be attribu- ted to the superior refinement and culture, of the sisters of the Salt Lake Basin ; it rather and really is the sign and mark of their servitude, their de- basement Brigham Young!s younger children, as seen in his school, to whixjh we were admitted, look sprightly and bright and handsome ; and some of his grown up daughters are comely and clever ; but his older sons give no marked sign of their father's smart- ness. The oldest, Brigham Jr., is mainly distin- guished for his size and strength, — he weighs two to three hundred pounds, and is muscular in- propor- tion. He has now taken one of his wives and gone to England with her, on business for the church. The next son, John, is a poor, puny looking fellow, with several wives and an inordinate love for whis- key. Brigham's dynasty will die with himself There is no more love lost between the soldiers and the Mormons than between the soldiers and the Indians. The "boys in blue" regard both as their natural enemies, and the enemies of order and the government ; and the feeling is cordially recip- 128 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. ■rocated. General Connor, the commander of the miHtary force in Utah, has never even seen Brigham Young ; and the latter, it is quite certain, has no desire ever to see him. There is a provost guard of soldiers in Salt Lake City, but the rent of the building which it occupies is about expiring, and, according to a Mormon way of getting, rid of an uncomfortable presence, none other is now to be had in its place. Every building singularly hap- pens to be occupied or engaged just now; and the Mormons have evidently hoped to thus drive all these standing menaces, and seducers of their wo- men, as they add the soldiers all are, out of town and into the camp; two miles distant. But when Mr. Colfax suggested to two or three of the elders that such a result could only be interpreted at Washington as a compact and contrivance to em- barrass the soldiers and defy the government, they seemed to be incited to a new and original line of thought; and the probability is that the provost guard will be able to find some unoccupied build- ing, that had not been before thought of One of the characters of Mormondom is Porter Rockwell, the accredited leader of the Danites or "Avenging Angels " of the church. We were pre- sented to him, and were invited to eat strawberries and cream at his "ranch," but our engagements did not permit our accepting and partaking. Though given to heavy whiskey drinking of late years, he is as mild a mannered man as ever scuttled ship or murdered crews ; and I really do not think that, any anxiety for our lives entered into our declination of PORTER ROCKWELL, "THE AVENGER." 139 his hospitality, inejtplicable as it may seem that for any less reason we should have omitted any opportunity at strawberries. There is a difference of opinion, even iamong the "Gentiles," as to his real share in the mysterious and terrible talcings- oif of parties in bad odor with the saints of the church; though unlettered, he is strong-minded and strong-hearted, and, unless under the influence of a shocking fanaticism, I can hardly believe, from his appearance and manners, he could be guilty of such crimes as are laid at his door by the more im- placable and suspicious of the "Gentile" residents. I should not be willing, however, to see Mr. Fitz- hugh Ludlow fall in his way again ; there might not be murder, but the author of the largely imagina- tive article's in the Atlantic Monthly on this west- ern journey would certainly feel the sharp ven- geance of the injured and irate "Avenger." Mr. Ludlow tells the worst stories' about Rockwell, such as that he had committed about fifty murders for the church and as many more on private account, as if accepted, proved facts ; at the same time that he acknowledges being his guest, and availing him- self of his courtesies to see the country. Porter shuts his teeth hard when the subject is now men- tioned, and mutters that he supposes "it -is all wheat," this being Utah^ idiom for all right. Which means, of course, that he don't suppose any such thing.. There is little or no immigration to the Mormons this season, at least not yet. They have been send- ' ing out fresh relays of missionaries and recruiting 6* - 9 130 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. agents to England and the Continent of Europe, and expect great returns next year. On the Sand- wich Islands they seem to have established a per- manent colony, also, to which has just been con- tributed a new company of about fifty, men, women and children from Utah. Some of the "Gentiles" believe this Sandwich Island movement is towards a new and contingent base ; and that if hard pressed here by the progress of civilization and the hand of authority, the Mormon leaders will gather up all their available forces and wealth, and retreat thither. It is certain that they must make a change of base of one sort or another before long, either in the matter of polygamy, or els6 in the location of their earthly tabernacles and kingdom. Even without the interference of government, they must soon give way here, in their peculiar sway and their re- volting institution, before the progress of population and the diversification of civilized industry that comes along with it. Our bachelor stage-driver out of Salt Lake, who said he expected to have a revelation soon to take one of the extra wives of a Mormon saint, is a representative of the Coming Man. Let the Mormons look out for him. LETTER XIV. THE RIDE THROUGH THE SAGE BRUSH AND THE GREAT BASIN. Virginia, Nevada, June 28. We are nearly out of the Sage Brush ! Nearly into a "white country," where the grass grows green, and water runs, and trees mount skjnvard and spread sweet shade. Like some of the dry, barren plains that lead up to the Rocky Moun- tains on the east, the six hundred miles we have come over from Salt Lake to this point, pass through a region whose uses are unimaginable, unless to hold the rest of the globe together, or to teach pa- tience to travelers, or to keep close-locked in its mountain ranges those rich mineral treasures that the world did not need or was not ready for until, now. The Basin of the Great Salt Lake, that I briefly described in a late letter as the center of the Mormon development, is but the south-eastern and most fertile corner of an immensely large intra- mountain basin, that has no water outlet to the ocean, that absorbs all the water developed within its limits, and cries, oh how hungrily for more, whose chief natural vegetable product is Sage 132 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Brush, and which holds within its bounds the grfeat, if not the sole, silver mines of the nation. This Great Desert Basin, — ^but desert only because comparatively waterless, — ^lies on the very central and commercial line of the Republic, — the line of greatest populatio'n and thrift and wealth both east and west of it, — -stretches three hundred miles from north to south and six hundred miles from east to west, is about equally divided between "the two states of Utah and Nevada, and is walled in on the one side by the. Rocky Mountains and on the other by the Sierra Nevadas. Not a wide, unbroken plain, iiowever, is this vast basin desert of the West. Through it, nOrth and South, run subsidiary rahgeS 'of mountains, averaging dt least one to eVery fifty 'miles, and the intervehing valleys or plains all di|i, 'though almost irriperceptibly, to the center, which gratefully suggests that they Were once not altd- 'gether 'sb tearless as now. Mountain and plain are alike above dew point ; rain is a rarity, — near neigh- bor to absolute stranger; and only an occasional r&nge of the hills mounts so high as to hold itfe Winter snovvs into the summer suns, and yield thfe summer streams that give, at rare intervals, sweet lines of green, affording forage for cattle and re- freshment and rest for traveler. Springs are even more infrequent, but not altogether unknown, and water ihay sometimes, though very hardly, be got, When all el^e fails, by digging deep wells. Such streams as rise from springs or snow-banks in the mountaihs, begin to shrink as they reach the Plain's, ind end in salt lakes, or sink quietly into the fam- THE RIVERS OF THE GREAT BASIN. 1 33 ishing earth., Humboldt River, the largest and longest of the basin, runs west and south from three hundred to five hundred miles, and then finds igno- minious end in a "sink," or, in a very natural big disgust at the imppssibility of the job it has under- taken, quietly "peters out." So of the Carson , River, which comes from the Sierra Nevadas on the west, and finds its home in a lagoon within sight of its parent peaks. Reese River, now so fa-' mous as lopalizing the new and extensive silver mining operations about Austin, is but a sluggish brook that the shortest-legged man could step across at its widest, and yields itself up to the hot sands without greening but a n'arrow line in the broad plain in which it runs. And yet it is the largest and almost only stream that we met in traveling westward from the Jordan which waters the valley of, Salt Lake ; and the two are four hundred miles apart ! Through this wide stretch of treeless mountain and plain, at its center, — fifty to one hundred miles below the old and more fortunately watered emi- grant route along the valley of the Humboldt,— on a nearly straight line west, we have made the most rapid stage ride yet achieved on the great overland line, and the equal perhaps of any ever made of like distance on the Continent. Mr. Holiday's ownership ceases at Salt Lake ; from there hither, the stages are run by the Overland Mail Company, whose stockholders are New Yorkers, and mainly the same as those of the g?'eat express company ol Wells, Fargo & Co., which mpnopplizes the express 134 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. business in all these western States and Territories, having its offices in every town and village, and ex- tending its routes as fast and as far as the most enterprising prospectors successfully push their hunt for the precious metals. ^ At Salt Lake City, therefore, we parted with our protector and com- panion, thus far, Mr. Otis, — ^with many a rare mem- ory of his good fellowship, — and found new friends and careful protection on our farther journey in the officers and drivers, of the Overland Company. Their part of the line has been happily exempt, for now two years, from the inroads of the "Indians ; it is all nearer to good markets than most of Mr. Holladay's ; and so we naturally found it in better condition, and able to run more promptly and regu- larly. Ambitious to see how fast they could ^end Mr." Colfax and his friends over their route, they took us up at Salt Lake on Monday morning week, and set us down at Austin, four hundred miles dis- tant, in fifty hours, or two-thirds the time usually taken. Awaiting our examination of the mining region about Austin, we were again put over the road on the double quick, and landed in Virginia, two hundred miles farther oiT, In .twenty-two hours more, or fourteen less than the schedule time ; and so came into this town at six o'clock Sunday morn- ing, while all the elements of a magnificent popular reception, that had been arranged for the night be- fore, were fast asleep in bed, and totally undreaming of the march that we were stealing upon them. Here, we are near the foot of the Sierra Nevadas on the borders of California, and will be transferred A FAST STAGE RIDE. 1 35 for our farther progress, to still another line of coaches. But our fast ride by the Overland Mail stages from Salt Lake will always be a chigf feature in the history and memory of our grand journey across the Continent. The stations of the company are ten to fifteen miles apart;- at every station fresh horses, ready harnessed, took the places of the old, with a delay of from two to four minutes only; every fifty miles a new driver took his place on the box; wherever meals were to be eaten, they were ready to serve on arrival ; and so, with horses ever fresh and fat, and gamey, — ^horses that would shine in Central Park and Fifth Avenue equipages, — with drivers, gentlemanly, intelligent and better dressed than their passengers, and a division superintend- ent, who had planned the ride and came along to see it executed, for each t^o hundred miles, — we were whirled over the rough mountains and through the dry and dusty plains of this uninhabited and uninhabitable region, rarely passing a house except the stage stations, never seeing wild bird or beast, for there were none to see, as rapidly and as regu- larly as we could have been over macadamized roads amid a complete civilization. The speed rarely fell below eight miles an hour, and often ran up to twelve. But so wisely was all arranged, and so well executed' that not an animal suffered ; to horses and men the ride seemed to be the work of every day, as indeed it was in everything but our higher rate of speed. , But the passengers are content that it should be 136 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. a single experience for them ; they are glad to have had it, but will spare their friends a repetitj^n.^-^at present. The alkali dust, dry with a season's sun, fine with the grinding of a season's stages and freight trains, was thick and constant and pene- ^ating beyond experience and comparison. It filled the air,— it was the air; it covered our bodies,— it penetrated them,; it soared to Almighty. attributes, and became omnipresent,, and finding its way into bags and trunks, begrimed all our clean clothes and reduced everything and everybody to a common plane of dirt, with a soda, soapy flavor to aH This alkali element ia the soil of all this region, as of much of the country on the other side of the Rocky Mountains, I have heard no explanation of. In some spots it prevails to such a degree as to clean the ground of all, even the most barren vegetation ; and wide, smooth, bare alkali plains stretch out be.- fore the eye sometimes for miles, and white in the distance like a snow-bank. In some places so strong is it that the earth when wet.rises like bread undej yeast. It taints the water everjrwher^ and some-? times so strongly that bread mixed with it needs no other "rising." Yet I find no evidence of any gen-r eral unhealthy effect from its presence ; animals eat the grass and drink the water flavored with it ; and though the dust chokes all pores and makes tbe- nose and lips sore, the inconvenience and annoy- ance seem to be but temporary from even largQ dpses of it. Then the jolts of the rocks and the "chuck holes" of the road, to which the drivers in their rapid prog- MR. GREELEY AND HANK MONK, THE DRIVER. 13^ ress could give no heed, kept us in a somewhat perr petual and not altogether graceful motion. There was certainly small sleep to be enjoyed during thi§ memorable ride of three days and nights; and though we made the best of it with joke and felici^ tation at each other's discomfort, there was nope not glad when it was over. The drivers all had the same consolation to administer to us for the rough riding, and that was the story, memorable all along this route,, of Mr. Greeley's experience upon, it some; six years ago. He had met rather a dull driver, lyag behind time, and became impatient, as he had a lep» ture engagement just over the niountains in Cali- fornia. So when he struck the mountain road, an4 a noted driver then and still, — for stage driving is a trade that men follow through their livesj^by name Hank Monk, Mr. Greeley suggested that he wpul4, like to get over the road a trifle faster. " Yes," sai4 Hank, as he gathered up the reins of six half-wild mustangs, then in common use on the road,— !-" keep your seat Mr. Greeley, and I will get you thrpugh in time." Crack went his whip; the mustangs dashed into a fearful pace, up hill and down, along precipices frightful to look at, over rocks that kept the noted passenger passing frantically between seat and ceiling of the coach; — the philosopher soon was getting more thani he bargained for ; and at the first soft place on the road, be mildly sug- gested to the driver that a half an hour more or less would not make much difference. But Monk was in for his drive and his joke, and replied again, witl^ a twinkle in his left eye, gfter a fresh cut at his mug? 138 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. tangs, "Just keep your seat, Mr. Greeley, and you shall be through in time." Mr. Greeley kept his seat so well as he could, got through on time^ and better, unharmed, though greatly to his surprise, in view of the dangers and roughness of the drive, and rewarded the driver, who had served him the rough joke, with a new suit of clothes. The story js now classic with all the drivers and all travelers on the road ; and Monk wears a watch with his re- ply to Mr. Greeley engraved on the case, — ^the pres- ent of some Other passengers, whom he had driven both rapidly and safely over his perilous route. The road is better now ; and the horses tamer ; but the driving is hardly less fearful. It is an interesting problem whether these un- promising valleys, gray and brown with an unnat- ural sunshine, can ever be subdued to the service of the population that the mineral wealth of theif hills invites and will inevitably, draw into them. Save a sandy desert of sixty miles wide, which comds a,fter the fertile strip of eastern Utah is passed, there is nothing in the soil itself that for- bids valuable uses. It is made up of the wash and waste of the Rocky Mountains, and wherever even moderately watered is very productive. Some the- orists contend that with the occtlpation and use of the country, rains will multiply ; and the observa- tions of the Morijions give a faint encouragement to this idea. Another theory is, that by plowing during the later rains of spring, and sowing during the long, dry summer rest, the smaller and hardy grains will sprout with the fall rains, strengthen in THE BEAUTY OF THE HILLS. 1 39 the winter, and quickly ripen in the early spring. Such treatment involves a year's fallow, as the har- vest would be too late for another plowing the same spring. This culture is doubtless practicable, as it has been proven, in the high sage brush plains in California; but it would seem as if these alkaline valleys of the great interior basin were too cold, and go dry too long, for like successful treatment. It is worthy intelligent and persistent experiment, ' however ; for I observe that wherever the sage bush can grow, other things can and will with the addi- tion of water. Do not think such a country is altogether with- out beauty or interest for a traveler. Mountains are always beautiful ; and here they are ever in sight, wearing every variety of shape, and even in their hard and bare surfaces presenting many a fascina- tion, of form, — running up into sharp peaks; rising up and rounding out into innumerdble fat mam- millas, exquisitely shapen, and inviting possibly to auriferous feasts ; sloping down into faint foot-hills, and mingling with the plain to which they are all destined; and now and then offering the silvery streak of snow, that is the sign of water for man and the promise of grass for ox. Add to the moun- tains the clear, pure, rare atmosphere, bringing re-^ mote objects close, giving new size and distinctness to moon and stars, offering sunsets and sunrises of indescribable, richness and reach of color, and ac- companied with cloudless skies and a south wind, refreshing at all times, and cool and exhilarating ever in the afternoon and evening; and you have X49 ACROSS THE CONTINlgN:?, I^rge compensations even for the lack pf vegeUT tion and color in the landscape. There is a rich exhilaration, especially, in the fresh evening air, dry, clear and strengthening, that no eastern mountam or ocean breeze can rival. In looking out through it at sunset on the starry heavens, and in taking in, its subtle inspiration, one almost forgets alkali, and for the nonqe does not remember flowers and grass and trees. LETTER XV. tire SILVER MINES OF NEVAbA— AUSWn ANt) VIRGINIA CITY. Virginia, Nevada, June 27. California, mature at eleven, .plants a colony in 1859-60, which ripens into a new State in 1864. Nevada is the first child of California. As bachelor uncles khd fond friends sometimes think children are born in order to wheedle them out of silver cups; so Nevada sprang into being under like inetallib fniSuehce. And if she promised to give, father than to get, she fails yet to keep fiill faith ; "for T:h6ugh in her six years of life, she has yielded sixty millions of material for pure coin of the realm, she has absorbed much more than that amount of California capital and labor. Coming west out of 'the barren plains of the great interior basin,— «vien in their midst, — we strike the first wave of Pacific coast life at Austin. Five hundred miles from San Francisco., two hundred miles from the Sierra Ne- vadas, in middle Nevada, huddled and incoherent along the steep hill-sides of a close canyon, running sharply up from the Rees^ River valley, lies the east- ernmost and freshest mining town of the State and the section. 142 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Two years old, Austin has already had a popula- tion of six or eight thousarid, cast one thousand nine hundred votes at the presidential election, and, now, experiencing its first reaction, falls back to four thousand inhabitants. It bears family likeness to Central City and Black Hawk in Colorado; houses are buiit anywhere and ever)rwhere, and streets are then made to reach them; one side of a house will be four stories and the other but two,-^ such is the lay of the land ; not a tree nor a flower, nor a grass plot does the whole town boast,— not one ; but it has the best French restaurant I have met since New York, a daily newspaper, and the boot-blacks and barbers and baths are luxurious and aristocratic to the continental degree; — while one of the finest specimens of feminine physical beauty and grace presides over a lager beer sdoon; gambUng riots openly in the large area of every drinking shop, — miners risking to this chance at night the proceeds of the scarcely less doubtful chance of the Tlay ; and weak-minded and curious strangers are tempted by such advertisements as this :— Mammoth Lager Beer Saloon, in the basement, comer Main and Virginia streets, Austin, Nevada. Choice liquors, wines, lager beer and cigars, served by pretty girls, who understand their business and attend to it Votaries o? Bacchus, Gambrinus, Venus or Cupid can spend an evening agreeably at the Mammoth Saloon. Both inquisitive and classical, we went in search of this bower of the senses ; and we found a cellar, whitewashed and sawdusted ; two fiddles and a clar- ionet in one corner ; a bar of liquors glaring in an- MYTHOLOGY AND MINES AT AUSTIN. I43 Other; and a fat, coarse Jew girl proved the sole embodiment and representative of all these pro- claimed gods and goddesses. We blushingly apol- ogized, and retired with our faces to Mistress Venus, Cupid, etc., as guests retire from mortal monarchs, — lest our pockets should be picked ; and we shall take our mythology out of the dictionaries hereafter. All ' up the Austin hill-sides, among the houses, and beyond them, are the big ant-hills that denote mines or the hopes of such. Down in the valley are the mills for crushing and separating the ore. Back and around the corners, and over the moun- tains for many miles, are similar though less frequent signs. The main Austin belt, however, has been successfully traced for but five miles, and one in width. The veins of ore lie thick in the rotten granite of the hills, like the spread fingers of some mineral giant. They are also comparatively small, sometimes as inches, rarely widening to more than three or four feet. But to compensate for this disr advantage, they are exceeding rich and generally reliable. But then again, the metal ~is so com- pounded with sulphurets of other metals, with an- timony and arsenic, that it is hard to extract, and requires a roasting, burning, or smelting process, like the gold ores of Colorado, in addition and in- termediate to those of crushing and amalgamating, to successful operation. About fifty veins are now being worked successfully, and as many more haVe . been satisfactorily prospected, and are being put in condition for operating, or are awaiting the coming of capital and its machinery. Water flows into all 144 ACRbSS THE CTNTINENT. the veins freely, and much labor is irequiredto pxitap it out. The first necessity of evei^ mine, indeeS, is a steam engine and hoisting apparatus, to dra^ up water and ore from the bottom of the shaft or tunnel. But few of the mines have mills connected witti ,them ; several of the older and strong compa^ nies only combine both operations, and make the two proi&ts. The mills are located with iregard to wood aiid water, rather than to the ore, and the lat- ter is carted sometimes for miles to be worked. Half a dozen mills, working some seventy-five 'stamps in all, are already put up in the Austift anfl neighboring canyons; but only about fifty starflf^ are now at work. The number will Speedily be doubled by mills going up or undergoing repair. The ore yields from one hundred to four hundred dollars in silver and gold per ton ; but at present prices, it costs nearly or quite one hundred dol- lars to mine and work it, so that which yields only one hundred dollars cannot be profitably worked. Consequently miners, who have no mills, separate their ores, and hire worked out only the most valu- able, saving the rest up until competition brings down the price of milling, or they erect mills df their own. The charge for working the ores at the 'mills is eighty dollars a ton, about half of which is profit. The same description of work can be hired done here at Virginia for thirty to forty dollars per ton. The ore of one mine near Austin has aver- aged one hundred and eighty dollars a ton for many months, and yields a net profit of at least eighty dollars a ton to its owners. Another company, CASES OF SUCCESSFUL MINING. I4S owning both mill and mines, finds its ores yielding one hundred and fifty dollars a ton without assort- ing, and the cost of getting out and working is but fifty dollars ; so that, working six tons a day, their steady profits are six hundred dollars daily, on an expenditure, in investments, of less than two hun- dred thousand dollars, and the employment of about thirty men. New York companies are now coming in here ind putting up fine new establishments. One hun- dred thousand dollars will pay for a fine large mill with fifteen to twenty stamps. Promising, pros- pected mines can be bought for from ten thousand to one hundred thousand dollars, depending upon the extent of their claims on the surface, and the notoriety they have attained, as well as upon the gullibility of the purchasers. It is not advisable for new enterprises to erect mills, first because there will probably soon be enough in the region to supply present wants at a fair price, and second, because so soon as a •cheaper and more speedy communication can be obtained, the ores will be transferred to other places, where fuel and water are more abundant, for milling. ' Even now, with freight ten to twelve cents a pound from Austin to San Francisco, all the ore from one mine in Austin is sent to England to be worked. It is so valuable and yet so refractory that it pays to send it this long distance in order to give it a "cheap but complete manipulation. New discoveries of valuable ore are constantly making both in the immeditte neighborhood of 7 10 X46 . ACROSS! THE CONXmENT-. i^stih, andfarsouth and north on ithe same jange^ ofj mountains. In: both directions vdnss equally rich and: much larger havebeen found? and many parties, are busy prospectingi Sraltecedt raills.^ are; also in operations in> these more? remote. loealities; and many a mining vilkge; is- struggling' for noto- riety amongi:he: Humboldttm©iHitain& to the north- west. But Austin is the chief point of mining; populationj and: de^^efepmentan-- central; Nevada, as Virginia is in;westeTn;,and the; two are by farther most conspicuous and represeHtaitive pointsof the; silver mining interest, on the Pacific Coast- But Virginia .presents many contrastSTto Austin. It: is three or four years:older; itputS-itsigamblimg- behind antextra dooF;'it isibeginning to recognize the Sabbathy.has many churches open, and closes part of its.' stores on: that day; is- exceedingly well; built,; in large proportion with solid -brick stores and; warehouses;: and though: the fast and fascinating times of- i862-63;are over^ when it held from. i fifteen thousand -to twenty, thousand people,* and Broadway and Wall street were not more crowded than its streets, ithas^a thriftyand enterprising air, and con- tains/a population of; ten -thousand, besides 4;he ad-- joiming town or extension of Gold Hill, which has about three thousand more. The situation of Virginia. is very picturesqtie ; above the canyon or ravine, it is spread along the mountain side, like the roof of a 'house,' about half way to the top. Right above rises a noble peak, fifteen, hundred feet higher than the town, itself about six ; thousand f^t high; below- stretches the THE COMSTOCK LEDGE AT VIRGINIA. 147 fc^t-Hillf bi^eeted-by the ravine ; arou-nd'^on all sides, sister hills rise in varying hights,' rich in rdtindness and other fbriHS-'of beautyjbut brown in barrenness, as if shorn for prize fight, and fading out into disA^ tant plain, with a sweet green spot to mark the rare pfesenee-of- water- and verdure. Different, too* in its- mines is Virginia from Aus- tin. Instead - of numerous little veins, the - wealth- of Virginia lifes in one grand ledge of ore, running along- the mountain ■' side; just within the^ upper line of the town> for three miles; of width,' from fifty to one 'hundi?ed -feet, and of depth incalculable. ThiS'- i& the famous- Comstock-Ledge ; and no silver mines- worth wcirkirig-have yet' been found off from it, in* the neighborhood of Virginia;' though thousands'-' of dollars and years of labor have- been spent in the search; Nor has the working of this -ledge at its- various points^ been attenjied • with ■ uniform suceessf. At -leaiS't' as many companies have failed upon if as have succeeded; Only fourteen out of about' thirty companies formed and still at work upon the Gom- stock Ledge have paid dividends. One compa;ny has spent over a million dollarsin the vain pursuit of "pay ore ;" the vein it' has, the ore it' finds, but the latter is not rich enough to pay for milling. • But it'Still goeson, seduced, by the hope-of finding the-- valuable streak which' its- neighbor- had' yesterday,' but niay have lost to-day. Other companies- have spent: hundreds of' thousands for vain expectations ; ■ l/ut still hold' on; some of them at least, in the* be- lief that a lower point in the lode will develop sure--' and- recompensing wealth. Th©' success- of othef- 148 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. companies has been more marked even than these failures, though they be fewer in number. The Gould & Curry is the largest and most fa- mous enterprise here. It has twelve hundred feet in length on the surface of the ledge, has dug down six hundred to eight hundred feet in depth, and back and forth on its line twenty or thirty times ; its whole excavations foot up five millions of cubic feet, and afford some two miles of underground travel, and it has consumed more lumber to brace up the 'walls of its tunnels than the entire city of Virginia above ground has used for all its build- ings. This company own the largest and finest mill probably in the world, costing nearly a million of dollars, and running eighty stamps. This mam- moth enterprise has only drawn one hundred and eighty thousand dollars from its stockholders, and has paid them back four millions in dividends. Altogether, it has produced twelve millions of bul- lion, and but for extravagance in management and the necessity for many a blind and expensive ex- periment, its profit share of this sum would have been at least fifty, instead of thirty-three, per cent. In one year the yield of this mine was four and a half millions, and its profits one million ; but with a railroad to San Francisco, the latter would have been swollen to three millions ! This immense development was secured under the energetic superintendence of Mr. Charles L. Strong, a native of Easthampton in Hampshire County, Massachusetts, brother of the brave Gen- eral Strong who fell in leading the black troops THE GOULD AND CURRY MINE. I49 upon the forts of Charleston,, and the nephew and adopted son of Mr. A. L. Strong of that village. Mr. Strong took charge of the Gould & Gurry mine in its infancy, and carried it on to its perfection and triumph, when, about a year and a half ago, his con- stitution gave way under its, great responsibility and work, and he was forced to retire. At one time, the mine sold at the rate of six thousand dollars a foot, but now it is down to about eighteen hundred; for, though it is producing bullion at. the rate of two millions a year, and pays handsome monthly divi- dends uninterruptedly, it has about exhausted all the valuable ore in its mine at the present depth, and is working up mainly the poorer ore that it re- jected iii its first progress through the vein. The company is how making an important experiment to find richer ore at a lower depth ; and by means of a tunnel, started half a mile off down the hill, and a shaft one thousand feet deep, will soon open the mine that distance down. The future fortunes of the company hang mainly upon the result of this enterprise. Not only, indeed, that of the Gould & Curry, but of most of the enterprises upon the Com- stock Ledge. Many of them have reached, or seem to be reaching, a like point of exhaustion with the Gould & Curry, and are either making a similar ex- periment, or are awaiting the results of this. The promises of a successful finding are certainly quite encouraging, and they are strengthened by the re- cent success of some small experiments in the same direction on distant parts of the ledge, which seem to indicate improved ore at the greater depths. . aSO A-CROSS THE iCONTINENT, The Ophir Company is another of. the mammoth jenterprises." That, too, Jsas taken out twelve mil- lion^ of ibuUion, but the rstockhdlders :haye not, gdt rmuch as their share.in Qonsequenpce ; of extra vaga-rit ■and fickle management,-and experiments- that proved Fexpensive .failure^. TJie Savage Com-paiiy, owning another large ^and -successful mine,!ha6 taken out six millions bullion. That.part of the Comstock Ledge, Lying-on:Gpld -Hill is divided'upinto smaller prpperties, such as one hundred and two -hundred feet, and one as low. ^s Iten feet, measuring on the su);faee; and these have .been worked 1 generally to better advantage than th^ -sections in Virginia. The Empire Gompany's claim Jias sold as >high as eighteen thousand dollars per ifoot, the highest price ever obtained for any- mine -here ; but it has grown less profitable >and inter- ,cupted its /dividends since, and has -^fallen to from 'three thousand to four 'thousand idollars a foot. ^This company never took any money from its .stockholders, land in only one month throu^ ■ its ^Operations jof some years has it failed to pay ex- penses. Another successful and now popular' com- pany in Gold Hill is the Yellow Jacket, which 4ias taken outabout two millions of bullion, and; paid its -stodkholders three hundred and thirty thousajid dollars,' or thirty-five thousand dollars more than all "!their assessments. But among its heavy expendi- tures, which suggests one cause of the ruin of many lof these mining companies, is an item of two huji- fdred and seventy thousand dollars for "legal ser- vices and .quieting title." OOST AND PROFIT OF' OaiE VIRGINIA ORES. 15I The Gomstock Ledge ore is, with small -excep- tions, much more simple in its eombinations sthan that at Austin, and requires only to be crushed and amalgamated 'to extract the bullioh. These two processes will produce from sixty to eighty per cent of all the. precious metal. It is also less rich than the i Austin ore; :fifty dollars is:a good average per ton, and is about what the Gould j& Curry claims for what it works of its own ore. But the average of all the ^ mines is even less than that; one mine reports an average yield foritheyearof biit;;^30.26 per ton.; and the product of the whole ledge for the first three months of the present iyear is 'given sto me as about one hundred thousand tons, yielding .nearly -four millions dollars, and averaging a frac- tion less than rforty dollars. To meet this lower yield per ton, however, is a greatly decreased cost of working the^ore, which does: not ^need the roast- ing or smelting process, and the whole expense of mining and reducing does not -exceed twenty^five dollars aton, and is :even "brought as low as eighteen and twenty dollars by the Gooild .& Curry com- pany. The probability is that even this cost may be. much reduced, and ^hat ore which will yield but ten and fifteen dollars to the ton can soon be •worked with profit. A choice selection of the' Gould & Curry ore, such as promises one thousanti dollars a ton or over,— 7-for there are streaks xif such in -all the mines> — is sent to Swanzrey, Wales, (for working ; — this amounts to say fifty tons a year ; -a next lower quality, which -will yield two hundred or three hundred dollars a ton, and amounts to sonre 152 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. fifty or sixty tons a month, is sent over into the neighboring valley of Washoe to be treated by the Freiburg process, which includes the roasting, and is the same as is necessary for all the Reese River ores. The balance or bulk of the product is treated at their own mill, which disposes of about one hun- dred tons a day, or, if there is an excess, as there often is, it is worked at some neighboring custom mills. There are, in all, seventy-seven quartz mills working on ore. from the Comstock Ledge, twenty- two of which are connected with mines, and fifty- five are custom mills. They are located in four different counties, only about half being in the same county with the mines whose ores they crush. Fifty-four of them are run by steam, twelve by water, and eleven by water and steam combined. They have in all one thousand and nineteen stamps, and their capacity is one thousand eight hundred, and forty-two tons daily, which is only about two- thirds employed now. The mines have been run- ning down in daily production, from one thousand six hundred and forty tons last October to one thou- sand in June, but they are now increasing again;, and if the present search for paying ore at lower depths in the leading mines is realized, it will, speedily go up to a higher point than it ever before ' reached. The present product of the whole State is probably nearly twenty millions dollars a year, of which Austin is sending forward a million and a quarter, and Virginia and Gold Hill fifteen to six- teen millions. Though the bullion, as perfected CALIFORNIA'S ACCOUNT WITH NEVADA. ,153 here, looks like pure silver, nearly or quite one-third of it in value is really gold ; and this is extracted after it gets to market, in England, or by the United States mints at San Francisco and in the East. During the great excitement of 1862, when the Austin mines were first discovered,^ and the Com- stock Ledge was doing its best, there was a wild speculation in mining properties, and many bogus or wildcat claims were bought and sold, and numer- ous companies organized that never did any busi- ness. Some statistics before me give sf ven hundred as the number of companies incorporated to operate on the Comstock Ledge alone ; yet of th^e but one hundred had prospected mines, and only fourteen have opemted so successfully as to pay dividends. Most of the capital invested in the Nevada mines so far has been Californian; as most of the men engaged upon the mines, either in managing or working them, are from that State. The leading companies are owned and controlled in San Fran- cisco, and have been to a considerable extent the victims of vicious stock gambling, which the real uncertainties of mining and the ease with which bogus uncertainties can be plausibly manufactured have tended to facilitate. As yet, though many great fortunes have been made, both from the mines and the commerce they have developed, California has not got the money back which she has sent over the Sierras into Nevada; some say she has invested many times as much as she has received, and that not one-twentieth, not one-fiftieth, indeed, of all the mining enterprises in the silver State have , 7* 154 AGROgs tThe continent, succeeded ; but -a. probably wiser judgtnent.is ^thsjt, string the conceded values of the newly created ^propertyin Nevada, she pays a fair profit to-day ; and that while one hundred millions have beeniinvested in mills and mines, and only Tsixty ;niillions taken out in bullion, ithe mills and mines are^worth much -more than the balance. Then "California has taught herself and ithe country.how to mine intelligently and economically by her Nevada experience ; mia- ingihere has been carried to greater -perfection- than ever befori^on this Continent; and the wisdom ^thus acquired is already going bade to profit - Cajj- ifornia's (jwn gold ..mines, and -remains and : extends over all -the. mining. region as asure and safe .basis Jot all fiiture r operations. Eastern capital and eastern men, are now craning -hither in .force, -and promise soonrto-sstart-fupranew the rather 4opmanti life of the S,tate,-and givejapid and » -profitable ^development to .its -jgiieat mimag .wealth. -One smaJl .circle of -New Yoxk -capitalists .^Jiave ralready invested about two .millions dollars ;ia njiJls and mines here and -in .Austin, and fby the help -of a .iibeml faith^and the employment of firsts 'class agents, are doing well in alhtheir .enterprises. ■In view of this fact and example, and the wide in- teresit manifest throughout the East, as =to this min- ing wealth and ;the 'changes for realizing from it, let me organize some conclusions from my various^ ob-- aservations and rstatisties-: — I. The eastern slopes .of the Sierra Nevadas in both California and Nevada, .and the mountain ranges of Nevada, are undoubtedly rich in copper. CONCLUSIONS AS 10 NEVADA MINES. 1^$ silver and gold, silver being the predominating and most available metal. 2. In spite of the scarcity flf wood and rwater, and the hi^ cost of labor and food, conseqjient upon the great distance ■from supplies, and the 'lack of railroad communication, the extraction of these metals will pay generously for the wise, careful, hon- est and persevering employment of capital and labor.. 3. TheComstock Ledge in Virginia 3nd its neigh- borhood is being fuUy developed, and offers no op- portunities tfor new enterprises; though as ^Pacific capital is not satisfied with less rtban fifty or severri^r- five per cent, per annum, and eastern is happy with -twenty-five, ipurehases of isoms.of dt« mines, or df interests in them, =m^ht be favoBabLy effected from the latter quarter without the risk of new enter- prises. iBut those who undertake isuch purchases, or indeed any investments in this quarter, must not think to find these people out Jiere wanting in sharp- ness at a bargain, \\5all street is easily out-man- aged by Montgomery street, and an cdd miner, -who is ^generally a traditional Yaidc^ with large im- provements, will ibol a dozenrspeetacledprofessoBS fromyour colleges in a single day. The latter sort of people are, indeed, at a ;great discount in this -legion, as ail the rules of science witii ?which they come equipped, are outraged and defied by the lo- cation and combination of ores, roclK, oils and soils on this side of the Rocky Mountains. 4. The mines of the E.eese River district (Aus- \tin, &c.iytiiough of narrow veins, offer a very prom- king field for new enterprises. They are licher. l$6 . ACROSS THE CONTINENT, and seem to be more certain to hold out than those of the Comstock Ledge ; though in the matter of continuance they need yet further testing. But no such enterprise should be entered upon without first sending an intelligent agent out to examine the condition of things, the location of the mines, their improvenients and promises ; and, if not him- . self a miner, he should call to his aid here one of that class upon whom he can rely for experience and integrity. 5. Beginners in the business should not be in haste to buy or erect mills. There is a superal)un- dance to-day of that sort of property on the Pacific Coast. Those at Virginia and its neighbor'hood are not worth what they cost (six millions) by at least twenty-five or thirty p^r cent. ; and stamps and en- gines can probably be bought cheaper on this Coast than they can be bought in New York and shipped ■ around .or across the mountains. The first business is to work the mine and get out the ore, which can be crushed at the custom mills, already Or soon to be plenty, in the neighborhood of all the mining^. centers ; and then measuring the profits thus real- ized, and finding, them sure and reliable, the mana- gers can decide whether it is best to extend opera- tions with them, by buying and working, more mines or by running their own mills. 6. Everything depends upon an intelligent and faithful superintendent. I meet many such here, experiericed Californians, Englishmen from the Mex- ican mines, Germans of both practice and theory at home, New York and Boston merchants. Fore- HINTS TO CAPITALISTS. 1 5/ men of mills and mines, first promoted from pick and shovel, are good material for such positions, and are gaining them. .The miners as a class are of a higher grade than eastern laborers, and they offer many individuals fit for the upper places in the business. I was impressed with the wisdom of an organization which a party of Rhode Island cap- italists had made in Colorado. They combined four or five different mines and mills, each distinct in its affairs, under the general management or over- seership of an experienced scientific miner from Cal- ifornia, and sent along with him from home a com- mon treasurer and accountant. In this way they got the benefit of the best talent and experience, and the most reliable guardianship over the expen- ditures, without making the cost thereof too heavy. 7. Do not make the capital of your mining com- pany out of all proportion to the cost of the enter- prise. Avoid putting up a property, that has cost one hundred thousand dollars and needs a working capital of as much more, to two millions, because you may hope sometime to pay a ten per cent, div- idend on such a sum. And then, again, do not in- sist on having a dividend at the end of the first thirty days, unless you are ready to pay an assess- ment at the beginning thereof to meet it. 8. When somebody offers you a mine, whose ore assays one thousand or ten thousand dollars a ton, you need not necessarily disbelieve him, but do not necessarily conclude that all its ore, for an indefinite distance into the earth, is of equal value. The Corastock Ledge was opened with a chunk that I^S ACROSS- THE- coirariNfifJ'K )delded:tv^ehtyi thousand' to thirty theusaiM felkrsf' per ton, or at that rate; but as I have 'tolid you, thes mines on that ledger that are paying at all, do ndt" asverage forty dollars from their ore. Every- day new- discoveries are being raadC) south and ■'nofth> in the StatCj of lodeSiwhose surface ore pays, according to^ report, any aiflount this side of one hundred thou- siand dollars a ton! yet it does- not folioW" that tbe^ mine bdowiit will even pay-for working. For" these are among the doubtful things that are very uncer- tain in their progress. Even the poorest* mines- have their streaks: and chunks of rich ore; do not, therefore, judge by a single fist-full nor by an assay; but invest' your money only after you have ascer- tained how much: your mine will practically work- ontj- cart-load by cart-load, without culling. g* And if: you have neither time- not raonSy enough, nor disposition, perhaps/ to go largely into- these mining en terprisesf and follow theirs manage^^ njent intelligently,- but 5till would like to -inake -some^ small ventures to fortune an- this direction, seek out some company thiat are. in or going into the bust-* n€ss,-on these principles, and that have got a rea- sonably sure thing;o£- it, and make your investment with them; and then be content with twenty-five per cent, return for your money. If it yields more,- give it aivay in charity, — if less, or even nothing, don't swear nor mention it to your wife. lo. And finally, — though the subject,- like the veins, is inexhaustible, — if you read so far- as this, and make profitable use of these suggestions, "re- member the printer," when the dividends come in. LETTER XVI. THE CONriNENT ACROSS : THE RIDE OVER THE SIERRAS,- Saw Francisco, Jnlf 4. Across the Gbntihent! The Great Ride is fin- ished. . Fifteen hundred miles of railroad, two thou- sand of staging, again sixty miles of' railway> and- then one hundred -and fifty miles by steamboat down' the Sacramento River, and the goal is reached,' the' Continent is spanned. Seven weeks of steady jour- neying, within hail of a single parallel line from east to west, and still the Republic ! Still the old flag, — the town is gay with its. -beauty to-day, — still the same Fourth of July ;— better than all, still the same people, with hearts aglow with the same loyalty and pride in the American Union, and the same purpose and the same faith for its future. Greater the wonder grows at- the extent; of the Republic^ but larger still our wonder atthe myste- rious but unmistakable homogeneity of its people. San Francisco, looking westward to the Orient' for greatness, cooling its summer heats with Pacific breezes, thinks the same thoug'hts, breathes the same patriotism, burns with the same- desires that' ,l60 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. inspire New York and Boston, whose outlook is eastward, and which seem to borrow their civiliza- tion with their commerce 'from Europe. Sacra- mento talks as you do in Springfield; Nevada, over the mountains, almost out of the world, an- ticipates New England in her judgments, and makes up her verdict, while those close to the " Hub of the Universe" are looking over the testimony. It is this that is the greatest thing about our coun. try ; that makes it the wonder of nations, the mar- vel of history, — the unity of its people in ideas and purpose; their quick assimilation of all emigra- tion, — come it so far or so various ; their simul- taneous and similar currents of thought, their spon- taneous, concurrent formation and utterance of a united Public Opinion. This is more than extent of territory, more than wealth of resource, more than beauty of landscape, more than variety of cli- mate arid productions, more than marvelous mate- rial developnient, more than cosmopolitan popula- tions, because it exists in spite of them, and con- quers them all by its subtle electricity. It is very interesting, indeed, to stand amid this civilization of half a generation ; to see towns that were not in 1850, now wearing an old and almost decaying air ; to walk up and down the close built streets of this metropolis, and doubt whether they look most like. Paris or New" York, Brussels or Turin ; to count the ocean steamers in. the bay, or passing out through the narrow crack in the coast hills beautifully called the Golden Gate, and wonder as you finish your fingers where they all came from THE CIVILIZATION^ OF THE PACIFIC COAST. l6l and are going to ; to find an agriculture richer and more various than that of Illinois; to feast the senses on a horticulture that marries the temperate and torrid zones, and makes of every yard and gar- den and orchard one immense eastern green-house ; to observe a commerce and an industry that supply every comfort, minister to every taste and fill the shops with every article of convenience and luxury that New York or Paris can boast of, and at prices as cheap as those of the former city to-day ; to find homes more luxurious than are often seen in the eastern States, and to be challenged unsuccessfully to name the city whose ladies dress more magnifi- cently than those of San Francisco^ None of this surprises me. I had large ideas of the Pacific Coast and its development ; and I long ago gave up being surprised at ariy victories of the American mind and hand over raw American mat- ter. Still, Nevada and California, with towns and cities of two to fifteen years' growth, yet to-day all full-armed in the elements of civilization, wanton with the luxuries of the senses, rich in the social amenities, supplied with churches and schools and libraries, even affecting high art, are wonderful illus- trations of the rapidity and ease with which our people organize society and State, and surround themselves with all the comforts and luxuries of metropolitan life. ~ The history of the world else- where offers no parallels to these. At present, and in comparison with the flush times of their first creative years, the States and towns of the Pacific Coast are but slowly grow- 'l62 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. l«g, and business is dull. Many mining towns are indeed falling: back, if not approaching desertion. Founded on temporary in terests,-^the sands of their streams all washed oyt, they are deserted for fresher fields. But new interests, as agriculture and manu- factures, and new and closer modes of extracting their mineral wealth -will sooner or later restore most •of these ; in some instances are already beginning to do so. The general comparative dullness is but a natural and temporary reaction from a hot and stimulated development. Our great war and its in- terests have occupied the Nation's life and thought, and centered it in the East, absorbing its capital and offering rare opportunities, also, for new indus- tries and speculations. California.was too far away to share in this stimulus ; and by rejecting the na- tional currency that was one of its elements, she has even denied herself the benefits of its overflow. But by drouth in her agriculture, by losses in many of her mining operations, by the cessation of the heavy tide of emigration, and by the narrow policy of her bankers and capitalists, she, has been gather- ing valuable lessons of experience ; she has learned both how to farm and mine ; she has come to appre- ciate her great wants of capital and labor ; and she is in fine condition to receive and accept the new Stimulus,- that is already drawing out of her own trials a more economical and intelligent prosperity, and bringing in a new tide of means and men from the East. Farmers may be poor; country mer- chants may be bankrupt ; gambling may be at a low ebb in the mining towns ; labor comparatively low, THE NEVAPA SIDE OF THE SIERRAS. 163 and pan washings unremunerative ; San Francisco brokers and bankers mayi as is charged, have sucked the life out of the interior; — here,jndeed, may rents be falling and houses unoccupied: but the real, in- dustries of the Pacific Coast were never more pro- ductive and promising than now, — never so much, in any previous year, of hay and grain ; of vegeta- bles and fruit, of gold and silver brought out of the ground, as is and will be in this year of 1865. This is the test and promise of prosperity ; and this year win date a renewal of life and growth to California and its adjacent States, — not so hot and feverish and rabid as that of '49 and '50 and '59 and '60, but strong enough to_ satisfy a just ambition, and sure enough to encourage permanent investments and permanent citizenship, — the real foundations and security of a State. But to go back on the record of our journey: Our last day in Nevada was passed among its pleas- . antest and richest valleys, under the shadows of the Sierra Nevada mountains, and rejoicing in the fer- tilizing streams from their springs and snows. Here, in the valleys of ;the Truckee, the Washoe, and the Carson, is the garden of the State ; here were a few agricultural settlers, fifteen and twenty years ago, colonists from Utah, to which all this region was originally attached. Now, the Mormons are dis- placed by a more vigorous and varied population, prosperous with farming, with lumbering among the rich pines of the Sierras, and with quartz mills, seek- ing proximity here to wood and water, and fed by the mines over the hills in Virginia and Gold HilL 1 64 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Skirting the hill-sides from Virginia at early morning, on a capital toll road, that runs from mountain to mountain on a common level, we breakfasted at Steamboat Springs, where the phe- nomenon of an immense natural tea-kettle is in op- ■eration. For a mile or more along a little stream, underneath a thin crust of earth, water immeasura- ble is seething and boiling, and occasionally break- ing through in columns of steam and in bubbling spouts and streams,^ — too hot to bear the hand in ; — the waste drawn off to a neighboring bath-house where chronic rheumatisms and blood affections are successfully treated, or tempering the cool river be- low. The boiling springs are flavored with sulphur and soda, and are similar to the more celebrated Geysers in California. In the winter the vapor fills the valley, and from this and the rumbling, bubbling noise of the seething waters, comes the name of Steamboat Springs. _ Down the valleys we drove to Washoe Village and Lake, — here speeches and- lunch, — and then farther on to Carson City, the capital of the young State, where the inevitable brass band, a militia company of twelve privates, "and nary two alike," more speeches and a dinner from Governor Blaisdell were the programme. Here we confronted the long-looked-for, the even long-seen Sierra Nevadas, the Andes of North America, the distinctive range of our Pacific States, fountain of their streams, source and bearer of their mineral wealth, chief element and parent of their beauty of landscape, and replenisher of their fer- tility of soil To us, too, long on the desert plain ' THE RIDE OVER THE SIERRAS. 1 65 and the barren mountain, — sad-eyed with weeks away from forests and sparkling waters, and the verdure of grass and vines and flowers, — they of- fered indeed the golden pathway to the Golden Gate of the Pacific. The ride over the mountains, down their western valleys, on to the ocean, was a succession of de- lights and surprises. The surging and soughing of the wind among the tall pines of. the Sierras came like sweetest music, laden with memories of home and friends and youth. Brass bands begone, operas avaunt ! in such presence as we found ourselves on the mountain top of a moonlight night, by the banks of Lake Tahoe, among forests to which the largest of New England are but pigmies, lying and listening by the water to the coming of the Pacific breeze and its delicate play upon the high tree-tops. All human music was but sound and fury signifying nothing, before such harmonies of high nature. The pine^ of these mountains are indeed mon- sters, — three, four, five feet through, and running up to heaven for light, straight and clear as an arrow by the hundred feet, — suggestive forerunners of the " big trees " of Calaveras and Mariposa, that we are yet to see. Rich green-yellow mosses cling to many a trunk; and firs and balsams fill up the vacant spots between the kingly pines ; while laughT ing waters sport lustily before our unaccustomed eyes, among the rocks in the deep ravines, along and far below the road on which our horses gallop up hill and down at a fearful pace. The initial trip of a little steamer upon Lake 1 66 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. T ahoe (formerly Lake Bigler) was amoiig the nov- dties of our mountain experience. This is one of the beautiful lakes of the world, richly ranking with those of Scbtrand and Swiss-Itdy, and destined to arouse as wide enthusiasm. It is located up among the mountains, itself six thousand five hundred feet high, overlooked by snow-capped peaks, bordered by luscious forests ; stretches wide for eight to four- feen miles in extent, with waters clear and rare al- most as air, — so rare, indeed, that not even a sheet of paper can float, but quickjy sinks, and swimming is nearly impossible ; and abounds in trout : — where, indeed, are more elements of lake beauty and at- traction ? Already, though far from heavy popula- tions, it has its mountain and lake hotel, and draws many summer visitors from California and Nevada. From Lake Tahoe to Placerville, the first, consid- erable town in California, is seventy-five miles of well-graded road, up to the mountain summits, and down on the western side,; and the drive over it, made in less than seven hours, even surpassed any that had gone before in rapidity and brilliancy of execution. With six horses, fresh and fast, we swept up the hill at a trot, and rolled down again at their sharpest gallop, turning abrupt comers without a pull-up, twisting among and by the loaded teams of freight toiling over into Nevada, and run- ning along the edge of high precipices, all as deftly as the skater flies or the steam car runs; though for many a rfoment we held our fainting breath at what seemed great risks or dare-devil performances. The road is excellent, hard and macadamized, con- THE SCENERY OF THE SIERRAS. l6f structed by private enterprise and imposing heavy tolls, and therefore far different from that, whose rough remains and steep passages are occasionally met on the mountain side, over -which Mr. Greeley made his famous ride six years ago. But there is no stage-riding, no stage-driving, left in the States, — ■! doubt if there ever was any,— at all comparable to this in perfection of discipline, in celerity and comfort, and in manipulation of the reins. Mr. Colfax well said, in one of his speeches, that as it was said to requiire more talent to cross Broadway than to be a justice of the peace in the country, so he was sure much more was necessary to drive a stage down the Sierras as we were driven, than to be a member of Congress. For a week, at least, we worshiped our knights of the whip. Think, too, of a stage-road one hundred miles long, from Carson to Placerville, watered as city streets are watered, to lay the dust for the traveler! Yet this luxury is performed through nearly the entire route, day by day, all the summer season. All over the Sierras in our road, the scenery is full of various beauty; some of its features I have mentioned ; but another chief one was the high walls of rock, rising abruptly and' perpendicularly from the valley for many hundreds of feet. Many a rich boulder, anon a hill, and a frequent mountain peak of pure rock, thousands of feet high, like pyr- amids of Egypt, are seen along the passage. The whole scenery of the Sierras is more like that of the Alps than any other in America, and has even features of surpassing attraction. l6B ACROSS THE CONTINENT. At Placerville, among vineyards and orchards and flower gardens, a night ; three speeches from Speaker Colfax, and a grand midnight dinner ; — at Sacramento, sixty miles hence by a railroad, which is seeking the mountains, — a superb breakfast and two speeches and more roses, — and thence by steamboat, large and elegant as the best of Sound and North River boats, and all built in San Fran- cisco, through wide grain fields, yellow with harvest and sun, we came to refreshing halt in the luxurious halls of the Occidental Hotel, of famous Leland creation and supervision, late on the last Saturday night. My memory is crowded-with observations in Cal- ifornia and Nevada, yet to be compacted for your reading ; but the journey cannot wait now for them. My steps move faster than my pen. Next Mon- day,— Rafter a crowded week of sjght-seeing and hospitality in San Francisco and vicinity, — we re- trace our steps as far as the mountains on a more northern route, and thence into the most interesting gol^-quartz mining region, and on along the valleys on the eastern slope of the Sierras north to Oregon, and back, through British Columbia, and by the ocean, the first of August. LETTER XVII. OVERLAND TO OREGON. Portland, Oregon, July 20. I WAS prepared for California. But Oregon is more of a revelation. It has i-arer natural beauties, richer resources, a larger development, and a more promising future than I had learned of. The dazzld of gold and silver has made California more con- spicuous in eastern eyes. Our visit here has there- fore had the always delicious element of unexpected- ness in its pleasures. There was some rebellious flesh among us, when we were told that to see Ore- gon we must take another week of day and night stage riding ; much of it on rough mountain roads, and in a "mud wagon" at that. We thought to have been through with that sort of travel. But no week's riding has given us greater or richer va- riety of experience ; more beauty of landscape ; , more revelation of knowledge ; more pleasure and less pain, than this one up through northern Cali- fornia and middle Oregon, between the coast moun- tains and the, Sierra Nevadas. Our point of departure was Sacramento, and the distance to Portland from there is six hundred and 8 170 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. • fifty miles, due north. Two short bits of railroad put us forward in the Sacramento valley about fifty miles ; at Oroville we began the stage ride proper, up still for another one hundred miles in the broad and generally rich and beautiful valley of the Sac-, ramento and its tributaries, — sometimes rolling in waves of earth, then flat and wide as flattest and widest of Illinois prairies, often treeless and unculti- vated, though not uncultivatable ; and again charm- ing with old oak groves, and fruitful with grain fields and orchards, that yield an increase unknown in all eastern or western valleys. At Chieo* we took sap- per with. General Bid well, one of the pioneers of the Pacific Coast, and one of the new members of Congress from California. Jilted by a young wo- man who chose a lover with more acres, he turned rover, and came out here from Missouri as early as 1 84 1 as one of a secret filibustering party, that in- tended to get up a revolution against Mexico, then the parent of this region, and join CaKfomia to the then lone star republic of Texas. The scheme was fruitless, but General Bidwell became the owner (d one of the famous Spanish grants of land in tha richest part of this vaUey, and now ^as a ferm of twenty thousand of its acres, of which one thou- sand eight hundred are under cultivation. His crop of wheat, in 1863, was thirty-six thousand bushela» from nine hundred acres of land, or at the average rate of forty bushels to the acre. This is a poorer grain year, and his wheat will average but thirtgi! bushels per acre. The general average of the v^- ley is twenty-five bushels. Of barley and oats, his JOHN teROWN'S FAMILY. I^I ©ther principal crops, he usually harvests fifty bush-; els to the acre. His garden and orchard cover one hundred acres. A large flouring mill is among his concerns, and its product is the favorite brand of the State. Add to these illustrative facts of his wealth, and of the beauty and protiuctiveness of the country, that General Bidwell still seems a young man, is fresh and handsome and of winning manners, — a bachelor, and intends to keep house in Washingtoii during his congressional term, and- do I not equally interest farmers, statisticians and' the ladies of our capital's society? On through a like productive country, crossing streams whose banks are lined with an almost trop- ical growth of trees and Vines, along roads bordered' with fences and trees, by farms and orchards rich in grains and fruits, we make our first night ride, passing in the gray morning the prosperous little town of Red Bluffs, which is noteworthy as the head of navigation on the Sacramento River, — some three hundred miles from its mouth, — and so a cen- tral point of commerce for all northern California and southern Oregon, and as the present home of the widow and daughters of the immortal John Brown. They straggled in here, weary and poor, from their overland journey, but found most hospit- able greeting from the citizens and hav^ secured a permanent home. A subscription among the Cali- fornians generally will give them soon a nice cot- tage ; Mrs. Brown e^rns both love and support as a successful nurse and doctor, particularly for chil- dren ; her two older daughters are teachers in the 172 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. public schools ; and the younger one is herself a pupil. Now the valley grows narrow, the mountains east and west chassez across and in among each other,- and for the remaining two hundred miles of Cali-i fornia, and the first two hundred of Oregon, we are winding among the hills and following up and down narrow valleys, first of tributaries of the Sacramento, and then of minor though earnest streahis, — Trinity, Klamath, Rogue and Umpqua, — that steal their way, among the now scattered and mingling ranges of coast and Sierra Nevada, west to the ocean. Shasta and Yreka are the two remaining villages' of importance in California, with perhaps fifteeiif hundred inhabitants each. Born of rich placer goldf diggings in neighboring valleys and gulches, but bereft of half, of their former population by the discovery of more tempting fields elsewhere, and the inherent migratory character of gold seekers, they present a sad array of unoccupied stores and bouses, like, indeed, to nearly every other of the in- terior mining towns of California. Their second reactionary stage now seems beginning, however j a more careful and intelligent working of the gold sands and banks proVes them still profitable, — in; some cases richly so; the Chinese are coming in to work over the neglected courses, satisfied with smaller returns than the whites ; and best of all, agriculture, hitherto despised, is asserting its legiti-t mate place as the base of all true and steady pros- perity. The valleys, though small, are fruitful, and MOUNT SHASTA. I75 many of the hill-sides are equally rich for grain and fruit. These hills of northern California and south- ern Oregon seem, indeed, the true home of apple> pear and grape, and are sure to have a large place in the future fruit-growing and wine-making pros- perity of the Pacific Coast. Beyond Shasta, just out of the valley, we stopped to dine at a -most inviting hotel, amid garden and orchard of great fruitfulness, which I found to" be " The Tower House," and the proprietor Mr. Levi H. Tower, whom you Springfield people of fifteen and twenty years' residence will remember as a prominent armorer, foreman of the Eagle Engine Company, and a popular young man, up to 1849, when he cast in his fortunes with the first emi- gration to California. After years of the ups and downs that belong to nearly every experience on this Coast, be has become prosperous, and grown stout, but keeps his Springfield memories green, and is yet a bachelor. Two of his sisters and a brother-in-law live upon his place. He owns a toll^ road over the mountain, and his orchard, only five years old, produced last year three thousand bushels of peaches, one thousand five hundred bushels of apples, and grapes by the ton, for which he finds market among the miners in the mountains around,, and in the villages north and south. Along here, individual mountains assumed a rare majesty ; snow peaks were visible, ten thousand and eleven thousand feet high ; and soon, too. Mount Shasta, monarch of the Sierras in northern Cali- fornia, reared its lofty crown of white, conspicuous 174 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. among hills of five thousand and six thousand feet, both for its vast fields of snow, its perfect sh^e, and its hight of fourteen thousand four hundred feet above the sea level. We saw it from various points and ail sides, and everywhere it was truly a King of the Mountains, and is entitled to rank among the first dozen mountain peaks of the world. Jacksonville was the firgt conspicuous town in .Oregon, and showed obviouis first-cousinship to Yreka and Shasta. But its neighboring gold dig- gings made better report ; many of the five hund- red men engaged upon them in the county were very prqsperous, and all were making good wages ; promising quartz mines were also discovered ; and we found, everywhere almost in these mountain counties of northern California an^ southern Ore- gon, gathering evidences of much gold yet un- crushed or undug, that would still form the basi^ with cheaper and more abundant labor and Capita^ of a large population and a new material growth for this region. The northern county of California .(Siskiyou) counts no fewer than two thousand Chi- nese among its population, and of these, eleven hundred are engaged in gold digging, from whom as foreigners the State gathers a tax of four dollars a month each, or from fifty thousand to sixty thou- sand dollars a year. That they pay this enormous .tribute, and still keep at work, shows well enough that it pays them to wash and re-wash the goldfiB sands of these valleys. The scenery of this region is full of various beauty. ■Of conspicuous single objects, Pilot Knob, a great THE TREES AND THE MISTLETOE. 1 75 chunk of bare rock standing on a mountain top, ranks next to Mount Shasta;- it miist be eight hundred to one thousand feet high in itself, and seen from all quarters, it has been famous as a pilot to the early emigrants in their journey across the mountains^ The hills are rich with pine forests,- and these gtow thicker aad the trees larger and of greater variety, as 'also the valleys widen and seem more fertile, as the road progresses into Oregon. Firs rival the pines and grow to similar size, one hundred and two hundred feet high and three to "five feet in diameter. Farther up in Oregon,, about the Cohimbia River, the fir even dominates, and is 'the chief timber, and specimens of it are recorded ■tiiiat are twelve feet through and three hundred feet high ! The oak, too, has its victories jn the valleys, and we ride through groves and parks of it that are indescribably beautiful. That fascinating parasite of British classics, the mistletoe, appears also, and shrouds the branches of the oak with its rich, ten- der green, and feeds on its rugged life. Many an oak had succumbed to the greedy bunch boughs of the mistletoey that fastened themselves upon it, and despitd its beauty and the sentimental reputation it brings to us froni British poets, I came to shrink from its touch and sight. More graceful and invit- ing and less absorbing bf life, — rather token of death,— was the pendant Spanish moss, hanging gray and sere and sad from the pine branches and trunks, aloiig bur way in southern Oregon. The birch, the ash, the spruce, the arbor vitae, and the balsam, all contribute to these forests. 176 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. But they do not rob your Connecticut valley of its jprecious elms ; to their individual beauty no tree here can ofifer successful rivalry. In aggregate^ however, for forests of trees, for size and beauty of pines and spruces and firs, for amount and quality of timber as timber, and for groves of oaks, there can be no competition in the East to the Sierra Nevadas and the Coast Mountains and their inter- mediate valleys in California and Oregon. They become the perpetual wonder and admiration and enthusiasm of the traveler. The cross valleys of the Rogue and Umpqua rivers present many rich fields for culture. The soil is a gravelly loam, warm and fertile, and more favorable for fruits, especially the grape and the peach, than the more northern valleys of Oregoii. But the way to market is long and hard ; and the products of agriculture here must mainly go out to the world on the hoof or in wool. So that the temptation to the farmer is not yet very strong. Yet we found a fev/ rich farms and prosperous gen- tleman farmers. "Joe" Lane, famous in Oregon politics, lives in one of these valleys ; his occupa- tion of public life is gone ; he fell out with a por- tion of his own party, and was put out by the up- rising volume of loyal and anti-slavery sentiment, wherein he has never shown any sympathy. He was an able but low, coarse and groveling politi- cian. A man of another description and history is Mr. Jesse Applegate, whose fame as an old pioneer, an honest, intelligent gentleman, incorruptible in JESSE APPLEGATE, A PIONEER. 1 77 thought and act, and the maker of good cider, kept increasing as we neared his home in the Umpqua ; and we made bold to stop and tell him we had come to see him and eat our breakfast out of his larder. We did all to our supreme satisfaction, finding a vigorous old man, who had been here twenty-five years, participated largely in the growth and history of the country, and the conversion of its people to right political principles; clear and strong and original in thought and its expression, with views upon our public affairs worthy the heed of our wisest ; every way, indeed, such a man as you won- der to find here in the woods, rejoice to find any- where, and hunger to have in his rightful position, conspicuous in the government. Oregon ought surely to send Jesse Applegate to Washington, and the general testimony is that she would, were he not so implacably hostile to all the helping arts of politician and place-seeker, which is of course only another reason why she should do what she yet does not. Mr. Applegate has sent his three sons to the war, and remains in their place to carry on his farm of two thousand acres. But farming here, he says, is but a cheap, careless process ; labor is so dear, and grain grows so easily, and the market is so distant, that there is no incentive for real culti- vation and care, in the business. Grass grows nat- urally, abundantly ; timothy seed thrown upon the unbroken soil, gives the best of permanent mowing; and so mild are the winters, and so abundant the feed upon hill and plain, that even that is only im- proved as a precaution against exceptional snow. 8* « 178 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Though he feeds cattle "by the hundreds and thoa- sanda, he has now one hundred and twenty-five tons of hay that he cut two years ago, but for which he has had no use. Two days and a night of rough riding from Jadc- sonville over rather unmilitary roads, built some years ago by the since famous General Hooke^ brought us out, of a sweet, Jtine-like afternoon, upon the hill that overlooks the head of the Wil^ lamette (Wil-/a7«-ette) VaWey. Here the mountain ranges cease their mazy dancing together, and take their places east and west, feeding a river that runs midway north one hundred and twenty-five miles to the Columbia River, and watering a valley through that length and for fifty miles wide. This is the Willamette River and valley, — the garden of Ore- gon, — itself Oregon; that which led emigrants here years before the gold discoveries on Ihe Pa- cific Coast ; the holder of nearly two-thirds of aB the inhabitants of the State ; the chief source of its -present strength and prosperity, and its sure secu- rity for the future ; lifting it above the uncertainties of mining, and giving guaranty of stability, intelli- gence and comfort to its people. We were led down into this indeed paradisiacal valley through richest groves of oak ; the same are scattered along the foot hills on either side, or peo- ple the swelling hills that occasionally vary the prairie surface of its central lines ; while the river, strong and free and navigable through the whole valley a part of the year, and through the lower half at all times, furnishes a deep belt of forest THE WILLAMETTE VAtLEY. 17^ through the very middle of the valley. Never be- held I more fascmating tjfcieater for rural homes; B.ever seemed more fitly united natural beauty and practical comforts ; fertility of soil and variety of surface and productipn ; never were my bucolic in- stiiiets more deeply stirred than in this first outlook upon the Willamette valley. The soil is a strong, clayey, vegetable Iflam, on a hardpan bottom, hold- ing manures firmly, and yielding large crops of the small grains, apples and potatoes. Wheat and ap- ples are the two great crops at present ; much of the inirproved land being set out with apple of- jebards, that come into full, bearing in from two to three years after planting. Wool and beef are, also, as in the loy(ev valleys. Leading items in the agricultural wealth of the Willamette, The hills ftnd valleys of interior Oregon furnish almost inr exhaustible and continuous pasture grounds. The fp-ing is too cold and wet for peaches ; the summer jaights are too cold for corn, though it is grown to 5 limited degree ; but Isabella and Catawba grapes ripen perfectly ; it is the home of the cherry ; and pears, plums and all the small berries reach high perfection. The average yield of wheat in the val- ley is twenty-five bushels to the acre ; but fifty is often obtained with careful cultivation. Though this valley supports a population 'of fifty thousand by agriculture only, probably not one- tenth of its area has yet felt the plow, and. certainly not over one-half is under fence. Its best land's can be bought fpr from five to twenty-five dollars an acre, (depending upon improvenjents, and near- l80 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. ness to villages and river. Only specially favored farms go higher, as some do to fifty and even one hundred dollars an acre. Much of the farming is unwisely done ; the farms are generally too large, the original locations being mostly of six hundred and forty acres each ; and the agricultural popula- tion are largely Missourians, Kentuckians and Ten- nesseeans, of that class who are forever moving farther west, and only stop here because there is no beyond but the ocean. The eastern men proper in Oregon, of whom there are indeed many, are mostly in the villages and towns, leaders in trade, and commerce, and manufactures, as well as in the professions. The agriculture of Oregon knows no such draw- back and doubt as the long summer drouths, that hang over that of all the rest of the country west of the Rocky Mountains, and render expensive irrigation a necessity to certainty in culture. Her fertile region, — so made fertile, indeed, — between the Coast Mountains and the Sierras, pr the Cas- cades, as the interior range of mountains is called >n Oregon, is abundantly supplied with rain the jjrear round. There is enough in summer to ripen the crops, and not too much to interfere with har- vesting; and the winter is one long shower oi six months. The Californians call their northern neighbors the Web Feet ; and from all account there is something too much of rain and mud during the winter season; but the fertility and perfection which its agriculture enjoys in consequence leave the practical side of the joke with the Oregonians. THE TOWNS OF THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY. l8l There is no snow in the valleys of middle and western Oregon; only rain and mist deaden the dormant season ; but February is usually x clear and warm month, and the work of the farmer then actively begins. The summers are long and favor- able, with warm days but cool nights, — more en- durable for the human system than New England summers, and kinder for all vegetation, with the single exception, perhaps, of Indian born. The average temperature of the Willaihette valley for the six summer months is from sixty-five to sev- enty, and of the six winter months from forty to forty-five degrees. And grass grows through all the so-called winter. Eugene City, Corvallis, Albany, Salem, Oregon City and Portland are the chief centers of popula- tion in the Willamette valley, in the order in which we passed them, coming down to the Columbia. Sa- lem is the State capital, and is a beautifully located, thriving, inland town. Here our party had a state reception ; here I met our old democratic brother editor of Westfield, Massachusetts, Mr. Asahel Bush, who has made a fortune here, and wielded large power in the politics of the State, dethroning on the Douglas breach Joe Lane as senator, but failing to keep progressing in the right direction, is now himself dethroned by the Union and republican possession of the State, and is in retirement from newspaper and business, and meditating eastern migration ; here, too, Mr. Reuben Boies, of Bland- ford origin and Chicopee residence, has grown into just distinction, and is one of the supreme 1 82 ACROSS tftfi CqilTINENT. jtidges of tlie State, birt has his pre^M resideftd^ oh a beaofiM farm in oiie of the neighboring foot- hills, where also he has erected Jtad pat in sTiccess- fill operation a woolen mill ;— and from here, also, We took steamboat passage, fifty miles, to this tdwn^ the cOffiihefdal and business center of the State, half rival to San Francisco itself, and the only othCT town, indeed, of prominence on the Pacific Coast, that shows signs of steady, uninterrupted prosper- ity at this moment. At Oregon City, on our way hither, we paid respect to the original capital of the Territory, inspected a new and extensive Wooleit rtlill that cost seventy-five thousand dollars in gold, and were railroaded around the falls of the Willam- ette, which, though not a brilliant feature in the natural scefle, offer temptations and almost inex-* haustible Water-power for the manufactures tha* the agricultural pfoductions of the State invite, and the enterprise of its citizens is alteady wisely aad eagerly reaching forward to. Portland, by far the largest town of Oregon, stands sweetly on the banks of the WiHaffl^i^ twelve miles before it joins the Columbia River; and one hundred and twenty miles from where the Columbia meets tlie Pacific Ocean. Ships and ocegft steamers of highest class come readily hither ; from it spreads out a wide navigation by steamboat of the Columbia and its branches, *el6w and above; here centers a large and increasing trade, not only for the Willamette valley, but for the mining regions of eastern Oregon and Idaho, Washington Territory on the north, and parts even of British Columbia; PORTLAND AND ITS PEOPLE. 1 83 Even Salt Lake, too, has taken groceries and dry- goods through this channel, and may yet find it ad- vantageous to buy more and continuously ; such are the attained and attainable water, communications through the far-extending Columbia. The population of Portland is about seven thou- sand ; they keep Sunday as we do in New England, and as no other population this side of the Mis- souri now does ; and real estate, as you may iirfer, is quite high, — four hundred dollars a front foot for best lots one hundred feet deep on the main busi- ness street, without ther buildings. In religion, the Methodists have the lead, and control an academic school in town and a professed State university a,% Salem ; the Presbyterians are next with a beautiful church and the most fashionable congregation, and favor a struggling university under Rev. S. H, Marsh, (son of President Marsh of the Vermont university,) located twenty miles off in the vaHey j perhaps the Catholics rank third, with a large Sis- ters of Charity establishment and school within the city. Governor Gibbs, the present chief magistrate of the State, resides here, and though a lawyer, owns and runs a successful iron foundry that imports ita material from England, though undeveloped iron' mines are thick in neighboring hills; — a single, daily paper has two thousand five hundred circula?- tion, with a weekly edition of three thousand more ; and altogether Portland has the air and the fact of a prosperous, energetic town, with a good deal of eastern leadership and tone to business and society and morals. LETTER XVIII. THE COLUMBIA RIVER— ITS SCENERY AND ITS COMMERCE. Portland, Oregon, July 23. When an enthusiastic Oregonian told me the Columbia River was the largest of the Continent, and watered a wider section of country than any other, I thought of the St. Lawrence and the Mis- sissippi, and smiled with mild incredulity. But unroll your map, and trace its course into the heart of this north-western interior, through the Cascade . Mountains, back into the great basin between them and the Rocky Mountains, and then, by its main branches, stretching up north and winding out through all British Columbia, and south and west into Idaho and over into the bowels of the Rocky Mountains, touching with its fingers all the vast area north of the great desert basin and west of the Rocky Mountains; then sail with me up and down its mile and a half wide sw,eep of majestic volume, at the distance of one hundred and fifty miles above its mouth ; see what steamboats already navigate its waters, and the points to which they reach ; and listen to the wide plans of the naviga- THE SCENERY OF THE COLUMBIA. l8S tors for the use of its most distant upper waters, in British Columbia and Idaho, — sapping the very vitals of British dominion in the North-west, and practically tapping the Pacific railroad as it comes west at Salt Lake for the benefit of Portland and Oregon, — do all this, and we will make our bow to- gether to the Oregonians and their great river. Only more full surveys can determine the literal correctness of their claims to superior vastness ; the Columbia, with its chief division, the Snake, may be anywhere from twelve hundred to two thousand miles in length ; — but that it ranks among the three or four great rivers of the world, and that it is the key to vast political and commercial questions and interests, — giving to its line the elements of a pow- erful rivalry to the great central commercial route of our Continent, of which San Francisco is the Pacific terminus, — no one who examines its posi- tion and extent, and witnesses the various capacity of the territory it waters, can for a moment doubt. As yet, however, the Columbia is most known abroad for the rare beauty and majesty of the scenery developed by its passage through the great Andean range of nOrth-western America. Alone of all the rivers of the West has it broken these stern barriers, and the theater of the conquering conflict offers, as might naturally be supposed, many an unusual feature of nature. River and rock have striven together, wrestling in close and doubtful em- brace, — sometimes one gaining ascendancy, again the other, but finally the subtler and more seductive element worrying its rival out; and gaining the 1 86 ACROSS THE eONTINEN^T. western sunshine, broken and scarred and foaming with hot sweat, but proudly victorious, and iforcing the withdrawing arms of its opponent to hold up eternal monuments of its ISriumph. To witness these scenes has been the main pur- pose and chief pleasure of a two dayis^ excursion up the stream from Portland. Starting at early morn- ing on a steamboat as capacious and comfortable as the best of those on eastern rivers, and with a com- pany of the leading citizens of Oregon, we soon turned out of the Willamette (twelve miles), and steamed up the broad, deep current of the Colian- bia. Near at hand was Vancouver, a feraous spot in this valley, first as a leading station of the Hud- son Bay Company for many yearsj and since and now as the chief military station of the Unite4 States in the interior North-west. Here many 6f our prominent military men have served appren- ticeship, — Grant, Hooker, McClellan and Ingles among them. They are all well remembered in the days of their captaincies here by the old inhab- itants. Grant was the same quiet, close-mouthed man then as now, but gave no indication of that great mastery of himself and of others, that he has within these few years so nobly, and to such high purpose, demonstrated. It was while here that he left the army originally, to come back to it in the hour of the Nation's need, a new and nobler man. The present arrangement of the quarters and offices of the post was made under Colonel Ingles' admin- istration, and is both generous and tasteful. It is evidently both a favorite and comfortable military THE CASCADES AND THE DALLES. 18/ post, and continues to be, as it ]©ng has been, one of the "soft places" in the army on this Coast. Fifty miles of steamiiig up through heavily wood- ed banks brought us to the foot-hills of the Cascade Mountains, and soon we were upon the charmed ground. High walls of basaltic rock rose slowly on either side; hage boulders, thrown off in the convulsion of wafer with mountain, lie lower down the valley, or stand out in the stream, — one so large, rising in rough egg shape some thousand feet up into the aJr, as to become a conspicuous and memo- rable element in the landscape. The river gets too fast here, at the Cascades, as they are called, for farther progress by boat; we change to a railway of five miles, along rock and river, at the end of which we come to navigable waters again, and find, to our surprise, another large, and equally luxurious Steamer. During these fix^e miles of the Cascades, the river makes a descent of forty feet, half of it . in one mile, but it takes the form of rough and rocky rapids, and not of one distinct, measurable fall. The second boat took us from the Upper Cas- cades to the Dalles, forty-five miles, all the way through the mountains. The waters narrow and fun swift and harsh; the rocks grow higher and sharper ; and their architecture, by fire and water, assumes noble and massive forms. The dark, ba- saltic stones lie along in even layers, seamed as in the walls of human structure ; then they change to upright form, and run up in well-rOunded columns, one after another, one above another. Oftefi is rich similitttde to ruined castles of the Rhine; l88 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. more frequently, fashions and forms, too massive,- too majestic, too unique for human ambition and art to aspire to. Where the clear rock retires, and sloping sides invite, verdure springs strong, and forests, as thick and high as in the valleys, fill the landscape. At the Dalles lies the second town in Oregon, bearing the name of The Dalles, and holding a population of twenty-five hundred. It is the en- trepot for the scattered mines in eastern Oregon, for we are now on the eastern slopes of the mountains, and very much also for the Boise and Owyhee mines in Idaho. The miners come in here to winter, send there earnings in here, and buy here many of their supplies. Two millions dollars in gold dust came in here from eastern Oregon and Idaho in the sin- gle month of June last. The town is ambitious of that unnecessary adjunct, a mint, and the Oregon politicians have even wheedled Congress out of a preliminary appropriation for one. The Dalles marks another interruption to thet navigation of the river, and another railway portage of fifteen miles is in use. The entire water of the Columbia is compressed for a short distance into a space only one hundred and sixty feet wide. Through this it pours with a rapidity and a depth, that give majestic, fearful intensity to its motion; while interfering rocks occasionally throw the stream into rich masses of foam. Through these second rapids of fifteen miles, the rock scenery at first rises still higher and sharper, and then fast grows tame; the mountains begin to slink away FUN ON THE STEAMBOAT. 1 89 and to lose their trees ; the familiar barrenness of the great interior basin reappears ; and the only beauty of the hills is their richly rounded forms, often repeated, and their only utility pasturage for sheep and horses and cattle. The fifteen miles of railway, which, with the lower portage of five miles, are built as permanently, and served as, thoroughly, with the best of locomotives and cars, as any rail- roads in the country, landed us on still another large and luxurious steamboat, — "and still the won- der grew," — built way up here beyond the moun- tains, but with every appointment of comfort and luxury that are found in the best of eastern river Craft,— large state-rooms, long and wide cabins, va- rious and well-served meals. From this point (Ce- lilo), there is uninterrupted navigation, and daily or tri-weekly steamers running, to Umatilla, eighty-five miles, Wallula, one hundred and ten miles, and to White Bluffs, one hundred and sixty miles, farther up the stream. For six months in the year, boats can and do run way on to Lewiston, on the Snake River branch of the Columbia, which is two hun- dred and seventy miles beyond Celilo, or five hun- dred miles from the mouth of the Columbia, as White Bluffs, the head of navigation on the main river, is four hundred miles from the mouth. We spent the night on the boat at Celilo, and during the evening the most of the party went back by rail to The Dalles for speeches to the peo- ple from Speaker Colfax and Governor Bross. One of the best bits of fun on our journey was impro- vised on their return late in the night. Those who igo ACROSS THE CONTINENX ihad remains?! on the boat suddenly emerged from tbejr state-rooms, wrapped in the drapery in which they had laid themselves 4own to sleep, and pro- jceedftd to give formal wfikome to the entering party. Mr. Richardson addresssed the Speaker m an amusing travestie of some familiar pokits in his own speeches. Mr. Colfax seized the joke, and replied a la Richardson with equal effectiveness. The whole scene and performance was pictjiresque .and ami^ing in the highest degree; aad the cabin resounded with boisterous laughter from all sides. The next niorning, we proceeded thirty or forty miles still farther up the river, till we had got be- yond all traces of the collision of the stream with the mountain, and the scenery grew tame and com- mon. Then we turned back, having reached a point two hundred and sixty miles above the mouth of the river, and retraced our passage through the mountains, renewing our worship and our wonder before the strange and beautiful effects produced by this piercing of these eternal hills by this ma- jestic riyer of the West As a whole, I know no like scenery so grand, so beautiful. It has much of the distinguishing elements of the Hudson in its Palisades, of the Rhine in its embattled, precip- itous and irregularly shaped sides, and of the Up- per Mississippi in its overhanging cliffs. Each of these holds a beauty that is not here ; but the Co- lumbia aggregates more than any one the element? ,of impressiveness, of picturesque majesty, of won- der-working, powerful nature. I was more enthu- ,5iastic over each of those rivers ; I saw them with MOUNT HOOD. T9I younger and tess "weary eyes ; but this convinces my intellect of its superiority. There is, however, a general uniformity in its characteristics ; one live miles repeats another ; and once seen, you are in- diflferent as to a second sight,-^^before next year, or unless with the accompaniment of new and be- loved eyes. A distinguishing feature in the landscape of this ride up the Columbia.^apart from it, yet bounding it, shadowing it, yet enkindling it with highest majesty and beauty, — is Mount Hood. This is the great snow peak of Oregon, its Shasta, its Rainier, its Mount Blanc. Lying off twenty or thirty miles south of the river, in its passage through the moun- tains, it towers high above all its fellows, and is seen, now through their gorges, and again at the end of apparent long plains, leading up to it from 'the river. Most magnificent views of it are ob- tained through nearly all the sail up and down from Portland. That which Bierstadt has ohosen for its perpetuation on canvas, and which is thus familiar to eastern eyes, is the most complete and impress- ive, and is recognized upon the steamboat. In it, the mountain seems to rise, apart, out from an up- ward-going plain, snow-covered from base to sum- mit, oppressive in its majesty, beautiful in form, angelic in its whiteness, — the union of all that is great and pure and impressive. Various hights are claimed for Hood, from twelve thousand to eighteen thousand five hundred feet ; but it is not at all likely that it exceeds twelve thousand or thirteen thou- sand feet, or less than Shasta in northern California, 192 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. and less, also, than Rainier and Adams in Washing- ton Territory. There is some rivalry among the neighbors of these great snow peaks of the north-western United States as to which is the highest. There are four or five of them from eleven thousand to fifteen thou- sand feet each, and the last one the traveler beholds seems to him not only the highest but the most beautiful, so engrossing is the view. But the most reliable measurements give Shasta the palm at four- teen thousand four hundred and forty feet, and, until within a year, made it the highest mountain peak in the United States. Last season, however, the explorations of the California Geological Survey brought to knowledge a series of rare snow-cov- ered and granite peaks, among the Sierra Nevadas in southern California and Nevada, one or two of which, at least, mount higher than Shasta, and, for the present at least, may claim to be the highest land in the Nation. One of these peaks was called Mount Tyndall, and is about fourteen thousand five hundred feet high; and another, the very highest, is named Mount Whitney for the head of the Ge- ological Survey of California, and is at least fifteen thousand feet high. But no mountain peak we have yet passed in our journey is seen to so fine advantage as Mount Hood from the Columbia River, — it is hard to imagine a more magnificent snow mountain ; and adding this crowning element to the scenery of the Columbia River, it is probably just to say of it, that this ex- cursion offers more of natural beauty and wonder THE OREGON STEAM NAVIGATION COMPANY. 1 93, to interest and excite the trayeler, than any otTier single journey or scene which the Pacific Coast presents,' except the Yosemite valley. That must, of course, stand first, unrivaled and unapproachable,. But to this I give the second place. ' The navigation of the Columbia River is now in the hands of a strong and energetic company, that not only have the capacity to improve all its present opportunities, but the foresight to seek out and cre- ate new ones. They are, indeed, making new paths in the wilderness, and show more comprehension of the situation and purpose to develop it than any set of men I have yet met on the Pacific Coast Organized in 1861, with property worth one hun- dred and seventy-five thousand dollars, they have now, with eighteen or twenty first class steamboats, the two railroads around the Cascades and The Dalles, and their appointments, warehouses at all the principal towns on the river, including one nine hundred and thirty-five feet long at Cellilo, and real estate in preparation for future growth, a total prop- erty of rising two millions dollars, all earned froni their business. Besides this great increase of wealth from their own enterprise, they have paid to themselves in dividends three hundrfed and thirtyrtwo thousand seven hundred and fifty dolr lars. With wagon roads from The Dalles, firom Um- atilla, and from Wallula, the river and their boats have formed and still form the cheapest and quick- est route for travel or freight from all parts of the Coast to the rich mines of Boise and Owyhee in Idaho, as well as to those in eastern Oregon. Boise 9 «3 194 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, City is two hundred and sixty miles from Umatilla and Owyhee two hundred and ninety miles. The roads from the other points are longer arid poorer. So large have been the travel and trade in this di- rection in the last few years, that the Oregon steam navigation company has carried to the Upper Co- lumbia sixty thousand three hundred and twenty tons in the last four years, beginning with six thou- sand tons in 1862 and rising to nearly twenty-two thousand tons in 1864. In the same time, their boats have carried up and down on the river nearly one hundred thousand passengers, increasing from ten thousand in 1861 to thirty-six thousand in 1864. California has at last aroused to the importance of securing this trade, if possible, for herself, and is oper^ing shorter wagon routes to Idaho by way of Chico and Red Bluffs in the upper Sacramento val- ley, and through Nevada by the Humboldt valley; but the Oregon people are still likely to keep the larger share of the traffic, for their route, -though Jonger, is very much by water, and so cheaper, safer and pleasanter. The Oregon navigation company are also busy with plans for improving their own route. By opening a road one hundred and ten miles long, across a wide bend of unnavigable sections of the Snake River, from Wallula to the mouth of the Powder River, they will again find the Snake River navigable for one hundred and fifty to two hundred miles farther up its course, or into the very .heart of the Owyhee and Boise gold basins, and on beyond towards Utah. Then from this new head of navigation on the Snake Oregon's pacific railroad cut-off. 195 River, to Salt Lake, is but one hundred or one hundred and fifty miles more ; so that with wagon roads of less than three hundred miles, steam navi- gation may soon be secured all the way from Salt Lake to the Pacific Ocean in Oregon. Substitute for these wagon roads a railway, or, leaving out the navigation of the upper Snake, and building a rail- road five hundred and fifty miles across from Salt Lake through the gold regions of Idaho to Wallula, whence is uninterrupted navigation down the Co- lumbia, and the Pacific Coast is reached by steam through Oregon with less than two-thirds the rail- road building required for the central route into San Francisco. The line for this suggested road is easy, crossing the Blue Mountains in eastern Oregon by'a very favorable pass, and avoiding by the Columbia River the great work of surmounting the Sierra Nevadas. These are important, preg- nant suggestions. The Oregon navigation com- pany is impressed with their significance, and will next spring construct a steamboat on the upper Snake for testing the practicability of that point in the programme. They mean at least to hold their superiority in the commerce of Idaho, and if the Central Pacific railway interest does not push on its work with alacrity, the despised Oregonians jnay yet show their heels to their California neigh- bors in the matter of the quickest and cheapest route for travel and freight from the Rocky Moun- tains to the Coast. So at the North, into the' heart of British Colum- t>ia, the Oregon steamboat company are working 196 "ACROSS THE CONTINENT. out a no'tabte plan for extending their Dperaticm& By building a ivagonpoartage of one hundred and fifty miles north from White ^ Bluffs, the present head of navigation on "the. main stream of the Co^ hjmbia, cutting ofi a wdde:,and impassable angle of the river, the stream is again -Struck at a navigable point close to the fbrtyninth parallel, and steamers can be run from there one hundred and fifty to, two hundred miles north through the series of lakes into which the river widens in that region, away up to the fifty-second and fifty-third parallels, where steamboats were never heard of or thought of, and into the now most famous gold region of British Columbia, the Carriboo country. The steamboat company are already buildin_g a steamer in this double upper Columbia, and next seasoti will prob- ably be enabled to inaugurate this capital idea and illustration of their enterprise. Now the Carriboo mines are only reached by way of Victoria, Frazer River, and three hundred' to five hundred miles of rough land travel. This, new route will bring them into quick and cheap communication with American tnarkets and American impulses at Portland. In ..this and other ways, Oregon and its people make a pleasant and promising impression upon us. They lack many of the a:dvantages of their neighbors below; their agriculture is less varied, but it IS more sure ; mining has not poured such irregular and intoxicating wealth into their laps ; they need, as well, a more thorough farming and a more varied industry ;' they need, also, as well, in- telligent, patient labor and larger capital ; but they OREGON, PRESENT AND PROSPECTIVE. I97 have builded what they have got more slowly and more wisely than the Californians ; they have less severe reaction from hot and unhealthy growth to encounter, — ^less to unlearn ; and they seem sure, not of organizing the first State on the Pacific Coast, indeed, but of a steadily prosperous, healthy and moral one,'^— they are in thfr way to be the New England of the Pacific Coast. Just now, new and exciting discoveries of placer gold have been made among the head waters of the John Day branch of the Columbia River, in south-eastern Oregon, and extensive improvements are being developed among the quartz mines of the western slopes of the Sierra Nevadas, just off 'from the Willamette vdley; and capital and labor are hastening in both directions: but while there is much to hope from these promises and investments, there is also something to fear ^ the real growth of the State. The uncertainty, the recklessness, the gambling habit which the varied and fickle results gf gold mining throw over the whole business and morals and manners of a com- munity, that is possessed by the passion, are very great obstacles to a real and permanent prosperity^ and growth in high civilization. May Oregon steady itself, or be steadied by sufficiently early failure against such dangers as California's experience has thrown around her condition as a State. LETTER XIX. THROUGH WASHINGTON TERRITORY. Olympia, W. T., July 26. Unless you have been studying geography lately, you. will need to open your map to follow us in our journey northward. So near the north-, western limit of the Republic and not to touch it ; so close to John Bull and not to shake his grim paw, and ask him what he thinks of the preposter- ous Yankees now ; so near to that rarely beautiful sheet of water, Puget Sound, and not to sail through it, and know its commercial capacities and feel its natural attractions, — it would never do. So, two days ago, we put out of Portland, steamed down the Columbia for fifty miles, and up its Cowlitz branch for two miles (all it is now navigable), and landed on the Washington Territory side at two houses and a stage wagon, bearing the classic name of Monticello. Jefferson was not at home; but there was a good dinner with Mr. Burbank, scion of your northern Berkshire Burbanks; testifying, like all the rest of these border settlers, away from schools and churches and society, that there was no such other country anywhere, and that you could THE FORESTS OF WASHINGTON TERRITORY. IQQ not drive them back to the snows and cold winters of " the States." The next question was, how to put eleven passen- gers in an open wagon that only held seven, for a ninety-mile and two-day drive across the Territory. It was successfully achieved by putting three of them on saddle horses; and off we bounced into the woods at the rate of three to four miles an hour. Most unpoetical rounding to our three thousand miles of staging in these ten weeks of travel, was this ride through Washington. The road was rough beyond description ; during the winter rains it is just impassable, and is abandoned ; for miles it is over trees and sticks laid dowr^ roughly in swamps ; and for the rest, — ungraded, and simply a path cut through the dense forest, — the hight and depth are fully equal to the length of it. Those who worked their passage, by whipping lazy mules whose backs they strode, and paid twenty dollars fo* the privilege, made the best time, and had the laziest of it. Yet since, I observe, with tender memories of hard saddles, they " stand and wait," instead of sitting upon wooden chairs. But the majestic beauty of the fir and cedar for- ests, through which we rode almost continuously for the day and a half that the road stretched out, was compensation for much discomfort. These are the finest forests we have yet met, — the trees larger and taller and standing thicker ; so thick and tall that the ground they occupy could not hold them cut and corded as wood ; and - the under- growth of shrub and flower and vine and fern, a|- 200 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. most tropical in its luxuriance and iniperietrable for its closeness. Washington Territory must have more timber and ferns and blackberries and snakes fo the square mile thain any other State or Territory of the Union. We occasionally struck a narrow prairie or a thread-like valley ; perhaps once in tea miles a clearing of an acre or two, rugged and rough in its half-redemption from primitive forest ; but for the most part it was a continuous ride through for- ests, so high and thick that the sun could not reach the road, so unpeopled and untouched, that the very spirit of Solitude reigned supreme, and made us feel its presence as never upon Ocean or Plaiii: The ferns are delicious, little and big, — more of them, and larger than you can see in New Eng- land, — and spread their beautiful shapes" on every hand. But the settlers apply to them other adjec- tives beginning with d, for they vindicate theii- right to the soil, in plain as well as forest, with most tenacious obstinacy, aiid to root them out is a long and difiScult job for the farmer. We dined on the second day at Skookeni Chuck (which is Indian for "big water,") and came to the head of Puget Sound, which kindly shortens the land-passage across the Territory one-half, and this town, the capital, at night, encountering the usual demonstration of artillery, brass band and banner^, and most hospitable greeting from Acting-Governor Evans and other officials and citizens. Olympia lies charmingly under the hill by the water-side ; counts its inhabitants less' than five hundred,. though still ttd lairgest town of the Territory, save the mining THE FOOD OF THE PACIFIC. 20i center of W^llula, way down in tlie south-east to- wards Idaho; numbers more stumps than houses within city limits; but is the social and political center for a large extent of country; puts on the airs and holds many of the materials of fine society ; and entertained us at a very Uncle Jerry and Aunt Phebe little inn, whose presiding genius, a fat and fair African of fifty years and three hundred pounds, robed in spotless white, welcomed us with the grace and dignity of a queen, and fed us as if we were in training for a cannibal's table. If there is one thing, indeed, more than another, among the facts of civilization, which the Pacific Coast organizes most quickly and completely, it is good eating. From the Occidental at San Fran- cisco to the loneliest of ranches on the most wilder- ness of weekly stage routes, a "good square meal" is the rule; while every village of five hundred in- habitants has its restaurants and French or Italian cookis.c I say this with the near experience and the lively recollection of one or two most illustrious ex- ceptions, where the meals consisted of coarse bacon, ancient beans and villainous mustard, — and where, . if you declinexl the two former, you were politely requested to help yourself to mustard, — and where, o' nights, the beds could e'en rise and walk with fleas and bedbugs. When the Puritans settled New England, their first public duty was to build a church with thrifty thought for their souls. Out here, their degenerate sons begin with organizing a restaurant, and silpplying Hostetter's stomachic bitters and an European or Asiatic cook. So the 9* 202 ACROSS THE CONTINENT- seat of empire, in its travel westward, changes its base from soul to stomach, from brains to bowels. Perhaps it is only in obedience to that delicate law of our later civilization, which forbids us to enjoy our religion unless we have already enjoyed our victual, and which sends a dyspeptic to hell by an eternal regard to the fitness of things. And cer- tainly the piety, that ascends from a grateful and gratified stomach, is as likely to be worthy as that fitfully fructified by Brandreth's pills. Is it not a little singular that only our forty- oddth State should bear the name of Washington ? That it was left to this day and to this cornermost Territory to enroll his name among the stars of the Republic's banner.' Washington Territory is the upper half of old Oregon, divided by the Co- lumbia River and the fortieth parallel for the south- ern boundary, and extending up to the forty-ninth, to which, under the reaction from the unmartial Polk's "fifty-four-forty or fight" pretensions, our northern line was ignominiously limited to! Its population is small, less than twenty thousand, and not likely to grow fast, or make it a State for some years to come, unless the chance, not probable, of rich gold and silver mines within its lines should flood it with rapid immigration. But it holds sure wealth and a large future through its certain illim- itable forests and its probable immense coal depos- its. Of all Its surface, west of the Cascade or Si- erra Nevada Mountains, not more than one-eighth is prairie or open land; the rest is covered by a growth of timber, such as, alike in density and in THE SOIL OF WASHINGTON. 203 size, no other like space on the earth's surface can boast of. Beyond the mountains to the East, the country partakes of the same characteristics as that below it; hilly, barren of trees, unfruitful, whose chief promises and possibilities are in the cattle and sheep line. Its arable land this side the moun- tains, where the forests are cleared or interrupted, is less fertile than that of Oregon and California; but it sufficeth for its present population, and even admits of considerable exports of grain and meat for. the mining populations in British Columbia, and will grow in extent and productiveness probably as fast as the necessities of the Territory require. LETTER XX. PUGET SOUND, AND VANCOUVER'S ISLAND. Victoria, V. I., Jntf 28. ■ We were a full day and night coming doWn Puget Sound, on the steamer from Olympia; loitering along at the villages on its either shore, and study- ing the already considerable development of its lumber interests, as well as regaling ourselves with the beauty of its waters and its richly-stored forest shores. Only the upper section of the southern branch of these grand series of inland seas and rivers, that sweep into the Continent here, and tpake Vancouver's Island, and open up a vast re- gion of interior country to the ocean, is now called Tuget Sound, — only forty miles or so from Olympia north. Formerly the whole confines went by that name ; and rightfully it should remain to all which runs up into Washington Territory from out the Strait of San Juan de Fuca, for this has a unity and serves a similar purpose. For beauty and for use, this is, indeed, one of the water wonders of the world ; curiosity and commerce will give it, year by year, increase of fame and visitors. It narrows to a river's width; it circles and swoops into the land PUGET S SOUND, AND ITS LV^BER. 20]; with coquettish freedom ; and then it widens into miles of breadth ; carrying the largest of ships any- where on its surface, even close to the forests' edge ; free of rocks, safe from wind and wave ;r— the. home of all craft, clear, blue and fathomless. It is the great lumber market of all the Pacific Coast. Already a dozen sawrmillsare located on its shores ; one which we. visited was three hundred and thirty-six feet long, and turns out one hundred thou- feand feet of lumber daily ; three ships and twP^barks of five hundred to one thousand tons each were load- ing with the product direct from the iniU ; and the -present entire export of the Sound, in prepareij lumber and masts and spars, reaches nearly to one hundred millions of feet yearly, and yields at the average price of ten dollars a thousand about one million dollars. San "Francisco is the largest cus- tomer; but the Sandwich Islands, China, all the Pacific American ports, south and north, and even Buenos Ayres around on the Atlantic, come here for building materials,, and France finds here her cheapest and best spars and masts. Much of the shipping employed in the business is owned on the Sound; one mill company has twelve vessels of from three hundred to one thousand tons each. The business is but in its very infancy; it will grow with the growth of the whole Pacific Coas^ and with the increasing deart]> of fine ship timber ■in "other parts of the world ; for it is impossible to calculate the time when, cut and saw as we may, all these forests shall be used up, and the supply be- come exhausted. 206 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. The size of these Washington Territory trees is rather overpowering, — we have not seen the big trees of California yet, — and not daring to trust unaccustomed eyes, we resorted to the statistics of the lumbermen. Trees, six and seven feet in diam- eter, and two hundred to two hundred and fifty feet high, are very common, perhaps rarely out of sight in the forest ; eight feet in diameter and three hun- dred feet high are rarer, but still not at all uncom- mon ; — the builder of the telegraph line has hitched his wire in one case to a cedar (arbor vitae) which is fourteen feet in diameter; a monster tree that had fallen, — the forests are full of fallen trees, — measured three hundred and twenty-five feet long ; and another tree, at the distance of ninety feet from its root, was seven feet in _ diameter! Masts for ships are readily procurable, straight as an arrow, .and without a knot for one hundred feet, and forty inches in diameter at thirty feet from the base. I stop my figures here, lest my character for truthful reporting grow questionable. Out of the Sound and straight across the Strain twenty miles, we encounter the rocky shore of Vancouver's Island; searching along we meet a (hidden hole in the wall, and, steaming in, there bpens out a little wash-bowl of a bay ; and here is Victoria. It is a charming surprise, — the prettiest located and best btilt town on the Pacific Coast, and next to Portland in size and business,— a healthy copartnership of American enterprise and enthusiasm, and English solidity and holdfastness. The population ranges from twenty-five hundred in victoria: BRITISH RULE. 20/ summer and dull times (now) to five thousand in winter and the flush season, when the mining across in British Columbia pays well, and the miners come to town to spend their harvest. Out of the town and its trade, the island offers Httle development ; there are some poor-paying gold mines ; good bitu- minous coal is found in abundance, and profitably worked; here and there is farming in patches, which is extending, but most of the food eaten here comes from California and Washington. The whole white population of the island is no more than five thousand to seven thousand, and over these reigns the cumbersome and expensive ma- chinery of an especial English colonial govern- ment, — partly appointed by the crown, partly rep- resentative, — with a parliament that sat ten months last year ; spending four hundred thousand dollars a year, and raising it out of the business of this town by a systeni of taxation • many times more burdensome than our civil war has imposed on our people, — including a tax on all sales, besides special licenses for each particular business, and an income tax on top of all ; but giving in return a. practically good government, a port free of customs duties, order in the city, and excellent roads into the country. Over across the Gulf of Georgia the same thing is repeated ; there stretches out the vast region of Brif ish Columbia, with another seven thousand pop- ulation, largely mining and American, but scattered from the capital of New Westminster at the mouth of Frazer River, north and east to the Carriboo .208 _ ACROSS THE . CONTINENT. country and the valley of the Kootenay, five huo- dred and six hundred miles away; duplicating this formal and expensive machinery of government, with English castles almost for gubernatorial resi- dences, and fifteen thousand dollars a year salaries to live in them with, and a long retinue of imported British officials to match ; raising revenue on this side the gulf, however,, from customs duties and a fifty cqnt tariff on every ounce of gold dug, in part ; and giving nothing to boast of back but better roads to the mines than, the American States offer. The taxation for public purposes in British Columbia swells to the enormous sum of one hundred dollars per head of population, and that in Vancouver's Island to seventy dollars, a year. The Frazer River gold diggings, in British Co- lumbia, are about worked out now; few besides Chinamen are' vvashing in them this year ; and the rush of the white miners is to the more distant and better paying regions of Carriboo and Kootenay, though these, as all others on the Coast, are over- shadowed this season by the fame of Idaho and Montana. Victoria is the chief commercial point for these two British Provinces, and in part, also, for Wash- ington Territory ; and much profitable smuggling goes on across these waters and imaginary territo- rial lines into the United States. There are fewer Americans in Victoria than formerly; they are stepping out, as its prosperity seems waning ; but the English element is apparently increasing. The two nations mingle pretty cordially ; the Yankees RECEPTION AT VICTORIA. 2O9 chafe a good deal at the extraordinarily high taxes and the aristocratic government, and even practical John Bull begins to see the ridiculous side of it. More surely than the Canadas, even, when these provinces become really important and worth hav- ing, they will be oUrs. They will drift to the Union by the inevitable law of gravitation, and by the in- fluence of the leaven of American nationality and sentiment, already large throughout their Wbrders, that will grow with their growth, and flavor their whole progress. Three daily papers seem to pros- per in Victoria; the stores are exceedingly well built, and, aside from the twenty-five to thirty-three per cent, that are now unoccupied, make a good showing of Enghsh goods; "shopping" is cheaper than anywhere in the States ; and the whole order of the civilization here has many pleasant points of. contrast with other towns on the Pacific Coast. This, too, is the great depot of the Hudson Bay Company ; all their business from the Paciflc Coast to the Red River of the North, beyond Minnesota, centers here; and their warehouses of accumulat- ing furs and of distributing goods to pay for them are among the chief curiosities o& the place. They do a general trading business wherever they have stations or stores; and you can buy calicoes and cottons, hardware and rum at their counters, as at any old-fashioned country store in New England. Our day and a half in Victoria has been a very pleasant experience indeed. The Americans gave Mr. Colfax and his friends cordial welcome; the English were no whit less hearty in demonstration 14 2IO ACROSS THE CONTINENT. of good feelJiig anfl respect; there was what the French call a "grand dinner," the eating wheirfebf lasted from seven to ten p. M., and the speaking whereat continued from ten to three A. m., — the re- sult of which was that all little international diflfer- ■ ences and accounts were amicahly adjusted, Andy Johnson and Queen Victoria were married, and the two grand nations of the Anglo-Saxon race were joined into one overpowering, all-subduing, all-fiTic* tifying Republic ! "And what a bloody country that would be," exclaimed an enthusiastic Britisher at one of the clock in the morning. How could the little question as to the title to a group of small islands in this inland sea, and known by the name of the largest, San Juan, be thought of in such a fraternal baptism? And, indeed, by the cool of the morning after, it seems a very small affair. Nothing but wide war between the two countries could ever make it of the slightest prac- tical consequence. The question turns on whether the boundary line runs from strait to gulf by one chahnet' or the other, this side the islands or that. Meantime, each government supports a captain and corporal's guard of soldiers on San Juan, — only dis- tinguishable, probably, one from the other by the blue and the red of their uniforms, — and fraterniz- ing .^aily, doubtless, over a game of cards and a whisky bottle. All these differences do indeed grow small and unpractical as you get near to them ; and it is difficult to appreciate what an ex- citement and passion one of our generals created up here a few years ago by laying hold on the wholp THE SUMMER IN VICTORIA. afJT of what the half is a burden. Palpably, by the rtiap, and by the course of ocean travel, the Amer- ican claim to these islands is the right one; but in view of the certainty of all this apple falling into our lap as soon as it is ripe enoxigh to be really val- uable, the present status may as well as not go in- definitely on; Up here, above the latitude of Quebec and Mon- treal, we bask in the smile of roses that are denied to you in New England. Mounts Shasta and. Hoed' of California and Oregon are more than rivaled in deep snow ifields and majestic snow peaks by Mounts Rainier and Baker of Wa^^gton ; sailing; down Puget Sound, we take in the former from base to three peaked summit of thirteen thousand feet in hight, all aglow with perpetual white, — a feature of deep beauty and impressiveness ; along the sea coast, on the opposite side, the hills also rise to the region of continuous snow, and look down bald and white through the long summer days into the trop- ical flower gardens and orchards and hot streets of Victoria ; and here, ever)rwhere under these wintry shadows, reigns a year, that knows no zero cold, and rarely freezing water or snow; that winters fuchsias and the most delicate roses, English ivies and other tender plants, and summers them with rioting luxuriance ; that grows the apple, the pear and all the small fruits to perfection, and only can- not grow our Indian com. The climate of all this Pacific Coast certainly presents many solaces and satisfactions in compari- son with our own New England. I do not wonder 212 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. the emigrants hither find new health and life and much happiness in its great comparative evenness; but I do not yet recognize that which would com- pensate me for the loss of our slow, hesitating, coy- ing spring times, our luxuriously-advancing, tender, red and brown autumns, aye, and our clear and crisply-cold winter days and snow-covered lands, with the contrasting evergreens, the illuminated sky, the delicately fretted architecture of the leaf- less trees, the sunsets, the nerve-giving tonic of the air. Surely there is more various .beauty in the progress of a New England year than any which all the Pacific Coast can offerl LETTER XXI. SAN FRANCISCO: MR. COLFAX AND HIS RECEP- TION IN THE PACIFIC STATES. San Francisco, August 2. "Friscoe," as the interior lovingly and for short calls the commercial capital of the Pacific Coast, is a good place to come back to, after dusty stage rides and rolling ocean travel. It is refreshing to stretch on a wide bed at the Occidental, after tangling your legs over night in the corner of a "mud wagon," or cramping them in the narrow berth of a steamer. It is something to miss the punctual Speaker's in- junction to be ready at four in the morning, and his quick, cheery voice at quarter before, cautioning us "to be sure and be on hand;" something also to sleep as long as we can, and eat when we have a mind to; much, indeed, to know that no brass bands lie in wait for us, no hoarse cannon hold a horrid welcome for tender nerves, no midnight din- ners vex dyspeptic stomachs. There is real refreshment and rest, always, in the independence and let-you-alone-ativeness of a large city. And Friscoe is, indeed, a good place, per se. The Washoe people have their chief incentive to 214 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. piety in the assurance that thus, when they die, they will come here ; just as good Bostonians count Paris their paradise. These bare, brown and white sand hills, that Nature exposes where art has not covered her, all around in San Francisco, furnish no poetical proof of the susceptible Washoe theory ; they are just abou± as f^r away fcoin all traditional and imaginative ideas of the Garden of Eden as it is: possible for ugly feet to be ; but the dissimilitude of the " Friscoe" climate to all known anywhere else on the face of the terrestrial globe, may suggest a point on the side of tie Washoeites. You cannot palm off old Thomas's almanac on tiie weather qutetion> — ^"calculated for Boston, but equally ap- ^kable to any other meridian," — ^in this town. San Francisco weather is only its own paralM; there is nothing like it, eitha- here on the Pacific Coast, or elsewh^ej so far as Bayard Taylor has traveled, or Fitzhugh Ludlow imagined in Hash- eesh. It has its summer in winter, and its winter in summer ; the ladies go to church and to opera pid a shopping, in July arid August, clad in heavy {]iTs; overcoats are a daily necessity to every man not lined with a patent air-tight coal stove; aiwi this very day of August is borrowed from the sui- cide week of November, — ^I would go "my bottom dollar," as the ininers say, that it would snow in half an hour, were I on my native heath. And yet, — ingrafce, am I not? — ^while I write this plaint, I am eating Sweetwater grapes bmight in the shops at ten cents a pound, though the season is but just opening; Black Hamburgs are equally cheap and SAN FRANCISCO S SUMMERS. 2L5 plenty ; peaches are ponderous and luscious at fifty cents to one dollar a basket; and pears, plums, apricots, nectarines, figs, blackberries and straw- berries (stiU !) all flood the fcuit stores, and are sol^ at equally low rates. What gives San Francisco its harsh summer day^ is, that it is constantly "in the draft." While elsct- where, along shore, the coast hills uninterruptaiLy break the steady north-west breeze -of the summer sea, here they open just enough to let out the wa- ters of the Sacramento River and San Francise© bay, and let in like a tide of escape steam the ocean breeze and mists. When winter comes, the wind changes to south-east, and blows to softer scale, amd between showers, — for then comes the rain, — ^the sky is clearer and the air balmier than in summer. Thus the Friscoe people boast of their winters, and apologize for their summers. Invalids, especially of weak lungs, find the latter seasons very trying here, and flee to the protected valleys inland, where the days are hot and clear, and the nights agreeab^ cool ; and come back here to winter safely and so- ciably. .Ben Holladay's good steamer Sierra Nevada brought us down from Victoria in less than threje days ; and we tried the Pacific Ocean and came in by the Golden Gate for the first time. Though no storm raged, the sea did not prove title to the name, but rolled, and pitched us altogether unpacifically ; and the mile wide gate to San Francisco, guarded by high hills, abruptly opened, and bristling witii fortifications, found from us ready answer to its 2l6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. welcome ; and we swept around its double corner, and came to wharf in the generous and land-locked bay of San Francisco, with thanksgiving and grati- tude, swelling anew and higher to Providence, Cap- tain Conner and Dr. Murdock, as we learned the sad fate of our alternate steamer, the Brother Jona- than, on her passage by us up the route. We passed her and her fatal rock, only an hour or two before their sudden and sad collision ; and we readily join, as you can imagine, in the wide tide of feeling that the disaster creates here. The genial old General Wright, long and honorable in service, and beloved throughout the Pacific States, and Mr. Nesbit of the Bulletin editorial staff, we knew, and had expe- rienced their hospitality. Other prominent and be- loved citizens went down in that mysterious, sudden wreck. Speaker Colfax and his friends have now made the round of the Pacific States and Territories, so far as their time will admit. Idaho and Montana they regret not to visit, but they have obtained much intimate knowledge of their characteristics and capacities. A month more remains to them here ; and this they spend in excursions to the in- terior of California, — to the Big Trees, the Yosem- ite, the Geysers, etc., — and in more private engage- ments in this city and State, than they have yet been able to make. The Speaker's public visit, or perhaps more pfoperly his public reception by the people of the Pacific States, may be said to be over. It has been a very remarkable one for its generos- ity and universality and spontaneity; altogether THE GREETINGS TO MR. COLFAX. 217 unexpected to him, and so still more flattering; and greatly creditable to the hospitality and genu- ine patriotism of the people of these States. I have omitted any record of it, in our progress from town to town and State to State, because the story in all general terms was the same. But now that it is substantially over and the journey completed, it is only simple truth to say that no man ever had such a generous popular welcome on these shores before. From his arrival at Austin in Nevada, where we first struck the spreading tide of Pacific civilization and population, through that State, through Cali- fornia to this city, and again northerly through the State, through Oregon and Washington, and into the British Provinces, up to this time, — a period of six weeks, — his progress through the country has been a continuous popular ovation. Everywhere the same welcome from authorities and citizens, the same unstinted proffer of every facility for the journey, for seeing all parts of the country, all shades of its development: special coarhes, special trains and extra steamboats have been at his service ; welcome everywhere to confi- dence, to fullest fact from most intelligent sources ; welcome everywhere by brass band, cannon, mili- tary escort, public addresses ; and everywhere, even to smallest village and tavern collection of neigh- boring rancheros, the same eager desire to hear the distinguished visitor speak, and eke then for big or little orations from his less distinguished com- panions. There is a combination of causes for the marked 2l8 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. demonstrativeness and popularity of this welporae to Mr. Colfax in all this region. Chief; of course, are his conspicuous public position, aJdd the fact that be is the first man high in State who has ever visited the Pacific States for the simple and sole reason of studying their resources and interests^ so as the better to serve them in the government ; his early and steady friendship and leadership in important legislation at Washington in behalf of all this re- gion; his wide personal popularity among public men and private men, who have ever knowji him, and the magnetic spread of this popularity along his jourriey from his intercourse with the people and his speeches to them. We must add to these reasons, how, the newly-developed and hearty sym- pathy of these western States with the political ex- periences and interests of the East ; their inability to share in the war directly, but their therefore more intensely loyal feeling in regard to it and its issues, and the limited occasion for expressing it. Also, and an important consideration, is the eager looking for larger knowledge and new appreciation of the capacities and interests of these States, in this time of their depression and comparative pov- erty ; and the desire for the spread of such infor- mation among the pubHc men, and through the press of the East, as will lead to a fresh emigration and a new supl)ly of capital. It is dull times here ; it is flush times in the East ; and the West would borrow of our new life and prosperity. Mr. Colfax and his companions were men thought to be in po- sitions to contribute to such results; and part of THE SPEECHES OF MR. COLFAX. 219 their welcome, part of the generous confidence and hospitaiity that have been extended to them,, have confessedly been on this ground. Such union of motive, gratitude, appreciatioii, loyalty, wise and creditable selfishness, have inspired and fed most bountiful welcome and treatment. These western people never do anything by halves ; they give of feeling and of time and of money, whenever they are moved, without stint, without calculation. Mr. Colfax has freely gratified the popular desire everywhere to hsten to his voice ; no place on his route: was too small, no gathering too insignificant, to be, turned ofi" with indifference, when such hearty greeting appealed for attention ; and he has spoken, long and short, an average of at least once a day since he left the Missouri River ; — some days his speeches number four and five. Never much stud- ied, they were rarely alike in form ; never greatly elaborated, they always reached a high level of popr ular eloquence. The average quality of excellence in all his efforts has surprised me : I doubt if any other of our public men could speak so often and so much, and on such various occasions, and suc- ceed so well in all. The characteristics of his speak- ing have been practical wisdom or good sense, entire frankness in utterance of opinions, a charming sim- plicity in his style of oratory, coupled with a ready, clear repression, and a steady, natural enthusiasm, which have kept his hearers in constant sympathy with his individuality. The staple subjects he has treated have been the War and the questions grow- ing out of it, the Resources of the Pacific States 220 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. and their development, the Mining and the taxation of its results, the Mexican question and the Monroe doctrine, the Future Destiny of the Republic, Mr. Lincoln and his character, the Pacific Railroad, and such local and personal matters as the place and hour suggested. As to the mines and the taxation of their prod- ucts, which is a subject of much anxiety in the mining districts, Mr. Colfax has taken the ground that the mineral lands should be thrown open by the government to the free occupation of discover- ers and workers, the same as our agricultural lands, and under similar regulations to those the miners themselves have adopted, in the absence of any governmental action, and that the government should not tax the product, until it passes, finally, in the form of bullion, into the commercial uses of the world ; — ^the same as it taxes grain only in the form of whiskey and flour, sheep and wool as cloth, and the woods in their last processes of manufac- ture. He argued this point so justly and strongly that he gained general acquiescence even from the classes who have generally contended that mining should, in no form or stage, be obliged to contribute to the support of the government. On the Mexican question, he even more bravely set himself against the current of public opinion on this Coast. Here it is popular to talk of "cleaning out" Maximilian in sixty days ; of taking up arms for the Juarez government, even if war with England and France should thus be precipitated. Mr. Colfax said distinctly that he had no sympathy with this MR. COLFAX AND THE MEXICAN QUESTION. 221 demand; he believed in the Monroe doctrine, he thought the Juarez was the rightful government of Mexico ; but he. was for no hasty, no harsh action by our people or government. We should have no new war if it could be avoided honorably ; we needed the healing, developing influences of peace; we needed to build the Pacific Railroad, to develop our mines and our manufactures and our agricul- ture, and to pay our debts, — all which would be for- bidden or suffer delay and depression under foreign war ; and he believed that with patience and tact, and a generous confidence in our government by the people, the Mexican question would be satis- factorily solved ere long, without any such dire calamity as a new and general taking up of arms by the Nation. Pressing these views constantly and against the popular passion, he has clearly made a strong impression in their favor; leadings citizens and prominent journals have responded to his opinions ; and he may be said to have worked almost a revolution in the current public sentiment of the Pacific States on this subject ; while he has added to the universal respect felt for him personally by his courage in espousing an unpopular view here. His visit may be counted as of real national benefit for the influence of his course in this matter alone. Mr. Colfax's speeches at Austin, Virginia City, Placerville, Sacramento, San Francisco, Portland and Olympia may be reckoned as his most com- plete and satisfactory and statesmanlike discus- sions. That at the dinner table in Victoria, to his combined American and British entertainers, was 222 ACROSS THE CONTTFTENT. Ms finest specimen of popular eloquence ; it was well-conceived and tasteful iii thought, well-pitched and richly sustained in expression ; and its impres- sion upon his audience, one of the most intelligent and critical he has ever addressed, was most decided and gratifying. The leading English gentlemen present were enthusiastic concerning both its mat- ter and manner. It breathed the spirit of peace and fraternal feeling towards the English sovereign and people ; while setting forth most efiectively the success and destiny of the great American Re- public. Mr. Colfax has indeed gained credit and popu- larity everywhere on his journey, and his visit here is as likely to prove as valuable to him personally, in his growth as a public man, as it surely will be important and useful in intertwining the bonds of business and of political union, of profit and of pa* triotism, among the widely separated States of th6 Nation. Of his companions in his travels, Governor Bross has generally joined hhn in addressing the popular audiences that have welcomed the partyj and Mr. Richardson occasionally, and both with much acceptance. The Governor is sure to gaiii the cheers of the men, the smiles of the ladies; and Mr. Richardson has charmed all by his cul- tured sentences and his well-rounded rhetoric LETTER XXII. THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES, YosEMiTE Valley, California, August ii. The Yosemite ! As well interpret God in thirty- nine articles as portray it to you by word of mouth or pen. As well reproduce castle or cathedral by a stolen frieze, or broken column, as this assem- blage of natural wonder and beauty by photograph or painting. The overpowering sense of the sub- lime, of awful desolation, of transcending marvel- ousness and unexpectedness, that swept over us, as we reined our horses sharply out of green forests, and stood upon high jutting rock that overlooked this rolling, upheaving sea of granite mountains, holding far down its rough lap this vale of beauty of meadow and grove and river, — such tide of feel- ing, such stoppage of ordinary emotions comes at rare intervals in any life. It was the confrontal of God face to face, as m great danger, in solemn, sud- den death. It was Niagara, magnified. All that was mortal shrank back, all that was immortal swept to the front and bent down in awe. We sat till the rich elements of beauty came out of the majesty and the desolation, and then, eager to get 224 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. nearer, pressed tired horses down the steep, rough path into the Valley. And here we have wandered and wondered and worshiped for four days. Under sunshine and shadow ; by rich, mellow moonlight ; by stars opening double wide their eager eyes; through a peculiar August haze, delicate, glowing, creamy, yet hardly perceptible as a distinct element, — the New England Indian summer haze doubly refined,— by morning and evening twilight, across camp fires, up from beds upon the ground through all the watches of the night, have we seen these, the great natural wonders and beauties of this western world. In- deed, it is not too much to say that no so limited space in all the known world offers 'such majestic and impressive beauty. Niagara alone divides hon- ors with it in America. Only the whole of Switzer- land can surpass it, — no one scene in all the Alps can match' this before me now in the things that mark the memory and impress all the senses for beauty and for sublimity. The one distinguishing feature is a double wall of perpendicular granite, rising from a half a mile ,to a mile in hight, and inclosing a valley not more 'than half a mile in width on the average, and from ten to fifteen miles in length. It is a fissure, a chasm, rather than a valley, in solid rock mountains ; there is not breadth enough in it for even one of tts walls to lie down ; and yet it offers all the fer- tihty, all the beauties of a rich valley. There is meadow with thick grass ; there are groves of pine and oak, the former exquisite in form and majestic THE VERDURE OF THE VALLEY. 22$ ia size, rising often to two hundred and two hun- dred and fifty feet ; there are thickets of willow and birch, bay trees and dogwood, and various flowering shrubs ; primrose and cowslip and golden rod and violet and painted cup, more delicate than eastern skies can welcome, make gay garden of all the va-. cant fields now in August ; the aroma, of mint, of pine and fir. of flower loads the air ; the fern family fijtid a familiar home everywhere; and winding in and out among all flows the Merced River, so pure and transparent that you can hardly tell where the air leaves off and the water begins, rolling rapid over polished stones or soft sands, or staying in wide, deep pools that invite the bather and the boat,. and holdiiig' trout only less rich and dainty than the brook trout of New England. The soil, the trees, the shrubs, the grasses and the flowers of this little Valley are much the same in general character and variety as those of your Connecticut River valleys ; but they are richer in development and greater in numbers. They borrow of the mountain fecundity and sweetness ; and they are fed by summer rains as those of other California valleys rarely are. Now imagine, — can you.' — rising up, sheer and sharp, on each side of this line of fertile beauty, irregularly-flowing and variously-crowned walls of granite rock, thrice as high as your Mounts Tom and Holyoke, twice as high as Berkshire's Graylock. The color of the rock is most varied. A grayiish drab or yellow is the dominant shade, warm and soft. In large spots, it whitens out ; and again it is dark and discolored as if by long exposure to 10* IS 226 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. rain and snow and wind. Sometimes the light and dark shades are thrown into quick contrast on a single wall, and you know where the Zebra and Dr. Bellows' church were borrowed from. More varied and exquisite still are the shapes into which the rocks are thrown. The one great conspicuous object of the Valley is a massive, two-sided wall, standing out into and over the meadow, yellowish- gray in color, and rising up into the air unbroken, square, perpendicular, for full three-quarters of a mile. It bears in Spanish and Indian the name of the Great Jehovah ; and it is easy to believe that it was an object of worship by the barbarians, as it is not difficult for civilization to recognize the Infinite in it, and impossible not to feel' awed and humbled in its presence. In other places these mountain walls of rock take similar and only less majestic shape ; while as fre- quently they assume more poetical and fantastic forms. Here and there are grand massive domes, as perfect in shape as your State-house dome, and bigger than the entire of a dozen State-houses. The highest rock of the Valley is a perfect half- dome, split sharp and square in the middle, and rising more than a mile or near six thousand feet, — as high as Mount Washington is above the level of the sea, — over the little lake which perfectly mirrors its majestic form at its foot. Perfect pyramids take their places in the wall ; then these pyramids come in families, and mount away one after and above the other, as "The Three Brothers." "The Cathe- dral Rocks" and "The Cathedral Spires" unite the THE MONARCH ROCKS. 22/ great impressiveness, the beauty and the fantastic *•*• form of the Gothic architecture. From their shape and color alike, it is easy to imagine, in looking upon them, that you are under the ruins of an old Gothic cathedral, to which those of Cologne and Milan are but baby-houses. The most common form of the rocks is a slightly sloping bare wall, lying in long, dizzy sweeps, some^ times horizontal, sometimes perpendicular, and stretching up and up so high as to cheat the Valley out of hours of sunshine every day. Here huge arches are carved on the face; there long, narrow shelves run midway, along which and in every avail- able crevice, great pines sprout and grow, yet ap- pearing like shrubs against the broad bight of the wall; again, the rock lies in thick foldsj one upon another, like the hide of a rhinbceros ; occasional columns stand out as if sculptured upon the sur- face ; sometimes it juts out at the top over the Val- ley like' the brim of a beaver ; and then it recedes and sharpens to a cone. Many of the various shapes and shades of color in the surface of these massive walls of rock come from the peeling off of great masses of the granite. Frost and ice get into the weak crevices, and blast out huge slices or frag- ments, that fall in boulders, from the size of a great house down to that of an apple, into the valley be- low. Ove? the sides of the walls pour streams of wa- ' ter out of narrower valleys still above, and yet higher and far away, rise to twelve and thirteen' thousand feet the culminating peaks of the Sierra 228 ACROSS THE GONTINENT. Nevadas, with still visible fields of melting snows. All forms and shapes and colors of majesty and beauty duster around this narrow spot ; it seenls. created the home of all that is richest in inspiratioa for the heroic in life, for poetry, for painting, for imr aginative religion. The Water-falls of the Valley, though a lesser inci- dent in ail lis attractions, oifer much that is marvel- ous and' beautiful. This, however, is the season of their feeblest: power. It is in May and June, when tfaeir fountains are freshesti that they appear at their best, and assume their proper place in the grand panorama of beauty and sublimity. In the main portion of the Valley, the Bridal Vail is the first con- spicuous fall, — now a dainty rivulet starting over a precipice nine hundred feet high, but nearly all lost ajt once in delicate spray that sways and scatters in the light breeze, and fastens upon the wall, as sign of its being and its beauty, the fabled rainbow of promise. The name of this fall is well chosen.; it is type of the delicate gauze, floating and illusory, by which brides delight to hide their blushes and give mystery to their charms. Farther up, before the hotel, you see the Yosemite Fall, perhaps twice the size in volume of the Bridal Vail, but distin- guished for its hight,— t;he greatest hight of any water-fall yet discovered in the world. It is broken about two-thirds the way down its high wall of rock by, projecting masses of the mountain, giving it sev- eral hundred feet of cataract passage ; but counting its whole fall from top to bottom, it is two thousand six hundred feet in^bight, which is onlv fifteen times THE VERNAL A^fD NEVADA FALLS. 229 as high as Niagara Falls ! Now, it is a mere silvery ribbon of spray, shooting down its long passage in delfcat« roc-kefts of whitened foafli. Earlier in the seas6n, when ten times the voliime of water poure down, it must, indeed, be a feature of fascinating^ wondeirful beauty. The Valley above this point separates into two or three narrow canydhs, and these are soon walled in by the uprising rocks. At the fend' of one of 'these, the main branch of the river falls from its upper fountains over two walls, one three hundred and fifty feet high and the other seven hundred, at poittts half a mile apart. The I6wer and shortet fall is called the Vernal, and pours down its whole hight without a break, and forms at the base a most exquisite circular rainbow, one of the rarest phe- nomena ifi all nature. The upper fall bears the name of Nevada, breaks as it comes over its crest into a grand blossom of spray, and strikes, about half way down its seven hundred feet/ the obtrud- ing 'wall, which thence offers just sufficient slope to keep the water and carry it in chasing, circling lines of foam to the bottom. This is the fall of fallsj^^ there is no rival to it heire in exquisite, various, fas- cinating beauty; and Switzerland, which abounds in Water-falls of like type, holds none of such pe- culiar charms. Not a drop of the rich stream of water but is whit-e in its whole passage, — it is one sheet, rather on:e grand lace-work of sptay from beginning to en4. As it sweeps down its plane of tock, each drop all distinct, all aHve, there is noth- ing of human art that you can compare it with but 230 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. innumerable and snow-white point-lace collars and capes; as much more delicate and beautiful and perfect, however, as Nature ever is than Art. For half the distance between the two falls, the river runs swift over a solid plane of granite, clean and smooth as ice, as if Neptune was on a grand sliding- down hill frolic. The excursion to this head of the chasm from the stopping-place below is through narrow defiles, over fallen rocks, up the sides of precipices, and over perpendicular walls by ladders, for a total distance of about four miles, and is the most difficult and fatiguing one that confronts the visitor; but both in the beauty of its Water-falls, and the new an4 rare shapes of rock scenery that it offers, it is most richly compensating, and never should be omitted. The journey hither from San Francisco is both a tedious and an expensive one, and so a barrier to the extensive popular enjoyment of the rare works of nature here gathered. But the number of visi- tors is rapidly increasing ; last year there were in all but one hundred, and already this season over three hundred persons have come into the Valley. Congress has ceded the territory of the Valley to the State of California for reservation and preser- vation as a spot for public resort and popular enjoy- ment ; and a laudable and promising effort is now making, under the lead of Mr. Frederick Law Olm- sted, the manager of the Mariposa estate, to secure an appropriation from the State treasury for improv- ing the means of access, laying out paths among its beauties, and providing cheap yet agreeable accom- THE JOURNEY TO THE YOSEMITE. 23 1 modations for visitors. This wise cession and dedi- cation by Congress, and proposed improvement by California, also includes the nearest of the groves of Big Trees, which is to be similarly held and pro- tected for the public benefit, and furnishes an ad- mirable example for other objects of natural curi- osity and popular interest all over the Union. New York should preserve for popular use both Niagara Falls and its neighborhood and a generous section of her famous Adirondacks, and Maine one of her lakes and its surrounding woods. The first stage of the journey-to the Yosfmite is by steamboat to Stockton, up the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, one hundred and twenty-five miles. Next was a stage ride of a day and a half (one hundred miles) up the San Joaquin valley, over now arid plains, waiting for irrigation to be produc- tive, and turning next to the east, among the foot- hills of the Sierra Nevadas, along the valleys of the tributaries of the San Joaquin, and into and through Mariposa County, seventy square miles of which constitute the celebrated Mariposa estate of Gen- eral Fremont. Here, at a point near the village of Mariposa, we came to the end of the stage road, and entered upon forty miles of horseback riding, so much farther into the bowels of the Sierras, in order to reach the Happy Valley. Along a nar- row trail, climbing up and down steep mountains, by and through close defiles, through continuous forests of majestic pines and firs, rich with yellow- green mosses, up to six and eight thousand feet above the sea level, we rode in single file, — a jjart 232 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, of the wa^ by a moonlig'ht ttat lent indescribat'-i picturesqueness and fascination to forest and ravine, besides frequent doubt as to the trail ; — every hour a joy, every hour a fatigue, full of soreness and dirt and merriment; eager for the end, but enjoying every moment of the novel experience, every long mite of the rare road. Our party had swollen to seventeen, the largest that had ever made the trip, and includsed five ladies. We had Law Olmsted, creator of New York Central Park, and organizer of the Sanitary Commission; Mr. Ashburner of the Geological Survey corps ; Boston lawyers ; - San Francisco journalists ; wit, grace, beauty. We exhausted all the horses of the kingdom of Fremont, and created famine in our path. Lodgings were abundant, however, for whom house and tent did not hold, the wide expanse of heaven safely covered, and the hay-stack warmed. The out-door bed^, indeed, came to be at a premium ; for in the dry, pure air of this region, there is not only no harm, but actual health in sleeping upon the ground either under tents or whoUy in the open air. The mountain IpastureS) — scattered meadows rich at this season with a vernal green,-^furnish mutton sweeter and richer than even English breeders or butchers can give you; the forests yielded their deer, and the rivers their trout to our appetites ; the valley has its one vegetable garden, — so that, however our im- mediate successors shall fare, we have had no com- plaint to make of the commissary department. Our companions from- San Francisco proved rich THE NAME OF THE VALLEY. 253 in song and sentiment; good-nature flowed and overflowed ; fatigue was forgotten in joke and rail- lery ; and digestion aided by sturdy laughter. We "kept marching through Georgia" with Sherman; we serenaded the "sweet lady" till she must have pined for a chalice to sleep ; we put John Brown's soul over its familiar road at least twice a day ; had "a day of jubilo" with our colored brothers equally often; helped " the turkey gobbler to yank the grasshopper fi-om the sweet potato vine " oftener than he could possibly have been hungry ; grew steadily barbaric and dirty ; laughed at dignity ; and voted form and ceremony a nuisance. But our week in the woods is over, and we turn our faces towards civilization and conformity to-morrow. We shall be glad to see the washerwoman, but we lament that no more, save in memory, shall these eyes behold these scenes of infinite beauty and sublimity. The name t]jiat has attached to this beautiful valley is both unique and euphonious. It rolls off the tongue most liquidly when you get the mas- tery of its pronunciation. Most strangers render it Yo-se-mite, or Yo-sem-ite ; but the true style is Yo-sem-i-te. It is Indian for Grizzly Bear, and probably was also the name of a noted chief, who reigned over the Indians in this, their favorite re- treat, and from this chief comes the application of the name to the locality and its marvelous scenery. The foot of white man never trod its limits, — the eye of white man never looked upon its sublimfe wonders till 1851, when he came here in pursuit of the Indians, with whom the settlers were then in 234 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. war. The red man had boasted that their retreat was secure ; that they had one spot which their en- emies could never penetrate ; and here they would gather in and enjoy their spoils unmolested. But to the white man's revenge was how added the s.timulus of curiosity ; and hither he found his way, and, coming to kill and exterminate, he has staid, and will forever henceforth stay, to wonder and worship. There are but two or three settlers in the Valley. One, Mr. Hutchings, keeps a hotel, and can accom- modate a dozen to twenty people at once very 'com- fortably, and is both enterprising and courteous. There are only two paths out of the Valley, one over the mountain to the right, to Coulterville, and the other in the opposite direction to Mariposa. Each are simple trails for foot passengers and horses; and all baggage, all provisions, lumbci", etc., have to be packed in on the backs of mules and horses. The mountains close in upon the river so nearly below this spot, that there is no egress or ipgress in that way, except for foot travelers, and only with difficulty to them. Part way in our horseback ride into the Valley, we stopped for a day at a solitary ranch on the South Fork of the Merced, and had generous wel- come from its owner, Mr. Galen Clark, an old and intelligent pioneer in this region, and under his pi- lotage saw the reservation of Big Trees near the border line of Mariposa and Fresno counties. They are but a few miles off the direct road to the Yo- semite, and while of the same character, are alike THE SEQUOIA GIGANTEA. 235 more numerous and larger in individual specimens than the grove of Big Trees in Calaveras County. The latter are the ones first discovered and often described, and are still those most visited ; but they lie in an adjoining county, and farther away from the route we took to the Yosemite. Other similar groves to both these two have been discovered within a year or two, and some fifteen or twenty are now known to exist among the forests on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevadas in southern California. They occur along at various points through some hundred miles ; and it is quite likely that many more still will be found in the same range yet farther south. The Big Trees we visited are scattered in groups among the pine and cedar forests through a space of several miles. The collection numbers about six hundred. East of the Rocky Mountains, their pine and cedar companions, — so common all over these hills and in these valleys, — ^would be the won- der of the States for size and beauty ; for they grow to six and eight and even ten feet in diameter, and to two hundred and fifty and three hundred feet in bight. But these mammoths sink to pigmies by the side of the Sequoia Gigantea, which is the scientific name applied to the Big Trees proper. They swell to thirty and forty feet in diameter, and rarely fall below two hundred and fifty feet in hight. Among those we examined are six each over thirty feet in diameter, and from ninety to one hundred in circum- ference ; fifty over sixteen feet in diameter, and two hundred over twelve feet. "The Grizzly Giant," 236 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, which is among the largest and most notewotthy, runs up ninety feet with scarcely perceptible dimi- nution of bulk, and then sends out a branch, itself six feet in diameter. But they are even more impressive for theiir beauty -than their bigness. The bark is an exquisitely light and delicate cinnamon color, fluted up and down the long, straight, slowly-4aperihg trunk, like Co- rinthian columns in architecture; the top, resting like a cap upon a high, bare mast, is a perfect cone ; and the evergreen leaves wear a bright, light shade, by which the tree can be distinguished from afar in the forest. The wood is a deep, rich red in color, and otherwise marks the similarity of the Big Trees to the species that grows so abundantly oh the coast raage of mountains through the Pacific States, and known generally as the redwcrod. Their wood is, however, of a finer grain than their smaller kindred, and both that. and the bark, the latter sometimes as much as twenty inches thick, are So light and deli- cate, that the winds and snows of the winter make frequent wrecks of the tops and upper branches. Many of the largest of these trees are, therefore, shorn of their upper works. One or two of the largest in the grove we visited are wholly blown down, and we rode on horseback through the trimk of an old one, that had been burned out. Many more of the noblest specimens are scarred by fires that have Ijeen wantonly built about their trunks, ot swept through the forests by accident. The trunk of one huge tree is burned into half a dozen little apartments, making capital provision for a game of THE AGE OF THE BIG TREES. 237 hide and seek by children, or for dividing up a pic- nic of older growths into sentimental couples. Wild calculations have been made of the ages of the larger of these trees ; but none now upon the ground date back farther than the Christian Era. They began with our Modern Civilization; they were just sprouting wheni the St^r of Bethlehem rose and stood. for a sign of its origin; they have been ripening in beauty and power through these Nineteen Centuries; and they stand forth now, a type of the Majesty and Grace of Him vyith whose life they are coeval. Certainly they are chief among the natural curiosities and marvels of western Amer- ica, of the known world ; and though not to be com^ pared, in the impressions they make and the emO' tions they arouse, to the great rock scenery of th^ Yosemite, which inevitably carries the spectator up. to the Infinite Creator and Father of all, they dos,, stand for all that has been claimed for them in wonr^ derful greatness and majestic beauty. LETTER XXIII. THE CHINESE: GRAND DINNER WITH THEM. San Francisco, August i8. I HAVE been waiting before writing of the Chinese in these Pacific States, till my experi- ence of them had culminated in the long-promised grand dinner with their leaders and aristocrats. This came last night, and while I am full of the subject,^shark's fins and resurrected fungus digest slowly, — ^let me write of this unique and impor- tant element in the population and civilization of this region. There are no fewer than sixty to eighty thousand Chinamen here. They are scat- tered all over the States and Territories of the Coast, and number from one-eighth to one-sixth of the entire population. We feegan to see them at Austin, in Nevada, and have found them every- where since, in country and city, in the woods, among the mines, north in the British dominions, on the Coast, in the mountains, — everywhere that work is to be done, and .money gained by patient, plodding industry. They have been coming over from home since 1852, when was the largest emi- gration, (twenty thousand.) A hundred thousand THE CHINESE HOUSE SERVANTS. 239 in all have come, but thirty thousand to forty thou- sand have gone back. None come really to stay ; they do not identify themselves with the country ; blit to get work,' to make money, and go back. They never, or very rarely, bring their wives. The Chinese women here are prostitutes, imported as such by those who make a business of satisfying the lust of men. Nor are their customers alto- gether Chinese; base white men patronize their wares as well. Some of these women are taken as " secondary'' wives by the Chinese residents, and a sort of family life established ; but, as a general rule, there are no families among them, and few children. The occupations of these people are various. There is hardly anything that they cannot turn their hands to, — the work of women as well as men. They do the washing and ironing for the whole population ; and sprinkle the clothes as they iron them, by squirting water over them in a fine spray from their mouths. Everywhere, in village and town, you see rude signs, informing you that See Hop or Ah Thing or Sam Sing or Wee Lung or Cum Sing wash and iron. How Tie is a doctor, , and Hop Chang and Chi Lung keep stores. They are good house servants ; cooks, table-waiters, and nurses ; better, on the whole, than Irish girls, and as cheap, — fifteen to twenty-iive dollars a month and board. One element of their usefulness as cooks is their genius for imitation; show them, once how to do a thing, and their education is per- fected ; no repetition of the lesson is needed. But 240 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. they seem to be more in use as house servants in tjie country than the city ; they do not share the passion of the Irish girls for herdi»g together, and appear to be content to be alone in a house, in a neighborhood, or a town. Many are vegetable gardeners, too. In this even climate and with this prod:UCt-ive, soil, their pains- taking culture, much hoeing and constant watering-, makes little ground very fruitful, and they gather in three, four and five crops a year. Their gardea. patches, in the neighborhood of cities and villages, are always distinguishable from the rougher and more carelessly cultured grounds of their Saxon rivals. The Pacific Railroad is being built by Chi- nese labor; several thousand Chinamen are now rapidly grading the track through the rocks, and sands of the Sierra Nevadas, — without them, in- deed, this great work would have to wait for years-, or move on with slow, hesitating steps. They can, by their steady industry, do nearly as much in a day, even in this rough labor, as the average of white men, and they cost only about half as much, say thirty dollars a month- against fifty dollars. Be- sides, white labor is not to be had in the quantitieg- necessary for such a great job as this. Good famj hands are the Chinese, also ; and in the simpler and, routine mechanic arts they have proven adepts ; — there is hardly any branch of labor in which, under proper tuition, they do not or cannot succeed most admirably. The great success of the woolen man- ufacture here is due to the admirable adaptation and comparative cheapness of Chinese labor for the de- CHEAPNESS OF CHINESE LABOR. 24 1 tails. They are quick to learn, quiet, cleanly and faithful, and have no "off days," no sprees to get over. As factory operatives they receive twenty and twenty-five dollars a month, and board them- selves, though quarters < are provided for them on the mill grounds. Fisja, vegetables, rice and pork are the main food, which is prepared and eaten with such economy that they live for about one-third what Yankee laborers can. Thousands of the Chinese are gleaners in the gold fields. They follow in crowds after the white miners, working and washing over their deserted or neglected sands, and thriving on results that their predecessors would despise. A Chinese gold washer is content with 'ohe to two dollars a day ; while the white man starves or moves on disgusted with twice that. A very considerable portion of the present gold production of California must now be the work of Chinese painstaking and moderate ambition. The traveler meets these Chinese miners everywhere on his road through the State ; at work in the deserted ditches, or moving from one to an- other, on foot with their packs, or often in the stage, sharing the seats and paying the price of their aris- tocratic Saxon rivals. Labor, cheap labor, being the one great palpable need of the Pacific States, — far more indeed than capital the want and necessity of their prosperity, — we should all say that these Chinese would be wel- comed on every hand, their emigration encouraged, and themselves protected by law. Instead of which, we see them the victims of all sorts pf prejudice 10 16 242^ ACROSS THE CONTINENT, and injustice. Ever since they began to.come here, even now, it is a disputed question with the public, whether they shauld not be forbidden our shores. The do not ask or wish for citizenship ; they have no ambition to become voters ; but they are even denied protection in persons and property by the law. Their testimony is inadmissible against the white man ; and, as miners, they are subject to a tax of four dollars a month, or nearly fifty dollars a year, each, for the benefit of the County and State treasuries. Thus ostracized and burdened by the State, they, of course, have been the victims of much meanness and cruelty from individuals. To abuse and cheat a Chinaman; to rob him; to kick and cuff him ; even to killr him, have been things not only done with impunity by mean and wicked men, but even with vain glory. Terrible are some of the cases of robbery and wanton maiming and murder reported from ' the mining districts. Had "John," — ^here and in China alike the English and Americans nickname every Chinaman "John," — a good claim, original or improved, he was ordered to " move on," — it belonged to somebody else. Had he hoarded a pile, he was ordered to disgorge ; and, if he resisted, he was killed. Worse crimes even are known against them ; they have been wantonly assaulted and shot down or stabbed by bad men, as sportsmen would surprise and shoot their game in the woods. There was no risk in such, barbarity ; if "John" survived to tell the tale, the law would not hear him or believe him. Nobody was so low, so miserable, that he did not despise the Chinaman, OPPOSITION T6 the CHINESE. i4f itld ceuld hot outrage him. IJ.oss Browne has art HlustratioH of the status of pOor "Johnj" that is quite toJthe point. A vagabond Indian comes upoQ a solitary Chinaman, working over the sindS of ai deserted gulch for gold. " Dish is ttiy land," — says he, — "you pay me fifty dollar." The poor celestial turns, deprecatingly, saying : " Melican man (Amer- ican) been here, and took all^ — no bit left." Indiaay irate and fierccy — "D Melican man, — ^you pa.Y me fifty dollar, or I killee you." Through a growing elevation of public opiniottj and a reactionary experience towards depression, fiiat calls for study of the future, the CalifornianS are beginning to have a better appreciation of thei* Chinese immigrants. The demand for them is in- creasing. The new State, to be built upon ftianu- fectures and agriculture, is seen to need their cheap and reliable labor ; and more pains will be taken to attract them to the country. But even now, a man who aspires to be a political leader, till lately a pos- sible United States Senator, and the most Widely circulated daily paper of this city, pronounce against the Chinese, and would drive them home. Their Opposition is based upon the prejudices' and jeal- ousy of ignorant white laborers, — ^the Irish partic- ularly, — ^^who regard the Chinese as rivals in their field, and clothes itself in that cheap talk, so com- mon among the bogus democracy of the East,- about this being a "white man's country," and' n(f place for Africans or Asiatics. But our national^ democratic principle, of Welcoming hither the peo-' pie of every country and clifiae, aside, the whit^ ^44 ACROS? THE CONTINENT. man needs the negro and the Chinaman more than they him ; the pocket appeal will override the prej- udices of his soul, — and we shall do a sort of rough justice to both classes, because it will pay. The political questions involved in the negro's presence, and pressing so earnestly for solution, do not yet arise with regard to the Chinese, — perhaps will never be presented. As I have said, the Chinese are ambitious of no political rights, no citizenship, — it is only as our merchants go to China that they come here. Their great care, indeed, is to be bur- ied at home ; they stipulate with anxiety for that ; and the great bulk of all who die on these shores are carried back for final interment. There is no, ready assimilation of the Chinese with our habits and modes of thought and action. Their simple, narrow though not dull minds have run too long in the old grooves to be easily turned off. They look down even with contempt upon our newer and rougher civilization, regarding us bar- baric in fact, and calling us In their hearts, if not in speech, "the foreign devils." And our conduct to- wards them has inevitably intensified these feel- ings, — it has driven them back upon their naturally self-contained natures and habits. So they bring here and retain all their home ways of living and dressing, their old associations and religion. Their streets and quarters in town and city are China reproduced, unalleviated. Christian missionaries make small inroads among them. There is an in- telligent and faithful one here (Rev. Mr. Loomis,) lyho has an attractive chapel and school, but his fol- CHINESE RELIGION AND VICES. 245 lowers are few, and not rapidly increasing. But he and his predecessors and assistants' have been and are doing a good work in teaching the two diverse races to better understand each other and in show- ing them how they can be of value to one another. They have been the constant and urgent advocates of the personal rights of the Chinese. The religion of these people is a cheap, showy idolatry, with apparently nothing like fariaticisiii' in it, and not a very deep hold in itself on their na- tures. "Josh" is their god or idol, and the "Josh" houses are small affairs, fitted up with images and altars a good deal after the style of cheap Catholic churches in Europe, Their whole civilization im- presses me as a low, disciplined, perfected, sensu- ous sensualism. Everything in their life and their habits seems cut and dried like their. food. There is no sign of that abandonment to an emotion, to a passion, good or bad, that marks the western races. Their great vice is gambling ; that is going on constantly in their houses and shops ; and com- mercial women and barbaric music minister to its indulgence. Cheap lotteries are a common form of this passion. Opium-smoking ranks next ; and this is believed to be indulged in more extensively among them here than at home, since there is less restraint from relatives and authorities, and the means of procuring the article are greater. The wildly brilliant eye, the thin, haggard face, and the broken nervous system betray the victim to opium- smoking ; and all tense, all excited, staring in eye and expression, he was almost a frightful object, as 246 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, we peered in through the smoke of his half-lighted Jitde room, and saw him lying on his mat in the ipidst pf bis fatal enjoyment. JBut as laborers in our jnanufactories and as ser- vants in our houses, beside their constant contact with our life and industry otherwise, these emi- grants from the East cannot fail to get enlargement; of ideas, freedom and novelty of action, and famil- iarity with and then preference for our higher civil-f' i^sation. Slowly and hardly but still surely thi^ work must go on; and their constant going back and forth between here and China must also trans- plant new elements of thought and action into the hepip circles. Thus it is that we may hope and qypect to reach this great people with the influ' ences of our better and higher life. It is through modification and revolution in materialities, in man- ner of living, in manner of doing, that we shall pave the way for our thought and our religion. Our missionaries to the Five Points have learned to attack first with soap and water and clean clothes. The Chinese that come here are unconsciously be^ sieged at first with better food and more of it than they have at home. The bath-house and the res- taurant are the avant couriers qf ' the Christian civ-r juration. The Chinese that come to these States are among t^e best of the peasantry from the country about Canton, and Hong Kong. None of them are the miserable coolies that have been imported by the JgngUsh ^o their Indian colonies as farm laborers^ yhey associate themselves here into companies, THE CHINESE VS. THE IRISH AND AFRICAN. 247 based upon the village or neighborhood from which they come at home. These companies have head- quarters in San Francisco ; their presidents are men of high intelHgence and character ; and their office is to afford a temporary refuge for all who be- long to their bodies, to assist them to work, to pro- tect them against wrong, and send the dead back to their kindred at home. Beside these organiza- tions, there are guilds or trade associations among the Chinese engaged in different occupations. Thus the laundry-men and the cigar-makers have organi- zations, with heavy fees from the members, power over the common interests of the business, and an occasional festivity. The impressions these people make- upon the American mind, after close observation of their habits, are very mixed and contradictory. They unite to many of the attainments and knowledge of the highest civilization, in some of which they are models for ourselves, many of the incidents and most of the ignorance of a simple barbarism. It may yet prove that we have as much to learn from them as they from us. Certainly here in this great field, this western half of our continental Nation, their diversified labor is a blessing and a neces- sity. It is all, perhaps more even, than the Irish and the Africans have been and are to our east- ern wealth and progress. At the first, at least,, they have greater adaptability and perfection than either of these classes of laborers, to whom we are so intimately and sometimes painfully accus- tomed. 248 ACROSS THE CONTINEJIT. There are quite a number of heavy mercantile houses, here in the hands of the Chinese. The managers are intelligent, superior men. Their busi- ness is in supplies for their countrymen and in teas and silks and curiosities for the Americans. They import by the hundreds of thousands, even millions, yearly ; and their reputation for fair and honest deal- ing is above that of the American merchants gen- erally. These are the men, with the presidents of the six companies, into which the whole Chinese population is organized, as I have described, with whom Mr. Colfax and his friends dined last night. There were formalities and negotiations enough in the preliminary arrangements of the entertainment to have sufficed for a pacification of Kentucky poli- tics, or the making of a new map of Europe ; but when these were finally adjusted, questions of pre- cedence among the Chinese settled, and a proper choice made among the many Americans who were eager to be bidden to the feast, all went as smooth as a town school examination that the teacher has been drilling for a month previous. The party numbered from fifty to sixty, half Chi- nese, half white folks. The dinner was given in the second story of a Chinese restaurant, in a lead- ing street of the city. Our hosts were fine-looking men, with impressive manners. While their race generally seems not more than two-thirds the size q{ our American men, these were nearly if not quite as tall and stout as their guests. Their eyes and their faces beamed with intelligence, and they were quick to perceive everything, and alert and au fait THE CHINESE " PIGEON-ENGLISH. 249 in all courtesies and politeness. An interpreter was present for the heavy talking ; but most of our Chi- nese entertainers spoke a little English, and we got on well enough so far as that was concerned ; though handshaking and bowing and scraping and a general flexibility of countenance, bodies and limbs had a very large share of the conversation to per-' form. Neither here nor in China is it common for the English and Americans to learn the Chinese language. The Chinese can and do more readily acquire ours, sufficiently at least for all business in- tercourse. Their broken or "pigeon" English, as it is called, is often very grotesque, and always very simple. Here is a specimen — a "pigeon-English" rendering of " My name is Nerval," etc. : — My namee being Norval topside that Glampian Hillee, My father you sabee my father, makee pay chow-chow he sheep. He smallo heartee man, too muchee take care that doUa, gallo .' So fashion he wantchee keep my, comita one piece chilo stope he own side. My no wantchee long that largee mandoli, go knockee alia man ; Littee turn Joss pay my what thing my father no like pay , That mourn last nightee get up loune, alia same my hat. No go full up, no got square ; that plenty piece That lobbie man, too muchee qui-si, alia saine that tiger. Chop-chop come down that- hillee, catchie that sheep long that cow, That man, custom take care, too muchie quick lun away. My one piecie owne spec eye, look see that ladlone man what side he walkee, Hi-yah ! No good chancie, findia he, lun catchie my flew : Too piecie loon choon lun catchie that lobbie man ! he No can walkee welly quick, he pocket too much full up. So fashion knockee he largee. He head man no got shutte far My knockie he head, Hi-yah ! my No. i strong man, Catchie he jacket, long he toousa, galo 1 You lik«e look see ?. II* 250 • ACROSS THE CONTINENT. My ao likee takee care that sheep, so fashion my hear you got fightee this side. My takee one servant, come your country, come ielpie you, He heart all same cow, too muchie fear lun away. Masquie, Joss take care pay my come you house. We were seated for the dinner around little round tables, six to nine at the table, and hosts and guests evenly mixed. There was a profusion of elegant China dishes on each table ; each guest had two or three plates and saucers, all delicate and small. Choice sauces, pickles, sweetmeats and nuts were plentifully scattered about. Each guest had a sau- cer of flowers, a China spoon or bowl with a handle and a pair of chop-sticks, little round and smooth ivory sticks about six inches long. Chi Sing-Tong, President of the San Yup Company, presided at Mr. Colfax's table. Now the meal began. It consisted of three dif- ferent courses, or dinners rather, between which was a recess of half an hour, when we retired to an ante- robim, smoked and talked, and listened to the simple, rough, barbaric music from coarse guitar, viol drum, knd violin, and meanwhile the tables were reset and new food provided. Each course or dinner comprised a dozen to twenty different dishes, served generally one at a time, though sometimes two were brought on at once. There were no joints, nothing to be carved. Every article of food was brought on in quart bowls, in a sort of hash form. We dove into it with our chop-sticks, which, well handled, took up about a mouthful, and, transferring this to our plates, worked THE CHOP-STICKS, AND THE ^OOD. 2$ I the chop-sticks again to get it or parts of it to our mouths. No one seemed to take more than a single taste or mouthful of each dish; so that, even if one reUshed the food, it woiUd need something like a hundred different dishes to satisfy an ordinary ap- petite. Some of us took very readily to the chop- sticks; others did not, — perhaps were glad they could not ; and for these a Yankee fork was pro- vided, and our Chinese neighbors at the table were also prompt to offer their own chop-Sticks to place a bit of each dish upon our plates. But as these same chop-sticks were also used to convey food into the mouths of the Chinese, the service did not always add to the relish of the food. These were the principal dishes served for the first course, and in the order named : Fried shark's fins and grated ham, stewed pigeon -with bamboo soup, fish sinews with ham, stewed chicken with water-cress, sea-weed, stewed ducks and bamboo soup, sponge cake, omelet cake, flower cake and banana fritters, bird-nest soup, tea. The meats seemed all alike ; they had been dried or preserved in some way; were cut up into'mouthfuls, and de- pended for, all savoriness upon their accompani- ments. The sea-weed, shark's fins and the like had a glutinous sort of taste; not repulsive, nor very seductive. The sweets were very delicate, but hke everything else had a very artificial flavor ; every article, indeed, seemed to have had its original and real taste and strength dried or cooked out of it, and a common Chinese flavor put into it. The bird-nest soup looked and, tasted somewhat as a 252 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. very delicate vermicelli soup does. The tea was flelicious, — it was served without milk or sugar, did hot need any such amelioration, and was very re- freshing. Evidently it was made from the most delicate leaves or flowers of the tea plant, and had escaped all vulgar steeping or boiling. During the first recess, the presidents of the com- panies, — the chief entertainers, — ^took their leave, and the merchants assumed the post of leadinig hosts ; such being the fashion of the people. The second dinner opened with cold tea, and a white, rose-scented liquor, very strong, and served in tiny cups, and went on with lichens and a fungus-like moss, more shark's fins, stewed chestnuts and chick-' ens, Chinese oysters, yellow and resurrected from the dried stage, more fungus stewed, a stew of flour and white nuts, stewed mutton, roast ducks, rice Soup, rice and ducks' eggs and pickled cucumbers, ham and chicken soup. Between the second and third parts, there was an exchange of compliment- ary speeches by the head Chinaman and Mr. Col-' fax, at which the interpreter had to officiate. The third and last course consisted of a great variety of fresh fruits; and the unique entertainment ended about eleven o'clock, after a sitting of full five hours. The American resident guests furnished champagne and claret, and our Chinese hosts, in- variably at the entrance and departure of each dish, invited us, with a gracious bow, to a sip thereof, in the which they all faithfully joined themselves. The dinner was unquestionably a most magnifi- cent one after the Chinese standard; the dishes A RESCUE BY THE POLICE. iCJ were many of them rare and expensive ; and every- thing was served in elegance and taste. It yvas a curious and interesting experience, and one of the rarest of the many courtesies extended to Mr. Col- fax on this coast. But as to any real gastronomic satisfaction to be derived from it, I certainly "did not see it." Governor Bross's fidelity to the great principle of "when you are among the Romans to do as the Romans do," led him to take the meal seriatimj and eat of everything ; but my own per- sonal experience is perhaps the best commentary to be made upon the meal, as a meal. I went to the table weak and hungry ; but I found the one universal odor and flavor soon destroyed all appe- tite ; and I fell back resignedly on a constitutional incapacity to use the chop-sticks, and was sitting with a grim politeness through dinner number two, when there came an angel in disguise to my relief The urbane chief of police of the city appeared and touched my shoulder : " There is a gentleman at the door who wishes to see you, and would have you bring your hat and coat." There were visions of violated.city ordinances and "assisting" at the po- lice court next morning. I thought, too, what a polite way this man has of arresting a stranger to the city. But, bowing my excuses to my pig-tail neighbor, I went joyfully to the unknown tribunal. A friend, a leading banker, who had sat opposite to me during the evening, and had been called out a few moments before, welcomed me at the street door with : " B- , I knew you were suffering, and were hungry — let us go and get something to eat— 254 ACROSS THE CONtlNENT.* a good square meal ! " So we crossed to an Ameri- can restaurant; the lost appetite came back; and mutton chops, squabs, fried potatoes and a bottle of champagne soon restored me. My friend in- sisted that the second course of the Chinese dinner was only the first warmed over, and that that was the object of the recess. However that might be, — this is how I went to the grand Chinese dinner, and went out, when it was two-thirds over, and "ffot something to 'eat" LETTER XXIV. THE GREAT THEME: THE PACIFIC RAILROAD. San Francisco, August 20. To feel the importance of the Pacific Railroad, to measure the urgency of its early completion, to become impatient with government and contractor at every delay in the work, you must come across the Plains and the Mountains to the Pacific Coast. Then you will see half a Continent waiting for its vivifying influences. You will witness a boundless agriculture, fickle and hesitating for lack of the reg- ular markets this would give. You will find mineral wealth, immeasurable, locked up, wastefuUy worked, or gambled away, until this shall open to it abun- dant labor, cheap capital, wood, water, science, ready oversight, steadiness of production, — everything that, shall make mining a certainty and not a chance. You will find the world's commerce with India and China eagerly awaiting its opportunities. You will see an illimitable field for manufactures unimproved for want 6f its stimulus and its advan- tages. You will feel hearts breaking, see morals struggling slowly upward against odds, know that religion languishes ; fefel, see and know that all the 256 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. sweetest and finest influences and elements of so- ciety and Christian civilization hunger and sufier for the lack of this quick contact with the Parent and Fountain of all our national life. It is touching to remember that between Plains and Pacific, in country and on coast, on the Colum- bia, on the Colorado, through all our long journey, the first question asked of us by every man and wo- man we have met, — whether rich or poor, high or humble, — has been, " When do you think the Pacific Railroad will be done ? " or, " Why do n't or wo n't the government, now the war is over, put the sol- diers to building this road ? " — and their parting ap- peal and injunction, as well, " Do build this Pacific Road for us as soon as possible, — we wait, every- thing waits for that." Tender-eyed women, hard- fisted men, — pioneers, or missionaries, the martyrs and the successful, — all alike feel and speak this sen- timent. It is the hunger, the prayer, the hope of all these people. Hunger and prayer and hope for "Home," and what home can bring them, in cheap and ready passage to and from, of reunion with par- ent and brother and sister and friend, of sight of old valley and mountain and wood, of social influ- ,ence, of esthetic elevation, of worldly stimulus and prosperity. " Home," they all here call the East It is a touching and pathetic, though almost un- conscious, tribute. Such an one "is going home next spring;" "I hope to go home another year;'' "When I was home last;" "I have never been home since I came out ; " " I am afraid I shall never go home again;" — these and kindred phrases are THE NATION S NEED. ' 257 the current forms of speech. Home is not here, but there, The thought of home is ever rolled, ■ like a sweet morsel, under the tongues of their souls. Here is large appeal both to the sympathy a«d foresight of the eastern States. Here is present bond of union and means for perpetuating it. To build the railroad, and freshen recollection and re- new association of the original emigrants, and to bind by travel and contact the children here with the homes and lives and loves of their parents there : this is the cheapest, surest and sweetest way to pre- serve our nationahty, and continue the Republic a unit from ocean to ocean. A sad and severe trial will ensue to the Union if a generation, grows up here that "knows not Joseph." The centrifugal forces will ever be in hot action between the far-separated eastern and western sections of the Nation. First among the centripetal powers is the Pacific Rail^ road, and every year of its delay increases tenfold its burden ; every year's postponement weakens in equal degree the influences here by which it shall operate, What is doing to supply this great want of Pa- cific progress and civilization and national unity? What are the possibilities and probabilities of the great continental railway > are what you will wish to know from me. Our journey has lain along its most natural commercial route ; we started from its eastern terminus on the Missouri border ; we kept in the main line of population and travel, which it is desirable for it ta follow ; we finished our ride «7 258 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. upon its beginnings at this end ; and we have every- where had the subject forced upon our thought, and made it constant study. Many of the obstacles to the great work grew feeble in travel over its line. Want of timber, of water, of coal for fuel ; the steep grades and high ascents of the two great continental ranges of mountains to be crossed, the Rocky and the Sierras; and the snows they will accumulate upon the track in the winter months, — these are the suggested and apparent difficulties to the building and operating of the Pacific Railroad. There is plenty of good timber in the mountains ; and the soft cotton-wood of the Plains can be kyan- ized (hardened by a chemical process), so as to make sound sleepers and ties. There are sections of many miles, even perhaps of two hundred, over which the timber will have to be hauled ; -but the road itself can do this as it progresses, — taking along over thte track built to-day the timber and rails for that to be built to-morrow. As to water, artesian wells are sure to find it in the vacant desert stretches, which are neither so long nor so barren of possible water as has been supposed The fuel question is perhaps more difficult to solve as yet. The Sierras will furnish wood in abundance, and cheaply, for all the western end; we know there is coal in the Rocky Mountains; and we were told almost everywhere over the en- tire line that it had been, or could undoubtedly be found, — in Kansas, on the Plains, among the hills of the deserts. But suppose the supplies of food for steam have to be carried over a few hundred ROUTES OVER THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. 259 miles of the road, east and west from the Sierras and the Rocky Mountains ; that is not so hard a matter, — certainly nothing to daunt or hesitate the enterprise. We shall soon learn, too, to make steam from petroleum; and that is easily trans- ported for long distances ; besides which, prospect-_ ors are finding it everywhere from Missouri to Pa- cific. Build the road, and the intermediate country will speedily find the means for running it. Now as to difficulties" of construction, heavy grades and high mountains, and the winter snows as obstacles to continuous use. The first third of the line, from the Missouri River to the Rocky Mountains, is mere baby-work. Three hundred men will grade it as fast as the iron can be laid. It is a level, natural roadway, with very little bridging, and no want of water. It is a shame all this section is not finished and running already. The first of January, 1867, ought now to be the limit for its completion. From here to Salt Lake, over the Rocky Mountains, there are appar- ently no greater obstacles to be overcome than your Western Road from Springfield to Albany, the Erie and the Pennsylvania Central have triumphantly and profitably surmounted. There are various con-' testing routes ; northerly by the North Platte and the South Pass; by the South Platte and Bridger's' Pass, which is the route we traveled in the stage ; — or more direct still, from Denver through the pres- ent gold mining region of Colorado by Clear Creek and over the Berthoud Pass ; or again fey a kindred route to the last, up Boulder Creek and over Boul- 26o ACROSS IfHE CplfTINEIIT. dpr Pass, both ttese last two entering the "Middle Park" of the Mountains, and through that to the Kead waters of the Salt Lake Basin. The Berthoud and Boplder Pass routes would probably involve higher grades and more rpck cutting, and in winter d.eeper snows ; but they would pass through a richer country, avoid the deserts of the north, and save at l^st one hundred miles of distance. A new road for the overland stages is this yery season being cut through the Berthoud, Pass route by the help of United States soldiers from Utah ; and the stage line is expected to be transferred to it next spring. But by the; Bridger or South Pass routes, the rail- road can surmount the eastern slope of the Rocky lyiountains with the greatest ease. Our stage teams trotted up the hardly perceptible grades by the Bridger route without any effort. Coming dowi^ iftto Salt Lake Valleyj there would be rougher work; but there are several considerable streams along whose banks the track could be brought, I am sure, with no greater labor or expense than h^s been incurred in a dozen cases by our eastern railroads. From Salt Lake to the Sierra Nevadas are two ijoutes; southerly through the center of Nevada, and striking Austin and Virginia City, the centers of the silver mining region, — which is the present stage and telegraph route, — and northerly by the Humboldt River. The former would pass more directly through the chief present and prospective pppulations ;^ but it would encounter a dozen or fifteen ranges of hills to te crossed, and find little OVER THE Sierras. ' 261 wood and scant water. The Humboldt route would be more cheaply built, and goes through a natural!^ better country as to wood, watet arid fertility of soil. It is generally conceded to be the true natural rbad^ way across the Continent. The etnigration has always taken it. If the railroad is built through it, Virginia City and Austin wilj be reached b^ branches dropping down to them through theit neighboring valleys. Now we reach the California border, and th6 toughest part of the work of the railroad, — the high- reaching, far- spreading, rock -fastened, and snow^ covered Sierra Nevadas. But the difficulties hett are mitigated by plenty of Water and timber, and by the near presence of an energetic populatiorf, and are already being practically overcome by thfe energy and perseverance of the California Pacific Railroad organization. I only wish the East would get to Salt Lake with their rail so soOn as the West can and will with theirs. It is not gratifying t6 eastern pride, indeed, to see How much more Cali- fornia, with its scant capital, its scarce labor, and its depressed industry and interests, is doing t6 solve this great practical problem of the conti- nental railway, than your abounding wealth and teeming populations of the East, with a great net- work of railroads from the Atlantic, all needing arid professing to seek an outlet west to the Pacifib Coast. Let me state the condition of the \Vork on each end the line. Congress has given princely Bounties to the eti- 262 . ACROSS THE CONTINENT. terprise, all that could be expected, everything that ^ was asked. Government bonds are loaned to it to the amount of sixteen thousand dollars a mile through the plains and forty-eight thousand dollars a mile in the mountains ; besides which half of all the land each side of the road for twenty miles deep is donated outright to the companies doing the work. The Union Pacific Railroad company is recognized at the East, and the Central Pacific Rail- road company here, as entitled to this bounty, and are respectively authorized to construct the road from their starting points until they meet. The companies are further authorized to issue their own bond's to an equal amount to those granted by the government, and secure them by a first mortgage ; the government loan taking the second place in security. The business of supplying the populations of Col- orado, Utal^ and Montana, — at least one hundred and fifty thousand persons, — invites the speedy con- struction of the road from the East. This busi- ness for 1 864 is estimated at forty million pounds, and for 1 865 at two hundred millions, and employed last year nine thousand wagons, fifty thousand cat- tle, sixteen thousand horses and mules and ten thou- sand men as drivers, laborers and guards ; and the sum paid for freight in the former year is estimated by one authority at enough to build the railroad the entire distance at a cost of forfy-eight thousand dollars the mile ! And during the months of May and June, this year, counting both the emigration and the freight trains, there passed west over the THE ROAD OVER THE PLAINS. 263 Plains full ten thousand teams and fifty thousand to sixty thousand head of stock, according to data furnished from Fort Laramie and the junction of the overland routes on the Platte River. The ship- ment of supplies for the United States troops on the Plains and in the Mountains this season is alone over eleven million pounds. All these statistics may not be perfectly accurate ; but they have a substantial basis of fact, and with such generous gifts as the government makes, and with such large railway interests behind to be ben- efited by farther extension of railway lines to the west, they would seem to justify and to demand a rapid construction of the road out from the Mis-, souri River, especially when for the first five hun- dred to six hundred miles of that road, there is scarcely more required than to scrape a place in the soft soil for sleepers and ties and iron. And yet, though three to four years have passed since the company accepted the bargain of the govern- ment and assumed its responsibilities, not a mile of the main road is running from the Missouri west. The lower branch from Kansas City is open to Lawrence, forty miles, and graded to Topeka, sixty miles; but from Atchison and Omaha there is no iron down, and only small sections graded or half graded. Is it said that by the government flooding the markets with better classes of its securities, there was no sale for the bonds allotted for this work, and so no means for its construction ? The reply is that no set of men should step forward to accept this 264 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. largess and undertake this enterprise, holding such sure profits in its future, tliat have not at least a million or two of their own to make a beginning with. Has the war absorbed all labor and capital during these years.' Other railroads have been built meantime, and labor was cheaper on the Plains than in California. Beside, here are six months since the war ended, and the end witnesses no marked progress, no largeir activity, than the begin- ning. I know nothing of the men who form the Pacific Railroad Company of the East ; I suspect their names are more familiar to Wall street than to the West or the railroad world ; but I do know that all I could see -or hear of them and their work, along the route of the continental railway, did not indi- cate either the earnestness or the- power that should accompany their position, their responsibilities and their opportunities. After leaving the Missouri River, indeed, thoy offered no sign of life except in a single small party of engineers in Salt Ltke City, who were on a straggling hunt for the best route through the Rocky Mountains, but who seemed to have no prpper leadership, and no clear purpose, and in fact confessed that the company had no chief engineer worthy the name or position. Here in California, however, there is more life and progress. Energy and capital are not perhaps the best directed possible ; there has been and still is somewhat of controversy and waste of power as to the true route; but there is earnestness and movement of the right sort, and the track is fast THE ROAt) OUT FROM CALIFORNIA. 265 ascending the Sierras on its progress eastward. It has no immediate Way business to tempt it but the trade of Nevada with thirty thousand population,— much less, therefore, than that which invites the laying of the rails across the prairies to the Rocky Mountains, — but this business has constructed and amply paid for two fine toll-roads over the Sierras, and was, until a few days ago, building two railroads, in their tracks. There being free water carriage from San Francisco to Sacramento, these rival roads (both carriage and rail), have their base at the latter point, and branch off right and left into the mountains, and cross the summit of the latter some thirty or forty miles apart, coming together again at a common point in Nevada on the other- side, namely, Virginia City. The distance between Sacramento and Virginia City is about the same, one hundred and sixty miles, by each road; and their rivalry has given excellent accommodations for travel and traffic, and helped to push forward the railroad tracks on both lines. The original and heretofore most popular wagon road was that by Placerville and Lake Tahoe, over which we came into the State, as already described. The railway track on its line is now laid about forty miles from Sacramento or nearly to Placer- ville, which is among the foot-hills of the moun- tains. During the "flush" times of Nevada, 1862 and 1863, the business done over this line was immense ; in the latter year about twelve millions dollars were paid for freights aIone,*"the cost of transportation being from five to ten cents a 266 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. " pound, — and the tolls on teams, received by the constructors of the wagon road, amounted to six hundred thousand dollars. The charge for a single team is about thirty dollars; and in 1864, when the business was much less than before, no less than seven thousand teams passed over this Placerville route ; carrying all kinds of food and merchandise and machinery over into Nevada,' but coming back nearly empty. As showing how great and wasteful was and still is the cost of doing business in Nevada under such circumstances, it has been carefully estimated that the famous Gould & Curry silver mine at Virginia City would have saved two millions dollars in ex- penses in a single year, had a railroad been built and running over the mountains. The production of the mine that year was four millions and a half of dollars, but its expenses absorbed three millions ^nd a half, leaving only one million profit to stock- 'holders, against three millions, probably, had there been ready and cheap communication with the San Francisco markets. The staging and freighting over these mountain toll roads are performed in the most perfect style, however. The freight wagons are bigger and stronger than anything ever seen in the East ; gen- erally a smaller one is attached as a tender to the main wagon ; ten to twelve large and strong mules or horses, in fine condition, constitute the usual team ; and the load ranges from five to ten tons. To each mule in the best teams a large bell is at- tached, and they are trained to keep step to their TRAVEL AND TRAFFIC OVER THE §IERRAS. 267 music, and so pull and move uniformly. Frequently the road will be filled with these teams for a quarter and a half mile, and the turning out for them is the only interruption to the steady trot or the grand gallop of the six-horse stage teams that, attached to the best of Concord coaches, usually loaded with passengers, go half-flying over these well-graded mountain roads, three to four each way daily. The stage horses are sleek and fat, gay as larks, changed every ten miles, and do their work as if they really loved it. The Placerville road is watered through- out nearly its whole line by sprinkling carts, in the same way as the streets of a city are wet in the dry summer season ; and luxurious as this seems and is, — for the dust is otherwise most fearful, — it is found to be the cheapest way of keeping the road itself in good repair. When dry, the heavy teams cut up the track most terribly. But these horses are running away with the loco- motive, which is my main theme to-day. The rival of the Placerville route, though opened since, has won the title and the government bounty of the Pacific Railroad, and has this season pushed its iron track ahead of the former, and so henceforth must have every advantage for both traffic and travel. Indeed, within a few days, its friends have bought a controlling interest in the railway section of the Placerville route, and will probably put a veto upon the construction of the latter beyond that town. It is called the Dutch Flat and Donner Lake route, as well as the Central Pacific Railroad, and lies to the north of the other. Its line was selected by the late 268 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Mr. T. D. Judah, who has left a very enviable repu- tation in California both for personal integrity and professional ability as an engineer, after a thorough examination of other lines and passes over the mountains; and having gained, mainly by his in- dorsement, the approval of Congress, and the sup- port and bounty, also, of San Francisco and Sacra- mento, it has readily achieved these decided advan- tages over its rival, which has been sustained only by private capital and the profits of its toll-road'. Mr. Judah, who died after having established the general route of the Pacific Road and secured its indorsement by Congress, was an assistant engineer in the construction of your Connecticut River Rail- road in Massachusetts, and married a Greenfield lady. His reputation is one of the main bulwarks of the friends of his road, in the bitter controversy that has r^ged between them and the advocates of the Placerville route ; and, though this Contest now seems nearly over under the triumph of tbe upper route, many of the most intelligent citizens of the State still contend that the Placerville line is the easiest and safest for the railroad track. Our own Superficial examination of the two routes tended to this conclusion, also ; but it is too late, now, to argue that question. The Judah or Dutch Flat Route has got the name and the means, and is being pushed over the mountains with commendable vigor and rapidity ; and it is wise for California and the coun- try alike to sustain it, and secure its completion as early as possible. This accomplished, the other may and probably will be extended over into Nevada, and TRACK ON THE SVMMIT OF THE .SIERRAS. ?6g( already there is agitation to secure government bounty in its behalf. Our party made a very profitable and interesting excursion over the route of the Central Pacific Road from Sacramento to Donner Lake, on the eastern slope of the mountains, by special train and coaches, and along the working sections on horseback. The track is graded and laid, and trains are running to the new town of Colfax (named for the Speaker), which is fifty-six miles from Sacramento. Grading i§ now in active progress on the next two sections, to Dutch Flat, twelve miles, and the Crystal Lake, thirteen miles farther, with a force of about four thousand laborers, mostly Chinese. Though these sections are through a very rough and rocky coun- try, the work will certainly be done to Dutch Flat by spring, and Crystal Lake early next fall Then the rails are within fifteen miles of the summit of the Sierras. The toughest job of the whole line lies in these fifteen miles up, and the three or four miles down to Donner Lake, on the other side. /This must hang on for two or three years, it seems to me ; there will be some tunneling, probably, and much heavy rock-cutting; for several miles along the summit, which is seven thousand feet above the sea level, the road must apparently be cut into' a wall of solid rock, and then be covered by a roof to keep off the snows ;^but the later surveys soften the anticipated severity of the work, and the com- pany and its contractor.s are sanguine of mastering all the difficulties of the summit sections in two years. 270 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. The wagon-road goes down from the summit to Donner Lake at the rate of about four hundred feet to the mile, and the railway track will have to be wound in and out on the mountain sides for ten or more miles in order to get ahead two or three, and reach the level of the lake, whence it can be run readily down by the Tfuckee River into the valleys and plains of Nevada. The road ascends the moun- tains on this side by a very regular and nearly uni- - form grade, never exceeding one hundred and five feet to the mile, which is less than the highest grades of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, to which the act of Congress limits this road. In going down the other side, no grade will exceed one hundred and five feet, and after reaching Don- ner Lake the grade will be reduced to forty feet. But the company does not purpose to wait for the full construction of the track over the summit be- fore pushing the work on the line beyond. While that is advanced as fast as possible, they will com- mence next spring at Donner Lake and proceed down the mountains and out into and through Ne- * vada as rapidly as may be, eager to absorb as much of the whole enterprise, and meet the road coming west at a point as far east as they can. So far the company have used none of the United States bonds or lands granted by Congress in aid of the work. Some two and a half millions in these bonds are now due. The company can issue an equal amount of their own bonds guaranteed by a preceding or first mortgage; but none of these, also, have yet been used. They also have available THE FINANCIAL STRENGTH OF THE ROAD. 27 1 a million and a half of other bonds on which the State of California pays seven per cent, interest in gold for twenty years. Here are six millions and a half of good securities now on hand for prosecuting the work, besides what is earned as the road pro- gresses, and the power to anticipate the issue of their own first mortgage bonds at the rate of forty- eight thousand dollars for a mile of mountains and sixteen thousand dollars for a mile of plain, for one hundred miles in advance of construction. The work so far has been done out of about a million of paid-up stock, and subscriptions of the county of Sacramento of three hundred thousand dollars, the county of Placer of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and of San Francisco of four hundred thou- sand dollars, and the profits of that part of the road in running order. Of these sums, nearly half a million is still left, and as the road has gone so far as to substantially secure a monopoly of all the business over the mountains, the profits on its com- pleted section will be constantly increasing. Then, besides all this, there are between eighteen and nineteen millions of the twenty millions capital stock of the road, yet unsubscribed for. Sometime, though not at present, this will be paying property ; and it may suffice even now for the profits of the contractors. The company thus feel strong finan- cially, and though much of their securities are not just now marketable except at a discount, they are confident there need be no further delay for the lack of means, and are increasing their working force upon the road as fast as laborers can be had. 272 ACRQ$S THE CONTINENT. All the Chinese that offer, or that can be encouraged to emigrate from home, are employed, and it is ex- pected that five thousand will be at work on the road before the present season closes. These details are very long, but I trust are not altogether tedious or uninteresting. The theme . presses itself upon us more deeply, more solemnly, than any one other offered by our journey and. its observations. It is pathetic and painful, as I said in the beginning, in the solicitude and anxiety it awakens here among the people, and which we can- not help but share. There is really nothing unrea- sonable in demanding that rails should be laid and trains running over half the line between the Pacific Ocean and the Missouri River in two years and a half, over two-thirds of it another year, and the en- tire distance, unbroken, in five years. There are short sections in the mountains that may require three, or even five years to work them out ; but the great bulk of the way can be graded and laid with rails in three years. The California Pacific railroad company, led by som6 of the best men in the State, with Ex-Governor Stanford for president, say, calmly • and distinctly, in their annual report just published, that they will take their completed line into Salt Lake City in three years from date. I believe they can and will do it, with anything like an easy money and labor market. And it is just as practicable for the road from the East to reach the Rocky Moun- tains in twelve or eighteen months, and to span these mountains in two years more. Next spring should see as many men at work on FINAL APPEAL FOR THE RAILROAD. 273 the eastern line as there will be on the western ; the fall, fifteen to twenty thousand along its entire route ; 1867 should count fifty thousand shovels and picks and drills, leveling the paths for this national high- way; and in 1868 the hungry hearts of these peo- ple of the Pacific States should dance to the music of a hundred thousand strong, — music sweeter far and holier even than that of all the martial bands of the new Republic. Men of the East! Men at Washington! You have given the toil and even the blood of a million of your brothers and fellows for four years, and spent three thousand million dollars, to rescue one section of the Republic from barbarism and from anarchy ; and your triumph makes the cost cheap. Lend now a few thousand of men, and a hundred millions of money, to create a new Republic ; to marry to the Nation of the Atlantic an equal if not greater Nation of the Pacific. Anticipate a new sectionalism, a new strife, by a triumph of the arts of Peace, that shall be even prouder and more reach- ing than the victories of your Arms. Here is pay- ment of your great debt ; here is wealth unbounded ; here the commerce of the world ; here the comple- tion of a Republic that is continental ; but you must come and take them with the Locomotive ! u* 18 LETTER XXy, COUNTRY EXCURSIONS: THE GEYSERS: VINE- YARDS, AND AGRICULTURE. San Francisco, August 28. Perhaps this is the least pleasant month of the twelve to see San Francisco and California in, — the dryest and dreariest and. dustiest, when Nature is at rest ; yet. we find piore to see, more delightful journeys to ijiake into the interior, than we have time for. In every direction, there is, a novelty, a surprise for us ; everywhere Nature makes strange and faspiuating combinations, presents herself in ne:w forms, outrages all our pre-educated ideas as to her laws and habits, and yet everywhere, as ever, is impressive and beautiful. These valleys inside the Coast range qf mountains about San Francisco are particularly rich in. novelty and beauty, and have been the theater of severd very dehghtful excur- sions by our party since we came back irom the Yosemite. They form the garden of Cdifornia, agriculturally, and their nearness to the central market, and their fertile soil, have made them to be the best improved and the most steadily pro- gressive in wealth and population of all the interior flections of the State. THE NATURAE mVISIONS OF CALIFORNIA. 2W California, as you will; see by tjie map, is. like: a.; great basin or bowl, between two ranges, of moun- tains. Along the Coast- runs one ; and the_ Sierras, two hundred miles easi,. separate, her from NeyadaK The Golden. Gate at San Francisco lets in the oqea,n, and- out her interial waters.; to the north from. that; city stretchesi the Sacramento River £^nd its tributa- ries through a plain- two hundred- miles long and. forty to fifty wide; to the south, the San Joaquin- (pronouncedi San Walk-in) repeats the same; and, the two, with all the drainage of the interior, all the; inside waste of both ranges of mountains, meet above San Francisco, and; spread out into the. wide: inland bays, twenty to fifty miles long and four to ten wide, that give to that city its beauty, its; wealth, and its commerce ; and delaying here, they leisure-;. ly_ balance accounts witii the ocean, through; its narr row gateway. San Francisco hangs -over the edge of its c-hief- est, largest bay, like the oriolfe balatiping. on the crest of his long, pocket ne.st ; peeping around the corner into the Pacific, but opening wide eyes north, and south and east, to the interior. To the; north, and south, the Sacramento, and San Joaquin valleys are shut in. by the . two , ranges of mountains, chas- sezing into each other. And) this is Galifoinia*. 'The side valleys, from the Sierras are the field of the gold diggings and thq. quartz mining;, their mates, over the way, inside the Coast range, an The vine does not need irrigation, nor the other fruits ; and the small grains are natural to hill and plain alike: and all ripen richly under the stimulus of the winter and spring moisture. Across the bay from San Francisco lies its sub- ui^b, Oakland, home of many of its best people. Here is one of the Coast valleys I have mentioned, thick with low-branching evergreen oaks, and soft- er in sky and air than the city ; here is quiet of country and cultivation of town ; here grows the "garden sauce" of the metropolis; here are its best seminaries and its hopeful college ; here, too, Fred Law Olnisted has planned on a large scale, and with novelties of arrangement befitting the novelties of climate and verdure, a grand rural cem- etery ; and here Major Ralph W. Kirkham, whom Springfield sent to West Point a generation ago, and has been proud of ever since, lias the most ele- gant house and home to be foqnd anywhere on the Pacific Coast. Down the bay on the San Francisco side, through the San Jose (Ozay) valley and its villages and its culture, and around its base, and back on the Alameda and Oakland shore, forms one of the most ftiteresting of our late excursions. It is a sweep of a hundred miles ; but railroads at THE SAN JOSE -VALLEY. 277 beginning and end, — ^the arms which San Francisco is crooking around her intervening waters to stretch out, by way of Stockton, to Sacramento, and there welcome the continental cars, — helped us to make it leisurely in a day. Many an elegant country home, with orchards and gardens acres wide, showed the overflow of San Francisco wealth, as we rode down the San Jose valley ; miles of wheat fields proved how extensive are the plans of agriculture here; busy and pros- perous villages told of their sure and steady profit, — quite in contrast with the desolated look of most of the mining towns of the interior ; old and tumble- down mission-houses and churches, built of mud and stone, without wood- or nails, and neighbor- ing orchards of ancient pear and fig trees, marked the old homes of Catholic and Spanish missionaries among the Indians ; modern convents and colleges holding up the cross, proved the presence of the same element, flexible in its character, and now offering perhaps the best education of the Coast to the children of our Puritan emigrants ; — everywhere was novelty, on every side beauty, though most of the hills w^re bare and brown ; and only the low, scraggy oaks, making park of field, and the culti- vated orchard fed the eye with green. The plain was everywhere yellow with the stubble of grain, or the wild oats that grow spontaneously on unoccu- pied hill and meadow all over California, or brown with the dry grass, that is hay ungathered, and rich feed still for cattle and horse ; and the hills, still of those beautifully rounded shapes, that I first recog- ^yS ACROSS THE CONTINENT. 'BHsed in~Nevadk, and are ever -a surprise and ations -of yesterday aild five years ago. 'Most of the waters are black as ink, and some aS thick; others are quite light and transparent ; and they are of all degrees of temperature from onfe Jiundred and fifty to five hundred. Near by, toc^ are springs of cool water ; some as cold as tfefese are hot, almost. The phenomena ca^rries its own explanation ; the chemist \vill reproduce for you the same thing, on a small scale, by mixing sulphurie acid and cold water, and the other unkindred ele- ments that haveiiere, in*iatiire's laboratory, chanced to get together. Volcanic action is also most prob=- ably connected with, some of the demonstrations ■here. There must be utility in these waters for the cure of rheumatism and other blood and skita diseases. The Indians have long used some of the pools ih this way, with results that seem like fables. One of the pools has fame for feyes ; and, with cherai* NAPA valley: its springs and baths. 283 cal examination and scientific application, doubtless -large benefits might be reasonably assured among invalids from a resort to these waters. At present there is only a rough little bathing^house, collecting the waters from the ravine, and the visitors to the valley, save for curiosity, are but few. It is a wild, unredeemed spot, all ardund the Geysers ; beautiful with deep forests, a mountain stream, a^d clear air. Game, too, -abounds,-; deer and grouste and troiit seemed tplentier than in any region we have visited. There is la. comfortable hotel ; but otherwise this valley is uninhabited. The entire region for two miles in length and half a mile in lareadth, in- =cluding all thie springs, is owned byone man, who offers it for sale. Who would speculate in a muii- dane hell .' Back on the route of our morning ride, we then turned off into the neighboring valley of Napa, celebrated for its agricultural beauty and produo- tiveness, and also for its Calistoga and Wkrm Springs, charmingly -located, the one in the plains and the other close among mountains, and con*- stituting the fashionable summer resorts for San Franciscans. The water is sulphurous ; the batb- ing delicious, ^softening the skin to the texture -of a babe's; the country charming : but we found botli establishments, though with capacious head-quar- ters and numerous family cottages, almost deserted of people. Past farms and orchards, through iparks of ever- green oak that looked as jpeifect as if the workfof art, we -stopped at the vill^e of Napa, twin and 284 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. rival to Petaluma, and from here, crossing another spur of the Coast range, we entered still another beautiful and fertile valley, that of Sonoma. Here are some of the largest vineyards of north- ern California, and we visited that of the Buena Vista Vinicultural society, under the management of Colonel Haraszthy, a Hungarian. This estate embraces about five thousand acres of land, a prince- ly-looking house, large wine manufactory and cel- lars, and about a million vines, foreign and native. The whole value of its property is half a million dollars, including one hundred thousand dollars' worth of wine and brandies ready and in prepara- tion for market. We tasted the liquors, we shared the generous hospitality of the estate, and its super- intendent ; but we failed to obtain, here or else- where, any satisfactory information as to the boasted success of wine-making, yet, in California. The business is still very much in its infancy, indeed; and this one enterprise does not seem well-managed. Nor do we find the wines very inviting ; they par- take of the general character of the Rhine wines and the Ohio Catawba ; but are rougher, harsh and heady, — ^needing apparently both some improve- ment in culture and manufacture, and time for soft- ening. I have drank, indeed, much better California wine in Springfield than out here. The vine and wine interest is already a great one, and is rapidly growing. Nearly all parts of the State are favorable to it ; the deserted and exhausted gold fields of the Sierra Nevada valleys and hill- sides, as well as the valleys of the Coast range and CALIFORNIA WINES VS. CHAMPAGNE. 28$ the southern mountains. Down in Los Angelos County, this season, though the grapes are twice as abundant as last year, the price is treble, because of the increased preparations for their manufacture, and the profit that is sure to be realized from the business when well-conducted. The Buena Vista vineyards have been making part of their wine into champagne the last y?ar, and gratifying results are confidently predicted. But as doctors never take their own medicines, the true Californian is slow to drink his own wine. He prefers to import from France, and to export to the East; and probably both kinds are improved by the voyages. More French wines are drank in California, twice over, than by the same popu- lation in any part of the eastern States. Cham- pagne is mother's milk, indeed, to all these people ; they start the day with "a champagne cock-tail," and go to bed with a full bottle of it under their ribs. At all the bar-rooms, it is sold by the glass, the same as any other liquor, and it answers to the general name of "wine" with both drinker and landlord. From Sonoma, over another hill, to our steam- boat of three days ago, and by that back in a few hours to the city. These three days seem long, they have been so rich in novelty and knowledge, in beauty of landscape, in acquaintanceship with the best riches of California. These valleys are, indeed, agricultural jewels, and should be held as prouder possessions by the State than her gold mines. The small grains, fruits and vegetables are 2^6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. tfeeii: common, chief produetidns; and* the yields cLve enormous, while the culture gind' care are com- paratiyely, light In California, from December- till April and May ig. seed-time; from June tilt September is harvesb No. barns are needed, for housing stock; they. can roam safely in pasture for the whole year. Neither- are they needed, for the harvests ; threshing and winnowing are done as well in. the open fields — sometimes, indeed, by the very machine that reaps, andiat the same time,— and the grainas put in bags, and thus transported^ to the market; all at leisure, for there: is; no rain nor dew to sppil the. crop; it lieS: safely in any s'hapein the open field. There is no hot, haxiying' work with planting and; harvest- ings as, in the East ; no dodging of; showers ; no lost days during the long summer. Fifty bushels of wheat to the acre is. more common here than twenty-five in the best wheat fields of the States, and seventy-five and eighty bushels are often ob-. tajned. Barley, which, is another leading crop, yields still, greatec Ectum; an, aulientic instance of one hundred and twenty bushels to the acre is be- fore roe;; and crops that would: astound an. Eastern farmer are often gathered from the droppings of a laist year/s. harvest. A single farmer in. the neigh- borhood of San Jose, with, a twelve hundred acre farm, has this year gathered in. over fifty, thousand bushels of wheat; and the county of Santa Glara, in which, this farm is located, lying south fifty miles from San Francisco, and in between two sections o£ the Coast range of mountains, presents the fol- AGRICULTURAL RICHES OF CALIFORNIA. 287 lowing aggregates of agriculture: acres fenced in, two hundred and ten thousand; cultivated, one hundred and thirty thousand; grape vines, eight hundred and seventy-nine thousand nine'hundred ; apple trees, one hundred and twenty thousand; crops this year, — thirty-five thousand tons of hay, one hundred a^d; thirty-five thousand bushels of wheat, one hundred thousand of barley, sixty thou- sand each of oats and potatoes, and fbur thousand of corn. Nothing i^ wanting to the agriculture of Califor- nia but a steady and extensive market ; she sends north to Washitigton and , the British Provinces; east to Nevada and- Idaho; south to Mexico; is even trying China on the west, and with steam navi- gation hopes for large market for wheat there; — but most of her- soil is still unbroken,-^her produc-^ tive power is but suggested, not proven, undevek oped. And still she buy& half her butter in the East !' Visit ranches in the interior, that boast theii; cattle by the tens of thousands, and the chances are two to one that neither milk nor butter can be had for love or money! LETTER XXVI. OF SAN FRANCISCO: BUSINESS MATTERS. San Francisco, August 26. This is a very ridiculous and repulsive 'town, in some aspects, and a very fascinating and commend- able one, in others, both materially and morally, physically and esthetically. Its youth is its apology in one regard, its wonder and its merit on the other. The location must have been chosen for its water and not its land privileges. It is set upon the in- side of a range of the, purest sand-hills, six or seven miles wide,, blown up from the ocean, and still blow- ing up, between it and the bay. The main business streets are in the hollows, or on the flat land, made by pulling down the sand from the hills. But go out of these in any direction, and you are con- fronted by steep hills. Some of these are cut through, or being cut through, others are scaled, to make ropm for the spread of the town. The happy thought of winding the streets about their sides, which would have made a very picturesque and certainly get-around-able town, came too late. If but the early San Franciscans had thought of Bos- ton, and followed the cow-paths, what a unique, nice THE SAND-HILLS OF SAN FRANCISCO. 289 town they would have made of this ! Qnly I fear there never was even an estray cow on these virgin sand-hills, as innocent of verdure as a babe of sor- row or vice. The modern American straight line style was the order, no matter what was in front ; and the result is that going about San Francisco is^ all collar and breeching work for man and beast. The consequence is, also, there are only two or three streets that you can think of driving out of town on; The only way to get up and down the others with a horse, is to go zig-zag from one side to the other. Some of the principal residence streets are after this fashion, however ; I found our friend. Rev. Horatio Stebbins, of the Unitarian church here, holding on by main strength to a side hill that runs up at an angle of something like thirty degrees. And so they run up and down, and the city is straggling loosely over these hills for several miles In all directions. Some of the highest of the knobs are being cut down, and this leaves the early houses, — that is those built four or five years ago, — away up one Jiundred feet or more in the air, and reached by long flights of steep steps. Wherever the hill-sides and tops are fastened with houses or pavements, or twice daily seduced with water, there the foundations are measurably secure ; and the deed of the purchaser means some- thing ; but all elsewhere, all the open lots and un- paved paths are still undergoing the changing and> creative process. The daily winds swoop up the soil in one place and deposit it in another in grea.t,. masses, like drifts of snow. You will often find a 13 '9 29Q ACROSS THE CONTINENT. suburban street blocked up with fresh sand; and the owner of vacant lots needs certainly to pay them daily visit in order to swear to title ; and the chance is anyway that, between one neon and another, he and his neighbor will have changed properties to an indefinite depth. Incidental to all this, of course, are clouds of sand and dust through all the residence and open parts of the city, making large market for soap and clothes-brushes, and put- ting neat housekeepers quite in despair for their furniture. Naturally enough, there is a looseness on the subject of cleanliness, that would shock your old-fashioned New England housewives. But then, as compensation, the winds give health, — ^keeping the town fresh and clean ; and the hills offer wide visions of bay and river, and islands and sister hills, — way out and on with var3ang life of shipping, and manufactures, and agriculture ; and, hanging over all, a sky of azure with broad hori- zons. Oceanward is Lone Mountain Cemetery, covering one of the hills with its scrawny, low- running, live oak shrub tree, and its white monu- ments, conspicuous among which are the erections t5 those martyrs to both western and eastern civili- zation and progress, — Broderick, the mechanic and senator, James King of William, the editor, and Baker, the soldier. Here is the old Mission quar- ter, there the soldiers' camp, yonder, by the water, the bristling fort, again the conspicuous and gener- ous Orphan Asylum, tnonument of the tenderness and devotion of the women of the city, and to the left of that still, the two Jewish Cemeteries, each PERPETUAL GARDENS IN THE CITY. 29 1 with its appropriate and tasteful burial chapel. No other American city holds in its very center such sweeping views of itself and its neighborhood. Then the little yards around the dwellings of the prosperous, even of those of moderate means, are made rich with all the verdure of a green-house, with only the cost of daily watering. The most delicate of evergreens; roses of every grade and hue; fuchsias vigorous and high as lilac bushes; nasturtiums sweeping over fences and up house walls ; flowering vines of delicate quality, unknown in the East; geraniums and salvias, pansies and daisies, and all the kindred summer flowers of New York and New England, grow and blossom under these skies, throughout the whole year, — the same in Decertiber and January as in June and August, — with a richness and a profusion that are rarely attained by any out door culture in the East. The public aqueducts furnish water, though at consider- able expense, and pipes convey and spread it in fine spray all over yard and garden. The result is, every man's door-yard in the city is like an east- ern conservatory; and little humble cottages smile out of this city of sand-hills and dust, as green and as yellow, and as red and as purple, as gayest of garden can make them. There is no aristocracy of flowers here ; they greet you everywhere in greatest profusion, and are tender solace to home- sick heart and cheap and sweet tonic to weary i brain. Kindred contrasts force themselves upon the ob- servant stranger, in the business and social life of 292 ACROSS THE CONHNENT. the town. Someof the finest-^qualities are mingled with others that are both shabby and "shoddy." There is sharp, full development of all material powers and excellencies ; wealth of practical qu^- ity and force; a recklessness and rioting with the- elements of prosperity ; much dash, a certain chiv- alric honor combined with carelessness of word, of" i5.tegrity, of consequence'; a sort of gambling, spec- ulating, horse-jockeying morality, — ^born of the un- cert^nties of mining, its sudden hights, its equal^ siirprising depths, and the eager haste to be rich, — that all require something of a re-casting of rela- tionships, new standards, certainly new charities, in order to get the unaccustomed mind into a state of candor and justice. People, who know they are smart in the East, and come out here thinking to find it easy wool-gathering, are generally apt to go home shorn. Wall Street can teach Montgomery Street nothing in the way of "bulling" and "bear- ing," and the "corners" made here require both quick and long breath to tiurn without faltering. Men of mediocre quality are no better off herg than in older cities, and States. Ten or fifteen years of stern chase after fortune, among the mines and mountains and against the new nature of this original country, has developed men here with a tougher and more various experience in all the tem- poriditie.8 of life, and a wider resource for fighting all sorts of "tigers," than you can easily find among the present generation in the eastern States. Nearly all the men of means here to-day have held long aflid various struggle with fortune, failing once, twicQ THE BUSINESS MEN OF SAN FRAnCISCO. 293 or thrice and making wide wreck, but buckling oil the armor again and again, a:nd trying the contest over and over. So it -is tliroughout the State and the Coast ; I have hardly met an old emigrant of '49 and '50, who has not told nie of vicissitudes of fortune, of personal trials, and hard work for bread and life, that, half-dreaijied of before coming here, he would never have dared to encounter, and which no experience of persons in like position in life ift the East can parallel. In consequence partly of all this training, and partly of the great interests arid the wide regions to be dealt with, the men I find at the head of the great enterpriseb of this Coast have great business power, — a wide practical reach, a boldness, a sagac- ity, a vim, that I do not believe can be matched anywheire in the world. London and New York and Boston can furnish men of more philosophies and theories, — men who have studied business as a science as well as practiced it as a trade, — but hei-e are the men of acuter intuitions arid more daring natures ; who cannot tell you why they db so and so, but who will do it with a force that cofnmahds success. Such men have built up and direct the California Steam Navigation Coinpany, that is to the waters of this State what the Oregon Company is to those of that, cominandihg the entire navigation and furnishing most unexceptionable facilities for trade and travel ; the California and Pionefer Stage Companies, that equally command the stage travel of the Coast ; the Woolen Mills of this city ; thfe Wells & Fargo Expi-ess Conipan^; the great M^- 294 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, chine Shops of Pacific street; the Pacific Mail Steamship Company ; and the great private Bank- ing Houses, of which there are many and most pros- perous. Much British capital is invested in bank- ing here ; nor only in original houses, but through branches of leading bankers in London, India and British Columbia. But chief of the banks is the Bank of California, with two millions of capital, divided into only forty shares of fifty thousand dol- lars each, and owned by fewer than that number of persons, who represent a total property of thirteen millions (gold). This institution does about half the banking business of the city, and its average cash movement every steamer day, in shipments of bullion and drafts, is five millions of dollars. It keeps the best commercial and financial writer of the Coast in its employ, has agents in all the centers of productive wealth in the Pacific States, invests, directly or indirectly, in most of the leading enter- prises of the State, has an eye out for the politics and religion of the country, and to a very consider- able extent " runs " California e-very way. But there is no institution of the Coast that has interested me more than the Wells & Fargo Ex- press. It is the omnipresent, universal business agent of all the region from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. Its offices are in every town, fai^and near ; a billiard saloon, a restaurant, and a Wells & Fargo office are the first three elements of a Pacific or Coast mining town ; its messengers are on every steamboat, and rail-car and stage, in all these States. It is the Ready Companion of ' WELLS AND FARGO AS LETTER-CARRIERS. 295 civilization, the Universal Friend and Agent of the miner, his errand man, his banker, his post-office. It is much more than an ordinary express com- pany ; it does a general and universal banking busi- ness, and a great one in amount ; it brings to market all the bullion and gold from the mining regions, — its statistic^s are the only reliable knowledge of the production ; and it divides with the government the carrying of letters to and fro. In the latter respect its operations are very curi- ous. Going along hand in hand with the rapidly changing populations of the mining States, offering readier and more various facilities than the slower- moving and circumscribed government machinery, carrying the goods of the merchant and the bullion of the miner, as well as their letters, it has grown very much into the heart and habit of the people, and even conveys many of the letters upon routes that the government mail now goes as quickly and as safely as the express company, though their cost by the latter is much the greatest. The company breaks none of the post-office laws, but pays the government its full price for every letter it carries. The process is thus : Wells & Fargo buy the post- office envelopes bearing the government stamp, and then put their own stamp or frank upon them, and sell the same for ten cents each ; and in these en- velopes, thus doubly stamped, all the letters by ex- press are carried. Where the letters are above the single rate, additional government stamps are put oil and charged for by the company. The extent of this business is shown by the facts 296 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. that Wells & Fargo bought of the government in 1863 over two millions of three-cent envelopes, ififteen thousand of six-cent envelopes, and thirty thousand of ten and eighteen-cent ones, besides seventy thousand of extra three-cent stamps and twelve thousand five hundred of six-cent ditto. In 1864, the business increased, as it has steadily all along, and the three-cent envelopes bought and sold by Wells & Fargo in that year were nearly two and a quarter millions, and the extra stamps about one hundred and twenty-five thousand. Thus all thie agencies of Wells & Fargo are private post-offices, doing the business of the government better and more satisfactorily than it does it itself, and paying the government its full price for the same. One long side of the great San Francisco office is de- voted to this letter business; clerks wait courte- ously, and at all hours, on all callers ; letters with known or discoverable local addresses are delivered ; and for the others, lists of those received each day are regularly posted, so that any one can tell at once, without inquiry, if there be anything for him. The messengers of the company on stages and steam- boats receive all letters under the appropriate en- velopes, and the facilities of letter carriage they afford are much wider and more intimate than the government gives. This part of the business of Wells & Fargo is very profitable, and its success, popularity and wide extensicjU, reaching through one hundred and sev- enty-five different towns and villages, and extending as well to the newest mining regions in Idaho as to ROBBERIES OF THE MESSENGERS. ^9? ^ the chief cities of California, — even beyond and off mail routes and post-offices, — ^present very effective practical arguments for the government's giving up wholly its post-office department. The main rea- son offered against such abandonment has genferally been, that the sparsely settled States and widely Separated populations could not, by private enter- prise, be served with their letters except at high cost ; but this experience on the Pacific Coast more than meets this. Private enterprise here does bet- ter than the government, and is preferred to it. Wells & Fargo even offered some years ago to do the whole mail service of the Pacific Coast at five cents a letter, provided the franking; privilege was abolished. They could doubtless perform it with profit at three cents, and would if the business were all secured to them. The Wells & Fargo Express is mostly owned in New York, but it is managed out here by men of large business experience and great sagacity, and ia its enterprise and popular facilities iiot only strik- ingly illustrates ' but greatly advances the civiliza- tion of these States. Often it runs Special treasure wagons with escort, and frequently its messengers are exposed to great peril from robbers and Indians. Those from Idaho now have to ride wide aw^ke, day and night, with guns and pistols ready loaded and cocked. The stages on which their messenger^ atid treasure were passing were stopped and fobbed on the road eight times during 1864; and several serious robberies have also occurred this year, and in one case a messenger was murdered. The man- ia* 298 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. agers of the express are influential leaders and movers in the opening of new routes and in estab- lishing lines of stages ; even also are high powers in the construction of railroads. The success and extent of the Machine Shops and Woolen Manufacture here in San Francisco were also interesting objects of observation. There is no longer use or profit in importing machinery from the East. As gftod, if not better, is made here, and as cheap ; steam engines and boilers of the highest grade ; and stamps and crushers and all the various machinery for the mining regions. The machine shops are mostly in a single street, and must employ in the aggregate about one thousand mechanics and laborers. One of the largest and most complete of these establishments is owned and conducted by Mr. Ira Pr Rankin, formerly of Boston and Northampton. ^ There are two large and successful Woolen Mills. The oldest and most successful is the "Mission," the creation of an indomitable Scotch- Yankee, Mr. Donald McLennan, who learned his business among the mills of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, and came out here some eight or ten years ago, with only a few dollars in his pocket, but with a big cap- ital of experience, industry and courage. His estab- lishment is now worth over half a million dollars ; consumed last year over one million pounds of wool, and manufactured thirty-two thousand pairs of blankets, near half a million yards of flannels, and over one hundred thousand yards of cloths and cloakings. The wool is all of California growth,— THE MISSION WOOLEN MILLS. 299 for this is a large and cheap wool-producing State ;— the machinery, which includes eleven sets. of cards, thirty-five hundred spindles and fifty broad power- loorns, is of the very best and most modern descrip- tion, from England and the East; and the goods produced are of much variety of grade and style, in order to suit and fill the limited market here. The blankets are the finest made anywhere in the United States, perhaps in the worlci; certainly there are none in the eastern markets to compare with them either in thickness or softness ; and except for the very finest of broadcloths and cassimeres, these mills are fast driving all woolen goods from the East and from Europe out of this market. The army and Indian departments on this Coast have been largely supplied with their blankets and cloth- ing from this establishment during the last four years; and the government officers testify that these goods are of much superior quality to those generally sent from the East. One of the most interesting features of Mr. McLennan's establishmeflrt is that the work is nearly all done by Chinamen, almost three hundred being employed. A few whites are only necessary for the more intricate and skill-requiring processes, and for superintending. The Chinese are found much cheaper of course ; indeed the business could not be carried on successfully here but for their labor, which costs but one dollar and twelve cents a day against two dollars and ninety-seven cents for the whites employed; and the superintendent testifies that the difficulties of a first beginning- 300 ACROSS THE CONTINENt. with them were very ispeedily and fully overcome, and they were found very quick to learn all the details of the work, such as carding, spinning, wear- ing, finishing and wool-Borting. They live in a 'large building. on the mill grounds, and make the taost reliable, constant and valuable of factory operatives. The first cotton manufactory in Califdriifa is just finished and going into operation, over the bay iii Oakland, and will get its raw material from the Mexican States, for the present at least. Success- ful experiments in cotton raising on a large scale have been made this season in southern Cdiforhia. ^— There is a great sugar refinery establishment iA San Francisco, drawing its materials foir refining from the Sandwich Islands, which are fast coming to be the exclusive soiirce of sweetening for all these States. — There are also extensive lead and ih)n and glass works. San Francisco enterprise and capital are at the foundation of all these pioneer manufactures; but success will soon extend and multiply them over the State. I dwell upon these particulars, these illustrations of the enterprise and skill of this city and these States, because they form the promise of the great future. There is a sea-captain in your town, and quite a young man, too, who uSed to come here for hides, when only a single cabin marked the site of. San Francisco. Now it has a population of over one hundred thousand, or nearly a quarter of the whole State ; pays half the taxes of the State ; has a larger fbreigrt commerce than any city in the Na- COMMERCE OF SAN FRANCISCO. 301 tion but New York and Boston, its customs-revenue for the first six months of this year being three mil- lions and a quarter dollars, and its port clearing two hundred and thirty vessels of one hundred and eighty-three thousand eight hundred and thirty-four tons for foreign ports, and entering one hundred and ninety vessels of one hundred and forty-nine thou- sand seven hundred and forty-four tonnage during the same time, besides a domestic shipping two- thirds these figures ; and soon, within ten years, — struggle as Boston may and grow as she will, — it will divide commercial honors with, New York alone. Here is seat of empire, and of population, as great as yours of the eastern States ; here the equal arm of the American Nation ; and these men and means that I have been describing are the beginnings of the great and majestic end. LETTER XXVII. MINING IN CAUFORNIA: ITS VARIETIES, RESULTS AND PROSPECTS. Mariposa, California, August 28. We have been making our final studies of the mining business of the Pacific States here among the mines and mills of the famous Mariposa estate of Colonel Fremont. Thus the occasion is a proper one to sum up my various notes and observations in California on that subject, and so far as possible represent the state of the business in the whole region west of the Rocky Mountains. The gross production of gold and silver by all these States was probably never greater than now. There are no very exact figures to be had ; those of Wells, Fargo & Company's Express and the San Francisco mint furnish the best data, and are before me in detail. They indicate a total yield for 1864 of about sixty millions of dollars, and for this year at least an equal, probably a greater sum, perhaps sixty-five or seventy millions. California herself produces now but about one-third of this amount ; she has fallen-off from forty and fifty millions a year to twenty and twenty-five ; while Nevada now offers from fifteen to twenty millions a year, maiply of QUARTZ MINING AND SOIL DIGGINGS. J03 Sliver ; Idaho and eastern Oregon sent forward nine millions last year, and will probably increase this to twelve or fifteen millions this year ; and the British Provinces and Arizona furnish perhaps five millions. The gold of Montana mainly finds its way east through Colorado; but this is the first season of any large production there. But the production of all the States and Territories this side of the Rocky Mountains comes to San Francisco ; one-third of it, or about twenty millions, is coined at the United States mint there ; and the rest is exported in bars or dust, mainly in bars, to New York, China and England, but chiefly now to England. The western or California slopes of the Sierra Nevada yield no silver ore, — here the mining is of gold alone, and it is divided into two general classes ; that which seeks the metal from the solid rock, or quartz, and that which finds it in sand, gravel, or soil. The former process is the universal and famil- iar one of all rock mining, following the rich veins into the bowels of the earth with pick and powder, crushing the rock, and seducing the infinitesimal atoms of metal from the dusty, powdered mass. The accepted theory is that this is the original form or deposit of the precious metals, — that the gold found in gravel, sand or soil, — lying as it does almost universally in the beds of rivers, dead or alive, or under the eaves of the mountains, — has been washed and ground out of the hard hills by the action of the elements through long years. WaS'hing with water is the universal means of get- ting at these deposits of the -gold. But the scale 304 ACROSS THE GONT-INENT. on which this work is done, and the instrumentali- ties of application, vary, from the simple hand-pan and pick and shovel of the individual and original miner, operating along the banks of a little stream, to grand combination enterprises for changing the entire course of a river, running shafts down hun- dreds of feet to get into the beds of long ago streams, and bringing water through ditches and flumes and great pipes for ten or twenty miles, wherewith to wash down a hill-side of golden gravel, and get at its precious particles. The simple indi- vidual pan-washers have mostly " moved on " for the richer sands of Idaho and Montana ; what of this sort of gold seeking remains in California is in the hands of patient and plodding "John Chinaman," who works over the neglected sands of his prede- cessors, and is content to reap as harvest a dollar's.; worth a day. The other means are employed, on greater or less scales of magnitude, by combinations of men and; capital. All the forms of gold washing run into each other, indeed ; and cornpanies of two or three, sometimes of Chinamen, with capitals of hundreds of dollars, buy a sluice claim or seize a deserted bed, and with shovel and pick and small stream of water, run the sands over and over through the sluice ways, and at end of day, or week, or month, gather up. the deposits of gold on the bottoms and at the ends ■ of their sluices. From this, opera- tions ascend to a magnitude involving hundreds of thousands, and employing hundreds of men as partners or day laborers for the managers. Some- DEEP DIGGINGS AND HYDRAULIC MINING. 3OS times, too, the enterprise is divided, and companies are organized, that furnish the water alone, and sell it out to the miners or washers according to their wants. The raising of auriferous sands and gravel from the deeply covered beds of old streams, by running down shafts and out tunnels into and through such beds, and then washing them over, is called "Deep Diggings," or "Bed-rock Diggings," and in their pursuit the bottoms of ancient rivers will be followed through the country for mile after mile, and many feet below the present surface of the earth. The miners in this fashion g<3 down fill they reach the bed-rock, along which the water orig- inally ran, and here they find the richest deposits. The other sort of heavy gold washing, employing powerful streams of water to tear down and wash out the soil of hill-sides that cover or hold golden deposits, is known as " Hydraulic Mining." This is the most unique and extensive process, involving the largest capital and risk. The water is brought from mountain lakes or rivers through ditches and flumes, sometimes supported by trestle-work fifty to one hundred feet Mgh,:to near the theater of operations. Then it is let from flumes into large and stout iron pipes which grow gradually smaller and smaller; out of these it is passed into hose, like that of a fire engine, and through this it is j^red with a terrible force into the bank or bed of earth, which is speeidily torn down and washed with resist- less, separating power, into narrow beds or sluices . in the lower valleys, and as it goes along these, hin- dered «nd seduced at various points, the more sglid 20 30^ ACROSS THE CONTINENi-; . gold particles deposit themselves. Usually, iti large operations of this kind, the main stream of water is divided in the final discharging hose into two or more streams, which spout out into the hill-side as if from several) fire engines, only with immensely more force. One of the streams would instantly kill man or animal that should get before it, and frequent fatal or half-fatal accidents occur from this cause. Near Dutch Flat, where extensive hydraulic mining is in progress, a water company taps lakes' twelve to twenty miles ofi" in the mountains, and turns whole rivers into its ditches; and as further illustration of its majestic operations, we learned that it spent eighty thousand dollars in one year in building a new ditch, and yet made and divided one hundred and twenty thousand dollars in additional profits that same year. Up near Yreka, in northern California, a ditch thirty miles long, and costing two hundred thousand dollars, was constructed for this business ; but in this instance, the enterprise did not prove profitable. Near Oroville, also, are supposed rich gold banks and beds that ©nly lack Water for development ; but to get this will require ditches costing two hundred thousand dollars. The citizens of the neighborhood are confident it would be a richly-paying investment, however, and say the chief reason why it is not entered upon is the lack of certain, laws regulating mining claims, and the conflicts and doubt that are engendered.by.the neg- lect of the government to establish the terms of ownership in mining lands. .1 As it is now, squatter sovej-eigcty is the substan- PROFITABLE GOLD WASHINGS. 307 tial law of mining properties; prospectors and miners have established a few general rules for de- termining the rights of each other ; and they can occupy and use the properties that they discover or purchase, to a certain limited extent. No one man is allowed to take up more thaii a certain amount in feet or acres. The government so far has done nothing with these mineral lands, whose fee is still in itself, and gets no revenue from them. When- ever cases of conflict come into court, the regu- lations of the miners of the district, where the properties are located, have been generally sus- tained. But the apprehension that the government will yet assume its rights, and establish different rules for the possession and use of these lands, and the uncertainty and controversies growing out of the present loose ways of making and holding claims, are undoubtedly a stumbling-block to large enterprises, and an obstacle to the best sort of mining progress and prosperity all through the mineral country of this Coast. "^ The returns obtained in some cases of extensive deep diggings and hydraulic mining are very great A thousand dollars a day is often washed out by a company holding rich soil and employing a large force; and a run of several weeks averaging fifty dollars and one hundred dollars a day to the hand is frequently recorded. A single "cleaning up," after a few peeks' washing in a rich place, has pro- duced fifty thousand dollars in gold dust and nug^ gets ; and in other cases, even one hundred. thousand , dpllars 13 reported.. These are -the extreme cases 308 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. of good fortune, however; other enterprises-are run with a loss, or with varying result ; but the gold washings, as a general thing, are paying good wages and a fair return to the capital invested. Of course all these operations create a wide waste wherever they are going on, and have been in progress. Tornado, flood, earthquake and volcano combined could hardly make greater havoc, spread wider rUin and wreck, than are to be seen every- where in the path of the larger gold-washing oper» ations. None of the interior streams of California, though haturally pure as crystal, escape the changft, to a thick yellow mud, from this cause, early in their progress out of the hills. The Sacramento is worse than the Missouri. Many of the streams are turned out of their original channels, either directly for mining purposes, of in consequence of the great masses of soil and gravel that come down from the gold-washiiigs above. Thousands of acres of fine land along their banks are ruined forever by the deposits of this character. There are no rights which miniiig respects in California. It is the one supreme interest. A farmer may have his whole estate turned to a barton waste by a flood of sand and gravel from some hydraulic mining up stream ; more, if a fine orchard or garden stands in the way of the working of a rich gulch or bank, orchard and garden must go. Then the torn-down, dug-out, washed to pieces and then washed over side-hills, that have been or are. being hydraulic-mined, are the very devil's chaos, indeed. ■ The country is full of them among the mining districts of the Sierra I YUBA DAM — GRASS VALLEY QUARTZ MINES. 3D9 Nevada foot-hills, and they are truly a t,errible blot upon the face of nature. The valley of the Yuba, a branch of the Sacramento, was one of the worst illustrations our journeying has presented; and ■when we came to the sign over the "grocery" of a now deserted mining camp, indicating that this was "Yuba Dam," we thought of the famous anecdote connected with this name, from its repetition, with- out the benefit of spelling, to an inquirin'g colpor- teur, and were fain to confess that the profane com- pound fairly represented the spirit of the lawless miner. The gold quartz mines are mostly in the same neighborhoods with present or past gold-washingS;; in the hills back and above the rich stream beds and gravel banks. Nevada County in the north, ■ and Mariposa in the south, have been ihe most fa- mous counties for this interest. The most: success- ful and noteworthy operations of it now are in and around the town of Grass Valley, in Nevada Coun- ty, which has always been a profitable mining re- gion. It seemed almost the only mining town of importance in . California, that we visited, which did not have vacant stores and houses, and show signs of decrepitude. There are now about twenty quartz mills in successful operation in. Grass V^- ley, and the ore they work yields from ten to fifty dollars a ton ; occasionally as high as one hundred and two hundred dollars. The cost of mining and working is from six to ten dollars a ton, depending on the facilities of mine and mill. Among the suc- cessful miners and capitalists here, is Mr. S. D. 3IO ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Bosworth, from West Springfield and Springfield, •who now occupies the cottage which the notorious Lola Montez built and lived in for several years. She came here to perform for the miners in 1854, and staid to ruin one husband, and change him for another. She led a irollicking life here, and the town is full of scandals concerning her. Intelli- gent gentlemen who met her confess to her intel- lectual power and impressive conversation, and to "her fascinating manners. Grass Valley also boasts an old horse that goes around alone with a milk- wagon, stopping before the doors of his customers, and nowhere else, and delivering his daily allow- ances to each with unvarying fidelity. But the really wonderful thing about this story is that Grass Valley should have a population that can be trusted to help themselves to milk, and not take, any of them, mcjf e than their allotted share. The mines here are receiving enlarged attention just now, and -extensive new investments are being made, both in Grass Valley and the neighboring town of Nevada. But here in Mariposa County, the interest has a different look, and affairs are in a desperate condi- tion. There are in all ten quartz mills here, all or nearly all on the Fremont estate, but only two or three are now running, and these with moderate re- sults. The villages are decreasing in population; the best people are going away ; viciousness of all sorts seems to be increasing ; and highway robber- ies are of almost nightly occurrence. The great Mariposa minihg. company, formed in Wall street two years ago with a capital of ten millions, a debt THE MARIPOSA ESTATE — ITS RUINS. 3 II of two millions, and not a cent of ready cash-^ succeeding to General . Fremont's property and his style of doing business, — has come to grief. Its most worthy superintendent and manager, Mr. Frederic Law Olmsted, who was beguiled but here under a gross misapprehension of the situation of affairs, and the duties he was to perform, is going home disgusted, to resume more congenial occupa- ,tion in the East; the sheriff has been brooding; over the estate for six months ; and its local credi- tors are running one or two of its mills and mines^, on a close and economical scale, — using up accu- mulated materials, but laying in no new supplies^ — in order to obtain their claims. The ore now being- .obtained and thus worked returns from seven dol- lars to ten dollars a ton, which gives a small mar- gin of profit. It is all a sad, vast ruin, — a magnifi- cent gentleman, holding his head high, but wearing- his last year's clothes, and dining around with his friends, — a. sort of grand land and mine Micawber. There is doubtless life and value, possibly great wealth, in it still, but not of the sort or degree that has been set up for it. Divided up, arid conducted by private parties or small companies on a moderate capital, as the Grass Valley mines are, or managed, as a whole even, with an eye to practical results! alone, and no such side issues as the presidency, or a grand Wall street stock-jobbing operation, or the control of California politics, depending on it, and drawing its life-blood, the estate may yet have a useful future before it. But the end to it as a grand Principality, as an exhaustless Fountain for political 3f2 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. and financial jobbing, seems surely to have come. IiBdeed, its most striking capacity always has- been in carrying an. immense, a magnificent indebted- ' ness. A few men are rich, from it here and in the I East; but their wealth is more from the sale of stock and bonds in New York, than the profits of its mines in Mariposa. The illustration of the whole lies best, perhaps, in the sincere boast at- tributed to its most gallant but never thrifty origi- nal owner. "Why," said General, Fremont, "when I came to. California, I was worth nothing, and now I; owe two. millions of dollars 1" ' There are no very reliable statistics as to the ex- tent of the qiiartz-rnining interest of California, or of ite comparative results by the side of the gold- washings. The estimate of a prominent authority before, me places the number of quartz-mills in the Statd at_ six. hundred, tiieir cost at twelve million dollars, and their product, on an average of ten dol- lars to the ton of ore, at eighteen millions of dollars a year. But these figures are clearly wide of the fact; there caai- hardly be over one hundred quartz- mills, properly so called, in all California ; and they do not divide the State's product with the gold- washers equally. Minirig in Califomiaj of all kinds-, is now much more systematically and intelligently conducted than ever before. It is losing its waste- ful^ gambling characteristics. In 1 862, it apparently had its greatest production; the returns for 1864 were only about half as much ; and probably this year will show no gain upon the last. The interest is, on the whole, at the ebb tide. But the risks of THE IDAHO MINES. 313 the business will henceforth be less than heretofore ; the cost of production is cheaper here 'than in the newer and more remote fields; new and valuable fields are being discovered and opened among the Sierras ; and.I am inclined to the belief that invest- ments in mining in California can be made with better results, at least with more certainty of profit, if less possible gains, than in any of the fresher and more fashionable regions. The Idaho mines are perhaps exciting the most interest at present among the people of the Coast ; and they are also beginning to divide enticements with those of Nevada and Colorado, for eastern speculators and capitalists. Some reliable facts about them, which I have from original sources, will not be amiss therefore, and serve to complete my general review of the mining developments of this whole region. The Boise Basin district is still rich in gold-washings, and is perhaps the richest region in that respect yet worked anywhere in the West. It has also rich quartz veins, and there are already eight mills in operation there, with eighty?- four stamps. South Boise is- less rich in.placer dig- gings, but has an even larger development of the quartz interest. The bullion (gold) here holds a large proportion of silver, and is not worth over fourteen dollars an ounce. The Owyhee district bordere on Oregon, and its mining wealth runs over into that State. • The ore here is like that in Nevada, having more silver than gold in it. There are six mills now. in this district, one of them with thirty stamps. The veins ip Boise Basin and South 14 "314 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. ' Boise are small, like those of Reese River, in Ne- vada, operiftig sometimes as low as four inches, but enlarging generally to four or five feet. The "Mammoth Vein" is from three to twelve feet -wide ; the ore is generally free and simple," and is worked without roasting. The yield is from forty dollars a ton up ; one veiii runs from forty to eighty dollars ; and others have yielded from two hundred to three hundred dollars a ton. It is not probable .that the full value of the ore is obtained by the present means of working, and the tailings are saved. The country is very barren, having the same general characteristics as eastern Oregon and Ne- vada. There are some good valleys, and timber is plenty enough for the present save in the Owyhee district. The price of labor is six dollars a day, and goods and provisions are in proportion. The population is made up mostly of the floating mining elements of California, Oregon and Nevada; the men who are always moving on for the newest mines; prosperous to-day, poor to-morrow. The winters in Idaho are severe, and the work in the placer diggings is then suspended. The miners float back to the older towns, to The Dalles and Port- land in Oregon, and San Francisco, in the fall, and spend there their summer savings, and start out again in the spring for the old diggings, if no newer and more fabulous ones have been since discovered. Taking these figures as reliable as statements about mines generally are from those engaged in the business, I do not see that Idaho really offers CALIFORNIA S ADVANTAGE FOR MINING. 31-5 -any better inducements for emigration and capital than Nevada and Colorado. It is probable my statements relate to the best veins, that the average will fall below these rates of production, and that the permanent prosperity of the mining interests and the sure progress of the State will await the profitable working of ores yielding from ten dollars to twenty-five dollars a ton, as is already admitted to be true for California, and for Virginia City, Nevada, and will probably soon be proven in Reese River and in Colorado. And this can hardly be done until quicker and cheaper communication is pro- vided. Only the rare veins, only the choice ore in any of these States can be worked to much profit, so long as all machinery, all food, all goods, used in the business and for the people, have to pay a freight tariff of ten ' to thirty cents a pound, and labpr is from four to eight dollars a day. California has the advantage over her rivals in these respects now; and I repeat that it seems to me mining is likely to be as profitable in this State for the next five years, taking all things into consideration, as in any of the newer regions. The others must wait for the rail road to give real and permanent and steady develop- ment and prosperity to greater apparent capacities. Do not complain, my reader, that this letter is (getting dull with dry fact and statistics ; consider the mass of figures and " disgusting details " that I have before me, and have spared you, and be grateful : and come now with me, and let us have the sensation of a visit into the abyssmal depths of the mines themselves. Our party have done con- 3l6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. siderable of this descending into mines in our prog- ress across the country; for it became occasion of reproach and doubt of our intelligent future judgment, if we failed to go down into every miner's particular pet hole. Over in Austin, we had amusing experience in this regard. We were to stay but three days there. But that is nothing, said the disappointed people; you can't begin to see our mines in that time ; you better have staid away. Well, come on, was the reply; show us what you can in thrpe d^ysj and then let us see what, is left that is new and strange. So we mount- ed ; and there was an extensive cavalcade of local officials, practical miners, speculators, and gentfeel bummers generally. We went over and around hills, down into mines, through mills, everywhere that our guides led us ; finding naturally great sim- ilarity of sights and testimony everywhere. By afternoon, our hosts had dwindled one-half. The next morning, instead of a dozen, we had but three or four guides ; at noon, they were reduced to one, and at night we had exhausted not only his strength and patience, but all he had to show us. We had seen Austin and its mines, and had a day to spare,! The newer mines, whose shafts are but fifty or one hundred feet, are descended by a sirnple rope and bucket, worked by a common hand windlass ; older and deeper ones, by the same contrivancej with steam power : if, as is often the case, the veia runs at an angle, or is reached below in that way, a little car runs down a steep track, held and drawn by a heavy rope and steam engine ; while other shaftg INTO THE GOULD AND CURRY MINE. 317 are provided with ladders, winding around, or set perpendicularly up and down. The latest, and safest and readiest contrivance for dfescending a perpendicular shaft is a cage or box,- let down by a rope with steam power, but provided with sharp, opening arms that, in case the rope breaks, will catch into the walls with such power as to hold the cage and its load. Its certainty was proven to us by cutting the rope with an ax, when the cage sent out its fingers and clung midway in its passage. We reached the insides of other mines by long tunnels, running into the veins from the surface, far down the hill-sides on which they were located. The deepest worked mine on the Pacific Coast is in Amador County, this State, and is' eight hundred feet down ; but some of those over in Nevada are fast approaching this depth; and the latter have the most extensive chambers below the surface of any in the country. The Gould & Curry mine, for instance, has several miles length of tunnels' and shafts, and it is a full half day's journey to travel through it entirely. We entered this mine through a long tunnel, that strikes the vein several hundred feet below the surface. There were half a dozen of us in the pro- cession, each with a lighted candle, which would go out under the out-going draft, and so we soon con- tented ourselves with grouping along in the dim, cavernous light. It seemed a very long journey, and the nerves had to brace themselves. The most stolid person, stranger to such experience, will hard- ly fail to find his heart beating a little quicker, as 3l8 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. he goes into these far-away, narrow recesses in the bowels of the earth.- I never failed to remember tlie principl#that "nature abhors a vacuum," and to wonder if she wouldn't take the present occasion to close up this little one that I was in. At last we reached the scenes of the ore and the work after it ; and among these we clambered and wandered about, down shafts to this or that level, and then out on side tunnels through the vein in both directions ; up again by narrow, pokerish ladders to a higher set of chambers, in and out, up and down, till we were lost in amazing confusi(5n. Here was, indeedj a city of streets and population far under the surface of the earth. Many of the chambers or streets were deserted ; in others we found littli coteries of miners, picking away at the hard rock, and loading" up cars of the ore, that were sent out by the tunnels and up by the shafts to the surface above. Here, too, was a building in a wide hall under ground, and steam engine to help on the work. Some of the chambers had closed in after being worked out of ore; others have been filled up to prevent caving ' in and causing great disaster overhead ; but many of -the open passages were stayed or braced open still with huge frame work of timber ; more lumber, indeed, as I have told you, I believe, is used for this purpose in this. single -^mine, than has been put into aU the buildings of Virginia City itself, with its ten tljousand to fifteen thousand inhabitants. And in many of the passages, such is the outward pressure into the vacuum, that these timbers, as big as a man's body, are bent and splintered almost in two.^ CO.MING OUT OF THE MINE. 319 Great pine sticksj eighteen' inches square, were thus bent like a bow, or yawned with gaping splin- ters.; and the spaces left in some places for us to go through were in this way reduced so sm^l that we almost had to crawl to get along. , Do you wonder that we began to grow weary, and thought we had seen enough? Besides, the mine was oppressively hot and close ; the mercury was up to one hundred degrees and more, and the sweat poured from us like water. One of our party grew faint and feeble, and we voted to take the near- est way out. This happened to be the most peril- ous and trying; but we did not realize that, and our miner guide, unsensitive from experience, did not think of it. So he started us into a long shaft, running straight up and down for several hundreds of feet, dark and damp as night, with no breaks or landing places, and set us going one after another, up a perpendicular ladder fastened to its side. We only took in a sense of the thing after we had got started; each must carry his lighted candle, hold on, and creep ahead; a single misstep by any one, the fainting of our invalid, or of any of us, all weary and unstrung, would not only have plunged that one headlong down the long fatal flight, to be- come a very Mantilinean cold body at the bottom, but would have swept everybody below him on the ladder, like a row of bricks, to th^same destination and destruction. There was, you may well believe, a stern summoning of all remaining strength and nerves, a close, firm grip on the rounds of the lad- der, a silent, grave procession, much and rapid 320 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. thought, and a very long breath, and a very fei««ent if voiceless prayer, when we got to the daylight and the top. Our part of the shaft and the ladder was about one hundred and fifty feet; it seemed very long; and we were content to call our day's work done when it was over. Brains won the victory over body ; but both were weary enough at the end. But if I prolong this story any further, you will almost wi^h I had never got out of that shaft! LETTER XXVIII. SOCIAL LIFE IN SAN FRANCISCO: THE WOMEN: RELIGION AND MINISTERS. San Francisco, August 30, You, must be a very indifferent sort of person, and have no friends, to escape during the first week of a visit here an invitation to drive out to the Cliff House for breakfast and a sight of the sea-lions- This is the one special pet dissipation of San Fran- cisco, the very trump card in its hospitality. A night among the Chinese houses and gambling holes is reserved as a choice lit-bit for the pruri- ently curious few ; but the. Cliff and the seals are for all ages and conditions of men and women. And, indeed, this is a vety pleasant, reviving ex- cursion. A drive of five or six miles, along a hard- made road over the intervening sand-hills, brings you out to the broad Pacific, rolling in and out, "wide as waters be." You strain your eyes for Sandwich Islands and China, — they are right before you; no object intervenes, and you feel that you ought to see them. Just at the right, around the comer, is the Golden Gate ; and vessels are passing in and out the bay. A rare cliff rock places you 14* 21 322 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. beyond the sands, within the ocean ; and a fine hotel on its very edge offers every hospitality — at a price. Out upon half a dozen fragmentary rocks, like solid castles moored in the ocean below and before, are the seals and the pelicans. TJie rocks are cov- ered and alive with them. You remember Barnum's seals at New York and Boston, don't you .' — great sleek and slimy amphibious calves, — all bodies, small heads and short, webby feet, — ^bobbing up and down in their water tanks, and most making you weep with their large, liquid human eyts, like a hunger^ ing, sorrowing woman's ? Well, here is their native water and rock; from these rocks they were cap- tured, and here by twenties and fifties you see their relations. Crawling up from the water, awkwardly and blunderingly like babe at its first creeping, they spread themselves in the sun all over the rocks, twenty and thirty feet high sometimes, and lie there as if comatose ; anon raising the head to look about and utter a rough, wide-sounding bark ; often two or three, by reason of a fresh squatter on their ter- ritory, get into combat, and strike and bite languidly at one another, barking and grumbling meanwhile like long-lunged dogs ; and again, tired of discord or weary of heaven, they plunge, with more of spring than they do anything else, back into the deep sea. An opera-glass brings them close to you upon the hotel piazza, and there is a singular fascination in sitting and watching their performances. They are of all sizes from fifty pounds weight up to two hun- dred and three hundred. Sea gulls and pelicans, the latter huge and awkward in flight as turkeys, THE PACIFIC BEACH "SOCIETY." 323 dispute possession of the rocks ; resting in great flocks, or with loud flaps flying around and around, overlooking the water for passing food. Weary of these sights, the visitor beeks neighbor- ing charming coves ainong the rocks below, and lies there out of the wind, watching the rolling waves rising and breaking over the island rocks, and sweeping in up the seducing sands to toy with his feet. And again, mounting horse or carriage, he rides swiftly and smoothly along the neighboring broad beach of hard sand for several miles ; the unbroken, wide-Veaching, long-rolling ocean is be- fore his sight ; and his horse's feet dance in merry race with the incoming surf; — and thus solemnly awed with ocean expanse, alternate with dainty titillation of amused senses, he closes his charming " half day at the Clifl". "Society" in this representative town of the Pa- cific Coast is somewhat difficult of characterization. It holds in chaos all sorts of elements; the very best, and the very worst, and all between. There is much of New York in it, much of St. Louis and Chicago, and a good deal that is original and local ; born of wide separation from the centers of our best social civilization; of the dominating materi- alism and masculineism of all life here ; of compar- ative lack of homes and families and their influences. There are probably more bachelors, great lusty fel- lows, who ought to be ashamed of themselves, living in hotels or in "lodgings," in this town, than in any place of its size in the "world. There is want of femininity, spirituality in the current tone of the 324 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. place ; lack of reverence for women ; fewer women to reverence, than our eastern towns are accustomed to. You hear more than is pleasant of private scandals ; of the vanity and weakness of women ; of the infidelity of wives. "It is the cussedest place for women," said an observant Yankee citizen, some two or three years from home, and not forget- ful yet of mother, sister and cousin, — " a town of men- and taverns and boarding-houses and billiard- saloons." Yet there seem to be plenty of women, — such as they are ; and Montgomery Street will offer the promenader as many pretty and striking faces, per- haps more in proportion, than Washington Street or Broadway. But the dominating quality, like mercy, is not strained ; it savors of the mannish- ness, the materialism, the "fastness" and the "loud- ness" of the country; and paradoxical as it may appear, by contrast with eastern society, the men seem of a higher grade than the Avomen, — better for men than the latter as women. Nor is this in- consistent with reason ; the men, dealing with great practical necessities and duties, are less harmed, on the whole, by the dominant materialism of life here, than the women, whose pressing responsibilities are lower and fewer; — as a fine, delicate blade is more roughened in cutting the way through bram- ble and brush than a tough and broader edge. All which is not only natural, but inevitable. In all new countries, where the first fight is for life and wealth with rough nature, the masculine qual- ity must ever be dominant; and the feminine ele- HOW THE LADIES DRESS. 325 ments must be influenced by it, more than they in* fluence it in turn. The senses rule the spirit. All civilization, all progress tends to the increase of the feminine element in our nature, and in life ; con- trast the centuries, and we see it creeping in every- where, in men and women alike, in religion, in in- tellectual culture, in art, in social intercourse, — softening, refining, hallowing, — the atmosphere of all modern hfe pictures. Women, who possess and represent this blossom of our civilization, are by no means wanting here, — ^no more perfect speci- mens have I ever met anywhere ; tender, tasteful, true ; and gaining in aggregate influence over so- ciety day by day ; but yet not to-day representing or making what is called " society." The ladies generally dress in good taste. Paris is really as near San Francisco as New York, and there are many foreign families here. But the styles are not so subdued as in our eastern cities ; a high- er or rather louder tone prevails ; rich, full colors* and sharp contrasts; the startling effects that the Parisian demi-monde seeks, — these are seen domi- nating here. In costliness of costume, too, there is apparent rivalry among the San Francisco ladies. Extravagance is lamented as a common weakness among them, and leading, where fortune is so fickle, as here, to many a worse one often. Perhaps in no other American city would the ladies invoice so high per head as in San Francisco, when they go out to the opera, or to party, or ball. Their point lace is deeper, their moire antique stiffer, their skirts a trifle longer, their corsage an inch lower, their 326 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. diamonds more brilliant, — and more of them, — ^than the cosmopolite is likely to find elsewhere, Another "society" item, and we will pass on. The common dining hour being five and six o'clock, the women are denied the esthetic, gossiping tea- party, so peculiar to New England. The "lunch party" is their substitute, and a famous feature of feminine social life it is. The hour is from high noon to two o'clock, when the men are busy at their work, and the women have this dissipation all to themselves. Richer and more various as a meal are the lunches than the teas they substitute; the, eating and attendant gossiping often absorb a whole afternoon, leaving the participants appetiteless, it is true, for the family dinner, but with what compen- sating material for garnishing the meal for the household! I have never even so much as seen through a crack in the door one of these California feminine lunch parties ; but confidential confessions lead me to give them a high place in the social fea- tures and distractions of the life of the town. And yet for high art in the line of the delicate but in- dustrious scandal-mongering and the virtuous plot- ting against masculine authority, that we are wont to attribute to these, exclusive gatherings of our dear sisters, it does still seem tp me that the New England conjunction of twilight and green hyson are much more favorable. Doubtless, these Cali- fornia Eves are bolder in their habits, as becomes their life and the grosser evils they are the victims of; but how much more daintily and delicately the stiletto and the tongue, the knitting-needle and the THE NEW ENGLAND SPIRIT DOMINANT. 327 eye can do their sweet work under a little softening of the shadows and the inspiration of hot tea on a stomach that has already done its duty for the day ! In affairs of public morals, and education and re- ligion, there is much activity in San Francisco, and a healthy progress in the right direction is visibly constant. The New England elements are clearly dominant here and through the whole Pacific Coast region ; softened from their old Puritanic habits,^- marrying themselves to the freer and more sensuous life of a new country with a cosmopolitan popula- tion, but still preserving their best ndon cos- mopolite-will make the circuit of the globe in ninety days, and we shall be nourished by the blood of the heart of the world. Intelli- gence will be increased, society liberalized by intercourse, and ex- temporaneous adventure driven out by better industries, as in the olderi time the temple of God was cleared of money-changers by the presence of a superior spirit Men have been attracted here by the dangerous and corrupting passion for gold. The inherent ten- dencies to barbarism in that adventure can be overcome and neu- tralized only by assimilation with the best forms of society, and bringing these distant places into close proximity with civilization, that the whole world may be tributary of its best things. "It is not wise for us to flatter ourselves with false appearances or expectations. The bare historic bet is, that no fine state of hu- REV. MR. STEBBINS ON CALIFORNIA SOCIETY. 333. man society has ever existed over gold mines. And the only ground of expectation we have, that society here Vfill prove an exception to the general law, is, that the compensating influences of a beneficent' government and swifi communication with the world of mankind will give us the laws, the manners and the religion which no gold- producing country has ever been able to make for itself. Man, here- on these shores, contends not merely with the unreclaimed powers of nature, as the pioneer of New England or the Mississippi valley, but nature herself is dishonest. She bribes and corrupts him, and plays a trick on all his being. She sneers at his industry, makes his business a. joke, and his word a lie. The world must be im- ported here to make nature honest, and outwit her secret arts. Nothing can save us from Spanish decline and Mexic littleness but, fc communication with the world; that rapid and sure intercourse with human society, which assimilates the interests and the life of mankind. And I make this moral predicament concerning the growth and prosperity of our State : That the powers which have made her prosperous thus far have done their best, and that no great impulse of human affairs, having breadth and hight and depth of permanent, imturing progress, can be felt here until the great high- ways are opened over sea and land ; and the world, the many-sided world of industries and arts, and commerce and literature, is im- ported to us. The primeval command comes to us with the aug- mented authority of our providential vocation, and is reiterated to us in original sublimity of moral law from every mountain summit which nature raises up as a barrier to our assimilation with the Na- tion and mankind. It is only by the introduction of new powers that we can conserve those we have. Compared with this all other questions for us are idle. And the people of California can make no better investment of their time, their talents, their money, or their public spirit, — and I would that I could persuade you to be- lieve it and quit all your lesser contradictions, — ^than in turning all the powers of the State to overcome the barriers which lie between her and the Nation's hearthstone, between her and the heart of the world. «iwr "Human society is made for religion: — ^for the ends and aims which religion suggests. Whatever promotes the assimilation of mankind, whatever brings nations and peoples into communion, thus supplementing each other in the completeness of humanity, is a step in the advancing kingdom of God. This earth is a musical instrument not yet fully strung. When .every Coast shall be peo- 334 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, pled, every mountain barrier overcome, every abyss spanned, and the peoples of the earth shall flow together as in prophetic vision to the mountain of the Lord's house, and harmony of common good shall persuade the lion and the Iamb; when laws shall be greater than conflict, and order than violence; when manners shall enrobe the races as a garment of beauty, and religion conserve soci- ety as virtue conserves the soul, — ^then this earth shall give its sound in harmony with the infinite intelligence, and the providential pur- pose shall gleam from every summit as the beacon lights of man- kind." These are, indeed, solemn, majestic truths, most impressively stated. I would that they reach every soul, East and West, and bring forth early, earnest fruit. LETTER XXIX. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS: COST OF LIVING: THE CURRENCY QUESTION : THE MINT. San Francisco, August 31. The climate of all this Pacific side of the Rocky Mountains is one in its distinctive qualities.' As a change from that of the Atlantic States, there can be no doubt of its beneficial influence upon the health, both because it is a change, and because it is less variable. It offers none of those wide sweeps of temperature that, both in degree and in sudden- ness, so try a weak constitution, and break down, a strong one. Snow and ice are things unknown out of the mountains, in California, Oregon and Nevada. The summer sun is fiercer than in the Middle and New England States ; but its oppressiveness is broken by a constant vitality in the air, and uni- formly cool nights, that do not accompany your July and August weather in the East. Neither the long summer drouth nor the winter rains appear to be an element of ill health or even of great dis- comfort to an invalid in themselves. The rains are not oppressive save in the central valley of Oregon ; and their chief inconvenience is felt in the mud in the country, as that of the summer's drouth is in 336 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. the deep and sensitive dust, both making walking and riding off the pavements a great trial to clean- liness and comfort. But the evenness of the climate and the inde- scribable inspiration of the air are the great features of life here, and the great elements in its health. There is a steady tone in the atmosphere, like draft of champagne, or subtle presence of iron. It in- vites to labor, and makes it possible. Horses can travel more miles here in a day than at the East ; and men and women feel impelled to an unusual activity. San Francisco, which has the advantage qf the interior in a cooler summer, probably offers more working days in the year than any other town or city in America ; less occasion for loss from bad weather and consequent ill-health. But this city, though favorable to preserving health, is bad for regaining it. Its doctors say it i^ the easiest place to keep well in, but the hardest to get well in. They send their invalids into the country. It is too early yet to determine the permanent influences, of the climate of the Pacific Coast upon the race. The fast and rough life of the present generation here is not sure basis for calculation. But the indications are that the human stock will be improved both in physical and nervous qual- ities. The children are stout and lusty. The climate invites and permits with impunity such a large open-air life that it could hardly be otherwise. There is great freedom from lung difficulties ; but the weakness of the country is in nervous affections. The journey hither is a serious and tedious one, THE FRUITS OF CALIFORNIA. 337 either by land or water, and no really weak invalid should undertake it. But persons with a tendency to weak lungs, or with a low physical system that is being sapped by our rough eastern changes in temperature, can undoubtedly come over here with advantage, and secure a longer and a heartier life. San Francisco is no place for a weak lung in sum- mer, however; the interior valleys must then be resorted to by those thus afflicted; but in winter this city is as favorable a residence for health as any in the State. The abundance and variety of fruits and vegeta- bles, and their great size and vigorous health, con- tinue to be a surprise and a pleasure here. No State in the Union has such wealth in these respects as California. Nearly everything that the temperate and torrid zones unite to offer is hers by birth-right or domestication. The southern counties send up .figs and oranges and bananas and tenderest of grapes; the northern, apples in abundance; and peaches, strawberries, plums, blackberries and pears come from all. And gnarled or wormy fruit is never seen ; everything is round, fair and large. So of vegetables, — the range is wide ; only Indian corn is fastidious and requires to be humored ; and the size and perfection of shape and vigor of health are uniformly such as are seen in the East only at cattle show exhibitions and in small quantities. But the fastidious Yankee, who never forgets his home or his mother's pies and preserves, insists that the quality of the fruit and vegetables is below that of the prodiictions of the orchards and gardens 15 22 ">5^8 • ACROSS THE' CONTIMENT. of the Middle States and New England,— that there is just a lower flavor and delicacy in them; a sacrifice of piquancy and richness to perfeetiota'^f 'shape and bulk. It may be this is only an iKustfi- ' tioh of that great moral truth that Burtbn- used-'fo impress npoii- his Chambers street theateraudiene^'s, "that the Sassehgers' of infancy never return; "and 'yet I am- inclined ' to believe tberc' is really same- thing in it. ' But 'he must be an ungrateful churl, -however; who is not content -with the wealth arid variety that nature offers us here for' food, and kt ' compafatively IW prices, too.^ The table cah be ' both better and more cheaply spread 'in nearly all respects hei'e in San Francisco, than in kfiy other ' Atnericari city at this moment. Butter, perhaps, is "a weak point^ and so is fish'; for thou-^li the fishit)f the Pa'cific are generally the same in species knd '^'appearance as those of the East, the quality is c6h- ' fessedly arid unifdrmly below. Everything in the 'markets, however, is sold by the poiind ; potatoes '^alrd- grains andfiruit, as well as meat and butter. ."But this is Surely the fairest test. Weight is the finest measure of the real worth of all food j^arid why "should it not be applied to all as' to some articles? ' The be6t time to See this country is in the spring. From February to Jtiiie, when the fains are dwiri- ^dling' away tb greet the summer drouth, and viegfe- tation of all sorts 'cOmes into its freshest, richest "life, then, according to all testimony, is the itiost 'cliarmirig , season fbt the traveler. ' All these now 'bare and russet hills, thes'6 dead and dtear plaint, are then alive with vigorous gffeeri; disputed, fehadied THE, TIME TO VISIT CALIFORNIA. 339 and glorified with all the rival and richer colors. The wild flowers of Califorpia fairly carpet all the uncultivated ground. No June prairie of Illinois; ,no garden of eastern culture can rival them. For luxuriance, for variety and depth and hight of color, for complete occupation of the hills and the plains, all agree that fhere is nothing like it to be seen any- where else in nature. Then, too,, the trees are cleap and fresh ; the live oak groves are enriched, to l?ri^- liant gaifdens; by the jiow&r;t and grass below ; and .the, pine and firi forests hojd majestic yet tender watch over all the various new life of the wood^. Those who would visjt i^he Pacific States under ^Ije most favorablfi circumstances, for seeing all their .natural beauty) ^nd studying all their improved re- ;jSouraes, .would do best to come around by sea in February, and go home overland in Septeinjjer ^r . October. That would afford ample tinje to gb^erve , everything leisurely, and a-t its be^t estate. rACtfr , .the first tv^o or. three days out fr,Qn>; New york, the -.Kjyage.at this season : of starting 4s ipade under -.3Bftild and pleasant skies, on [bptb; sides the Continent ' Itis BoA easy tp make any exa^t comparison be- . tween the cost pf- living] here and that at .the; East. ivEj-icesof everythifigf both hei^e: and there, are now ; much unsettled faijdi fickle; what might be true tp- . day would -be^ wholly fj^^apged next^-jv!??}?- T^n here, there is a.lapk of settled and uniform habits ox. scales of living; aii irregular, fitfi^l .e^trayag|jice prevails ; in ljuck» to-day, a man drinks ejiampagne and flaunts his jewelry at th^ pccidp]p.t3.1;, whife ifco-oiQfi'ow,, fortune frpwning, Jie is sponging a dip- 340 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. ner and a drink from his friends, and takes a fifty- cent lodging at the What Cheer House. Large profits are generally demanded by the traders; nothing is sold for less than "two bits" (twenty-five cents) ; and a fifty-cent piece is the lowest coin that it is respectable to carry, or throw to the man who waters your horse. As a general rule, no statement can be more intelligent than that it costs about as much to live in San Francisco in gold as it does in Boston and New York in greenbacks. Food, and consequently board, is cheaper than this here ; but dry goods and luxuries are generally more. At the best hotels, the Occidental and Cosmopolitan, the price is three dollars a day in gold, which is the same as the four dollars and fifty cents per diem in greenbacks of your first New York and Boston houses. The "What Cheer House" is the famous resort for miners and mechanics ; and it has made several fine fortunes in furnishing meals and beds at fifty cents each. Some of the features of this establish- ment are original and noteworthy. It has an es- pecial ofl&ce for receiving clothes to be washed and mended, a well chosen popular library with five thousand volumes, full files of newspapers and magazines, an extensive and valuable cabinet of minerals, and a beautiful collection of stufied birds, all for the accommodation and entertainment of its guests. Its reading room is generally well-filled with plain, rough-looking men, each with book or newspaper in hand. The rule of the establishment is for every guest to buy a supply of tickets for THE SAN FRANCISCO MARKETS. 34I meals and lodgings on his arrival, and the proprietor redeems with cash what have not been used up when the customer leaves. . A "drink" at an aristocratic San Francisco bar is two bits (twenty-five cents), at a more democratic establishment one bit (ten cents). There is no coin in use less than a dime (ten cents); one of these ansTMCrs as "a bit;" two of them will pass for two bits, or twenty-five cents ; but the man who often offers two dimes for a quarter of a dollar is voted a " bummer." Some quotations from the retail family markets will still further illustrate the prices of food and living here : butter seventy-five cents a pound, eggs seventy cents a dozen, hams and bacon thirty cents a pound, potatoes one to two and one-half cents a pound, cauliflowers one dollar to one dollar and twenty-five cents per dozen, green peas five to ten cents a pound, apples four to ten cents a pound, peaches five to ten cents a pound, pears three to ten cents, grapes three to ten cents, new figs eight to fifteen cents a pound, dried figs twenty to forty cents, chickens seventy-five cents apiece, turkeys thirty cents a pound, ducks one dollar and fifty cents to two dollars a pair, quails one dollar and fifty cents per dozen, rabbits thirty-seven cents a pair, fresh salmon eight to twelve cents a pound, smelts ten cents a pound, sea bass five to ten cents, codfish ten to twelve cents, oranges four dollars to four dollars and fifty cents per hundred, lard thirty-three cents a pound. French and English dry goods at auction sold like this: — Brussels carpets one dollar and twenty- five cents to one dollar and sixty-seyeri 34^ ACROSS THE CONTINENf. cents, velvet carpets one dollar and sixty cents to two dollars' and fifteen cents, broadcloth two dollars and forty-five cents to three dollars, black silks two dollars and fifteen cents to two dollars and eighty-i five cents, plain wool delaines twenty-seven to thirty cents, number five ribbons one dollar to one dollar and seven cents, satinets fifty to sixty-two cents. These latter are wholesale raites, of coursfe, ahfl all the figures quoted are for specie. My readers will infer, what I think I have not ex- plicitly stated before, that the currency of these States is gold and silver. Paper money has beeii kept out by the force of a very obstinate public opinion and the instrumentality of State legislation. Our national currency of greenbacks are seen here simply as merchandise ; you buy and sell them at the brokers, for about seventy-five cents in coin to the dollar. Of course bein^made a "legal tender" by United States law, it is competent to pay a debt here with them; but no man who should do this once, without the sum being made proportionately larger of course, could henceforth have any creSit' or standing in the mercantile community. All large and long credits are now coupled with an express stipulation that thiey are on a specie footing, and a law of the State, known as the "specific contract act," protects such arrangements. But public opin- ion so far, and in all the small daily transactions of trade, is the great and controlling law on the subject. These Pacific States never having had any paper money of their own, and producing plenty of the material for cojii, with a mint for its manufacture, it THE. "greenback" QUESTION. 343- was very natural, though unquestionably sfelfish and unpatriotic, for them to resist the debasement and supersedure of their currency by the legal tender notes, which the gieneral government resorte(Lto for means to carry , oh the war. Their motive in excluding them was, of course, to protect their busi- ness operations from the dangerous derangements, often spreading a wide financial ruiri, that are the common accompaniments of a cheap and abundaat- currency. But since only activity and prosperity are seen to have resulted in the eastern States,— while depression and dullness have been creeping over affairs in these States,-^there has been a grad- ual change in public sentiment on the subject. Out of San Francisco, and especially in Oregon and Nevada, there is evidently a preponderating feeling now in favor of introducing the national currency. The principal arguments for it are, that the States here ought to share in all the responsibilities of their sisters in the East; if the paper money con- fers benefits, they should be enjoyed here ; if bur- dens, they too should be assumed by those that are proud to belong to the national Republic. The friends of the introduction also argue that it would ntake money more abundant and cheaper-, a:nd largely increase the tendency of eastern capitalists to make heavy investments on this Coast, and so give new life arid prosperity to all business here. But San Francisco, as the center of all the busi- ness and finanGiar operations of these Stated, holds all firmly to the present state of things. Her merchants arid bankers have prospered all along; 344 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. many of them are foreigners, and represent foreign capital ; and they are not only content to keep the business of the country on a specie basis, but are determined that it shall be so kept. They argue that these States do not need capital so much as labor ; not money so much as emigration ; and that while, as matters have now turned out, it might have been well to have accepted the government paper at the start, and gradually come to its in- fluence upon prices and business, as we did in the East, it would create great confusion and disorder to make the revolution at the present time, when there is a difference of fifty per cent, between the two currencies, and the prices based upon them; and, consequently, that it is better to continue as they have begun, and await the return of the cur- rency of the East to the coin standard. The question is being vigorously discussed ; it is, indeed, the only live issue in the politics of these States ; but so far San Francisco holds dominance over all the interior, and keeps out the greenbacks. The tendency of opinion and affairs is against her, however ; and the day for a change may not be so far distant as it superficially seems. The bankers evidently intend to control the subject; and when they find they must yield, they will lead, and be the first to introduce the paper money. As it now stahds, however, the question is a difficult and per- plexing one to manage practically. It is even doubtful if the government could spare enough currency from the East to answer for the business of these States, so far away from the financial and THE MINT AT SAN FRANCISCO. 345 government centers that they cannot draw supplies in one or two days, as all your eastern commercial points can. Certainly it will require the co-opera- tion of the government at Washington and of the State governments here, with all the facilities of the baAkers of this city, to introduce the change now without great interruption to the progress of trade and possible ruin to many delicate interests. Utah and Colorado have the paper money of the East in use ; but all the States and Territories this side of them employ only gold and silver, in sym- pathy with the fountain head of San Francisco. Of all the government institutions in San Fran- cisco, the Mint is the most interesting and impor- tant. Already it is the great manufactory of coin in the Nation, and its comparative importance in this respect is destined to increase. It coins now about twenty millions of gold and silver a year, against five millions coined at all the other govern- ment mints in the country, including the parent mint at Philadelphia. The coinage here for June and July was nearly three millions a month, and the aggregate for this year is likely to go up to twenty- four millions. Mints elsewhere on the Pacific Coast, and in the mining regions, are utterly unnecessary. There is one at Denver in Colorado, but it has nothing to do, — the gold of the Colorado and Mon- tana mines goes right by it, in dust or bars, to New York and Philadelphia. Efforts are making to get mints in Nevada and in Oregon, but tljey would only prove a waste of money. No local clamor of politicians, seeking home popularity or contractors' IS* 346 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. jobs for friends, should induce Congress. to )deld to such demands. Two mints are only needed for the whole country, at New York or Philadelphia, and at San Francisco. The metals, as soon as mined, drift at once to the commercial and financial centers; there only can their true value be known, — there only the use to which commerce may choose to put them. Sometimes, she demands their exportation in bars, and again in coin. Besides, the business, of coining is an intricate and delicate one, requiring large responsibilities, expensive establishments, and men of both science and integrity. It should not be needlessly cheapened and scattered. Govern- ment may well have assay offices in all the mining districts, acting as branches of the mints, to receive the metalsi and give coin or exchange for their full value, minus the bare cost of manipulating, in order to accommodate especially the poorer and smaller miners ; but the multiplication of mints, I repeat, is an unnecessary, wastefu* and dangerous operation. The Mint here is now in charge of oiie of the best merchants -of the city, Mr. R. B. Swain, but it has no adequate accommodations. It is crowded into the back and upper rooms of an old and ordi- nary block in the principal business street. But provision has been made by Congress for a distinct and appropriate building. The metals are received at the Mint iii all manner of half-worked forms* in dust, nuggets, rough bars, silver and gold mixed togethei*, and more or less dross with all. Each parcel is kept distinct, first assayed, to discover its exact value, and then worked over, the dross ex- THE WORLDS BALANCING-HOUSE. 347 pelled, and the silver and gold separated. Fire, water and chemicals are the means employed. The processes are simple enough and exquisitely enter- taining, as you follow them with eye and intelligent explanation. The results are returned to the owner either in solid bars, bearing official stamp of their value, or in freshly made coin. ' Much gold and silver aire already exported direct from here to China to settle the balances of trade of both New York and London merchants; and when the Pacific Railroad is done, and the line of steamships to China is running, San Francisco, as the center of the gold and silver producing region of the world, and the half-way house of commerce, will become the great financial and balancing center for all the trade between Europe and America, and Asia. LETTER XXX. THE MINING QUESTIONS AGAIN: GENERAL REVIEW. San Francisco, September i, I MUST go back to the Mines for a renewed word of caution to the East. You are tempted there with all sorts of seductive ventures in the way of mining in these Pacific States. There are many men, both there and here, busy in working up a furore for investments in this business. Every steamer carries speculators and adventurers to the East, with mines to sell, — ^good, bad and indiffer- ent, — but mostly uncertain. These have often been, and are likely to be, made the basis of joint stock companies of mammoth capitals, yet low- priced shares ; their prospects set before the public in flaming advertisements, studded with stiuining statements as to the assay of the ore and the as- sured prospects of the company. It is safe to ad- vise people to put no trust in such enterprises. It is safe to assert that the money made by them will be made out of the stock-buyers, and not out of the mines, and shared by the officers of the company and their friends. Very likely, the latter are in the first instance swindled in the purchase of the mines, and that they are only repeating, in another form CAUTION TO CAPITALISTS. 349 and before a larger audience, the game that has been played on them. Most of the mines now being of- fered to the eastern public are so remotely located, distant from markets, from wood and water, that, even if valuable in themselves, they cannot for many years to come be worked to advantage and profit No investments, I repeat, should be made in mines in this region, except after the most intelli- gent and complete study of the whole subject, and of the merits of the special enterprise offered, either by the capitalist himself, or by some one in whom he can place the most implicit confidence. Not only the mine itself should offer assured evidence of value, and of favorable location, but the capitalist should also be assured of its management here by persons of both intelligence and integrity. This point is as vital as the other, and as difficult, more difficult indeed, to be secured. These qualities of intelligence and integrity are rare here, and com- ^land a high price. They can generally do better than to work for other people. Eastern capitalists^ investing largely, — and it is certainly best to invest enough to command their personal attention, or not at all,— will always find it wise to send out one of their own number, or a person equally dependable, to oversee the expenditures and direct the financial part of their operations, and let him find here that scientific and practical knowledge on the subject of mining, that he cannot of course possess. This he will obtain in mining engineers of repute, and in old practical miners, the latter most often men who have been foremen or overseers in mines or mills. 350 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. The discoverers and prospectors of mines are a cla^s by themselves, and are rarely the right men to wo^k a mine for other people, I find my conviction, of distrust of indiscrirainate investments in mining, and my growing conserva- tism on the whole subject, abundantly confirmed by the experience and testimony of others. There is but one voice among the oldest and best business men of this city,^— men who have gone through all the mining excitements of the Coast and shared] in them all,-^and that is in fullest sympathy with what I have written. Mr. Charles Allen of Boston, the reporter for your Massachusetts Supreme , Court, who has followed our party through the . Nw^a silver and the California gold mining districts, e?- , aniining them and their operations with(pyen mpfe of strictness and detail, inbehalf-ofeast^rp elicits i§i>d,: capitalists, i^than we did/ Itfind^ has;writteji _^i}ie almost exact transcripts of' my conclusions, -i^ithput any l^nowlfidge qf';what the^e were, \Vfe ,^nd them fully eqnfinned, too, by jtiie^ printed opin- jigijiSF of; Professor Whitney of ±he C^ifpriiift Sta;te Geological Survey, ,pn record; here. Mr. Williap lAshhurner,' who -%a§, been the mineralogisLof thgt survey, au'd is noyirjtliexQnfi.de.liti9l. mining engineer jof some of the jno^t important enterprises aii4 in- ^t^@res,tson th:is Coast, — and.whq isifrom Stppkbrjdg^, (Mass.;) and the son-in-;la,w of Mr. Jonathan: E. Field pf that town,— acts confidently and. qautiously ;^on the same principles, and all his experience justi- ffies th^r, soundness. There is no higher or more ,ilit€flligent aHthppty on t^gse subjectR th^n he. DOUBLE INJURY OF DECEPTION. 35 1 None of those who hold these views belittle the mineral wealth of these States. Those who know most about it have, indeed, the largest ideas of its extent and its value. But even thus utterly unable to measure these riches and the amounts to be drawn from them for the use of the world, they have learned how fickle are their individual deposits, how : incomplete and uneconomical are present modes of extracting and working them, how remote from supplies are their best fields, and how difficult, al- mosfjmpossible, has been and still is the reduction of the business of mining to order and legitimacy. Those, too, who have the true interests of these States at heart, who foresee their future, and would ■have their progress steady and sure, cannot but look, upon the invitation of eastern capital hither Tinder &lse igxpectations and by deceptive enter- prises, with equal sorrow and indignation. The firaud arid the injury are as great to the West as the East.: Every, dollar swindled out of the Atlantic States by speculating adventure on the Pacific loses at 'least' two -dixllars on the great balance-sheet lo this section. It will keep that much, at least, back "front legitimate- enterprise and investment here. There is field enough on this Coast and the way hither; for all the capital and all the labor the Eaest can spare, — ^legitimate, honorable, profitable field; and so every dollar, every hand turned from thisio unremunerative, 'baseless enterprise,- is indeed a rdouble fraud. Sound theories and healthy haMts as to mining are Fast becoming •dominant here; few enterprises, controlled by old miners and long: resi- 352 ACROSS THE CONTINENT, dents, are not now meeting with some degree of success, or carried on with a fair integrity. Only- eastern credulity and passion, fed of course by reck- less cupidity here, can repeat on a large scale the lamentable experience through which this wisdom has been gained. I warn all whom my words may reach against feeding or yielding to the passion; for they peril in it both their consciences and their cash, and bring injury to the best interests of Cali- fornia and her sister States. The results of the geological survey of Califor- nia, under Professor Whitney, just gow beginning to come before the public, will aid materially in the dissemination of reliable knowledge on all subjects connected with the State's wealth and the opportu- nities for its development. That survey is one of the most comprehensive and thorough scientific la- bors of the description ever attempted in this coun- try; so far as known, its results have challenged the admiration of scientific men everywhere ; both its intelligence and its integrity are unimpeachable ; and the State of California owes it to her best in- terests and to her reputation the world over to carry the work through on the high scale with which it has been commenced, disregarding the suggestions of prejudiced ignorance, the clamor of baffled speculation, and the appeal of a narrow economy. No money can be so well expended by California as in telling the world exactly what she is, in whole and in detail ; and this is the work that Professor Whitney has carried forward lo its near, triumphant completion. NEW MINING DISTRICT IN CALIFORNIA. 353 Looking back over our mining experiences, and taking the average testimony of each district as equally reliable, I find myself impressed with the su- perior richness of the Colorado gold mines. Their ore averaged as uniformly one hundred dollars a ton, as that of Nevada, either Austin or Virginia, or of California does fifty dollars. The extraction is not as complete because of the more intricate na- ture of the precious deposits ; but means to over- come this, though perhaps at enlarged cost, seemed successfully initiated while we were there. There has been opened a new mining district in California the present season, in the extreme west- ern part of Nevada County, among the higher hills of the Sierras, and near the line of the Pacific rail- road, whose ores resemble those of Colorado, both in richness and in peculiarity of combinations, andi which, already attracting great attention, seems des- tined to become both popular and profitable. The poorer portions of the ore of one mine are sold on the spot at forty dollars a ton ; and the rest are taken some distance to be worked. But the first and most important step in the successful treatment of all of it is believed to be roasting, which is not a common pro- cess in California. A single chunk of ore from this mine was so fat with wealth that it yielded at the rate of over thirty-nine hundred dollars to the ton ! There is even increased doubt and anxiety as to the future of the Comstock Ledge in Nevada, which is the great mineral deposit of the Continent, if not the world. The mines are turning out bullion more rich- ly than in early summer ; but they are spending large n 354 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. sums for explorations for new deposits, with results that are, on the whole, disheartening. Dividends are decreasing and stopping ; assessments coming ; and the stocks are about half the rates in the spring. The gold and copper mines down in Arizona, along the Colorado River, as it runs between that Territory and California, are also coming more into favor and development. That river offers conven- ient and cheap access to them ; and the chief ob- stacles, as yet, are the lack of steam communication, the barrenness of the neighboring country, and the hostility of the Indians. Mr. Charles L. Strong, the famous superintendent of the famous Gould & Curry mine in Virginia, until within two years, has just returned from an exploring expedition in that direction, and reports most valuable discoveries of mines, which he has taken up in behalf of some heavy New York capitalists, whom he represents. From Idaho we hear already of deserted villages and impoverished gold-diggings ; successful mining there is fast falling back on the quartz leads ; and as a consequence the occupation of the "wandering Jews," the pioneers in gold-hunting, is gone. The experience 'of the East with oil wells is a fit parallel to the mining experience of the Pacific States. The excitement, the specula:tion, the lucky hits of the few, the losses and disappointments of the many, the sud- den creation of a town with all the elements of civili- zation, and its almost as sudden desertion for new and more'favored localities, — ;in all these features and in many incidental ones, the history of one experience is counterpart and repetition of that of the other. COPPER AND QUICKSILVER. 355 Copper and q^icksilver are to be added to the profitable mineral productions of California. The most brilliant success has attended the discover and working of both these valuable metals, each, however, in a single locality. The copper miijes lie in the foot-hills of the Sierras, a day's ride west from Stockton, and the town they have built up is called appropriately Copperopolis. They are being developed very extensively and with much profit; no less than three thousand tons of the ore goes East and to England every month ; and an increase from these and other mines to twenty thousand tons a month is predicted by another year. The suc- cessful smelting of the ore for the metal is not in- troduced here yet, except on a small scale. The pro- cesses abroad are so much cheaper and more com- plete that it pays better to ship the rough ore direct. The great mines of Cinnabar, from which quick- silver is extracted, are those of New Almaden, on the inside of the Coast hills, about sixty miles south of San Francisco; and they have become one of the most curious and interesting objects for visit and inspection in all California. Their discovery and successful working have had a marked influence upon the mining interests of the country, since quicksilver is universally used, and in large quanti- ties, to separate the gold and silver from the parti- cles of dross with which they are bound up in the ore, and the production of- the article throughout the world is quite limited. Spain, Peru and Austria only have mines of it besides California; and the New Almaden now controls the prices for the world. 3S6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Its present production is four thousancj to five thou- sand 'flasks a month, worth forty dollars a flaslc, and the net profits of the operation are about one hun- dred thousand dollars a month. The history of this property, its discovery and ownership, has been full of romance ; there was great dispute over it, a long contest in law, vast sums paid in litigation, and ■finally a purchase of rival claims. It is now owned 'by a New York company, with a capital of ten millions, and is a magnificent property. The cin- nabar is a red, brick-looking earth or ore, which is dug from its veins like any other ore, fashioned into small squares or bricks, built up into a kiln, and then fire set under and among it; and the precious quicksilver exudes in a liquid stream or vapor, and is caught and bottled for market. Other cinnabar veins of promise, as other copper mines, are in existence, and to a greater or less ex- tent improved, but these are the distinctive and controlling interests in both metals. In crossing the Rocky Mountains from Denver to Salt Late City, I remember seeing evidences of generous cin- nabar deposits at various points along the Norlii Platte ; and the United States are probably destined to be the great .producers of quicksilver. California is not without its petroleum, also: there has been fierce dispute as to its existence ; much of furore in the search for it; and much wild speculation, into which the East has been drawn most unprofitably, upon the basis of its discovery 4n large quantities. That it exists, in greater or less degree, in some form or another, in one or two bf THE PETROLEUM FEVER — OIL VS. WINE. 357 the distant Coast counties, may no longer be dis- puted ; but it yet remains to be proven whether it exists under successful commercial circumstances, that is, whether it will pay. I believe there is no well-authenticated case of a flowing well yet ; I am sure much more money has been put into the wells than has been taken fr'om them ; and' I am positive that the only money yet made from petroleum on the Pacific Coast has been made by the land-own- ers and the speculators. The oil fever has clearly a better basis and a more healthy promise in the East than at the West ; and yet, under the influence of rhetorical representations by speculators and their agents, two companies of eastern Capitalists have put up large sums of money, and bought a quarter of a million of acres of supposed oil lands. in the southern counties of California. Their search for the oil has not had brilliant success yet ;. and one of the companies has 'adopted the very sensible plan of turning their land to good account by planting it with grape vines aiid going into the manufacture of wine. This is not the entertain- ment to which they invited themselves, but it cer- tainly promises better results. They propose to set out ten millions of vines within two years ; and the other company in the same position will probably fbllow suit with both vines and olives. This is an odd turn for a petroleum speculation to take, but it is fortunate for the true interests of California, and' if well followed up will prove remunerative to the victims of the oil fever, — and Pirofessor Sillinian's rhetorical report. LETTER XXXI. THE FAREWELL FESTIVITIES': POLITICS AND POL- ITICIANS. San Francisco, September 2. There is something of pathos in the very word parting. Few can confront the fact, can break any experience, from which life has been taken, or to which life has been given, without a flutter in the heart. But this is my last letter from the Pacific Coast. This morning ends the record of the " Col- fax party" on this shore : we are closing that wealth of experience which it is difficult to believe has been made ours in only four months' time : host and hostess gather to whelm us with final generosity; to give coup de grace to a summer of such hospi- tality, both of sense and spirit, as was never ours before. Do you wonder we are all a trifle senti- mental ; and that I would coin my daintiest phrase for the final adieux.' Yet the themes left on my note-book are prosaic and practical ; and poetry fit to the occasion is felt better than written. Besides, these emotions, voiced to Atlantic shore, would reach unsympathizing ears. So you shall not know these words that are uttered, these scenes that are transpiring, in hotel parlor and steamer saloon, this THE LAST WEEK IN SAN FRANCISCO. 3S9 morning, as guest and host are parting. They belong to those things that should always be taken "during the effervescence." Our final visit in San Francisco has been crowded with most agreeable attentions, both of a public and a private character. Not half that were proffered could be enjoyed. Excursions to the country, and on the bay ; visits to public institutions of the city and neighborhood ; the seeing of the Mechanics' Fair, a fine exposition of the manufacturing indus- try and art ambition of California ; addresses here, there, everywhere ; private breakfasts and dinners ; and a grand final and farewell ball and banquet- by the bankers and merchants of the city, at the Oc- cidental Hotel, — this has been the entertainment to which Mr. Colfax and his companions -have been invited during the last week. But all are over now, — the Speaker has made his farewell speech; Governor Bross has addressed the last Sunday School ; the brass band is hushed, — "And silence, like a poultice, comes, To heal the blows of sound ; — " the final photograph is taken, — and rare photo- graphs, indeed, both of faces and scenery, do skill of the artist and clearness of the air combine to produce on this Coast : the tongue has wagged its last good-bye; and the hour of waving handker- chiefs is passing ! Conspicuous among the more private entertain- ments of the week w^s a dinner party to Mr. Colfax by the leading banker of the city, and to which 36e ACROSS THE CONTINENT. were gathered from twenty to thirty of the, most noted and notable bankers and business men of the Coast, heads and managers? of the great enter-prises q£ the Pacific. It was;ai rare colleetioni of strong men, real kings, in: this- Israel, and no city of the Atlantic could marshal a superior. The. dinner it« self was a. triumph, was high, art itselfj.in ifis .way. It was said to have never had. its i equal before i^ San Frandseo ; and I certainly never sat through: its superior, for richness and rarity, both in its, ele^ ments and. their serving, anywhere. The farewell- ball and banquet was a, brilliant fete of a more public character. Two or three hundred ladies and gentlemen joined in the .festival; the hotel was surrendered to its accommodation ; the tickets were no less than twenty-five dollars in gold ; and in aggregate and in detail, in preparation andi achievement, it was as elegant and as flattering am entertainment and social compliment as ever city tendered or citizen received. There- is more catho- licity of feeling as to such amusements among church people here than in the East ; dancing is not a sin, even, among the San Francisco orthodox ; and- the guests were greeted at thia ball by the leaders in every good word and' work in the town,, who, men and women^ made themselves gay with, its, pleasures, and contributed: to its brilliancy with> their beauty and grace. I had a home pride in recognizing, in the most womanly of the womea and the most beautiful of the belles, a daughter and grand-daughter, respectively, another hoidihg sa- credly exclusive the fead burial-place for strangers and travelers, another the depot fot the steamships-, ©thers undisputied with lukuriant and grasping na- ture, and anchor, amid all) in front of the quaittl old city of Panama. The harbor its^f is center Fot- wide commerce North and Soiith, gathering here td cross the Isthmus, and reach American and EuSro- DEATH ON SHtPBOARSi. 35^ |ican ceto&rs ; but a bad bar forces the slow use of lighters for passengers and freight. We left the steamer 4ne less than came upon it. There was a death among the steerage passengers, two dajs before reaching Panama; but the ib®dj was brought on, and lies now in the lonely strangersi' cemetery out in the bay. Poor fellow 1 He was eager to go "home" to die; That hope buoyed him up, as it keeps alive a feeble, struggling lidy in the cabin: but disease was too strong for even thife tonic, — ^and now be lies buried, afar from kindred, dependent upon strangers for the last offices, and bearing, painted on the simple board above his grave, these niore sympathetic than coherent lines, the fcomposition of one of the ship's guard :^- Death chanced to roam o'er ffie ocean's bireaSt, And spied a hipless -warider- -er wanting rest, Who from the western land of gold returning To see his childiibo^S hoiiie ■vfes yearning; But unpitying death, with resistless stroke. The casket of his soiil brbltb ope, And set forth to Another Hoiiie From whence again it ne'CT will roam. We Spent the day from early morning till l^te evening upon the Isthmus. By grace arid gold, i few passengers were landed at once at Panama^ "*^hich ga^e us several houi-s there for brfeakfest, for sight-seeing) for shopping before the great crowd 380 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. of our company, the baggage and the fast freight could be transhipped, and the trains for their con- veyance over to Aspinwall Ke made ready. Panama we found to be only an improvement over Acapulco ; it mingled more modern quality with its as ancient features ; the streets were broader ; the houses of two stories ; and carts and rickety omnibuses, and a fine carriage or two, as well as retail stores by Jews or Yankees, and large warehouses under Eng- lish or American Superintendence, showed the in- novations and elevations of commerce. There was a flavor of Spanish about everything, however ; the food, the churches, the stores, the town generally*; decayed, effete, luxuriant, tropical Spanish. The natives were a good deal mixed, wearing all the mulatto shades; the women flaunting in narrow, sleazy white gowns, rich with wide negro ruffles and furbelows; and the children rolUcking in single, short, wide chemises, or unblushing and bold with utter freedom of covering. The churches, ancient, cheap and moss-grown, won no veneration except for their antiquity ; they told of no interest in re- ligion ; of nothing but a tawdry, vulgar fanaticism ; a lazy, cock-fighting priesthood, and an indifferent parish. We found the bats flying about in the arches above and behind the altar, and priests and boys firing guns at them among the poor tinselry of the worship, with results more dartiaging to " bell, book and candle" than birds. The things to buy here at Panama are fine linen lawns for ladies' dresses ; they are delicate and pretty, and, Panama being a free port, cheap; besides which they are THE RAILROAD OVER THE ISTHMUS. 38 1 rarely to be had in New York, or other northern cities. Our passengers also found some bargains in other linen goods and under clothing ; and their wardrobes were sensibly improved, without corres- ponding benefit to Uncle Samuel's customs revenue. At mid-day, the long and crowded passenger train started Across the Isthmus, — treasure and baggage waited for a second, — and we had that ever-memora- ble ride, in the experience of all who have ever made this trip, between the Continents, from ocean to ocean, in the very fullness of the tropics, ovef rails fairly built upon human bodies, so fatal was the miasma of the country to nearly all classes of imported laborers. The road is fifty miles long, and the run is made in two to three hours. Mo- n6polizing the commerce of all the Pacific Coast of both North and South America, the gateway for all travel from Continent to Continent, it is a rich pos^. session to its owners. The fare for this two hours' ride is no less than twenty-five dollars, and freights are correspondingly high. The sleepers and ties of the track are of lignum-vitse wood, the telegraph posts of cement, as thus only are both protected from rot and insect. The road is well appointed in other respects, and the service unexceptionable. But the ride was rare revelation. All was sub- stantially new and strange to our unused northern eyes; and we stared and wondered and absorbed through all this tropical passage. The sun was not fierce ; one will suffer more from heat in a ride from' Springfield to New York of a dry and dusty August- day ; but the warmth was deep and high, — ^it lay in 382 ^ROSS THE CONXISENI. tbicfe, hjsayy, sensuous folds in the air^— it di^ pofe fret, but it permeated and subduM and enriched. With Nature, it was season of res-t,-— colprg were dulled from the spring and early summer hues,— r but what quantity ! what ripeness and fullness; what luxuriant,, wanton rioting! There was no* limit to variety or aboundingnesS' of tfee and shrub, and plant and flower and grass. Waste 3n4 robbery, 4here could not bie in such abundance ;; thfi vacancy ©f torday's ax. or fire is'filled to-morrow; only daiJy ^§e of hatchet and scythe keeps open path.. PalmiS everywhere,- singly andi in. groves^ with great rough fruit, rich in oil; fernS' as trees and in forests ; clus- ^rs of bananas as big _as an honest two-bushel, charcoal basket, yet hidden by the generoias leaves of their tree; bread-fruit and co.eoa-BMts ripening. gnd- rotting out of reach of man or beast; tall oaks ajid short oaks ; littjbe trees and big trees of every femily, interliaqed sO' closely that you could not teJl vrherfeone begun and the other left ofF; vimes, ten? der and strong, marrying everything to everybody, cunning up, and running down, and running around, dropping dxjwn lines straight and stiff like: rqpes, all through the. woods, making swings everywhere, but permitting no place for their play ;'great, coarse^ flglming flower, and delicate, tender microscopic blos- Sjom holding up its. cup by roadside,, between rails, on every haajid ; occasionally bright plumage .of gay bird fluttered across the vision among the thidc foliage, .$.a4 hid behwid leaves so wide and long that we. knew why Adam and Eve needed ino tailor Of mantua-njaker, — :one would suffice for ail oi;d,in,ary LIKB m THE TRQi«€S. 383 Igngtji of nakedness : — thus and mere like it and continuously was our ride across the Isthmus. At frequent intervals alpng the rqad are well-, hujlt stations vfith handsama yardp. gnd, gardens and American oecupantSi Adjoining, and at other points, we passed, eroflrded negro hamlets and villa? ges; their houses frequently thatched both, on, tpp aad side with the generous leaves of the ftdjoining forests, and their food the easy-rgrpwing fruits and vegetables of the tropic^. What work, they will do the: railroad- probably furnishes. 'I'he mark, of the white man is among them ;, if dead, he. yet liveth in the blood of the native ; but the h^bit of th.e i^egro is dominant. The climate and tiieir rude ■s\fants invite a lazy, sensiial. life, ajid such is. theirs. There is smajl. expenditure for clothes ; boys and. girls, even. of full-growth, stroll freely about Jaefbre the passing trains, and among, t^heir fellows, witk not a rag. of clothing toffieir bodies; and the men, Tijfhen they do work, strip as 'fully to. the ta^k. We pass by the thick a^A sinuous C^hagrepRiyer, up 3.fld down w^ich in fiat-boats the ^^rly passen- gers by this' route were pushed by the negro ;; along, whose banks' in this slaw and painful passage did many lie down to die ; and out of whose fetid, breath came many a longrlurking and finally fatal fever. The passage is now made jso quickly in, the cars, tJigt there is little, danger at any season of taking;; the fever of the country. Exposure to the rain,, or imprudence in. eating, axided to a system receptive; q£ disease, are quite likely to bring it on ; but per- sons in ordinary he^ilth and. takipg reasonable care 384 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. of themselves need have no apprehensions. As a precaution, many travelers by this route take small doses of quinine for a day or two before reaching the Isthmus and a day or two after passing it. In this way the system is pretty surely toned up against the feverish tendencies of the passage. We came into .Aspinwall, in the first rain storm that we had felt since rain and hail pelted us so mercilessly on the Plains near Fort Kearney, most four months ago, and found that a dreary new town of one street, lined with hotels and shops and Jamaica negroes a:nd negresses. These people are proof against this climate ; they luxuriate and thrive froni the start here, and it was due to their importation that the railroad was finally completed, as it was, after all other importations, white and black alike, had fallen in their tracks along its line of rotting nature, stirred to revengeful miasma by shovel and pick. Aspinwall has no past like Panama, no present and no future but what the railroad and steamships make for it. There was a political revolution and civil war in progress on the Isthmus as we came through; but what it was all about, nobody could intelligently tell us; and we were not half so ex- cited by the fact as we should have been over the ebullition of a neighboring volcano, — the latter be- ing the more strange and interesting event here in Central America than the former. The town had little to interest us ; plenty of tropical fruits and imported liquors; plenty of cheap stores, but no "bargains," and not a wanting watch crystal on the Isthmus ! So we were glad when the baggage was ON THE ATLANTIC SIDE. 385. all on board our new steamer, and the gun sum- moned us to follow it to our places. The steamship service on the Atlantic side, be- tween Aspinwall and New York, has been very poor for years ; a disreputable monopoly, and greatly aggravating the perils and discomforts of the Cali- fornia voyage. But lately the management has been changed, and the service much imjiroved ; and we were in the luck to connect with a new and ele- gant steamship, on her first voyage, and uijder com- mand of that Nestor of Isthmus-going sailors, Cap- tain Tinklepaugh.' The discomfort of a crowd continued and increased, for the vessel was of less size than that «f the Pacific side ; and we missed the shambles and the butcher's shop before getting through, for the meats for the round trip on this side, covering twenty days' time, are taken out of -New York on the ice. But in all other respects the accommodations and service were beyond criti- cism ; and old travelers on the route reported the improvement from the sad past beyond description. Good fortune attended us, too, in the weather ; the September equinoctial was past due, but we escaped even the breath of it. The Caribbean Sea forgot its accustomed crispness and spared our stomachs and appetites. Threading our way through the West India Islands ; stopping at none, and catching glimpse of but few ; passing near but outside Cuba, and waving our hands to its eastern shores, we swept' up on calm waters, under summer skies, into the broad Atlantic ; caught the Gulf Stream and crossed it; cherished our fears of a rough time "off Hat-* 17 «S 3^6 ACROSS THE CONTINENT.. teras," aad woke to pass the dreaded spot on tbe smoothest sea o£ ali ; and, our steamer being fast and on her trial trip, and winds and seas fevoring from first to last,, we disposed of our two thousand miles, and swept into never more beautiful New York harbor on soft September morning, and up ta the doek, in j«st six days and a half from AspinwaLt t3iis being the shortest trip ever made by any vessel. Though- one day longer on the Pacific side thaa usual, the whole journey froitt San Francisco ta New York was thus accomplished in twenty-on© days. The whole distance is five thousand miles; with fine weather and crowding the steamers up ta their fullest power, it can be passed over in eighteea or nineteen days ; but the trip is ordinarily extended to twenty-two to twenty-four days. The tropical weather kept with us until within two days of New York, and indeed isi the usual experience of two-* thirds to three-fourths the voyage, on both Coasts* whatever the season. On this side no land is seen, from leaving the Isthmus, till Cuba, and none again till tiie Jersey shore is sighted as New York ig neared. The whole lineof this service,, on both sides the Continent, has now passed imto the- hands of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, heretofore con- trolling only the steamers on the Pacific Coast This; event is. hailed with delight by ail California tfavelers, old and new. The Pacific Company is the most notable triumph oi our American steam marine, and is as popular as, it has been, successfult, No passenger steamships, in the world are larger or more ql^asfi than th^ii?? J no service, more satisfac- THE PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY, jgjf toiy to the public. They have within a year p^i, three new and mammoth vessels on the Pacifiq portion of the Mne,. and new and larger and better steamers than have ever been employed on this side ■will be at once placed in the service to connect with them. A uniform, excellence in accoBiraodationa will be maintained on both sets of steamers ; and foe , the first time in the history of California emigration and commerce, their facilities will be somewhat commensurate to their extent and importance, and the voyage will invite rather than deter the traveler^ For the past few months,, the tide of travel, has been greater from than to California; the larger prosperity of the East has invited home the unsuc- cessful there ; but this is. not likely to continue. The general flow must be the other way. And with these more agreeabk facilities, and a widening curi- osity and interest in the region of the Pacific Coast, there will soon grx)w up a large pleasure travel from the Atlantic States to those of the Pacific, Tb^ public and the Pacific Steamship Company are both fortunate in the new arrangement, and the proa- perity of the latter is likely to be still more conspic- uous. The owners and chief managers; are in New York ; though all its heavy interests and property have been till now on the Pacific Coast i an Cessful, oi to pick up a precarious liviftg, if uriludky. Many -dis» :charged soldiers also remain there or in the neighboring districts. The growing travel and commerce across the Continent floats in other pers©ns, "good, bad and indiSerent" as to habits and self- control. Other a.ecessions to the " Gcntfle" strength and agitatitm ' are constantly being Mia4e. The merchants of that tilass are iB<- Creasing and becoming prosperous ; l3|»ssewho hste been sHent and submissive under the Mormon hierarchy, iSare now to demonstrate their real feelings, uader the protection of sympathy and soldiers; the " Daily Union Vedette" -cotitinaes to be paWished.as orgaa of the soldiers and other ^'GentHes," and is bold and unsparing and •constant in its denunciations of the Mormon church and its influ- ences ; Rev. Norman MacLeod, diaplaim of the soldiers, and past« of the Congregational society in Salt Lake City, has returned from -a summer's trip to N«vada a»d California, "wilh ftmds for building a *neetittg»lioaS8, and increased zeal against the Mormons; a "Gten- itile" theater has been established ; vMioffis social orgawixations, m the same interest, are increasing, and growing infl»fintial over the ■young people ; General Connor himself, his fellow-^cers and sol- tliers are all bitter in their haib-ed of the Mormons, and eager for -opportunities to subdue them to the governmental -authority ; Gov- *mor Durkee seems less disposed to be tolerant of the Mormofl. ■control and the Mormon disrespect to federal authority, than his predecessors generally have Tseen; and the judgK, goaded, like all the rest of the " Gentiles," by Mormon insults and MorJnon defiane*^ and their own incapadty, under government neglect, to"perfi*m their ■daties, more than share the common feeling of airtagonism to the Churcjh lea^e^. Thus the two parties are growi;^ more ^id more antagonistii^ more and more into a spirit of conflict. Thus, too, while are rap* idly aggregating and operatmg the means by -which tlie Mormoft problem is lere long to be solved, even withoiA the special heip or interference of the government, are also coming into life the (elements and the danger of a more serious and pefsbnal colUsioa, Sn which the Mormons, from their numerical superiafity, wotild most probably be successful, and, quite likely, wreak terrible v«n« SUPPLEMENTAllV PAPERS: THE MORMONS. 395 geance on their enemiiS. Of course, sudi a result Wotfld evoke full retribution on their own heads ; for then peot)le and government would arouse, and enforce speedy and complete subjugation. But tiiese threatened and dreaded results ought to be and can he avoided. The government has now the opportunity to guide and control the o|)eration of natural causes to the overthrow of po- lygamy and the submission of the Mormon aristocracy, without the ■shedding of blood, without the loss of a valuable population and their industries. The steps to this are, first, a sufficient military force In the Territory "to keep the peace ; " to protect freedom of speech, of the press, and of religious proselytjsm ; to forbid any per- sonal outrages on the rights ot the Mormons ; and to prevent any Tevenges by them upon the " Gentiles." And next, the supplanting ot all polygamists in federal offices by 'men not connected with that distinctive sin and offense of the church. These steps, wisely taken, firmly administered, would rapidly give the growing anta-polyga" inous elements such moral power, as would ensure speedy and bloodless revolution. It may not be wise or necessary, at least at present^ in view of past indulgence, to undertake to enforce the fed- eral law against polygamy; that maybe held in abeyance until the effect of such proceedings as have been indicated is fully developed. In short, 1 would change the government policy frohi the "do- nothing " to the "make-haste-slowly " character ; I would have its influence decidedly and continuously felt in the Territory against the crime of polygamy. Neglecting to do this, there is danger of anarchy and deadly con- flict springing up on that arena ; there is also sure prospect that the people of the country at large will, in their iwipatiettce and disgust, force upon Congress such radical measures against the Mormons, as are, in regard to our past neglect and the present opportunity of peaceful revolution, to be almost as deeply deprecated. In either event, the responsibility will rest heavily aftd sharply upon the President and his Cabinet, who are permitting the affairs of the Territory to drift on in the present loose and dangerous way, either ignorant o( or indifferent to, the rapidly developing social conflict there. DEFENSE OF POLYGAMY. My readers may be interested to know the reply of the Mormons to my letters on Ae subject of Polygamy. The Deseret News, the 396 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. official organ of the church, had such a reply in August, from which I quote : — " As a people we view every revelation from the Lord as sacred. Polygamy was none of our seeking. It came to us frcan Heaven, and we recognized in it, and still do, the voice of Him whose right it is not only to teach us but to dictate and teach all men, for in His hand is the breath of the nostrils, the life and existence of the proudest, most exalted, most learned or puissant of the children of men. It is extremely difficult, nay utterly impossible, for those who have not been "bleksed with the gift of the Holy Ghost, to enter into our feelings, thoughts and faith in these matters. They talk of rev- eJation given, and of receiving counter revelation to forbid what has been commanded, as if man was the sole author, originator and de- signer of them. Granted that they do not believe the revelations we have received come from God. Granted that they do not believe in God at all, if they so desire it. Do they wish to hrand a whole people with the foul stigma of hypocrisy, who, from their leaders to the last converts that have made the dreary journey to these moun- tain wilds for their faith, have proved their honesty of purpose and deep sincerity of faith by the most sublime sacrifices ? Either that is the issue of their reasoning, or they imagine that we serve and worship the most accommodating Deity ever dreamed of in the wildest vagaries of the most savage polytheist. Either they imagine that we believe man concocts and devises the revelations which we receive, or that we serve a God who will oblige us at any time by giving us revelations to suit our changing fancies, or thet dictation of men who have declared the canon of revelation full, sealed up the heavens as brass, and utterly repudiate the interference of the Almighty in the aflairs of men. By the first of these suppositions we would be gross hypocrites ; by the other grosser idiots. "Know, gentlemen of the press and all whom it may concern, that though a repugnance to this doctrine may be expressed by one in a thousand of the people whom you call ' Mormons,' he is not one, nor recognized as such by that religious community of which he may be called a member. If one revelation is untrue, all are untrue ; if one was revealed by God, all have their origin in the same Divine source." The News goes on to declaim that greater purity, better morals accompany Polygamy than Monogamy, and adds : — " As well might it be said that the affection of the parent must be confined to one child, and that the affection of a united family could not reciprocate that of the parent, or jealousy would creep in, bit- terness of thought be engendered and the finer' feelings and suscep- tibilities be blunted, :is that one man cannot entertSn for and ex- tend affection to more than one woman, or that his affection could not be eciprocated by aiore than one without the same results being called i nto existence. "The presumed aiisery consequent upon polygamy is advanced SUrrLEMENTARY PAPERS: THE MORMONS. 39/ as one of the strongest arguments against it. Upon what is it based ? Some person met and conversed with some other person who did not enjoy that amomit of happiness in polygamy, which they desired to realize. Who does in any condition of life ? How many monogamic wives curse the hour they ever entered the bonds of wedloclf ? There is no argument in it, nor can an argument be logically based upon it. It is a statement, and can be met by a counter statement which the experience of this united people can indorse, they having had a practical acquaintance with, and an ex- perience in, the workings of both forms of marriage. Take fifty polygamic famihes indiscriminately from this community, and the same number in the same manner from any other community in the world, and there will be found more conjugal unhappiness in the latter than exists in the former." The Mormons point lustily to the incontinence and license that exist in society, where one man to one wife is the rule, as practical argument in favor of their system. It is their final and favorite ap- peal, and always very satisfactory — to themselves. They hold that there is more real purity and order, in the intercourse of the sexes, in society based upon Polygamy, than in that where Monogamy is the law, and license the practice. A SPECIMEN OF' MORMON PREACHING. This extract from a late Sunday discourse in the Salt Lake City Tabernacle by Heber C. Kimball, the first Vice-President and chief prophet of the church,, is a fair specimen of a good deal of the preaching of the Mormon bishops. I have reports of other ser- mons by Brigham Young himself and others, so absolutely filthy in language, that they cannot be reproduced in print anywhere : — "Ladies and gentlemen, good morning. I am going to talk to you by revelation. I never study my sermons, and when I get up to speak, I never know what I am gomg to say only as it is revealed to me from on high ; then all I say is true ; could it help but be so, when God communicates to you through me .' The Gentiles are our enemies ; they are damned foi-ever ; they are thieves and mur- derers, and if they don't like what I say they can go to hell, damn them ! They want to come here in large numbers and decoy our women. I .lave introduced some Gentiles to my wives, but I will not do it again, because,.if I do, I will have to take them to my houses and introduce them to Mrs. Kimball at one house, and to Mrs. Kimball at another house, and so on ; and they will say Mrs. Kimball such, and Mrs. Kimball such, and so on, are w . They are taking some of our fairest daughters from us now in Salt Lake City, damn them. If I catch any of them running after my wives jgS ACROSS THE CONTINEKT, I will send tjiem to helU and ladies, you -musfnot keeg their cohv pany, you sin if you, dp, and you will be damned and go to helt What do you think of such people ? They hunt aiter out fairest and prettiest women, and it is a vamentable Set that they would rather go with them damned scoundrels than Stay with us. Jf Brother Brigham comes to me, and says he wants one of my daughters, he has a right to take her, and I have the exclusive nght to give her to who I please^.and she has no right to refuse; if she does, she will be damned forever and ever,, because she belongs to me. Sht is part of my flesh, and no one has a right to take her' unless I say so, any more than he has a right to take one of my horses or cows. " All the federal Governor has to dp is to pay the legislature and administer justice. Are the Governors our masters ? No, sir; not for me ; they are our servants. We have our apostolic govern- ment. Brigham Young is our leader, our President, our Governor. I am Lieutenant-Governor, Aint I a terrible feller ? Why, it has taken the hair all off my head. At least it would, if I hadij't lost it before. J lost it in my hardships, while going out to preach thd kingdonL of God, without purse or scrip. '■' " [To the Gentiles.]; Oh, don't be scart at me ! Come up to. my house and see ine. I will give you spme peaches, and make yqi^ happy. I have two sons abroad preaching the kingdom of God. Brother Byrd says they are good boys. It makes me proud to hear it. I want the time to come when I can send out fifty sons to preach, all at one lick. Come up and see me. I will give you some peaches. I will give you some apples. I would give you some meat if I had it, but I am abput out" THE EMIGRATION OF 1865, The Mormons boast of one thousand emigrants from Europe this, season, proselyted and shipped by their missionaries abroad. Most of them aie English and Norwegians, simple, ignorant people, be- yond any class known in American society, and so easy victims to the shrewd and sharp and &natical Yankee leaders in the Mormcn church. Educatipn, common schools are among the first of r-eforma- tpiy means needed in Utah. II. MINES AND MINING. THE MINES IN MONTANA. Mr. Albert D. Richardson of our summer party, who remained behind to visit Montana and Idaho, writes from Virginia City, Mon- tana, October 28th, as follows : — "Montana is very promising.^-riqher, I think,, than any of our other gold or silver States or Territories. The placer diggings are paying largely, and the quartz seems to me 'richer than anything else I have seen ; and a good many mills are coming in. But there are lots of Montana people In New York to sell leads, many of whom- eught to be sent to the penitentiary for obtaining money imder false pretenses. 'Beware of Wild-Cat' should be written over every arti^ cle published on quartz-mining, in letters so large that he who runs may read, and the wayfaring man, though a fool, may not invest therein." From other sources are gathered the following facts : Alder Gulch is the theater of the original and most extensive gold-mining in Montana. Virginia City is the first and largest town here. About thirty millions of gold have been taken in the various diggings of the gulch ; and the quartz mines at its head among the hills are now very popular and promising. The present population of the Alder Gulch region is about fourteei) thousand. About one hundred aAd forty miles north and east, more immediately among the Rocky Mountains, is the second center of development and population; and Helena is its chief town, with about five thousajid, inhabitants. Neighboring valleys and gulches are also rich in gold and silver, both washings and quartz. Many millions of treasure have already been obtained fi-om this section of the Territory. And the country is described as very picturesque and beautiful. It is -vyatered by the head streams of the Missouri Rjver, — the Jeffersen and Gallatin Rivers, and thdr fedbitfaries,: — and Fort Benton, the head of navig^ 400 ACROSS THE CONTINENT. tion on the Missouri, is but one hundred and seventy-five miles east from Helena. The maps give but inadequate idea of the divisions of Idaho and Montana, and their chief districts of gold and population. Mon- tana lies along upon the Rocky Mountains, above Colorado and Utah, mostly on the western slopes, but still going over into the eastern valleys, whose waters feed the Missouri River, and find their way to the Atlantic Ocean. Idaho lies beyond Montana to the west, among the Blue Mountains, and the upper waters of the Co- lumbia River, or its Snake River branch. The population of each Territory is fickle ; it has probsbly been from twenty thousand to twenty-five thousand each, during the' past summer ; but in the win- ter these figures will be reduced one-third to one-hal£ THE UNCERTAINTIES OF MINING. From a Lecture in San Francisco iy Professor J. D. Whitney of the State Geological Survey of California. It is a fact, that extremely few metalliferous veins are equally rich for any considerable distance, either lengthwise or up and down ; the valuable portions of the ore are concentrated in masses which are frequently very limited in extent, compared with the mass of the vein, in which they are contained. It is a fact, that indications of valuable ores on the surface do not always, nor once in a hundred times, lead to masses of ore beneath the surface of a sufficient extent and purity to be worked with profit There are, literally and truly, thousands of places in New England where ores of the metals, including silver, copper, tin, lead, zinc, cobalt and nickel, have been observed ; many of these have given rise to mining excitements, and have been taken up, worked for a time, abandoned, taken up again, abandoned again, off and on for the last fifty or even a hundred years, and always with partial, and usually with a total, loss of the money invested. There may be one solitary mine in Vermont which is paying a small profit to the share- holders ; but with the exception of this, and a few mines of iron ore on the border of Massachusetts and Connecticut, there is not one which has not cruelly burned the fingers of those who have meddled wi,th them. Even on Lake Superior, that region which is commonly appealed to as made up of solid copper, there have been many hundreds of companies formed, and at least a hundred mines opened and worked more or less extensively ; but for ten years after mining had begun to be actively carried on there, only two of the mines had paid back to the stockholders, one cent of dividend. Even in England, it is the opinion of Mr. Hunt, the Keeper of Mining Records, who has devoted many years to the investigation of the statistics of this SUPPLEMENTARY PAPERS : MINES, ETC. 4OI branch of the Nation's wealth, that mining for the metallic min- erals, with the exception of non, is not on the whole remunerative. There is a wonderful fascination about the mining business, which seems to blind the eyes and bewilder the senses (of 'hose who come within the sphere of its influence. The organ of hope seems to swell up and predominate over all Ihe others : — what phantasma- goria will len not follow, if there is any metallic luster about it ! If the California capital, which has been wasted in foolish mining enterprises in this State and on its borders during the past three years, would, as I fully believe, have paid for a railroad to Washoe ; then California is the poorer by a railroad to Washoe, with double track and rolling stock complete, than it would have been, had not recklessness and ignorance diverted capital ixom this great enterprise. THE MINING LAWS AND THEIR OPERATION. J