1585. SWISHER (JAMES) How I Know, or, Sixteen Years Eventful Ex- perience. An Authentic Narrative embracing a record of hazardous enterprises, thriUing adventures and narrow escapes on the western frontier; among the Mor- mons, the miners and the Indians. Portrait and plates. 384 pp., 8vo, cloth. Cin- cinnati: Printed by the Author, 1880. 25.00 Very Scarce. Swisher's party was ambushed by the Navajoes in the San Re Nado Pass, New Mexico. With the exception of the author and four of his companions, the entire company was wiped out. His narrative details the incidents of the journey across the plains to Utah; the Mountain Mea- dow massacre; onward to California; early mining experiences, etc. H James Swisher. HOW I KNOW, OR SIXTEEN YEARS' EVENTFUL EXPERIENCE. AN ^ AUTHENTIC NARRATIVE, EMBRACING A BRIEF RECORD OF SERIOUS AND SEVERE SERVICE ON THE BATTLE-FIELDS OF THE south; A DETAILED ACCOUNT OF HAZARDOUS ENTERPRISES, THRILLING ADVENTURES, NARROW ESCAPES, AND DIRE DISASTERS ON THE WESTERN FRONTIER AND IN THE WILDS OF THE WEST; LIFE AMONG THE MORMONS, THE MINERS, AND THE IN- DIANS; THE PAST, THE PRESENT, AND THE FUTURE OF THE GREAT WEST; THE WONDERFUL GRANDEUR AND BEAUTY OF ITS SCENERY AND ITS LAND- SCAPES; ITS GREAT MINERAL AND AGRI- CULTURAL resources; a glance at THE MORE important EVENTS IN ITS HISTORY AND DEVELOP- MENT, ETC., ETC. By JAMES SWISHER. lllustljcltEfl. PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR: CINCINNATI, OHIO. 1880. Copyright, 1880, by James Swisher. 15 4^ PRESS OF Jones Brothers & Co, CINCINNATI. Comp. and Electrotyped "^^^ BY Campbell & Company, CINCINNATI, o. > I HAVE written this book, not because I make any pretensions as an author or writer, but at the earnest request of many of my friends in different parts of the country, who have urged me to prepare and pubhsh an account of my travels and experiences. I have thought it unnecessary to speak, except in the briefest manner possible, of my experiences in the Civil War. I have said enough on this subject, how- ever, to vividly recall to the minds of my comrades- in-arms the thrilHng incidents of those dark days, and to awaken the memory of the keen interest and the trembling apprehension with which the dire conflict was viewed from the thousands of homes and firesides, by mother, wife and sister. I have been vain enough to hope that my book may not be entirely devoid of interest to those who love such grandly magnificent and beautiful works of Nature as are to be seen in so many places in the West. Of these I have given such glimpses and de- scriptions as the limits of the book and my ability as a writer would allo^v. Of the Mormons, Indians, miners, and other classes of people of which I speak, I say only such things as I have learned by personal association and observation. JU IV PRE FA CE. Although in some cases my account may not be com- plete and exhaustive, yet I think it will be always in- teresting and valuable from the fact that it is reliable. In what I have said of the mining and agricultural resources and the commercial interests of the West, I have been guided by an extensive and varied experi- ence, and a wide opportunity for observation. I have been laborer, lumberman, explorer, guide, traveler, prospector, miner, hunter, Indian-fighter, government surveyor and civil engineer, freighter, herder, stock- broker, and transient sojourner. In one or another of these capacities I have visited nearly every portion of the West, and consequently know whereof I speak. I do not expect to escape criticism. I am well aware that I am in great need of it. Still I hope that those who read this book will belong to that class of true critics who endeavor, as far as possible, to seek out that which is commendable and praiseworthy, and to overlook that which is imperfect and incomplete. I can but express the hope that each one who reads the book may derive some little benefit from what I have written. In conclusion, it is but proper that I should here express my sincere thanks to Messrs. Jones Brothers & Co., Cincinnati, for the generous kindness w^ith which they have afforded me every needed assistance and facility for the proper printing, binding and illus- tration of my book. Their friendly favors shall ever be held in most grateful remembrance. J. S. January^ iSSo. iWliM '£. £. ^r^ "^ 7^\^ CHAPTER I. — WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMY CORPS. Birth-place — Joins the Army — Sketch of the Twentieth Corps — Battles of Lookout Alountain, Rocky Face Ridge and Resaca — Capture of Pine Knob — Kenesaw Mountain — Peach Tree Creek — Siege of Atlanta — The "March to the Sea" — Savannah occupied — Devastation of the "Mother of Secession" — Pursuit of Johnston's flying Forces — The Surrender at Raleigh — Homeward — The grand Review at Washington — Home and Friends. . . . 11-25 CHAPTER II. UTAH AND THE MORMONS. The "Western Fever" — In a Utah mining Camp — Situation of Utah — The Mormons — Mountain Meadow Massacre — Bishop S 's " Revelations " — A horrible Outrage — Murder of D. P. Smith — Another Instance of Mormon Atrocity — Nationality of the Mormons — Adobe Houses — Practical Polygamy — Scenery in Utah — Hot and cold Springs — Irrigation — Mountains and Des- erts — Grass, Cattle and Timber — Mining — Early Mining Experiences — Sinks a Shaft, and some Money — The Webster Lode — General Reflections. . 26-44 CHAPTER III.— NEVADA. Nevada for a Change — Carson City — Lake Tahoe — Mining Fever again — Stock-speculator — The Comstock Mines — The Narrow Guage Railroad — The long Flume — Heat and Water in the Mines — Ventilation — The Sutro Tunnel — Climate of Nevada — Stock and Farming — Hot Springs — Alkali — The brackish Water. .......... 45-53 CHAPTER IV.— CALIFORNIA. From Carson City to San Francisco — The Enchanting Scenery — Donner Lake — Pulpit Rock — Sad Story of the Donner Family — Indian Tradition — In the old Mining District — Virgin Gold — Geological History — Theories — Placer Mining — Some big Nuggets — Northward — TheYosemiteVallev — The "Garden of the Gods"— Nevada Fall— The Giant Trees— California Vegetables— The Golden City — Its Splendor and Magnificence — Fertile Valleys and Immense Crops — The Seasons — Stock-raising— Grape Culture — Drawbacks — Something of a Shake — Volcanic and Desert Regions — The Earthquake of 1S72. . 54-74 CHAPTER v.— THE CHINESE. The Chinese — Their Appearance — Their Dress — Their Numbers — ISIost of Them in Servitude — The Six Companies — Low Wages — Idol Worship — A Law unto Themselves — The Chinese Qiiarter — Coolies — Legislation — General Review of California Resources — Wealth ^er capita — Commercial Enterprises — Agricultural Resources — Remarkably Healthy Climate — Colonizing — Gov- ernment Lands — Area and Population — Internal Improvements. . 75-S2 CHAPTER VI. — OREGON and Washington. Portland— The Varied Climate— The Fertile Tracts— Population— The Columbia River — The Cascade Range — The Lava Beds — Fine Stock — Wil- lamette Valley — Agricultural Products of the State — Grains and Emits — V VI CONTENTS. Washington Territory — Lumbering — The Cold Weather — Fish and Game — The Indians — The grand Scenery of the North-west. . . . 83-90 CHAPTER VII.— MEXICO. Eleven Months in Mexico — The Mexicans — The Climate — Mexican Char- acter — Mining — Primitive Processes Employed — The Dwellings — General De- cay — A Stranger's Impressions — Amusements — Gambling — Mexican Horse- manship — Corraling Wild Stock — Lassoing — Riding a Wild Horse — Cheap Horses — The Beauty of the Country — The Delightful Climate — Chihuahua — The Casas Grandes Ruins — Explorations — Relics of the Inhabitants of the Ancient Cities — Other Ancient Ruins — The Moqui Indians of Arizona — The Cliff-dwellers — A Legend — Character of the Moqui, . . . gi-103 CHAPTER VIII.— ARIZONA. Heat and Sand — Other Disagreeable Features — Mr. Janin's Great Scheme — Prospector's Oui^i— Burros — Packs and Pack-saddles — Perils of Prospect- ing — Ancient Mines — The Inhabitants — Drinking and Gambling — Indians — Cock-fighting — Is Civilization a Failure.? 104-112 CHAPTER IX.— NAVAjOES. A Long Trip on Horseback — Chosen Leader — The Outfit — Grand and Beautiful Scenerj — First Camp — A Dreary Night — Wet, Worn and Weary — Following a Mountain Trail — Night in the Forest — Indian Signs — An Unex- pected Visitor — Sketch of Bennett— " Injuns! Injuns!" — A Fierce Fight — The Indians Retreat — The Killed and Wounded — Burying the Dead — Forward! — An Indian Ambush — But Five Escape — Closely Pursued — Fishing for Food — Worn out — Sad Reflections — A Dreadful Night — Friends Discovered — Names of Those Killed. 113-132 CHAPTER X. — THROUGH THE COLORADO CANONS. The Colorado Canon — A large Pi-ospecting Party — The Start — No Road — Traveling by Night— No Water — A Mutiny— A Bad Situation— Plain Talk — Another Mutiny — A Separation — Off Again — Deserters Return — Cornered by a Grizzly — Habits of the Grizzlj- — Hunting the Grizzh' — The Grizzly Killed — A Lofty Outlook — Standing Guard — Pleasant Dreams — A Gloomy Ride — Creeping down the Mountain Side — Meets a Panther — A Frightful Situation — The Last Chance — A Lucky Shot — Safe in the Valley — Day- light — The Dead Panther-^Trout-fishing — Dreadful Dreams — " Raising the Color." 133-152 CHAPTER XL — through the Colorado canons. — [continued.] A Mighty Precipice — The Grand Canon — Buckskin Mountains — " Heads or Tails " — Up the River — Rough Traveling — Down the Gulch — An Im- pressive Situation — The Head of the Canon — Ancient Ruins — An Oasis — A Dangerous Swim — Safely Over — Eastern Side of the River — Apache Visitors — " Heap Bad Injun "—Prospecting — An Undesirable Location — Callville — John D. Lee — Murderous Mormons. 153-164 CHAPTER XII. — MONTANA and IDAHO. First Settlers— Rich Resources— The Gallatin Valley— Other Valleys- Occupations — Advantages of the Railroads — Staging and Freighting — Cor- rinne — Warehouses — A Bad Road — High Prices — "Self-risers," "Pilgrims," "Tenderfoots." 165-168 CHAPTER XIII. — LAKES AND SPRINGS OF THE FAR \VEST. Waters of the West— Great Salt Lake— Its Outlet— The Lake Rising- Bathing — Lake Tahoe — Good Place for Captain Boy ton — Crystal Lake — Va- rieties of Waters — Hot Springs — Phenomena in Connection with Hot Springs CONTEXTS. vii —A Large Spring— The Yellowstone— A Tide Spring— A IMud Spring — The Steamboat Spring— Alkaline Streams— Causes of Hot Springs, Earth- quakes, and Volcanoes 169-177 CHAPTER XIV.— LA PAZ. Surveying in Arizona— Two Days' Ride in a " jerkey "—Stage-coach Ex- periences — The Factotum Expressman — La Paz— A Dilapidated Town— Rough C-ostomers— The Hotel— The Landlord— A Bad Lot— Street Scenes— Riot Let Loose— A Rush for " Hash "—The Barroom— The Landlord's Stories— Greas- ers— A Night in Bedlam— Another Lodging-place— A Drunken Texan- Pleasant Anticipations— Taking a Tumble— Complimentary Comments— A Big Dinner— Night Scenes— Routed by Bed-bugs— Another Tumble— Family History— Impressions of La Paz— Back to Fort McDowell— Does " Roughing It "Pay.? 178-193 CHAPTER XV. STOCK-RAISING. Successful Men— Life of a Stock-raiser— The Cow-boys— Branding Stock — County Inspectors— A Stock Range — Changing Ranges — A " Round-up " — Description of the " Cow-boys " — Dangers of a Herder's Life— Indian Raids 193-201 CHAPTER XVI. — STOCK-BROKER AND FREIGHTER. San Francisco—" Bulls " and " Bears "—A Good Run of Luck— A Bad Run — Two-thirds of Capital Lost — Off for Salt Lake City — Meeting Old Friends — Outfit of Wagons Bought — Instance of Mormon Atrocity — The Gilson Brothers — Buying Oxen at Manti — Loading up with Flour — Learning to Drive Oxen — Handling the Whip — Yoking the Cattle — Stuck in the Mud — Doubling Up — The Second of March — Completely Disgusted— The Final Start from Manti — Names of the Party — Salina — A Herder's Camp — Snow — Five Weary Weeks — Advice — Thirteen Miles in Six Weeks — Desolate Coun- trv 202-218 CHAPTER XVII.— IN GREEN RIVER VALLEY. Streams in Castle Valley — Description of the Valley — Rock Wells — Bad Water — Wretched Traveling— Green River Valley — High Water— A Long Ride for a Boat — A Pleasant Camp — Trip to the"^ Canon — Grand Mountain View — Mountain Sheep — Back to Camp — Beaver and Otter — Snakes — A Rat- tlesnake Den — Wolves — An Exciting Chase — Habits of the Wolves — Wait- ing 219-232 CHAPTER XVIII.— VEXATIOUS delays. The Boat Arrives — Ferrving the Wagons and Loads Across — Swimming the Cattle— A Wearisome Effort — The Virtue of Patience— Cattle Stampeded by a Grizzly — Back Across the River Again — A Dangerous Situation — A little out of Humor — A Strange Discovery — A Remarkable Trail — What Could the Cloven-footed " Varmint " Be.? — No Cattle— A Hazardous Under- taking — The Cattle Found — Driven Over the River Again — The Green Brothers Murdered — Something of their History— The " Saints " and their Principles — Persecution of the Gentiles — The Green Brothers' Ranch— 'Their Horrible Death — Trail of the Murderers — A Clue to the Mystery — A Warning to Hasten — A Fatiguing Journey — Grand River Valley — The Paradise of Col- orado — Ancient Ruins — Two Miles a Day — Serious Reflections. . 233-252 CHAPTER XIX. — MORAL and descriptive. Colorado as a Health Resort — Lack of Society — Two Years' Isolation — A Test of Character— The Lazy Man— The Cheerful Man— Wealth and Rank — Worth and Character — The Use of Tobacco — Lonesomeness — Money-mak- viii CONTENTS. ing and Mining — Duped — Carrying Weapons — Game on Green River — A Hunter's Requisites — Methods of Hunting — Mountain Sheep — Deer — Face of the Country — Mirages — Gold — Scenery — A Beautiful Prospect — Civilization Once More— Chief Ouray— The Ute Indians— Their Farming (?)— Los Pinos Agency— Selling Out 253-271 CHAPTER XX. — SHALL the young man go west? A Mining Region — Mining Enterprises — Great Corporations — Their Im mense Power — Prosperity — The Real Sovereigns — Advisability of Mining Ventures — Chances of the Investor and Prospector — The San Juan Region — Disappointment and Dissipation — Immigration — Leadville — Mr. W. H. Ste- vens — Soft Carbonates — Bonanzas — Roughing It — A Mining Excitement — Idlers — Unpoetic Poverty — Overplus of Population — Condition of San Fran- cisco — Let the Young Man Stay at Home — The Puzzled Englishman — Decep- tive Appearances — " Cloud-bursts." 272-288 CHAPTER XXI. — A SPANISH bull-fight. Ojo Calienta— The Early Comers— A Front Seat at the Corral— The Spectators— The Matadore—ThQ Bull— The First Rush— A Prolonged En- counter — The Bull Vanquished — Another Bull Brought in — The Matadore Tossed — Severely Injured — A Panic — Scaffolding Gives Way— A Firm Reso- lution 289-295 CHAPTER XXII.— THE INDIANS. Their Wigwams — Bedding — Hunting and Amusements — Trading — Dis- posal of the bead— Instance of Cruelty— Medicine Men— Exorcising Evil Spirits— Religious Belief. 296-301 CHAPTER XXIII. — THE CUSTER MASSACRE. The Tragedy of June 25, 1876 — Sorrow of the Nation — Sketch of Custer's Life— Hancock's Campaign — Hancock Outwitted — Custer's First Indian Fight — "Circling" — Massacre of Lieutenant Kidder and Party — Horrid Scenes — General Sully's Campaign— Custer's Washita Campaign— Yellowstone Ex- pedition — Murder of Honzinger and Baliran — Arrest of Rain-in-the-Face — He Escapes and Swears Vengeance against Custer — Black Hills Expedition —Gold in the Hills— Events of 1S75— Campaign against Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse — Custer in Disgrace at Headquarters — The Miserable Belknap Affair — Three Columns Converge upon the Hostile Camp — The Bloody Ending — Close of the Campaign — Sitting Bull Goes to Canada, and Crazy Horse to the Happy Hunting-grounds — Perhaps. 3^2-348 CHAPTER XXIV.— WHERE shall we settle.? Go W^est!— Southern Minnesota— Iowa— Southern Dakota— Nebraska— Kansas— The Indian Territorv—No!—Texas— Don't Believe All You Hear!— The Indian Border— California: Land Monopoly— Oregon— Climate and Soil — " The Great American Desert "—Probable Population in 1900— Whither is the Surplus Population to Go?— Good Land Pretty Well Occupied— What will be the Result?— Western Wilds will Continue Wild for a Century to Come 349-381 CHAPTER XXV.— conclusion. Homeward Bound — Old Memories Aroused — A Surprise — A Pleasant Meeting — Time's Changes — Contrasts — Preparing for a Little Trip — Detained — Another Surprise — A Happy Birthday— Concluding Reflections. 3S2-384 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Abraham Lincoln, . • Jefferson Davis, Gen. W. T. Sherman, Sherman's March to the Sea, Gen. Robt. E. Lee, Gen. U. S. Grant, Mountain Meadow Massacre, Mormon Persecution, Brigham Young, . . . ■ Mormon Tabernacle, New Mining Town, View near Lake Tahoe, Blue Canon, Sierra Nevada, Humboldt Palisades, . Donner Lake, Pulpit Rock, Echo Canon, Scene near Eagle Lake, Cahfornia, The Two Guardsmen, The Yosemite Falls, Bridal Veil Fall, Yosemite Valley, A California Stump, Northern California Scenery, Cape Horn, Central Pacific R. R., Chinese Qiiarter, San Francisco, Rapids of the Upper Columbia, View in the Modoc Country, View on the Oregon Coast, . Border Mexicans, Mexican Border Town, Mexican Border Invasion, Arizona Sand Plains, A Train of Burros, Perils of Prospecting, Civilization in Arizona, An Arizona Scrimmage, Scene in the Sierra Del Cariso Range, Following a Mountain Trail, Attacked by Navajo Indians, An Indian Ambuscade, The Grand Canon of the Colorado The Search for Water, . Cornered by Grizzhes, In the Colorado Canons, Sunset in the Colorado Canons, PAGE. Frontispiece. 16 18 21 23 24 28 34 37 40 . 46 48 52 54 55 61 63 ^^ 67 70 72 H 86 88 91 94 97 lOI 107 108 no III 114 118 123 127 134 137 141 150 156 IX ILL US TEA TIONS. Prospecting in the Colorado Canons, Execution of John D. Lee, Great Salt Lake, ..... Vernal Falls, California, .... " Giantess," Big Geyser of the Yellowstone, A Western Frontiersman, Ready for a Raid, .... Salt Lake City, 1857, .... Sevier River, Wasatch Mountains, Herders' Camping House, Shoshonee Indians in the Sevier Valley, Camp in Green River Valley, Night Scene in Green River Canon, Peak in Green River Valley, Orson Pratt, Mormon Prophet, Former Residences of Brigham Young, . George A. Smith, Mormon Apostle, "The Sw^ift Dashing- Water," . Lonely — Three Thousand Miles from Home, "Oh, Solitude, Where are thy Charms?" Scalp-Dance of the Ute Indians, Hunting Buffalo in the Olden Time, He Paid a Big Price, These Did Not Grow in a Mining Region, An Old '49er Not Yet Rich, Dead Broke, Mexican Outlaws, Mexican Maiden, Lower Class, Pueblo Cacique, New Mexico, Mexican Indians, Indian Wigwam, Black Hawk, Un Ind^o Bravo, Texas, "Go West," "Busted," .... Custer's First Indian Fight, Western Scout,— Wild Bill, . Rude Surgery of the Plains, Scene of the Sioux War, Getting the First Shot, Fighting Hand to Hand, Winter in the Minnesota Pineries, Droughty Kansas, Texas and Coahuila in 1830, Skirmish with Indians, . Fort Massachusetts, New Mexico, 1855, A California Big Tree, Nevada Falls, Yosemite Valley, 160 163 170 173 175 195 199 203 213 215 217 223 225 230 241 243 24^ 248 251 254 260 265 276 279 282 284 290 291 293 294 297 299 300 305 307 310 313 319 326 333 339 351 355 359 365 367 371 375 HOW I KNOW. CHAPTER I. WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMY CORPS. THE author of this work was born in Champaign County, Ohio, in June, 1849, and, at the age of thirteen years, nine months and twenty- three days, joined the army. He was assigned to Company E, of the Fifth Ohio Infantry, twentieth army corps, and sent to the field. "What fun I shall have," thought he to himself, as he took his position in the ranks. Little does a boy know, at that age, about the life of a soldier. Since every one has read and re-read the history of the war, I will condense what I saw into a few words, merely giving a little history of the different battles in which the twentieth corps took part. No body of troops in the Northern army made for itself a prouder history than the twentieth army corps. Its life was crowded with events not one of which brings dishonor to its proudest member, although it was formed from the most daring, cultivated, and resolute men of the North. " The best fruit trees are clubbed the most," and, in the army, detraction often follows the exhibition of superior merit in discipline, appearance, or achievements. From 12 HOW I KNOW. the rigid tests of Manchester, Port RepubHc, Antietam, Dumfries, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg, Gen. Hooker brought his men to the Army of the Cumberland at a perilous hour. The troops of Gen. Bragg, full sixty thousand strong, nerved with an earnest devotion to their cause, and en- couraged by the doubtful result at Chickamauga, occu- pied an almost impregnable position near Chattanooga, while in front of them Rosecrans held an uncertain footing. His soldiers had seen the hopes of an early peace quickly disappear. They were almost appalled at the gigantic proportions the rebelHon had assumed. They wxre disheartened by the absence, without leave, of thousands of their comrades. Their line of supplies was in imminent danger, and the country was at that time enshrouded in such gloom that the growing glory of President Lincoln could scarcely be discerned. It was at this crisis that the men whose badges imaged the lights that rule the night came and kindled a lustre in Wauhatchie Valley, that rose and spread until it bathed in matchless splendor old Lookout Mountain's rugged peak. Rosecrans was saved! Tennessee was saved! A portion of the corps then hurried away to Knoxville, with others from the fifteenth corps, and soon broke the bands in which Longstreet had kept Burnside hampered, almost to the point of starvation. The remainder of the corps went into winter quarters. It was on the 4th of April, 1864, that the twentieth corps was formed, the beloved Joe Hooker being placed at its head. The corps retained the star of the twelfth WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 13 corps as its insignia. Its real history began with the campaign that soon opened. On the 8th of May, the enemy was found occupying a strong position on Rocky Face Ridge. A severely contested fight followed. It had been said that if Johnston could not hold that place he could not hold any in Georgia, and the firmest deter- mination charac- terized the con- test until night- fall, when both armies retired; Johnston to his works at Resaca, and our troops to pass through Snake Creek Gap and then attack them again. Constant skir- mishing was kept up until, on the 14th of May, at Resaca, the Con- federate f o r c e s advanced under a flag so faded that it was taken for a flag of truce. In consequence of this mistake a terrible blow was given to our forces. The blow was aimed at the fourteenth corps, and shook it to the center. But Gen. Hooker, by throw^ing out a brigade with that marvelous dexterity in which none could surpass him, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 14 HOW I KNOW. saved the Fifth Indiana Battery when on the very poinl of capture, checked the advance of the enemy, and held his ground until dark. The next morning the entire corps moved forward upon the enemy, now firmly in- trenched in a series of lines so arranged as to make an attack very difficult. The momentum of the first charge carried it over the first line, where it gallantly reformed its somewhat confused ranks, and at once pressed on. Now came emphatically the tug of war. With strain- ing sinews and grimmest courage, gray-haired veterans and proud-eyed youths fought on and on, gaining always some ground ; but so slowly that evening was at hand when the weary but still resolute men reached the fourth and last chain of defenses. Here was displayed as true grit as was ever known among men. So fierce was the assault that the rebels could not hold their works, and so tenacious the defense that the national forces could not occupy them; and there stood an empty fort and an idle battery between the lines, which surged and swayed and clamored around them for hours. But scarcely had the favoring darkness come, ere the Fifth Ohio boys crept to the wall, dug through, and hauled out the guns by hand. On the 25th of May, while the second division of the twentieth corps was crossing Pumpkin Vine Creek, a, bridge broke down, completely isolating those who had crossed; but their very renown shielded them from at- tack until help arrived. The situation was critical. No intrenching tools had been taken over the stream, and orders to recross were expected. But to pass away the WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 15 time, and to deceive the enemy, the men went to work usino- their bayonets and cooking utensils instead of picks and shovels, to dig their trenches. But this could not loner deceive the watchful foe, and while the remainder of the corps was in the act of crossing they made a most furious attack. Having checked this, the corps moved directly on the well-formed and well-defended works in its front. The fighting was desperate. Gen- erals Sherman and Thomas were there to direct the movement, and there the fact was impressed on all, as Gen. Hooker has since said, that a good line of works, well manned, cannot be taken by infantry alone. Hav- ing lost two thousand men, the movement was aban- doned, and then followed seven days of skirmishing, so annoying to the enemy that Johnston fell back disgusted with the neighborhood. No language can adequately depict the perils of that week. All felt that the welfare of their respective causes was to be made sure or gravely periled by the issue of that field. At last the Army of the Cumberland, by extending its flank, pressed the right of the hostile Hne back, which then retired to Dallas. The twentieth corps was now placed in reserve for six days, at the end of which time, it moved into line, reliev- ing the fourth corps, which took position further to the left. Marching, digging, and fighting, alternately, our forces pressed on, and, finally, by the middle of June, were in Hne beyond Pine Knob. Here Lieut. Gen. Polk was killed and it became evident that the dearest hopes of the rebel South were doomed to perish beneath the blows of the sturdy Northmen. But none could expect 16 HOW / KNOW. the daring sons of Dixie to tamely yield their sectional claims, cherished so many years. Valor and patience and labor and diligence and skill and blood must all be given to the nation's cause, by Sherman's noble men, and lavishly were they be- stowed. It cost some of our regiments full twenty per cent of their strength to force the line at Pine Knob; but the victors went on to seek another fateful field, as light of spirit and as strong of heart as the farmer who goes to the harvest field of peace. Lost Mount- ain having been abandoned, the Army of theTen- jEFFERsoN DAVIS. Hcssee advauccd several miles, and found Johnston preparing to stand. The Thirteenth New York Battery, Lieutenant Bundy commanding, coming up, attacked the enemy skillfully, and won a reputation among soldiers that will not dim while memory holds her seat. The insurgent chief was forced back once more. He then carefully selected a WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 17 strong line of defense on Kenesaw Mountain. As the first division of the twentieth corps was forming its line on the right of the second, a large force was hurled upon it, which force was nearly annihilated by the artillery happily at that moment massed at the extreme front. The unprecedented slaughter discouraged the assailants, and they retired to their works, remaining in them sev- eral days. The twentieth corps celebrated the Fourth of July in line of battle, forgetting their own crowding honors in the just glories of our hero sires of 1776. Girding up their loins, they pressed on toward the Chattahoochee with renewed courage, for Atlanta, the Gate City of the South was now in sight. In proportion as victory cheered them, defeat carried sorrow and despair to their opponents. General Hood was sent to relieve General Johnston, whose farewell address was audible to our pickets. He instituted at once a more decisive policy, staking the very existence of his army, and requiring equal risks on the part of his opponents. Gaining the left bank of the Chattahoochee with admirable skill, Sherman approached Peach Tree Creek, where the united skill of both rebel chiefs had prepared formidable work for the intrepid travelers. On the 2oth of July, the star corps, while in order of march, was assailed by the entire force then and there gathered for the deliverance of Georgia. A terrible battle ensued. The Southern troops were burning to retrieve their losses, and felt that another defeat might be fatal to their cause. Their base of suppHes was at 18 HOW I KNOW, hand, and their entire force was available. The ground was well adapted for defense. Now, or never, they must crush this daring invader. To break his Hues was to annihilate his army; to fail in that was to have him soon thunder at the gates. Nor could Sherman now afford defeat — it was ruin. His long line of communication could not be held a day after such an event. The immense gains of the summer's toil would all be lost. A new campaign added to the bur- dens of the al- ready heavily la- den nation could hardly restore what might now be secured by persevering en- ergy and the un- daunted courage that had made these men heroic. True, their ground was unfavorable; they must stand the more stubbornly. A deep, crooked stream was be- fore them; the}^ must use more skill in crossing. They could not form in line; every man must be his own support. They were called upon to brave all difficulties, GEN. W. T. SHERMAN. WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 19 and they did it. They were to win success by sacrifices, and they suffered and succeeded. Peach Tree Creek was rnade one of the holy spots where the nation's chil- dren were faithful unto death, and victory planted there a laurel that will never fade. Two days later the Army of the Tennessee was similarly attacked with similar results, and Hood retired to Atlanta. The siege of the doomed city began at once. The twentieth corps had been under fire more than one hundred days, with only six days intermission. It had lost over thirteen thousand men, about three-fifths of its entire number, and still it retained its characteristic energy, and was a pride to its friends and a terror to its foes. Taking its place in the Hues about the city, it bore a conspicuous part in that skillful siege. Meantime the lamented M'Pherson (com- manding the Army of the Tennessee) fell, and General Hooker was recommended as his successor. But Gen- eral Howard was appointed, and " Fighting Joe" could only ask to be relieved from duty under Sherman. General Williams assumed his command, and by a change afterward made in the plan of the siege, this trusty corps was sent to hold the line of the Chattahoo- chee, guard trains, deceive the enemy, and, if possible, annoy him while Sherman flanked the great northern defenses, and approached the town from the rear. The corps, there being now confidence in every man belong- ing to it, stretched out in line for nearly ten miles, the men being in some instances ten or twelve feet apart. They held their position, and fully answered the expec- tation of their commander. When Hood left, the twen- 20 HOW I KNOW. tieth moved on, and was the first to enter the fallen stronghold. There it lay and recruited while the re- mainder of the army drove Ho6d to the arms of Thomas at Nashville, where Hood lost his power. Several thou- sand new troops joined the corps at Atlanta. Having repelled some trifling attacks at different times, here, preparations were made for another campaign. Where now? was a much mooted question among the men; but the accomplished Sherman suffered friend and foe alike to wonder and conjecture. On the 15th of November (1864) we set out for the south-east, and Mobile, Savan- nah, Charleston, Augusta, Wilmington, and even Rich- mond, were confidently named as probable points we were to reach. Very meagre were the supplies we carried, and the rebel papers we saw from time to time, were filled with the most glowing prophecies of our swiff; destruction. The resources of the country through which we passed were at once put under contribution. The accumulated edibles of Georgia, its numerous cat- tle, horses, mules, calves, etc., disappeared as by magic along our route. Too strong to be stopped or seriously hindered by any effort the foe could make, four co-oper- ating corps swept along, and the great raid became the most magnificent march of modern history. Our ex- perience was more like that of a band of mischievous travelers than an invading army. Destroying railroads, cotton gins, warehouses, and bridges; making roads across plantations and through swamps, and marching leisurely on with song and shout, and endless badinage; foraging, cooking, and eating alternated with each other WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 21 through the entire thirty days we spent in reaching the defenses of Savannah. Our corps was assigned the direct approach by the Augusta pike, with the fourteenth as reserve, and twelve miles from the city the outer defense was carried gallantly after a very brief ac- tion. The next line, five miles from town, was its real reliance. The complete destitution of the troops, in respect to some important supplies, caused comparative inactivity until the fall of M'Allister open- ed a line for supplies. Then heavy fatigue parties were employed in the raising of coun- terworks, which were scarcely ^ begun before sherman's march to the sea, Hardee evacuated the place. No sooner had his sharp- shooters crept away from the outer rifle pits than an enterprising New Yorker crept into them, and hurrying back, roused his officers with the welcome intelligence. Wonderful was the forbearance of the victorious warriors. General Sherman alludes to it, in his report, as a most gratifying proof of their good discipline. The citizens, terrified by the horrible tales with which South- ern editors had tried to fire the Southern heart, seemed to expect barbarities almost unendurable. Their own 22 HOW I KNOW. soldiers had wantonly murdered many negroes during the night, for manifesting joy at the coming of the Yankees. Nearly the whole day was spent arranging and stationing the usual guard, during which the city lay completely at the mercy of our men. The conduct of these sons of our free civilization in that hour, furnished testimony in favor of liberty and equal rights that the people of Savan- nah should never f o r g e t. The re- mainder of the ar- my subsequently took position in the vicinity. O n o u r departure, six weeks later, the reiterated regrets of the citizens was a most honorable proof of general good conduct. Earnest public ef- forts were made to retain the second division of the twentieth corps as a city guard. But it had proved itself too useful in the field to be excused from aiding in the great effort soon to be made. Moving up the river in the latter part of January the army crossed into South Carolina, and entered with GEN. ROBT. E. LEE. WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 23 more than usual energy upon the work of devastation. For a considerable distance hardly anything combustible was left unburned. Neither strength nor weakness, wealth nor poverty could shield the luckless citizens of the Mother of Secession from the hot zeal of the aveng- ers. Gradually, however, passion subsided, and a calm, quiet resolve to enforce justice and right took its place, and then more discrimination marked our deeds. By the time we reached Winnsborough, February the 20th, even Wade Hampton had learned the disposition of our men so well as to assure the citizens, by letter, that " If the twentieth corps occupy the place, private rights will be respected." His confidence was not misplaced. A feeling of mutual respect, based on profound self-respect, seemed to pervade both citizens and soldiers, and our stay there will ever be one of the most agreeable mem- ories of the campaign. We now pushed more to the eastward, and a monotonous journey succeeded. Cross- ing the Catawba during a dark, rainy night, we moved on to Cheraw, crossed the Great Pedee, and three days later entered North Carolina. Here a general order was published, reminding the army of the greater loyalty of the old North State, and recommending a milder pol- icy. A few days later we reached Fayetteville, and from that point dispatched a mail. Much rain had made the roads heavy, and the trains were therefore sent to Goldsborough for suppHes, w^hile the main portion of the second corps was sent up the Ra- leigh plank road. At Averysborough the long-cherished plans of Joe Johnston were proved futile, his army badly 24 HOW I KNOW. punished, and the old reputation of our corps honorably sustained. At Bentonville the disheartened leaders of the rebellion made their last despairing, wild, but fruit- less stand before Sherman's troops. For a little time their assault showed something of their ancient vigor ; but, as our scattered forces came flocking to the field, their discretion prevailed, and they retired. After rest- ing a few days at Goldsborough to refit, we hurried on to Raleigh. The foe seemed intent only on necessary flight. Here we received their very welcome sur- render. And now, having finished the Avork assigned us, and brought again ev- ery portion of our beloved country under the control of the national arms, we gladly turned toward home, loving the arts and du- ties of peace far better than the harsh scenes of war. Reaching Washington, the twentieth corps participated in the grand review, and won high compliments from the spectators. An impartial writer has declared the GEN. U. S. GRANT. WITH THE TWENTIETH ARMT CORPS. 25 second division of the corps the crack division of the vast assemblage. A few days later the corps wras dis- banded, and nov^ most of its noble members are enjoy- ing the well earned comforts of the homes they so val- orously defended. May they long live to recount their great achievements, and to perpetuate in narrative, and song; the memories of their brave fellows who fell in the conflict, and who sleep everywhere from Maryland to Mississippi. HOW I KNOW. CHAPTER II. UTAH AND THE MORMONS. RETURNING home at the close of the war, I re- mained for nearly two years, a portion of the time with my father, and the remainder with friends in Mad- ison County, Ohio. This period I will pass over with- out further notice. In 1863 an uncle, my mother's brother, went to Cali- fornia. He was continually writing for me to come to him. I hesitated a long time. Finally he became, as he thought, permanently located in Piute County, Utah Territory. Then he again "wrote me, holding out in- ducements so strong that I could no longer resist. He wrote to his brothers and to me of the enormous for- tunes that were made in a few days ( like Jonah's gourd, that sprung up in a night), and that people who would or did come there would amass fortunes ten and twenty times faster than they could in Ohio. Consequently I could not rest satisfied until I had turned all my resources into cash, and the Fall of '68 found me in Utah, in a new mining camp located two hundred miles south of Salt Lake City. I was green in the business of mining. I had some money; but I loaned it to uncle and his friends. The consequence was, I must work or starve. This now brings me up to the beginning of a three years' sojourn in Utah. UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 27 Utah is situated in the great basin between the Rocky Mountains on the East and the Sierra Nevada on the West. Some of the valleys ov^ned and v^orked by the Mormon saints are as fertile as any on the conti- nent. They raise everything for their own use, and have considerable of an export trade with the adjacent States and Territories. But, for all that, I found it was as much as people could do to live there, for the Terri- tory was populated with fanatics, and unless you were one of their creed, and agreed with them in their wild notions, you were liable to be forever lost unless you passed through the ordeal of Blood Atonement. You should be murdered for the remission of your sins. And they were careful that this should be done in se- cret. Not that the chosen of the Lord should operate with deadly revenge, on dark nights; but that the per- petrators of their criminal deeds might be the better concealed from the eyes of the Law and of the Christian world. Unless persons residing there were of their faith, or upheld them in their deeds of violence, such as murdering, stealing, and burning the property belonging to the Gentiles, they were regarded as evil doers, by the Mormon profession. Violent acts, fully premeditated, and without any cause or provocation whatever, were committed time and again; were almost daily occur- rences, indeed. Numbers of instances could I mention, but they have been fully narrated heretofore by others, such as following up and murdering in the most brutal manner, one whole emigrant train of men, women, and children, who were on their way to California. 28 HOW I KNOW. To this day their bones 4ie bleaching in the sun. Some claim that they did have a burial; but, judging from appearances and the manner in which I saw the bones lying scattered over the plain, it would be very difficult for Brigham Young, Haight, Higbee, and Delee, and their hordes of destroying angels to verify the statement MOUNTAIN MEADOW MASSACRE. that they did bury those that were massacred at Mount- ain Meadow. Taking a view of the picturesque and beautiful land- scapes which compose the Mountain Meadows, one would hardly think that this had been the scene of such a wanton outrage. But this was no w^orse than hun- UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 29 dreds of others. Several incidents have come under my own observation. One I may mention, occurred in Manti, San Pete County. There v^^as a young man living there who had become entangled in a love affair with a young lady of the same place. It so happened that Bishop S , of the precinct, had had revelations; that is, the Lord had commanded him to take this young lady as his wife, notwithstanding the fact that he had several wives already. The bishop tried to reason the young lady out of having anything to say to the young man. But the fact was, the young couple were engaged to be married; and the bishop, finding that loving words to his desired darling were of no avail, resolved not to be outdone, but to seek revenge on the young man. Con- sequently he had a secret conference with a few of the brethren, and they decided to hold a meeting in the school-house, which meeting the young man should be prevailed upon to attend. At this meeting these plot- ters in a most cruel manner destroyed the manhood of the young man. He, after lingering some time in great suffering, died. Several instances of like character have taken place in Utah, all in obedience to the "revelations of the Lord," as given to those whose lives have been passed worse than brutes of the field. Another way of seeking revenge is for some one to sell horses or cattle to one not belonging to the faith. Then officers are sent to arrest him for stealing. He is certain to receive no mercy, because they will murder him on the road to trial, and make a report to the effect that he had been some desperado of the worst dye. The case of 30 HOW I KNOW. D. P. Smith, of Piute County, is a good illustration. He bought a span of mules from a certain saint who resided in Ogden, a settlement thirty-six miles north of Salt Lake City, and took them to the mines on the Sevier River. They followed and arrested him on the charge of stealing the mules, and started to take him to the city for trial. They soon became tired of him, and, after hauling him twenty-five miles, they shot him, and buried the body in an old manure bank. One more illustration of their saintliness. Captain Hawley, now living at Pleasant Grove, Utah, hired a young man of seventeen years of age to work for him. After the young fellow had labored six months Captain Hawley paid him off with an old horse that was not worth a cent, since good broncos were selling at only ten and twelve dollars a piece. The young fellow, glad to get an3/thing, took the horse, and started toward Corinne. Captain Plawley waited a sufficient time for his victim to get well on his way, then got the sheriff and fol- lowed and arrested him, before he had reached Corinne, on the charge of having stolen the horse. The Mormons, being so bitterly opposed to w^orldly immigration into Utah, would charge any criminal offense against a Gen- tile already in the Territory. So it was with the young man with the horse. He was taken to the nearest tree and hung by the neck, his hands being untied. When he was swung off he commenced to climb the rope hand over hand. Captain Hawley then took a small cedar post that lay there and broke both of the young man's arms, and, after pounding him with the club until UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 31 satisfied, he rode off and left the poor fellow to the merc}^ of some one who could show enough sympathy for such unfortunates to give him a burial. The people in Utah who piofess to belong to the Mormon Church are two-thirds of them direct from Eu- rope (Danes and Swedes being largely in the majority), and among the most of them ignorance predominates. I have seen in Southern Utah the women out plowing with cattle, breaking up the ground, harrowing and seeding it, and tending and gathering their crops, while the men w^ere too shiftless to either help them or otherwise to provide suste- nance for their household. Hundreds of them live in adobe houses. These are made by mixing black earth to the consistency of thick mud and forming it into very large-sized blocks shaped like bricks. Then they are spread over a piece of ground leveled off for the pur- pose, there to be sun-dried, when they are considered fit material of which to build their houses. Then they go to the canon and there cut small straight poles for the roof The poles are laid along the sides of the house, one end resting on a large log that is laid up for a center beam, the other on the top of the adobe wall; after which they mix more mud and water together MORMON PERSECUTION. 32 HOW I KNOW. and plaster these poles all over. This forms the roof. Shingle and all other expensive roofs are dispensed with. Here in these castles the saints have their wives brush- ing up their dirt floors, washing, mending, ironing, cook- ing and indeed providing for the support of the house- hold, while they themselves spend their time in receiving revelations from the Lord regarding the future prosper- ity of Mormondom and the number of additional wives it would be necessary to take in order to obtain celestial glory. The following illustration is given to convey some idea of marriage in Utah. A certain Mr. Buntz, who is now living in San Pete County, Utah, received a revelation from the Lord, as he claimed, that, notwithstanding he had already a number of wives, he must still increase his better half by taking to his arms and marrying three sisters who were living near by. He married all three at one and the same time with as much unconcern as if it were an every-day occurrence. Another instance I will notice. There was a certain bishop then living in Provost City, who became enamored w^ith a married lady of one of the adjoining villages. In order to obtain his sixth loved one he went to the lady's husband, and there in pleading tones he narrated the revelations he had received from the Lord, setting forth the way in ^vhich he must do in order to receive his share of celes- tial glory in the world to come. The husband listened very attentively until the bishop had finished his request; then, in a good-natured way, he showed him the fallacy of such proceedings both in a moral and religious view. UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 33 But the bishop was not to be argued out of his hope of celestial happiness. That night the husband was fol- lowed and murdered in cold blood upon his own door- step. Some who read this may think that I am overstat- ing the facts. Indeed such is not the case ; for I have given only a few instances when I could recount more than one hundred such, most of which can be verified by many who are still living in Utah, and in surrounding States and Territories. I will next speak of the scenery. In traveling through Utah from the north-east you are constantly passing into and out of canons with mountains on either side, tower- ing for thousands of feet above you. These mountain sides, where not too rocky and abrupt, are covered with a dense giowth of timber, while between the mountains in the canons are clear running brooks of cold water, in most of which trout abound. In traveling along one frequently passes alkaline springs, boiling springs, and springs of almost freezing water oftentimes located only a few feet apart. Many of these springs are intermittent in their action and they are all a source of unfailing interest to the traveler and geologist. The Jordan River and City Creek run through the city of Salt Lake, affording an abundant supply of the purest water in any city as large as this, in the world. Most beautiful trout are hooked out of the streams, by the little boys, right in the street. After leaving Salt Lake City, going south, one is struck with the prominence of the old Wasatch range, 3 34 I/OW I KNOW. now ascending gradually, then rising abruptly in broken, rough, and dangerous looking precipices. At other places it looks as if the country had been inundated with water, and the rock, being in some places softer than its connecting sides, had been worn away, leaving canons of all shapes, depths, and lengths. The valleys through Juab and San Pete Counties are made very productive by irrigation. This is done by taking water and con- ducting it through ditches all over the land under cultivation. After their crops are planted, and it becomes necessa- ry to moisten the ground, the water is turned into these small ditches and left running until the earth is sufficiently moist- ened, when it is shut off until it becomes neces- sary to repeat the operation. The valleys are of a dark, loamy soil mixed with sand, and before they are brought under cultivation are covered with sage brush — a small scrubby bush that grows sometimes to the height of six feet. It is found from the British possessions on the the North to the Gulf of Mexico on the South. All the valleys and plains throughout the mountains of the West produce the sage bush in great abundance. The sage bush is the home of the jack-rabbit. Dozens of them BRIGHAM YOUNG. UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 35 may be seen at any time running in all directions from the traveler, as he journeys over the plains. Some of the loftiest peaks of Utah can be seen at a distance of many miles. Mt. Nebo is as prominent as any, with an elevation of a little over twelve thousand feet. As the traveler journeys on South, through the Territory, he travels over sandy deserts, unsettled and uncultivated, except in a few places where the streams flow through from the mountains, furnishing water suffi- cient for irrigating purposes. Generally along these streams a few of the saints have settled in adobe houses, built after their own fashion, usually surrounded by a stone wall built in the form of a square, and often con- taining as much as an acre of land. Into this they remove their famihes, and use it as a fortress in defend- ing themselves against the Indians, when they make their raids through the settlements. The bench lands all over the Territory produce great quantities of bunch grass, a very nutritious grass that grows to the height of eighteen inches, and in bunches. In passing through the Territory you see thousands and thousands of cattle feeding upon this grass. The val- leys are productive of no timber whatever, unless it be a few scattering cottonwoods along the banks of the streams. But sufficient timber grows in the mountains for all necessar}^ purposes. Mahogany and cedar con- stitute the kinds that grow on that side of the ranges facing the South, while the pine, fir, spruce, balsam, and small scrub-oaks, with a few more scrubby little bushes, constitute the timber on the North slope. 36 HOW I KNOW. Mines were discovered in Utah years ago; but owing to the influences brought to bear by the Mormon leaders upon their not so well enlightened followers, mining was prohibited within the Hmits of the Territory. But as time passed on, and people began to emigrate to the West in greater numbers, crowding full the older places, and seeking for newer fields, where fortunes might be dug from the earth, at last, and in the face of all opposition from the Mormons, prospecting and min- ing throughout the Territory began. So that to-day thousands of honest, hard-working miners can be seen toiHng and striving for the treasures of gold and silver, and other minerals that lie buried underneath the surface earth of Utah. Notwithstanding the many difficulties that the pioneer miners of the Territory had to encoun- ter and overcome, some of them have done extremely well. And now some who were so bitterly opposed to opening up mines there, finding it useless to resist the fast growing population of miners, are zealously engaged, themselves, in opening up some of the Territory's pre- cious wealth. Gold, silver, lead, copper, zinc, iron, salt, and a few other minerals are found in many parts of the Territory in sufficient quantities to leave a balance over all expen- ditures in running them. At different places throughout the Territory, salt is found in the mountains, and is easily taken out and refined. Large deposits of coal are found in various places throughout the Territory. While in Utah my home was in a mining camp UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 37 located on Sevier River. A great number of locations was recorded. The recorder was kept busy writing out and recording claims, as people would do nothing but locate and then record. I often times thought to myself, "What will this amount to?" But green as I THE MORMON TABERNACLE. was, I could only do as others did. I then knew no more about mining than a two-year-old boy knows about making an arasta, or quartz mill. I worked a few^ days and obtained a little money — enough for a grub-stake — then I went to hunting for hidden millions, along with 38 HOW I KNOW. Others. I would write out a notice and post it up on everything that my ignorance claimed as a very valuable mine. It was only a short time until every bowlder and pile of rocks for miles around the camping spot was located and recorded. The recorder would most always do the work of recording, and wait for his fees until the mine became a paying property. And I rather think that the recorder of Ohio District is yet waiting, like Micaw- ber, for some of the miners that located there to turn up. It would sometimes happen that two or more notices would be found on the same bowlder. Then war would be the result. A mine is of no value until a few per- sons are butchered over it, in an effort to determine the question as to who shall be the possessor of it. Thousands of locations are made throughout the mountains, when work to the amount of one dollar has not been done upon them; yet the location is named, filed, and recorded, and the worthy claimant struts around and talks of his mine as though it were worth thousands, when in reality it is not worth the paper he has soiled in writing the notice. But stay with your mine, pard, you may sell it for several thousand yet. It is very easy to tell a prospector from any one else. The prospector always has his pockets full of rocks of all sizes, shapes, colors, and kinds, each piece of which he will tell you the nature of, the probability of its value, and all the different combinations of mineral that it con- tains, with as much ease, and all the grace of a first- class mineralogist. If he is not able to do this he is a " tenderfoot," and has much to learn in the art of min- UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 39 ing. To prospect successfully he should send to some friend in California and have some very rich specimens of gold rock sent to him. Then, if he keeps his little tongue in the right channel, the whole camp is soon on its feet, anxious to see a specimen of the richest gold- bearing quartz rock that was ever heard of; and the next day, and for days after, the lucky miner is watched in his every movement, to see in what direction he leaves camp. He is then still watched and carefully trailed. Miners in well doing are the most excitable of men. Often and often will they leave mines or claims that pay well, to go to a distance, led by some new excitement; and when they arrive there it frequently happens that they find nothing but disappointment and starvation staring them in the face. The White Pine excitement, in Ne- vada, is a good illustration. Hundreds flocked there to spend the last cent they had, and then to leave, packing their blankets on their backs; that is, they who were fortunate enough to have blankets, for hundreds had not even a meal's provisions to serve them on their exit from what a few days before was supposed to be one of the richest camps the world had ever seen. A miner's fortune is like a mushroom — it springs up where least expected, then again it vanishes with as great rapidity as it came. I shall always remember the first mine I endeavored to work for myself. After prospect- ing for two months on all quarters of the compass from Bullion City, the mining town I was holding responsible for my bed and board, I at last resolved to go to work on what I supposed the best of my many locations. So 40 HOW I KNOW. I laid in a supply of drills, hammers, powder and fuse, and hired a man to work with me for four dollars a day. Then, after spending a day surveying the location and arguing the many advantages one spot had over another for working, we at last concluded that the cheapest and best way to work the mine advantageously was to go down below the mine on the slope of the mountain and NEW MINING TOWN. run a tunnel in until we struck the vein, then we would be at a sufficient depth to ascertain the value of our ore. So we spent the whole day, and did nothing ex- cept to come to the conclusion that a tunnel was the cheapest and best method, and that by running in twenty feet we could tap the lead at about that or a little greater depth, and that the next morning we would UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 41 begin digging the tunnel. After digging, picking, drill- ing and blasting one month we had run a tunnel in twenty-seven feet and had found no ledge. Then what to do I did not know, for my money was exhausted and I had been running in debt at the store for provisions two weeks. At last I resolved to have some older, ex- perienced miners to go up with me and see my claim and give me some idea of what I should do in order to show up my vein of ore, for I v^as sure it was there some place, and plain to be seen on top I thought. Some said I was working it right; others were doubt- ful. At last one of them agreed to come the next morning and to help me work some on it from the top in exchange for v^ork, which I accepted. The next morning found me on the ground as usual, but not to tunnel. I was now about to sink a shaft riofht down on what I considered to be the vein. After spending the day in prying around large rocks and pushing off smaller ones, we were ready to begin sink- ing the next morning. Before noon we had sunk a shaft clear through my mine, and there was now no more of an indication left than there is on a barn floor. So I was out about three hundred dollars in time, money, and provisions, not counting my tools in, for I still had them — all because I was no miner, but simply wanted to do something I knew nothing about. This was my first out in mining. But I remained by no means an idle prospector, show- ing nothing but notices on file. A company often of us went in on the Webster Location Lode, and we located 42 HOW I KNOW. all of the available ground that the law specified we should have and more too, and then went to work on it, some of my partners expecting to sell out in a few days for fabulous amounts. But my courage was none of the best in developing; for my first work spent in tun- neling had proved such an entire failure. We had hard rock to blast, and progress was slow. At a called meet- ing of the members of the company, we concluded to put in the remainder of the work done in developing by sinking a shaft parallel with the vein. We got along very well with this until we had attained the depth of fifty or sixty feet, when the walls became scaly and we had to timber the shaft. Then the water came in in torrents, which had to be kept out, and the consequence was our progress was so impeded that we were two years sink- ing on the Webster Lode and only obtained a depth of two hundred feet. I always will think it is a good mine, could it be worked with any reasonable expense; but it can not. So there it lies yet with no one doing any- thing with it. Thus it is with thousands of others who have located and worked claims until they were satisfied that the mineral extracted from the lead would not pay expenses of labor and cost of milling, and have abandoned claims that sometimes assay hundreds of dollars to the ton. In this w^ay prospecting is going on all over the West and not one mine out of every ten thousand that is located and even put on file in the county or district clerk's office ever pays back the cost of expenditures, counting money, time, provisions, tools, and all other necessary expenses. UTAH AND THE MORMONS. 43 It can, therefore, plainly be seen that all men can not make a fortune mining; but the majority of people that are carried away by mining excitements rush in pell- mell, without ever taking time to think what they can or will do when they get there. They seem to think that the precious metals are lying around in quantities sufficient for them to amass enormous fortunes, so that they may live at ease and in luxury and splendor the balance of their lives; and all this is to be obtained within a short time and at little or no expense, merely expecting to shovel the gravel into a sluice box, or by some other method to separate the gold from the mother earth. Now, friends, this is all a mistake. Where one man reaps a fortune in a mining field, scores are retiring to hunt some other place where the chance would seem better in their favor, and they will never find it. Mining is a legitimate business, as much so as farming or any other branch of industry that one might engage in. But yet there is more chance work connected with mining than with all the other different pursuits of business. I am well aware there are a great many writing to the contrary, and I would not wish to try to dissuade any one from mining ; but, on the contrary, go if you want to. There is yet plenty to learn. Hundreds will go to the West, expecting to make their mark in some pro- fession where shrewdness and education are required. They will find all the professions full and much more so than is needed. Some want to know where to go. Bear patiently with me and I will show you where there is yet room before I come to the end of this book. 44 HOW I KNOW. Mining, when you are on a good mine, is an invest- ment or enterprise that surpasses all other enterprises that I know of as a high road to fortune. Thousands of dollars have rewarded the sturdy prospector in some in- stances in a single day. But the day is past when the miner can take up his pan and in an hour or tw^o pan out enough dust to supply himself and friends with abundant funds. One meets hundreds of good old fel- lows, who will tell of the money they made in the early days of California and how they spent it, thinking there were such vast quantities lying in the gulches, that they could be possessors of all the luxuries of the land as long as they lived. NEVADA. ^^ CHAPTER III. NEVADA. AFTER remaining in Utah Territory until I became weary of not well doing, I concluded to go to Ne- vada. I settled temporarily in Carson City, which, at that time, was a very small place; but was, nevertheless, bustUng with life and energy. My finances not being cumbersome, I resolved to go to work at the first op- portunity. This presented itself two days after, when I went to work for Yerrington, BHss & Co., who were large wood and lumber contractors. They owned large tracts of timber lands lying in proximity to Lake Tahoe, together with saw-mills and flumes. Tahoe is a beau- tiful lake, about which enough has been said to justify me in passing over the beauties and grandeur of the lake, and the surrounding locality. (Read Mark Twain.) I began work in a saw-mill, as screw-turner, and remained there until the mill closed in the Fall, which it does every year on account of cold and snow. But I had made good use of my time, and when I went down to Carson City I had six hundred and forty dol- lars, nearly all of which I had made that Summer. There the mining fever was raging, as it always is. Excitement ran high, and every one — men, women, and children, old and young, rich and poor— if they were able to raise only five dollars, were deaHng or dabbling 46 HOW I KNOW. in stocks of the celebrated Comstock mines, which were just then receiving so much attention in the San Francisco Stock Exchange. I, of course, must try my luck, with the others. So I invested the half I had, and became a constant attendant at the broker's office, and watcher of the bulletin boards, along with the crowded masses of different nationalities that are always there watching every change that is noted down with VIEW NEAR LAKE TAHOE. the fluctuation of the stock in San Francisco. Fortune for once, I thought, seemed to be in my favor, for during that Winter I made the little sum of sixteen hundred dollars; not by my shrewdness, how- ever, for I declare I knew nothing about it, except that I would give Messrs. Rice & Peters my money, with orders to buy such and such stock, and in a short time I would make sale at a large profit, and buy again. Nevada possesses some of the richest producing NEVADA. 47 mines in the world. The Comstock mines are the best in the State. Millions and millions have been produced from some of the oldest locations on this lode, with vast bodies of ore yet in sight. No one who has never been at Virginia City can form an idea of the vast amount of work that is required to carry on the mining busi- ness there. Some of the finest machinery that the world has yet produced can there be seen. This must be had in order to mine successfully in deep mines. MilHons of dollars are annually spent in erecting hoist- ing works, quartz mills, and other necessary improve- ments. The water that they use comes through pipes from Marlette or Silver Lake miles away, down the mountain side, across valleys, then to ascend again, to be distributed throughout the city. The mines are always in need of vast quantities of wood and lumber, a greater portion of which comes from the mountain sides around Lake Tahoe. The lumber is sawed at the different mills along the eastern shore of the lake. A great many men are employed in this work. Some cutting logs at different points around the lake, others hauling and dumping them into the water, where rafts are formed and then towed across the lake to the mills, where they have large break-waters constructed to keep the logs from being carried back into the lake and lost. When the logs are sawed, the lumber is all piled up, each kind by itself, after which it is loaded on the cars and taken to the dividing ridge of the mountain between the lake and Carson City, where it is again piled up as before, alongside a flume. 48 HOW I KNOW. Now, to go back a little, the Lake Tahoe Narrow Gauge Railroad was built from the lake at Glenbrook to the summit. In a direct line, the distance is a little short of three miles; but to get from the lake up, they made nine miles of road, and some of that has a grade of one hundred and sixty feet to the mile. They have two engines on the road, which run all the time, except in the dead of Winter, bringing up wood and lumber to the summit yards. From the summit to Carson City is fourteen miles, and the distance is spanned by a long BLUE CANON, SIERRA NEVADA. flumC. ThC capacity of the flume is unknown. There have been over one million feet of lumber and four hundred cords of wood sent from the summit to Carson in a single day's run of ten hours. The flume is built of two-inch plank sixteen feet in length, and twenty and twenty-two inches in width. These boards are placed the bottom of one on the flat edge of the other, and securely NEVADA. 49 nailed with large spike nails, forming a V shaped box. After the flume bed has been laid with stringers prop- erly graded, the boxes are put in place and securely supported by generally five bracket bearings to each box. The brackets are made with arms extending enough to admit of another two-inch plank ten or twelve inches in width, being placed in on either side if necessary. Then a head of water is turned on at the upper end of the flume and it is ready for opera- tion. Sometimes fifty men can be seen throwing in wood without checking its movement in the least. When at the yard, running lumber, I have seen one hundred and thirty-four thousand feet run from the yard in a single hour. I have seen green sticks of timber forty feet long, sixteen by eighteen inches square, thrown in and run along with more ease than a boat through the water. Miles of flume can be seen at this date extending up along the mountain sides, used to flume wood to Carson. Large bodies of men are everywhere at work cutting wood. The timber around the lake is pine of different varieties, white and red fir, spruce, and tama- rack. All grow to large size. The forest land around Lake Tahoe is very rough, broken, and of no value except for the timber that is on it. But to return to the Comstock Mines. The mines are very deep and the deeper down they go the hotter they become. Vast quantities of water are continually running in and are as rapidly pumped to the top by mammoth machinery. The water is hoisted twenty- 50 HOW I KNOW, three hundred feet out of some of the deepest loca- tions. A few years ago they claimed that they hoisted through their pumps fish without eyes; they were living when found, but, after being exposed to the cold air on the surface, soon died. The heat on the lower levels of the Comstock Lode is intense,j vary- ing according to particular parts visited, but averaging about one hundred and forty degrees. Air pumps are constantly at work, forcing down cool air, and at the same time tons of ice are being lowered. And yet it is more like traveling in an oven that is heated and still heating than in the pure breezes from off Mt. David- son. Eight hours constitute a day's work down in these depths, where no light except the feeble flicker of the miner's candle ever shines to guide him on his narrow pathway underneath the ground. The miners' wages average four dollars a day. The Comstock Lode and Sutro Tunnel Company entered into an agreement in 1866 to tap and drain the lode. The tunnel was commenced at what is now Sutro City, and was pushed along under the super- vision of Mr. Sutro. Millions of money have been expended in the undertaking. They now think they will be able to use it by the first of June, 1879. Mr. Sutro estimates that, after the mines are drained, con- nections with the tunnel made, and cross-cutting under way, the average daily output of ore will be three thou- sand tons, a great portion of which will be first-class or good ore. The Tunnel Company expect to reap bene- fits in many ways, viz: by revenues they will receive NEVADA. 51 for the use of the tunnel for purposes of transportation, furnishing fire-wood, timber, compressed air, water for power, irrigation, mill supplies, etc. The climate of Nevada is cold in Winter and pleas- ant in Summer. All through the Sierra Nevada range deep snow falls, and covers the ground until late in the Spring, in many places not melting off entirely at all, but remaining until snow falls again. A few years ago, in going from Lake Tahoe down to Carson City, while on that part of the road lying be- tween Mr. Spooner's and the Flinne camp, I passed through a tunnel of snow for several hundred feet, where the snow had been shoveled out along the side of the wagon road and wood had been hauled in and burned to melt the snow. I do not know how thick the roof of the tunnel was, but I know it was on the fourth day of July that I passed through it. Large for- ests of the finest of timber lying between the lake and Eagle Valley have all been cut and used for the ben- efit of the Comstock Mines. There are a great many horses and cattle scattered throughout the State, but not in droves and herds, such as are seen on the plains and bench lands of Utah or Col- orado. Farming is not a success in Nevada for many reasons. The seasons are too short. There is gener- ally frost every month in the year, or, at least, I found it so during my stay in the State. Hot Springs abound all along the valley of the Hum- boldt. Some of these springs are situated entirely alone, while others lie very near springs of cold water. 52 HOJV I KNOW. I remember having seen a hot and cold spring so near together that the two hands could be placed one in each spring at the same time. Some of these springs are very shallow, while others extend to unknown or, at least, unsounded depths. The valleys are covered with alkali, varying from a thin sheet to three inches in thickness. The water HUMBOLDT PALISADES. Standing in drains, ponds, and lakes in the valleys is all brackish, containing a vast amount of alkaH. In many places travelers and wagon trains, passing to and fro, laden with freight, suffer to the utmost extremity for the want of fresh water, since all the fresh-water streams from the mountains have sunk and disappeared on the bench lands, ere they reach the low lands or NEVADA. 53 valleys. It is nothing uncommon to see animals of bur- den lying dead along the roads, killed by drinking this alkahne water. You meet travelers and freighters go- ing and coming in all directions, with sore and inflamed eyes, oftentimes so bad that they are unable to see; lips parched, cracked, and often swollen far beyond their usual size; gums sore; throat and lungs sometimes so painful that it is with great effort the individual can eat or speak — all arising from the winds and the dust that sweep along over these alkahne plains. Nevada deserts are very bad; but I will point out further along some locahties where the Humboldt or Walker River valleys would be pleasant by comparison. 54 HOW I KNOW, CHAPTER IV. CALIFORNIA. IN going from Nevada to the coast, one traverses over three hundred and twenty-four miles of rail- road, between Carson City and San Francisco. The enchanting views of this whole distance will awaken DONNER LAKE. the traveler's keenest admiration. Donner Lake is not equaled in grandeur and picturesqueness anywhere in the East. It is three and one-half miles long by one CALIFORNIA. 55 in width. It lies at the base of the Sierra range, two miles west of Truckee. It is hemmed in on three sides by the Sierras, and a more beautiful place is hard to find. The lake is filled with fish. There are three kinds of trout and a few other kinds of fish. The lake is entirely surrounded by forests of magnificent growth. One of the attractive places about the lake is Pulpit Rock in Echo Canon, where the voice will be repeated so often and distinctly that it -^^j^^—---^"^"^^^ produces a pecuHarly pleasing and interesting effect. This is the place the Donners perished in 1846. They were on their way to the valleys of California from Illinois. Here they be^- came hemmed in by snow, only a portion of their number es- caping and that after undergoing terrible suffering and hardship in traveling through mountains and canons across the range, in search of some one to go to the pulpit rock, echo canon. relief of their comrades. A party finally went to their rescue, but only to find them all dead, except one, a German, who, it is said, was subsisting on a portion of Mrs. Donner's body when found, and was in a most wretched condition. There are a great many stories in circulation con- cerning Donner Lake. The Indians claim that the place where the lake now is was formerly a volcano's 56 HOW I KNOW. crater, and discharged hot cinders, fire and smoke con- tinually. Whether this be true or not, I do not pre- tend to say. I was told that the Lake had been sounded to the depth of two thousand feet without finding bottom. But Donner Lake takes its name from the unfortu- nates who perished there in one of those dreadful storms that pass over that region of the Sierras every Winter, where the snow sometimes falls to the depth of ten or twelve feet. Traveling is then out of the question, un- less provided with snow-shoes; and then one unaccus- tomed to their use would find it difficult and laborious to make any progress. Going north from here one comes to the Sierra Val- ley, where there is an abundance of grass in the sum- mer; but farming is limited as the altitude is so high that it is liable to freeze any night during the Summer months. But this is still in a mining region, and mining is, directly or indirectly, the leading occupation of the set- tlers. Farther north we pass through Plumas, Tehama, Shasta, Lassen, Siskiyou and Modoc Counties, all noted for their mining industries. The mountains are full of holes and tunnels. The gulches have been washed over and over through strings of sluices, and still the miner is washing- away with as much or more energy and ambition than in the years of '50 and '51. Sierra County has been the scene of excitement ever since gold was discovered in 1847. Thousands of dollars have been brought into Downieville day after day as a reward for the early and successful prospector. Ditches CALIFORNIA. 57 have been run for miles to convey water for washing down— by the use of hydraulic ram — whole sides of high bars or mountains, as I might term them. ^ I have often been asked how gold looks in the earth; in what form it is generally found, and of what size are the nuggets. The last two questions admit of a num- ber of answers. The first question I will answer by saying that persons who can recognize gold after it has been taken from the earth, and refined and cleaned, would generally recognize it when seen in quartz rock, or in nuggets, in the sand and gravel. Gold most always has its distinctive bright yellow appearance, although I have sometimes seen it when it seemed to be covered with a coat of rust. When this is the case the color of the outside coating varies greatly. The gold I have seen so shaded has generally been where the water was saturated with different combinations of minerals. The second question I will answer by stating that all gold is formed in quartz, and quartz (not float quartz) generally lies in veins. Where it does not, there has been a general upheaval of the earth's surface, grinding and mingling it into one conglomerate mass. In a case of this kind the quartz is in confusion and is scattered ir- regularly throughout the locality of such visitation. The veins of quartz are found in crevices in rocks of a pre- vious formation. Veins are either of a different material or like that of the surrounding rock; in either case the filling-up of the vein has succeeded the formation of the country rock. Bishop Mohr says, as to the formation of these crev- 58 HO W I KNO W. ices : " There seems to be no doubt that they have their origin in the rending of the crust of the earth, caused by plutonic or volcanic action in the interior of the earth, or by the formation and lifting of newly- formed masses from lower depths into higher regions, and a consequent rending of the overlying rocks. As the latter are lifted into higher regions of the globe, ^which have a larger diameter, these masses must of course break, or separate, and become detached from the neighboring rocks, producing chasms and crevices. The material with which these crevices are filled out has entered from below, from above, or from the neigh- boring strata, as a solution, either from the country rocks, or from deeper regions. Water was very likely the principal medium, which, together perhaps with some gases, acted as a receiver for the particles of metal and other substances which lay distributed in the different strata of rocks, and depos- ited them, far more concentrated, by a slow and often repeated process." The uneven distribution of minerals in veins, the often symmetric and parallel texture of veins, as well as their composition, so different often from that of the neighboring rocks, seems to be proof for this explanation. Veins are usually found within those places where the surrounding country rock is in a decomposed state. Some scientists cling to the idea that veins are formed entirely by the heating process. I will not en^ deavor to dispute with them. But one thing I will say, that the walls of veins show nowhere the action of fire, CALIFORNIA. 59 as would be the case where the wall-rock was of a nature difficult to fuse. Now this is where the gold in veins is obtained, the metal is distributed throughout this vein matter, and often in very rich rock or ore the SCENE NEAR EAGLE LAKE, CALIFORNIA. particles are so small that the eye can not discover a trace either of gold or silver. At other times the rock, or ore, will be dotted throughout with grains of gold, sometimes with golden wires woven together, and then 60 HOW I KNOW. again small nuggets can be picked from the ore with a pocket knife. Placer mining is for gold that has been thrown from these veins where the rock has become softened and has been washed from the mother vein. The gold, owing to its very heavy nature, is left deposited along the gulches, in canons, and along the mountain sides, and bench lands. The earth, where the gold has been thus deposited, is then washed in different ways and by different processes, until it passes away, leaving the grains of gold. It is seen, therefore, that gold in not all in nuggets; but, on the contrary, some of it is in grains so fine that the eye can not see it until it is gathered together through the washing and cleaning process. Again, there have been some large pieces found. The largest that was ever found in California was brought to light by John J. Finney, one of the Shasta County pioneers, who now resides near French Gulch. He un- earthed it in the early mining times in California, about ten miles from Downieville, Sierra County. It was a chunk of solid gold that weighed five thousand one hundred and twenty ounces. This is said to be the best day's work ever done by a single miner. But John, like the most of old miners, is still prospecting for hid- den wealth. Going on to the North, from here, we pass through Lassen County. Large forests of pine and fir hem us in on all sides. We move on past Honey Lake, a picturesque place, and a sight that will be impressed forever upon the memory. A little farther on we come CALIFORNIA. 61 to Eagle Lake. There we turn and go into Siskiyou County, and soon we are at the base of old Mt. Shasta. We can then then look up to the top, where she rears her head for over fourteen thousand feet; and there she stands, with snow for a perpetual covering, and clouds dashing like billows all around her. No timber grows upon the top, of course. The Yosemite Valley, California, is situated on the Merced River, in the southern part of Mariposa County. It is on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, and near the center of the State, North and South. The valley is small, being but eight miles in length and three-quarters of a mile in width. It is enclosed with granite walls rising with al- most unbroken and perpendicular faces to the dizzy height of from three thousand the two guardsmen. to six thousand feet above the green valley beneath. Yosemite is the Indian name for grizzly bear. This place is and will be preserved for public use. At Crane Flat there is a small grove of the mammoth trees of 62 HOW I KNOW. Mariposa. There are two of these trees, called The Two Guardsmen, growing from the same root, which measure one hundred and fourteen feet in circumference, and are of corresponding height. From the brink of the basin to the valley beneath measures four thousand feet. In order to get a descent at this point a trail over seven miles in length has been blasted and worked out of the rock. After the descent is made, you find yourself in what has been well called the "Garden of the Gods." Around you towers some of the grandest scenery that the world contains. The stu- penduously massive walls seem, as it were, to be closing in around you from all sides. The valley in which you stand, the fertility of which is unsurpassed on the continent, is beautifully set in grass. Here we are able to look upon Nature in all of her grandeur. The lofty walls lifting themselves to a per- pendicular height of four or five thousand feet; the water gushing out of the many springs that are everywhere around you, to fall many hundreds of feet below, there to mingle with the waters of the beautiful Merced River. Looking to the east the eye rests upon the Yosemite, spreading out and falling down, like a magnificent bridal veil, a distance of twenty-six hundred feet. This is by far the highest water-fall in the world. There are nu- merous other falls. The Nevada Fall is seven hundred feet high. It is a grand and beautiful sight. It is formed by the Merced River, a stream several feet in depth and from fifty to seventy-five feet in width, continually pour- ing its waters over the clifis into the valley. CALIFORNIA. 63 Standing in the valley on a bright, clear day, one may well go into ecstacies over the many magnificent works THE YOSEMITE FALLS. of nature that crowd upon the view. Here are the gi- ants of the forest with a circumference, at the earth, of one hundred and six i^oX^ rearing their lofty heads over 64 HOW I KNOW. two hundred and seventy feet into the air. There is one lying prostrate, with its whole heart burned out, leaving nothinof but the shell. A man can ride on horseback for seventy feet right into it, and yet have plenty of room to turn a horse of ordinary size around and come out. The surrounding country is for fifty or sixty miles dotted with little valleys in which these large trees are found all the way from thirty to one hundred feet in circumfer- ence, and from two hundred to considerably more than three hundred feet in height. Vegetables grow to an enormous size here. I have sometimes thought I would say nothing about this, how- ever, for I have my doubts whether the people in the East w^ill believe the statements or not. They may think I am exaggerating when I say I have here seen single heads of cabbage weighing eighty pounds. Melons often weigh one hundred pounds, and pumpkins more than that; beets are three feet in length; onions as large around as a large pie pan; grapes in bunches v^^eighing ten pounds. From here v^e will go to the Golden City. I can not hope to say more than has been said by others, but jus- tice demands that I shall not pass it by without a word. The first house was built in San Francisco in the year 1835. Since then a city Kas sprung up that to-day is the leading city of western North America. The town was not originally laid out in accordance with any def- inite plan, and until a few years ago people continued to build in the same irregular way. Then great im- provements were set on foot by widening the streets, cutting through whole blocks of houses, tearing down CALIFORNIA. 65 the older buildings, and erecting in their stead better and costlier ones. Some magnificent buildings were erected, the San Francisco Mining Exchange, built en- tirely of marble, being the best and handsomest. The Palace Hotel, J erected by W. C. Ralston, now dead, is said to be the grandest in the BRIDAL VEIL FALL, YOSEMITE VALLEY. United States. Mr. Baldwin's Academy of Music is an ornament fit for any European city. So that San Fran- cisco is now, the hoodlums excepted, as beautiful a city as one can find among any of the port towns of the S 66 HOW I KNOW. United States of the same population, hoodlums not excepted. In addition to this the city is filled with attractions of such a number and nature that one need never be at a loss for entertainment. North Beach is filled up with ancient collections in the shape of cobwebs as old as Adam would have been had he not died. The Cliff Rocks, a little more remote from the city, is a great place of resort. Here one gets a fair view of the Pacific Ocean. At this point, a little distance from the shore, are cliffs of rocks projecting out of the water. These are almost constantly covered with sea lions, roll- ing and pitching over another and howling incessantly. But, perhaps, the greatest attraction of San Fran- cisco is Woodward's Garden. This is a place of which one never grows weary. Mr. Woodward has, at a great expense of time and money, arranged and opened for exhibition a museum, containing, it is said, eighteen thousand specimens that have been procured from every part of the globe. The museum includes an art gallery, filled with the most beautiful painting and statuary to be procured in Europe and America. There are green- houses, filled with every variety of plants known in botany. There is a zoological department, containing almost all kinds of wild animals and birds. There is an amphitheater, where twenty thousand people may sit ' and witness the hippodrome performances, such as rac- ing, drijls, games of various kinds, and other entertain- ments which may be given there. Mr. Woodward is continually making additions to his already very ex- CALIFORNIA. 67 tensive collections. His grounds are magnificently shaded with many varieties of shade trees. Everything in the collections is arranged and labeled in the most systematic manner. Any one that can see and read may there view^ intelligently the productions of the world. The valleys of California are fertile, and vegetation A CALIFORNIA STUMP, is thriftier there than in most any other place in the United States. Wheat has been raised, yielding eighty bushels to the acre. Thousands upon thousands of acres are sown annually. I have seen one unbroken field of waving wheat, extending for over forty miles, without a fence or ditch to separate it. The mode of harvesting wheat on the Pacific Coast is different from what it is 68 HOW I KNOW. in the Atlantic States. In the West the grain is sown either by drill or broadcast. If, after sowing, the ground is not moist enough, it is irrigated by letting on water until it has become sufficiently wet; then the water is shut off again. In this way they regulate the seasons. Harvesting wheat is done by machines called " headers," which cut the heads of the standing wheat and threshes out the grain, sacks and sews up the sacks, all at the same time. Ricks of sacked grain can be seen standing in every direction over the grain fields during the har- vesting. It may be as well remarked here that the Pacific Coast is subject to rain only at one season during the year. That is known as the rainy season. It sets in about the month of November, sometimes not until later, and closes in February. Sometimes there will be but a few days' rain during that period of time. Dur- ing other seasons there may be rain for six or seven weeks. When it does rain, it often happens that several inches of water fall in a very short time. The foot-hills of California are covered with a very nutritious grass, which during the long summer months has the appearance of being all burnt, parched and and dried up. It, nevertheless, retains a great deal of nutriment. Stock like it and keep fat and sleek as long as they can get plenty of it. Alfalfa is raised through- out the valleys with flattering success. Sometimes as many as four cuttings are procured from the same ground during the year. Grapes do better in California than in any other part CALIFORNIA. 69 of the United States. Hundreds of acres of vineyards can be seen growing throughout the State. Apples, peaches, pears, plums, cherries, apricots, and oranges all grow there in vast quantities and of as rich and fine a quality and flavor as any I have ever seen in the East or along the Mississippi Valley. Nuts of all kinds and varieties that I know of can be seen growing in many of the southern counties. Cotton and tobacco are said to do well also. Fish and game abound. If a well-to- do man can not enjoy himself in California, it would be difficult for him to find enjoyment anywhere on this continent. Of course the State has many drawbacks. Some- times an earthquake shakes up the country considerably, to the consternation of its inhabitants. This was the case when I was in the State in March, 1872. I had been at VandaHa, in Tulare County, for several days. The weather had been very pleasant and sunshiny — rather warm, with not a cloud to be seen. But at two o'clock, on the morning of March 26th, I was awakened by the windows rattling and the house cracking and shaking in a violent manner. I had not been thinking of an earthquake, neither did I realize that there was then one already at hand. The building seemed to be moving as on a wagon that was run over a hard, rough road. I did not remain long in bed, for I thought the house would surely soon fall down. When I got upon my feet I could scarcely stand. Then I was sure that the house was being meddled with in some violent man- ner, for it was shaking in such a way that it gave me 70 HO W I KNO W. feelings which no pen can express. For once, if never before, I was terribly scared. The oscillations were so short, and in such quick succession, that I was con- tinually bounced about in such a manner that it was NORTHERN CALIFORNIA SCENERY. with great difficulty I could dress myself There was no more sleep for me, for the shocks continued the remainder of the night; and the whole of the next day shocks could be repeatedly felt. The shocks, on CALIFORNIA. 71 this occasion, were felt the whole length of California, and into Mexico on the south, and as far east as Win- nemucca, in Nevada, covering an area seven hundred and fifty miles long, by nearly five hundred miles broad. The center of the shock was in portions of Kern and Inyo Counties, including a desert country along the border Hne between Cahfornia and Nevada. In this part of the country the Sierra Nevada range breaks off into a number of detached ranges, so that, in San Bernardino and San Diego Counties, the range disappears entirely, as far as its distinctive features are concerned. All this region bears evidence of volcanic eruptions, some of which must have been of a very recent date. Here alkaline lakes, salfataras, hot springs, and mud volcanoes are still seen. In the north-eastern part of San Bernardino County is " Death's Valley;" said to be far below the level of the sea, while the sur- rounding mountains are not less than five thousand feet above it. Still further south, in San Bernardino County, north of the trail leading from Fort Mojave by way of the sink of Mojave, the Mojave Desert and River, to Los Angelos, there are numerous volcanic craters, rising to heights of from fifty to tw^o hundred feet above the des- olate plain, still as perfect as when their fires went out. The earth is covered with lava for many miles in width, and extending to the borders of the Colorado Desert. Hot mineral springs, volcanic ashes in vast beds, lava, pumice stone, and other evidences of comparatively recent volcanic disturbance, are found in abundance. It is supposed the Dry Lakes in Bernardino County, 72 HOW I KNOW. in the Colorado Desert, was the bed of the sea at a very distant date, and that its present condition is the result of volcanic action. The ancient water-Hne, which is still distinctly marked by sedimentary discoloration, can be seen extending along the side of the San Gorgonio Mountain, south of San Gorgonio Pass, for some fifty miles. At Dos Palmas, a water station on the north- CAPE HORN, CENTRAL PACIFIC R. R. eastern side of the Colorado Desert, on the trail from San Bernardino, by way of San Gorgonio Pass, to La Paz, on the Colorado River, in 1868, an earthquake opened a large fissure in the earth, from which flowed a stream of cold water. The fissure is but a short dis- tance from the great hot spring of Dos Palmas, which is still flowing, but is said to have become much cooler CALIFORNIA. 73 since that event. At Fort Tejon, in the south-eastern part of Kern County, several years ago the earth was rent into a chasm. At Lone Pine, when the terrible earthquake visited that section, in 1872, the inhabitants were awakened by a loud explosion followed by a terrible upheaval and shaking of the earth from north to south. The whole town was instantly in ruins, not a building being left standing. Colonel Whipple, who was in Lone Pine at the time, was sleeping, he says, in the second story of an adobe house; and stated that he just had time to jump' from bed and get to the doorway when the house ap- peared to crumble to pieces beneath him, and he was buried in the ruins; but succeeded in extricating himself, though suffering from several painful but not dangerous wounds. He reports that the scenes which ensued beg- gared description. Screams and groans and cries for help rent the air in all directions, for nearly the whole population of the town was buried beneath the ruins. The first shock was followed in quick succession by three others. In fact, the earth was in a constant shock and tremble for over three hours. A chasm was opened extending thirty-five miles down the valley, ranging from three inches to forty feet in width. Rocks were torn from their places and rolled down into the valley. Everywhere through the valley are to be seen evi- dences of the terrible convulsion of nature. Before each shock an explosion was heard which seemed to be directly underneath. Over six hundred distinct shocks were felt within fifty-eight hours after the first. 74 HOW I KNOW. At Tibbet's ranch, fifteen miles above Independence, forty acres of ground sunk seven feet below the surface of the surrounding country. Big Owens Lake rose four feet. Owens River overflowed its banks, and shoals of fish were left on the shore for a distance of four miles. Through Lone Pine the earth cracked, and on one side it sunk seven or eight feet, leaving a wall of earth over three miles in length where formerly was level country. Innumerable cracks were made throughout the valley, and the Kern and Owens Rivers turned and ran up stream for several minutes, leaving the beds dry, and returned with swollen volume. There had been no parallel to this earthquake since 1812, when the missions San Juan, Capistrano, and La Purissima, in South California, were destroyed. THE CHINESE. 75 CHAPTER V. THE CHINESE. FOR upward of thirty years there has been a stream of Chinese immigration to the western part of the United States. The Chinese are of a very short but symmetrical build, with a face larger in proportion to the size of the skull, than in the European race, and round instead of oval in shape. The eyes are very small, deep, and obliquely set, with a color resembling that of the almond. Nearly all that come to the coast are of a dirty brown or swarthy complexion, although you occasionally meet one of yellow, olive, or sallow color. Their hair is all shaved off smooth and clean around the head, leaving only a small place on the top of the head where the hair is allowed to grow. This tuft is braided into a single strand, and that is lengthened out with other braiding material, so much so that oftentimes it trails upon the ground behind. While at work this queue is generally arranged in a coil around the top part of the head. Their manner of dressing differs from the European custom. Their clothing is usually clean and tidy enough; but it is on the " too muchee loosee " fitting order, and is made after the models of their own fashions. They wear wooden shoes; but not after the Holland wooden shoe pattern, for their shoes are small and finely finished. 76 HOW J KNOW. Their hats are made from the splittings of the bamboo tree, plaited after the manner of straw hats here, with a very narrow and shallow crown, and a rim from seven to ten inches wide. There are now one hundred and twenty-five thou- sand Chinese in the State of California, the greater portion of whom live in San Francisco. Most of these people are virtually in a condition of servitude. "Why, how is that?" some one asks. The answer can be given in a few words. The Chinese who are brought to this country are of a very poor class in their own land. They are destitute of money, and even of the common necessities of life. There are in San Francisco six different companies importing them; or, in words a little harsher, making slaves of them, and that to as great an extent as ever was true of the negroes in the South. Wages for all kinds of labor in the Chinese Empire are extremely low, amounting, generally, only to about seven cents per day in our money. In some cases the wages are a little higher. Here, briefly stated, is what is to-day causing so much disturbance in the West on this subject. These six companies have agents in the different ports of China. Whenever any new enterprise is undertaken on the Pacific slope requiring great numbers of workmen, these companies hire in China, at the low rates for labor paid there, as many laborers as can be worked — millions could be hired, if necessary — and bring them over and hire them out again. Now, some one of these companies, by vir- THE CHINESE. 77 tue of the contract and agreement made and entered into in China, becomes, to all intents and purposes, the owner of the persons so imported, until they have earned their freedom according to the terms of their contract. From the terms of this contract there can be no variation. These six companies, of course, pocket the difference between what they give and what they receive for these laborers, giving their chattleman such meager credit on his account that he will be compelled to work a long time to gain his freedom. The Chinese who emigrate to this country do not become citizens. Applications for naturalization papers have been made time and again, and have as often failed to be granted. They are called " heathen Chinese " be- cause they have their "Big Josh" in all their temples; that is, an idol which they worship. They have their own judicial tribunals, before which they try and punish offenders, in all grades of crime that may be registered against them. There is a secret order among them, known as the "Hoeys," the object of which is to protect their own countrymen from American or State laws, and to enforce laws of their own making. Their tribunals are held in secret, and they administer such punishment as they see fit. The penalty of death is enforced very often for the most trivial offenses, such as neglecting to pay a debt. If the culprit is not in custody when the offense with which he is charged is investigated, and he is decided to be guilty, then rewards for his assassination are offered, written in Chinese characters and publicly posted. It 78 HOW I KNOW. is with great difficulty that Chinese criminals are con- victed in our courts. Officers are bribed to release them from custody, and Chinamen witnesses in court will commit perjury to get them clear, in order that they may be tried before their own tribunals. A China- man stands in utter fear of telling the truth in our courts, if it should tend to convict a countryman, for he knows that he is sure to lose his life if he does not aid in defeating the administration of justice to them before our tribunals. At the same time the Chinese will use our laws before their own tribunals, to prosecute inno- cent men, in addition to enforcing their own. The Chinese occupy their own quarters in the city, where they live more after the manner of herding ani- mals or swarming insects than intelligent human beings. Their houses are compact, one against the other, with very small rooms, all of which on the inside are of the dirtiest, smokiest color. Paint, whitewash, and scrub- brooms are unknown to the Chinese. Often small rooms not more than eight or ten feet square^ will be the abode of ten or twelve Chinamen, with bunks ar- ranged as in barracks. There they will lie and smoke opium and gamble their hours of idleness away. The Chinese are termed " Coolies " in popular West- ern phrase. That is a word used to designate all day- laborers of the East Indian and neighboring countries, where they unlade vessels, bear the palanquins of the wealthy, push and pull the clumsy two-wheeled carts, or carry such things as their employers desire in net-like bags, suspended from the two ends of a bamboo pole, rest- THE CHINESE. 79 ing on their shoulders. These Chinese coolies are rude in manner and noisy, but good-humored and fond of CHINESE CHARTER, SAN FRANCISCO. amusement. Numbers of them can be worked in very small places in ditching, shoveling, picking, blasting, v^orking in sections in railroad cuts or in making roads, 80 HOW I KNOW. etc. They are not capable of doing as much work as Americans when put to the test; yet they generally ac- complish as much or more than many Americans really like to do. Much the larger number of Chinese that are imported to this country are adult males. It is estimated that there are four thousand Chinese females in San Francisco, with a great many more scattered at various places throughout the West. There has been petitioning and legislating in Cali- fornia for a long time in an effort to prevent the Chi- nese from coming there; but, strange to say, that is done mostly by a set of men who are foreigners by birth themselves. The more distinguished and thought- ful of our own countrymen say this: "The summary disturbance of our existing treaties with China is greatly inconvenient to the much wider and more prominent interests of the country." The Chinese question has been disturbing the minds of the Western people for a long time, and, doubtless, will continue so to do for some time to come. I think that John would have been much happier if he had never wandered away from the home of his idols. But now let me speak a few words in general terms in behalf of the State of California. This State has been wonderfully prosperous since its admission into the Union, by reason of its great natural resources and its singularly energetic and enterprising population. It has probably more wealth per capita of its population than most other States of the Union, or, perhaps, countries THE CHINESE. 81 'of the world. It, no doubt, has also the materials of progress on a larger scale than has ever existed on any other similar area. The two principal cities are San Francisco and Sacra- mento. The business of these two places consists chiefly in trading upon the wealth produced from the soil. The principal element of the future growth of the State will consist in the settlement of the lands by desirable oc- cupants. The lands are naturally very rich and fertile; besides they are situated in an unrivaled climate. Southern California can boast of what but few, if any, other parts of our country can rightfully claim to possess, and that is a mean difference of temper- ature of 15.88. I do not know of a more healthy spot anywhere to reside in, and at the same time reap a large reward for industry. These lands have all to be irrigated. There are irrigating canals and ditches along and adjoining every ranch that is tilled. They have been colonizing the State for a few years back, and an earnest interest has been taken in pro- moting the immigration of large numbers. In Califor- nia the Federal, State, and County governments, the settlers upon lands, and the citizens of the commercial marts — all take a common interest in the promotion of and working for the welfare of individual and joint en- terprises. The Federal Government has several million acres of surveyed lands yet to sell in the State. The area of the State of California alone is one hundred and twenty milHon nine hundred and forty-seven thousand 82 HOW I KNOW. eight hundred and forty acres, of which thirty-four mill- ion acres have been surveyed by the officers of the Federal Government. Of the quantity surveyed, not more than twenty milHon acres have been disposed of, leaving as much as fourteen million acres of surveyed lands in the hands of the Federal Government. Over two-thirds of the State lands are unsurveyed. The entire present population of the State is less than one million. The Federal Government has given three million two hundred thousand acres of the lands in the State to railroads, in order that the value of the whole may be improved by facilitating transportation. If a railroad company receives a grant of land for the purpose of bringing the whole within the reach of market, an irrigation company, whose object is to insure the crops of all those lands, certainly has an equal claim to aid, the more so when the canals which irrigate the lands also complete the means of transport- ing the crops. I have tried to do justice to California and the good people of the State. I have traveled the State over, and, while doing so, I have met with a warm-hearted recep- tion from all. May they ever live in enjoyment of all the bountiful blessings of peace and prosperity. My visit here is ended. I shall now visit Oregon and see it, that I may be able to compare for my own satis- faction and that of the reader the different shades and experiences of life there. OREGON AND WASHINGTON. 83' CHAPTER VI. OREGON AND WASHINGTON. PORTLAND, Oregon, is six hundred and seventy- five miles, by water, from San Francisco. Ore- gon is like California in some respects; in others it differs from all the rest of the country along the Pacific coast. Portland is a thriving city, with, perhaps, thir- teen thousand inhabitants. Along the coast w^arm breezes from off the ocean constantly blow inland. In Summer the atmosphere is perfectly delightful and healthy; in Winter it is colder, owing to the winds coming down from the Cascade Mountains on the east. Yet, it is not so cold as to freeze hard, ex- cept at a high altitude. Some of the valleys are very fertile, with a good depth of soil, covered with the finest grass and beautiful flowers, affording natural attrac- tions of a richness seldom met with elsewhere. There is splendid water and an abundance of fish in all the streams that are not of an alkaHne or brackish character. The State can never have a dense popula- tion, for the valleys I have referred to above, are small and in many places settled thickly enough already. In the southern and south-eastern part of the State the val- leys are not so good, and are often covered with vast beds of sand, alkali, and fields of lava. Much of this part of the State is almost a desert, with only here and 84 HOW I KNOW. there a small piece of fertile and watered ground upon which the squatter may settle. The greater portion of this part of the State is worthless and must ever remain so. The Columbia River, which forms the boundary line between Washington Territory and the State of Ore- gon is one of the grandest streams in the North-west. This mighty river has cut its way through solid rock RAPIDS OF THE UPPER COLUMBIA. for nearly its whole length above the cascades. Here may be seen an instance of what Nature by her mys- terious forces can accomplish. By the constant attri- tion of water, vast mountains of rock have been soft- ened and worn away, leaving the harder portions of the rock standing in all kinds of fanciful and grotesque forms, like the ruins of some ancient castle. After OREGON AND WASHINGTON. 85 passing the cascades one is soon enclosed in forests of beautiful timber, composed principally of large and thrifty trees of red-wood, pine and other varieties. In many places along the Cascade range the mount- ains are barren and unproductive of either timber or other vegetation. Here are high walls of rock, some- times perpendicular, at other times more sloping. Huge bowlders are piled up in confusion as high and even higher than the clouds. But, where the ranges are not too high and there is a sufficient quantity of soil and moisture, large trees cover the mountain sides, while there is such a dense thicket of underbrush, so filled with old logs and broken branches of trees, that there is no pleasure in making an exploration through these forests. Hundreds of little squirrels may here be seen playing about at any time. Let a person or any other moving object be espied and they set to chattering with all their might. Sometimes five or six will be seen gath- ered together, viewing the same object. If the object of their curiosity ceases to move, they become more bold and will approach cautiously nearer and nearer, until they will sometimes climb upon and run over the person. As soon as they learn that there is no danger, they become very familiar, playful, and amusing. These little squirrels are found in all parts of the West, filling the woods with their constant and saucy chatter. The lava beds of Oregon, the scene of the celebrated Modoc war a few years ago, form a very singular place. This has been at some time, ages ago, the seat or center of some large volcano. There the rock has been melted 86 HOW I KNOW, SO that it would boil and run like water. The upheaval in places has been very great. The rock, in cooling off VIEW IN THE MODOC COUNTRY. after it had been melted and thrown out, has assumed something of a sponge-like appearance. There are OREGON AND WASHINGTON 87 holes, tunnels, caverns, caves, ridges, defiles, canons — all running in perpendicular, horizontal and oblique di- rections. I was afraid to venture far into any of the openings in so much darkness, so I did not explore them to any distance. This lava has been throw^n up and is spread out over thousands and thousands of acres of land. In this region water is not at all abundant, and when obtained it is not good, having a soft, warm, brackish, disagree- able and unhealthy taste. In this part of the State the climate is hot in Summer, the hot winds and sun beat- ing down on the pummice that covers the country, making the shade much preferable to the roads. But, returning a little to the north again, we find some small valleys where vegetation is abundant. Cat- tle, horses, and sheep are found here in as good con- dition as anywhere, and of a finer quality than can be found in many of the other western States and Territories. No finer blooded animals can be bousfht at reasonable prices in the eastern States. Animals imported here from other parts of the country, after becoming acclimated, do well. In the Willamette Valley all the way back from Portland, the cHmate is very remarkable. It is surpris- ing to see here, so far in the North, such a tempera- ture. Here they have but two seasons. Winter and Sum- mer, each having its pleasant and rainy weather. The grass is green in Oregon nearly the whole year. The valleys along the coast are very productive, both in quantity and quality. The yield of wheat on the 88 HOW I KNOW. Pacific slope is good, as is generally known, and Ore- gon is no exception. All other grains are raised almost or quite to perfection. Small grains are perfectly at VIEW ON THE OREGON COAST. home in Oregon. I have seen farmers feeding peas to their horses and hogs, and the animals looked healthy and fat. It is claimed that this feed is as cheap as corn in the western States. OREGON AND WASHINGTON. 89 Fruit of all kinds is raised in the greatest of pro- fusion, and is remarkable for its great size and excellent flavor. Although California fruit is justly in good rep- utation, Oregon apples are, nevertheless, exported to San Francisco, where they bring an advanced price on account of their excellence. Vegetables that come from here to the San Francisco market are held in high favor. Potatoes, especially, that are exported to the southern coast markets are prized highly, and find ready sale at an advanced price in preference to those of home production. Washington Territory is very similar to Oregon in productiveness, though the yield is generally less per acre than that of Oregon. Even in Winter the ice never obstructs the passage of vessels along the coast. Boats and vessels are coming and leaving all the time. Washington Territory possesses many gigantic trees of different varieties. Here lumber is sawed by millions of feet daily, and shipped to various parts of the world. Hundreds of men and teams are employed in cutting and moving these mammoth trees to the mills, where they are sawed into lumber and loaded on vessels that do nothing else but ply back and forth in the lumber traffic. In the mountains of the Territory the weather is cold — dreadful cold — and people perish every Winter. There is an abundance of splendid fish in the Terri- tory, and some game; but game is not so plentiful as it is on the east side of the mountains, or further south. There are still some Indians here, as in Oregon; but in both places they are disposed to be both sociable and 90 IIOIV I KNOW. peaceable. They live a very hard and uncomfortable sort of life, dressed either very poorly or not at all. They are too lazy either to hunt, fish, or farm. But lit- tle need be said of the Indians here, how^ever, since I shall treat the whole subject fully in a later chapter. The scenery of the whole north-western part of the United States is grand. There are gradually-ascending slopes for miles and miles, where the unbroken forest conceals the ground from view. Here and there, by a bold projection, the mountains lift themselves upward, sometimes to heights far above the timber line. In such cases there they stand enveloped in snow for nearly the whole year. MEXICO. 91 CHAPTER VII. MEXICO. I SPENT eleven months in Mexico. I found the Mexicans to be a truly democratic people, there being no distinction of caste among them. The rich and poor meet socially on the same footing, often sharing together the same sleeping apartment. However, in dry seasons, all classes seem to prefer to sleep in the open air. The climate of Mex- -n^^^^^^:=:^ -^^ ico is determined chiefly c .egss It ^^^ ^^^^ vf^^ by elevation. On the coast it is hot; temperate on the slopes, and cold on the table lands and in the higher ranges of the Sierra Madre. Some of the valleys of Mexico are so situated that their climate is one perpetual Spring. The coasts of Mexico produce all the plants indige- nous to hot cHmates. The table lands produce the plants of the temperate zones, and the higher mountains those that grow farther north. The Mexicans, though hospitable and often magnan- imous, are, nevertheless, generally vindictive, cruel, and treacherous. Intellectually, they are an inferior race of people. The natives of Mexico are devoid BORDER MEXICANS. 92 , HOW I KNOW. of enterprise, and almost wholly neglect all public and private improvements. Mexico, as every one knows, is noted for its mining industries. They have good mines in several of their States. The States of Sonora, Sinaloa, Chihuahua, and Durango claiming the best, with the greatest yield of gold and silver. The Mexicans themselves have been mining in differ- ent localities of these States for long over a century. Some of their mines, properly worked, are probably capable of producing more than the world-renowned Comstock Lode, in Nevada. But the manner in which the Mexican people work their mines is such that they would not be able to take out any great wealth in years of toil. Americans have often gone into Mexico to prospect and mine; but have as often been visited by the prowling bandits, who live in the mountains, and have either been killed or had to flee the country for their lives. All Mexicans are not ban- dits; but there are a great many outlaws in the mount- ains who make robbery and plunder their profession. There are still a few Americans interested there in mining; but they are compelled to pay well for the privilege. One of the processes by which the Mexicans crush their rock, is to take a large rock and dress it off, first level and flat, then they crease the outer side by cutting and beveling. This rock is then placed on a solid and level foundation — and generally near some stream, so as to secure water power — after which another rock is made to exactly fit the one already in place, and so MEXICO. 93 closely that with a motion of the upper rock the tailing is usually ground very fine, so that little will remain in a fifty-mesh sieve. Then, by following their tedious processes they obtain a small percentage of the royal metals which the rock contains. After this, the tailing is piled up in piles, and salted, one layer on top of another, where it is left to undergo a leaching process. While lying in this way it is occasionally stirred, and sometimes left for two or three years, when it is worked over again, and with more success than was at first obtained. But this is a very slow and tedious process, compared with the crushing and amalgamating of ores in California or Nevada. Nine-tenths of the Mexican population live in adobe houses, built out of adobes and covered with heavily tiled roofs. From a distance, the cities and towns of Mexico have a beautiful and picturesque appearance. The buildings are low — very seldom is a La Grande Casie over one story in height — the walls are thick, heavy, and cumbersome, with usually grated windows. But as one enters the towns all beauty vanishes. Build- ing after building is found to be all cracked, shaken up, neglected, and on the road to ruin, if not already in ruins. Even in the City of Mexico itself, one-seventh of the houses are uninhabited, and not fit to live in. Some of the stores, hotels, and houses of pubHc resort are very fine, large, and commodious; but private resi- dences are seldom more than one story high. Many of their gardens and camfos are deserted, and either going or gone to waste. They have been so long 94 HOW I KNOW. neglected that dense thickets of the orange and other trees occupy the ground. Sortie of their houses are MEXICAN BORDER TOWN. surrounded with flowers and shade trees as beautiful as grow in any clime. ' A stranger traveling in Mexico would naturally be MEXICO. 95 deterred, by the very appearance of things, from asking for hospitality or a night's rest at most of these dwell- ings; but, among that small class of Mexicans who seem to take some little pride in keeping their premises neat and in good repair, I found solid hospitality and comfort. I found this class rather social and somewhat well informjsd. There is, in the end, but little enjoy- ment to be derived from a trip through Mexico, unless one is master of the language. There are very few Mexicans who can speak EngHsh, and those who can will seldom do so. They are all very fond of their wine, or liquor (Mescale)^ oftentimes indulging more freely than they should. They are fond of amusements, and the more barbarous and cruel the entertainment may be, the better it is liked by both young and old. Horse-racing, bull- fighting, dog-fighting, sheep-fighting, chicken-fighting, and other kinds of cruelty are much sought after. Such scenes are attended and witnessed by thousands, with glee and mirth. Thfe Mexicans are a nation of gamblers. They en- gage freely in all the different games of chance or skill. Generally they do not bet heavily; but they continue the game, oftentimes, until they have lost the last cent. They possess great powers of endurance. Even the inclemencies of the mountain rains and snows possess no terrors to the swarthy native. They are skilled in horse-back riding, often performing the most hazardous and reckless feats. In the saddle, with a lasso, they are perfectly at home, throwing the lariat with dexterity, 96 HOW I KNOW. and with such accuracy that they seldom miss the .object of pursuit, whether out in the open country or confined in the corral. The common domestic animals run wild in Mexico and frequently become vicious. Great droves and herds of them are found in the foot hills, away from the villages and settlements. When any one or more of these animals is needed for use, the herd is surrounded and driven into some strong and convenient corral. The corral is a small piece of ground inclosed with a strong fence or barricade of small trees, usually cut in lengths to suit and placed on end in a ditch, somewhat after the manner of a stockade. After the animals are once confined inside of the corral, it is then a very easy task to throw the lariat over the heads of such as are needed. The rest of the animals are then allowed to return to their range, and they generally lose no time in going. I might say here that this is the method of handHng stock throughout the west beyond the Missouri River. Horses are known by various terms, such as mustangs, broncosj or ciyuse. Cattle in Mexico are known by the following terms: souaves, toros, vacas^ and so on. Lassoing those wild, vicious animals, where so many are corralled together, is attended with danger. None but a daring, resolute, self-reliant man dare enter a cor- ral full of wild Mexican stock for the purpose of making selections. After the lariat has been thrown and the animal is ensnared, an exciting scene takes place. The lassoed animal goes rearing, plunging, running, strug- MEXICO. 97 gling, and snorting through the herd at a tremendous rate, dragging the would-be captor after it for a time, it may be, at a comparatively easy gait, and then again lifting him, by a jerk, several feet through the air. By this time the animals all become frightened, and around MEXICAN BORDER INVASION. and around the corral they go until assistance enough has arrived to hold the animal, or else the poor beast gives up from exhaustion. If the animal be a horse, he is led out and a saddle securely fastened to his back. A bridle, that needs to 7 98 HOW I KNOW. be seen for it can not well be described, is also put upon him, when some buckarier advances with a spur on either foot, with a rowel as much as two inches across, and locks attached to the center pivot, making as much noise when he steps as a little boy with a parcel of bells. The horse is held, generally, until the rider is seated and ready. Then commences another ordeal, in which man and beast are generally both se- verely tried. The Mexican horse is small, but yet pos- sesses great strength. He is slender limbed, well-mus- cled, and very active. They very seldom weigh one thousand pounds, unless crossed with eastern horses. They can be ridden or driven further than any eastern horse could go in the same time with the same treatment. They usually get no grain, and even when in use are picketed to a stake, driven firmly into the ground, in some convenient spot, near camp, pro- ducing the greatest amount of grass. These horses have often been ridden one hundred miles, and, in some of the Mexican incursions during the border troubles, one hundred and thirty miles in a single day. Horses here and in southern California are very cheap ; whole herds can, in some instances, be bought for from eight to twelve dollars per head. An extra good riding horse of native stock can be had for from twenty to thirty dollars. Mexico is a beautiful country. The climate is de- lightful. The scenery is picturesque, and the forests are immense, extending along the sides and into the gorges and canons of the old Sierra Madre range, and MEXICO. 99 overlooking the beautiful valleys beneath. Some of the low lands in the valleys are covered for miles each way with lagoons. A lagoon is a very shallow lake, cover- ing, sometimes, thousands of acres of land. In the northern part of the RepubHc there are large deserts, or plains, where there is no vegetation, neither can wood or water be procured. Chihuahua is the State lying in the northern part of the the Republic just south of Arizona and New Mexico. This State is very thinly settled by Indians only, and they not civilized. The valleys are small, and, in some parts where there is water, very produc- tive. The country shows unmistakable signs of having once contained large cities and towns, the ruins of which are now leveled to the ground. The valleys are of a sandy soil, which washes very easily. In this shifting, sandy soil there are found covered, or partially covered, ruins of old chimneys and walls, and vases and pottery of many varieties, mementoes of a bygone race. I have there found some specimens of earthen- ware in almost a perfect state. But, generally, time has told upon it and it is found m scales, not entirely separated, but still hangmg together, showing that it has been ages in existence. Near the head of the Rio San Miguel, in Chihuahua State, there is what is called the Casas Grandes ruins, that, no doubt, have been standing for hundreds and hundreds of years, but which to-day can be examined as easily as if built but yesterday. Some of the build- ings are still partly standing, while others have nothing 100 HOW I KNOW. left to mark the spot they once occupied, except a rough pile of earth and rock. At this place I have found earthen pots with the ornamental figures upon them as perfect apparently as when they were first made. The vessels, however, showed great age and rough usage. I, with others, have dug into several of these heaps of ruins to see if we could unearth anything. We found nothing different from what was to be found on the surface. We found abundant proof, however, that at some time, at a very early day, there had been a city there over a mile square in extent. There is evidence of some magnificent buildings. The inhabitants of these ancient cities must have been of a race far superior to those found there to-day. Many large, polished blocks of stone are found. Por- tions of whitened walls are still standing in perfect shape. Earthen-ware vessels, large enough to hold five gallons have been discovered. Hundreds of flint arrow heads are found. The parts of walls still standing have been built of stone. Where the walls have been pro- tected from the storms and sun, they show such neat- ness of finish and workmanship as shows the painstak- ing efforts of highly-skilled workmen. There are many places in Mexico, where ruins similar to these are dis- covered. Northward we find traces of ancient cities. In Arizona there are innumerable remains of villages, towns, and cities that have long since crumbled away. In the canons in the northern part of the Territory, and in places on the Rio de La Mancas, in Arizona, and on the Piorere, and in the country of the Rio Virgin MEXICO. 101 in Utah, ancient dwellings are found high up in the cliffs. On the Rio Virgin and Rio de La Mancas these dwellings are deserted, and have been for a long time. In Arizona the Moqui (pronounced Mo-kee) Indians inhabit some of the caves and rocky houses of the an- cient cliff-dwellers. I found in and around the ruins of Chihuahua pottery of the same material, character, manufacture and flowering as is found in these cliff vil- lages. It would seem, therefore, that these may have been one and the same race of people. Some have thought that the pre-his- toric races of Mexico and Arizona were two distinct races of civil- ized beings. My idea is that they be- longed to one and the same race. The fragments and ruins are all similar, with only this difference : at the ruins of the Casas Grandes I found remains of poHshed walls in a few places. These I saw nowhere else. The Moqui Indians live in villages or houses, some of them five, six, and seven stories high. These struc- tures are built from sand, rock and mud. The lower story has a strong wall, in some places eight feet in thickness. The roof of the first story forms the floor of the next, which is entered by a ladder from the out- ARIZONA SAND PLAINS. 102 HOW I KNOW. side, and, when necessary, the ladder is pulled up in- side. The inside walls are whitewashed, and, though their houses on the inside look rather strange, yet they are neat and tidy. Arizona is a dry, barren country, with little water and less vegetation, unless it be the prickly pear, which covers the whole face of the earth. No soil but sand, which lies in one broad expanse of heat and sultriness. Consequently the Moqui Indians are not farmers and producers from the soil to the extent that some writers have represented. They have in places little gardens, perhaps two rods square. Their houses are away up in the cliffs, like sparrow nests. In some places they are as much as eight hundred feet above the level of the valley beneath, and they can only reach them by the aid of ropes made generally from raw-hide. These Indians are fed, clothed, and supported by the Govern- ment through its agents. It is supposed by many that they belong to the an- cient New Mexican race, called "town-builders" or "cHff- dwellers," who first lived in cities on the plateaus, and, as they became less numerous from war and disease, removed to the cliffs, so as to be the better prepared to resist and take advantages in attacks that were from time to time made upon them by other savage tribes. There is a legend to the effect that they are descend- ants of the Scotch. For myself, I am better prepared to believe the legend than to think they descend direct from the Indian, Spanish, or any of the northern tribes. The language spoken is different from that spoken by MEXICO. 103 any of the other Indian tribes in the West. Many of their words have that peculiarity of accent so notice- able among the 3r^a