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Two Years Before the Mast
Views on California History!
Title: Two Years Before The Mast Author: Dana, Richard Henry, Jr. Date:
1869 Chapter XXI California and Its Inhabitants We kept up a constant connection
with the Presidio, and by the close of the summer I had added much to my
vocabulary, beside having made the acquaintance of nearly everybody in
the place, and acquired some knowledge of the character and habits of the
people, as well as of the institutions under which they live. California
was first discovered in 1536, by Cortes and was subsequently visited by
numerous other adventurers as well as commissioned voyagers of the Spanish
crown. It was found to be inhabited by numerous tribes of Indians, and
to be in many parts extremely fertile; to which, of course, was added rumors
of gold mines, pearl fishery, etc. No sooner was the importance of the
country known, than the Jesuits obtained leave to establish themselves
in it, to Christianize and enlighten the Indians .
They established missions in various parts of the country toward the close
of the seventeenth century, and collected the natives about them, baptizing
them into the church, and teaching them the arts of civilized life. To
protect the Jesuits in their missions, and at the same time to support
the power of the crown over the civilized Indians, two forts were erected
and garrisoned, one at San Diego, and the other at Monterey. These were
called Presidios, and divided the command of the whole country between
them. Presidios have since been established at Santa Barbara and San Francisco;
thus dividing the country into four large districts, each with its presidio,
and governed by the commandant. The soldiers, for the most part, married
civilized Indians; and thus, in the vicinity of each presidio, sprung up,
gradually, small towns. In the course of time, vessels began to come into
the ports to trade with the missions, and received hides in return; and
thus began the great trade of California. Nearly all the cattle in the
country belonged to the missions, and they employed their Indians, who
became, in fact, their slaves, in tending their vast herds. In the year
1793, when Vancouver visited San Diego, the mission had obtained great
wealth and power, and are accused of having depreciated the country with
the sovereign, that they might be allowed to retain their possessions.
On the expulsion of the Jesuits from the Spanish dominions, the missions
passed into the hands of the Franciscans, though without any essential
change in their management. Ever since the independence of Mexico, the
missions have been going down; until, at last, a law was passed, stripping
them of all their possessions, and confining the priests to their spiritual
duties; and at the same time declaring all the Indians free and independent
Rancheros. The change in the condition of the Indians was, as may be supposed,
only nominal: they are virtually slaves, as much as they ever were. But
in the missions, the change was complete. The priests have now no power,
except in their religious character, and the great possessions of the missions
are given over to be preyed upon by the harpies of the civil power, who
are sent there in the capacity of administradores, to settle up the concerns;
and who usually end, in a few years, by making themselves fortunes, and
leaving their stewardships worse than they found them. The dynasty of the
priests was much more acceptable to the people of the country, and indeed,
to every one concerned with the country, by trade or otherwise, than that
of the administradores. The priests were attached perpetually to one mission,
and felt the necessity of keeping up its credit. Accordingly, their debts
were regularly paid, and the people were, in the main, well treated, and
attached to those who had spent their whole lives among them. But the administradores
are strangers sent from Mexico, having no interest in the country; not
identified in any way with their charge, and, for the most part, men of
desperate fortunes - broken down politicians and soldiers - whose only
object is to retrieve their condition in as short a time as possible. The
change had been made but a few years before our arrival upon the coast,
yet, in that short time, the trade was much diminished, credit impaired,
and the venerable missions going rapidly to decay. The external arrangements
remain the same. There are four presidios, having under their protection
the various missions, and pueblos, which are towns formed by the civil
power, and containing no mission or presidio. The most northerly presidio
is San Francisco; the next Monterey; the next Santa Barbara,
including the mission of the same, St. Louis Obispo, and St. Buenaventura,
which is the finest mission in the whole country, having very fertile soil
and rich vineyards. The last, and most southerly, is San Diego, including
the mission of the same, San Juan Campestrano, the Pueblo de los Angelos,
the largest town in California, with the neighboring mission of San Gabriel.
The priests in spiritual matters are subject to the Archbishop of Mexico,
and in temporal matters to the governor-general, who is the great civil
and military head of the country. The government of the country is an arbitrary
democracy; having no common law, and no judiciary. Their only laws are
made and unmade at the caprice of the legislature, and are as variable
as the legislature itself. They pass through the form of sending representatives
to the congress at Mexico, but as it takes several months to go and return,
and there is very little communication between the capital and this distant
province, a member usually stays there, as permanent member, knowing very
well that there will be revolutions at home before he can write and receive
an answer; if another member should be sent, he has only to challenge him,
and decide the contested election in that way. Revolutions are matters
of constant occurrence in California. They are got up by men who are at
the foot of the ladder and in desperate circumstances, just as a new political
party is started by such men in our own country. The only object, of course,
is the loaves and fishes; and instead of caucusing, paragraphing, libelling,
feasting, promising, and lying, as with us, they take muskets and bayonets,
and seizing upon the presidio and custom-house, divide the spoils, and
declare a new dynasty. As for justice, they know no law but will and fear.
A Yankee, who had been naturalized, and become a Catholic, and had married
in the country, was sitting in his house at the Pueblo de los Angelos,
with his wife and children, when a Spaniard, with whom he had had a difficulty,
entered the house, and stabbed him to the heart before them all. The murderer
was seized by some Yankees who had settled there, and kept in confinement
until a statement of the whole affair could be sent to the governor-general.
He refused to do anything about it, and the countrymen of the murdered
man, seeing no prospect of justice being administered, made known that
if nothing was done, they should try the man themselves. It chanced that,
at this time, there was a company of forty trappers and hunters from Kentucky,
with their rifles, who had made their head-quarters at the Pueblo; and
these, together with the Americans and Englishmen in the place, who were
between twenty and thirty in number, took possession of the town, and waiting
a reasonable time, proceeded to try the man according to the forms in their
own country. A judge and jury were appointed, and he was tried, convicted,
sentenced to be shot, and carried out before the town, with his eyes blindfolded.
The names of all the men were then put into a hat and each one pledging
himself to perform his duty, twelve names were drawn out, and the men took
their stations with their rifles, and, firing at the word, laid him dead.
He was decently buried, and the place was restored quietly to the proper
authorities. A general, with titles enough for an hidalgo, was at San Gabriel,
and issued a proclamation as long as the fore-top-bowline, threatening
destruction to the rebels, but never stirred from his fort; for forty Kentucky
hunters, with their rifles, were a match for a whole regiment of hungry,
drawling, lazy half-breeds. This affair happened while we were at San Pedro,
(the port of the Pueblo,) and we had all the particulars directly from
those who were on the spot. A few months afterwards, another man, whom
we had often seen in San Diego, murdered a man and his wife on the high
road between the Pueblo and San Louis Rey, and the foreigners not feeling
themselves called upon to act in this case, the parties being all natives,
nothing was done about it; and I frequently afterwards saw the murderer
in San Diego, where he was living with his wife and family. When a crime
has been committed by Indians, justice, or rather vengeance, is not so
tardy. One Sunday afternoon, while I was at San Diego, an Indian was sitting
on his horse, when another, with whom he had had some difficulty, came
up to him, drew a long knife, and plunged it directly into the horse's
heart. The Indian sprang from his falling horse, drew out the knife, and
plunged it into the other Indian's breast, over his shoulder, and laid
him dead. The poor fellow was seized at once, clapped into the calabozo,
and kept there until an answer could be received from Monterey. A few weeks
afterwards, I saw the poor wretch, sitting on the bare ground, in front
of the calabozo, with his feet chained to a stake, and handcuffs about
his wrists. I knew there was very little hope for him. Although the deed
was done in hot blood, the horse on which he was sitting being his own,
and a great favorite, yet he was an Indian, and that was enough. In about
a week after I saw him, I heard that he had been shot. These few instances
will serve to give one a notion of the distribution of justice in California.
In their domestic relations, these people are no better than in their public.
The men are thriftless, proud, and extravagant, and very much given to
gaming; and the women have but little education, and a good deal of beauty,
and their morality, of course, is one of the best; yet the instances of
infidelity are much less frequent than one would at first suppose. In fact,
one vice is set over against another; and thus, something like a balance
is obtained. The women have but little virtue, but then the jealousy of
their husbands is extreme, and their revenge deadly and almost certain.
A few inches of cold steel has been the punishment of many an unwary man,
who has been guilty, perhaps, of nothing more than indiscretion of manner.
The difficulties of the attempt are numerous, and the consequences of discovery
fatal. With the unmarried women, too, great watchfulness is used. The main
object of the parents is to marry their daughters well, and to this, the
slightest slip would be fatal .
The sharp eyes of a duena, and the cold steel of a father or brother, are
a protection which the characters of most of them - men and women - render
by no means useless; for the very men who would lay down their lives to
avenge the dishonor of their own family, would risk the same lives to complete
the dishonor of another. Of the poor Indians, very little care is taken.
The priests, indeed, at the missions, are said to keep them very strictly,
and some rules are usually made by the alcaldes to punish their misconduct;
but it all amounts to but little. Indeed, to show the entire want of any
sense of morality or domestic duty among them, I have frequently known
an Indian to bring his wife, to whom he was lawfully married in the church,
down to the beach, and carry her back again, dividing with her the money
which she had got from the sailors. If any of the girls were discovered
by the alcalde to be open evil-livers, they were whipped, and kept at work
sweeping the square of the presidio, and carrying mud and bricks for the
buildings; yet a few reals would generally buy them off. Intemperance,
too, is a common vice among the Indians. The Spaniards, on the contrary,
are very abstemious, and I do not remember ever having seen a Spaniard
intoxicated. Such are the people who inhabit a country embracing four or
five hundred miles of sea-coast, with several good harbors; with fine forests
in the north; the waters filled with fish, and the plains covered with
thousands of herds of cattle; blessed with a climate, than which there
can be no better in the world; free from all manner of diseases, whether
epidemic or endemic; and with a soil in which corn yields from seventy
to eighty fold. In the hands of an enterprising people, what a country
this might be! we are ready to say. Yet how long would a people remain
so, in such a country? The Americans (as those from the United States are
called) and Englishmen, who are fast filling up the principal towns, and
getting the trade into their hands, are indeed more industrious and effective
than the Spaniards; yet their children are brought up Spaniards, in every
respect, and if the "California fever" (laziness) spares the first generation,
it always attacks the second.
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