<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
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<h3>SAN FRANCISCO—EARLY CALIFORNIA EXPERIENCES—LIFE ON THE PACIFIC COAST—PROMOTED CAPTAIN—FLUSH TIMES IN CALIFORNIA.</h3>
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<p>San Francisco at that day was a lively place. Gold, or placer
digging as it was called, was at its height. Steamers plied daily
between San Francisco and both Stockton and Sacramento. Passengers
and gold from the southern mines came by the Stockton boat; from
the northern mines by Sacramento. In the evening when these boats
arrived, Long Wharf—there was but one wharf in San Francisco
in 1852—was alive with people crowding to meet the miners as
they came down to sell their "dust" and to "have a time." Of these
some were runners for hotels, boarding houses or restaurants;
others belonged to a class of impecunious adventurers, of good
manners and good presence, who were ever on the alert to make the
acquaintance of people with some ready means, in the hope of being
asked to take a meal at a restaurant. Many were young men of good
family, good education and gentlemanly instincts. Their parents had
been able to support them during their minority, and to give them
good educations, but not to maintain them afterwards. From 1849 to
1853 there was a rush of people to the Pacific coast, of the class
described. All thought that fortunes were to be picked up, without
effort, in the gold fields on the Pacific. Some realized more than
their most sanguine expectations; but for one such there were
hundreds disappointed, many of whom now fill unknown graves; others
died wrecks of their former selves, and many, without a vicious
instinct, became criminals and outcasts. Many of the real scenes in
early California life exceed in strangeness and interest any of the
mere products of the brain of the novelist.</p>
<p>Those early days in California brought out character. It was a
long way off then, and the journey was expensive. The fortunate
could go by Cape Horn or by the Isthmus of Panama; but the mass of
pioneers crossed the plains with their ox-teams. This took an
entire summer. They were very lucky when they got through with a
yoke of worn-out cattle. All other means were exhausted in
procuring the outfit on the Missouri River. The immigrant, on
arriving, found himself a stranger, in a strange land, far from
friends. Time pressed, for the little means that could be realized
from the sale of what was left of the outfit would not support a
man long at California prices. Many became discouraged. Others
would take off their coats and look for a job, no matter what it
might be. These succeeded as a rule. There were many young men who
had studied professions before they went to California, and who had
never done a day's manual labor in their lives, who took in the
situation at once and went to work to make a start at anything they
could get to do. Some supplied carpenters and masons with
material—carrying plank, brick, or mortar, as the case might
be; others drove stages, drays, or baggage wagons, until they could
do better. More became discouraged early and spent their time
looking up people who would "treat," or lounging about restaurants
and gambling houses where free lunches were furnished daily. They
were welcomed at these places because they often brought in miners
who proved good customers.</p>
<p>My regiment spent a few weeks at Benicia barracks, and then was
ordered to Fort Vancouver, on the Columbia River, then in Oregon
Territory. During the winter of 1852-3 the territory was divided,
all north of the Columbia River being taken from Oregon to make
Washington Territory.</p>
<p>Prices for all kinds of supplies were so high on the Pacific
coast from 1849 until at least 1853—that it would have been
impossible for officers of the army to exist upon their pay, if it
had not been that authority was given them to purchase from the
commissary such supplies as he kept, at New Orleans wholesale
prices. A cook could not be hired for the pay of a captain. The
cook could do better. At Benicia, in 1852, flour was 25 cents per
pound; potatoes were 16 cents; beets, turnips and cabbage, 6 cents;
onions, 37 1/2 cents; meat and other articles in proportion. In
1853 at Vancouver vegetables were a little lower. I with three
other officers concluded that we would raise a crop for ourselves,
and by selling the surplus realize something handsome. I bought a
pair of horses that had crossed the plains that summer and were
very poor. They recuperated rapidly, however, and proved a good
team to break up the ground with. I performed all the labor of
breaking up the ground while the other officers planted the
potatoes. Our crop was enormous. Luckily for us the Columbia River
rose to a great height from the melting of the snow in the
mountains in June, and overflowed and killed most of our crop. This
saved digging it up, for everybody on the Pacific coast seemed to
have come to the conclusion at the same time that agriculture would
be profitable. In 1853 more than three-quarters of the potatoes
raised were permitted to rot in the ground, or had to be thrown
away. The only potatoes we sold were to our own mess.</p>
<p>While I was stationed on the Pacific coast we were free from
Indian wars. There were quite a number of remnants of tribes in the
vicinity of Portland in Oregon, and of Fort Vancouver in Washington
Territory. They had generally acquired some of the vices of
civilization, but none of the virtues, except in individual cases.
The Hudson's Bay Company had held the North-west with their trading
posts for many years before the United States was represented on
the Pacific coast. They still retained posts along the Columbia
River and one at Fort Vancouver, when I was there. Their treatment
of the Indians had brought out the better qualities of the savages.
Farming had been undertaken by the company to supply the Indians
with bread and vegetables; they raised some cattle and horses; and
they had now taught the Indians to do the labor of the farm and
herd. They always compensated them for their labor, and always gave
them goods of uniform quality and at uniform price.</p>
<p>Before the advent of the American, the medium of exchange
between the Indian and the white man was pelts. Afterward it was
silver coin. If an Indian received in the sale of a horse a fifty
dollar gold piece, not an infrequent occurrence, the first thing he
did was to exchange it for American half dollars. These he could
count. He would then commence his purchases, paying for each
article separately, as he got it. He would not trust any one to add
up the bill and pay it all at once. At that day fifty dollar gold
pieces, not the issue of the government, were common on the Pacific
coast. They were called slugs.</p>
<p>The Indians, along the lower Columbia as far as the Cascades and
on the lower Willamette, died off very fast during the year I spent
in that section; for besides acquiring the vices of the white
people they had acquired also their diseases. The measles and the
small-pox were both amazingly fatal. In their wild state, before
the appearance of the white man among them, the principal
complaints they were subject to were those produced by long
involuntary fasting, violent exercise in pursuit of game, and
over-eating. Instinct more than reason had taught them a remedy for
these ills. It was the steam bath. Something like a bake-oven was
built, large enough to admit a man lying down. Bushes were stuck in
the ground in two rows, about six feet long and some two or three
feet apart; other bushes connected the rows at one end. The tops of
the bushes were drawn together to interlace, and confined in that
position; the whole was then plastered over with wet clay until
every opening was filled. Just inside the open end of the oven the
floor was scooped out so as to make a hole that would hold a bucket
or two of water. These ovens were always built on the banks of a
stream, a big spring, or pool of water. When a patient required a
bath, a fire was built near the oven and a pile of stones put upon
it. The cavity at the front was then filled with water. When the
stones were sufficiently heated, the patient would draw himself
into the oven; a blanket would be thrown over the open end, and hot
stones put into the water until the patient could stand it no
longer. He was then withdrawn from his steam bath and doused into
the cold stream near by. This treatment may have answered with the
early ailments of the Indians. With the measles or small-pox it
would kill every time.</p>
<p>During my year on the Columbia River, the small-pox exterminated
one small remnant of a band of Indians entirely, and reduced others
materially. I do not think there was a case of recovery among them,
until the doctor with the Hudson Bay Company took the matter in
hand and established a hospital. Nearly every case he treated
recovered. I never, myself, saw the treatment described in the
preceding paragraph, but have heard it described by persons who
have witnessed it. The decimation among the Indians I knew of
personally, and the hospital, established for their benefit, was a
Hudson's Bay building not a stone's throw from my own quarters.</p>
<p>The death of Colonel Bliss, of the Adjutant General's
department, which occurred July 5th, 1853, promoted me to the
captaincy of a company then stationed at Humboldt Bay, California.
The notice reached me in September of the same year, and I very
soon started to join my new command. There was no way of reaching
Humboldt at that time except to take passage on a San Francisco
sailing vessel going after lumber. Red wood, a species of cedar,
which on the Pacific coast takes the place filled by white pine in
the East, then abounded on the banks of Humboldt Bay. There were
extensive saw-mills engaged in preparing this lumber for the San
Francisco market, and sailing vessels, used in getting it to
market, furnished the only means of communication between Humboldt
and the balance of the world.</p>
<p>I was obliged to remain in San Francisco for several days before
I found a vessel. This gave me a good opportunity of comparing the
San Francisco of 1852 with that of 1853. As before stated, there
had been but one wharf in front of the city in 1852—Long
Wharf. In 1853 the town had grown out into the bay beyond what was
the end of this wharf when I first saw it. Streets and houses had
been built out on piles where the year before the largest vessels
visiting the port lay at anchor or tied to the wharf. There was no
filling under the streets or houses. San Francisco presented the
same general appearance as the year before; that is, eating,
drinking and gambling houses were conspicuous for their number and
publicity. They were on the first floor, with doors wide open. At
all hours of the day and night in walking the streets, the eye was
regaled, on every block near the water front, by the sight of
players at faro. Often broken places were found in the street,
large enough to let a man down into the water below. I have but
little doubt that many of the people who went to the Pacific coast
in the early days of the gold excitement, and have never been heard
from since, or who were heard from for a time and then ceased to
write, found watery graves beneath the houses or streets built over
San Francisco Bay.</p>
<p>Besides the gambling in cards there was gambling on a larger
scale in city lots. These were sold "On Change," much as stocks are
now sold on Wall Street. Cash, at time of purchase, was always paid
by the broker; but the purchaser had only to put up his margin. He
was charged at the rate of two or three per cent. a month on the
difference, besides commissions. The sand hills, some of them
almost inaccessible to foot-passengers, were surveyed off and
mapped into fifty vara lots—a vara being a Spanish yard.
These were sold at first at very low prices, but were sold and
resold for higher prices until they went up to many thousands of
dollars. The brokers did a fine business, and so did many such
purchasers as were sharp enough to quit purchasing before the final
crash came. As the city grew, the sand hills back of the town
furnished material for filling up the bay under the houses and
streets, and still further out. The temporary houses, first built
over the water in the harbor, soon gave way to more solid
structures. The main business part of the city now is on solid
ground, made where vessels of the largest class lay at anchor in
the early days. I was in San Francisco again in 1854. Gambling
houses had disappeared from public view. The city had become staid
and orderly.</p>
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