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CALIFORNIA
LEGENDS
The Discovery Of Gold In California
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By
John A. Sutter in 1857 |
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It
was in the first part of January, 1848, when the gold was discovered at
Coloma, where I was then building a sawmill. The contractor and builder of
this mill was James W. Marshall, from New Jersey. In the fall of 1847,
after the mill seat had been located, I sent up to this place Mr. P. L. Wimmer with his family, and a number of laborers, from the disbanded
Mormon Battalion; and a little later I engaged Mr. Bennet from
Oregon to
assist Mr. Marshall in the mechanical labors of the mill. Mr. Wimmer had
the team in charge, assisted by his young sons, to do the necessary
teaming, and Mrs. Wimmer did the cooking for all hands.
I
was very much in need of a new sawmill, to get lumber to finish my large
flouring mill, of four run of stones, at Brighton, which was commenced at
the same time, and was rapidly progressing; likewise for other buildings,
fences, etc., for the small village of Yerba Buena, (now
San
Francisco.)
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Johann Augustus Sutter (1803-1880)
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In the City Hotel, (the only one) at the
dinner table this enterprise was unkindly called “another folly of
Sutter’s,” as my first settlement at the old fort near
Sacramento
City
was called by a good many, “a folly of his,” and they were about right
in that, because I had the best chances to get some of the finest
locations near the settlements; and even well stocked rancho’s had
been offered to me on the most reasonable conditions; but I refused
all these good offers, and preferred to explore the wilderness, and
select a territory on the banks of the
Sacramento. It was a rainy
afternoon when Mr. Marshall arrived at my office in the Fort, very
wet. I was somewhat surprised to see him, as he was down a few days
previous; and then, I sent up to Coloma a number of teams with
provisions, mill irons, etc., etc. He told me then that he had some
important and interesting news which he wished to communicate secretly
to me, and wished me to go with him to a place where we should not be
disturbed, and where no listeners could come and hear what we had to
say. I went with him to my private rooms; he requested me to lock the
door; I complied, but I told him at the same time that nobody was in
the house except the clerk, who was in his office in a different part
of the house; after requesting of me something which he wanted, which
my servants brought and then left the room, I forgot to lock the
doors, and it happened that the door was opened by the clerk just at
the moment when Marshall took a rag from his pocket, showing me the
yellow metal: he had about two ounces of it; but how quick
Mr Marshall put
the yellow metal in his pocket again can hardly be described. The
clerk came to see me on business, and excused himself for interrupting
me, and as soon as he had left I was told, “now lock the doors; didn’t
I tell you that we might have listeners?” I told him that he need fear
nothing about that, as it was not the habit of this gentleman; but I
could hardly convince him that he need not to be suspicious. Then
Mr. Marshall began to show me this metal, which consisted of small pieces and
specimens, some of them worth a few dollars; he told me that he had
expressed his opinion to the laborers at the mill, that this might be
gold; but some of them were laughing at him and called him a crazy
man, and could not believe such a thing.
After having proved the metal with aqua
fortis, which I found in my apothecary shop, likewise with other
experiments, and read the long article “gold” in the Encyclopedia
Americana, I declared this to be gold of the finest quality, of at
least 23 carats. After this Mr.
Marshall had no more rest nor patience, and
wanted me to start with him immediately for Coloma; but I told him I
could not leave as it was late in the evening and nearly supper time,
and that it would be better for him to remain with me till the next
morning, and I would travel with him, but this would not do: he asked
me only “will you come tomorrow morning?”
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James
Marshall at Sutter's Sawmill,
Coloma,
California,
1851
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I
told him yes, and off he started for Coloma in the heaviest rain, although
already very wet, taking nothing to eat. I took this news very easy, like
all other occurrences good or bad, but thought a great deal during the
night about the consequences which might follow such a discovery. I gave
all my necessary orders to my numerous laborers, and left the next morning
at 7 o’clock, accompanied by an
Indian soldier, and vaquero, in a heavy
rain, for Coloma. About half way on the road I saw at a distance a human
being crawling out from the brushwood. I asked the
Indian who it was: he
told me “the same man who was with you last evening.” When I came nearer I
found it was Marshall, very wet; I told him that he would have done better
to remain with me at the fort than to pass such an ugly night here but he
told me that he went up to Coloma, (54 miles) took his other horse and
came half way to meet me; then we rode up to the new Eldorado.
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In the afternoon the weather was
clearing up, and we made a prospecting promenade. The next morning we went
to the tail-race of the mill, through which the water was running during
the night, to clean out the gravel which had been made loose, for the
purpose of widening the race; and after the water was out of the race we
went in to search for gold. This was done every morning: small pieces of
gold could be seen remaining on the bottom of the clean washed bed rock. I
went in the race and picked up several pieces of this gold, several of the
laborers gave me some which they had picked up, and from
Marshall I
received a part. I told them that I would get a ring made of this gold as
soon as it could be done in
California; and I have had a heavy ring made,
with my family’s cost of arms engraved on the outside, and on the inside
of the ring is engraved, “The first gold, discovered in January, 1848.”
Now if Mrs. Wimmer possesses a piece which has been found earlier than
mine Mr. Marshall can tell, as it was probably received from him. I think
Mr. Marshall could have hardly known himself which was exactly the first
little piece, among the whole.
Continued Next
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