Page:History of the War between the United States and Mexico.djvu/568

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SETTLEMENT AT NEW HELVETIA.

and Rodega, ninety miles north of San Francisco, founded as early as the year 1812; and factories were also established in the territory by the Hudson Bay Company. Their agents and employés ransacked the whole country west of the Sierra Nevada, or Snowy Mountains, in search of game. In 1838, Captain Sutter, formerly an officer in the Swiss Guards of Charles X, king of France, emigrated from the state of Missouri to Upper California, and obtained from the Mexican government a conditional grant of thirty leagues square of land, bounded on the west by the Sacramento river. Having purchased the stock, arms, and ammunition, of the Russian establishment, he erected a dwelling and fortification on the left bank of the Sacramento, about fifty miles from its mouth, and near what was termed, in allusion to the new settlers, the American fork. This formed the nucleus of a thriving settlement, to which Captain Sutter gave the name of New Helvetia. It is situated at the head of navigation for vessels on the Sacramento, in latitude 38° 33' 45" North, and longitude 121° 20' 05" West. During a residence of ten years in the immediate vicinity of the recently discovered placeras, or gold regions, Captain Sutter was neither the wiser, nor the richer, for the brilliant treasures that lay scattered around him.[1]

In the year 1811, careful examinations of the Bay of San Francisco, and of the Sacramento river and its tributaries, were made by Lieutenant Wilkes, the commander of the Exploring Expedition; and a party under Lieutenant Emmons, of the navy, proceeded up the valley of the Willamette, crossed the intervening highlands, and descended the Sacramento. In 1843 — 4, similar examinations were made by Captain, afterwards Lieu~ tenant-Colonel, Frémont, of the Topographical Engineers, and in 1846, by Major Emory, of the same corps. None of these officers made any discoveries of minerals, although they were led to conjecture, as private individuals who had visited the country had done, from its volcanic formation and peculiar geological features, that they might be found to exist in considerable quantities.[2]

As is often the case, chance at length accomplished what science had

  1. *Farnham's Adventures in California. — Wilkes' Narrative of the Exploring Expedition — Frémont's Narrative.
  2. See Farnham's Adventures, Wilkes' and Frémont's Narratives, and Emory's Report. — 1n 1846, Eugenio Macnamara, a Catholic priest and missionary, obtained a grant of a large tract of land between the San Joaquim and the Sierra Nevada, the Cosumnés and the Tulares in the vicinity of San Gabriel, from Pio Pico, governor of the Californias, for the purpose of establishing upon it a large colony of Irish Catholics; but the grant was not ratified by the Central Government, and the project was not carried into effect. There is no evidence that Father Macnamara was aware of the existence of gold in the valley of Sen Joaquim.