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Collection: Directories and Documents > Historical Clippings

Historical Clippings Book (HC-11) (314 pages)

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Yuba Canal “Company, with thelr vast mining interesss, particularly: in the vicinity of Columbia ; and the Milton Water and Mining Company who controlled the longest continuous ditch of the three companies-the Milton Ditch, 80 miles in length, with their extensive operations at Sweetland and French Corral, had brought up the multitude of mining locations along the San Juan Ridge for thei: particular interests. — The question may be appropriately asked again: What became of these early French settlers or their progeny? It is scarcely likely that one would find the names of these Frenchmen on the roster of a Potter’s Field. The French are not like that. Generations of frugality does not breed a race destined for a Potter’s Field. Names such as Fauchery, who was instrumental in producing one of the’ finest engineering features in our state. I refer to the Magenta flume of the Bureka Lake Company, 4 flume 126 feet in height, requiring no splicing of timber in the bents. This situation wasnot to be} found anywhere else on earth where single trees, from which poles 126 feet in length could be hewn right on the ground for these bents. No scaffolding was needed, as each bent was finished as a single unit and raised into. place complete. ; Learned Men Learned men such as Poquillon, a linguist of note, and one of the original Frenchmen referred to in this article; Chabot, the Frenchman working at Buckeye Hill .at Nevada City and who came within a hair of becoming the originator of hydraulic mining and beating to the line by one year the distinction bestowed upon E. E. Matteson for the discovery; Chav-: anne, who was the inventor of the needle nozzle here in our, county which revolutionized the important part of “peak” load and “low” load: for the generators of’ electricity, do not end up in a) Potter’s Field. ’ One answer to the query of, what became of these early French in Nevada County and why the land was not settled in vineyards, orchards and gardens may stem from the fact. that the craze in France, after the tumultuous times of revoltings around 1848, for the founding of “associations” in order to rid itself of undesirables, the unemployed, the revolutionists, by: the emigration of these elements to French Colonies, This did not materalize in containing enough of the farm, element for such undertakings. And again, probably, in the very fact that these same emigrants had been at civil war during this period and as a consequence their adjustment in a new land needed dime. The speed with which these people fraternized on a foreigu soil would make quite a tale itself in the telling, It is nice to dwell upon the assumption that if men of distinction and foresight such as can be found in the records of the ’50’s could only have carried on, possibly the demoralization of a rich portion of our county would not have been so final, and the robbing of one section of the terrain for the aggrandizement of another section might have ‘been avoided, The eternal wrangling which affords ils. amusement in these times jmight have been prevented.