Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
Amador Indians (Amador County History) (1 pages)

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard
Page: of 1

¢
A Ce FRdcope o Wordea) Chee (&p {92 7)
/
1
AMADOR COUNTY HISTORY
AMADOR INDIANS
Anthony Caminetti secured the Indian Reservation for the county in 1895. The John Fullen
ranch was purchased and preparations made for
earing for the government wards. Louis Evans
and wife were the first to live on the ranch. G.
B. Crosby was superintendent, and stayed 7
years; then Geo. Grist, who resigned after 18
years’ service, followed by John Shafer, who
supervised for 5 years. Meanwhile, the Indians
were becoming self-supporting, doing road work,
wood cutting and ranch work. There are nine
on the reservation now. There are several
colonies of them in the county in good homes,
with autos, their children attending school regularly. There is a special fund provided, whereby a school educating Indian children receives
government money. Several of the young people
have reached High School. The first boy to
enlist in the county was an Indian from Plym[ee White skin, (Sutter), was building a fort, wen
outh.
Although most of them have got far away \y _work.
from the customs of their forbears, some of the
older women still weave excellent baskets, not
the tawdry ones, made to sell, but beautiful
specimens, used in cooking their acorn bread
and squirrel stews. There are several fine Indian
collections in private homes.
U. S. Gregory has this to say of the Indians
around Ione:
“Near Buena Vista there remains scarcely a
relic of what was once a great Indian village. I
have seen hundreds of Diggers from all over
Northern California gathered there at their
Annual Pow-wows, remaining for several days
feasting and dancing in a great underground
dance house. Often they fell from sheer exhaustion and were dragged to the surface to
be revived. I have seen them depart for their
homes with countless dogs and piccininnis trailing behind. Not an uncommon sight was a
white squaw man with a mud-head squaw and a
band of halfbreeds following them. Nearly all
these sights have vanished, and only a few are
left who remember them.”
Indian Dick met Ben Milliken near Yosemite,
as he was making his way into the mountains
after being released from Folsom, where he had
been for many years for the murder of some
Chinamen in Amador County. Milliken became
interested in him, and wrote to Will Tam, JackSon merchant, to be good to the old one-legged
_fellow. He said old Dick haa one regret. He
had killed only seven Chinamen. The eighth
got away! (This charming specimen now lives
in Jackson. )
i
vy” It is probable that trappers visited the country
about the Mokelumne in the ’40’s, but not often
for the Indians watched every move with sus
picious eyes. The Hudson Bay agent at French
Camp reported that all attempts to ranch o
raise cattle on the east side of the San Joaquin
had been failures. The Indians appropriated
the cattle and destroyed the ranches. There
‘were 5000 Indians in and around the count
where Ione now stands. They disposed of theiy
dead by placing them in the tops of trees ang
tying them with withes. Robert Ludgate and
the brothers of Mrs. Surface confirm this. The
former, seeing something strange in a tree one
day, climbed up, and nearly fell from his post
when confronted with the grim skeleton of an
Indian.
& These Indians, hearing that a man with
to take a look, were corralled, and made to
Later, they went voluntarily. There was oluntart
trouble with them sometimes, as their land was
taken over by the whites, but as a rule, they
gave way, retiring higher in the hills. Volcano
and Pine Grove were surrounded by them.
Clarence Wooster, born in Pine Grove (now of
San Francisco and very facile with his pen),
tells of seeing hundreds of Indians camped about
his grandfather’s, (Abner Clough’s) ranch,
There were fine apple orchards there, and the
Indians sort of ‘honed’ for the fruit.
Mrs. McLaughlin, formerly of Shake Ridge,®
tells how startled she would be, as she sat quietly peeling apples for drying, to hear, ‘‘Mahala,
mahala, biskit, biskit,’’ and to see the Indians
stay ’til they got them.
Robert Jameson says there were hundreds in
Shenandoah. Some of the white men took
Indian wives, to ‘‘uplift’’ the natives. A very
intelligent Indian woman, named Lupe, disapproved of the custom.
self down; no uplift.”
“There are Indian ‘mills’ (a group of mortars,
stationary) at Middle Bar, Shenandoah, on the
Herbert Ranch (formerly Clough’s), on the
Ginocchio ranch at Scottsville, and many near
Butte Mt. They tell much of the social habits
of the squaws. A group of mortars, close together in the huge rocks prove what the ‘49ers
said. The women laughed and chatted as they
pounded acorns, pine nuts, seeds, hoppers, and
even buckeye meats in these mills, and probably
planned their future actions as cleverly as their
later sisters, though not according to Robert’s
Rules of Order.
“White man pull himer