Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
Volume 036-3 - July 1982 (8 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

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 8

out an order to his tribesmen, following
which a young Indian stepped out into
the clearing with the body of Samuel Holt
slung over his shoulder. Hearing a noise
from the direction of his white friends,
John Day quickly told them not to move.
“It’s all right, boys—don’t shoot. I think
he’s got Sam Holt, and it looks like he’s
dead.”
Anger was slowly replacing Day’s earlier fear. He had seen many corpses in
Mexico, so the body did not shock him,
and he did not grieve as a friend, for he
had scarcely known the dead man. What
gave rise to his outrage was his belief that
a white American possessed of valuable
skills had been wantonly murdered by
worthless savages, the lowest of the race.
Either through ignorance or meanness,
he reasoned, these miserable creatures
had destroyed a superior life.
He willingly would have attacked the
chief with his bare hands, but he recognized how slim were his own chances of
surviving. With immense effort he restrained his fury and tried to elicit more
information from Wema. After much effort on both sides, Wema was able to
make Day understand that Holt had died
because the whites had killed Indians,
but the ex-soldier either could not or
would not understand that Holt had been
executed for stealing from the Indians.
Eventually, Wema gave up trying. He
turned his back to Day and walked into
the woods, followed by the youth who
had delivered Samuel Holt’s body. John
Day picked up the lifeless form and carried it to the mill.
IV
It had been too late to head for Camp
Far West, so they had eaten supper in
Walsh and Wheeler’s cabin and were preparing to spend the night at the mill.
Afterwards John Day and Zenas Wheeler
had gone for a walk while Jim Walsh
laboriously composed a letter to the military commander. The day had been
warm, and now, in the cool of early evening, the men still could smell the sweet
fragrance of wildflowers among the tall
grass of the meadow.
“Look at that sunset, Wheeler. It’s as
bloody red as the day has been.”
“Peculiar, isn’t it? Don’t usually get a
sunset quite like that. Kind of like a sign,
maybe.”
“Maybe.” Day looked at the sky for a
long time. “Tell me, Wheeler, which way is
north? I’m a little confused.”
“Why, it’s that way—you can line up
with that big pine over there—see that
real tall one, by itself?”
“That’s what I guessed. So why is
there a sunset to the southwest of here?”
“Oh, Lord! It must be a fire!”
“I think you’re right. It looks to me as
if someone’s set fire to the Holt place.”
“We'd better get down there and lend
a hand!”
“Forget it, Zenas. There’s nothing we
can do. Do you want to chase around in
the woods at night and have them Injuns
lift your scalp?”
“TI guess you’re right, John. Damn, but
it makes me mad, though! We never did
any harm to those redskins and look at
the thanks we get. We treated ’em decent,
let ’em come down and watch us. I figured
we were friends.”
“It’s no use trying to figure ’em, Zenas.
Only thing to do is show ’em who’s boss,
and if they won’t take orders, kill ’em or
run ’em out. And that’s what we’re going
to do!”
In the morning, John Day and a companion rode to Camp Far West, where
they delivered Walsh’s letter to Captain
Hannibal S. Day. On the way they had
stopped at the site of the Holt sawmill and
found both it and the cabin burned to the
ground. They transmitted this information along with the letter.
To their dismay, Captain Day replied
that he could spare no more than eight
men, including Doctor Murray, the camp
physician. Only two companies of the
Second United States Infantry were stationed there at the time, and Day actually
tried to convince the men that the miners
were better able to deal with the Indians
than the military. The commandant also
hinted that they might even have caused
their own problems. The disgusted
miners had no choice but to go back to
Wolf Creek in the company of five privates, one corporal, a lieutenant and the
camp doctor.
After George Holt’s wounds had been
treated and the arrows removed, he was
taken to the store at Stocking’s Flat.
There were men nearby who called themselves physicians to look after him, now
that the surgery was done. A hundred or
so miners who had heard about the
assault on Holt’s Mill rode down from
Deer Creek and joined the platoon from
Camp Far West. For two days the combined posse combed the countryside, but
yin
MSENAN CREMATION
the villages were deserted and only one
Indian could be found.
On May 11 the soldiers went back to
camp and Captain Day filed a report
which pointed out that the death of
Samuel Holt had been preceded by the
killing of two Indians for the alleged theft
of cattle. He noted that the cattle had
later been found, unhurt, never having
been stolen. It was Captain Day’s opinion
that the attack on the Holt brothers was
“purely in consequence of a lawless
aggression of white men in the first instance.” He warned that, unless something were done quickly to change the situation, the Indians would seek revenge
on any white man, guilty or not.
Unlike Captain Day, California Governor Peter H. Burnett was not immune
to pressure from the miners. As rumors of
Indian attacks and raids traveled like
wildfire through the mining camps, sales
of guns and pistols increased; demand
drove the price of Colt’s five-shot revolvers back up to seventy-five dollars after a
decline in price during the winter. The
miners demanded protection and the governor responded by telling State Senator
Thomas Jefferson Green to organize two
companies of volunteers to pursue the Indians and tame them.
Green, who had earlier been named a
Major General in the as yet non-existent
First Division of the California State Militia, accepted the assignment with pleasure. First he hurried over to the town of
Nicolaus and _ persuaded its recent
founder, Nicolaus Allgeier, to raise one of
the companies. At Oro, just above Nicolaus on the Feather River, a second company was being formed by Charles H.
19