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Volume 036-4 - October 1982 (8 pages)

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Page: of 8

THE MARSH FAMILY OF NEVADA CITY
PART ONE
BY DORIS FOLEY LARSEN
I.
MARTIN LUTHER MARSH
To be successful in California, a pioneer
needed a sense of humor, initiative,
diligence, stamina, and the courage to take
chances. M.L. Marsh was well equipped with
these valuable attributes. Not a tall man
(five feet, eight inches), slight and wiry in
build, he averaged a weight of a hundred and
forty pounds. His dark brown hair, parted on
the side and brushed away from his face, was
soft in texture, defying the intended straight
line by curling itself in back and about his
ears. His eyes, a penetrating blue-grey,
would light up with merriment whenever
amused. The firm chin, his most prominent
feature, symbolized the innate perseverance
and determination of the man.
Born April 22, 1831, in Middlebourne, a
district of Middletown, Guernsey County,
Ohio, he was christened Martin Luther for
the German monk who led the Reformation
in the 16th century. Called ‘Mart’ by those
close to him, he preferred, however, to be
known by his friends and acquaintances as
“M.L.” A few of his letters and business
papers are signed “Martin L. Marsh,” but
most of them bear the shorter version.
When gold was discovered in California,
January 24, 1848, it became uppermost in the
minds and conversation of men. An Eastern
newspaper made the following announcement on December 6, 1850, “The California
gold fever is approaching its crisis. We are
told the new region that has just become a
part of our possessions is El Dorado after
all.” ;
Items appeared in the daily newspaper
announcing the formation of companies to
proceed to California by the overland route,
while shipping agencies recommended their
steamers “as the best chance yet,” for
reaching the gold coast.
It was not until 1851 that M.L. decided to
leave for California. His father, John Marsh,
had died in 1840 at the age of 37, a month
before Daniel was born. His sister, Rosanna,
and brothers, Enoch and Cyrus, were dead.
His mother, Rebecca Teterick Marsh, had
remarried in the spring of 1850. Her second
husband, Thomas Johnston, livedin Antrim
Ohio, with his children. At the age of twenty,
Mart, having completed a_ three-year
apprenticeship in the carpenter and building
trade, left Ohio on October 22, 1851. His stepbrother, James Johnston, accompanied him.
Making their way to New York, they boarded
a steamer for Nicaragua.
Cornelius Vanderbilt, in opposition to the
Pacific Mail Steamship Company’s route
over the Isthmus of Panama, instituted one
of his own. The most obvious advantage of
the Nicaraguan route lay in its shorter
distance from New York to San Francisco.
Although the mileage between the two
26
MARTIN LUTHER MARSH
oceans was greater, (174 as compared to 55 at
Panama), all but 18 miles of the Nicaraguan
crossing could be made by water through the
use of the San Juan River and Lake
Nicaragua.
An inconvenience to those enroute with
young Marsh, was a delay caused by the
revolution in the country. On November 10,
some 200 Honduras troops commanded by
General Lopez arrived on the plaza of
Chenadya and fought General Munos, of the
Nicaraguan government. After some
skirmishes, loss of men and capture of
prisoners, a treaty was proposed. This was in
progress as the 365 passengers of
Vanderbilt’s line left the Pacific port of San
Juan del Sud, November 16, on the
steamship ‘‘North America.’’ After
encountering heavy gales, and enduring
much sickness aboard, (three deaths
occurring among the passengers), the North
America reached San Francisco, November
29, 1851, at 6:00 AM.
We can only pre-suppose, like many
another who left San Francisco to seek the
“Elephant,” that M.L. equipped himself with
the necessities of mining, including perhaps
a “Greenhorn’s Manual.” Going by steamer
to Sacramento, he spoke of encountering the
flood of late December, 1851, which caused
him to make his way into the nearby Placer
County hills. Despite the inconveniences of
winter mining, he panned his first nugget
(now a family possession) at Ophir, near the
present town of Auburn. Five hundred men
had accompanied him into the area.
With the arrival of immigrants from the
European mining districts, the greenhorn
received a wealth of practical knowledge and
initiation into the intricacies of mining. It
meant digging and shoveling gravel,
kneeling, bending and stooping over a pan or
rocker, slushing about in the water with
soggy boots and dripping clothes, and
perspiring or freezing according to the’
weather. The constant lure of better