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Collection: Books and Periodicals

A Memorial and Biographical History of Northern California (1891) (713 pages)

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182 HISTORY OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. gon, Cameo, and the Laura Virginia had anchored in the roadstead in 1850. Crescent City had a peculiar and romantic origin. An old story had been set afloat in 1849-’50 that a solitary prospector crossed the Coast Range and “struck it rich;” that he accumulated a fabulous sum, hid it, and that the Indians assaulted him and left him for dead; that he recovered his consciousness, but not his reason, and he wandered out of the forest into the confines of civilization, and finally found his friends in the East. This story of cuurse excited the cupidity of some miners, who in the spring of 1851, under Captain McDermott, beyan a search and first found a magnificent harbor. Another party then started in search of that harbor and they found and named Paragon Bay. They dispatched a messenger to San Francisco, who organized another expedition to this bay, with the schooner Pomona, some tine in the fall of 1852. The next spring the town site was selected. During the winter of 1852‘63 A. M. Rosborongh purchased a land warrant in J. F. Wendell’s name for 320 acres, on which Crescent City now stands. The place was so named on account of the crescent shape of the roadstead. Smith’s River Valley, the only other settlement of importance in that district, was settled in 1853. In 1858-59 there was a war with the Mintoon Indians on the Upper Mad River, resulting in a surrender of the savages, under General Kibbe. In February, 1860, there occurred a great massacre of the redskins on Indian Island. The Assemblymen from Del Norte County have been: R. H. Campbell, 1887; L. F. Cooper, 1880; W. B. Hamilton, 1883; R. P. Hirst, 1858, 186364; W. B. Mason, 1881; James E. Murphy, 1869-70, 1873~78, and others from adjoining counties, which see. EL DORADO COUNTY. In this county is the spot now called Coloma, where Marshall made the discovery that immediately excited the whole world. For a full account of this, the great gold discovery, see a previons chapter. The word « El Dorado” is Spanish for golden, or the gilt. In 1541, so tradition goes, Gonzalo Pizarro, brother of the conqueror of Peru, marched from Quito to seek the fabled kingdom of gold, which, according to the traditions of the aborigines, existed some place east of the Andes. The monarch of this fabulons kingdom was said, in order to wear a more magnificent attire than any other king in the world, to be adorned with a daily coating of gold. His body was anointed every morning with rare and fragrant gums, and gold dust blown over him through a tube. Thus attired, the Spaniards called him El Dorado. He was said to reside generally in the superb city of Manos, in one street of which there were said to be not less than 3,000 silversmiths or silver-workers. The columns of his palace were affirmed to be porphyry and alabaster, his throne ivory, and its steps gold; the body of the palace was of white stone, ornamented with gold suns and silver moons; and living lions fastened with chains of gold guarded its entrance. The county was 680 nained from the fact that gold was first discovered within its limits. Abont the middle of the sunnmer of 1850 some Indians were killed in the neighborhood of Johnson’s ranch, about six miles above Placerville, on the immigrant road. It was rumored at the time that no provocation for this had been given by the Indians, and that it was done to stir up a war of extermination. If this was the scheme it worked well, fur the Indians killed some of the miners and then the citizens aroused and organized companies, placed Sheriff William Rogers at the head and marched to the county line without finding any Indians. After they disbanded Indians came from their hiding places and again began committing outrages. A subsequent attempt was made by the whites to exterminate the savages, with doubtful results, and this was the last.