Gold Country (May/June 1989 | Volume: 40, Issue: 4)

Gold Country

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May/June 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 4


In the graveyard just outside Mokelumne Hill, California, the tombstones bear the usual spare summary of the lives of the people beneath them; then, after the name and the dates and the fragment of Scripture, there appears something unique to this part of the country. “A native of Virginia,” one epitaph ends; “from Fairfield Vermont,” says another; “native of Germany”; “Born in Butler County Kentucky”; and “né à St. Erme, Department de L’Ain (France) Décédé à Chili-Gulch.”

They were not settlers. They never planned to stay. Home was Butler County or St. Erme. Yet here they are, and thousands more nearby—men and women who were just stopping by until their luck changed and instead built the American West.

The thing that brought them lies with them in the loose soil. Mokelumne Hill is about halfway down the three-hundred-mile drift of gold called the Mother Lode. Along it from north to south are scattered towns with names like Nevada City and Chinese Camp, El Dorado and Placerville, the survivors of the five hundred hasty communities that burned their feverish lives away during the gold rush of 1849, monuments to one of the greatest migrations in human history.

Among the half-million people who hurried out to California to make their fortunes was a Missouri boy named Milton Bailey. He was my great-greatgreat-uncle, and early last November I took copies of his letters home and went West to see where he’d gone on the greatest adventure of his life.

Milton Bailey’s personal epic began at a sawmill on the American River in the wilderness of northern California. The mill belonged to John Augustus Sutler, the genial German-Swiss wouldbe empire builder who had for a decade presided over a benign barony from his fort some fifty miles to the west near the Sacramento River. Sutler was not there the day the world changed. James Marshall, the carpenter who had built his mill, was overseeing it on January 24, 1848, when he spotted a yellow glint in the millrace.

The storm that was about to break over Sutter swept his fort and fortune away, but the fort has been carefully restored. Sutter may have been something of a charlatan, but he was no fool, and it is hard to imagine that he didn’t stand in his compound and sense the gathering of an invasion that his stubby bronze cannon would be powerless to check.

There were two ways to get to California from the East: a wretched sea journey or a wretched land journey. Milton Bailey came by land. From Fort Laramie he wrote on June 1, 1850, as all of them were writing: “I feel sertain that I can make a fortune if I get through safe and have my health after I arrive.” He barely did. September 1, Sacramento: “I have been sick for 8 weeks. I was taken, 300 miles