History of California by Bandini, Helen Elliott - History of California

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History of California

Project Guten­berg’s His­to­ry of Cal­ifor­nia, by He­len El­liott Ban­di­ni

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Ti­tle: His­to­ry of Cal­ifor­nia

Au­thor: He­len El­liott Ban­di­ni

Re­lease Date: March, 2005 [EBook #7778] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of sched­ule] [This file was first post­ed on May 16, 2003]

Edi­tion: 10

Lan­guage: En­glish

Char­ac­ter set en­cod­ing: ISO-​Latin-1

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTEN­BERG EBOOK HIS­TO­RY OF CAL­IFOR­NIA ***

Pro­duced by David A. Schwan

His­to­ry of Cal­ifor­nia

By He­len El­liot Ban­di­ni

Il­lus­trat­ed By Roy J. War­ren

B. Cal. W. P. 16

Pref­ace

This book is an at­tempt to present the his­to­ry of Cal­ifor­nia in so sim­ple and in­ter­est­ing a way that chil­dren may read it with plea­sure. It does not con­fine it­self to the his­to­ry of one sec­tion or pe­ri­od, but tells the sto­ry of all the prin­ci­pal events from the In­di­an oc­cu­pan­cy through the Span­ish and Mis­sion days, the ex­cite­ment of the gold dis­cov­ery, the birth of the state, down to the lat­est events of yes­ter­day and to-​day. Sev­er­al chap­ters, al­so, are de­vot­ed to the de­vel­op­ment of Cal­ifor­nia’s great in­dus­tries. The work is de­signed not on­ly for chil­dren, but al­so for old­er peo­ple in­ter­est­ed in the sto­ry of Cal­ifor­nia, in­clud­ing the tourists who vis­it the state by the thou­sand ev­ery year.

For her in­for­ma­tion the writ­er has de­pend­ed al­most en­tire­ly up­on source ma­te­ri­al, sel­dom mak­ing use of a sec­ondary work. Her con­nec­tion with the old Span­ish fam­ilies has opened to her un­usu­al ad­van­tages for the study of old manuscripts and for the gath­er­ing of rec­ol­lec­tions of his­tor­ical events which she has tak­en from the lips of aged Span­ish res­idents, al­ways ver­ify­ing a state­ment be­fore us­ing it. She has, al­so, from long fa­mil­iar­ity with the Span­ish-​speak­ing peo­ple, been able to in­ter­pret tru­ly the life of the Span­ish and Mis­sion pe­ri­od.

The il­lus­tra­tor of the his­to­ry, Mr. Roy J. War­ren, has made a care­ful study of the manuscript, chap­ter by chap­ter. He has al­so been a faith­ful stu­dent of Cal­ifor­nia and her con­di­tions; his il­lus­tra­tions are, there­fore, in per­fect touch with the text and are as true to facts as the his­to­ry it­self.

The thanks of the au­thor are due not on­ly to a host of writ­ers from whom she has gained valu­able as­sis­tance, and some of whose names are among those in the ref­er­ences at the end of the book, but to oth­ers to whom fur­ther ac­knowl­edg­ment is due. First of these is Pro­fes­sor H. Morse Stephens, whose sug­ges­tions from the in­cep­tion of the work un­til its com­ple­tion have been of in­cal­cu­la­ble ad­van­tage, and whose gen­er­ous of­fer to read the proof sheets crowns long months of friend­ly in­ter­est. Sec­ond­ly, the au­thor is in­debt­ed to the faith­ful and con­stant su­per­vi­sion of her sis­ter, Miss Agnes El­liott of the Los An­ge­les State Nor­mal School, with­out whose wide ex­pe­ri­ence as a teach­er of his­to­ry and eco­nomics the work could nev­er have reached its present plane. The au­thor al­so of­fers her thanks to Mr. Charles F. Lum­mis, to whom not on­ly she but all stu­dents of Cal­ifor­nia his­to­ry must ev­er be in­debt­ed; to Mrs. Mary M. Co­man, Miss Is­abel Frazee, to the of­fi­cers of the var­ious state de­part­ments, es­pe­cial­ly Mr. Lewis E. Aubrey, State Min­er­al­ogist, and Mr. Thomas J. Kirk and his as­sis­tant Mr. Job Wood of the ed­uca­tion­al de­part­ment; to Miss Nel­lie Rust, Li­brar­ian of the Pasade­na City Li­brary, and her corps of ac­com­mo­dat­ing and in­tel­li­gent as­sis­tants, and to the li­brar­ians of the Los An­ge­les City Li­brary and State Nor­mal School.

The pas­sages from the Cen­tu­ry Mag­azine quot­ed in Chap­ters V-​IX are in­sert­ed by ex­press per­mis­sion of the pub­lish­ers, the Cen­tu­ry Com­pa­ny. Ac­knowl­edg­ment is due, al­so, to the pub­lish­ers of the Over­land Month­ly for cour­tesy in per­mit­ting the use of copy­right ma­te­ri­al; and to D. Ap­ple­ton & Co. for per­mis­sion to in­sert se­lec­tions from Sher­man’s Mem­oirs.

Con­tents

Chap­ter

I. The Land and the Name II. The Sto­ry of the In­di­ans III. “The Se­cret of the Strait” IV. The Cross of San­ta Fe V. Pas­toral Days VI. The Foot­steps of the Stranger VII. At the Touch of King Mi­das VI­II. The Great Stam­pede IX. The Birth of the Gold­en Ba­by X. The Sig­nal Gun and the Steel Trail XI. That Which Fol­lowed Af­ter XII. “The Groves Were God’s First Tem­ples” XI­II. To All that Sow the Time of Har­vest Should be Giv­en XIV. The Gold­en Ap­ples of the Hes­perides XV. Cal­ifor­nia’s Oth­er Con­tri­bu­tions to the World’s Bill of Fare XVI. The Hid­den Trea­sures of Moth­er Earth XVII. From La Es­cuela of Span­ish Cal­ifor­nia to the Schools of the Twen­ti­eth Cen­tu­ry XVI­II. Statis­tics

Bib­li­og­ra­phy In­dex

His­to­ry of Cal­ifor­nia