Page
[Portrait of Kimball Webster in ’49][Frontispiece]
[Kimball Webster in His 85th year][Opp. p. 9]
[Placer Mining in ’49. By Frank Holland (from an old drawing)][17]
[Overland Trail. By Frank Holland][33]
[Bay of San Francisco][49]
[The Golden Gate][65]
[San Francisco in 1849][81]
[Sutter’s Mill][97]
[Mining Scene][113]
[Sacramento City in 1850][129]
[Postoffice in ’49][145]
[Custom House on the Plaza][161]
[Vigilantes in ’49][177]
[Miners Starting for Home][193]
[Great Seal of California][209]
[Warship Portsmouth. By Frank Holland][225]

ERRATA

Line 16, insert George W. Houston, Joseph B. Gage, and Calvin S. Fifield [20]
9, read Moore, not moon[39]
9, read formed, not found[45]
19, erase of, and insert on, after mountains[63]
19, erase s at end of line, and insert r (Fort Bridger)[65]
10, read service berries, not summer berries[74]
Top, Chapter IV[83]
18, spell Winnemucca[83]
19, correct spelling of principal[96]
15, read miners, not winers[101]
18, read weighed, not wished[102]
17, After promised, insert “to release to”[127]
Top, also line 8, spell protractor[151]
27 and 28, read the Pelham camp[166]
2, after “The” erase following, and after morning insert before starting[167]
3, erase leaving and insert learning[177]
8, at end of line add ship, “Columbia”[189]
Top, erase “the” between “to” and “commence”[190]
4 and 7, erase measured and insert meandered[207]
7, erase compassman and insert campman[207]
22 and 23, name of river, “Callapooya”[210]
16, erase “have” and insert “had”[216]

THE PIONEERS OF CALIFORNIA.

The story of the pioneers of all times and all countries is one of great interest. In it is embodied the combined elements of adventure and patriotism; the certain forerunner of the coming greatness of the land quickened by the inspiring efforts of the newcomers, usually men of sterling qualities and unswerving purpose. The history of none of these adventurers is fraught with keener interest or more momentous results than that of the “Gold Seekers of ’49.”

The story of the men who dared and did so much in the early days of the discovery of GOLD on the Pacific Slope has never been fully told. In the pages of this remarkable book we are given in plain straightforward language without any attempt at embellishment, by one who participated in them, the trying experiences that comprised the adventures and achievements of the hardy volunteers forming the little army of gold seekers who crossed the plains immediately following the cry that awoke the land from ocean to ocean as no other word could have done.

With no Jason to lead them, no seer to prophesy success, no wizard to avert danger, these brave Argonauts pushed resolutely forward across a continent, traversing thousands of miles where the Greek heroes traveled hundreds, passing over long, weary stretches of pathless plains, under beetling crags, along frowning chasms and over alkaline deserts, where the barest sustenance of life was denied them, constantly menaced by the Arabs of prairie and mountain flitting hither and thither across their way, enduring sickness and privations sufficient to have discouraged a less determined body, comrade after comrade falling from the ranks, the ever-decreasing band still resolutely marching onward into the Land of Gold, to become the creators of a mighty commonwealth, the builders of states. Through the flood of circulating coin that their pickaxes unloosened was advanced the prosperity of a nation whose progress since has been the wonder of the world.

In the midst of all of this, and much more that a glance at the scenes cannot even suggest, Mr. Webster bore a prominent part as pioneer, miner, prospector, and surveyor of the new country. With over half a century intervening since that far-away day his vivid narrative comes to the few now living who participated in the scenes like a voice in a dream, while imparting to others the inner story of an era in our country’s history that forms one of its most important chapters.