As dawn broke, her colors flapped
in the wind. A solitary marker, making a stand in a strange
new world. As a representation of a young nation, she really
had no right to be flying so far from home. Yet it was here
that the United States flag flew in defiance, atop a mountain,
the highest mountain, for the entire province to see.
As Captain John C. Fremont, U.S. Army
Corp of Topographical Engineers, looked up at the flag he
was flying in defiance, he must have contemplated what had
brought him to this point. He had been to California a couple
times before, along with some of the members of his party,
including the famous mountain man Kit Carson. In fact, it
was on the first expedition in 1844 when Kit Carson stood
at the top of the Sierras, about 9,000 feet in elevation
at this place, and declared it to be Carson Pass. He then
carved his name into a tree before the party descended the
mountain along the American River. (Cleland 1929, 325-326)
After Fremont’s Second expedition
to California He wrote “I had returned inspired with
California. Its delightful climate and uncommon beauty of
surface; the great strength of its vegetation and its grand
commercial position took possession of my mind. My wish
when I first saw it settled into intention, and I determined
to make there a home.” (Cleland 1929, 334)
Now, however, on his third expedition
to a land he loved so much, everything began to seem different
somehow. The world climate was changing. Every major power
was now looking at this paradise as a source for their own
conquest. Still, this didn’t give an American soldier
the right to raise his nation’s flag on foreign soil,
especially with no declaration of war. Yet it was at the
top of Gavilan Peak (meaning Hawk’s Peak, later to
be known as Fremont Peak) that he built a fort, erected
a flag pole, and flew his colors in defiance of the California
authorities.
Fremont had come to California (on
his third expedition) peacefully. He was sent here shortly
after he mapped out the Oregon Trail to find the best route
from the Mississippi Valley to the Pacific Ocean. (Cleland
1939, 194-195)
After being accused of stealing horses,
and mistreating a lady, Fremont and his party were being
asked to leave the county. They could leave on their own,
or be escorted out by an armed band. The choice was his,
but he had to leave. Fremont decided that he and his sixty-two
man party would leave on their own. (Walker 1999, 84)
Instead of leaving, however, Fremont
and his men climbed to Gavilan peak (overlooking San Juan
Bautista) to make his stand on March 5, 1846. (Walker 1999,
94) General Castro, hearing of Fremont’s defiance,
organized an army at San Juan Bautista. He then sent the
army up the mountain to bring Fremont and his men down.
Castro, who once wanted a peaceful revolt from Mexican control
to independence now feared the 10,000 American settlers
whom he feared carried visions of “Manifest Destiny“.
(California Historical Society 1887, 64-65)
Prior to Fremont’s visits to
California, independence had already been in the air. John
Sutter, a Swiss emigrant built New Helvetia (Neuva Helvetia),
later to be known as Sutter’s Fort. While he had a
Mexican citizenship, required by law, he dreamed of independence
an eventual statehood in the United States. He would never
play a role in the revolt though, other than a supplier
to both sides.
Thomas Larkin, who managed to hold
onto his American citizenship despite Mexican law, was a
strong businessman, and close friend of General Castro in
Monterey. Larkin acted as a secret agent for American President
Polk, who wanted information state of the people of California.
President Polk knew they wanted independence, but he also
knew that several countries, including Britain wanted California
for themselves. Larkin did supply the U.S. with information,
but he also was a key player in the Californian’s
desire for independence. (Walker 1999, 51-52; Cleland 1939,
172)
On March 9th, 1846, the flag Fremont
had erected blew over. He took it as an omen, and decided
it was time to leave California. He passed the armed band
that Castro had sent out of San Juan Bautista, and peacefully
made his way to New Helvetia. There he picked up supplies,
and headed north for the Oregon Territory. (Walker 1999,
101-105)
After camping at Klamath Lake for
a couple of nights, Fremont and his men turned back for
California. A messenger, Lieutenant Archibald Gillespie,
of the U.S. Marine Corp, had delivered a memorized message
to Fremont. Though it is not certain exactly what the message
was, Fremont did mobilize his men and return to California
the next morning. (California Historical Society, 1887,
71-72)
It was upon Fremont’s return
to California that the peaceful show of force began. A group
of settlers from the Sacramento Valley banded together to
start the revolt of California against Mexican rule. They
called themselves Osos (a word inspired by the “fighting
spirits” of the local grizzly bears). They went to
Sonoma, to the home of Commandante Mariano G. Vallejo, and
asked for his surrender. It was here that the Osos agreed
to avoid shedding any blood in this revolt. It was also
here that William Todd, nephew of Mary Todd who married
future President Abraham Lincoln, designed a flag for the
new Republic of California. He chose a grizzly bear as an
emblem to represent strength and unyielding resistance.
His design would later be used as the state flag for California.
(Ide 1967, 54)
Most of the settlers, including the
Mexican citizens, were ready for independence. There was
an incident where William Todd was captured by an armed
band, and they planned to execute him. It was in his rescue
that two men of the armed band were killed. There was one
other incident where three men were killed. Other than these
five, no blood was shed in the revolt. California became
its own nation under the leadership of Fremont, and for
the most part, the people were happy.
In the process, General Castro and
Governor Pio Pico escaped California to live out the rest
of their lives in Mexico.
Gillespie was put in charge of the
pueblo Los Angeles. He wasn’t a good governor, and
soon the people began to resent him. Andres Pico, brother
of former Governor Pio Pico, led a revolt of the California
Republic. His actions would later be immortalized in a fictional
character named Zoro, who was patterned after the life of
Andres Pico.
The United States at this time had
been at war with Mexico, though those in California didn’t
yet know about it. After the U.S. Marines captured Mexico
City, and then purchased the Southwest Territory from Mexico,
an army was in under General Kearny to end the hostilities
in California. The final treaty for peace was signed by
John Fremont and Andres Pico at Cahuenga Pass on a hill
outside of the pueblo Los Angeles. Today that spot is in
Beverly Hills, and is commemorated with a plaque.
While the Bear Flag Republic had its
independence for only a short time, it was successful in
bringing the people of the region together. They had escaped
he rule and neglect of Mexico. Also, as they would later
find out, President Santa Anna of Mexico had made a secret
deal with Great Britain to transfer California into British
control. The revolt, and the war between the U.S. and Mexico
prevented Great Britain from gaining California as a colony.
Soon the United States would have control of the region,
and due to the influx of people during the gold rush of
1849, California would soon be a state. (Cleland 1939, 180)
Fremont owned land that had been granted
to him before the revolt in an area the Mexicans considered
to be a wasteland, the Sierra foothills. The land was known
as Las Mariposas. He settled the land and built the town
of Mariposa.
By Erick Hanneman
myMerced.com staff writer
Bibligraphy
California Historical Society, Papers
of the California Historical Society. Vol. 1. Part
1. San Francisco: California Historical Society, 1887.
Cleland, Robert G. Pathfinder:
of the series California. Los Angeles: Powell Publishing
Company, 1929.
Cleland, Robert G. History
of California: The American Period. New York: The
MacMillan Company, 1939.
Ide, Simeon. The Conquest of
California By The Bear Flag Party, A Biographical Sketch
of the Life of William B. Ide. Glorieta, New Mexico:
The Rio Grande Press, Inc., 1967.
Walker, Dale L. Bear Flag Rising:
The Conquest of California. 1846. New York: Forge,
1999.