Diary Documenting a Wagon Trip from California to Oregon in 1880 MC340

Vanessa Cardona Ocegueda
University of California, Davis Library, Dept. of Special Collections
2023
1st Floor, Shields Library, University of California
100 North West Quad
Davis, CA 95616-5292
Telephone: (530) 752-1621
Fax Number: (530) 754-5758
speccoll@ucdavis.edu


Contributing Institution: University of California, Davis Library, Dept. of Special Collections
Title: Diary Documenting a Wagon Trip from California to Oregon in 1880
source: McBride Rare Books
Identifier/Call Number: MC340
Physical Description: 1 item [56]pp. plus additional, unrelated manuscript passages in the rear of the diary. Small quarto. Contemporary half-calf and marbled boards.
Date (inclusive): April 12, 1880 - June 17, 1880
Abstract: A unique firsthand travel account recorded by at least two members of a traveling party on a journey through the wilds of the West Coast from southern California to west-central Oregon, recorded over the course of three months in 1880.
Physical Location: Researchers should contact Archives and Special Collections to request collections, as many are stored offsite.
Language of Material: English .

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased from McBride Rare Books, 2022.

Preferred Citation

[Identification of item], Diary Documenting a Wagon Trip from California to Oregon in 1880, MC340, Archives and Special Collections, UC Davis Library, University of California, Davis.

Scope and Contents

A unique firsthand travel account recorded by at least two members of a traveling party on a journey through the wilds of the West Coast from southern California to west-central Oregon, recorded over the course of three months in 1880. The two principal writers are most likely Joe H. Whiting and Sarah Mundell, who both sign an introductory preface. Their account encompasses dozens of locations across the breadth of California and the southern half of Oregon between April 12 and June 27, 1880, and is written in at least two distinct hands, one of which definitely belongs to a woman. This last point is evidenced by textual clues such as the author's mention of sewing a calico dress for herself, as well as her act of building a fire because "the men were both lazy this morning." Also, she ends her last entry by signing off as "Sis." The diary includes valuable and impactful observations on numerous townships and cities, natural landmarks, the difficulties of travel by wagon in the late-19th century, and most especially, a few unique, firsthand encounters and impressions of Native Americans.
The diary begins April 12, 1880, when Whiting and his traveling party leave Alhambra, California heading north, ultimately for Tillamook, Oregon. They pass through numerous named towns such as San Fernando, Delano, Porterville, Visalia, Fresno, Borden, Grayson, Banta, Antioch, Collinsville, Denverton, Elmira, Winters, Maxwell, Willow, Orland, Red Bluff, Redding, Little Shasta, and others in California, as well as Oregon towns such as Phoenix, Jacksonville, Cow Creek, Canyonville, Roseburg ("the terminus of the Oregon Pacific R.R."), Eugene ("Eugene City"), Dallas, McMinnville, and finally Tillamook. The writers often include appraisals of the settlements they trek through, represented by this passage regarding Roseburg, Oregon: "The town of Roseburg like other little pretentious towns aspires to be a city, plying great unction to itself on its 'terminus.' And hence can never, that is 'hardly ever,' have those petty annoyances that shake other places to its centre, called hard times."
Near the beginning of the journey, at Deer Creek, they encounter "emigrants there waiting for the water to subside." They also later describe an encounter with "emigrants presumably from Oregon on their return to California." A couple of days after this, they speak to another group of emigrants coming back to California "who gave a woeful description of Oregon so much so as to render the spirits of the company downcast and despondent." On June 15, the diarists describe a similar encounter with another group of disgruntled emigrants coming back from Oregon, but decide that the negative opinions of Oregon were formed by untrustworthy travelers who "elongate the truth."
Along the way the writers comment on the landscape, crops, "the richness of the soil," their "anxiety" and hardships such as a wheel breaking off of their wagon, the sad conditions of the roads, and much more. They kill numerous rattlesnakes, sleep in barns or in encampments near graveyards and whiskey saloons, cross swollen rivers, follow the path of various railroads, comment on the flora and fauna, climb mountains, encounter fellow travelers, and so forth.
On May 8, the diary includes an interesting observation on the town of Banta, California, which the writer describes as "a shabby and dilapidated place." The writers also proceed to describe - mostly in brief but with notable passages nonetheless - municipalities or landmarks such as Elizabeth Lake, the Mojave Desert, Mt. Diablo, the San Joaquin River ("in many respects it resembles the mighty Missouri"), the Antioch distillery, Willow ("It appears to be well and substantially built, many brick buildings of an imposing character adorning its principal streets"), Stony Creek near Orland, Red Bluff ("The town is anything but handsome in appearance – being irregularly built and containing no fine or imposing structures"), the area near the Sacramento River ("The country here-abouts is rugged, bold, and Grand: presenting to the eye the awful convulsions that Mother Nature has had to bring forth 'piles so stupendous.'"), the Pit River (where they cross by ferry and "the first sign of the 'noble' red man made his appearance, a rather uninviting one, it must be confessed with two 'Mahalas' doing the time-honored task of toting the 'Chemuck' for her lazy lord"), the McCloud River (where they again comment on the Native Americans they encounter: "Beside a number of Indian lodges with a large number of the Natives sitting around or lounging lazily under the trees. They appear to be docile and tractable"), Salt Creek (where they camped near "a Chinese burying ground, with 2 graves in it"), Strawberry Valley, Mt. Shasta ("whose lofty height and noble bearing fills the beholder with admiration" and where they were impressed by the big trees on their way around Yreka), and other wild and unsettled areas in California.
They also detail various locations in Oregon, such as the Siskiyou Mountains, Phoenix ("pleasant and the scenery delightful"), Rocky Point ("where also we were compelled to disgorge 50 cts for toll on the bridge"), Cow Creek, the Umpquah River ("whose waters, clear, cool and refreshing invite alike the lord and the brute to quench their thirst at its brink"), the "far famed" Willamette Valley, the landscape around Dallas ("some good land – some poor land, some hill and timber land, better for stock than ranching"), and Moores Valley.
While camped near the Umpquah River near Roseburg, Oregon on June 12, the party meets a Native American man. The discomforting passage reads: "We had the good fortune(?) to receive a visit from a half-breed Indian. He appeared at camp as unconcernedly as possible. Mrs. M and children were quite alarmed at his presence, which, to say the least was not inviting. After giving a short 'Autobiography' of himself – his career in the State Prison, he departed much to the relief of Mrs. M and the children. (And also the writer.)"
The travelers arrived in Tillamook on June 5, where they were deluged with visitors eager "to see the Cal[ifornia] campers." In Tillamook, they went "strawberrying," made strawberry shortcakes from their haul, and observed the Sabbath day. The final few days documenting their arrival include two entries per day as two separate diarists record their experiences of arriving in Tillamook. The diary ends with the party going to Tully McKinley's house in Tillamook, where the diarist describes the town: "small but flourishing, it contains 2 Hotels, 3 stores, one a floating built upon a scow – to run up and down the bay. It is the county seat of Tillamook Co." This last entry is signed, "Joe."
The reporting of the journey is occasionally enlivened with commentary from the recordists, such as accounts of dreams or good-natured ribbing from one diarist to another. The diary opens with a flowery two-page Preface asking for mercy in whatever criticisms the reader might make, as the diary was often written in camp in "the dusky shades of night" and has not been revised. This preface is signed "J.H. Whiting" and "Sarah Mundell." The latter is crossed out below Whiting's name at the end of the preface but is readable, nonetheless. The names of the traveling party and others mentioned here which may aid further research include Whiting and Mundell, plus "Jim," "Mrs. Wright" (cousin to Mrs. Mundell), "Miss Viola," and Tully McKinley. The diary itself is wrapped in a plain piece of cardboard on which a later family member has written: "Grandma Mundell's Diary Trip to Oregon when Laura Mundell Rutherford was very young – 4 years."
The original diary of the trip from California to Oregon occupies about two-thirds of the diary. The remainder was additionally used by another writer who picks up their diary entries in California in 1894, though they only utilize four pages. The remainder of the pages were used to record a handful of recipes and assorted family notes.

Conditions Governing Use

All applicable copyrights for the collection are protected under chapter 17 of the U.S. Copyright Code. Requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Archives and Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Regents of the University of California as the owner of the physical items. It is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the researcher.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

California -- Travel
Oregon--Description and travel
Diaries
McBride Rare Books