Title:
Henry S. Hewit papers, 1849-1852
Henry S. Hewit journal and correspondence
Creator/Contributor:
Hewit, Henry S., creator
Creator/Contributor:
United States, Adjutant and Inspector General's Office,, correspondent.
Creator/Contributor:
United States, Surgeon-General's Office,, correspondent.
Abstract:
Contains one leather bound journal (80 p.) of an Army surgeon assigned to Captain William H. Warner's expedition to the Sierra
Nevada. Entries were recorded in two parts. The first part was recorded at the time Hewit was actually with the expedition
and covers the period, August 1 to September 3, 1849. It contains dated entries with observations on illnesses, California
Indians, including their diet and enslavement by white settlers, Captain John Sutter, gold mining, bears digging up graves,
emigrant trains, and his own long recuperation in Hawaii from a lingering illness. He resumes the second part of the journal
on March 16, 1850 while recuperating in Hawaii by recalling the rest of the events in the expedition while he was with it.
He gives numerous details of being ill and notes that a rumor of Warner's death was confirmed on Oct. 6, 1849. The journal
also contains 9 pages of surgery notes, dated 1845(?), concerning wounds to the head and tongue, and neuralgia. Also includes
9 letters of correspondence, mostly relating to military orders, including other assignments, leaves of absence for his illness,
and a letter on official stationery of the Adjutant General's Office accepting Hewlit's resignation. Includes the original
envelope on official stationery of the Surgeon General's office used to mail the resignation acceptance letter addressed to
Hewit's commanding officer in San Diego. Also includes one personal letter from Panama addressed to his father.
Date:
1849 (issued)
Subject:
n-us-ca
Hewit, Henry S -- Archives
Hewit, Henry S -- Diaries
Hewit, Henry S -- Correspondence
Warner, William Horace
Sutter, John Augustus -- 1803-1880
United States. -- Army -- Surgeons
United States. -- Army -- Medical care
United States. -- Adjutant and Inspector General's Office -- Correspondence
United States. -- Surgeon-General's Office -- Correspondence
Overland journeys to the Pacific -- Personal narratives
Gold mines and mining -- California
Indians, Treatment of -- California
Surgeons -- United States
Indians of North America -- Food -- California
Slavery -- California
Bears -- California
California -- Gold discoveries
Sierra Nevada (Calif. and Nev.) -- Discovery and exploration
West (U.S.) -- Discovery and exploration
Panama -- Description and travel
Note:
Henry S. Hewit papers, 1849-1852, BANC MSS 2005/238 c, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Purchase ; from Bonham's; 20041124..
Henry S. Hewit was an Assistant Surgeon in the U.S. Army, serving in New York, California and Hawaii, and later in the Civil
War under U.S. Grant.
Wiliam H. Warner became a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Topographical Engineers in 1841 and a brevet captain in December
of 1846. The purpose of the 1849 Sierra Nevada expedition was to determine the most practical route for land travel across
the mountain barrier to California. Captain Warner was also instructed to consider the practicability of a railroad through
the pass of Cow Creek. It was during this expedition, on September 26, 1849, that Captain Warner was killed by Indians.
In English.
Partial transcript of journal available in the library.
Type:
Diaries.
Physical Description:
print
2 volumes (circa 0.1 linear feet)
Language:
English
Identifier:
BANC MSS 2005/239 c v. 1
BANC MSS 2005/239 c v. 2
BANC MSS 2005/239 c
Origin:
California