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Ella M. Sexton - Stories of California

famous Cliff House, and the Golden Gate, through which so many Argonauts sailed into California, are
the most attractive and best known places.

MEN CALIFORNIA REMEMBERS

Many pages of this book might be filled with California's roll of honor, - with that long list of men whose
names are remembered whenever the state's history is recalled.

Explorers, Mission-builders, Argonauts, and pioneers were the men who helped to make California the
fair state you know and live in. From the first day of the Spanish discoveries on this shore of the Pacific

Ocean, we find brave and great men who gave their best efforts, and sometimes their lives, for

California.

Let us head our brief list with Cortes, the name-giver, who dreamed long years of the golden land he was
never to see. Then Cabrillo, the sea-king whom San Diego people honor every year because he found

their bay and first set foot on California's ground. Next comes the bold Englishman, Sir Admiral Francis

Drake, who intended that his queen, Elizabeth, should have this Indian kingdom, as he believed it to be.

The stone Prayer-book Cross, in Golden Gate Park, was put up to commemorate the service of prayer

and psalms, offered at Drake's Bay by Fletcher, the minister on the Admiral's ship.

Good Father Serra, the founder of the Missions, his friend and brother-priest Father Palou of San
Francisco, and their fellow-laborers Crespi and Lasuen, helped in the work of building churches and

teaching the Indians. Governor Portola, the first Spanish ruler of Alta California, assisted the Padres, and

also found San Francisco Bay. Lieutenant Ayala, however, sailed the first ship, the San Carlos,

through the Golden Gate. Another governor, de Neve, founded San Jose and Los Angeles, and wrote a

set of laws for the two Californias of his time. That wise ruler, Governor Borica, ordered schools opened

and tried to get the Indians to farm their lands and to raise hemp and flax.

Many of the old Spanish settlers and explorers have left us their names, though they are themselves
forgotten, as Martinez, Amador, Castro, Bodega, and countless others plainly show. The Englishmen

Livermore, Gilroy and Mark West, those early settlers, Temple and Rice at Los Angeles, Yount and Pope

of Napa Valley, Don Timoteo Murphy of San Rafael, and Lassen the Dane, for whom Lassen's Peak was

named, were among those who came here before 1830.

Governor Figueroa, called the "benefactor of Alta California" ordered the Missions to be given up to the
Indians. By directing that the town of Yerba Buena should be laid out, he also is remembered as the

founder of San Francisco. Richardson, who carried out the governor's orders, was the first settler and

Leese built the first frame-house of San Francisco.

In Governor Alvarado's time many Americans came to the new country, although Alvarado and General
Vallejo tried hard to keep them out. Vallejo was then the military commander, and had headquarters at

Sonoma, where he had an adobe fort and a few soldiers to protect the Mission of Solano. Here General

Vallejo was living with his Indian and Californian settlers when the place was taken by Ide, the leader of

the "bear-flag party." Vallejo, set free when the short-lived "bear-flag republic" went to pieces, lived

many years at Sonoma. He was afterwards a member of the first legislature. He tried hard in 1851 to

have the state capital at Vallejo; but he failed, for he did not keep his agreement to put up buildings for

government use.

A man well known in the early days was John Sutter, a Swiss, who built a fort and settled where

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