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Doti on Hurtado, _John Sutter: A Life on the North American Frontier_

eh.net-review at eh.net (eh.net-review at eh.net)

Wed Sep 13 10:21:19 EDT 2006

Published by EH.NET (September 2006)  
  
Albert L. Hurtado, _John Sutter: A Life on the North American   
Frontier_. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006. xvii + 416   
pp. $35 (cloth), ISBN: 0-8061-3772-X.  
  
Review for EH.NET by Lynne Pierson Doti, Department of Economics,   
Chapman University.  
  
  
Billed as "the definitive biography of California's renowned   
gold-rush entrepreneur," this book is a long overdue update on all   
the available information about John Sutter. Although the amount of   
material gathered by the author certainly justifies the term   
"definitive biography," even the author would probably question   
labeling John Sutter as a "gold rush entrepreneur." One of the   
best-known facts about this renowned Swiss transplant is that he was   
ruined by the gold rush.  
  
Sutter earned the title entrepreneur. He took risks and regularly   
tried new ventures. His entrepreneurial life started in Switzerland,   
but at age 32 he left his wife and five children for the United   
States to avoid his debts. He traveled to New York, then St. Charles,   
Missouri, in 1835, but quickly left there with his European wardrobe   
as his contribution to a trading venture to New Mexico. This venture   
apparently earned him enough to return with wine, seven mules and   
cash. His success sent Sutter to New Mexico again. But he was back in   
Missouri in less than a year. The next year, facing debtors' court,   
Sutter left Missouri and by the end of the year was in Hawaii. He   
celebrated the 4th of July, 1839 in Monterey, California. Governor   
Alvarado was also present at that celebration, and promised Sutter   
land in California's central valley if he would settle it and become   
a citizen of Mexico. Sutter agreed, planning to model his settlement   
after the prosperous cattle ranch owned by Guadalupe Vallejo and   
staffed by local Indians. Within months Sutter was residing in a   
grass house, erected by his Hawaiian workers, in what would become   
Sacramento. By 1841, he was a Mexican citizen and had   
heavily-encumbered but vast acreage under his control. Sutter's Fort   
soon became a destination for every visitor to California and the   
first stop for settlers.  
  
Apparently gregarious, and probably an alcoholic, Sutter was a   
generous host and collected companions, workers and hangers-on   
wherever he went. At his fort in Sacramento, he lived in a rich stew   
of French, British, Germans, Hawaiians, Russians, Mexicans, New   
Mexicans and Native Americans from tribes all over the west. Adding   
to this melting-pot community were over one hundred children, most of   
whom had mixed parentage.  
  
The Mexican War of 1846 to 1848 was a confusing affair in California.   
Sutter mostly supported the American side, but also spent a great   
deal of time during the war fraternizing with his Mexican friends.   
When he was keeping the Mexican Commander Vallejo prisoner at his   
fort (commandeered by Fremont), Sutter was chided for inviting the   
prisoner to dine with him. United States victory in the war increased   
the population in California and Sutter began expanding his   
production of horses, cattle and wheat. The horses and cattle   
supplied the military and other ranchers; much of the wheat was   
exported to Russia. Hock Farm, his home north of the fort, supplied   
his own and local needs. A new flour mill was planned, and his role   
in American history was assured when construction of a lumber mill   
revealed a rich vein of gold. At this point, Sutter's financial   
situation should have improved further. Notoriously, Sutter marked   
this as the beginning of his ruin. He eventually lost title to all of   
his land. The title to some of the land was lost because of   
difficulties in staking claims in the administrative void between the   
end of Mexican rule and statehood. There were other reasons. While   
Mexican grants were honored under the Treaty of Hidalgo, Sutter's   
grants were not specified correctly. Even on land that clearly   
belonged to Sutter, squatters took up residence. Downtown Sacramento   
developed along the river, land Sutter had avoided due to periodic   
flooding, instead of in Sutter's safer subdivisions. Above all,   
Sutter trusted people who clearly should not have been trusted,   
over-encumbered his property and paid too little attention to   
business. "He was a poor businessman," notes Hurtado early in the   
book (p. 65).  
  
Sutter's family joined him during the gold rush, but his son August,   
who came first, seemed to have even less sense than his father. In   
1850 the Sacramento property was sold to satisfy debts. After that,   
Sutter and his wife lived at Hock Farm, in debt, and often on the   
charity of friends and the state government. When they lost their   
home to an arsonist in 1865, Sutter and his wife moved to Washington,   
D.C. where he received a pension from the federal government. With   
August's financial assistance, Sutter built a home in Lititz,   
Pennsylvania in 1871. He spent time lobbying Congress in support of   
his property claims and died in 1880 in Washington, D.C.  
  
Is this "the definitive biography of California's renowned gold rush   
entrepreneur?" Normally there isn't much to think about in the   
dust-cover blurbs, but this comment sums up what is great about this   
book and also what is disappointing. There is a huge amount of   
information here about John Sutter, but even knowing perhaps all   
there is to know, the reader is left without any new understanding of   
this enigmatic figure.  
  
While Sutter is left, perhaps forever, as an enigma, this book is one   
of the most important additions to California history in the last   
decade. The research is extensive and taps many original sources.   
There is information on financial, agricultural, military and trade   
history for the1840s and 50s. Hurtado also expands the work he did in   
_Indian Survival on the California Frontier_ in exploring the native   
tribes and their lives as they connect with Sutter.  
  
  
Lynne Pierson Doti is the David and Sandra Stone Professor of   
Economics in the Argyros School of Business and Economics at Chapman   
University. She is writing a financial history of California.  
  
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