The Battle of Dominguez Rancho as depicted by William H. Meyers in Naval Sketches of the War in California, published in 1939.
“A renegade from Flores’ camp brings intelligence that a party of some
300 Americans (sailors, marines & riflemen) had landed at San Pedro &
moved on towards Los Angeles. At Domingo’s Ranche, they were met by 130
Californians with a small field piece, defeated & driven back to the Ship
with a loss of 5 killed & 7 wounded. Must be Mervine for no other officer
is ass enough to attempt to move infantry against these people unless backed by
Artillery.” (McLane, 87)
Thus does 1st Lieutenant Louis McLane of the U.S.
Navy, describe the Battle of Dominguez Rancho in October 1846, the last true
victory of the Mexican residents of Alta California in the fight to prevent
conquest by American forces. At the time of writing, Lt. McLane was on loan to
John C. Frémont’s California Battalion in northern California. Despite
questionable punctuation, spelling, and fact-checking, his paragraph provides
an adequate overview of this incident in the California War.
Commodore Stockton, in his official report on the battle,
echoed McLane’s report, although in more formal language:
“Captain Mervine
further informed me that…he had landed with his sailors and marines for the
purpose of marching in conjunction with Captain Gillespie and his detachment of
volunteers to Ciudad de los Angeles. He had not carried any artillery with him;
that about twelve miles from San Pedro he encountered a party of the insurgents
with one piece of artillery; a battle ensued; that several charges had been
made upon the insurgents’ gun, but it was impossible to capture it, as,
whenever he approached, they hitched their horses to it and retreated. Having
sustained a loss of several men killed and wounded, he retired with his force
and re-embarked.” (Stockton Report, 174-75)
The basic facts of the case are not in dispute. There are
differing opinions among both primary and secondary sources as to the size of
the Californio forces, the number
killed and wounded, and the actual dates of the battle. (Some say the march
began on October 7th and the retreat on October 8th.
Others have it all a day later. The plaque commemorating the battle at Rancho
Dominguez plumps for the latter.) The estimated number of defenders ranges from
50 to 400, depending on whom you ask. Not surprisingly, American sources tend
to the higher ranges.As to casualties, most sources indicate none killed on the Californio side, although one source says that two of the wounded
succumbed to their injuries following the battle. (Faragher, 129) American
casualties included a cabin boy killed by friendly fire before the march even
started and four to thirteen killed by enemy fire, again, depending on whom you
ask.
March through the mustard
On the morning of October 8th (or 7th, if you
prefer) two American vessels stood in San Pedro Harbor, the merchant ship Vandalia [1]
and the U.S. Navy’s frigate Savannah.
A diverse body of soldiers, sailors, and marines, about 300 in number, disembarked
from the Savannah and were rowed to
shore. They were under the command of Captain William Mervine who had been sent
by Commodore Stockton, chief of the Pacific Squadron, to put down the rebellion
that had broken out in the Pueblo of Los Angeles two weeks earlier. The second
ship, the Vandalia, had aboard Brevet
Captain Archibald Gillespie and his command of some 50 soldiers, the contingent
that had been left behind to garrison the pueblo after it had been conquered by
the Americans in mid-August. Just nine days earlier Gillespie and his men had
been harried out of Los Angeles and forced to make a humiliating march some 25
miles to the sea. San Pedro was the closest point to Los Angeles at that time
with a harbor deep enough to accommodate sailing ships.
Now Mervine proposed to reverse the process, marching troops
back to the pueblo and reclaiming it for the United States. Neither Mervine nor
his boss, Stockton, expected the Californios
to put up any meaningful resistance. A quick march, a quick victory, and then
some consequences for their impudence!
The most detailed account of the events of these two days
comes from one Lieutenant Robert C. Duvall, who served under Mervine in the
engagement. Duvall was the keeper of the ship’s log of the Savannah. (Robert Duvall)
The march began inauspiciously with the death of the cabin
boy, William A. Smith, in an accidental discharge of weaponry on the beach. But,
without burning daylight, Mervine led his troops out along the dusty lowland
wagon trail that led toward the pueblo. In his haste, the Captain ignored the
advice of some of his officers to take ordnance from the ships. That would only
slow him down! The troops likewise took little in the way of provisions. Such
niceties as food and water would surely be available en route!
The troops waded
out into the track lined in places by waist-high mustard fields. Ominously, horsemen
started appearing on the upland slopes. A few shots rang out on both sides.
Fortunately for the Americans, the Californio
captain José Antonio
Carrillo was under strict orders from his commander, José Maria Flores, not to risk an all-out fight,
but to harass the interlopers until Flores could arrive with a piece of
artillery. (Such tactics are sometimes called “Fabian,” after the Roman General
Quintus
Fabius Maximus Verrucosus,
who employed such strategies against the Carthaginian Hannibal and his
elephants.)
After eight hours and 12 miles of a hot heavy march the
troops staggered into the Rancho Dominguez, less than halfway to their ultimate
destination. With his men exhausted, Mervine agreed to stop for the night at
the rancho.
Duvall described the first leg of the march:
“For the first four
miles our march was through hills and ravines which the enemy might have taken
advantage of, but preferred to occupy as spectators only, until our approach. A
few shots from our flankers (who were the volunteer riflemen) would start them
off; they returning the compliment before going. The remainder or our march was
preformed over a continuous plain overgrown with wild mustard, rising in places
to six or eight feet in height. The ground was excessively dry, the clouds of
dust were suffocating and there was not a breath of wind in motion. There was
no water on our line of march for ten or twelve miles and we suffered greatly
from thirst. At 2:30 p.m. we reached our camping ground.” (Robert Duvall, 116)
According to Dominguez family historian Robert Gillingham,
the family was in residence at the time. In his comprehensive Rancho San Pedro, Gillingham writes
“Manuel Dominguez and his family were not molested, but had to provide beef and
other food supplies.” He further states that, as to the battle, “there is no evidence that Don Manuel
Dominguez took any active part, but he did send a messenger from the Rancho to
authorities in the Pueblo when the American troops appeared.” (Gilllingham, 151)
Most other historians believe the family had vacated the
premises in advance of the soldiers, driving off most of their livestock, as
well. From the time that Gillespie’s party had marched south to San Pedro, at
the end of September, the caballeros
had kept an eye on movements at the harbor. Gillespie had been told to embark
immediately, and the Vandalia stood
ready to provide this service, but he apparently hesitated for several days,
perhaps hoping for immediate salvation from the sea. Prior to leaving the town,
he had sent a messenger on a fast horse north to notify Stockton of the
situation.
The Californios were also keeping eyes on the sea. Whether it was Dominguez or another look-out who sent the message to Flores at the pueblo is immaterial. However, it seems likely that a man of means and connections like Manuel Dominguez would have taken steps to assure the safety of his very young family by removing them to the pueblo or to some rancho farther inland during this chaotic time. Not only were his seven children at the time all under 17, the youngest but two years of age, but his wife was six months pregnant with their last child. None of the primary sources consulted for this essay mention anyone, even servants, at the rancho.
The Californios were also keeping eyes on the sea. Whether it was Dominguez or another look-out who sent the message to Flores at the pueblo is immaterial. However, it seems likely that a man of means and connections like Manuel Dominguez would have taken steps to assure the safety of his very young family by removing them to the pueblo or to some rancho farther inland during this chaotic time. Not only were his seven children at the time all under 17, the youngest but two years of age, but his wife was six months pregnant with their last child. None of the primary sources consulted for this essay mention anyone, even servants, at the rancho.
A sleepless
night
Although the Americanos were able to bivouac on the grounds
and patio of the Dominguez Rancho, it is doubtful that many got any rest. Nor
were the Californios taking time out
from the contest. Throughout the night the troops at the rancho were harassed
by gunfire which they attempted to return, firing into the darkness. At about two
in the morning, according to Duvall, a cannonball landed at the feet of some of
the Americans, indicating the arrival of the cannon that was about to turn what
was left of the tide of battle. “The
marines, riflemen and volunteers were sent in pursuit of the gun, but could see
or near nothing of it.” (Robert Duvall, 116) This was hardly surprising, since it would have been quite dark at that time,
with only the light of a gibbous moon to make out shapes in the gloom.
At least at the rancho the troops were able to obtain fresh
water from a spring and food from the ranch stores.
Despite the fatigue and what surely must have been the
demoralization of his troops, Mervine rousted them out at daybreak to continue
the march toward Los Angeles, another 16 miles along the track that is now,
roughly, Alameda Street.
Flying
artillery vs. Infantry squares
The advance toward the pueblo came to a screeching halt only
three to four miles up the road, in the vicinity of what is now Compton
Creek. Any thought that the enemy had retreated was put to rest when, according
to Duvall,
“…the enemy appeared
before us, drawn up on each side of the road, mounted on fine horses, each man
armed with a lance and carbine. They also had a field piece (a four-pounder) to
which were hitched eight or ten horses, placed on the road ahead of us.” (Robert Duvall, 117)
What followed was a running battle in which Mervine
attempted to make forward progress, but was driven back each time by volleys
from the gun. The horsemen used their reatas
(lassos) to pull the cannon, affixed to a wheeled cart, out of the reach of Mervine’s
advance men whenever they made an attempt to capture it, a kind of Californio game of chicken. The caballeros themselves were able to stay
well back and keep the advantages of speed and agility.
Duvall states that the gun was loaded with round shot and
copper grapeshot, in other words, cannon balls and small projectiles fired like
buckshot. One historian, Leonard Pitt, believes the Californios may have been using other projectiles as well:
cobblestones and metal scraps, in short anything that could cause damage.(Pitt, 33) Several historians have remarked that the Californios had only inferior
gunpowder at their disposal, manufactured at the Mission San Gabriel, and not
much of that. Some have considered that lack of powder was the reason cannon
fire ceased during Mervine’s retreat.
This phase of the battle lasted only an hour or two. At some point, Mervine and his lieutenants recognized the futility of further action. They could not make forward progress. They could not capture the gun. They had wounded needing care. Even the approved method of fighting cavalry, placing the men in “infantry squares,” with sharpshooters and bayonets positioned on the perimeter, had little effect, since the enemy kept their distance.
A decision was made to retreat to the ship, carrying their dead and wounded in carts. The dead, numbering at least five, were buried on a small islet marking the entrance to the harbor. Either before or after these events the land mass became known as Deadman's Island. It is possible, also, that some fallen comrades were left on the field of battle. Reports from the enemy's side suggest that, following the battle, corpses were found along with spoils of war that included an American flag, equipment, and tobacco. (Farragher, 129)
The trip back to San Pedro was long and weary, we can
imagine. The Californians kept their presence known with occasional potshots. Notably,
the defenders did not follow up their advantage with an all-out assault. In
keeping with their instructions, they continued to harass the Americans in the
hope of driving them out of the country. In this they were successful — but
only for a time.
Stockton takes charge
Mervine, Gillespie, and their men did not immediately set
sail. Without further orders, they hovered at the cove in San Pedro for more
than two weeks until Commodore Stockton himself arrived with a large force on
board the flagship Congress on or
about October 26, as had been previously arranged. Sizing up the situation, and viewing what
appeared to be hundreds, if not thousands, of horsemen on the hills, the
Commodore made the executive decision to move his forces and his base of
operation to San Diego, from whence he was to launch the final and successful
assault on Los Angeles. In his report to his boss, Secretary of the Navy George
Bancroft, Stockton explains his decision with telling words that speak of his
disdain for the local inhabitants:
“Elated by this
transient success, which the enemy, with his usual want of veracity, magnified
into a great victory, they collected in large bodies on all the adjacent hills,
and would not permit a hoof except their own horses to be within fifty miles of
San Pedro. I had, however, agreed to land there, to be in readiness to
co-operate with the forces under Major Frémont expected from Santa Barbara; and
therefore determined to do so in the face of their boasting insolence, and
there again to hoist the glorious stars in the presence of their horse covered
hills.” (Stockton to George Bancroft)
Stockton get a dig in against John C. Frémont, that loose
cannon who failed to meet up with him at San Pedro with his California
Battalion:
“…I had given up all hope of the co-operation of Major Frémont.
Besides, the enemy had driven off every animal, man, and beast, from that
section of the country, and it was not possible, by any means in our power, to
carry provisions for our march to the city.” (Stockton to George Bancroft)
Historians have analyzed the battle from many angles and
most agree on a few basic factors that can be briefly summarized:
· Stockton’s arrogance in underestimating the resentment and resolve of the Californios.
· The horses: Carrillo’s mounted caballeros had every advantage in navigating familiar terrain.
· Style of warfare: The Battle of Dominguez Rancho is a classic example of guerilla warfare used effectively against a force schooled in the rigid rules of classic warfare. Not unlike the Minutemen at Lexington and Concord in 1775, the caballeros used their native wits and weapons, the element of surprise, and even trickery to force a tactical withdrawal by their enemy.
· Scorched earth: The Californios stopped short of actually burning crops, but they did — at the direction of Commandante Flores — drive off much of the cattle and horses from the coastal areas where they might have provided mounts or sustenance to the Americans. Indeed, Stockton and Mervine had been confident that they could find horses to ride and pull artillery along their route. The lack of these animals cramped their style. At Rancho Dominguez, they were able to commandeer one nag from an unfortunate man who had strayed into their camp. The horse was useful for dragging the cart bearing their wounded back to San Pedro, not much else.
Deceiving the Enemy
Antonio Maria Osio, a long-time resident of Alta California,
commented on the clever tactics and “games” used during and after the Battle of
Dominguez Rancho by the Californios
to intimidate and wear down their opponents. He describes how Carrillo deployed
his 80 men to fool the eyesight of Commodore Stockton on the beach:
“The eighty men walked
halfway around San Pedro Hill. Then, one after the other, they climbed up to
the top, where they could be easily seen by the warships, and then they climbed
down. The first man to arrive at the base of the hill would run halfway around
to catch up with the formation that was coming down, and he would position
himself behind the last man. Thus they gave the appearance that there were more
than six hundred soldiers.” (Osio, 235)
Another
of Osio’s anecdotes involves a dog that hung around Stockton’s men on the
beach. It seems one of Carrillo’s men tempted the dog over and tied a note to
his neck challenging Stockton to “a colossal battle.” The trick must have
worked, because a few hours later Stockton’s ships were preparing to stand out
of the harbor! (Ibid.)
The
story of the dog is confirmed in a first-hand account by ship’s surgeon Marius
Duvall, posted to the Savannah at the time and no relation to Lieutenant R.C.
Duvall. Duvall kept a journal in which he described the scene on the beach on
October 28:
“A bright day; we began to
be at home in our camp —Commodore Stockton came on shore, looked at every
thing, made some bombastic speeches to the troops and returned on board. Today
about 11 a.m. a large party (400?) came and reinforced those previously here —
soon afterwards, 100 of them occupied the hills nearest out lines, they abused
us, and one of them rode in bravado quite near us — he was fired at several
times. Late in the afternoon, they sent a dog down to us, some letters were
found on him, very abusive and obscene in their language.” (Marius Duvall, 64)
Duvall
goes on to describe the hasty and somewhat humiliating departure ordered by
Stockton:
“A flaming ‘general order’
was read to the troops. About 10 o’clock at night the boats from both ships
came on shore with the order to [load up] every thing in the shortest possible
time — this was accomplished before daylight of the 29th. There was
some confusion, and it was fortunate there was not a spirited enemy to watch
us; some of us received a ‘ducking.’ What will be said of this here and at home
[?!] (Ibid.)
Many writers have mentioned the Californios’ use of horses to stir up dust clouds to create the
impression of a large horde. One account is in the memoirs of an American
resident of the country, one Benjamin D. Wilson, who, as a friend to both sides,
became a witness to history. Finding himself a prisoner of the Californios after the battle, Wilson
agreed to act as an intermediary with Stockton whose arrival by sea was shortly
expected:
“I was placed under
charge of a Sergeant, and carried to the place designated, near the old
San Pedro Landing, on the Mesa, where I was to await Carrillo's orders. On our way we passed Carrillo's command, of some four or five hundred men all mounted … they seemed to be collecting on Dominguez's Ranch all the scattered horses they could secure; they already had a large number together… I looked back in the gap where the road leads through from the Palos Verdes to San Pedro Landing, and saw an immense dust raised by a large caballada mixed with mounted soldiers. This immense band of horses and cavalcade occupied up again to the same gap, and passing through again. This gave the impression and appearance of an immense mass of mounted cavalry, as no one at a distance could distinguish horses through the dust, if all had riders or not.” (Wilson, 115)
San Pedro Landing, on the Mesa, where I was to await Carrillo's orders. On our way we passed Carrillo's command, of some four or five hundred men all mounted … they seemed to be collecting on Dominguez's Ranch all the scattered horses they could secure; they already had a large number together… I looked back in the gap where the road leads through from the Palos Verdes to San Pedro Landing, and saw an immense dust raised by a large caballada mixed with mounted soldiers. This immense band of horses and cavalcade occupied up again to the same gap, and passing through again. This gave the impression and appearance of an immense mass of mounted cavalry, as no one at a distance could distinguish horses through the dust, if all had riders or not.” (Wilson, 115)
It appears that Wilson was himself fooled by the stratagem
he describes, since it is unlikely that Carrillo had anything like “four or
five hundred men” at this stage of the game. We have read that Dr. Duvall had
the same impression of a large force.
Historian Bancroft also mentions these tricks on the part of
the Californian forces, including the episode of the dog at the beach, although
with less detail.
Yet another account is that contained in the memoir of film
star Leo Carrillo (1880-1961) titled The
California I Love. Carrillo is able to recount family lore handed down by
his great-uncle José Antonio
Carrillo, the very fellow who led the Californios against Mervine’s men. His
ancestor regaled the children with the story of how he confused the Americanos
with a type of smoke screen:
“He had his cavalrymen
attach pieces of brush, old cowhides, and all sorts of heavy objects to their
reatas. These were dragged across a dusty spot ahead of the oncoming American
force. Then the horsemen dashed in and out of this dust cloud so that they
appeared as a tremendous force of cavalry. The Americans were completely
confused as to the numbers of the Californianos [sic]. Actually there were only
fifty in the contingent under the command of Jose Antonio.” (Carrillo, 18)
Carrillo offers additional details about the battle,
including the presence of “skittish gray mule” that dragged the cannon into
battle and a suggestion that the Californios had only eight cannonballs which
they re-used when they were able to retrieve them from the battlefield. (Ibid.) We must mention that Leo Carrillo was born 18 years after his great uncle’s
demise; thus, he had only second- or perhaps third-hand knowledge of these
tales.
Aftermath
The Battle of Dominguez Rancho was, of course, a mere blip
in the history of the battle for California. With little or no backing from the
official government in Mexico, and no other allies, the Californians only
bought themselves a little time and perhaps burnished their reputation for
bravery and fighting skill. Once Stockton had regrouped in San Diego, met up
with General Stephen W. Kearney, not so fresh in from New Mexico, and tracked
down Major Frémont and his California Battalion who were making their way south
from Monterey by land, the fate of the Californians was sealed. Stockton and
Kearney pushed through resistance in the battles of San Pascual (December 6 and
7), Rio San Gabriel near Montebello (January 8 and 9), and La Mesa near Vernon
(January 9). A day following this last battle, Stockton’s forces entered Los
Angeles for the second time, again encountering no opposition. Meanwhile, Frémont,
now a Lieutenant Colonel, had approached the town from the San Fernando Valley,
and, in a brilliant tactical move ensuring his own fame, cemented a peace
treaty with Andres Pico of the Californio
forces under the noses of his commanders, Stockton and Kearney. But that is a
story for another day.
Who are you calling old?!
Folklore has dubbed the Battle of Dominguez Rancho “The
Battle of the Old Woman’s Gun.” (Other names include “The Battle of Dominguez Hills,”
“The Battle of Dominguez Ranch,” and “The Battle of Mervine’s Grapes” with a
sarcastic nod to the grapeshot fired from the gun.)
So, who was this old woman and what did she have to do with
a gun? Well, reliable sources have stated that the single piece of artillery
used in the battle, a four-pound cannon brought to bear by the Californio forces, was one that had been
hidden away by a woman during or perhaps just after the American occupation of
Los Angeles. Famed historian Hubert Howe Bancroft, writing from voluminous
notes taken by researchers in 1886, names the woman Inocensia Reyes:
“Nearly all of the
male inhabitants of southern California were now, in a certain sense, engaged
as soldiers in the revolt…The country was ransacked for old muskets, pistols,
and lances, with indifferent success. An old four-pounder, that had formerly
served on festive occasions for the firing of salutes, was dug up from the
garden of Inocencia Reyes, where it had been buried on Stockton’s first
approach; and this was mounted on a pair of wagon wheels by an English
carpenter.” (Bancroft, 318)
A few years after Bancroft’s monumental work, historian J.
M. Guinn, writing in the publication of the Historical Society of Southern
California, identifies the woman as Dona Clara Cota de Reyes, but without
mentioning his source. A
search of public records reveals that one Maria Clara Cota de Reyes, a widow,
lived in the pueblo of Los Angeles at the time of the uprising with five
children, one of whom was named Maria Inocencia. It is likely that the burying
of the cannon was a family affair. Dona Clara would have been about 56 at the
time, old enough to be considered “old” in those days. Maria Inocencia was only
about 31. (Ancestry.com) This version of the story appears to be confirmed by a descendant of the Reyes
family. (Tina Reyes email)
But wait, there’s more! A website dedicated to the history
of the Verdugo family in California adds more detail to the tale, naming
several co-conspirators in the plot to seize and bury the gun. While historian
Guinn believes the gun was buried in a sugarcane field at 1st and
Alameda streets, the author of the post states that the cannon was transported
to a peach orchard adjacent to the Reyes homestead at 2nd and San
Pedro streets. (Doc ) The two addresses are a scant quarter mile apart. The web article draws on
information from the memoirs of one Narciso Botello, an eyewitness to the
events of the rebellion. Botello explains that
“It needs to be said
how this cannon had always been in the Los Angeles Plaza, used to fire salutes
to the Virgin. This cannon had been buried in a sandy spot of Antonio Reyes’
orchard, and meantime hidden by some women before Stockton came into town.” (Botello, 81)
Let us note that, according to baptismal records of Mission
San Carlos Borromeo, an Antonio Reyes was the father of Inocencia (or
Ynocencia) Reyes and the husband of Maria Clara Cota Reyes.(Ancestry.com, baptismal record)
In the extensive notes to the published Botello memoirs, editor
Brent C. Dickerson details the adventures of the gun prior to the big battle,
including a salute welcoming new governor Micheltorena in 1842 and its
involvement in a jailbreak from the old calaboose in 1845. He recounts the
conspiracy to obtain and bury the gun, perhaps twice, so it may be that both
the story of the cane field and the peach orchard are true. Dickerson draws on
publications currently unavailable to us, including the memoir of Pablo Vejar,
the alleged instigator of the scheme. (Dickerson, Annals, 261) According to Vejar, the gun was buried for the second time on or about
September 27, only a few days before the battle and during the period that
Gillespie and his men were under siege on Fort Hill.
What happened to the Old Woman’s Gun?
Artillery, like the four-pound bore cannon that came to be
called the “Old Woman’s Gun” (el pedrero
de vieja) or el conico (conical
one) were prized possessions in the rough and ready days of old California. While
anecdotes about the gun are few and far between, we can piece together the
gun’s life story, always keeping in mind that some accounts are contradictory
and many guns looked alike.
Like many others, our gun had a number of varied assignments during its working life and in retirement it traveled as far afield as New Orleans and Annapolis. Probably. At present a cannon on display at the U.S. Naval Academy Museum in Annapolis purports to be the one we want.
Courtesy of U.S. Naval Academy Museum, Annapolis.
In his memoirs, Antonio Maria Osio provides a description of the gun in question:
”The angelinos had
acquired a very small cannon which they would fire to celebrate special
occasions. Unfortunately the vent on the cannon was too wide, and those who
wanted to play artilleryman would be injured and might even lose their thumbs
when they fired it. Even though the cannon had this defect, the angelinos,
aware that it could do more damage through it mouth than through it vent,
believed that it was an excellent defense. However, it was not mounted on a gun
carriage. So to make it more powerful, they mounted it on a cart made from a
tree trunk and left to engage Captain Mervine’s forces.” (Osio, 235)
Guinn picks up the tale:
“[The gun] was lashed
to the axle by means of rawhide thongs and was drawn by riatas as described by
Lieut. Duvall. The range was obtained by raising or lowering the pole of the
wagon. Ignacio Aguilar acted as gunner, and having neither lanyard nor pentstock
to fire it, he touched off the gun with the lighted end of a cigarette. Never
before or since perhaps was a battle won with such crude artillery.” (Guinn, "Battle," 266)
Brent Dickerson, in his extensive notes to Narciso Botello’s
memoir, provides further description of the gun courtesy of Franklin G. Mead, a
descendant of old Angeleno families. Mead, basing his observations on the gun
at Annapolis, describes it:
“The Old Woman's Gun
is a quite large swivel gun; but it is, indeed, a swivel gun (in
contradistinction to a field gun). Description: Bronze, smoothbore, 4 pounder,
cannon tube, 43½ inches overall in length; bore 2.77 inches diameter; 4½ inch
muzzle section length; tube 4 inches in diameter at the muzzle astragal; 16
inch chase section; 6 inches between 3rd and 2nd reinforce; 9½ inches across at
trunnions.” (Dickerson website)
Further, Mead disputes Osio's assertion that there was
something wrong with the cannon’s vent, a hint that perhaps they were not
describing the same gun.
The Old Woman’s Gun was not the only piece of artillery
available to the Californios.
Accounts of the Battle of San Pascual, which followed the Battle of Dominguez Rancho
on December 6 and 7 also involved a cannon or cannons. Louis McLane of the U.S.
Navy, who accompanied Frémont toward Los Angeles, provided this account of that
battle and the two skirmishes that followed:
“Flores [awaited them]
with about 600 men on the best horses in California – and 3 pieces of Artillery
– 1 twelve pound Iron medium and 2 brass 4’s. [He] disputed the passage of the
Rio San Gabriel on January 8 & [of] the Mesa [on] January 9th.
[Flores] was beat off on both days & on the 10th Stockton
entered Los Angeles.” (McLane, 108)
It is possible, even likely, that el conico was present at these battles. Historian Guinn believes so
based on inscriptions on the gun itself. (Guinn, "Battle," 265)
U.S. Naval Academy Museum.
In the hands of the enemy
Various sources say that two cannons were surrendered to (now)
Lieutenant Colonel Frémont shortly after the signing of the Treaty of Cahuenga
on January 13, 1847. Most assume that el conico
was one of these:
Edwin Bryant, a journalist embedded with Frémont’s troops,
was present at Campo de Cahuenga when Frémont met with his counterpart, Andrés Pico.
In his journal he writes out the terms of the treaty in full. Article 1 dictated that
the defeated forces “deliver up their
artillery and public arms…” He goes on to state that “the next morning [January 14] a brass howitzer was brought into camp
and delivered. What other arms were given up I cannot say, for I saw none.” (Bryant, 53)
J.M. Guinn, writing at the end of the 19th
century, asserts (without giving his source) that two cannon were given up to Frémont
at Cahuenga – “the howitzer captured from
General Kearny at San Pascual” and “the woman’s gun that won the battle of
Dominguez.” (Guinn, A History, 143)
Mr. Guinn provides us with tantalizing information about the
gun’s future in a paragraph which places the small cannon on display at the New
Orleans Exposition of 1884-85, otherwise known as the World Cotton Centennial.
Guinn says the “label” read:
“Trophy 53, No. 63, Class 7. Used by Mexico against the United States
at the battle of Dominguez Ranch, Oct. 9, 1846; at San Gabriel and Mesa; Jan. 8
and 9, 1847; used by U.S. forces against Mexico at Mazatlan Nov. 11, 1847;
Urias (crew all killed or wounded); Palos Prietos, Dec. 13, 1847 and at San
Jose, Feb. 15, 1848.” (Guinn, A History, 131)
As we have seen, San Gabriel and Mesa were back-to-back clashes early
in January 1847. The last three encounters mentioned were skirmishes of the
Mexican-American war outside of California.
Although Guinn does not specify it, the gun displayed at the
exposition was likely a part of the U.S. Navy’s display. A catalog of the exposition
described some of the many guns offered for view by the Navy: “Full sized models of the thirteen-inch and
fifteen-inch bore, steel rifle cannon, now being made for the steel cruisers,
were shown, together with specimens of the Hotchkiss revolving cannon, the
Gatling gun, and the Dalghren and Parrott cannon.” (Fairall, 338)
If the gun was in the custody of the navy in 1885, it would
go far to explain how it came to be at the U.S. Naval Academy Museum at Annapolis
today. Photos made available by the museum show the gun on display among
artifacts of the Mexican-American war. It is labelled “Old Woman’s Gun.”
Close-ups of the barrel reveal that at some point it was inscribed with the
wording Guinn quotes above, and perhaps more.
Tales told by dead men
So, we have what seems like a straightforward timeline for our gun: from Cahuenga to the U.S. Navy, to the New Orleans Exposition, to retirement at Annapolis. There is, however, one story that puts a hitch in this theory: In 1881 one Horace Bell, a former California Ranger (state marshal), published his memoirs. Although Bell does not cover the period of the battles and treaty, he recounts an interesting anecdote involving Juan Sepúlveda, a prominent don who had served with Carrillo in the Battle of Dominguez Rancho. Sepúlveda and Bell, it seems, were part of a group of boisterous gentlemen celebrating the new American holiday, the Fourth of July, in 1853.
According to Bell:
“Don Juan, in the
exuberance of his patriotism, had unearthed a venerable field piece which had
enjoyed the silence of the grave since it had fired its last shot in defense of
Mexican territory. Captain Sepúlveda mustered and embarked his command on a
large boat and proceeded up Wilmington Bay, where he embarked his artillery and
sailed for Dead Man’s Island, where, after infinite labor, he succeeded in
mounting his battery on the highest point of the island, and all being ready,
we let loose such a thunder as was never exceeded by one gun. It seemed that we
would wake the seven sleeping heroes who so quietly reposed on the little
barren rock…...while paying our
respects to our liquid ammunition, Don Juan proceeded to tell us how the seven
sailors came to be killed. Their wooden head-boards stood in line in front of
us.” (Bell, Chapter IX)
Sepúlveda then went on to give a vivid and perhaps somewhat
enhanced account of the Battle of Dominguez Rancho, swearing that the gun at
their feet was the very same that had turned the tide of that engagement. In
Bell’s remembered and poetic words, Don Juan spoke thusly:
“The old gun was
subsequently buried near my house, and after a nap of six years, here it is,
and here am I, and others who dragged it away at the time, and here we are, all
of us, the old gun, the old enemies, now friends, and here is brave Higuera
firing a salute of honor over our former foes who fell in battle.” (Ibid.)
If there is any truth to this hearsay evidence, it would put
the lie to the story of the old gun being surrendered as a spoil of war in
1847. It would raise many more questions concerning its actual fate and concerning
the true identity of the impostor currently on display in Annapolis with a
label that reads:
“Surrendered to
Commodore R.F. Stockton, U.S.N., Los Angeles, California, January 16, 1847.”
A word in parting
In reviewing the story of the battle, I have endeavored to
balance all relevant sources, both primary accounts and secondary assessments,
while attempting to correct for bias of the parties involved. I am forced to
concur with the words of historian Guinn who, in his 1899 article wrote:
“Of the notable events
occurring during the conquest of California there are few others of which there
are so contradictory accounts as that known as the battle of Dominguez Ranch.” (Guinn, "Battle," 261)
[1]
The Vandalia was a sloop-of-war which had served in the U.S. Navy until being
decommissioned in 1845. Although she was re-commissioned for service in the Navy
in 1849, during the period in question she was in private service.
SOURCES
- The Private Journal of Louis McLane, U.S.N., 1844-1848 edited by Jay Monaghan, 1971.
- Stockton report to Congress, 1848, in Memoir of the Life and Public Services of John Charles Fremont edited by John Bigelow, 1856.
- Stockton to George Bancroft, Secretary of the Navy, November 23, 1846, in Samuel Bayard, A Sketch of the Life of Com. Robert F. Stockton, Applewood Books, 2009.
- John Mack Faragher, Eternity Street: Violence and Justice in Frontier Los Angeles, 2016.
- Robert C. Gillingham, Rancho San Pedro, 1961.
- Lt. Robert C. Duvall, "Extracts from the Log of the U.S. Frigate Savannah kept by Robert Carson Duvall," California Historical Society Quarterly, Vol. III, No. 2, July 1924.
- J.M. Guinn, "Battle of Dominguez Ranch," Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California and Pioneer Register, Vol. 4, No. 3, 1899, pp. 261-266. Much of Guinn's 1899 article was reproduced verbatim in his history of California, below.
- J.M. Guinn, A History of California and an Extended History of Los Angeles and Environs, Vol I, Chapter 18, "The Defeat and Retreat of Mervine's Men," 1915. Guinn provides a detailed of account of the battle in this three-volume opus. Unfortunately, while he assures us that “In gathering material for this work, I have examined the collections in a number of libraries, public and private, have consulted state, county and city archives and have scanned thousands of pages of newspapers and magazines,” he does not provide individual sources for his statements.
- Leonard Pitt, The Decline of the Californios, 1966.
- Antonio María Osio, The History of Alta California, 1996.
- Marius Duvall, A Navy Surgeon in California, 1846-1847.
- Benjamin David Wilson, "Observations on Early Days in California and New Mexico," edited by Arthur Woodward, Historical Society of Southern California, 1934, vol. 16.
- Leo Carrillo, The California I Love, 1961.
- Hubert Howe Bancroft, A History of California, 1846-1886.
- Ancestry.com
- Tina Reyes, email to Eleanor Boba, April 1, 2019.
- Doc, “The ‘Old Woman’s Gun’ and the Battle of Rancho Dominguez, blogpost, Verdugo Family History, October 4, 2017, http://verdugofamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2017/10/the-old-womans-gun-and-battle-of-rancho.html, accessed April 2019.
- Ynocencia Reyes Cota, baptismal record, Ancestry.com.
- Narciso Botello's Annals of Southern California, 1833-1847 edited by Brent C. Dickerson, 2014.
- Brent C. Dickerson, "Narciso Botello's Annals of Southern California, 1833-1847, Illustrations, Maps, Images and Further Remarks," https://web.csulb.edu/~odinthor/botello.html.
- Edwin Bryant, What I Saw in California, undated, c. 1846-47.
- Herbert S. Fairall, The World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition, New Orleans, 1884-1885, 1885.
- Horace Bell, Reminiscences of a Ranger, 1881, Chapter IX, Kindle edition..
- Les Driver, “Carrillo’s Flying Artillery,” in California Historical Society Quarterly, 1969.