I located Marsh in many places: in Massachusetts, where he was
born; at Phillips Academy, Andover, in his prep days; at Harvard
where he graduated; at Fort Snelling, Minnesota, where he taught
the first school; at Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin; at Davenport,
Iowa; at New Salem, Illinois; at St. Louis and Independence, Missouri;
at Santa Fe, New Mexico , and finally on a rancho in California.
When I had run down the clews, collected my data, and pieced together
my information, what a history it disclosed! What a man!
I had found a hero neglected by the historians!
For John Marsh was one of the greatest of our early adventurers.
He was a pioneer of six American frontiers, a founder of commonwealths,
a power in every community in which he lived. What other frontiersman,
I ask, can equal that record? What other man figured as largely
in the pioneer annals of the frontier as he?
John Marsh was a Harvard graduate. How many others, of our wilderness
wanderers, boasted an alma mater? That diploma made him unique
as a frontiersman. He carried the intellectual traditions of New
England from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The faded and dusty
records show that he made them revered. He helped to bind Massachusetts,
the Mississippi, and the Pacific with one indissoluble bond. Therein
lies John Marsh's chief claim to fame. Not only did he blaze a
trail; he carried a torch.
One of John Marsh's acts is quoted as a cause leading up to the
Black Hawk War. He was a witness of the treaty that terminated
that struggle, and that transferred an immense tract of land from
the possession of the red men into the hands of the whites.
Another of his acts started prairie schooners rolling across the
continent. Still another freed California from the last of her
Mexican governors. Both those accomplishments paved the way to
California's ultimate acquisition by the United States.
Many of Marsh's deeds were greater than the man himself. Many
fell far short. Sometimes he destroyed. Mostly he builded. He
was strong. He was weak. He was great. He was small. He loved.
He hated. But always he was human. On every occasion but one he
was master of circumstances. Even then, in defeat, he was heroic.
Wherever John Marsh went there was romance and adventure. His
life reads like a volume of fiction. The name of Marsh should
be a household word. Yet Fate, for some inscrutable reason, denied
him a place among the immortals.
GEORGE D. LYMAN
San Francisco May, 1930
(Excerpt from Preface to the definitive biography of John
Marsh:
JOHN MARSH, PIONEER by George D. Lyman, NY, 1930, Scribner's
& Sons)
California State Historic Landmark 722
Site of the Murder of Dr. John Marsh
"California pioneer murdered here September 24, 1856"
John Marsh - California Pioneer
Being a brief outline of the remarkable life of Dr. John Marsh,
Physician, Indian Agent, Friend of the Sioux, Explorer, Rancher,
Father of Early California Immigration, Pioneer. Harvard Class
of 1823.
* Born in Salem, MA in 1799
* Died in Contra Costa County, CA 1856
* Graduated Harvard College 1823
* Taught first school-Minnesota.
* Assistant to the Indian Agent at Fort St. Anthony, MN.
* Studied medicine under the eye of post physician but never received
official certificate due to the death of his mentor.
* Became a staunch supporter of the Sioux during the tribal difficulties
that finally erupted into the Black Hawk War.
* In 1828 he rescued the wife and child of an influential Sioux
chief, being held captive by Morgan, war chief of the Fox tribe.
* Compiled the first dictionary of the sioux language with the
help of his common law wife, Marguerite. Marguerite was the beautiful
daughter of a French trapper and his Wahpeton wife. John and Marguerite
produced a son, charles.
* Moved to Independence, MO where he set up a general store.
* moved on to santa fe and thence to Los angeles as rumors of
gun running to the sioux and creditors dogged him.
* Practiced medicine in Los Angeles for a year to earn money to
buy land. He was paid in the currency of the pueblo, hides and
tallow.
* Arrived in San Jose in 1837 inquiring after land for sale. Purchased
Los Meganos from Jose Noriega for $500.
* Took possession of Los Meganos in 1838, a year before John Sutter
took up his grant on the Sacramento.
* Built a small adobe along a stream and began practicing medicine.
His fees, paid in cattle created one of the largest herds in early
California.
* Began his letter campaign to bring American settlers to California.
One, to Governor Cass of Michigan correctly evaluated the agricultural
potential of California. These letters brought the first wagon
trains to California, 1000's of settlers followed.
* Developed Los Meganos into one of the largest ranches in the
area and shipped beef and produce to the gold mines and to San
Francisco.
* Married Abigail Tuck in 1851; daughter Alice born in 1852. Reunited
with lost son Charles in 1855.
* Murdered on the road to Martinez, CA in 1856