Rhoads Donner Party

Hamrick's of California 1850

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Elizabeth Wisdom Rhoads Hamrick, was a first cousin, once removed of the Rhoads' brothers of the Donner Party RESCUE group, including Daniel Rhoads and John Pierce Rhoads, they lived less than 50 miles from one another from 1850 and on.....Elizabeth and her clan in Amador and Daniel and his family near Lemoore....

Daniel Rhoads writes to his inlaws:

Letter by Daniel Rhoads to Jesse Esrey written in the summer of l847 and carried from California to Missouri by James Stice.

Dear Parents:

I take my pen in hand to inform you that we are all well and hope that these few lines may find you enjoying the same blessing. We all arrived safe in California except John Patterson He died and was buried near the plains of California.

We made our arrival the first day of October through many difficulties and troubles. The first part of our journey was pleasant and beautiful traveling and on tel we got about half way. We began to get tired and out of heart. The grass was failing and our cattle was weak. After we came to the mountains grass was very scarce.

Our travel was principally up rivers. We traveled up the plat river to the mountains. Up sweet watter to the South Pass. The mountains was passable about l5 our 20 miles at the pass. From there on we traveled down the streams. We come to mary's river at the head and traveled down 300 and 30 miles to the sink.

On the old route there is but one long drive. The route we come there is two a day and a night's travel each without water or grass. The first is from big sandy to green river green woods cut-off. The second is from the sink of Mary's river to Truckey's river.

Between Mary's river and Truckey's is boiling springs. There is rocks blown out half as big as a house. These springs is not like other springs. The water does not run from them unless there is a blow-uo. It is boiling like a pot. There is a number of wam and hot springs on the road. salt and sulpher springs. Soda spring. At these soda springs there is about five in the bounds of 10 feet, a clear water, a red, a black and two soda springs.

We travelled hundreds of miles without seeing a stick of growing timber, but plenty of small willows. We had exceeding good roads until we come to truckey's River, which is about 300 and 50 miles from Calafornia(sp). We crossed truckey's river 27 times. One day the rocks from the size of a wash bowl. to the size of a kettle. so plenty that neither oxen nor wagon ever touched bottom. The last 300 miles is very near all rocks. The nearer California the worse the road. From the bottom of the cascade to the top is about 4 miles. It took us 3 days to take our waggons and cattle up. the oxen could be trailed from bottom to top by the blood.

Since we crossed their has been a new rout found that is a great deal better. 6 or 8 yoke of oxen can pull up a wagon in 2 hours. on the top of this mountain is a lake and every 4 or 5 miles through out the mountains is lakes. some of them are so deep in places there is no bottom to be found. the three last days travel we had nothing but oak bushes for our cattle. our old wagon brought us through safe and we then sold it for 30 dollar. we got in with 3 yoke of oxen, 2 horses and 1 cow. one ox died when we got in after halling us 2 thousand miles farther. Rhoads got in wit 7 or 8 yoke of oxen and 18 head of loose cattle only and 3 head of horses.

our provisions gave out before we got in. it would have lasted us if the ballance had a had plenty. John Rhoads gave out and we divided with him. then the old man finally. we all gave out. we kild cattle and eat alone until we got near the plains. John Rhoads went in a horse back and brought out corn. we boiled corn and eat it until we got in.

the first house we came to they sold wheat bran at 3 dollar a hundred. it was hard times. wheat 2 dollars a fanaker flour, and meal 8 dollars by the hundred. peas 2 dollars per bushel. a good fat cow 10 dollars. evrything is dear. white and yellow domestic 50 cts per yard. calico and apron check 50. tea 2 dollars a pound. Coffee is 50 cts. sugar 25 cts a pound. plates tea cups and saucers 50 cents a peace. nives and forks are from 4 to 8 dollars a dozen. castings 16 cents a pound. shoes from 2 to 5 dollars a pair.

the fannon boys and Thomas Rhoads enlisted for 3 months and went in the army and all the emigrants that could leave their families went along. they was determined to gain the country or die in the persuit of it. And without help they could never have gaing it. there is none of our boys returned but Joseph house he cried a many a day to see his aunt betsy before he got back. the other boys hasen't got their discharge yet.

tony patterson has settled on a creek crossing between the cosina and the mekelima. She has in 12 akers of wheat. her and the children is well and she wants to go back to Mo. turner elder is mooving up and down dry creek farther

Rhoads is making him a farm. on the cosima river on a tract of land presented to him by 2 sons in law. John R has no stationary place but has a fine crop of wheat. it was the commencement of the rainy season. It was to late to build a house and I was obliged to have a shelter. I hired to a work from the 1st of November til the harvesting is over, which will be about the last of August. I am to get 25 dollars a month, a house to live in, and my family considered. I am to be paid in young cattle cows at the calving at 5 dolllars a head. Bulls at 3 dollars. I shall be able to drive home 40 to 50 head. I do not know were I will settle but somewhere in the sacrament valley. The rainy season set in the 1st of November. It rains perhaps 2 or 3 days, then a week or two dry weather, then more rain. It rains this way on til April or May. then dry, warm weather. This a last winter is the coldest ever been known in California. We had one lite shift of snow. It is moderately cool in the winter. In the summer it is very warm. The heat gets up to a 100 and 10 degrees. The climate is mild and pleasant. When we came in last fall everything looked horrible. (i.e. no person was pleased with the country. But now everything is in full bloom and looks beautiful. The young grass came on in the months of January and February. Some places the wild oats and clover is waist high. The sail is as rich in places as the Mo bottom, but not generally so. This country is excellent for wheat, corn and garden vegetables will not grow to do much good without watering. In the sacrament valley on the coast they can raise everything but wheat.

Tony patterson requests you to write to david patterson about his misfortunes and if either he or his patterson clan collect any money either here or in clark county to try to send it to her. She stands in great need of it. when you write to david patterson direct your letter to notify county sullivan post office.

Mother Rhoads girls is married. Sally married a man by the name of William Daly. Caty is ms. Sheldon. and elizabeth a ms. Kaiser, a German. They have all done well. Elizabeth has done exceedingly well.

About half of the emigration went to Oregon. A part of what came to California went a new rout with hastings, through by the salt flats. About half of them got in before the snows. The balance got to the fort of the caskade and campt overnight. And the snow fell about two feet deep. They concluded to stay an other day for the snow to melt of. The next nigh they have eight feet. It snowed the cattle all under and them without and provisions. They found some of these cattle which done them til the 1 of February. Some of them attempted to come out two or three times. The snow being too soft they turned back. They finally concluded they would have to die somewhere and they started again--18 of them among them was 5 woman and 2 indians. They started with 2 pounds of meat, each of them. They didn't know the rout to come and they wandered about in the mountains 4 weeks. They all died but 7 and subsisted on the dead bodies.

They got in the 15th day of January, the 5 women and 2 men. They gave the alarm that the people would all die without assistance.

They wasent more than 15 men to the sacrament valley. It was sed that every company of men that would go should have 5 dollars per day. It was 2 weeks before any person would consent to go. Finally it was concluded that we would go or die trying. For not to make any attempt to save them would be a disgrace to us and to California as long as time lasted. We started-- a small company of 7 men myself, John Rhoads, Mr. Glover, Joseph Forster, [Riley Moutrey] and some sailers

We took 50 pounds of provisions and a heavy blanket to each man and started. We walked on snow shoes over the snow it was from 5 to 25 feet deep. At the end of a days travel we cached provisions so as to lighten our loads. We was 7 days going to them Their tents and cabins they had been living on rawhides for 3 weeks. They was dieing every day. in some of the tents the was 3 and 4 on a pile of dead persons.

We gave them these allowance and started with 23persons all that was able to walk. We had but very little provisions to leave the ballance. On our way back a "back a bear" had to one of our caches. That left us 3 days with anything to eat but a tent bag and our snow shoes which was rawhide strings. We met another party bring out provisions. They divided with us or we never would have got in. We manged so as to get in with 19 persons. 3 died on the way. Th 2 nd company started with 14 and got in with 3. the most of those people lived on dead baodys from 4 to 6 weeks. There were but two hole families got out`and a number of orphant children. We saved 30 out of 80 persons. The most of them were from spring field illinois and plat city. It was the awfulest and most horrible sight that ever was seen to go to their cabbins and see the human frames that was theirs. There is now men started to meet the emigrants and hurry them on. There is a large emigration coming from Oregon here this summer. I am not able to tell you how many persons came in last year but the was 200 waggons come over the mountains and 2 or 3 ship loads come by sea. The most of them is Mormans. There is 2000 waggons of mormans between here and the states. Apart of them is on the plat river living on buffalo. The balance is at the salt plains. They don't calculate to embody themselves as they did in the states.

California is improving very fast. In the plains of California there is no good timber. The greater part of it is oak large heavy scrubby timber. The top will cover a bundance of groung There is very fine pine timber in california as was represented but it is in the neighboring mountains. Also on the opposite side of the caskade from us is some of the largest fur and pine that I ever see or heard of. It is were it will do no person any good. Pine timber is 10 dollars a thousand. Horses is from 10 to 25. Heard from the boys matthew fannon is dead and robert was very low. Thomas Rhoads was with him. They are 600 miles below.

We are all heayer than we have been for a great while all but mother Rhoads she is very lean she is determined to go back.

Arnanda is heartier than she has been for the las 4 years. Her weight is a hundred and fifty pounds. We've a fine young son, born the 4 day of November. Amanda calls him for her father and her brother Jesse Esrey. Over here a coat will you

manda sends her compliments to all of her friends. I would like to see you all. As yet I advise you all to stay where you are. We are coming on a visit after a while.

Such weddings. All the girls from 14 up is getting married. Nothing more at present let my best respects to you all,

Daniel Rhoads to Jesse Essery


RELIEF OF THE DONNER PARTY l846

STATEMENT OF DANIEL RHOADS OF KINGSTON, FRESNO COUNTY

BANCROFT LIBRARY 1873

I was born in Edgar County (Illinois) December 7th, 1821. I arrived in California, by the overland route, after a journey of five months from the Missouri River on the 5th of October 1846 and went to work for John Sinclair in the Grimes Ranch,(now Haggin & Tevis') near Sacramento. In the month of January l847, while I was at Sinclairs news came to the fort that a party of emigrants were in the mountains "snowed in" and destitute of food.

Previous to this time, Captain Sutter, having heard that there still remained of the emigration of 1846 a party who had not yet come through and knowing from the lateness of the season the danger they were in sent a party composed of three Indians with pack mules loaded with provisions in charge of a white man to meet these emigrants wherever they might be found.

This pack train met with the emigrants, 80 in number, (since known as the Donner party) either at Donner Lake or a day's journey east of it and were with them the night they encamped at the lake. That night the first snow of the season fell to the depth of four feet and the storm continued until the ground was covered ten feet deep. By this the work oxen and horses on which the emigrants might have subsisted until relief came, were scattered and with the exception of a very few, utterly lost.

The few miserable oxen saved and the provisions sent by Captain Sutter lasted the party but a short time. Then twenty-four of the emigrants, including Mrs. McCutcheon, Mrs. Graves and two other women, and the white man and Indians sent by Sutter, started without any food, in the desperate hope either of reaching the settlements (a hundred miles distant) or of encountering some relief party. Of course, many soon commenced dying from exhaustion and starvation and the survivors were compelled to subsist upon the bodies of those who perished. In about three weeks from the time the party left Donner lake some "wild" Indians living in the foothills brought to Johnson's Ranch on Bear River, 40 miles from Sutter's Fort, one of the emigrants named Eddy, half carried and led him a distance of about 30 miles. Eddy told the people at Johnson's that the four women and William Foster, all that remained alive of the party that left the lake were at an Indian Rancheria about 25 miles East of Johnson's. I may here observe that the Indians of Sutter's relief party were never afterwards heard from. The surviving emigrants stated that one had died and been eaten, but it was generally thought that the Indian had been killed for food and the other Indians became frightened and had left the party. On the arrival of Eddy at Johnson's a letter was dispatched, by Indian runners, to the Fort giving an account of the condition of the emigrants at Donner Lake and this was the first intelligence received by Captain Sutter and to which I have first above referred.

Allow me here to make a digression to mention our postal facilities in those days. When it became necessary to transmit a message from one of the widely scattered ranches or settlements to another, no matter how great the distance, a letter was placed in the hands of an Indian who carried it with the utmost dispatch until he was tired when he stopped at some rancheria, and delivered his package to some other Indian who in turn carried it, and so on until the letter reached its destination. Sometimes these mail carriers received a small reward and sometimes not; but I never heard of a letter failing to reach the person to whom it was sent.

The day after the arrival of Eddy at Johnson's a party started from the latter place to bring in Foster and the four women, which they accomplished in two or three days.

On the receipt of the news at the Fort letters were at once sent (in the manner above named) to Yerba Buena and the settlements around the Bay of San Francisco.

Captain Sutter made a call for volunteers to proceed to the assistance of the emigrants. A party of fourteen of which I was one was made up and at once started for Johnson's Ranch. Here we prepared for our expedition. We killed some beef cattle and dried the meat over fires. We pounded some wheat in Indian stone mortars and ground some in coffee mills (no gristmills nor flour nor meal of any kind in those days). We cut the hides of animals we killed into strips for the future construction of snowshoes.

Although we worked night and day without intermission, except for short intervals for sleep, these preparations occupied us three days. The provisions were then packed on mules and we started on our journey without a guide, and trusting to the judgement of our leaders, John P. Rhoads (my brother) and Resin P. Tucker to find our way. Until we struck the snow we took the emigrant trail.

This trail was called the old Truckee route and runs in places a short distance from the line of the railroad being in plain sight to the left going over.

Our road was in very bad condition and at frequent intervals we had to unpack the mules and drag them out of the mire. In about five days travelling on an average five or six miles a day we reached the snow which we found three feet deep. Through this we worried along some five miles when it became too deep for the mules to go any further, it being eight feet deep and falling all the time; a regular storm having set in. Our encountering the snow so deep and so much sooner than we had been led to anticipate utterly disheartened some of the party and six men turned back.

We made a camp and left the mules in charge of one of Sutter's men, a German who went by the sobriquet of Greasy Jim. Jim was to take care of the animals and to pasture them on hillsides with a Southern exposure and such other bare spots as he could find until our return.

Our party now consisted of seven. John P. Rhoads, Reasin P. Tucker (now in Napa Valley), Sept. Moutry (now in Santa Clara), Aquila Glover (dead), a sailor named George Foster, a sailor named Mike, and myself. Each man made a pair of snowshoes. These were constructed by cutting pine boughs, stripping off the bark, heating them over the fire and bending them in the shape of an ox-bow about two feet long and 1 wide, with a lattice work of rawhide for soles. We attached them to our feet by means of the rawhide strips with which we were provided. On these we had to travel continuously except at brief intervals on hillsides and bare spots when we took them off.

Each man also took a single blanket, a tin cup, and a hatchet and as near as the captains could estimate, 7 pounds of dried meat. Thus equipped we started. Foster had told us that we should find the emigrants at or near Truckee Lake (since called Donner Lake) and in the direction of this we journeyed. Of course, there was no trail, we had no guide and most of our journey was through a dense pine forest but the lofty peak which overlooks the lake was in sight at intervals and this and the judgement of our two leaders were our sole means of direction.

Since I made that trip I have frequently read about the "sighing", the "soughing" and the "moaning" of the wind through the pine trees and I suppose if any of our party had fallen by the way, the wind and pines together would have sung the requiem and the snow have made the stereotyped "winding-sheet"; but none of our party had ever read any poetry and we were too desperately in earnest both to preserve our own lives and to succor any of the emigrants who might survive to give a thought to sentiment. When we first started from the fort Capt. Sutter assured us that we should be followed by other parties as soon as the necessary preparations could be made. For the guidance of those who might follow us and as a signal to any of the emigrants who might be straggling about in the mountains, as well as for our own direction on our return trip, we set fire to every dead pine tree on or near our trail. At the end of every three days journey (10 or 20 miles) we made up a small bundle of dried meat and hung it to the bough of a tree to lighten the burden we carried and for subsistence on our return.

The first day we made 7 or 8 miles. At sunset we "made camp" by felling pine saplings 6 inches in diameter and cutting them off about 12 feet long and placing them in the snow making a platform 6 or 8 feet wide. On this platform we kindled our fire, roasted some meat for supper and then throwing our blankets over our shoulders sat, close together around the fire and dozed through the night the best way we could. If we had made the fire on top of the snow without the intervention of any protecting substance, we should have found our fire, in the morning 8 or 10 feet below the surface on which we encamped. In this manner we passed every night of our journey both to and from the lake on the part of the road covered by snow.

We went on making from four to six miles per day leaving a very sinuous trail by reason of the impossibility of pursuing a straight course through the dense forest and of our having to wind around the sides of hills and mountains instead of going over them. The snow increased as we proceeded until it amounted to a depth of eighteen feet as was afterward discovered by the stumps of the pine trees we burned.

We traveled in Indian file. At each step taken by the man in front he would sink in the snow to his knees and of course had to lift his foot correspondingly high for his next step. Each succeeding man would follow in the tracks of the leader. The latter soon became tired, fell to the rear, and the second man took the head of the file. When he became fatigued by breaking the trail he would fall back and so on each one in his turn.

At sunset of the 16th day we crossed the Truckee Lake on the ice and came to the spot where we had been told we should find the emigrants. We looked all around but no living thing except ourselves was in sight and we thought that all must have perished. We raised a loud halloo and then we saw a woman emerge from a hole in the snow. As we approached her several others made their appearance in like manner, coming out of the snow. They were gaunt with famine and I never can forget the horrible, ghastly sight they presented. The first woman spoke in a hollow voice very much agitated and said "are you men from California or do you come from heaven?"

They had been without food except a few work oxen since the first fall of snow, about 3 weeks. They had gathered up the bones of the slaughtered cattle and boiled them to extract the grease and had roasted some of the hides which formed the roofs of their cabins. We gave them food very sparingly and retired for the night, having some one on guard until morning to keep close watch on our provisions to prevent the starving emigrants from eating them, which they would have done until they died of repletion.

When these emigrants had first been stopped by snow they had built small cabins using the skins of the slaughtered oxen for roofs. Storms nearly continuous had caused the snow to fall to the depth of 18 feet so that the tops of their cabins were far beneath the surface. When we arrived they were eating portions of the hides forming their roofs which hides being under the snow were in a putrid condition. The bodies of those who had perished were lying on top of the snow covered with quilts. When a person died an inclined plane was dug to the floor of the cabin and the body slid up to the surface, the inmates being too weak to lift the corpse out. So far the survivors had not been compelled to partake of human flesh. I remember seeing but 3 living men. Louis Keeseburg was lying on his back unable to rise. He, Patrick Breen and one other were the only ones left. Very few women or children had died up to this time.

The morning after our arrival John P. Rhoads and Tucker started for another camp distant 8 miles East, where were the Donner family, to distribute what provisions could be shared and to bring along such of the party as had sufficient strength to walk. They returned bringing four girls and two boys of the Donner family and some others.

The next morning we started on our return trip accompanied by 21 emigrants mostly women and children. John Rhoads carried a child in his arms which died the second night. On the third day an emigrant named John Denton, exhausted by starvation and totally snow-blind gave out. He tried to keep up a hopeful and cheerful appearance, but we knew he could not live much longer. We made a platform of saplings, built a fire on it, cut some boughs for him to sit upon and left him. This was imperatively necessary. The party who followed in our trail from California found his dead body a few days after we had left him, partially eaten by wolves.

As we were now guided by the stumps of the pine trees we had burned on our way out as we never had to stop to determine the road and as the ground we traveled over was mostly descending we made much more rapid progress than on our journey East being only five days from the lake to the camp where we had left our mules. Had we not made the journey thus quickly I do not know how we ever could have gotten through as will be seen. The first night after leaving the lake we consumed the last of our dried meat expecting that our next days journey would bring us to one of our "caches" of provisions which we had left hanging to the boughs of trees. When we reached this point (2nd night) we found that some varmint (predatory animals) had climbed up and eaten our cache so that we had to make a supper of some strips of raw hide which we still carried and which we cut from our snow-shoes, roasted. We passed the night on our usual platform--there had to be several to accommodate the entire party. This rawhide was our sole subsistence for 3 days until just before we reached our "mule camp" when we met a party going east under the guidance of a half-.breed named Brit Greenwood who acted as pilot. Greenwood told us that when his father, Caleb Greenwood, an old Rocky Mountain hunter and trapper, heard that our party of seven had started over the mountains without a guide, he offered to wager the money he was to receive for piloting a party, that not one of us would ever come back alive; and the bet was not taken.

When we reached the camp where we had left our mules we remained until next day. During the night, the food in camp not being guarded sufficiently the eldest boy of the Donner family managed to eat so much dried meat that he died the next day. We here found a party of sailors from the U.S. Squadron commanded by Lieutenant Selim E. Woodworth U.S.A. and piloted by old man Greenwood before referred to. This was a novel business for the sailors and I heard that they suffered terribly when they reached the deep snow.

Glover and myself were the weakest of the party suffering greatly from exhaustion caused by deprivation of food and want of sleep. We mounted mules and returned to the Fort. It was a long time before I recovered from the effects of the expedition. My brother, John Rhoads, made a second and a third trip with relief parties none of which, however met with the difficulties experienced by our party.

The sufferings of the Donner have formed the subject of many writings, some of which I have read and have every reason to believe from personal intercourse with many of the sufferers as well as with those who at various times went to their relief, that some of the statements made concerning the party are not true. In the above account I have mentioned nothing beyond my own experience.

On the discovery of gold I mined at Mormon Island and with the other gold seekers at that point paid Sam Brannen one third of the gross amount taken out. I continued mining until the autumn of 1849. I went East in 1850 but was not contented and returned to California where I have since resided, experiencing the vicissitudes of fortune incident to a life in that country.

My present residence is near Kingston, Fresno County. My wife's maiden name was Amanda Ezra. I married her in Ray County, Missouri. We have had seven children, all born in California. Those living are Sarah, born March 1850; Mary, June 1853; John, October 1857; Elvira, 1861.

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Daniel Rhoads is my wife's brother. I have known him about 23 years and from the simple conscientious truthfulness of the man as well as from the statements I have had made to me by others who went on expeditions to succor the Donner party corroborating his story related to me as above set forth in person I have no doubt of the perfect truth of it in the minutest detail.

The man who wrote the very brief paper in the "Overland Monthly" magazine for July 1870 was misinformed in some particulars but was in the main correct, except as to that portion relating to the conduct of Keeseburg. The latter was by no means as blameless as the magazine article represents. Suspicion amounting almost to a certainty existed in the minds of the members of one of the relief parties that Keeseburg murdered Mrs. Donner for her property and money. He came very near being hung and was suspended for a while to make him give up certain money of Mrs. Donner.

Mr. Samuel Brannan who was one of a relief party in the spring of 1847 can give full particulars of the whole affair. I have heard Mr. B. throw these things up at Keeseburg in a quarrel with him.

I have had the whole story from men who went on some of the expeditions but of course what I state is from hearsay.

I will add that when Keeseburg was on his trial before Captain Sutter the latter had the best of reasons of a personal nature for acquitting him. What those reasons were partakes too much of the nature of gossip and scandal to be detailed here. You can get them from anyone who lived at New Helvetia in those days.

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