Bringing Some Gold to the Civil War: Let’s Talk About California

Today we are glad to welcome Kathleen Logothetis as a guest author. Kathleen is currently a graduate student at West Virginia University and is a seasonal ranger at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park.

71st Pennsylvania Monument at Gettysburg.

Among the vast collection of Gettysburg’s monuments, a large but simple stone monument stands near the corner of the angle where the infamous Confederate charge was broken. Rising four stone layers from the pedestal, topped with pointed stone pieces and supporting panels of writing on each side, this monument is not as flashy as many that surround it. It is what is written at the very top of the side facing away from the Confederate line that catches the attention of those who stop and take a look. Above the Second Corps trefoil is written “California Regiment.”

Californian soldiers were at Gettysburg? Really?

Well…no.

United States 1850.

At the outbreak of the Civil War, California was America’s western-most state. Acquired with a large chunk of land by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), which ended the Mexican-American War, California quickly became a state when the discovery of gold caused a population boom. On September 9, 1850, California was officially admitted to the United States as a free state as part of the Compromise of 1850. Despite being separated from the rest of the states by a large expanse of territorial land (Texas was the next-closest state), California did not remain isolated from the conflicts which led to civil war. Although admitted as a free state, California faced its own secession crisis as the conflict heated up in the east. Pro-Union factions prevailed and the United States flag remained above the Golden State.

Even though California was far from the main areas of action, they wanted to become involved; thus the “California Regiment” at Gettysburg. Because it was such a great distance, California could not send regiments to the Eastern Theater (although individuals traveled east to join both the Union and Confederate armies). So, California Senator James McDougall offered to raise the money and furnish the arms to a “Californian” regiment if his friend in Washington, Oregon Senator Edward D. Baker (who would command these troops), would be willing to find men from the eastern states to fill it.

Sen. Edward D. Baker

Baker contacted Isaac Jones Wistar in Philadelphia for help recruiting the troops. Originally, Baker had wanted to recruit the men from New York, but Wistar thought he would have better luck in Philadelphia. There, the California Brigade of four regiments was born. After spending about two months constructing defenses and skirmishing around Washington, they saw action at Ball’s Bluff. Baker was killed at the battle and all ties to California were cut; Pennsylvania reclaimed their troops and relabeled them the 69th, 71st, 72nd, and 106th Pennsylvania, the “Philadelphia Brigade.” These regiments remained in service in the Eastern Theater until after General Lee’s surrender at Appomattox.

At the end of the war, when these four regiments placed monuments at Gettysburg where they had helped to repel the Confederate attack on July 3, 1863, only the 71st Pennsylvania chose to honor its “Californian” roots.

Of course “real” Californian regiments did exist. Californians who did not travel east to fight in the armies there joined units (two cavalry regiments, eight infantry regiments, and two smaller units) that fought in the West, primarily in the territories. Some fought Confederates and Southern sympathizers, some fought Native Americans, some fought simply to keep the mail lines open. These men occupied a vast area and insured that the Far West remained federal territory and that gold would continue to move east to assist in the war effort, important tasks even if they do not figure largely in the memory of the Civil War.

California indeed felt the conflict of the Civil War, something I discovered while visiting San Francisco a few years ago. My parents and I were in town for my cousin’s wedding, and we were seeing the sites, including the most iconic of all: The Golden Gate Bridge. Of course, Golden Gate National Recreation Area contains more than just the famous bridge; it chronicles many aspects of California’s diverse history, including historic Fort Point, which sits literally under the span of the bridge. I, of course, had to see it, since my interest lies with military history, so I dragged my parents to yet another military site.  On our way we passed a sign that said “Reenactment Today,” which made me even more curious, but I was not expecting what I saw when we entered the fort: Union Civil War reeanactors under the Golden Gate Bridge. And amazingly, they were not out-of-place there.

Originally constructed due to the Gold Rush, Fort Point was built by the U.S. Army Engineers between 1853 and 1861. They placed the fort at the mouth of the Golden Gate, the entrance to San Francisco Bay, to protect the Bay and the area’s golden resources. Initial construction was slow, and by 1860 the fort was far from completed; with war looming in the east, however, construction continued in 1861, and the first fifty-five guns were finally mounted. Colonel Albert Sidney Johnson oversaw preparations to defend the bay against possible attack and ordered the first garrison to Fort Point before resigning his commission and joining the Confederate Army (where he would be killed at the Battle of Shiloh in 1862). The fort never came under attack during the war, but it was ready to defend the Union presence on that coast.

California is not usually first in people’s minds when it comes to the Civil War, and frankly, it probably never will be. The focus has always been on the eastern half of the United States, where the war was more fiercely contested on the battlefield, in government, and in millions of homes. But the Civil War was a national experience, encompassing every state and territory that called itself American. I personally discovered this when I encountered Californian involvement at two American icons roughly three thousand miles apart: Gettysburg and the Golden Gate Bridge. So, let’s talk about California along with Virginia, New York, and North Carolina. Let’s talk about the western territories along with Pennsylvania, Texas, and Illinois. Let’s keep broadening the discussion of our country’s largest conflict—you never know when you will strike gold.

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6 Responses to Bringing Some Gold to the Civil War: Let’s Talk About California

  1. Kris says:

    This post helped to change the way in which I understand the Civil War, monuments, and history in general. Why is Ms. Logothetis only a guest author? She should be added to your fine pantheon of contributors. Just a suggestion.

  2. I actually had no idea there were California regiments in the war until I started learning more about the Battle of Ball’s Bluff this year. (More on that with author/historian James Morgan in the weeks ahead!) Thanks for taking the time to explore the California connection a bit more for us, Logo.

  3. Great post!!!! The area where their monument is can be one of the most confusing for visitors to the battlefield at Gettysburg. You have the 71st Pennsylvania Monument as you pointed out. Then you have the chain and small stands of the 69th PA. To some they might be confusing, but they have the great story of the 69th repulsing Pickett’s men. The bent but they didn’t break. You have a Confederate Monument to Armistead mixed in with Union monuments. The 20th Mass chose to bring a large rock down from Mass. in honor of their leader.

    If you want to keep with the Philadelphia Brigade I suggest you explore their exploits at Gettysburg especially those of the 72nd during the battle and after the war. There is another great story there.

    Great job of bringing an overlooked story to life.

  4. I just heard about this blog and had to reply. I’m a West Coast reenactor in Seattle who is raising troops to portray soldiers in Baker’s California Regiment. The reenactment is scheduled to occur on the weekend of 22 October 2011 near Leesburg. Being that this reenactment is on the original ground and being that I’m a native Californian with a history degree from Berkeley, this was a mandatory event. I get two eastern events a year. This will be my number two. 150th Sumter was my number one.

    Baker’s concept was sound : A soldier’s life is hard. Baker wanted hearty troops. Those men who had travelled from the East Coast to the West Coast and back had proven their heartiness.

    We are intending to portray some of that heartiness by going into this battle as they did. The night before the battle, the regiment received marching orders from General Stone which read :

    “COLONEL [BAKER] : You will send the California regiment (less the camp guard) to Conrads Ferry, to arrive there at sunrise and await orders. The men will take with them blankets and overcoats and forty rounds of ammunition in boxes, and will be followed by one days rations in wagons. The remainder of the brigade will be held in readiness for marching orders (leaving camp guards) at 7 o’clock a.m. tomorrow, and will all have breakfasted before that hour.”

    Unlike the substantial majority of troops at this reenactment who will reside in tents and be stationary, we will be without tentage and spending the weekend in light marching order. Like Baker’s troops, we’ll be carrying all our gear. Knapsacks will not be allowed. I hope we can make Baker’s troops proud.

  5. Johannes Allert says:

    This was one of the many “I didn’t know that.” moments I discovered on the Staff Ride I took this past summer. Great article! Thanks for sharing!

  6. Pingback: Emerging Civil War | To the Sound of the Guns

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