THE good old pioneer, Lamon,
was the first of all the early Yosemite settlers who cordially and
unreservedly adopted the Valley as his home.
He was born in the Shenandoah
Valley, Virginia, May 10, 1817, emigrated to Illinois with his father, John
Lamon, at the age of nineteen; afterwards went to Texas and settled on the
Brazos, where he raised melons and hunted alligators for a living. "Right
interestin' business," he said, "especially the alligator part of it." From
the Brazos he went to the Comanche Indian country between Gonzales and
Austin, twenty miles from his nearest neighbor. During the first summer, the
only bread he had was the breast meat of wild turkeys. When the formidable
Comanche Indians were on the warpath he left his cabin after dark and slept
in the woods. From Texas he crossed the plains to California and worked in
the Calaveras and Mariposa gold-fields.
He first heard Yosemite
spoken of as a very beautiful mountain valley and after making two
excursions in the summers of 1857 and 1858 to see the wonderful place, he
made up his mind to quit roving and make a permanent home in it. In April,
1859, he moved into it, located a garden opposite the Half Dome, set out a
lot of apple, pear and peach trees, planted potatoes, etc., that he had
packed in on a it old mule," and worked for his board in building a hotel
which was afterwards purchased by Mr. Hutchings. His neighbors thought he
was very foolish in attempting to raise crops in so high and cold a valley,
and warned him that he could raise nothing and sell nothing, and would
surely starve.
For the first year or two
lack of provisions compelled him to move out on the approach of winter, but
in 1862, after he had succeeded in raising some fruit and vegetables, he
began to winter in the Valley.
The first winter he had no
companions, not even a dog or cat, and one evening was greatly surprised to
see two men coming up the Valley. They were very glad to see him, for they
had come from Mariposa in search of him, a report having been spread that he
had been killed by Indians. He assured his visitors that he felt safer in
his Yosemite home, lying snug and squirrel-like in his 10 x 12 cabin than in
Mariposa. When the avalanches began to slip, he wondered where all the wild
roaring and booming came from, the flying snow preventing them from being
seen. But, upon the whole, he wondered most at the brightness, gentleness,
and sunniness of the weather, and hopefully employed the calm days in
clearing ground for an orchard and vegetable garden.
In the second winter he built
a winter cabin under the Royal Arches, where he enjoyed more sunshine. But
no matter how he praised the weather he could not induce any one to winter
with him until 1864.
He liked to describe the
great flood of 1867, the year before I reached California, when all the
walls were striped with thundering waterfalls.
He was a fine, erect, whole-souled
man, between six and seven feet high, with a broad, open face, bland and
guileless as his pet oxen. No stranger to hunger and weariness, he knew well
how to appreciate suffering of a like kind in others, and many there be,
myself among the number, who can testify to his simple, unostentatious
kindness that found expression in a thousand small deeds.
After gaining sufficient
means to enjoy a long afternoon of life in comparative affluence and ease,
he died in the autumn of 1876. He sleeps in a beautiful spot near Galen
Clark and a monument hewn from a block of Yosemite granite marks his grave. |