Recently rereading volume one of the W.T. Sherman’s Memoirs, I discovered this past January 26, marked the 173rd anniversary of his arrival to Monterey California. By his own description he was a young army officer, hoping to gain fame and glory in the Mexican War. Instead he was sent to keep the peace in the main port of entry in Alta California recently transferred to U.S. possession. His first stay lasted just short of two years yet a pivotal time and watershed moment in California’s history—the discovery of gold. Sherman’s eyewitness accounts are descriptive and sometimes entertaining though not particularly insightful. Except for one observation—that the discovery of gold would forever change the landscape and history of California.
I live in the Bay Area and over the years I’ve visited Monterey, California several times. This coming February 8th marks the 200th year of WTS’ birth in Lancaster, Ohio. Since I’m not able to attend the upcoming festivities hosted by the Sherman House Museum and Fairfield County Historical Society, I commemorated the upcoming occasion by visiting the historic old town of Monterey imagining what it must have been like when a young army officer set off for adventures on the other side of the continent and lived there in the wake of times that shaped its own story.
young WTS back side of adobe cottage one room interior of adobe cottage Larkin House garden historic Monterey the adobe cottage adjacent to the Larkin House, residence of young Sherman Larkin House “everything was in a bustle when the old Lexington dropped her anchor on January 26, 1847 in Monterey Bay after after a voyage of 198 days from New York.” p46 “nothing could be more peaceful in its looks than Monterey in January 1847” p 46 “everybody was talking of “Gold! gold!!” until it assumed the character of a fever. p68