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John Bidwell

American politician (1819–1900)

John Bidwell

American politician (1819–1900)

FieldValue
nameJohn Bidwell
imageHon. John A. Bidwell, Calif - NARA - 528114 Panel 4 Crop.jpg
captionPortrait by Mathew Brady 1865
stateCalifornia
district
term_startMarch 4, 1865
term_endMarch 3, 1867
predecessorConstituency established
successorJames Johnson
state_senate1California
district1Sacramento
term_start1December 17, 1849
term_end1January 6, 1851
predecessor1Constituency established
successor1Alonzo W. Adams
office2Alcalde of Mission San Luis Rey
appointed2John C. Frémont
term_start2August 1846
term_end2January 1847
birth_date
birth_placeChautauqua County, New York, U.S.
death_date
death_placeChico, California, U.S.
resting_placeChico Cemetery
partyDemocratic (Before 1861)
Republican (1861–1875)
Prohibition (after 1875)
otherpartyNational Union (1861–1868)
People's Independent (1875)
Anti-Monopoly (1875)
spouse
residenceBidwell Mansion
signatureSignature of John Bidwell.png
allegianceUnited States
[[File:First Bear Flag of California (1846).svg24px]] California Republic
rank[[File:Union Army brigadier general rank insignia.svg35px]] Brigadier General
unitCalifornia Battalion
battles

Republican (1861–1875) Prohibition (after 1875) People's Independent (1875) Anti-Monopoly (1875)

  • Mexican–American War
    • Bear Flag Revolt John Bidwell (August 5, 1819 – April 4, 1900), known in Spanish as Don Juan Bidwell, was an American pioneer, politician, and soldier. Bidwell is known as the founder of the city of Chico, California. He served in the California Senate and then in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Early life

Bidwell was born in 1819 in Chautauqua County, New York. His Bidwell ancestors immigrated to North America in the colonial era. His family moved to Erie, Pennsylvania, in 1829, and then to Ashtabula County, Ohio, in 1831. At age 17, he attended and shortly thereafter became principal of Kingsville Academy.

Life in California

Bidwell in 1850

In 1841, at the age of 22, Bidwell became one of the first emigrants on the California Trail. John Sutter employed Bidwell as his business manager shortly after the younger man reached California. In October 1844, Bidwell went with Sutter to Monterey, where the two learned of an insurrection by leader José Castro and ex-governor Juan Bautista Alvarado. In 1845, Bidwell and Sutter joined Governor Manuel Micheltorena and a group of Americans and Indians to fight the insurrectionists, pursuing them to Cahuenga. Micheltorena, Sutter, and Bidwell were imprisoned, and the latter two were shortly thereafter released.

Upon release, Bidwell headed north through Placerita Canyon, saw the mining operations, and was determined to search for gold on his way to Sutter's Fort, where he met James W. Marshall. Shortly after Marshall's discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill, Bidwell also discovered gold on the Feather River, establishing a productive claim at Bidwell Bar in advance of the California Gold Rush. Bidwell obtained the four square-league Rancho Los Ulpinos land grant after being naturalized as a Mexican citizen in 1844, and the two square-league Rancho Colus grant on the Sacramento River in 1845. He later sold the latter grant and bought Rancho Arroyo Chico on Chico Creek to establish a ranch and farm.

Mexican-American War and military service

Soon after the outbreak of the Mexican–American War, Bidwell met with the leaders of the Bear Flag Revolt and drafted their constitution. He later attained the rank of major while fighting at Fort Stockton. In August 1846, he was appointed Alcalde of Mission San Luis Rey by John C. Frémont, where he served until the end of the war. He was appointed brigadier general of the California Militia in 1863. From 1863 to 1864, Bidwell and other local financiers built the Humboldt Wagon Road connecting Chico to the mining districts of Nevada. Around this time, in 1865, General Bidwell backed a petition from settlers at Red Bluff, California to protect Red Bluff's trail to the Owyhee Mines of Idaho. The United States Army commissioned seven forts for this purpose. One site was near Fandango Pass at the base of the Warner Mountains, in the north end of Surprise Valley. On June 10, 1865, a fort (eventually named Fort Bidwell) was ordered to be built there. The fort was built amid escalating fighting with the Snake Indians of eastern Oregon and southern Idaho. It was a base for U.S. Army operations in the Snake War, that lasted until 1868, and the later Modoc War. Although traffic dwindled on the Red Bluff route once the Central Pacific Railroad extended into Nevada in 1868, the Army staffed Fort Bidwell until 1890 to quell various uprisings and disturbances. A Paiute reservation and small community maintain the name Fort Bidwell.

Belle ship disaster

On February 5, 1856, Bidwell was one of several passengers traveling down the Sacramento River on the steamboat Belle when the ship's boiler exploded, killing several people instantly. Bidwell was sitting by the stove reading a newspaper when the explosion sent a piece of shrapnel the size of a quarter directly into his skull. Bidwell survived, but spent the rest of his life with a visible hole in his head.

Political career

Bidwell was selected as a delegate to the 1849 California Constitutional Convention, but did not attend because of mining business. Later that year, he was elected to the California State Senate, serving a single one-year term. He ran for State Senate again in 1855, but lost to incumbent Know Nothing John B. McGee by just 187 votes. He supervised conducting the federal census of California in 1850 and 1860, under national direction by Joseph C. G. Kennedy. Bidwell was a delegate to the 1860 Democratic National Convention in Charleston. He was the only West Coast delegate opposed to secession. He left the party soon after the outbreak of the Civil War, and in 1864 was a delegate to the National Union National Convention.

Congress

That year, he was also elected to the House of Representatives as a Republican, serving from 1865 to 1867.

Rather than seek re-election, he chose to run for Governor of California in 1867, George Congdon Gorham by a vote of 167 to 132.

Later campaigns

In 1875, Bidwell ran for Governor of California on the Anti-Monopoly Party ticket. As a strong advocate of the temperance movement, he presided over the state convention of the Prohibition Party in 1888 and was their nominee for governor in 1890. In the 1892 presidential election, Bidwell was the nominee of the Prohibition Party. The ticket of Bidwell and James B. Cranfill of Texas finished fourth nationwide, receiving 271,058 votes, or 2.3%. It was the largest total vote and highest percentage of the vote received by any Prohibition Party national ticket. Their strongest result was in Minnesota, where they received over five percent of the vote.

Death

John Bidwell's autobiography, Echoes of the Past, was published in 1900. That same year, on April 4, Bidwell died of natural causes at the age of 80.

Personal life

Annie and John Bidwell, 1895

In 1868 Bidwell was about 49 when he married Annie Kennedy, whom he had courted for years. She was 20 years younger and a daughter of Joseph C. G. Kennedy. Her father was socially prominent, a high-ranking Washington official who supervised the U.S. Census Bureau. Bidwell had met him while working on the California census. The senior Kennedy was active in the U.S. Whig party. Annie Kennedy was deeply religious, joining the Presbyterian Church, and committed to a number of moral and social causes. She was very active in the suffrage and prohibition movements.

The couple married April 16, 1868, in Washington, D.C., with President Andrew Johnson and future president Ulysses S. Grant among the guests. After he returned with her to Chico, the Bidwells used their mansion extensively for entertainment of friends and official guests. Among them were President Rutherford B. Hayes, General William T. Sherman, Susan B. Anthony, Frances Willard, Governor Leland Stanford, John Muir, Joseph Dalton Hooker, and Asa Gray.

Legacy

The Bidwell Family Papers are held at the Bancroft Library.

The actor Howard Negley (1898–1983) played Bidwell in the 1953 episode, "The Lady with the Blue Silk Umbrella" on the syndicated television anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. In the story line, Helen Crosby (Kathleen Case) carries official California statehood papers in her umbrella to shield them from ruffians who want to destroy the documents. Rick Vallin played Lieutenant Bob Hastings.

Fraternal allegiance

Bidwell was a Freemason for a time but left the group. He said that allegiance to the fraternity "was pointless" in an October 17, 1867, letter to Annie Kennedy, whom he had been courting. His signature appears in the Book of By-Laws of the Chico-Leland Stanford Lodge No. 111 in Chico, California.

Electoral history

Citations

References

  1. [https://books.google.com/books?id=jPVAAQAAMAAJ&dq=%22Jos%C3%ADas+belden%22&pg=PA32 Jimeno's and Hartnell's Indexes of Land Concessions, from 1830 to 1846]
  2. Bidwell, Edwin M.. (1884). "Genealogy to the Seventh Generation of the Bidwell Family in America".
  3. (2006). "John Bidwell-Biography". Spartacus Education.
  4. "Guide to the John Bidwell Papers".
  5. Michael J. Gillis and Michael F. Magliari, ''John Bidwell and California: The Life and Writings of a Pioneer, 1841–1900'', {{ISBN. 0-87062-332-X, p. 31–
  6. Boyle, C. C.. (1906). "Addresses, Reminiscences, Etc. of General John Bidwell".
  7. Worden, Leon. (October 2005). "California's REAL First Gold". COINage magazine.
  8. (2019). ""Time Out of Mind": The San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians and the Historical Origins of a Struggle for Federal Recognition". California History.
  9. (2012). "The Humboldt Wagon Road". Arcadia Publishing.
  10. Pease, Robert W.. (1965). "Modoc County; University of California Publications in Geography, Volume 17". University of California Press.
  11. (1897). "The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies". Government Printing Office.
  12. {{California's Geographic Names. 378
  13. Burnett, Marie. (December 2018). "Belle".
  14. Leek, Nancy. (January 7, 2019). "Like a Hole in the Head".
  15. . ["John Bidwell"](https://www.joincalifornia.com/candidate/7256).
  16. . (September 26, 1855). ["Senatorial—Butte and Plumas."](https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=SDU18550926.2.14&srpos=1&e=------185-en--20--1--txt-txIN-Bidwell+McGee----1855---). *[[Sacramento Daily Union]]*.
  17. (1917). "John Bidwell: A Prince Among Pioneers". Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California.
  18. (2008). "A Fragile Machine: California Senator John Conness". California History.
  19. . (June 13, 1867). ["THE SACRAMENTO CONVENTION–NOMINATION OF GEORGE GORHAM."](https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=DAC18670613.2.19&srpos=9&e=01-06-1867-30-06-1867--en--20--1--txt-txIN-bidwell+gorham----1867---). *[[The Daily Alta California]]*.
  20. "The Lady with the Blue Silk Umbrella on ''Death Valley Days''". [[Internet Movie Database]].
  21. Michael J. Gillis and Michael F. Magliari, ''John Bidwell and California: The Life and Writings of a Pioneer, 1841–1900'', {{ISBN. 0-87062-332-X, p. 223–224
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