CHAPTER 2
The Tracy Family History
The Bear Flag Revolt

Bear Flag, 1846. This is a
photo of the original Bear Flag that was
destroyed in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906.
The Bear Flag Revolt
The purpose of this segment is not to tell the story of the
Bear Flag Revolt. There are books available that can tell that story in detail.
Here I only wish to tell as it affects the family history.
By 1846, there were around 800 Americans in California,
mostly in the northern part of the state and within trading distance of Sutter's
Fort. Most of the settlers knew one another. There were war clouds between
Mexico and the United States, thus Mexican officials were becoming wary of the
ever-growing American presence in California. William Todd, who will come back
into our story later, wrote in a letter, "…the Mexicans talk every spring and
fall of driving the foreigners out."
As in most histories there is more than one version. I
prefer the one that is best for the family history. In the first half of June
1846, probably the first week of the month, an unidentified horseman crossed
Moon's primitive ferry with the news that the Mexicans were forming an army to
drive out all Americans north of Sutter's Fort.
Local history tells this tale: "Moon, on hearing the tale
from the unknown horseman crossing the river immediately spread the alarm among
the Northern Valley settlers and they gathered at the Moon house, that original
adobe building, to plan some concerted defense…" Thus, Uncle Billy became the
Paul Revere of the Bear Flag Revolt.
Most historians believe that it was not Moon who spread the
word but another. The settlers did meet in the Moon house to plan the revolt,
but there is some question as to whether it was the original adobe or the
unfinished famous wood frame house. Most historians believe it was the wood
frame house.
Some say that there were a dozen or more at the meeting,
others that there were five or six. Among those in the meeting was Henry Ford,
Uncle Billy's partner. He had military experience having deserted from the army.
Included was Ezekiel Merritt, Uncle Billy's partner known as "Zeke" or
"Stuttering Merritt." He was quite a character. He lived with a squaw. One
historian describes him as "…a big, stuttering, excitable frontiersman with a
bushy, tobacco-juice-stained beard, a mane of graying hair, and fierce bloodshot
eyes." Bancroft says, "...a coarse-grained, loud-mouthed, unprincipled,
whiskey-drinking, quarrelsome fellow." John Charles Fremont, the Pathfinder,
said, "a rugged man, fearless and simple: taking delight in incurring risks, but
tractable and not given to asking questions when there was something he was
required to do."
Another said, "When excited he had a peculiar stuttering speech. His whole
appearance and manner was that of a man moved by some revengeful, intoxicating
passion." He was over six feet in height, "…dressed in greasy buckskins, beaded
moccasins, and foxtail cap." He was a famous Indian fighter. Merritt was
probably living at the Moon house at the time of the revolt.
Another who was at the meeting was Robert Baylor Semple,
6'8", with red hair. He was a most amazing personality. Mary Todd Lincoln's
sister once rode with him in a stage coach and said he was "…the most brilliant
man she had ever heard." The famed Civil War general, William Tecumseh Sherman,
thought he was very smart. A British naval officer was amazed to find that
Semple knew more about British naval history than he did. The American counsel
said, "…near genius whose light shown brightly, in flashes, then flickered and
died out." I am telling you these stories so you know the kind of men that Uncle
Billy counted as his friends.
By the end of the meeting two things had been decided: One
was to gather an army and take over the Mexican headquarters for all of Northern
California, which was located in Sonoma close to San Francisco bay. Ford put it
bluntly, "We have gone to war with the Mexican nation."
The second decision was to make a flag. They took a washed
out flour sack from Chile, which had been shipped to San Francisco and freighted
by team to the Moon store. William Todd, whose aunt, Mary Todd from Kentucky,
had married a lawyer four years earlier named Abraham Lincoln, has gone down in
history as "The Great Artist.” A red star and bar were cut out from a red
flannel shirt, then a pot of blacking was used
to draw a bear so crude that it looked like a pig. Underneath, were the words
"California Republic.”
Thus began the Bear Flag Revolt and ever since the Moon house
has been known as the "Cradle of the California Republic." Ford and Merritt were
the leaders.
The California Republic lasted just 25 days when news was
received that the United States was officially at war with Mexico. The Bear Flag
was taken down from the pole in Sonoma and the American flag raised. (Some say
the Bear Flag was made in Sonoma from a petticoat.)
Legend has it that a naval officer from one of the American
war ships, Lieutenant Revere, grandson of Paul Revere, put the bear flag in his
pocket and walked off with it. It would later find it's way to the Society of
California Pioneers in San Francisco, there destroyed in the earthquake and fire
of 1906. (This was the same naval officer who did the previous sketch of
Sutter’s Fort.)
Another version
“Ford was the man who carried the Bear Flag to Sonoma on June
14, 1846. After July 7, the original flag was carried away by John Elliott
Montgomery, 16. He disappeared, and his father, Commander John B. Montgomery,
took the flag to Boston Navy Yard, and later it was transferred to the Navy
Department at Washington D. C. Californians asked for it and it was presented in
1855 to the Society of California Pioneers and brought to San Francisco. The
Society made a copy of it, which is reserved in their museum in San Francisco.
The original was lost in the big San Francisco fire in 1906.”
248 Bear Flaggers would join the California Battalion of the
US Army and march off to war.
At the famous Bancroft Library on the University of
California campus at Berkeley, there is a shoebox with a few notes inside about
our famous Wm. C. Moon. Unnamed historians placed these scraps of paper there
over the years. In a letter from Bidwell, it says Wm. C. Moon stayed on the
ranch during the war of 1847-1848. Uncle Billy's partners, the leaders of the
Bear Flag Revolt, Ford and Merritt, went off to war. I can only assume that Moon
stayed behind to take care of their ranches.
The transition for the Californios to US rule was not
difficult. Long neglected and abused by the Mexican government, the Californios
had no love for, nor loyalty to Mexico. When war was certain, the California
Mexican leaders held a meeting to decide which country they wanted to align
themselves with. One wanted to go with France because of the common religion.
Another wanted to align themselves with England because of the empire. The third wanted to go with the United States because of the Constitution. Not
one person even considered staying with Mexico!
A recommended book on the Bear Flag Revolt, the events
leading up to it, and afterwards, is Bear Flag Rising, by Dale L. Walker.
The definitive works on the revolt is The Men of the Bear Flag Revolt and
Their Heritage, by Barbara R. Warner, in which the author attempts to give
the genealogy, history, and biographical sketch of all the major participants.

The replica of the Moon House is used in a parade by the Squaw Hill 4-H Club.
More Moon Stories
William C. Moon was in the right place at the right time in history. In 1848,
gold was discovered. It would take six months for news of the discovery to reach
the outside world, then another six months for the outside world to get to the
California gold fields. This gave the early pioneers a one-year jump on the rest
of the world.
The shoebox tells us that Moon went to the gold fields in 1848, with Job F. Dye.
It is also recorded that he mined on Clear Creek, near Muletown, before the gold
rush of '49.
An article in the Sacramento Union newspaper dated 19 May 1858, tells an
interesting tale of gold mining, intrigue, and Uncle Billy's reputation as a
hunter. Following, is the full story as reported in the paper:
An old Trapper in Tehama-a correspondent of the Union, writing from Tehama
County, gives the following reminiscences. We do not wish to be understood as
impugning the veracity of "Old Moon" and his partner accumulating some two
hundred pounds of gold, or of "Old Moon" and the "three other hunters" bagging,
"within a circuit of four miles," three hundred deer and one thousand hares,"
etc., but we do say they had most uncommon luck: If the mines are exhausted,
certainly the forests are not. Do you know "Old Moon," the hunter and trapper?
No! Well he lives on his own ranch, about twenty-five miles, by the river, below
Tehama, and is well known here as the greatest hunter and trapper in this
section. He hunted and trapped for years in what was called the "Far West," and
can tell many tales of "hair breath 'capes" from animals and "injuns." In 1834,
he came to California, then inhabited almost wholly by the red man. When the
gold was discovered, he employed about one hundred Indians to work for him. In a
short time he and his partner had accumulated about two hundred solid pounds of
gold. His partner took it to San Francisco to have it assayed, and vamosed with
the whole to parts unknown. Since that time "Old Moon," whose hair is white as
snow, has contented himself with the possession of a good ranch and a trusty
gun, which he knows how to use. A few days ago, "Old Moon" and three other
hunters went out to the Coast range of mountains, and within a circuit of four
miles, bagged the following game: three hundred deer, five elk, and one thousand
hares, grouse, etc. They were not gone over thirty days. Can anyone beat that?
Some other time I may give you some items of "Old Moons" past life. Peg Leg
Smith, with whom I conversed a few days ago, told me that "Old Moon" had several
times saved him (Smith) from the Indians on the Plains.
Foremost among the talents of a mountain man was his
ability to tell tall tales.
It is interesting to note that at the time this article was
written, Uncle Billy was forty-nine years of age and already called "Old Moon!”
If his partner vamoosed with the gold it was probably Ezekiel
Merritt.
The shoebox tells us in the words of Bidwell, Moon "was an
inveritable hunter." After Merritt's death (In another note, Bidwell states that
Merritt died in the winter of 1847 or 1848) "… he mined for a short time at
Feather River."
Trusting your partner with 200 pounds of gold was not unusual
in the early years of the gold rush, particularly in the first year. A man could
leave a pile of his gold on the banks of the river he mined it from, or leave a
box of gold on the paddlewheel docks, and nobody would touch it, even though
everyone knew the box was full of gold.
As I already told you, the early pioneers had a year head
start on the “49ers.” When the prospectors started coming into California they
came pouring in from all over the world. It would be the greatest peacetime
migration in history. And Moon was perfectly positioned for them.
The sternwheelers made their way up the Sacramento River and
it's tributaries. The miners came into San Francisco, then by sternwheeler up
the Sacramento River to Moons place, one of the departing places for the gold
fields. Although the river was not navigable year round it did provide an
excellent transportation system. The smaller sternwheelers were dismantled in
the "States," put aboard ships and freighted to San Francisco. The larger boats
simply paddled their way around the Cape of Good Hope.
The paddlewheelers established a terminus at the Moon Ranch
in 1850, which was 232 river miles from Sacramento (Sutter's Fort), then headed
north another 38 miles to Red Bluff, which was the headwaters. Red Bluff was as
far as the steamboats could go without hitting bottom. The valley did not end at
Red Bluff, just the steamboat transportation. The valley extended north many
more miles. This shows you the vastness of the land that Uncle Billy opened to
the world.
Moon established a more modern ferry by this time. A ferry to
cross the Sacramento was not established at Red Bluff until three years later.
The ferry landing was not at the Moon house itself but a few hundred yards up
river. The house had to be situated on a bank high enough to escape the
flooding, whereas the ferry landing (also the paddlewheel landing) had to have a
gentle slope so the ferry and paddlewheelers could nose in.
The original landing was called Moon's, Squaw Hill, later the
Corning Landing. There are different versions of how the name Squaw Hill came
into being. Some say two elderly Indian women would stand on the hill and wave
to the passengers on the passing sternwheelers. Others tell the same story, but
say it was two young Indian girls. Still others say that this was the place the
Indian women cleaned their fish.

Moons Ferry Over the Sacramento River
“In the early days streams that could not be forded were crossed by ferries in
place of bridges. Those ferries were flat barges large enough to hold one or
more vehicles. They were propelled back and forth across the streams by the use
of poles or the force of the current. Usually they were attached to cables
stretching across the streams. Since the Sacramento River was navigable a cable
placed across the stream would obstruct river traffic; so a pontoon system was
used. The ferry here has just pushed off. If the front of the ferry is pointed
up-stream the current will carry it across to the opposite bank.” (This is from
an 1880 illustration.)
The following are two excerpts of interest from an 1850 diary:
"(May 23) A cool morning. Spent afternoon at Myer's. A party
from the wedding, and some travelers, caught a ducking. Crossing a wagon, oxen
and 6 men, in the scow, at Moon's Ferry, about 2 miles below Hall's, the oxen
caused the boat to upset, and the men had to swim.
(Aug. 3rd) …Early in the afternoon J.J. Myers, McBride, Moon,
(proprietor of the Sacramento ferry) all mounted, with Mr Moon's squaw,
astraddle a mule, and 10 of his indians a-foot, passed, on their way from the
settlements to the upper Feather River mines."
As I told you before, the Moon house is where everything came
together. When the few primitive roads were established they would pass the Moon
house. (Although in the very early days there were no roads. The rivers were the
only forms of transportation.) Stagecoaches, wagons, etc. had to cross at the
Moon ferry. Here is where all of the connections were made for transportation:
river boats, stagecoaches, etc. Uncle Billy's Moon house must have been a very
busy place indeed.
By July 1851, a post office was established at the Moon house
with Nathaniel
Merrill as postmaster. Merrill was a cousin of Ford's. Merrill would become
manager of the Moon house and all of its operations and would start the first
serious farming in the county in the same year. The original post office is on
display at the Tehama County Museum in the little town of Tehama, not far from
Corning off of I-5. It is a little museum but quite good. As of the time of this
writing, year 2000, the museum is only open Saturdays and Sundays from 1 PM to 4
PM.
In the early 1850's, a man came to the Moon house from the
gold fields and placed his baggage behind a pot bellied stove but did not notice
a sign, which said “Sacramento." At the bottom of his bag was a smaller bag with
$4,000 in gold dust. Remember, the honest people of the time would not touch
your possessions. When the man came back to get his bag, it was gone. He asked
Moon what happened to his bag, and Uncle Billy told him he had put it on the
paddleboat for Sacramento. We can assume that the miner just about had a heart
attack. Realizing the mistake, Uncle Billy loaned the man his best horse so that
he could attempt to ride ahead and catch the boat at its next stop, but he
arrived too late. Nobody wanted to ride any further because the land was
flooded. Finally a man was found who was willing to ride all the way to
Sacramento. The gold was finally retrieved. The retrivee was paid only for his
expenses by the retrivor, and nothing extra for his extraordinary effort in the
face of adversity.
Next is the story of a murder at the Moon house. In late
1851, a man named Nathaniel Bowman killed another man, Levi Seigler, at the Moon
ranch by beating him over the head with a bottle. Apparently Seigler's snoring
upset Bowman. Bowman was placed under guard at Monroeville and on 22 March 1852
indicted for murder by the grand jury. After he was convicted he escaped from
his imprisonment and hobbled into a house laden in heavy chains and begged the
owner for his life and that the chains be cut loose. Being a good citizen, the
man led Bowman back to Monroeville where he was eventually executed.
All early day inns had their stories of buried gold. In the
early 1850's, a miner stayed at the Moon house, then was stricken with fever. He
would linger for weeks, alternating between bouts of delirium. Finally he died.
But before his last breath he told of burying a pot of gold worth $40,000 under
an old oak tree north of the house. For 50 years people would search for the
gold without success.
At the California State Library in Sacramento there is on
file a Federal Government deposition dated 1858, with William C. Moon called as
a witness for the US Government. It is not a very serious case. It looks like
the government bought some cattle from someone and thought they were
overcharged. The deposition took place in San Francisco and an attorney
represented Moon. Moon gave his birth date, stated he had first come to
California in 1840. Either he was wrong about the date or had visited the state
on a previous trip. He was probably wrong on the date. Furthermore, he said he
had lived on his ranch since 1844. Then he went on to say he knew nothing about
cattle except how they were carried on the tax roles. Two things are curious
about this deposition. Why would he take the precaution of being represented by
an attorney when he was only a witness? And why would he say he knew nothing
about cattle when he was a cattle rancher?
There are numerous references to Moon's squaw in legal
documents and diaries of the time. This was not a derogatory statement at this
time in history. It merely denoted that he had an Indian wife. He had a
half-breed son, also named William C. Moon, born in 1859, and dying at the age
of 18, in 1877. The native Indians were an important part of this era of
California history. Moon, like most of the ranchers, used Indian labor
extensively. Of historical note: Uncle Billy was from Missouri, a strong slave
state. Working 10 Indians, or 100, would have been normal for a slave owner.
In a legal document dated 6 February 1857, Nicholas P. Moon
is also living on the ranch. This would have been Uncle Billy's nephew who
showed up in the 1850 census in Missouri.
In 1867, a William Coleman Moon shows up in the same area,
four years difference in age, also native of Tennessee, also a cattle rancher.
It has long been believed that the two were the same. However, the county
historian says that Uncle Billy died on 31 May 1878, (I haven't been able to
verify this with official records.) and I have William Coleman Moon signing a
deed six months later. I believe that they were two different men and that
Coleman used his full middle name so as not to confuse the two.
Eventually, Moon sold his interest in the house but kept a
room. This is where he died. The shoebox says that "G" was with him when he
died. That was probably Isaac L. Given, a member of the Workman-Rowland party
and a prominent local citizen. No one knows what happened to his Indian wife or
where the half-bred son is buried. Some say that Moon is buried on the ranch,
others that he is buried at the Tehama cemetery.
His photo can be dated, with certainty, to within five years
of his death. Bancroft lists him as one of California 66 original pioneers. I
assume this means he was one of the first to come and actually to settle
California.
In time the famous Moon house fell into disrepair and was
abandoned. Sometime after 1910 the house was torn down, the lumber used for
fence post, which still fill the countryside. The chimney bricks were dismantled
and used by others. The famous Moon house is no more. In time the fame of Uncle
Billy and his Moon house would fade from memory. The family, like the other
residents of the area, would eventually come to think that the Moon house was
Chinese.
Note: I purposely challenge the English grammar taught in school.
I sometimes use numbers, like 1,2,3; instead of writing out the numbers: one, two,
three. From an historical and logical perspective I think it makes sense.
I usually spell Moon’s, but leaving out the
apostrophe. Somehow Moons looks more historically authentic.
I often use dates this way: 22 March 1852. This is a standard
genealogical technique.

This is how the ferry looked in 1911, a big improvement over Uncle Billy’s primitive ferry of 1846. Notice how the ferry, and paddlewheelers, nose into the landing. The paddlewheelers were used until 1916, the ferry until 1921. At that time the Woodson Bridge was built on the same spot.
If you wish further reading, and to see
another photo on the Squaw Hill Ferry then go to the following site:
http://www.catechnologies.com/corning/history/squawhill.html
For more stories on William C. Moon and his
Bear Flag buddies then go to:
www.californiahistory.com/93.html
The Tehama County Museum WEB site:
http://www.tco.net/tehama/museum/
My family history web site has 79 chapters. If you would like to know more about the other chapters then go to my Home Page www.thetracyfamilyhistory.net
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