Volume XIV Issue 204 | Thursday, May 12th, 2022
An author’s portrait of James Beckwourth for his 1856
book “The Life and Adventures of James Beckwourth”
From the Files of the Lassen Historical Society: James Pierson Beckwourth
by Susan Couso

The Honey Lake Valley area has been home to many unique individuals, who might be more appropriately titled ‘characters.’ One of these very interesting citizens was James Pierson Beckwourth. Beckwourth was a peripatetic explorer who readily accepted and exploited new adventures.

He was the son of Sir Jennings Beckwirth and one of Beckwirth’s slaves. James Beckwourth noted that he was the third of thirteen children.
This common tale of life in the early south was made exceptional by the fact that Jennings Beckwirth, (married to Catherine Miskell), packed up his family, both white and black, and moved them to St. Louis, Missouri around 1800. Here, Jennings Beckwirth manumitted his twenty-two slaves.

Sir Jennings Beckwirth was an avid hunter and sportsman and had spent much time in the wilderness around St. Louis. His stories of his sporting exploits and the tales of life in the Indian camps must have aroused yearnings in young James, for when he was but eight years old, James, (who for some reason used the spelling ‘Beckwourth’) ran off to join the circus.

Things did not go as planned, and the dejected boy was returned to his father. This marked a ‘turning point’ for James, as his father then had him apprenticed to a blacksmith.

But a blacksmith’s profession was not for a wanderer and adventurer, and James only spent a few miserable months at the smithy before escaping the confines of an unwanted education in metalwork.

James had plans. He opened his own business selling popcorn, at which he did fairly well before securing a bit part in the theater. The troupe traveled from town to town, which suited James completely, but the actors soon realized, as most actors do, that they were ‘dead broke’. A change of venue as well as a change of occupation was necessary.

And thus, James Pierson ‘Jim’ Beckwourth set off to see just what awaited him in the world.

He reportedly attended a Mountain Man rendezvous in 1825 in Wyoming, and by 1829, he was becoming famous as a trapper, explorer, fur trader, guide, innkeeper, mountain man, scout, gambler, and avid storyteller.

He spent many years among the Native People of the West, most notably, the Crow Nation, where he reportedly married several times and had numerous children.

In 1837, he participated in the Seminole War in Florida, but no one seems to know just what he did. He boarded a boat out of New Orleans, but soon became terribly seasick. The boat was then stranded on a sand bar for two weeks. James eventually made it to Florida, but then soon returned to the west.

Beckwourth is noted for establishing trading posts, among other ventures. His explorations into unknown territory and setting up a bit of civilization for trappers and travelers alike did take courage and work. Beckwourth played a major role in the creation of Pueblo, Colorado.

He also made quite a profit selling whiskey to the Cheyenne and operating saloons in New Mexico, where he is rumored to have had a ‘side business’ illegally procuring horses!

As the Gold Rush began in 1849, James went to Sonoma, California, and then on to Sacramento, where he was a professional gambler.

By 1850, he had ’discovered’ an easy pass through the Sierra Nevada Mountains, in what was to become Lassen County. Beckwourth’s Pass is still a well-known pass today. He is credited with finding three other passes, but only Beckwourth’s Pass was anointed as an official historic landmark (in 1939).

Beckwourth’s first cabin in Honey Lake Valley burned in 1852 and was quickly replaced by the cabin now on display near the town of Portola. The City of Portola thinks this may actually be Beckwourth’s third cabin, and the little museum has information to support this, but its structure harks back to the methods used during those early days in Virginia.

James Beckwourth’s life was indeed unique and interesting, if not a bit ambiguous. His biography, The Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, was written by another unique individual named Thomas P. Bonner and published in 1856.

Beckwourth has been dubbed a ‘gaudy liar’, an ‘immortal liar’, an ‘audacious braggart and prevaricator’, and his biography deemed as, “so much effluvium washing down the pike,” but many researchers consider the work to be generally accurate and, at the very least, a look into what it was like to be an African American man in the ‘Wild West’.

A question remains as to whether Beckwourth, with his very limited literacy, told these tall tales, or whether Bonner embellished on his own. Bonner was considered a drunkard and is said to have absconded with the book’s proceeds, leaving Beckwourth to move on to new adventures.

But most all accounts recall that Beckwourth was an intriguing, striking fellow. He stood at least six-feet tall and had a strongly built muscular body. He let his long black hair grow to his waist and sometimes braided it with ribbons and other adornment. He normally dressed in the Crow tradition with earrings, beading, and Crow leggings.

His appearance and bravado must have enticed the female population as Beckwourth had several wives. He supposedly fathered many children, but this can never be confirmed.

At least two documented offspring; Matilda Mary Beckwourth and George W. Beckwourth existed. Matilda married a man named Brown, and then faded from records. George worked as a postman in Colorado, and on Christmas day, 1876, was kicked in the head by a horse. He died, and his body was buried at the Crow Settlement Cemetery in Laramie, Wyoming.

In 1866, James Beckwourth got a job working as a scout and guide to help move U.S. Army troops from Fort Smith, Montana to a Crow Settlement in Wyoming. The facts are as sketchy as the other facts of Beckwourth’s life, but he apparently made some enemies at Fort Smith when he refused to help the U.S. Army go to war against the Crow nation.

Soon after leaving the fort, he became ill, but he made it to his beloved Crow country shortly before expiring. Many say that he had been poisoned at the fort.

Beckwourth’s body was placed on a platform, as per the Crow custom, until his body was buried at the Crow Indian Settlement Cemetery. And, so, a remarkable man with a remarkable life finally found where he belonged.
If you are a fan of our weekly history stories you should join the Lassen County Historical Society!
It’s a fun way to be a part of our county’s rich history. When you sign up, you’ll receive regular Historical Society newsletters with interesting stories and information. Membership is open to anyone with an interest in area history.

Through your membership you help preserve local history.

30th Annual ‘Stamp Out Hunger’ Food Drive Happens This Saturday
The National Association of Letter Carriers will conduct its annual national food drive this Saturday, May 14th. The Stamp Out Hunger food drive, which was first held in 1983, is the country’s largest one-day food drive, providing residents with an easy way to donate food to those millions of Americans in need.

Customers simply leave their donation of non-perishable food items next to their mailbox before the delivery of the mail on Saturday, May 14th. Letter carriers will collect these food donations on that day as they deliver mail along their postal routes, and distribute them to local food banks, pantries, shelters and churches.
All donations made locally to the food drive stay right here in our community.

The drive is held annually on the second Saturday in May in 10,000 cities and towns in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Guam. Hunger affects 1 in 8 Americans, including millions of children, senior citizens and veterans.

In the 30 years since it began, the food drive has collected about 1.82 billion pounds of food for struggling residents.

The need is as great as ever, given the pandemic-caused economic dislocations of the past two years. The traditional food drive is returning this year after a two-year hiatus because of the coronavirus pandemic. In 2020 and 2021, it was replaced by NALC’s donor drive, in which those wishing to help made online donations to local food pantries.

“Letter carriers are a part of every neighborhood in the nation,” NALC President Fredric Rolando said, “and we see the growing need for food assistance in our communities. On Saturday, May 14th, NALC invites everyone to participate in the annual Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive. Together, we can help stamp out hunger in America.”

The timing is important, with food banks, pantries and shelters running low on donations from the winter holidays and with summer approaching, when most school meal programs are suspended.

How it works

On May 14th, as they deliver mail, the nation’s 200,000 letter carriers will collect the donations that residents have left near their mailboxes. People are encouraged to leave a sturdy bag containing non-perishable foods, such as canned soup, canned vegetables, canned meats and fish, pasta, rice or cereal next to their mailbox before the regular mail delivery on Saturday.

The food donations stay in each community, going to help local residents.
The Lassen Lightning Softball Travel Team -photo provided
Lassen Lightning 12U Makes Championship Game in Medford Tournament

The Lassen Lightning 12U Softball team traveled to Medford, Oregon last weekend for tournament play, where they fell just one-run short of the championship title after a weekend of hard played games.

The Lightning won all three of their games on Saturday, then won two more on Sunday, which got them to the championship game where they lost by only one run and took second place.

Lassen Lightning are the travel teams for lassen fastpitch softball and teams made up of girls from ages six to fifteen who travel all over northern Nevada and California.

The girls paid for the trip through series of fundraisers held earlier this year.
CASA Program Holding Gala Night Fundraiser and Silent Auction
Lassen Family Service’s Court Appointed Special Advocates program will be hosting an evening of ‘country chic fun’ at their Gala Night fundraiser and silent auction on May 28th, benefiting the children of Lassen County in the CASA program.

Dinner for the Gala Night event is Top Sirloin from the 5 Dot Ranch, prepared by rockstar BBQ expert Joe Camino.

The cost of the dinner is $40 per plate and tickets are available at Margie’s Book Nook, Zaengles Floor and Home and Lassen Family Services. You must be twenty-one or older to purchase tickets.
Doors open at 5:30 at Sentimental Journey, 465-320 Church Street in Janesville, and dinner will be served at 7:00.

The bar will be sponsored and served by Soroptimist International of Susanville.

For more information contact CASA at 1.530.250.3927.
Diamond Mountain Custom Mill taken in 1938, from the Eastman Archive at UC Davis
Holmes Plans Wide Program
Work is Pushed on at Diamond Mountain
May 12, 1938

Extensive development of the Art Greig property, five miles south of Susanville on Diamond Mountain, is being mapped by John Holmes and associates following preliminary work on the claim.

The claim is located across the road from the old Lone Pine property which established a mint record in the Susanville district 40 years ago, and good pannings are being obtained, according to the Lassen Advocate.

Construction of a 40-ton mill is contemplated. A definite footwall of granite has been reached at a depth of 15 feet, and the vein is from four to six feet wide. The ore shoot has been stripped for a distance of 200 feet in both directions from the shaft.

The property, according to Holmes, is on a direct line from the old Arkansas property on Gold Run Creek. The vein has a mother lode trend, northeast and southwest, about 30 degrees east.

Holmes and his associates have taken a lease and option on 225 acres of the Greig holdings. A spring believed large enough to furnish ample water for development of the property is located about a quarter of a mile above the workings.
If you are a fan of our daily history stories you should join the Lassen Historical Society! It's a fun way to be a part of our county's rich history. When you sign up you'll receive regular Historical Society newsletters with interesting stories and information. Membership is open to anyone with an interest in area history.

Through your membership you help preserve local history. You can download a membership application by clicking here.
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