Background White immigrants flooded into
Northern California in 1848 due to the
California Gold Rush, increasing the settler population of California from 13,000 to well over 300,000 in little more than a decade. The sudden influx of miners and settlers on top of the nearly 300,000 Native Americans living in the area strained space and resources. On April 22, 1850, the fledgling California state legislature passed the
Act for the Government and Protection of Indians, legalizing the kidnapping and forced servitude of Indians by White settlers. In 1851, the civilian governor of California,
Peter Hardeman Burnett, declared, "That a war of extermination will continue to be waged … until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected. While we cannot anticipate this result but with painful regret, the inevitable destiny of the race is beyond the power or wisdom of man to avert. Situated as California is, we must expect a long continued and harassing irregular warfare with the Indians upon our borders .... Although few in numbers, and unskilled in the use of fire arms, they seem to understand all the advantages of their position; and they consequently resort to that predatory warfare, most distressing to us, and secure to them." This expectation soon found its way into law. An 1851 legislative measure not only gave settlers the right to organize
lynch mobs to kill Indians, but allowed them to submit their expenses to the government. By 1852, the state had authorized over a million dollars in such claims. In 1856, a
San Francisco Bulletin editorial stated, "Extermination is the quickest and cheapest remedy, and effectually prevents all other difficulties when an outbreak [of Indian violence] occurs." In 1854, when the first six white settlers arrived in Round Valley, somewhere between 6,000 and 20,000
Yuki people inhabited the valley and its surrounding area. Those first six settlers immediately attacked the Yuki without provocation, killing 40 of them in the
Asbill Massacre. By 1855–56, Yuki women were being kidnapped in large numbers and sold to outside men as there was a shortage of women among the miners and settlers. Pierce Asbill, the instigator of the Asbill Massacre, stayed in the area and personally kidnapped at least 35 Yuki women over the next year.
Indian Agent Simon Storms reported upon arriving in 1856 that the Yuki people feared white men due to the kidnapping of women and children and in 1857 Indian Agent Vincent Geiger stated that in Round Valley: "the Indians...have very few children—most of them doubtless having been stolen and sold." By 1860, settler William Frazier reported that there were no longer any children among the Indians they encountered and blamed kidnapping by outsiders as the cause. Historians Sherburne Cooke and Benjamin Madley suggest that these abductions were one of several instigators of violent conflict in the valley. William Brewer, a member of the
California Geological Survey in the early 1860s, directly blamed child-stealing of Indian children for the rise in Indian/settler conflict and the atrocities that followed. A second instigator of conflict was competition for resources. The new settlers killed deer in large numbers and cut off Yuki access to fields where they had gathered plants and hunted small game. This threatened the Yuki with starvation, and at times Yuki men killed and ate grazing cattle to survive. Many cattle and horses also wandered off and died of natural causes, but these deaths were also blamed on the Indians and used to build animosity towards them. U.S. Army Lieutenant Edward Dillon implicated California Superintendent of Indian Affairs
Thomas J. Henley, current ranch owner and former
California Supreme Court Judge
Serranus Clinton Hastings, and Hastings's ranch manager H.L. Hall in a plot to build hatred towards the Indians by holding town-hall style public gatherings where settlers aired their grievances against them, real or imagined. In this manner they created community buy-in to their campaign of atrocities which drove the Indians off the land and allowed them to have the valley to themselves.
Incidents and death toll A band of 20–30 men, a significant portion of the several dozen white settlers occupying the valley at that time, committed a series of attacks against the Yuki Indians between 1856 and the summer of 1859. One Round Valley settler, Dryden Lacock, testified to the
California State Legislature that he regularly took part in expeditions that would kill 50–60 Indians in a trip, as often as two to three trips a week at times, from 1856 to 1860. Settler William Scott testified before the legislature that H.L. Hall was a leader of vigilantes, killing all the Indians he could find whenever he encountered them and even poisoning their food and supplies. Hall's culpability was verified by Army Lieutenant Edward Dillon, who referred to Hall as a "monster" who killed men, women, and children, regardless of any crimes committed and lamented that he had basically depopulated the county of Indians. Hall, despite remaining silent as to the number of Indians he had killed, did admit under oath to executing Indian women, children, and even infants. Special Treasury Agent J. Ross Browne's account of the attacks is vivid: "At [Round Valley], during the winter of 1858–59, more than a hundred and fifty peaceable Indians, including women and children, were cruelly slaughtered by the whites who had settled there under official authority. ... Armed parties went into the
rancherias in open day, when no evil was apprehended, and shot the Indians down—weak, harmless, and defenseless as they were—without distinction of age or sex; shot down women with sucking babes at their breasts; killed or crippled the naked children that were running about." As early as September 1857, Superintendent Henley had stated that the campaign against the Yuki would continue until they were either exterminated or driven from the area entirely. Special Treasury agent J. Ross Browne in September 1858 called it a "war of extermination" against the Yuki with 20–30 armed white men engaging in months of constant attacks. By August 1859, after three years of a sustained campaign of atrocities, the
Sacramento Union wrote that the local Indians appeared doomed to extirpation. A few specific attacks of which there is witness testimony are: • A local paper reported 55 Indians killed in Clinton Valley on October 8, 1856. • A white farmer, John Lawson, admitted an attack killing eight Indians, three by shooting and five by hanging, after some of his hogs were stolen. He stated that these killings were a common practice. • A white farmer, Isaac Shanon, testified to killing 14 Indians in a revenge attack after a white man was killed in early 1858. • White persons from the
Sacramento Valley came into Round Valley and killed four Yuki Indians with the help of locals in June 1858, despite having been warned against it by Indian Agents. • White settlers attacked and killed nine Indians in the mountains edging the valley in November 1858. • Former Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Thomas Henley (fired two months earlier for embezzling funds), led a massacre of 11 Yuki Indians in August 1859. Due to the overwhelming number of killings, an exact death toll is unknowable. The following estimates were made by government agents and newspapers at the time: • 1856: 300 total killed over the course of the year. • Winter 1856–57: About 75 Yuki Indians killed over the course of the winter. • March–April 1858: 300–400 male Yukis killed in three weeks. • November 1858 – January 1859: 150+ or 170 Yuki Indians killed between November and January • March–May 1859: 240 Yuki killed in assaults led by H.L. Hall in revenge for the slaughter of Judge Hasting's horse and a total of 600 men, women, and children killed within the previous year. These estimates suggest well over 1,000 Yuki deaths at the hands of white settlers. (See Cook, Sherburne;
The California Indian and White Civilization Part III, pg 7, for an argument in favor of the approximate reliability of figures of Indians killed at this time.) The white settler John Burgess testified that 10–15 Indians were killed for every beef that had been killed. Lieutenant Edward Dillon stated that many crimes were unknown as settlers "will not testify against each other, and in most cases of this nature, Indians are the only witnesses." Yuki Indian depositions were taken during the investigation of the murders by the California legislature in 1860, but all of these depositions have either been lost or destroyed. Little retaliation or defense was possible from the Yuki. On 24 September 1857, over three years after the first massacre of Indians in Round Valley, Indian Agent Geiger reported that a white man had been killed by a Yuki for the first time. Another white man was killed in early 1858, and by the end of 1858 a total of four white men had been killed. Reports from the U.S. Army suggest that at least two of the men killed were well known for grievous crimes against the Indians and that the Indians had been provoked in both instances. ==Repercussions==