Sale On reaching Yerba Buena, today's San Francisco, Gale and company found a man in need of a ship,
Joseph Yves Limantour. In October 1841, the French merchant's schooner
Ayucucho had gone aground near
Point Reyes. Although much of the cargo was saved, Limantour was stranded in California with no means of transport. During his time in northern California, Limantour sold his cargo for cash and credit to the local elite, but the value of the
Ayucucho's cargo far exceeded the local capacity for purchase. General
Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, Commander General of California, was a major exception and he owned a substantial
rancho in
Sonoma with plenty of cattle. Gale and company wanted cattle, and Limantour wanted the schooner. In a three-way deal, Vallejo purchased the
Star of Oregon for 350 cows, and then transferred ownership to Limantour. The
Star of Oregon was renamed the
Jóven Fanita in honor of General Vallejo's seven-year-old daughter, Epifania."
Jóven Fanita In late 1842, Limantour loaded the
Jóven Fanita with "the remainder of his goods and effects and sailed down the coast, stopping at the ports of
Monterrey,
Santa Barbara and
San Pedro." On anchoring at San Pedro in January 1843, Limantour encountered demand for his cargo in the form of the newly appointed Governor of California,
Manuel Micheltorena. Micheltorena had arrived in southern California in the summer of 1842 with several hundred ill-trained Mexican troops and little provision for their support. The Governor was desperate for cash and goods to support his army and to spare the locals their depredations. Micheltorena requested cash and merchandise in exchange for a draft of Mexican funds to be honored at
Mazatlán. Limantour provided these (either voluntarily or under duress) and then sailed to Mazatlán at the Governor's request. He then returned with a second cargo of goods for Micheltorena, which was purchased with $10,221 in Mexican funds. Later, the Mexican government reimbursed Limantour $56,184 for the goods "confiscated" from the
Jóven Fanita. Although the number of trips to and from Mexico in the small schooner is unclear, Limantour continued to use the schooner until it "became a total wreck." ==See also==