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in the list of survivors at one time, but eliminated in the course of revisions was also James J. Rogers, whose death was at the age of eighty-two. He was born in Illinois March 17, 1822, the son of Robert Rogers and Helen Patterson, and a direct descendent of Gen. Robert Rogers of French and Indian wars. Rogers served under Gen. Winfield Scott in the War with Mexico and was one of the twelve that carried the .American flag into the capital, Mexico City, on the 14th of September, 1847, when the victorious army marched into the city and occupied the national palace. He married Cynthia Ann Stephens, born in Illinois December, 1830, daughter of William Stephens and Delia Short, the latter a descendant of Capt. Short of Revolutionary fame, and the parents of J. B. Stephens, who was a captain in the Mexican and Civil wars. James Rogers married at Little Rock, Ark., September 26, 1848, left for California April 1, 1850, via the southern route through New Mexico and Arizona, arrived at Los Angeles August 1, 1850, settled at Stockton in the spring of 1851, engaged in mining until 1857 and then removed to Fresno county where a large family was reared. The Rogers were the pioneer owners of the Rogers Hot Springs, known now as the Fresno Hot Springs. James J. Rogers died at Los Angeles March 6, 1904. Mrs. Cynthia A. Rogers, the widow, lived at last accounts (November 20, 1918), at Stockton, Cal., and though eighty-eight years of age is a wonderfully preserved woman, who despite her years is able to read and write without difficulty, goes wither and when the mood possesses her and has found time to knit for the American soldiers in France.

       BACK TO MINING ERA

      In the rostered membership of the Fresno County Pioneers' Association are the following named living residents whose days go back to the mining era of the decade of the 50's, namely;

      1856 — Mrs. Mary A. Parker-Strivens. Charles E. Strivens, James T. Parker, Henry Wells, Mrs. Sallie Cole-Sample (Obit., Dec. 17, 1917), and T. F. Boling.

      1857—1. W. Holliday, G. W. Statham and Frank M. Lewis.

      1858— John C. Hoxie (Obit., Nov. 21, 1918), Elizabeth J. Hoxie-Barth, Sewell F. Hoxie, Mrs. Tillie Gilmore-Brown and Charles Crawford.

      1859— Lil A. and Led. F. Winchell (Obit., 1918), Mrs. Peter Parry and Mrs. Carrie E. Hoxie-McKenzie.

      Some of these were children at the time. They are excluded from the pioneer list of territorial residents before county organization date. The association residence date qualification for membership is the removal year of the county seat of Millerton in 1874.

      CHAPTER III

      California is a land redolent of romance in its early history of discovery and exploration. Its very name created in 1510 for a romance of medieval chivalry, "the most fictitious of fiction," is an etymological enigma to this day. Its source origin in a forgotten Spanish romance was not discovered until the winter of 1863, and then by Rev. Edward E. Hale in the course of Spanish archival researches at a time when he expected to become the reader and amanuensis for William H. Prescott, the historian. Melodious as the name is, the California poet Edwin H. Markham observes that it is "as well also the oldest of any state save only Florida," given by Ponce de Leon in 1512, while in search of the fabled Fountain of Youth.

      For long California was "a mere field of cosmographic conjecture," whether island, peninsula or part of mainland. Its location was placed somewhere between Mexico and India, with its boundaries vagueness itself. The fabled and the material California have in turn attracted a world's undivided interest. Her history is unique. Considered in entirety or in its successive phases, the record is one unequalled in variety, originality and interest by that of any other province of the New World. Whether regarded from the purely romantic or the positive, materialistic viewpoint, no state of the union has commanded more continuous notice and attention. Writers and historians ever return for a fascinating theme to California, land of gold, of perpetual sunshine, of natural blessings such as no other land has been endowed with in such prodigality.

      The romancer of 1510 described his California as an imaginary island "located on the right hand of the Indies, very near the terrestrial paradise." He peopled it with black Amazons, who trained griffins for warfare and caparisoned them with gold. The only mineral on the island was gold, though it was fabulously rich also in precious stones and pearls. It was, as Poet Markham described it, "a rosy romance." Still the Spanish romancer's most extravagant dreams did not conjure up such a rich land as the real, materialistic California has proven to be. The California that the explorers placed on the map and named proved in truth to be the land of gold and of untold riches. Not of precious stones and pearls, but of gold and products of the virgin soil.

      The gold was not unearthed until nearly three and a half centuries after the romance, and then by the Anglo-Americans, in whose veins throbbed and pulsated to action the admixed red blood of preceding generations of the adventurous and resistless Saxon.

      The problem of Columbus' day was to reach "far Cathay" by sea, sailing westward — to open a new route to India. Ever the cry was India. This feverish quest for wealth was the impelling motive also of Hernando Cortez after his conquest of Mexico and the subjugation of Montezuma (1520-21). In the various explorations under him, of the California and North Pacific coasts (1532-37), whatever the specific moving cause of particular expeditions, whether in the alarm-spreading presence in the North Pacific of English buccaneer or freebooter to seize the annual Spanish treasure galleon from the Philippines, whether the threatened aggressions of foreign powers for territorial acquisition or commercial spoliation, or whether the location of a California relief port for the teredo-eaten hull or scurvy-stricken crew of the annual "great Manila ship."

      It was all very nice for the history recording apologists for "these conscienceless gold-seeking adventurers" to advance the specious plea for them, of spreading the faith and win souls through religion, their real motive in the quest for the Indies was always gold, precious stones, the luxurious and costly fabrics — to find the shorter route to wealth, glory and the commerce with the Eastern El Dorado, fat and overflowing with the things precious for the increasing wealth and luxurious demands of the age.

      Great would be the glory and great also the profit of the individual or the nation that would shorten the overland route to India, minimize its perils and difficulties, and pour into the receptive lap of Europe the priceless and coveted commodities of Asia in quantity unstinted. The very name of India suggested boundless wealth and riotous, luxury. The Indian sea-route never was voyaged, via the fabled and long sought "Strait of Anian," because the early navigators had to learn that a New World continental barrier blocked the way. In the course of time and in a slow but gradual unfolding of a foreordained destiny, California astonished the world with her stores of gold and her succeeding greater material wealth in the soil and products thereof, and her name was acclaimed the synonym for a wealth incomparably greater and more substantial than all the fabled and dreamed of treasures of the Indies.

      It was long the subject for wonder and amazement with early travelers and the sea commanders that California so rich and fertile, a great territory capable of sustaining such a large population, and a region so remarkably favored by nature in all things conducive to man's comfort, happiness and prosperity, should, for more than three-quarters of a century during the Spanish-Mexican regime from 1767 to 1846, be left neglected, remain practically undeveloped, its vast gold-besprinkled interior unknown and unexplored, and the stretch of country along an ocean highway so ill protected as to make it the easy prey of any nation that would have cared to seize it. The little known concerning the land and its isolation were the main safeguards against such forcible seizure.

      During the later development periods, California's geographical isolation and position was relatively a less important controlling factor than in the times of discovery exploration. Stretching along the unknown Pacific, the right to control the commerce on which the Spaniards asserted, and next door neighbor to their Mexican province, it was natural that they should discover California and hold possession. No reason then to imagine that the English speaking settlers from the extreme eastern continental shore would come and control the most remote and isolated western border. Previous to the adventitious discovery of gold, in January, 1849, California was practically unpeopled, save

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