Eternity Street
Page 61
Bartlett, John Russell. 1854. Personal Narrative of Explorations and Incidents in Texas, New Mexico, California, Sonora, and Chihuahua. New York: D. Appleton.
Baugh, Ruth E. 1942. “The Site of Early Los Angeles.” Economic Geography 18: 87–96.
Baur, John E. 1954. “John Goller: Pioneer Angeleno Manufacturer.” Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly 36: 14–27.
Bayard, Samuel J. 1856. A Sketch of the Life of Com. Robert F. Stockton. New York: Derby & Jackson.
Bean, Lowell John. 1965. The Cahuilla Indians of Southern California. Banning, CA: Malki Museum Press.
Beasley, Delilah L. 1918. “Slavery in California.” Journal of Negro History 3: 33–44.
_______. 1919. The Negro Trail Blazers of California. Los Angeles: Times Mirror Printing and Binding House.
Beattie, George William. 1925. “Development of Travel between Southern Arizona and Los Angeles as It Related to the San Bernardino Valley.” Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California 13 (2): 228–57.
_______. 1942. “The Battle of Chino.” Quarterly: Historical Society of Southern California 24 (December): 143-60.
Beattie, George William, and Helen Pruitt Beattie. 1939. Heritage of the Valley; San Bernardino’s First Century. Pasadena, CA: San Pasqual Press.
Beebe, Rose Marie, and Robert M. Senkewicz, eds. 2001. Lands of Promise and Despair: Chronicles of Early California, 1535–1846. Berkeley: Heyday Books.
_______, eds. 2006. Testimonios: Early California through the Eyes of Women, 1815–1848. Berkeley: Heyday Books.
Beezley, William H., and David E. Lorey. 2001. Viva Mexico! Viva La Independencia! Celebrations of September 16. Wilmington, DE: SR Books.
Bell, Horace. 1829–90. “Papers.” Huntington Library.
_______. 1881. Reminiscences of a Ranger; or, Early Times in Southern California. Los Angeles: Yarnell, Caystile & Mathes.
_______. 1930. On the Old West Coast: Being Further Reminiscences of a Ranger. New York: W. Morrow.
Benavides, José Luis. 2006. “‘Californios! Whom Do You Support?’ ‘El Clamor Público’’s Contradictory Role in the Racial Formation Process in Early California.” California History 84: 54–66.
Benjamin, I. J. 1956. Three Years in America, 1859–1862. 2 vols. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America.
Benjamin, Marcus. 1907. John Bidwell, Pioneer: A Sketch of His Career. Washington: n.p.
Bennett, Deb. 1998. Conquerors: The Roots of New World Horsemanship. Solvang, CA: Amigo Publications.
Bibb, Leland E. 1976. “William Marshall: “The Wickedest Man in California; A Reappraisal.” Journal of San Diego History 22 (1): 11–25.
_______. 1991. “Pablo Apis and Temecula.” Journal of San Diego History 37 (4): 256–71.
Bidwell, John, and Annie E. Kennedy. 1973. What Makes a Man: The Annie E. Kennedy and John Bidwell Letters, 1866–1868. Edited by Chad L. Hoopes. Fresno, CA: Valley Publishers.
Bieber, Ralph P. 1925. “The Southwestern Trails to California in 1849.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 12: 342–75.
Bigelow, John. 1856. Memoir of the Life and Public Services of John Charles Frémont. New York: Derby & Jackson.
Biggs, Donald C. 1977. Conquer and Colonize: Stevenson’s Regiment and California. San Rafael, CA: Presidio Press.
Black, Esther Boulton. 1975. Rancho Cucamonga and Doña Merced. Redlands, CA: San Bernardino County Museum Association.
Blackburn, Thomas. 1975. “The Chumash Revolt of 1824: A Native Account.” Journal of California Anthropology 2: 223–27.
Blew, Robert W. 1972. “Vigilantism in Los Angeles, 1835–1874.” Southern California Quarterly 54: 11–30.
Boessenecker, John. 1988. Badge and Buckshot: Lawlessness in Old California. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
_______. 1998. “California Bandidos: Social Bandits or Sociopaths?” Southern California Quarterly 80: 419–34.
_______. 1999. Gold Dust and Gunsmoke: Tales of Gold Rush Outlaws, Gunfighters, Lawmen, and Vigilantes. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Bolton, Herbert E. 1927. Fray Juan Crespi: Missionary Explorer on the Pacific Coast, 1769–1774. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Bonsal, Stephen. 1912. Edward Fitzgerald Beale. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons.
Boscana, Gerónimo. 1934. A New Original Version of Boscana’s Historical Account of the San Juan Capistrano Indians of Southern California. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution.
Botello, Narciso. 1878. “Anales del sur de la California.” Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Bouvier, Virginia Marie. 2001. Women and the Conquest of California, 1542–1840: Codes of Silence. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Brace, Charles Loring. 1869. The New West; or, California in 1867–1868. New York: G. P. Putnam & Son.
Brackett, Frank Parkhurst. 1920. History of Pomona Valley, California. Los Angeles: Historic Record Company.
Brent, Joseph Lancaster. 1850–1939. “Papers.” Huntington Library.
_______. 1869–1940. “Papers.” Special Collections, Hill Memorial Library, Louisiana State University.
_______. 1926. The Lugo Case: A Personal Experience. New Orleans: Searcy & Pfaff.
Brewer, William Henry. 1930. Up and Down California in 1860–1864: The Journal of William H. Brewer. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Brier, John Wells. 1903. “The Death Valley Party of 1849.” Out West 17: 326–35, 456–65.
Broadstone, Michael A. 1918. History of Greene County, Ohio. Indianapolis: B. F. Bowen.
Brockmann, R. John. 2009. Commodore Robert F. Stockton, 1795–1866: Protean Man for a Protean Nation. Amherst, NY: Cambria Press.
Brooke, George M., Jr. 1962. “The Vest Pocket War of Commodore Jones.” Pacific Historical Review 31: 217–33.
Brown, Charles Henry. 1980. Agents of Manifest Destiny: The Lives and Times of the Filibusters. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
Brown, Clara Spaulding. 1883. “La Ciudad de la Reyna de Los Angeles.” Overland Monthly 2 (7).
Brown, Richard Maxwell. 1975. Strain of Violence: Historical Studies of American Violence and Vigilantism. New York: Oxford University Press.
_______. 1991. No Duty to Retreat: Violence and Values in American History and Society. New York: Oxford University Press.
_______. 1996. “Violence.” In The Oxford History of the American West, edited by Clyde A. Milner, Carol A. O’Connor, and Martha A. Sandweiss. New York: Oxford University Press.
Brown-Coronel, Margie. 2011. “Beyond the Rancho: Four Generations of del Valle Women in Southern California, 1830–1940.” PhD diss., University of California, Irvine.
Browne, J. Ross. 1850. Report of the Debates in the Convention of California on the Formation of the State Constitution, in September and October, 1849. Washington: J. T. Towers.
_______. 1869. Adventures in the Apache Country: A Tour Through Arizona and Sonora, with Notes on the Silver Regions of Nevada. New York: Harper & Brothers.
_______. 1871. Crusoe’s Island: A Ramble in the Footsteps of Alexander Selkirk. With Sketches of Adventure in California and Washoe. New York: Harper & Brothers.
Brownrigg, Coya Paz. 2007. “Linchocracia: Performing ‘America’ in El Clamor Publico.” California History 84: 40–53.
Bryant, Edwin. 1848. What I Saw in California . . . in the Years 1846, 1847. New York: D. Appleton.
Buchanan, Albert Russell. 1956. David S. Terry of California, Dueling Judge. San Marino, CA: Huntington Library.
Burnett, Peter Hardeman. 1880. Recollections and Opinions of an Old Pioneer. New York: D. Appleton.
Burns, James Franklin. 1950. “James Franklin Burns, Pioneer.” Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly 32: 61–66.
Bynum, Lindley. 1941. “Los Angeles in 1854–1855: The Diary of Reverend James Woods.” Quarterly: Historical Society of Southern California 23: 65–86.
Caballería y Collell, Juan. 190
2. History of San Bernardino Valley from the Padres to the Pioneers, 1810–1851. San Bernardino: Times-Index Press.
Caldwell, Dan. 1971. “The Negroization of the Chinese Stereotype in California.” Southern California Quarterly 53: 123–31.
“California Claims.” 1848. S. Doc. No. 75, 30th Cong., 1st sess.
California Legislature. 1855. The Statutes of California: Passed at the Sixth Session of the Legislature. Sacramento: B. B. Redding.
Camp, Charles L. 1922. “Kit Carson in California, with Extracts from His Own Story,” California Historical Society Quarterly 1: 111–51.
_______. 1936. “The Journal of a ‘Crazy Man.’ Travels and Scenes in California from the Year 1834 to the American Conquest: The Narrative of Albert Ferdinand Morris.” California Historical Society Quarterly 15: 103–38.
Carney, Stephen A. 2008. U.S. Army Campaigns of the Mexican War: The Occupation of Mexico, May 1846–July 1848. Washington, DC: U.S. Army Center of Military History.
Carrico, Richard L. 2008. Strangers in a Stolen Land: Indians of San Diego County from Prehistory to the New Deal. San Diego: Sunbelt Publications.
Carrigan, William D. 2004. The Making of a Lynching Culture: Violence and Vigilantism in Central Texas, 1836–1916. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
_______, ed. 2008. Lynching Reconsidered: New Perspectives in the Study of Mob Violence. London; New York: Routledge.
_______. 2013. Forgotten Dead: Mob Violence against Mexicans in the United States, 1848–1928. New York: Oxford University Press.
Carrigan, William D., and Christopher Waldrep, eds. 2013. Swift to Wrath: Lynching in Global Perspective. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
Carson, Kit. 1935. Kit Carson’s Autobiography. Chicago: R. R. Donnelly & Sons.
Carter, Harvey Lewis. 1968. “Dear Old Kit”: The Historical Christopher Carson. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
Casas, Maria Raquél. 1999. “‘In Consideration of His Being Married to a Daughter of the Land’: Interethnic Marriages in Alta California, 1825–1875.” PhD diss., Yale University.
_______. 2007. Married to a Daughter of the Land: Spanish-Mexican Women and Interethnic Marriage in California, 1820–1880. Reno: University of Nevada Press.
Castañeda, Antonia I. 1993. “Sexual Violence in the Politics and Policies of Conquest.” In Building with Our Hands: New Directions in Chicana Studies, edited by Adela de la Torre and Beatriz Pesquera. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Castillo, Edward D. 1994. “Gender Status Decline, Resistance, and Accommodation among Female Neophytes in the Missions of California: A San Gabriel Case Study.” American Indian Culture and Research Journal 18: 67–93.
Caughey, John Walton. 1939. “Don Benito Wilson: An Average Southern Californian.” Huntington Library Quarterly 2: 285–300.
Caughey, John Walton, and LaRee Caughey. 1976. Los Angeles: Biography of a City. Berkeley: University of California Press.
César, Julio. 1878. “Cosas de indios de California.” Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Chaffin, Tom. 2002. Pathfinder: John Charles Frémont and the Course of American Empire. New York: Macmillan.
Chamberlain, Samuel E. 1996. My Confession: Recollections of a Rogue. Edited by William H. Goetzmann. Austin: Texas State Historical Association.
Chandler, Robert Joseph. 1978. “The Press and Civil Liberties in California during the Civil War, 1861–1865.” PhD diss., University of California, Riverside.
_______. 1984. “Crushing Dissent: The Pacific Coast Tests Lincoln’s Policy of Suppression, 1862.” Civil War History 30: 235–54.
_______. 2003. “An Uncertain Influence: The Role of the Federal Government in California, 1846–1880.” California History 81: 224–71.
Chase, Lucien Bonaparte. 1850. History of the Polk Administration. New York: G. P. Putnam.
Chavez-Garcia, Miraslava. 1998. “Finding Guide to the Alcalde Court Records, 1830–1850.” Seaver Center for Western History Research, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
_______. 2004. Negotiating Conquest: Gender and Power in California, 1770s to 1880s. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Cheng, Lucie. 1984. Linking Our Lives: Chinese American Women of Los Angeles. Los Angeles: Chinese Historical Society of Southern Califoria.
Christian, Peggy. 2002. Historic San Timoteo Canyon: A Pictorial Tour, Myths, and Legends. Morongo Valley, CA: Sagebrush Press.
Churchill, Charles B. 1991. “Thomas Jefferson Farnham: An Exponent of American Empire in Mexican California.” Pacific Historical Review 60: 517–37.
Clark, Francis D. 1882. The First Regiment of New York Volunteers, Commanded by Col. Jonathan D. Stevenson, in the Mexican War. New York: G. S. Evans.
Clark, Harry. 1974. “Their Pride, Their Manners, and Their Voices: Sources of the Traditional Portrait of the Early Californians.” California Historical Quarterly 53: 71–82.
Clarke, Dwight L. 1961. Stephen Watts Kearny, Soldier of the West. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
_______. 1966. “Soldiers under Stephen Watts Kearny.” California Historical Society Quarterly 45: 132–48.
Clarke, Dwight L., and George Ruhlen. 1964. “The Final Roster of the Army of the West, 1846–1847.” California Historical Society Quarterly 43: 37–44.
Clary, William W. 1966. History of the Law Firm of O’Melveny and Myers, 1885–1965. 2 vols. Los Angeles: privately printed.
Clay, Karen, and Werner Troesken. 2005. “Ranchos and the Politics of Land Claims.” In Land of Sunshine: An Environmental History of Metropolitan Los Angeles, edited by William Francis Deverell and Greg Hise. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.
Cleland, Robert Glass. 1914. “The Early Sentiment for the Annexation of California: An Account of the Growth of American Interest in California, 1835–1846.” Southwestern Historical Quarterly 18: 1–40, 121–61, 231–60.
_______. 1918. “Transportation in California before the Railroads, with Especial Reference to Los Angeles.” Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California 11 (1): 60–67.
_______. 1941. The Cattle on a Thousand Hills: Southern California, 1850–1880. San Marino CA: Huntington Library.
_______. 1944. From Wilderness to Empire: A History of California, 1542–1900. New York: A. A. Knopf.
Clendenen, Clarence C. 1961. “Dan Showalter—California Secessionist.” California Historical Society Quarterly 40: 309–25.
Cole, Martin. 1978. Pio Pico Miscellany. Whittier, CA: Governor Pico Mansion Society.
_______. 1981. Pico Rivera: Where the World Began. Whittier, CA: Rio Hondo College Community Services.
Colton, Walter. 1850. Three Years in California. Cincinnati: H. W. Derby.
Compton, Todd. 1997. In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith. Salt Lake City: Signature Books.
Cook, Roy. 2005. “Antonio Garra: Tarnished California Gold.” American Indian Source. http://americanindiansource.com/gara/gara.html.
Cook, Tony Stanley. 1986. “Historical Mythmaking: Richard Henry Dana and American Immigration to California, 1840–1850.” Southern California Quarterly 68: 97–117.
Cooke, Phillip St. George. 1878. The Conquest of New Mexico and California: An Historical and Personal Narrative. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons.
Coolbrith, Ina D. 1895. Songs from the Golden Gate. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin.
Cooney, Percival J. 1924. “Southern California in Civil War Days.” Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California 13 (1): 54–68.
Coronel, Antonio F. 1817–94. “Papers.” Seaver Center for Western History Research.
_______. 1994. Tales of Mexican California: Cosas de California. Edited by Doyce B. Nunis. Santa Barbara, CA: Bellerophon Books.
Coulter, Thomas. 1835. “Notes on Upper California.” Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 5: 59–70.
Courtwright, David T. 1996. “Violence in America: What Human Nat
ure and the California Gold Rush Tell Us about Crime in the Inner City.” American Heritage 47 (5): 36-51.
_______. 1998. Violent Land: Single Men and Social Disorder from the Frontier to the Inner City. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Couts, Cave Johnson. 1831–1951. “Papers.” Huntington Library.
Cowan, Robert G. 1956. Ranchos of California: A List of Spanish Concessions, 1775–1822, and Mexican Grants, 1822–1846. Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild.
Coy, Owen Cochran. 1921. The Battle of San Pasqual: A Report of the California Historical Survey Commission with Special Reference to Its Location. Sacramento: California State Printing Office.
Crandell, John. 1997. “The Life and Times of Thomas J. White, M.D.” Southern California Quarterly 79: 161–70.
_______. 1999. “Rio Porciuncula: A New Perspective on the Former Environs of Los Angeles.” Southern California Quarterly 81: 305–14.
Crongeyer, Sven. 2006. Six Gun Sound: The Early History of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. Fresno, CA: Craven Street Books.
Crosby, Harry. 2003. Gateway to Alta California: The Expedition to San Diego, 1769. San Diego: Sunbelt Publications.
Cunyngham-Cunningham, G. 1898. Tales from the Land of Mañana. Cincinnati: Editor Publishing Co.
Cutts, James Madison. 1847. The Conquest of California and New Mexico, by the Forces of the United States, in the Years 1846 & 1847. Philadelphia: Carey & Hart.
Dakin, Susanna Bryant. 1939. A Scotch Paisano: Hugo Reid’s Life in California, 1832–1852, Derived from His Correspondence. Berkeley: University of California Press.
_______. 1949. The Lives of William Hartnell. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
DAR, California State Society. 1952. “Los Angeles County Wills, 1850–1885.” Early California Wills. http://www.sfgenealogy.com/caldatanook/tagdata/9-calwills/index.htm#volume1.
Davis, William Heath. 1889. Sixty Years in California: A History of Events and Life in California. San Francisco: A. J. Leary.
_______. 1929. Seventy-Five Years in California: A History of Events and Life in California. San Francisco: J. Howell.
Davis, Winfield J. 1890. An Illustrated History of Sacramento County, California. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.