When you think about the United States Civil War,
California might not be the first state that comes to mind.
But that’s what Richard Hurley and T.J. Meekins,
curators of Folsom History Museum’s “California and the Civil War Exhibit,” want
to change.
“I knew that California backed the Union, and that
California gold backed the war effort, but I didn’t realize that Abraham Lincoln
only had a total of 32 percent of the vote in California. It was only because it
was a four-way race that Lincoln got enough Electoral Votes. He only won because
the Democrats couldn’t get united,” Hurley said.
Back up a decade, and you’ll learn that
California’s state constitution was drafted establishing the states’ borders and
banning slavery. While banning slavery may have been a boon for humanity, the
California Constitutional Convention voted unanimously against slavery, not to
give blacks freedom, but to keep out slave-powered mining
companies.
“Politics in California were so bitter that
California’s Chief Justice at the time — a Southern Democrat, challenged our
U.S. Senator, a ‘Free Soil’ or Northern Democrat, to a duel. And the plot
thickens because the pistols weren’t evenly matched,” Hurley said. “The senator
was shot in the lung and died three days later — the event really called
attention to the rift in our state.”
According to the exhibit, no one knew if California
was going to stay in the Union. A lot hung on the 1860 presidential election
that put the 16th president in office.
History buffs are flocking to the small museum, and
students who are studying California history should, too.
“We have a steady stream of visitors, and even more
people would come if they understood more about California’s role in the Civil
War,” said museum Director Mary Mast. “People don’t know that California almost
became part of the Confederacy.”
From California’s transition from a sleepy colonial
outpost, to the treatment of her Indigenous People, to the Gold Rush and beyond,
the exhibit shares a narrative history of the great state, and its involvement
in the Civil War.
Californians were sharply divided on which way the
state should vote. A group of Secessionists, the Knights of the Golden Circle,
organized rebellions, while a Union-loving battalion fought and served in the
Massachusetts Cavalry. Californians played their part in the deadly war that
killed 600,000 men and decimated the South’s economy for over a
century.
“California had very interesting regiments.
California had the only militia from a free state that went to fight for a slave
state,” Hurley said.
With the somber sounds of Taps or the optimistic
When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again playing in the background, it’s easy to
imagine a Union soldier with his weapon, or an officer contemplating strategy in
his quarters — all are on display in the exhibit.
The extensive artifacts on hand focus on
California’s Indigenous People — a favorite subject of co-curator, T.J. Meekins,
the Gold Rush, the Civil War, and a final piece that no war exhibit would be
complete without – widows’ mourning garb.
Meekins and Hurley appreciate the Sacramento Living
History Society, the Native Daughters of the Golden West, and the Sons of Union
Veterans for their expertise and help with the exhibit, as well as museum staff
and volunteers.
The husband and wife team recently finished a book,
Queen of the Northern Mines: A Novel of the Civil War in California, which
required years of research and led Meekins to study with, and learn the language
of the last of the Mountain Maidu native speakers.
The exhibit will run through Sunday, May 13, and
Queen of the Northern Mines is available for purchase at the museum, or at
amazon.com.