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Big
River - A History - The Story of Two Villages
Buldam and Mendocino
Introduction
In
2001 a lone skiff moved between crab pots set in the mouth
of Big River. Few salmon made their joyous death trek
to the remnants of spawning beds. Steelhead no longer
flashed in their busy explorations of the estuary. Below
the dock at Catch A Canoe, only an occasional bullhead
darted under the shadows of kayaks.
Nearly
150 years before, Nathaniel Smith, who was a black teenager
according to some accounts or a middle aged man in others,
settled just below what is today's Stanford Inn after
having sold his cabin on what is now property of the Mendocino
Hotel in town.
"There
was more elk here than there's cattle now Nat told a writer
in 1892. But elk was not well liked and there were other
choices. "The men was always willin' to pay more
fur ven'son, an' more fur black and brown bear than fur
grizzly. If we'd had such guns as they hev nowdays, wouldn't
'a' left any game in the county."
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during the most intensive logging, Big River provided
a wealth of game. In the fall, salmon were so plentiful
that Nat claimed he once netted 15,000 within ten
minutes.
"They
last till June an' then comes herrin', yaller perch
and flounders, an' there's always plenty bullheads,
though a lot of 'em is killed b the fresh water
comin' down. Ya see that log, like an island with
grass on top? When an otter's fishin' he lies on
one of them logs out o' sight in the grass, an'
there's jest where I set my trap an' ketch 'em every
time."
Nathaniel
Smith |

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The
Mitom Pomo - Early Settlements
Big
River's two histories, one natural and the other cultural,
converged sometime in the last 10,000 years. Ten thousand
years ago, the sea level was some 300 feet below where
we know it today and Big River was 3 1/2 miles longer.
There was no Mendocino headland. Big River cut through
a marine escarpment emptying into the Pacific. The lower
sea level allowed Asians to cross to North America. Among
them were people of the Hokan language family who made
their way south and settled in California. The Pomo a
distinct and isolated Hokan group occupied what are now
Mendocino, Lake and Sonoma counties.
When
the Pomo arrived is not known, nor do we know what they
found. They may have lived along a coast now buried underwater
but nevertheless, by the time Europeans arrived they were
well established in Mendocino County. The Me-tum'mah,
or Mitom Pomo, lived in the area of Little Lake Valley
near Willits and claimed the coast from south of the Noyo
River at what is now Fort Bragg, to just north of the
Navarro River, eighteen miles south.
Big
River is the principle stream draining land from just
west and south of Willits. The area was prolific. Near
Willits were abundant oaks producing the Mitom's dietary
staple, acorns. To the west was Big River and the Pacific
teeming with wildlife and importantly, kelp, a source
of salt. To make tools, the Mitom traded with the another
Pomo group, the Mato who made their coastal encampment
north of the Noyo River. The Mato had direct access to
obsidian, a volcanic glass, used to make points (arrow
and spear heads) scrapers and other tools. Bits of obsidian
can still be found throughout the Mendocino area.
The
Mitom called their coastal camp "Bool-dam"or
Buldam signifying "big holes" for the blowholes
on the headlands at Mendocino and Russian Gulch. The name
"Big River" is believed to have been derived
from the Pomo name, rather than a direct reference to
its size, although one might suppose that Little River
received its name in relation to "Big" River.
The
center of Mitom life was the sweat lodge which was located
on the ridge, above the river in today's east Mendocino.
This was not a village, but a large gathering spot. Small
family encampments were sprinkled about. Shelters were
made of Redwood Bark formed into a cone shape, about ten
feet in diameter and five feet high. Inside, the floor
was dug out one and a half to two feet. Redwood bark is
resistant to insects and decay and remnants of one of
these can be found on Pomo Lane off Point Cabrillo Drive.
Buldam
was not a permanent home for the Mitom until they sought
to escape the influx of Europeans settling Little Lake
Valley. They permanently moved to Buldam in approximately
1850.
Households
were setup near freshwater springs and occasionally artifact
remnants can be be found, including pieces of worked obsidian,
broken pestles used for grinding and worked pieces of
chert. The
fate of the Mitom is not clearly known. Some were part
of 200 Pomos who were rounded up by the U.S. Army in the
early 1850's and removed from the coast.
The
Age of Logging and Nat Smith
Just
a year before the Mitom moved to Buldam, gold was discovered
at Sutter's Mill attracting tens of thousands to California.
Among them a highly motivated entrepreneur, thirteen (?)
year old Nathaniel Smith, came as far as San Francisco
where he established a ferry service between the City
and Sausalito. One report suggests that he may have become
a wealthy teenager as he charged $16 per person!
After
hearing that the unsettled north coast offered plentiful
game and fish, Nat sold his ferry and moved to just slightly
north of present day Elk. He partnered with Francisco
Faria, known as Portuguese Frank, and both later claimed
that they were the first two non-natives to live on the
coast. Nat's color gave the area its name, Cuffy's Cove
"cuffy" was another term for Negro. Moving
further north, by 1852, he was living in a cabin on the
Mendocino Headlands which was later claimed to have been
originally built by a shipwrecked German sailor, William
Kasten. Jerome Ford bought Nat's claim to the cabin for
$100 according to research by Martin Simpson writing for
the Mendocino Historical Research, Inc. Newsletter (No.
54; Winter 2002/2003).
Lumber
was needed to build San Francisco and loggers flooded
into the area. Early logging exploited the huge redwoods
rising above Big River and did not immediately impact
wildlife. The techniques included sawing trees by hand,
pulling out their trunks by oxen, floating them in Big
River and its tributaries, holding them at dams called
booms, and eventually floating them to Big River beach
where they were either hauled to the early mill on the
Mendocino headlands or sawn at the newer mill on Big River
Beach.
Damage
to the ecosystem and the animals dependent on it became
manifest. And damage has continued - some from industrial
logging techniques, some from climatic changes, and some
from local residents who considered themselves - ironically
as it turned out - environmentalists.
Twenty
years ago a few salmon still sought their spawning beds
and the crab that ate remnants of roe and and of the salmon
who fulfilled their destiny could be watched scooting
along the bottom of the estuary. Now, even the few crab
and salmon are almost gone. What happened? The demise
of these resources may well be a result of damage created
to spawning beds by local "salvagers" who pried
and removed prized first growth logs long buried in Big
River's bed. Working out of sight of the State Lands Commission
and the Department of Fish and Game, these "salvagers,"
most likely unintentionally, damaged the river's gravel
beds.
First
White Resident? The Early History of the Land which
is home to the Stanford Inn by the Sea
Nathaniel
Smith may very well have been the first non-Pomo who lived
on what is now the grounds of the Stanford Inn. "I
was the first white man that come to Cuffey's Cove, an'
Portugee Frank was the next un." he told a writer
for the Overland Monthly in 1892. The writer, Meta Hanen,
commented, "It was evident that the word 'white'
was not intended to be facetious, for the bright eyes
that met mine had no twinkle in their depths, and the
mobile lips wore a respectful smile. He probably used
the term in contradistinction to Indian...."
A
popular man, much is known about Nat's exploits and an
extensive record of his life is contained in articles
from The Mendocino Beacon. However the record is
confusing. As noted above some researchers believed him
younger than others. Copies of notes taken at the 1860
census and that for 1870, give his age as 45 and 33 respectively.
Apparently Nat grew younger explaining his two substantially
different birth dates, 1815 and 1837. He died an older
man on March 24th, 1908 (71 or 93?) or perhaps was it
March 21, 1906, another date given?
Regardless
of his age, after selling the cabin on the headlands,
Nat moved to the south shore of Big River's mouth, to
a cabin most likely near or on the site of the red house
at the Stanford Inn by the Sea, on the other side of the
road from Catch A Canoe. Here he raised his young family
and teaming up with Portuguese Frank he provided fresh
game for the loggers who poured into the area.
Nat
and his family would have needed fresh water because the
river was briny. The closest water welling-up to the surface
known today is from the spring which feeds the pond that
can be seen in the 1981 photograph at the bottom of this
page.
Wherever
it was located, the Smith home was near the south side
of the ferry that transported people and their goods across
Big River until the first bridge was completed in 1860.
This bridge was the first of five low bridges which crossed
the river each with a slightly different abutment. Today's
high bridge was built in 1960 to replace the flood prone
lower bridge.
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The
color image taken from the old bridge abutment is
just to the north of the original ferry landing. The
land here is composed of fill and Nat Smith's home
would have been both behind and to the right of the
photographer's position. |

Eventually
the land was cleared south of the ferry landing and became
a site for farming produce and fruit to supply the town.
Who began farming here is not certain, perhaps it was
Nat's wife or perhaps a later resident. In any case, Nat
moved on, living in various places including East Mendocino
where he was reported to have owned a house of prostitution.
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