John Augustus Sutter

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John Augustus Sutter

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

John Augustus Sutter 1803-80, American pioneer, b. Kandern, Baden, of Swiss parents. His original name was Johann August Suter. He emigrated to the United States in 1834, went to St. Louis, then to Santa Fe. Fired with a desire to go to the Pacific coast, he went to the Oregon country and entered the coast trade in the Northwest, going to the Hawaiian Islands, to Sitka, Alaska, and finally (1839) to California. He settled in the Sacramento valley and obtained large grants of land from the Mexican governor of California. There he established his colony, known as New Helvetia, and built Sutter's Fort (see Sacramento ). Rich and powerful, Sutter helped many newcomers to California. In 1848, James W. Marshall found gold while building a sawmill on Sutter's land. The news spread, and gold-mad crowds poured across the continent in the rush of 1849. They killed Sutter's cattle and swarmed over his lands hunting for gold. He struggled against them in vain, and moved E to Pennsylvania, a ruined man, in 1873. He had earlier been granted a pension from California, and to the end he hoped that the U.S. Congress would reimburse him for his losses.

Bibliography: See Sutter's New Helvetia Diary (1939) and his Statement regarding Early California Experiences (ed. by A. Ottley, 1943); see also biographies by J. P. Zollinger (1939, repr. 1967) and R. H. Dillon (1967).

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Sutter, John Augustus (Johann August Sutter)

The Oxford Companion to American Literature | 1995 | | © The Oxford Companion to American Literature 1995, originally published by Oxford University Press 1995. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Sutter, John Augustus (Johann August Sutter) (1803–80),Swiss adventurer and colonist, settled in California (1839) as proprietor of the wealthy New Helvetia Colony, protected by Sutter's Fort (Sacramento). When gold was discovered on the site of his sawmill, on the south fork of the American River at Coloma, by his partner James W. Marshall (Jan. 22, 1848) the influx of miners ruined his property, and as a result he died in poverty. His Diary, first published in the San Francisco Argonaut (1878), was republished in 1932, and his New Helvetia Diary (Sept. 1845–May 1848) was published in 1939.

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James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Sutter, John Augustus (Johann August Sutter)." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. 23 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Sutter, John Augustus (Johann August Sutter)." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. (December 23, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-SutterJohngstsJhnngstSttr.html

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Sutter, John Augustus (Johann August Sutter)." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Retrieved December 23, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-SutterJohngstsJhnngstSttr.html

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John Augustus Sutter

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

John Augustus Sutter

John Augustus Sutter (1803-1880), German-born American adventurer and colonizer, is generally regarded as one of the founding fathers of California.

Born in Kandern, Baden, on Feb. 15, 1803, Johann August Sutter (as he spelled the name before he Anglicized it) grew to manhood at Rünenberg, Switzerland. He possibly attended a military academy there, and he served in the army. He married in 1826, but after failing in business he emigrated to the United States in 1834.

Sutter settled at St. Charles, Mo., where he became a trader. Twice he made unsuccessful trading trips to New Mexico. He left Missouri in 1838, one jump ahead of his creditors. From Oregon he sailed to Honolulu and to Alaska, arriving in San Francisco in July 1839. He received a land grant from the Mexican governor of California of approximately 50, 000 acres, which he decided to locate at the junction of two rivers in northern California. Employing former mission Native Americans, he cleared land, dug irrigation ditches, planted crops, and erected a fortified post. Soon he was growing wheat, ranching, milling, mining, fur trading, salmon fishing, and shipping. He predicted that California's greatness lay in agriculture and commerce.

Sutter became a Mexican citizen in 1841, and his wife and child joined him at what came to be known as Sutter's Fort. Short, heavy, and bald, except for a fringe of gray hair, he proved a genial, expansive host to Americans arriving in Mexican California. His fort became the focal point of the Bear Flag Revolution, which quickly merged into the Mexican War and ended with California in the hands of the United States. Sutter was a delegate at the constitutional convention of 1849 and a candidate for governor in the first election following statehood.

In January 1848 one of Sutter's employees discovered gold on Sutter's property. This triggered the famous gold rush of 1849, during which Sutter's employees deserted him, his herds disappeared, his fields fell into ruin, and his lands were overrun by squatters searching for gold. He began drinking heavily and by 1852 was bankrupt. Even when the Federal courts upheld his Mexican land grant, he could not afford the court costs to recover it and was left almost penniless. The state of California paid him a pension of $250 per month from 1864 to 1878. He moved to Lititz, Pa., in 1873 but spent his winters in Washington, D.C., pushing a petition in Congress for his relief. He died in Washington on June 18, 1880, still awaiting passage of his bill.

Further Reading

The Diary of Johann August Sutter (1932) contains good autobiographical detail. An early and somewhat derogatory biography is Thomas J. Schoonover, The Life and Times of Gen. John A. Sutter (1895), while Julian Dana, Sutter of California (1936), is eulogistic. A balanced treatment is Richard Dillon, Fool's Gold: The Decline and Fall of Captain John Sutter of California (1967). See also Oscar Lewis, Sutter's Fort: Gateway to the Gold Fields (1966).

Additional Sources

Dana, Julian, Sutter of California; a biography, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1974.

Dillon, Richard H., Fool's gold: the decline and fall of Captain John Sutter of California, Santa Cruz: Western Tanager, 1981.

John A. Sutter's last days: the Bidwell letters, Sacramento: Sacramento Book Collectors Club, 1986.

John Sutter and a wider West, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1994.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Stamp to Pay Tribute to California's Great Gold Rush.
Business Wire; 11/11/1998

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Blaise Cendrars. Gold: The Marvellous History of General John Augustus Sutter.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Review of Contemporary Fiction; 6/22/2005; ; 673 words ; ...The Marvellous History of General John Augustus Sutter. Trans. Nina Rootes. Peter Owen...Cendrars transforms the historical Sutter, on whose California property...to wrest money out of his land. Sutter left the Old World to make his...
John Sutter's story
Magazine article from: Humanities; 1/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...1834 AT THE AGE OF THIRTY-ONE, JOHN AUGUSTUS SUTTER left Switzerland for New York...from Governor Alvarado. There Sutter built a fort with wheat fields...Hawaiian, and Mexican servants. Sutter was famously hospitable to American...
Lititz, in Pennsylvania Dutch country, has real small-town charm. (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 2/13/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...followers of the heretic John Huss were given sanctuary...under the name General Sutter Inn. Ironically, the...Lititz, Gen. Johann Augustus Sutter, spent most of his lifetime...the town regulations. Sutter was a Swiss shopkeeper...
City Nixes Naming Street After Pioneer
News Wire article from: AP Online; 5/5/2004; 292 words ; ...voted down an effort to rename Sutter Place, turning aside arguments...testimony from critics who said John Augustus Sutter abused and enslaved Indians. Councilman...council in 1998 had voted to drop Sutter's name from the street, but...
Stamp to Pay Tribute to California's Great Gold Rush.
Business Wire; 11/11/1998; 570 words ; ...unveiling will occur at Sutter's Fort in Sacramento...featuring a painting by artist John Berkey, will be dedicated...99 in Old Sacramento. John Berkey's painting captures...Fort was built by Captain John Augustus Sutter, and remains today...
Strike it rich at Gold Rush regional. (Photographic Society of America Gold Rush chapter meeting, Jun 10-13, 1993, Sacramento, California; includes program information, registration forms and photo tour opportunities)
Magazine article from: PSA Journal; 3/1/1993; ; 700+ words ; ...to 4:30 p.m. for this first tour of Sutter's Fort, the Capitol, Old Sacramento...to tell you about it! Betty and Dick: Sutter's Fort Historical Park Swiss immigrant John Augustus Sutter came to California in 1839 with dreams...
GOLD RUSH PHOTOS ON DISPLAY
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 11/1/1998; 691 words ; ...the first nugget found in 1848 at Sutter's Mill, east of Sacramento...still Mexican soil. It belonged to John Augustus Sutter, who owned the land. Photos still...James Woodhouse Audubon, son of John James Audubon, the great painter...
California gold rush got photo coverage, 150 years ago
News Wire article from: AP Online; 10/31/1998; ; 681 words ; ...the first nugget found in 1848 at Sutter's Mill, east of Sacramento...still Mexican soil. It belonged to John Augustus Sutter, who owned the land. Photos still...James Woodhouse Audubon, son of John James Audubon, the great painter...
Lititz planning for 250th anniversary
Newspaper article from: Intelligencer Journal Lancaster, PA; 6/29/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...Holly Ball, Dec. 16, General Sutter Inn. There will also be a 250th...on Lititz, such as the story of John George Klein and Count Nicolaus...pretzel bakery in 1861, Gen. John Augustus Sutter moving to Lititz in the 1870s to...
Culture: Schmit's talon to entertain; As the Eagles fly in to the Birmingham NIA for tomorrow's show, John Whishaw talks to bass guitarist Timothy B Schmit, who has just released his fourth solo album.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 6/14/2001; 700+ words ; Byline: John Whishaw In the summer of 1839, Captain John Augustus Sutter, a naturalised American citizen, sails up the Sacramento...Buffett, Bob Seger, Crosby Stills and Nash, Elton John and even Spinal Tap. Everything is going swimmingly...

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