<h3 class="chapterhead"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIII.</h3>
<p class="hanging">A CALIFORNIA COAL MINE.—​A HARTFORD COAL MINE.—​MYSTERIOUS <SPAN name="corr49" id="corr49"></SPAN>SUBTERRANEAN
CANAL ON THE ISTHMUS.</p>
<p>Some twelve years ago or so, in the early days of Californian
immigration, a curious little business humbug came off about six miles
from Monterey. A United States officer, about the year 1850, was on his
way into the interior on a surveying expedition, with a party of men, a
portable forge, a load of coal, and sundry other articles. At the place
in question, six miles inland, the Lieutenant’s coal wagon “stalled” in
a “tulé” swamp. With true military decision the greater part of the coal
was thrown out to extricate the team, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN></span> not picked up again. The
expedition went on and so did time, and the latter, in his progress, had
some years afterward dried up the tulé swamp. Some enterprising
<SPAN name="corr50" id="corr50"></SPAN>prospectors, with eyes wide open to the nature of things, now espied one
fine morning the lumps of coal, sticking their black noses up out of the
mud. It was a clear case—there was a coal mine there! The happy
discoverers rushed into town. A company was at once organized under the
mining laws of the state of California. The corporators at first kept
the whole matter totally secret except from a few particular friends who
were as a very great favor allowed to buy stock for cash. A “compromise”
was made with the owner of the land, largely to his advantage. When
things had thus been set properly at work, specimens of coal were
publicly exhibited at Monterey. There was a gigantic excitement; shares
went up almost out of sight. Twelve hundred dollars in coin for one
share (par $100) was laughed at. About this time a quiet honest Dutchman
of the vicinity passing along by the “mine” one evening with his cart,
innocently and unconsciously picked up the whole at one single load and
carried it home. Prompt was the discovery of the “sell” by the
stockholders, and voluble and intense, it is said, their profane
expressions of dissatisfaction. But the original discoverers of the mine
vigorously protested that they were “sold” themselves, and that it was
only a case of common misfortune. It is however reported that a number
of persons in Monterey, <i>after</i> the explosion of the speculation,
remembered all about the coal-wagon part of the business, which they
said, the excite<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN></span>ment of the “company” had put entirely out of their
heads.</p>
<p>An equally unfounded but not quite so barefaced humbug came off a good
many years ago in the good old city of Hartford, in Connecticut,
according to the account given me by an old gentleman now deceased, who
was one of the parties interested. This was a coal mine in the State
House yard. It sounds like talking about getting sunbeams out of
cucumbers—but something of the sort certainly took place.</p>
<p>Coal is found among rocks of certain kinds, and not elsewhere. Among
strata of granite or basalt for instance, nobody expects to find coal.
But along with a certain kind of sandstone it may reasonably be
expected. Now the Hartford wiseacres found that tremendously far down
under their city, there was <i>a</i> sort of sandstone, and they were sure
that it was <i>the</i> sort. So they gathered together some money,—there is
a vast deal of <i>that</i> in Hartford, coal or no coal—organized a company,
employed a Mining Superintendent, set up a boring apparatus, and down
went their hole into the ground—an orifice some four or six inches
across. Through the surface stratum of earth it went, and bang it came
against the sandstone. They pounded away, with good courage, and got
some fifties or hundreds of feet further. Indefinable sensations were
aroused in their minds at one time by the coming up among the products
of boring, of some chips of wood. Now wood, shortly coal, they thought.
They might, I imagine, have brought up some pieces of boiled potato or
even of fresh shad, provided it had fallen down first. They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></SPAN></span> dug on
until they got tired, and then they stopped. If they had gone down ten
thousand feet they would have found no coal. Coal is found in the new
red sandstone; but theirs was the old red sandstone, which is a very
fine old stone itself, but in which no coal was ever found, except what
might have been put there on purpose, or possibly some faint
indications. The hole they made, however, as my informant gravely
observed, was left sticking in the ground, and if he is right is to this
day a sort of appendix or tail to the well north-west corner of the
State House Square. So, I suppose, any one who chooses can go and poke
down there after it and satisfy himself about the accuracy of this
account. Such an inquirer ought to find satisfaction, for “truth lies in
the bottom of a well” says the proverb. Yet some ill natured skeptics
have construed this to mean that all will tell lies sometimes, for—as
they accent it, even “Truth <i>lies</i>, at the bottom of a well!”</p>
<p>Still a different sort of business humbug, again, was a wonderful story
which went the rounds about fifteen years ago, and which was cooked up
to help some one or other of the various enterprises for new routes by
Central America to California. This story started, I believe, in the
“New Orleans Courier.” It was, that a French Doctor of Vera Paz in
Guatemala, while making a canal from his estate to the sea, discovered,
away up at the very furthest extremity of the Gulf of Honduras, a vast
ancient canal, two hundred and forty feet wide, seventy feet deep, and
walled in on both sides with gigantic masses of rough cut stone. The
Doctor at once gave up his own trifling modern exca<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN></span>vation, and plunged
into an explanation of this vast ancient one, as zealously as if he were
probing after some uncertain bullet in a poor fellow’s leg. The
monstrous canal carried him in a straight line up the country, to the
south-westward. Some twenty miles or so inland it plunged under a
<i>volcano!</i></p>
<p>But see what a French doctor is made of!</p>
<p>Cutting down the great, old trees that obstructed the entrance, and
procuring a canoe with a crew of Indians, in he went. The canal became a
prodigious tunnel, of the same width and depth of water, and vaulted
three hundred and thirty five feet high in the living rock. Nothing is
said about the bowels of the volcano, so that we must conclude either
that such affairs are not planted so deep as is supposed, or that the
fire-pot of the concern was shoved one side or bridged over by the
canallers, or that the Frenchman had some remarkably good style of Fire
Annihilator, or else that there is some mistake!</p>
<p>Eighteen hours of incessant travel brought our intrepid M.D. safe
through to the Pacific Ocean; during which time, if the maps of that
country are of any authority, he passed under quite a number of
mountains and rivers. The trip was not dark at all, as shafts were sunk
every little way, which lighted up the interior quite well, and then the
volcano gave—or ought to have given—some light inside. Indeed, if the
doctor had only thought of it, I presume he would have noticed double
rows of street gas lamps on each side of the canal! The exclusive right
to use this excellent transit route has not, to my knowledge, been
secured to anybody<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></span> yet. It will be observed that ships as large as the
Great Eastern could easily pass each other in this canal, which renders
it a sure thing for any other vessel unless that shrewd and grasping
fellow the Emperor Louis <SPAN name="corr51" id="corr51"></SPAN>Napoleon, has got hold of this canal and is
keeping it dark for some still darker purposes of his own—as for
instance to run his puppet Maximilian into for refuge, when he is run
out of Mexico—it is therefore still in the market. And my publication
of the facts effectually disposes of the Emperor’s plan of secrecy, of
course.</p>
<hr class="chapbreak" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="chapterhead"><SPAN name="IV_MONEY_MANIAS" id="IV_MONEY_MANIAS"></SPAN>IV. MONEY MANIAS.</h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />