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The
Great Republic of Rough And Ready

By
Arthur Winfield Knight
A one-sentence blurb
in California Travelers
Trivia attracted
my attention: “The
small hamlet (Rough
and Ready) seceded
from the Union in 1850
and
did not legally return
until 1948.”
When I looked at a regional map of California, I discovered the community was
about five miles west of Grass Valley, located on the Rough and Ready Highway.
It seemed unimaginable that a town in California had seceded from the Union ten
years before the Civil War. My wife and I decided to go there to see if we could
find out what had happened and why.
We learned Rough and Ready was founded by Captain A. A. Townsend, a mining engineer
from Wisconsin in 1849, and the town was named after General Zachary Taylor,
nicknamed “Old Rough and Ready,” who’d just become the 12th
President of the United States.
By 1850 most of the miners in the area were southern sympathizers who were opposed
to the idea of California becoming a Union state, but they also objected to a
government-imposed mining tax on all claims.
On April 7th, 1850, the townspeople signed a constitution similar to that of
the United States, and they elected Colonel E.F. Brundage as President. The constitution
was referred to as Brundage’s Manifesto, and read in part: “We deem
it necessary and prudential to withdraw from said Territory (of California) and
from the United States of America to form, peacefully if we can, forcibly if
we must, the Great Republic of Rough and Ready,” but the Republic fizzled
the following 4th of July when Nevada City saloon owners refused to sell liquor
to “foreigners.”
Another town meeting was held, and the citizens of the “Great Republic” thirstily
decided they wanted to rejoin the Union—immediately—so the world’s
smallest nation came to an end in slightly less than three months.
On July 28th, 1851, Rough and Ready became the third town in Nevada County to
establish its own post office, but it was discontinued for about five years during
World War II. When the local citizens reapplied for a post office, old records
revealed the town had never officially rejoined the Union, but the matter was
finally settled and Rough and Ready was welcomed back into the United States
in 1948—almost a century after seceding.
The secession is celebrated the last Sunday in June each year, but you can hear
the Rough and Ready Fruit Jar Pickers every Sunday from 10 a.m. until noon at
the Opry Palace, across the street from the Rough & Ready Market. The band
performs country, bluegrass and gospel songs, and there’s no admission
charge.
The market has been around since 1850, but Barbara and B. J. Joachim purchased
it last year. B. J. had been a contractor in Carlsbad, California for 30 years,
but he’d always dreamt of owning a small country store that would serve
barbecued ribs and tri-tip on the weekends. (The barbecue is held every Friday
and Saturday, from 4 until 8 p.m., during the summer.)
Two trees in Rough and Ready have become legendary. When a large Cork Elm that
had been planted in 1894 died in 1996, the remaining six-foot-tall stump was
turned into a chainsaw carving of a prospector named “Old Bill,” after
the then-owner of the general store.
The other tree, according to a pamphlet published by the chamber of commerce,
was a cottonwood that had been “started by accident in 1851 by the ‘slave
girl’, Caroline Allen.” The pamphlet doesn’t explain why a “slave
girl” was living in Rough and Ready, but it claims the tree, which fell
in 1962, grew after she stuck a cottonwood switch into the ground as she was
tying her pony.
Maria Swindle, who’s lived in Rough and Ready for the past 14 years, told
us a different story. She said the girl was hung from an oak tree in the early
1850s. Given Rough and Ready’s southern sympathies, her version seemed
more credible than the chamber of commerce’s, although I still don’t
know what the girl was doing there, (ironically, the stump from the tree was
turned into a love seat, which now rests on the porch in front of the general
store.) Who knows which story is true? Maybe neither.
As William S. Burroughs observed, “All history is fiction.”
Arthur and Kit Knight live in Yeringtton, Nevada, which is in the Mason Valley,
82 miles southeast of Reno. Kit is the film critic for a newspaper in Napa County,
and Arthur is the film critic for a newspaper in Citrus Heights. Kit is also
the author of a book of poems titled “The Greatest Kisser in the Northern
Hemisphere” (Geronimo Books 2004) and Arthur is the author of “Blue
Skies Falling” (Forge Books 2001), a novel about a film director with a
dying wife.
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