La Vereda del Monte was used by mesteñeros and horse thieves most notably by
Joaquin Murrieta's
Five Joaquins Gang as a route for driving mustangs and stolen horses from
Contra Costa County and the upper
Central Valley southward toward Mexico, unobserved by authorities.[3] Murrieta was reportedly killed by
California Rangers at the
Arroyo de Cantua, after they had found and followed the Vereda to his gathering place there on the trail where he and his gang held and organized their horse herd for the drive to Sonora.[1]
Stations Along The Route Of La Vereda del Monte
Estación primero, Located in
Contra Costa County northwest of
Point of Timber on
Arroyo del Sur,[6] was the uppermost of the gathering points of mustangs for the drove down the Vereda del Monte to Cantua Creek.[3]: 431
Estación segundo:
Las Tinajas, 37°46′13″N121°41′40″W / 37.77028°N 121.69444°W / 37.77028; -121.69444, a watering place and corral with a supply of relief saddle horses, and occasional captured mustangs to add to the drove. The location is at large outcrops of
Vaqueros Sandstone, called Murrieta Rocks, about a mile northeast of
Brushy Peak[7] just within the southern bounds of the
Rancho Cañada de los Vaqueros. From the east the outcrop overlooks a spring in an eastern tributary arroyo to the upper
Kellogg Creek that flows down from Brushy Peak. The original name Las Tinajas, (The Jars), refers to the waterholes to be found eroded into the sandstone on top of the outcrops.[3]: 431
Estación tercero: Located along
Crane Ridge,[5] at a waterhole in the
Arroyo Mocho, in the vicinity of
Mud Springs.[8] Fresh saddle horses were stationed here. Between droves the band gathered in horses from the plain beyond
Corral Hollow at
La Centinela for the next drove.[9] The arroyo was named Mocho after the nickname of the custodian of this and the next station near the source of the arroyo.[3]: 431
Estación cuarto:
Valle de Mocho,[10] 1st overnight stop in what is now known as Blackbird Valley, south of
Mount Mocho.[11] Horses captured on the plain to the east opposite
Lone Tree,[12]Hospital,[13]Kern[14] and
Ingram Canyons[15] were brought here for the drove as well as horses from the lower
Santa Clara Valley as far up the east bay side as the
Rancho San Antonio (Peralta) and
Rancho San Leandro. The Valle de Mocho was named after the man in charge of the station,
Avalino Martínez, known by his nickname as "Mocho," (meaning cut off or short) for his diminutive four feet, four inch, stature. The Arroyo Mocho, and the nearby peak, Mount Mocho is also named after him.[3]: 431
Estación sexto (alternate):
Valle Atravesado, (Crossed Valley),37°11′51″N121°25′06″W / 37.19750°N 121.41833°W / 37.19750; -121.41833, so named because it lay across the path of the north-south trending Vereda in an east west direction, was an alternative to Valle Hondo as an overnight camp with a brush corral for the drove if it was slowed while driven from Valle de Mocho to Valle Hondo. Valle Atravesado has been subsequently dammed in the 20th century on its south side and is now a reservoir on the upper reach of
Mississippi Creek and is now called
Mississippi Lake.[17][3]: 433, 443 [18]
Estación sexto:
Valle Hondo (Deep Valley) a former rancheria below the Vereda on
North Fork Pacheco Creek, was an overnight camp with a brush corral. Valle Atravesado was the alternative overnight spot if Valle Hondo could not be reached. From either location the drove then added in horses taken from Arroyos
Orestimba,
Garzas and
Mesteño that had been held at either
Estación Paraiso[19] or at
Mustang Flat.[20] They were added into the drove where the Vereda passed north of
Mustang Peak.[21][3]: 433, 445
Estación séptimo:
Estación Romero,[22] gathered in horses captured opposite Arroyos
Quinto,
Romero,
San Luis Gonzaga and
Alamos. This station was a major hangout for the gang, and it had a brush and pole corral for the holding of stolen horses nearby in
Bull Heads Canyon[23] that were added into the drove at early daylight.[3]: 433, 446
Pacheco Pass was where La Vereda crossed over the trail through this pass at the head of
Pacheco Creek, to the west of its summit. This trail over the Diablo Range, between the coastal valleys and the San Joaquin Valley, was steep and rugged and not heavily traveled until 1857 when a wagon road with a lesser grade than the old trail was built over it.
Frenchs Flat a holding corral for horses to be picked up by the droves, here where the Vereda passed, five miles south of Pacheco Pass.[24][3]: 446, 450–452
Deposito:
Rancho de Cantua,[29] on
Arroyo Grande (Arroyo de Cantua). The rancho of the Cantua brothers, used to gather and brand and organize the gang's droves of horses. Location of an adobe building, used as a warehouse for the gang.[3]: 122, 142, 402,
Murrieta Spring a historic spring flowing from the south bank of Cantua Creek, about 100 yards above where
El Camino Viejo crossed the Creek in the San Joaquin Valley. The Spring formed a pool in the arroyo where it emerged from the foot of the western mountains southwest of the Rancho de Cantua. This is where
Harry Love and his detachment of
California Rangers found the gang at the spring and attacked them on July 25, 1853.[3]: 520
Joaquin Rocks Also known by the name "Tres Piedras" meaning "three rocks".[31] It was a lookout, a meeting place and campsite for the gang and its leaders, and also sometimes the route of droves of horses being sent to Sonora.
Joaquin Spring This spring below Joaquin Rocks to the west along Joaquin Ridge was originally known as Valenzuela Spring until about 1950.[32] This original name probably commemorates
Joaquin Valenzuela, one of the Joaquins of the Five Joaquins Gang, leader in charge of the Gang's horse trade to Sonora, and one of the men said to have been killed in the battle of the Cantua at Murrieta Spring.[3]: 134, 547, 572, 574, 608, 612, 647 The spring, located in a mountainside meadow, would also supply water and grazing for droves of horses.[32]
Frank F. Latta, JOAQUIN MURRIETA AND HIS HORSE GANGS, Bear State Books, Santa Cruz, California. 1980. xv,685 pages. Illustrated with numerous photos. Index. Photographic front endpapers. Latta devoted chapter eight of this work to the Vereda del Monte.
La Vereda del Monte was used by mesteñeros and horse thieves most notably by
Joaquin Murrieta's
Five Joaquins Gang as a route for driving mustangs and stolen horses from
Contra Costa County and the upper
Central Valley southward toward Mexico, unobserved by authorities.[3] Murrieta was reportedly killed by
California Rangers at the
Arroyo de Cantua, after they had found and followed the Vereda to his gathering place there on the trail where he and his gang held and organized their horse herd for the drive to Sonora.[1]
Stations Along The Route Of La Vereda del Monte
Estación primero, Located in
Contra Costa County northwest of
Point of Timber on
Arroyo del Sur,[6] was the uppermost of the gathering points of mustangs for the drove down the Vereda del Monte to Cantua Creek.[3]: 431
Estación segundo:
Las Tinajas, 37°46′13″N121°41′40″W / 37.77028°N 121.69444°W / 37.77028; -121.69444, a watering place and corral with a supply of relief saddle horses, and occasional captured mustangs to add to the drove. The location is at large outcrops of
Vaqueros Sandstone, called Murrieta Rocks, about a mile northeast of
Brushy Peak[7] just within the southern bounds of the
Rancho Cañada de los Vaqueros. From the east the outcrop overlooks a spring in an eastern tributary arroyo to the upper
Kellogg Creek that flows down from Brushy Peak. The original name Las Tinajas, (The Jars), refers to the waterholes to be found eroded into the sandstone on top of the outcrops.[3]: 431
Estación tercero: Located along
Crane Ridge,[5] at a waterhole in the
Arroyo Mocho, in the vicinity of
Mud Springs.[8] Fresh saddle horses were stationed here. Between droves the band gathered in horses from the plain beyond
Corral Hollow at
La Centinela for the next drove.[9] The arroyo was named Mocho after the nickname of the custodian of this and the next station near the source of the arroyo.[3]: 431
Estación cuarto:
Valle de Mocho,[10] 1st overnight stop in what is now known as Blackbird Valley, south of
Mount Mocho.[11] Horses captured on the plain to the east opposite
Lone Tree,[12]Hospital,[13]Kern[14] and
Ingram Canyons[15] were brought here for the drove as well as horses from the lower
Santa Clara Valley as far up the east bay side as the
Rancho San Antonio (Peralta) and
Rancho San Leandro. The Valle de Mocho was named after the man in charge of the station,
Avalino Martínez, known by his nickname as "Mocho," (meaning cut off or short) for his diminutive four feet, four inch, stature. The Arroyo Mocho, and the nearby peak, Mount Mocho is also named after him.[3]: 431
Estación sexto (alternate):
Valle Atravesado, (Crossed Valley),37°11′51″N121°25′06″W / 37.19750°N 121.41833°W / 37.19750; -121.41833, so named because it lay across the path of the north-south trending Vereda in an east west direction, was an alternative to Valle Hondo as an overnight camp with a brush corral for the drove if it was slowed while driven from Valle de Mocho to Valle Hondo. Valle Atravesado has been subsequently dammed in the 20th century on its south side and is now a reservoir on the upper reach of
Mississippi Creek and is now called
Mississippi Lake.[17][3]: 433, 443 [18]
Estación sexto:
Valle Hondo (Deep Valley) a former rancheria below the Vereda on
North Fork Pacheco Creek, was an overnight camp with a brush corral. Valle Atravesado was the alternative overnight spot if Valle Hondo could not be reached. From either location the drove then added in horses taken from Arroyos
Orestimba,
Garzas and
Mesteño that had been held at either
Estación Paraiso[19] or at
Mustang Flat.[20] They were added into the drove where the Vereda passed north of
Mustang Peak.[21][3]: 433, 445
Estación séptimo:
Estación Romero,[22] gathered in horses captured opposite Arroyos
Quinto,
Romero,
San Luis Gonzaga and
Alamos. This station was a major hangout for the gang, and it had a brush and pole corral for the holding of stolen horses nearby in
Bull Heads Canyon[23] that were added into the drove at early daylight.[3]: 433, 446
Pacheco Pass was where La Vereda crossed over the trail through this pass at the head of
Pacheco Creek, to the west of its summit. This trail over the Diablo Range, between the coastal valleys and the San Joaquin Valley, was steep and rugged and not heavily traveled until 1857 when a wagon road with a lesser grade than the old trail was built over it.
Frenchs Flat a holding corral for horses to be picked up by the droves, here where the Vereda passed, five miles south of Pacheco Pass.[24][3]: 446, 450–452
Deposito:
Rancho de Cantua,[29] on
Arroyo Grande (Arroyo de Cantua). The rancho of the Cantua brothers, used to gather and brand and organize the gang's droves of horses. Location of an adobe building, used as a warehouse for the gang.[3]: 122, 142, 402,
Murrieta Spring a historic spring flowing from the south bank of Cantua Creek, about 100 yards above where
El Camino Viejo crossed the Creek in the San Joaquin Valley. The Spring formed a pool in the arroyo where it emerged from the foot of the western mountains southwest of the Rancho de Cantua. This is where
Harry Love and his detachment of
California Rangers found the gang at the spring and attacked them on July 25, 1853.[3]: 520
Joaquin Rocks Also known by the name "Tres Piedras" meaning "three rocks".[31] It was a lookout, a meeting place and campsite for the gang and its leaders, and also sometimes the route of droves of horses being sent to Sonora.
Joaquin Spring This spring below Joaquin Rocks to the west along Joaquin Ridge was originally known as Valenzuela Spring until about 1950.[32] This original name probably commemorates
Joaquin Valenzuela, one of the Joaquins of the Five Joaquins Gang, leader in charge of the Gang's horse trade to Sonora, and one of the men said to have been killed in the battle of the Cantua at Murrieta Spring.[3]: 134, 547, 572, 574, 608, 612, 647 The spring, located in a mountainside meadow, would also supply water and grazing for droves of horses.[32]
Frank F. Latta, JOAQUIN MURRIETA AND HIS HORSE GANGS, Bear State Books, Santa Cruz, California. 1980. xv,685 pages. Illustrated with numerous photos. Index. Photographic front endpapers. Latta devoted chapter eight of this work to the Vereda del Monte.