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- Jun 9, 2006
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The Lost Treasure of San Pedro
Our San Pedro Bay gold treasure mystery saga and historical tale of Wells Fargo opens in the âold wild westâ of Los Angeles, California, in the year 1859 with the dawn of a burgeoning economy that had just awakened this once sleepy little pueblo â thanks in part to the rich gold strikes in the mines of the Holcomb Valley, the Mojave Desert, and others eastward through the San Bernardino mountains to the Colorado River.
It also involves the two, tiny, nearby port towns of Wilmington and San Pedro, where two competing stage and freight lines owned by Phineas Banning and John Tomlinson served the harbor ports and the enormous inland dry chaparral-desert area extending as far as 250 miles from the coast where gold mining was the economic base. But their services were minimal at best. They both lacked the ability to handle large commercial freight services, dependable employees and shipping schedules, adequate security measures for the transportation of raw gold ore, and a safe and secure place to house it once it reached the coast, because there was no banking house.
A far more reliable and secure banking house with commercial and transportation services was needed. Wells Fargo and Company fit that bill. They had already created many banking outposts of security, integrity and civility across the western United States. They were also the first in many cases to establish offices where even the US mail wouldnât deliver, making it possible for miners and others to not only exchange raw gold dust and nuggets, but to conduct banking transactions, reliably send and retrieve mail parcels and freight, and meet family, friends and business associates arriving on overland stagecoaches.
After the financial panic of 1855, Wells Fargo and Company, like its major competitors, emerged in a strengthened position. It began to establish a number of new branch banking offices in important western towns such as: Shasta, 1856; Yreka, 1857; Victoria, BC, 1858; and Los Angeles, 1859.
However, the Los Angeles economy around the outset of the Civil War took a sudden nosedive and became so bad that Wells Fargo closed its banking house there in 1862. Only its Express Office and Stage Line operations remained. From late 1862 to early 1866 no major banking house operated in Los Angeles.
Because many of the residents in Southern California were secessionists with sympathetic loyalties to the Confederacy, the US Army established a large seaport garrison at âDrum Barracksâ in Wilmington. From there, the military-escorted Wells Fargo freight wagons moved massive amounts of military supplies inland to Forts Tejon, Mojave, Camp Independence, Yuma and several other small outposts.
On the return trip, the wagons and stages carried large amounts of gold dust to the busy Wells Fargo banking office in Los Angeles. The office also received and housed gold bullion, bars, and raw ore from the rich strikes in the San Bernardino mountains adjacent the Holcomb Valley mines, the central Owenâs Valley, and even the Laguna de la Paz along the Colorado River.
Working out of the bustling Los Angeles Wells & Fargo Express Office were several bonded messengers who were entrusted to carry large amounts of gold, coin, currency, bonds and stocks between that city and San Francisco, both overland and on coastal ships. These long-time trusted couriers were paid $75 dollars a month for their services. Two, Louis Scheslinger and William Ritchie, are involved in this golden story.
Louis Scheslinger was a crafty scoundrel with few honorable character principles. Unbeknownst to Wells Fargo, he had established a lucrative sideline business âas an extortionist and loan shark where he could charge exorbitant interest rates (at 50% and above) to small landowners who could not qualify for a normal bank loan.â He was ruthless and would foreclose on the due date of any outstanding mortgage and immediately seize the land, an act that made him increasingly wealthy and very unpopular. Yet for some reason when Wells Fargo got wind of his actions, they turned a deaf ear to it.
In July of 1862, Scheslinger made a one-year loan of $30,000 dollars to Don Ricardo Vejar. For collateral Vejar put up his extensive Spanish land grant east of Los Angeles. A clause in the mortgage stated âtotal amount due immediately in the event of Vejarâs deathâ. On the morning of April 20, 1863, Vejar was thrown from his horse and instantly killed. Even before his family could bury him, Scheslinger accompanied by two armed thugs arrived at the ranch. He demanded full payment of the thirty grand with interest from his eldest son, Ramon, or âIâll take immediately ownership of the entire ranch.â
Ramon thought the demand âof loan sharkâ Scheslinger was totally unreasonable and without merit, but quickly learned he was deadly serious. He thereupon picked up the mortgage documents and excused himself from the room. After a short wait, the three scoundrels realized he wasnât coming back. Their ears noticed the noisy ranch activities had ceased. As they peered through the ranch house windows to the outside, they noticed the ranch was now completely deserted. Ramon, his family and all the hands â and nearly every animal â had disappeared.
Fearing the worst for their safety, the three rogues with guns drawn discreetly rode off in a big hurry. As they galloped along the dusty trail talking âtrashâ amongst themselves, Scheslinger became increasingly angry and vowed to return with the sheriff and officially take possession of the ranch. As the trio hurriedly, yet cautiously, rode down into a small ravine, a series of gun shots rang out. One of the two accompanying gunmen was instantly killed and the other seriously wounded. Scheslinger somehow managed to escape without a scratch.
A photo of the plaza and Old Plaza Church in Los Angeles taken in 1869, just six years after the Ada Hancock exploded, shows the tumultuous little town of roughly 5,000 residents.
Arriving hot and sweaty in Los Angeles, a stoic Scheslinger reported the ambush to an unsympathetic sheriff who declined to investigate the matter nor take any action against the accused Vejar family. And none was ever taken.
Now fearing for his life and continually looking over his shoulder, Scheslinger began to liquidate his entire mortgage holdings at up to a 50% discount. On the morning of April 27, 1863, he sold the Vejar and several other mortgages to Robert Clark, a Los Angeles financier, who paid him cash. The two met at the Wells Fargo (banking) office and concluded their business transactions there in the lobby. Afterwards, Scheslinger also closed out his personal accounts as well for cash and gold coins. The total amount was said to be just more than $100,000.
Later that same afternoon, Scheslinger was observed having a conversation with his co-worker, William C. Ritchie, in the lobby of the Belle Union Hotel. They were again both seen together outside the Wells Fargo office around 3PM on horseback with filled saddle bags, riding out of town in a southerly direction (toward the Wilmington Docks). Around 4PM, the telegraph between Banningâs Wilmington dock and Los Angeles, twenty miles away, suddenly went dead. Hours later it was discovered the wires had been cut on the south road near the midway point between the two stations.
At around the 4PM time line, the coastal steamship, the SS Senator anchored near Dead Manâs Island in the San Pedro Bay, was making preparations for its 5PM departure to San Francisco. The ship was forced to anchor a couple of miles offshore because its size made it impossible to cross the shallow sand bars in the harbor and reach the Wilmington Dock. Freight and passengers had to be shuttled between the dock and the ship by small shallow draft ferries. One of these was the relatively new ferryboat Ada Hancock.
At a few minutes before 5PM, with 55 passengers and all freight on board, Captain Seeley ordered the bow and stern lines cast off. The Ada Hancock began to slowly pull away from the dock. At that same moment, Scheslinger dashed up on a lathered horse and loudly demanded to get on board. The captain reversed his vessel and Scheslinger was able to jump off his horse and aboard the ship.
A map showing the spot where the Ada Hancock sank in the San Pedro Bay.
The Ada Hancock again moved ever so slowly away from the Wilmington dock and picked up speed. She steered directly across the murky, gray water toward the SS Senator anchored about two miles away. About midway on her short voyage, and at precisely 5PM on the chilly evening of April 27, 1863, the Ada Hancock was disintegrated by a devastating explosion that was heard for miles around. She instantly sank into her watery grave there at the bottom of the silty-muddy San Pedro Bay, leaving only floating debris, bodies and 30 cold, wet, and dazed survivors.
The SS Senator immediately came to the rescue. Its crew quickly lowered its life boats and began to pick up survivors thrashing about in the water. Soldiers from Camp Drum soon joined in. They also heroically rescued survivors and recovered the floating bodies of the dead. Many of the 30 survivors lived through the tragedy because of the quick emergency medical attention provided by the doctors and staff at the military hospital. A few of the
uninjured ones taken aboard the SS Senator stayed on and made the trip to San Francisco.
Word of the Ada Hancock disaster did not reach Los Angeles for more than four hours as the telegraph wires had been cut earlier that afternoon. When word did and the story was finalized, it was learned that many of the 26 who perished were prominent well-known community leaders. Los Angeles was both shocked and stricken by the senseless loss of life.
Counted among the dead was William Sanford, Phineas Banningâs father-in-law, a major player in California transportation. He led the first commercial wagon train in 1859 from San Pedro to Salt Lake City, UT, with 15 wagons carrying 50,000 pounds of merchandise, each drawn by 10 mules. He was also with the group who scouted the 1861 route and built the first road east from the Cajon Pass to Holcomb Valley. In July of 1861, he personally hauled the first 8,000-pound Mellus stamp mill boiler over the new road to an ore mining and refining camp in the Holcomb Valley.
Benjamin D. Wilson, pioneer of pioneers who discovered and named Bear Valley (in the San Bernardino Mountains above Lake Arrowhead) was also on board the ill-fated ferry with his daughter, Sue, and his wifeâs sister, Medora Hereford, were both seriously injured. Medora, who was seriously burned over more than 70% of her body, died of infection in the Camp Drum hospital in Wilmington three months later. Wilson was already depressed by the Civil War and the recent death of another daughter, Maggie. The death of Medora and the long recovery proved too much for him. He could barely function. His insanity drove him to kill himself shortly after Medoraâs death.
The Disaster Aftermath
News wire reports surrounding the loss of the ferry Ada Hancock in San Pedro Bay went out as soon as possible to newspapers throughout California, just hours after the disaster. Bold typeface headlines in San Francisco, Sacramento, and a multitude of other California and Nevada newspapers reported the story as follows:
Source: Wells Fargo
â$100,000 in gold and silver reserves stolen from Los Angeles Wells Fargo Office,â
âVast gold and silver treasure lost in San Pedro Bay ship disaster,â
â$125,000 in missing funds entrusted to Wells Fargo Agent Ritchie for transportation to San Francisco,â
âVast golden treasure mysteriously vanishes which was secretly brought aboard anchored San Pedro Bay Hancock ferry in three medal boxes containing 700 ounces of gold, coin, bars and dust (a cool near three quarters of a million dollars worth by todayâs market value). Wells Fargo investigates loss,â
âWells Fargo messenger killed. Fierce gun battle breaks out aboard ship. Explosion sinks Hancock. Foul play suspected in $100,000 gold theft,â and âMurder mystery surrounds Wells Fargo agent and loss of $100,000 in gold aboard ship.â
The day after the Ada Hancock disaster, a newspaper headline reported:
âWells Fargo agents discover Messenger Ritchie took not only the authorized $25,000 in gold for transport to San Francisco, but the entire reserve of $100,000,â [Note: This led some newspaper stories to report the total gold loss at $125,000 dollars.]
âFallout among conspirators leads to double-cross, a shoot out and explosion aboard ship carrying vast amount of gold,â
âPlot thickens in Wells Fargo robbery and murder investigation of Hancock sinking.â
Three days later San Francisco newspaper headlines read:
âBody of Wells Fargo Messenger Ritchie washes ashore three days after Hancock disaster.Whereabouts of missing gold treasure unknown.â
The Official Investigation
In the investigation which quickly followed the Ada Hancock disaster, Well Fargo agents who interviewed survivors recorded that many reported âgunshots had been firedâ on board the ferry just before the horrific explosion took place. There were conflicting reports as to whom was involved here, though some did recall seeing both Ritchie and Scheslinger with a couple of other men on the ship. Neither Ritchieâs body nor that of Scheslinger was not found among the dead, which was strange.
Wells Fargo agent interviews with the freight loading crew added yet another strange twist to the growing intrigue surrounding this case. Two of them recalled and insisted that when Ritchie arrived at the dock in the late afternoon, âhe unloaded not one, but a total of three heavy metal boxes which were placed on the deck of the Ada Hancock next to several barrels of gun powder.â
Public speculation and rumors ran rampant that âthe two had somehow conspired together to steal the three boxes of goldâŚ(then) managed to mysteriously make it off the ship alive carrying the heavy metal boxesâŚand tried to cover up the theft by blowing up the ferryâŚâ
This widespread public theory was the talk of the town and the telegraph. When Ritchieâs body mysteriously washed ashore near Banningâs Dock three days after the disaster, rumors became fact. They quickly surmised and spread the word that Ritchie and Scheslinger were partners in the theft of gold coin and bullion from the Los Angeles Wells Fargo bank office, and that Ritchie at the last minute had tried a double-cross which resulted in a gun battle on board the Ada Hancock and caused the ensuing disaster.
Oddly enough, the water bloated and intact corpse of Ritchie showed no signs that it had been in an explosion and in fact was still wearing his favorite gun holster, but the weapon was missing! The body of Scheslinger was never found at the time, which only added more fuel to the mystery fires of intrigue surrounding what was reported âas the largest gold theft of the time from Wells Fargo.â
Subsequently, Wells Fargo investigators in possession of all the facts concluded otherwise: ââŚalthough in all probability a gun blast did trigger the explosion which resulted in the destruction of the ferry, there is no corroborative evidence to support the claim of a gun battle between the two took place on board the ferry nor the fact the Messenger Ritchie carried more than one metal box aboard the ferry containing less than $500 dollars in coin and 52 ounces of gold dustâŚâ
Did the supposed mysterious gun battle between Ritchie and Scheslinger actually take place, or is it just another of the tales spun to add spice, mystery, and intrigue to the unfortunate explosion which sank the Ada Hancock? And furthermore, is there any truth to the story that a fortune in Wells Fargo gold bullion and gold coin was even involved here? Or, it is another exaggerated legendary tale of the old west? And, what about the missing body of Scheslinger?
For more on this story follow the link
http://www.coinweek.com/news/a-gold...edro-bay-or-just-another-tale-of-wells-fargo/
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