Joaquin Murrieta Carrillo (sometimes misspelled Murieta or Murietta) (c. 1829 – July 25, 1853), also called the Robin Hood of the West or the Robin Hood of El Dorado, was a Mexican figure of disputed historicity. The novel The Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta: The Celebrated California Bandit (1854) by John Rollin Ridge is ostensibly his story.

Joaquin Murrieta
Artist's portrayal of Murrieta
Bornc. 1829
DiedJuly 25, 1853(1853-07-25) (aged 23–24)
Cause of deathGun fight in Mariposa
Resting placeHornitos, California
Other namesThe Robin Hood of El Dorado, The Mexican Robin Hood
Occupation(s)Vaquero, gold miner, outlaw
Known forOutlaw leader during time period of California Gold Rush
SpouseRosa Feliz or Rosita Carmela or Rosita Carmel Feliz

Legends subsequently arose about a notorious outlaw in California during the California Gold Rush of the 1850s, but evidence for a historical Murrieta is scarce. Contemporary documents record testimony in 1852 concerning a minor horse thief of that name.[1] Newspapers reported a bandido named Joaquin, who robbed and killed several people during the same time. A California Ranger named Harry Love was assigned to track down Murrieta and was said to have brought his head in for the bounty.[2]

The popular legend of Joaquin Murrieta was that he was a forty-niner, a gold miner and a vaquero (cowboy) from Sonora. Peace loving, he was driven to revenge after his brother and he were falsely accused of stealing a mule. His brother was hanged and Murrieta was horse-whipped. His young wife was raped, and in one version, she died in Murrieta's arms. Swearing revenge, he hunted down the men who had violated her. He embarked on a short but violent career to kill his Anglo tormentors. The state of California offered a reward up to $5,000 for Murrieta, "dead or alive."

Controversy over his life

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Controversy surrounds the figure of Joaquin Murrieta—who he was, what he did, and many of his life's events. Historian Susan Lee Johnson says:

"So many tales have grown up around Murrieta that it is hard to disentangle the fabulous from the factual. There seems to be a consensus that Anglos drove him from a rich mining claim, and that, in rapid succession, his wife was raped, his half-brother lynched, and Murrieta himself horse-whipped. He may have worked as a monte dealer for a time; then, according to whichever version one accepts, he became either a horse trader and occasional horse thief, or a bandit."[3]

John Rollin Ridge, grandson of Cherokee leader Major Ridge, wrote a dime novel about Murrieta. This fictional account contributed to his legend, especially as it was translated into various European languages. A portion of Ridge's novel was reprinted in 1858 in the California Police Gazette. This story was picked up and subsequently translated into French. The French version was translated into Spanish by Roberto Hyenne, who took Ridge's original story and changed every "Mexican" reference to "Chilean".

Early 20th-century writer Johnston McCulley was said to have based his character Don Diego de la Vega—better known as Zorro in his 1919 novel of that name—on Ridge's 1854 novel about Murrieta.[4][5]

Early life and education

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Most biographical sources hold that Murrieta was born in Hermosillo[3] in the northwestern state of Sonora, Mexico. Historian Frank Forrest Latta wrote Joaquín Murrieta and His Horse Gangs (1980) based on decades of investigation of the Murrieta family in Sonora, California, and Texas. He said that Murrieta was from the Pueblo de Murrieta on the Rancho Tapizuelas, across the Cuchujaqui River (known locally as the Arroyo de [los] Álamos). This was north of Casanate, in the southeast of Sonora and near the Sinaloa border, within what is now the Álamos Municipality, of Sonora.[6]: 127, 153  Murrieta was educated at a school nearby in El Salado.[6]: 199 

1849 migration to California

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Joaquin Murietta (1868) by Charles Christian Nahl

Murrieta reportedly went to California in 1849 to seek his fortune in the California Gold Rush.[3] His older Carrillo stepbrother Joaquin Manuel Carrillo Murrieta, who was already in California, had written him about the discovery of gold and urged him to come. Like many Sonorans, Murrieta and a party including his new wife Rosa Feliz, traveled there across the Altar and Colorado Deserts in 1849. This large family expedition included Joaquin's younger brother (Jesus Murrieta); Jesus Carrillo Murrieta, his other Carrillo stepbrother; three Feliz brothers-in-law (Claudio, Reyes, and Jesus); two Murrieta cousins (Joaquin Juan and Martin Murrieta; four Valenzuela cousins (including Joaquin, Theodoro, and Jesus Valenzuela); two Duarte cousins (Antonio and Manuel); and a few other men from Pueblo de Murrieta or nearby.[6]: 2, 101, 105–06, 126–29, 133–40 

Five Joaquins Gang

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Murrieta encountered prejudice and hostility in the extreme competition of the rough mining camps. While mining for gold, his wife and he were supposedly attacked by American miners jealous of his success.[3] They allegedly beat him and raped his wife. However, the only source for this account was a dime novel, The Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta, written by John Rollin Ridge and published in 1854.[3]

Historian Latta wrote that Murrieta formed a gang, with well-organized bands, one led by himself and the rest led by one or two of his trusted Sonoran relatives. Latta documented that the core of these men had gathered to help Murrieta kill at least six of the Americans who had lynched his stepbrother Jesus Carrillo and whipped him on the false charge of the theft of a mule. The gang began to engage in illegal horse trade with Mexico, using stolen horses and legally captured mustangs. They drove herds of stolen horses from as far north as Contra Costa County, the gold camps of the Sierras, and the Central Valley via the remote La Vereda del Monte trail through the Diablo Range, then south to Sonora for sale.[6]: 77–143 

At other times, the bands robbed and killed miners or American settlers, particularly those returning from the California goldfields.[7][8] The gang is believed to have killed up to 28 Chinese and 13 Anglo-Americans.[9] This figure is based on accounts of their raids in early 1853.

The death of Joaquin Murrieta

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By 1853, the California state legislature listed Murrieta as one of the so-called "Five Joaquins", suspected criminals in a bill passed in May 1853. The legislature authorized hiring for three months a company of 20 California Rangers, veterans of the Mexican War, to hunt down "the five Joaquins, whose names are Joaquin Muriati [sic], Joaquin Ocomorenia, Joaquin Valenzuela, Joaquin Botellier, and Joaquin Carillo, and their banded associates."[10] On May 11, 1853, the governor, John Bigler, signed an act to create the "California State Rangers," to be led by Captain Harry Love (a former Texas Ranger and Mexican War veteran).

 
'The head of Joaquin Murietta not taken - A strange Story - Daily Alta California' 1853

The state paid the California Rangers $150 a month, and promised them a $1,000 governor's reward if they captured the wanted men. On July 25, 1853, a group of rangers encountered a band of armed Mexican men near Arroyo de Cantua on the edge of the Diablo Range near Coalinga. In the confrontation, three of the Mexicans were killed. The rangers claimed one of the dead was Murrieta, and another Manuel Garcia, also known as Three-Fingered Jack, one of his most notorious associates.[8] Two others were captured.[11]

A California Historical Landmark plaque has been installed near Coalinga at the intersection of State Routes 33 and 198 to mark the approximate site of the incident.[12]

As proof of the outlaws' deaths, the Rangers cut off the hand of Three-Fingered Jack, and the alleged head of Murrieta. They preserved these in a jar of alcohol to bring to the authorities to claim their reward.[3][8] Officials displayed the jar of remains in Mariposa County, Stockton,[13] and San Francisco. The rangers took the display throughout California; spectators could pay $1 to see the relics.

Love and his rangers received the $1,000 reward money. In August 1853, an anonymous Los Angeles-based man wrote to the San Francisco Alta California Daily, claiming that Love and his rangers had murdered some innocent Mexican mustang catchers, and bribed people to swear out affidavits as to their identities.[14] On May 28, 1854, the California State Legislature voted to reward the Rangers with another $5,000 (~$133,192 in 2023) for their defeat of Murrieta and his band.[15]

Some 25 years later, myths began to form about Murrieta. In 1879, O. P. Stidger reportedly heard Murrieta's sister say that the displayed head was not her brother's.[16] At around the same time, numerous sightings were reported of Murrieta as a middle-aged man. These were never confirmed. His preserved head was destroyed during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and subsequent fire.

Murrieta's nephew, known as Procopio, became one of California's most notorious bandits of the 1860s and 1870s. He was said to have wanted to exceed the reputation of his uncle.

The Real Zorro

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Murrieta is believed to have inspired the fictional character of Zorro, the lead character in the five-part serial story, The Curse of Capistrano, written by Johnston McCulley, and published in 1919 in a pulp fiction magazine.

For some political activists of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Murrieta has symbolized Mexican resistance against White Anglo-Saxon Protestant domination of California, as Spanish colonists, Native Americans, mixtos, and independent Mexicans were there first. The "Association of Descendants of Joaquin Murrieta" says that Murrieta was not a "gringo eater", but "He wanted to retrieve the part of Mexico that was lost at that time in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo" (after the Mexican-American War).[17]

Representations in media

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"The head of the renowned bandit Joaquin Murrieta to be exhibited...at the Stockton House on August 19, 1853. Ignacio Lisarraga of Sonora has given a sworn statement authenticating the identity of the head"[13]

Joaquin Murrieta has been used frequently as a romantic outlaw figure in novels, stories, and comics, and in films and TV series.

Literature

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  • Joaquin Miller, Songs of the Sierras (1871)
  • Louis Kretschman, Trail Of Vengeance (1977)
  • John Rollin Ridge, The Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta (1854): Parts of this were translated into French and Spanish.
  • Burns, Walter Noble (1932). The Robin Hood of El Dorado. New York: Coward-McCann, Inc.
  • Yellow Bird (John Rollin Ridge), The Life and Adventures of JOAQUIN MURIETA, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1955. With introduction by Joseph Henry Jackson, a reprint of the only known copy of the 1854 original book by John Rollin Ridge.
  • Chilean Nobel laureate Pablo Neruda's play Fulgor y Muerte de Joaquín Murieta, (tr. The Splendor and Death of Joaquin Murieta by Ben Belitt, 1972)
  • Robert Gaillard, L'Homme aux Mains de Cuir (The Man with the Leather Hands) (1963 in French)[18]
  • Isabel Allende, Daughter of Fortune (1999), includes the mythical figure of Murrieta.
  • Alexei Rybnikov and Pavel Grushko's opera, Звезда и смерть Хоакина Мурьеты (Zvezda i smert' Khoakina Mur'etyThe Star and Death of Joaquin Murieta), 1976, is based on Pablo Neruda's play.
  • Sid Fleischman, Bandit's Moon, (1998), children's novel.
  • T. Jefferson Parker's novel L.A. Outlaws (2008), features Murietta as an ancestor of some of the main characters.
  • "The History & Adventures of the Bandit Joaquin Murietta" (2012[19]) a novella by Stanley Moss (b. 1948), retelling the legend of the outlaw intertwined with a memoir
  • "This is a Suit" – a slam poem by Joaquin Zihuatanejo.
  • "The California Trail" by Ralph Compton, a small part in chapters 22 and 23
  • In Sunset Specters by Gary Jonas, the purported head of Joaquin Murrieta was preserved in a jar at Doctor Jordan’s Museum of Horrors in San Francisco in the late-1800s.

Film, radio, and TV

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  • Rawhide, United States CBS TV Series, May 3, 1963, episode "Incident of White Eyes" with Nehemiah Persoff as Domingo, suspected to be Joaquin Murrieta

Comics

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Music

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In the late 20th century a Los Angeles Chicano community center was named Centro Joaquin Murrieta de Aztlan.[33]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Daily Alta California 18 December 1852 – California Digital Newspaper Collection". cdnc.ucr.edu. Retrieved November 15, 2023.
  2. ^ Gordon, Thomas (1983). Joaquin Murieta: Fact, Fiction, and Folklore (Masters thesis). Utah State University, Logan.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Review: Roaring Camp: The Social World of the California Gold Rush", American Scholar, January 1, 2000, p. 142 Vol. 69 No. 1 ISSN 0003-0937.
  4. ^ "The Real Zorro, Unmasked". Desert Magazine. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015.
  5. ^ "El Bandito Joaquin Murrieta". Desert Magazine. December 30, 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d Frank F. Latta, Joaquin Murrueta and His Horse Gangs, Santa Cruz, California: Bear State Books,1980. xv, 685 pages.[ISBN missing]
  7. ^ Latta, Joaquin Murrieta, p. 43 – Note: The author's uncle may have been one of their victims. Samuel N. Latta disappeared after mailing a letter to his wife and daughters from Robinson's Ferry, saying he had sold his gold claim and in a few days was going to Stockton and San Francisco to arrange for his return to Arkansas with $8,000 in gold.
  8. ^ a b c Ron Erskine (March 5, 2004). "Joaquin Murrieta slept here". Morgan Hill Times. Archived from the original on September 26, 2018. Retrieved October 24, 2016.
  9. ^ Peter Mancall; Benjamin Heber-Johnson (2007). Making of the American West: People and Perspectives. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 270. ISBN 978-1851097630.
  10. ^ The Statutes of California passed at the Fourth Session of the Legislature, George Kerr, State Printer, 1853, p. 194 An Act to Create a Company of Rangers
  11. ^ "California State Rangers". California State Military Museum. 1940. Retrieved June 16, 2010.
  12. ^ #344
  13. ^ a b "Head of Joaquin Murrieta". tessa2. lapl.org. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  14. ^ "The Head of Joaquin Murieta not Taken – A Strange Story", Alta California, August 23, 1853, p. 2,
  15. ^ WPA, "California State Rangers: History", 1940, California State Military Museum, accessed August 7, 2011
  16. ^ *The Pioneer, Sat., November 29, 1879.
  17. ^ Bacon, David (December 15, 2001). "Interview with Antonio Rivera Murrieta". Retrieved June 16, 2010.
  18. ^ "L'Homme aux mains de cuir – Livre de Robert Gaillard".
  19. ^ Amazon eBook ASIN B00ATYKW3C
  20. ^ Nugent, Frank S. (March 14, 1936). "Concerning, Among Others, 'Robin Hood of El Dorado,' at the Capitol, and 'Love Before Breakfast.'". NY Times. The New York Times Company. p. 10. ISSN 0362-4331. ProQuest 101952264. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  21. ^ Nevins, Francis M.; Keller, Gary D. (2008). The Cisco Kid: American Hero, Hispanic Roots. Bilingual Press/Editorial Bilingüe. p. 68. ISBN 978-1931010498.
  22. ^ Nash, Jay Robert; Ross, Stanley Ralph (1985). The Motion Picture Guide. Vol. 5. Cinebooks. p. 1618. ISBN 978-0933997059.
  23. ^ Keller, Gary D. (1994). Hispanics and United States Film: An Overview and Handbook. Bilingual Press/Editorial Bilingüe. p. 155. ISBN 978-0927534406.
  24. ^ Green, Paul (2014). Jeffrey Hunter: The Film, Television, Radio and Stage Performances. McFarland Publishing. pp. 112, 114. ISBN 978-0786478682.
  25. ^ Holmes, Martin (December 20, 2018). "'Timeless' Returns to Say Goodbye in an Emotional Series Finale (RECAP)". TV Insider. NTVB Media, Inc. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  26. ^ "Prime Video Reveals the Official Art of "La Cabeza de Joaquin Murrieta"". TheFutonCritic.com. January 10, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023. via press release from Amazon
  27. ^ "La cabeza de Joaquín Murrieta (Serie de TV) (2023)". filmaffinity (in Spanish). Retrieved February 18, 2023.
  28. ^ Cueva, Álvaro. "'La cabeza de Joaquín Murrieta', de Prime Video". Milenio Diario (in Mexican Spanish). Grupo Milenio. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
  29. ^ "Reseña de 'La cabeza de Joaquín Murrieta', nueva serie en Amazon Prime Video". Dallas News (in Spanish). February 16, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
  30. ^ "La Cabeza de Joaquín Murrieta: Alejandro Speitzer y el elenco hablan sobre la serie". GQ.com.mx (in Mexican Spanish). February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
  31. ^ "La Cabeza de Joaquín Murrieta". TVmaze. February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  32. ^ "La Cabeza de Joaquín Murrieta". TheTVDB. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  33. ^ Blaine, John; Baker, Decia, eds. (1973). "Neighborhood Arts Centers". Community Arts of Los Angeles (Report). Los Angeles Community Art Alliance. p. 21. hdl:10139/2728. OCLC 912321031.

Further reading

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  • Yellow Bird (John Rolin Ridge), The Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta, University of Oaklahoma Press, Norman, 1955. With introduction by Joseph Henry Jackson, a reprint of the only known copy of the 1854 original book by John Rolin Ridge.
  • Ridge, John Rolin, The Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta the Celebrated California Bandit. Third Edition, Revised and Enlarged by the Author, F. MacCrellish & Co., San Francisco, 1874. Joaquin Murrieta, pp. 3–40.
  • Jackson, Joseph Henry, Bad Company, The Story of California's Legendary and Actual Stage-Robbers, Bandits, Highwaymen, and Outlaws, from the Fifties to the Eighties. Reprint of the first edition, published in 1939. Bison Books, 1977.
  • 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.
  • Varley, James F., The Legend of Joaquin Murrieta, California,s Gold Rush Bandit, Big Lost River Press, Twin Falls, ID, 1995. Includes the California Gazette, February 21, 1852, Confession of Teodor Vasquez in Appendix A.
  • Paz, Ireneo (1904). Vida y Aventuras del Mas Celebre Bandido Sonorense, Joaquin Murrieta: Sus Grandes Proezas En California (in Spanish) (English translation by Francis P. Belle, Regan Pub. Corp., Chicago, 1925. Republished with introduction and additional translation by Luis Leal as Life and Adventures of the Celebrated Bandit Joaquin Murrieta: His Exploits in the State of California, Arte Publico Press, 1999. ed.). Mexico City.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • John Boessenecker, Gold Dust and Gunsmoke: Tales of Gold Rush Outlaws, Gunfighters, Lawmen, and Vigilantes, Wiley, 1999.
  • Roaring Camp: The Social World of the California Gold Rush. New York: W.W. Norton. 2000. ISBN 978-0393320992.
  • Seacrest, William B., The Man From The Rio Grande: A Biography of Harry Love, Leader of the California Rangers who tracked down Joaquin Murrieta, The Arthur H. Clark Company, Spokane, 2005. Includes a very extensive account of the outlaws career including many quotes drawn from period news sources and personal accounts.
  • Wilson, Lori Lee, The Joaquin Band, The History behind the Legend, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 2011.
  • Iddings, Ray, Joaquin Murrieta, The True Story from News Reports of the Period, Create Space, 2016. Includes military reports and news reports from 1846–1931.
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