Brand Book Number Seven—The San Diego Corral of the
Westerners.
Edited by Horace L. Dodd. San Diego: San
Diego Corral of the Westerners, 1983. Forword by W. Turrentine Jackson.
Illustrations. Index. Maps. 245 Pages. $35.00
Reviewed by Alexandra Luberski, State Historian, Frontera
Area of the California State Department of Parks and Recreation, and author of a
recent study of Robert W. Waterman.
This compilation of articles and sources is done by a "who's
who" of San Diego County avocationalists and professional historians. They
have contributed over twenty pieces of the Brand Book Number Seven, all built
around the topic "People of the Southwest and Pacific Coast." The book covers a
wide range of topics from popular historical issues such as women in the west to
contemporary artists and illustrators of the west. Major topics include mountain
men, the Mexican heritage, the sea, people of the Yankee period, and medicine
and art. The result is a Brand Book which will stand proudly alongside other
historical works on local and regional history.
The Brand Book Number Seven includes a number of articles
on a wide variety of specialized topics; too large a number to cover
individually in a review. In addition to the articles, the Brand Book also
includes a rich variety of primary materials, which make it of special
value to future historians. One such contribution is Helen Long's selection of
correspondence written by her great-grandmother, Prudenica Vallejo Lopez de
Moreno. These letters reflect the conditions and hardships endured by women and
families in early California, and are immensely informative. Other selections -
the edited reminiscences of Margaret O'Mara Smith (who survived the hazards of
the Oregon Trail) and the Curtis family letters (describing life in the Arizona
Territory in the 1880s) - richly document life on the frontier and provide the
reader with a first hand glimpse of this period in American history.
Other important sources are several selections edited by
Abraham Nasatir from the papers of Rear Admiral Sir George Francis Seymour, and
Estevan de la Torre's recollections of Mexican California,
edited by Robert Michaelis. There are also twentieth century pieces, such as the
logs of the Star of India.
A special bonus of this Brand Book is the beautiful
set of maps. For example, Greta Ezell and cartographer Richard Smith prepared a
map tracing the final route of Sylvester Pattie to California. Elsewhere, Wayne
Bennett's research on J. Ross Browne is complemented by a detailed 1866 map of
Lower California. And finally, by including a collection of maps published by
Godfrey Sykes on his travels through the Southwest at the turn of the century,
Ila Alvarez tantalizes the reader into wanting to learn more about this
eccentric adventurer.
The flaws in Brand Book Number Seven are minimal,
although some readers might find the diversity of subject matter and the wide
range of historical eras somewhat distracting. Also the interpretive skills of
some of the authors are somewhat suspect and perhaps their findings are not
always supported by the primary sources they cite. This book is, nevertheless, a
significant contribution to local and regional history because of its good
articles, selections of sources, graphics, maps and illustrations. Brand
Book Number Seven complements the long-standing tradition of professional
publication by the San Diego Corral of Westerners.