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Francis
Ziba Branch was
born in Scipio,
New York, on July 24, 1802. His grandfathers both served
in the Revolutionary War. Branch’s
father died when he was just a toddler, and because his mother was too
poor to support the family, the children were split between relatives for
upbringing. In 1820, at age
18, Francis became a sailor out of Buffalo, New York, working
Great Lakes
boats for about five years.
Early in 1830 Branch found himself in
St. Louis
where he joined a pack train, possibly led by Ceran St. Vrain, headed to Santa Fe.
(In 1830, St. Vrain
partnered with the Bent Brothers to form the Bent & St. Vrain Company.)
The pack train, consisting of 150 men and 82 wagons,
traveled along the Santa Fe Trail, past the future site of Bent’s Fort, which
wouldn’t be constructed until 1833.
In the fall of
1832 Branch joined a fur brigade being formed by William Wolfskill in Santa Fe. Wolfskill was planning to
trap beaver in the Tulare Valley of California. The trip to
California
was filled with hardships. In
November the country through which the men were passing was covered with
deep snow, and for nine grueling days the party broke trail through snow
two to three feet deep. Few
beaver were present to be trapped, and no game was found.
The brigade soon exhausted their supplies, living first on the four
oxen they had left Santa Fe with, followed by the mules and horses. To
the trappers surprise, when they arrived on the lower
Colorado River, they were treated kindly by the Mojave Indians, who by this time had
a reputation for hostility (See Jedediah Smith).
The party was able to trade knives and red cloth for bread, corn,
dried pumpkins and beans.
The Wolfskill
party arrived in the San Bernardino area by February of 1831.
Although these men had endured extreme hardship in their travels,
the path they took would eventually become known as the “Old Spanish Trail” for travel
and trade between Taos/Santa Fe
to
Los Angeles.
In Los Angeles
the Wolfskill party disbanded. The
destitute men were left to return to Santa Fe
or remain in
California
as they choose. Branch had
little more than his rifle and some personal equipment.
With these he was able to successfully hunt sea otter, the furs of
which commanded a high price in the trade with China. He was able to earn a
comfortable living hunting otter for three years.
With sea otter becoming scarce, he became a merchant in Santa Barbara
for a short period of time. In
1835 he married Manuela Carlon with whom he would eventually have eleven
children. In 1836, he joined
the Catholic Church, probably becoming a Mexican citizen at this time.
On April 6, 1837, Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado granted Branch the Rancho Santa Manuela
property in the
San Luis Obispo area, at this time an expanse of wilderness. He
was highly successful as a rancher, and at one time owned 37,000 acres of
land and herds of cattle that peaked at 20,000 head.
In addition to being a successful businessman, Branch was a
civic-minded member of his community.
He was involved in local and County politics, and allowed the use
of a ranch house for a schoolhouse.
Francis Branch
died of bronchitis at his home on May 8, 1874
at the age of 71.
To learn more
about Francis Ziba Branch see the following references:
The Mountain
Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West, Vol. 2,
edited by LeRoy R Hafen, published 1965 by the Arthur H Clark Company.

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