Joining the California Gold Rush, Shaw left New Orleans aboard the merchant steamer Isthmus, on April 21, 1849.[6] After crossing the Isthmus of Panama, he booked passage on the Dutch bark, Alexander von Humboldt,[6][7] which left Panama on May 20, 1849. Becalmed for five weeks, they reached Acapulco July 6 where the passengers forced the owners off the boat[8] due to poor provisioning and overcrowding.[9] After more than three months voyage, the ship finally arrived in San Francisco, August 30, 1849[1] and was sold for $17,000 to satisfy the passengers' lien against the owners.[10] One of the other passengers, Collis P. Huntington, formed an association of the 365 survivors of the 102-day passage, called "The Society of the Humboldter." Huntington sponsored reunions and at least one commemorative poster; the last four members met on August 30, 1899.[11]
Contrary to at least one published report,[1] neither ships' manifest lists Shaw's brother Seth Shaw[6] who was elsewhere reported to have crossed the country overland in 1850.[2] Huntington, a large group of fellow passengers, and Stephen Shaw immediately went to the gold mines at Mormon Island[2] for about six months, then Shaw moved to Sacramento for February and March 1850,[3] where he met future judge Edwin B. Crocker, brother of railroad baron Charles Crocker, for whom he would paint more than 25 portraits of notable Californians.[1]
1841 announcement of a Writing Academy opened by S. W. Shaw in Wooster, Ohio.[12]
1842 Wooster Democrat newspaper ad by S. W. Shaw to execute portraits in crayon.[13]
Discovery of Humboldt Bay
In the early part of March 1850, Shaw left San Francisco on the schooner Laura Virginia, under Captain Douglas Ottenger.[5] At anchor near Trinidad, California on April 7, expedition director E.H. Howard selected Shaw and four others to go ashore at Trinidad Bay to locate the entrance to Humboldt Bay from shore. The six men walked down the beach, were ferried across the Mad River by Indians, and camped for the night on the spit north of the entrance to Humboldt Bay. The next day, the shore party walked back to Trinidad and was picked up by the Laura Virginia.[14]
On April 9, 1850, second mate Hans Henry Buhne piloted the first landing craft over the bar and into Humboldt Bay. Later that same day, two more boatloads of passengers and supplies were landed.[15] On April 14, Buhne piloted the Laura Virginia over the bar and into the bay near the tents of the shore party.[16] Shaw sketched the first views of the bay[1] and insisted the bay be named honoring Prussian naturalist Alexander von Humboldt.[14][17] On April 26, 1850, the San Francisco Daily Journal of Commerce published a wood engraving based on his sketches of Humboldt Bay.[1] Shaw returned to San Francisco on the steamer Sea Gull April 5, 1851.[18]
In 1851, Shaw spent much of the year with John Augustus Sutter at Hock Farm on the Feather River as the family portrait painter[19] and general business agent.[2] Following a brief engagement to Sutter's daughter, Ann "Eliza" Sutter (1828 – March 1895),[20] Shaw returned to San Francisco,[2] and later in 1852, with his brother Seth Shaw and Willard Allen, settled on Table Bluff, near Loleta.[21]
In summer 1852, they moved across the Eel River and began clearing the area where the town of Ferndale, California, would later be incorporated.[22] In the rainy winter of 1852–1853, twelve men, including Seth Kinman, stayed with the Shaws because theirs was the most finished cabin.[23] Shaw spent the next two years coaxing plants to grow in the cold coastal fog.[24] Around 1852, he painted the portrait of Wiyot elder Kiwelattah (or Ki-we-lah-tah).[1][25] Finally, with little to show for his labors,[24] Shaw returned to San Francisco in 1854 and later sold his claim to Ferndale settler Francis Francis, in 1856.[19][21]
San Francisco portrait painter
Shaw moved quickly in the big city, setting up studio,[3] joining the Mason's California Lodge No. 1 in San Francisco June 1, 1854[2] and painting more than 200 portraits of Masonic Officers,[1] possibly from photographs. Shaw took first prize for best portrait in oils at the 1860 California State Fair.[26]
On April 18, 1861, Shaw married Mary Frances Meacham at the First Unitarian Church in San Francisco.[28] Shaw grew grapes and is credited with introducing wine grape cultivation to Sonoma County.[29] The Shaws had two children before Mary died October 2, 1866.[30] Shaw spent 1871 abroad[2] and married Lucretia Swain of Nantucket, Massachusetts[31] August 12, 1873, on his return to San Francisco.[32]
Shaw died February 14, 1900, in San Francisco,[33] memorialized in an obituary in the San Francisco Examiner, 16 February 1900.[1]
^Sutter, John Augustus (January 10, 1852). "Letter to Richard M. Kern". manuscript. HM 20647, The Huntington Library.
^ abRohde, Jerry (July 6, 2023). Greenson, Thadeus (ed.). "Whites Come to the South Side of the Lower Eel". The Ferndale Enterprise. Eureka, California: Melissa Sanderson, North Coast Journal. p. 10.
^Parry, M. A. (1963). The History of Loleta. Arcata, California: Humboldt State University, Humboldt Room, M.A. thesis. pp. 178–182.
^"Hymeneal". Daily Alta California. Vol. 13, no. 4081. April 19, 1861. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
^Tucker, Luther (1864). "California Grapes". The Horticulturist and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste. 19–21. Luther Tucker: 391. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
^Shaw, S.W., Petitioner (June 10, 1867). In the Matter of the Estate of Mary F. Shaw, decd.; Probate Court Sonoma County, Number 334, Register B. Santa Rosa, California: Attorney Democrat Steam Print. p. 701.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)