PREFACE
George Monroe
worked as a stage driver for the Washburn brothers and their
associates, who created and operated the Yosemite Stage &
Turnpike Company
and
the Wawona
Hotel
Company. John Washburn
was
the last surviving of the brothers. After John died in 1917, his
son Clarence Washburn
headed
the two corporations until he liquidated the Y.S.&T.C. and
transferred the hotel business to the Yosemite Park & Curry
Company
,
and the company’s property holdings to the United States
government, in 1932. Clarence’s daughter, Wawona Washburn
Hartwig
(1914-2000)
spent an enormous part of her later years researching her
family’s rich history.
My employment as a musician and entertainer at the Wawona
Hotel began in 1983 and brought me into contact with Mrs. Hartwig
in the late ‘80s. In 1989 she asked me to photograph her 75th
birthday celebration at the hotel, at which time we formed a close
bond that carried through the last decade of her life. Through my
friendship with her and shared interest in Wawona’s history
(both the person and the place), I was asked by the executor of
her estate to carry on her work.
Taking the responsibility seriously, and with ever-growing
respect for what she’d achieved, in 2001 I began to copy and
index all of her research. I also went about indexing several
published books covering history related to Wawona and Yosemite.
Noting the paucity of source attributions in the published
materials, I sought to find the primary sources that had been
omitted, first by looking for corroboration of specific events
that may have been covered in the Mariposa
Gazette
newspaper
microfilm archives in the Yosemite Research Library. In some
cases, I found corroboration, but it quickly became apparent that
the primary sources often contradicted the history books, and
beyond that, there was a wealth of additional information yet to
be unearthed.
Over the next five years, I poured through every page of
microfilm of the Gazette
from 1854 to 1901, copying and indexing as much as I could find
relating directly or indirectly to Wawona history. Before reaching
the 1890s, I began to recognize names that I had not indexed from
earlier years—names that had not become significant until later
years. While my memory was still fresh, I started over at 1854 to
index the names and events that I now knew belonged in the
historical stream. After the Gazette project, there were
several other archives yet to be indexed, many of which I’ve
completed, but with still more to do. With the advent of online
digital archiving of newspapers, I’ve learned that, so far,
digital search functions fail to turn up key words and names
nearly as well as the more painstaking visual scan with one’s
own eyes.
A search of my index for George Monroe revealed just about
enough material to construct a biography or at least a chapter in
a larger book. Among the indexed items was a notice in the Gazette
about the death of Mary Monroe, George's mother, in San Diego
in
1897. This led to a visit to the San Diego History Center Research
Archives, where I was provided with a copy of Mary Monroe’s
Coroner’s Inquest, and two related stories in the San Diego
Union newspaper. This new data, combined with my previous
research, was enough to bring the Monroes’ extraordinary saga to
life.
To give as accurately as possible a feel for the life and
times of George Monroe, a good deal of text from primary sources
is provided, as in an anthology. While some historical
source-material about Monroe is known to exist in private
collections, I have focused my research on sources that are freely
available to serious researchers, so that it may be checked for
accuracy and expanded upon as more documents become public.
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"A
very well written, carefully documented story."
– Dr. John Oliver Wilson, School of Social Welfare,
University
of California at Berkeley

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