Everything about Buenaventura River Legend totally explained
The non-existent
Buenaventura River, alternatively
San Buenaventura River,
Río Buenaventura, etc. was once believed to run from the
Rocky Mountains to the
Pacific Ocean in what is now the western
United States. The river was chronologically the last of several imagined incarnations of an imagined
Great River of the West which would be for
North America west of the Rockies what the
Mississippi River was east of the Rockies. The hopes were to find a waterway from coast to coast, sparing the traveling around
Cape Horn at the tip of
South America.
In 1776, two Franciscan missionaries
Francisco Atanasio Domínguez and
Silvestre Vélez de Escalante explored a connection between
Santa Fe in Spanish New Mexico to
Monterey in also Spanish California. They encountered the
Green River, a southward-flowing
tributary of the
Colorado and named it
San Buenaventura after the catholic saint
Bonaventure. Shortly after they discovered the
Sevier River and wrongly identified it with the Buenaventura, thus believing in a southwesterly course, instead of straight south. Consequently their
cartographer Bernardo Miera y Pacheco showed the river as heading southwesterly and flowing into a lake, that can be identified as the now dry
Sevier Lake. In an accompanying note to king
Charles III of Spain Miera recommended to build several
missions in the area and mentioned the possibility of a water way to the Pacific Ocean, via the Buenaventura or the completely speculative Timpanogos River.
When
Francisco Garcés and Pedro Font drew their maps of Spanish
Alta California, they didn't understand the nature of the
Sierra Nevada, nor did they know about the
Great Basin between the Sierra and the Rocky Mountains, so they identified rivers from the Sierra with Miera's Buenaventura. Then, when Manuel Augustin Mascaro and Miguel Constanso made the first map of the whole
Viceroyalty of New Spain (1784), they built on their colleagues' work and connected the Buenaventura to the Pacific Ocean, in or near
San Francisco Bay. Later cartographers of the young
United States such as
Alexander von Humboldt in 1804,
William Clark in 1814 and
Zebulon Pike in his book from 1810 believed in the findings of the Spanish cartographers and connected different Californian rivers, that they themselves had seen, with waters in the Rocky Mountains.
When Mexican explorers learned more about the Sierra Nevada, questions arose about the Buenaventura, but Albert Finley in 1826 still drew the river in his influential map. In 1827,
Jedediah Smith crossed the Sierra Nevada and the Great Basin, not finding the Buenaventura; the following year he tracked the western flank of the Sierra in its full length, again without registering a river of the size predicted. In 1841,
John Bidwell and
Thomas Fitzpatrick led the first group of settlers over the Rocky Mountains to California. They were advised to take carpenters tools with them, to build canoes and sail the Buenaventura from the
Great Salt Lake. They found
Humboldt River at the edge of the Great Basin and followed it for a while, but there was no trace of a navigable river that would cross the Sierra Nevada.
The Buenaventura River's existence or non-existence was a matter of controversy until 1843, when
John Charles Frémont, with Thomas Fitzpatrick and
Kit Carson as scouts, led a perilous expedition from the
Columbia River to
Sacramento, California via the Sierra Nevada. On
January 27,
1844 at
Walker River, he briefly believed himself to have found the mythical river, but it was the result of a faulty measurement. Two days later he discovered his mistake and definitively proved that the Buenaventura didn't exist.
After the hopes of a waterway from east to west were lost, Frémont and his father-in-law and political sponsor, Senator
Thomas Hart Benton, directed their ambitions to a
transcontinental railway, which was completed in 1869, after the
Mexican-American War of 1846–48 and the
American Civil War.
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