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  • Clampers?

    Does anyone have any historical references to the "Clampers" During the Civil War? I know they were a fraternal group of Gold Miners. Did this include just Gold miners? Did they include gold miners from just CA or did they have active organizations in places like Dahlonega, GA (more Gold mines)?

    Jim BUtler
    Jim Butler

  • #2
    Re: Clampers?

    Jim,
    I've not yet found any wartime references to E Clampus Vitus but the fraternal order was very active in California before and after the war and there is good reason to suspect that at least some of the California Volunteers were members of the order. There is even good reasons to believe that U.S. Grant joined the order when he was out in California before the war.

    The historical roots of the order can be traced to Ephraim Bee of Lewisport, West Virginia in 1845. (Although Clampers will readily tell you that Adam was the first Clamper.) (Interestingly, after the war it was revealed that Ephraim Bee was heavily involved with the Underground Railroad.)

    Prior to the war there were ECV chapters in Pennsylvania, Missouri, Illinois, Georgia, and quite possibly Mexico City. E Clampus Vitas made its way to California with Joe Zumwalt, after he learned of it in Missouri, and quickly spread throughout the California gold fields. It was very popular throughout the California Gold rush and continued past the war until it peaked in Membership in the 1870's.

    The order dwindled in numbers until the 1930s when it was revitalized by a group of California historians why were contacted by one of the last remaining Clampers. (This is in the West, there are apparently still some remnants of the order in the East who have come down through a different historical lineage.) The organization is very active and growing in the west today with active chapters in many Western states. There are a number of reenactors who have been taken in and there is even a floating reenacting chapter that meets at Western events. The organization is very involved in History and local chapters regularly place historic plaques at otherwise unknown historic sites.

    I've probably revealed more than enough already, but a search with Google will turn up quite a lot about the order.
    Troy Groves "AZReenactor"
    1st California Infantry Volunteers, Co. C

    So, you think that scrap in the East is rough, do you?
    Ever consider what it means to be captured by Apaches?

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Clampers?

      Oh Troy! What magnificant FUN that google search turned up :p

      It also explained a lot. My Great Uncle Mark was always a rolling party, with chaos and merriment in his wake. The other uncles always referred to him as a "Clamper" --and as they were all Masons, older than Mark and very dignified, I had always assumed that Clampers were some lesser order of Mason.

      He was born right at the turn of the century, not far from the Dalonega gold fields and was known to swirl a pan in his youth. Some 50 years after the war, this provides only a very tenuous connection in Georgia, but may indicate a possible connection.
      Terre Hood Biederman
      Yassir, I used to be Mrs. Lawson. I still run period dyepots, knit stuff, and cause trouble.

      sigpic
      Wearing Grossly Out of Fashion Clothing Since 1958.

      ADVENTURE CALLS. Can you hear it? Come ON.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Clampers?

        Troy:


        Satisfactory!! One definite Clamper conection w/ the war was Capt. Antonio De la Guerra of Co. "C" Native Cal. Cav. Batt. and a State Senator in the 1850's. I have also been doing a part-time research on clampers in the ranks and I have come up with 40 or so possible indviduals.

        Tom Smith XGDR, GNR and future AL the XXI
        De la Guerra y Pacheco chapter 1.5 ECV
        Tom Smith, 2nd Lt. T.E.
        Nobel Grand Humbug, Al XXI,
        Chapt. 1.5 De la Guerra y Pacheco
        Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus
        Topographer for: TAG '03, BGR, Spring Hill, Marmeduke's Raid, & ITPW

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Clampers?

          Hi All & fellow brothers

          ECV through the 1850-70's is an interesting coarse of sutddy. I have been interested in finding any known pins associated with the order, especailly watch fobs.

          It is just a mater of time before names of memebers of the diferent ECV lodges in Ca match up to enlistments in the Cal Vols.

          Don S
          Don F Smith

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Clampers?

            Here's a soldier I'll nominate for a potential member of the Clampers. Ran across him totally by accident, looking at names from the 20th North Carolina for September Storm.

            Timothy Reid, a private in the 20th NC, Co. B, native of Cabarrus Co., NC.

            After giving up his family's interest in the Reid gold mine in North Carolina, he went to California and was listed there at Montezuma P.O., Tuolumne Co., California as a miner in the 1860 census, in a household of all adult males. Apparently sometime between the summer of 1860 and the spring of 1861 he returned home to Cabarrus Co., fresh from the goldfields, to enlist in his hometown's regiment.

            No idea if he was a Clamper, but the demographics are certainly right. Are there any surviving records of members from the Tuolumne area?

            Hank Trent
            hanktrent@voyager.net
            Hank Trent

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Clampers?

              Hi Hank,

              This fellow might be a Clamper , he is in the right demographic, and the right area and in the right business and was around men that were more than likely Clampers.

              Tom Smith would more than likely be able to see if Timothy Reid was possibly a memeber of ECV

              All the best

              Don S
              Don F Smith

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Clampers?

                Hank: I'll check on what I can find out about Mr. Reid. The main problem with Calmper records was that during one of their "doins" no one was in any condition to take minuets and afterwards no one could remember what happened!:D

                Credo quia absurdum
                Tom Smith, 2nd Lt. T.E.
                Nobel Grand Humbug, Al XXI,
                Chapt. 1.5 De la Guerra y Pacheco
                Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus
                Topographer for: TAG '03, BGR, Spring Hill, Marmeduke's Raid, & ITPW

                Comment


                • #9

                  NY Times
                  October 14, 2008
                  Promoting Offbeat History Between the Drinks
                  By JESSE McKINLEY

                  TWAIN HARTE, Calif. — Strange where a road trip can begin: a dorm room, a bar stool or Page 283 of the W.P.A. Guide to California.

                  It is on Page 283 that a reader can find the barest mention of The Order of E Clampus Vitus, one of the oldest and oddest entities in a state known for having a few, a Gold Rush-era organization whose goofball sensibilities are offset by a single, serious pursuit: a tendency to plaque all things historical, an obsession that continues to this day.

                  With little more than mortar and their ever-present red shirts, the Clampers, as the organization’s members are known, have placed more than 1,000 bronze, wood and granite plaques throughout California, from the remote stretches of coast to mining towns like this one, in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada.

                  The group’s handiwork appears on roadsides, lakesides and at the sites of former brothels, breweries and ballrooms. Jails and forts have been plaqued, and so have whaling stations. Historical drinks have been commemorated — and, no doubt, imbibed — along with ghost stories, stories of heroism and plenty of tall tales in between.

                  “It’s a common saying that no one has been able to tell if they are historians that like to drink or drinkers who like history,” said Dr. Robert J. Chandler, a senior historian at Wells Fargo Bank and a proud member of the group’s San Francisco chapter. “And no one knows because no one has been in any condition to record the minutes.”

                  Whether a historical drinking society or a drinking historical society, the Clampers claim tens of thousands of members in 40 chapters across seven Western states, though nowhere are the group’s strange ways more alive than in California, where members are said to have included Ronald Reagan; John Huston, the film director; and Herb Caen, the famous San Franciscan master of the three-dot journal. Some Clamper membership claims, of course, can be suspect. It is true, however, that many noted historians have been members, as is the current director of the State Office of Historic Preservation.

                  The group’s specialty is the lesser-known nuggets of history.

                  “I think these guys felt there were a lot of things that weren’t being covered,” said Michael Wurtz, an archivist at University of the Pacific, whose Clampers archives include photographs, letters and travelogues of trips by past members. “And it’s a whole other type of history. There’s a public element. Rather than the ivy-covered walls, this is the stuff we can go out and touch.”

                  Take the tiny mountain hamlet of Volcano, Calif. (pop. 101), the site of three plaques, including one devoted to the potent Gold Rush drink known as moose milk. (Mix bourbon, rum and heavy cream. Drink. Do not repeat.)

                  Or Murphys, a town with wooden sidewalks where the Clampers have erected the Wall of Comparative Ovations, devoted to Californians like John Thompson, a pioneer known as Snowshoe who carried mail over mountain passes, and the saber-toothed tiger that prowled the same territory eons before and was “a formidable adversary.”

                  Then, there is the pure oddity, like an upside-down house in the eastern town of Lee Vining, built by a long-forgotten silent-film actress named Nellie Bly O’Bryan, who found inspiration for the house in bedtime stories. (The plaque, appropriately enough, is also upside down.)

                  That the writers of the Works Progress Administration, also charged with chronicling the state’s history, would cross paths with E Clampus Vitus is not surprising. Founded in the 1840s, the Clampers fizzled as the Gold Rush did, but were re-established in San Francisco in the early 1930s, just before the W.P.A. project began.

                  A few years later, the W.P.A.’s guide to California described the “revived” group as a “gold miners’ burlesque fraternity,” citing its plaque at a tavern in San Francisco favored by Joshua A. Norton — the famed British lunatic who once declared himself the emperor of California. That plaque is now gone, as is the building that housed the saloon, but the local chapter, Yerba Buena, survives.

                  Even today, the points of interest in the W.P.A. guide to California, published in 1939, shadow those pinpointed by Clampers over the years, like the elegant eastern Sierra fishing hole called Convict Lake (“a pellucid sheet of blue,” according to W.P.A.) and Bodie, a high-desert ghost town that was barely functioning when the W.P.A. guide was published and that the Clampers helped preserve as a state park years later.

                  For members, the Clampers’ ties to those long-bygone eras — and them that survived ’em — seem to make for potent male bonding in the present day.

                  “It’s a brotherhood, where men can be men,” said Sid Blumner, a retired economics professor and Clamper since 1969, who has compiled a master list of the group’s plaques.

                  And sometimes the men act like boys. Established as a parody of more serious minded fraternal groups like the Freemasons and the Odd Fellows, the Clampers spoof ceremonial titles. Their chief executive is Sublime Noble Grand Humbug.

                  The group’s motto is “Credo Quia Absurdum,” or roughly “believe because it is absurd.” (E Clampus Vitus, after all, is meaningless in Latin.) Members raise the money for the plaques and install them in cooperation with localities. “We don’t get paid for this,” said Ron Wells, 43, a carpenter and a Clamper “plaquero,” the man with the mortar. “It’s just something you do in your heart.”

                  The Clampers thrived in the overnight towns that sprang up after the discovery of gold in the Sierra Nevada foothills in 1848 — the red shirts they wear now are meant to symbolize the red long johns worn by many prospectors. The early members were often the ones with the pans.

                  “The Clampers were the ones out in the streams freezing their butts off,” said Skip Skyrud, a Clamper historian. “The businessmen in the towns, making the money, they were Masons.”

                  About 50 modern Clampers met recently on a chilly Saturday morning in Twain Harte, a foothill town of about 2,500, to unveil a plaque recalling its rich history, and have some “doin’s,” as their gatherings are called.

                  The town, about 150 miles east of San Francisco, was once a crossroads named Bald Rock Ranch, between western mining settlements and those over the Sierra Nevada to the east. It was the birthplace of William Fuller, a Miwuk Indian chief who held powwows there. Several of his descendants still live nearby and were in attendance.

                  Paying attention to things other than “rich old man’s history” has been a big part of the Clampers’ value, said Milford Wayne Donaldson, the state’s historic preservation officer and a member of the San Diego chapter.

                  “The kings and queens are recognized, but the king- and queen-makers are not,” Mr. Donaldson said. “And ethnic groups were the backbone of a lot this stuff.”

                  Wearing a top hat and holding a staff made of manzanita, the chapter’s current noble grand humbug, Scott Nielsen, intoned a lengthy description of the plaque’s significance. Another Clamper, Mike Carbonaro, took up the issue of the town’s odd naming.

                  To wit: Twain Harte was never home to the Mother Lode authors Mark Twain or Bret Harte. The town’s name was picked by a local woman for her favorite authors and originally had a hyphen. Where it went no one knows, and the Clampers still want to find out.

                  “Let’s see if we can go find that hyphen,” Mr. Carbonaro shouted to the crowd, each in red and wearing vests adorned with pins, flags and ribbons. “What say the brethren?”

                  The Clampers roared their traditional word of approval — “Satisfactory!” — and then retired, as is also tradition, to a local bar to plan their next lark.
                  Last edited by AZReenactor; 10-15-2008, 08:24 AM. Reason: Added Text of Article
                  Troy Groves "AZReenactor"
                  1st California Infantry Volunteers, Co. C

                  So, you think that scrap in the East is rough, do you?
                  Ever consider what it means to be captured by Apaches?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Clampers?

                    Not every miner in California during the Gold Rush was a Clamper, in fact the vast majority weren't. Just thought I'd through that out there.:)

                    Spent this past weekend mining along the American River in Coloma, CA, where it all began.
                    Last edited by Ian McWherter; 10-15-2008, 02:19 PM.
                    Ian McWherter

                    "With documentation you are wearing History, without it, it's just another costume."-David W. Rickman

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Clampers?

                      There's a new book coming out by a Mr. Seth Slopes (author of ECV Then and Now) based on further research into the earlier day of ECV in the South and the Mid-West. One of the bits of evidence he found was a collection of newspaper ads in 1864 promoting a pamphlet of the Great North-West Conspiracy. The ad connects E Clampus Vitus with the Copperheads.
                      Tom Smith, 2nd Lt. T.E.
                      Nobel Grand Humbug, Al XXI,
                      Chapt. 1.5 De la Guerra y Pacheco
                      Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus
                      Topographer for: TAG '03, BGR, Spring Hill, Marmeduke's Raid, & ITPW

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Clampers?

                        Thanks Tom, I'll have to keep an eye out for it.
                        Andrew Grim
                        The Monte Mounted Rifles, Monte Bh'oys

                        Burbank #406 F&AM
                        x-PBC, Co-Chairman of the Most Important Committee
                        Peter Lebeck #1866, The Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus
                        Billy Holcomb #1069, Order of Vituscan Missionaries

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Clampers?

                          There are a couple of very good books out now tracing the history of ECV in W.Va., Penn. and the mid-west. The author's name is Tim Spencer, a long-time Clamper and historian. ( pen name of Seth Slopes). He has researched and found evidence that ECV was pretty active in the Ohio valley in the 1850's, and up to the Civil War, but seems to have died away by the time the war ended. See response by Terre Biederman above. She had a relative in the 19th C. in No, Ga. that was a Clamper. I think there is much still left to find out about this Fraternal Order, I am doing some research off-and- on, but Mr. Spencer is doing a great job researching and documenting this unusual order.
                          Tom Smith, 2nd Lt. T.E.
                          Nobel Grand Humbug, Al XXI,
                          Chapt. 1.5 De la Guerra y Pacheco
                          Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus
                          Topographer for: TAG '03, BGR, Spring Hill, Marmeduke's Raid, & ITPW

                          Comment

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