Copyright 1999
Bill
Roddy
The Sanchez File
The Probate Proceedings
on the drowning of José Maria Sánchez
at the Pájaro River, Christmas Eve, 1852
and the Conspiracy to plunder the
estate of his widow Encarnación Ortega.
Encarnacion Ortega was my great grandmother
Based on Court Records
Monterey and San Benito counties
California
1853-1857
The newcomers were too shrewd for them, too unscrupulous.
They beat them at monte, they surpassed them at cattle
stealing, at whiskey drinking. They swindled them out of their lands, seduced their wives and daughters, and played the mischief
generally.
They were a wicked lot.
Hubert Howe Bancroft
THE SANCHEZ FILE
(synopsis)
Jose Maria Sanchez drowned in the Pajaro River in Monterey
County, California, on Christmas Eve, 1852 at the place called the Malpaso,
the evil path. He left his beautiful, 28 year old widow, Encarnacion
Ortega and their five children an estate worth over $300 thousand. (1852
dollars)
Encarnacion, who could not read or write and spoke little
English, became the victim of a plot to swindle her estate by corrupt politicians.
The probate judge in Monterey, Josiah Merritt, appointed the sheriff
as guardian of her children and a gambler as the administrator. They began
to appropriate money for themselves by selling off cattle and other property.
Encarnacion married her attorney, but within a few months
he died in a steamboat accident.
She married a doctor, but the sheriff's brother in law
killed him in a gun battle in a Monterey saloon in which he was also shot
dead.
In the lust for her treasure eight men would die in a
little over four years.
Convinced she was Malpaso, she sold her entire estate for a five dollar gold
piece to the man who became her fourth husband.
He was George W. Crane, the second of her lawyers she married and my great
grandfather.
The final mystery occurred when the sheriff's body was
found at the bottom of a Watsonville well.
The Cast and Photos
Table of Contents Chapters with summaries