Our country is so divided some are starting to worry it could lead to a civil war. Even Sonoma County is split with neither political party clearly having an upper hand, Democrats mostly in control of the government while Republicans dominate the media. It's easy to find reasons to sneer at the guys on the other side of the fence; Democrats are in disarray while Republicans bark out conspiracy theories. Both parties have resorted to name-calling and view themselves as unfairly treated victims. And it will probably get even worse - who knows what craziness awaits us next year in 1858?

While Santa Rosa was the county seat it was still little more than a village in the late 1850s. There were about 400 people in the town proper, although there were three times that number living in simple cabins and roughly made houses in the surrounding township. There were six blacksmith shops but only two restaurants; three carpenter shops and one clothing store. A farmer's town. By contrast, Petaluma was a regional mercantile center - it took at least 90 minutes to reach it by buggy, but it was said half of Santa Rosa still shopped down there.

This is a (long overdue) companion piece to an article I wrote several years ago, "PETALUMA VS SANTA ROSA: ROUND ONE." That covered the stirring rivalry between the towns, including Petaluma's insistence it deserved the county seat more than Santa Rosa. There's some necessary crosstalk between these two items, but the focus here is on the feud between the town's newspapers. This is not just because of the entertainment value of a good ol' Victorian-era insult throwdown (ranging from childish taunting about "a set of block heads and dolts" to an almost poetic, "wou't [sic] somebody hold this high mettled charger? He has already bucked sufficient"). More importantly, the 1850s squabble in newsprint revealed details about Santa Rosa during that era that wouldn't have been otherwise known.

For example: The early years of the Sonoma Democrat - Santa Rosa's newspaper - are most associated with its pro-Confederacy position during the Civil War and expressing its raw hatred for Lincoln even before then. But that was when the Democrat was owned and edited by Thomas L. Thompson starting in 1860; the paper had two earlier owners. Were they likewise pro-slavery zealots? Historians mention them only in passing (if at all) so the answers will be surprising.

The rest of this article can be read at the SantaRosaHistory.com website. Because of recurring problems with the Blogger platform, I am no longer wasting my time formatting and posting complete articles here. I will continue to create stubs for the sake of continuity, but will be publishing full articles only at SantaRosaHistory.com.

- Jeff Elliott

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