How a Mexican forty-niner turned into the legend of Zorro
Sheryl Losser
March 20, 2023
"Joaquín Murieta: The Vaquero," by Charles Christian Nahl. (Public Domain)
The story of Joaquín Murrieta the legendary Mexican Robin Hood who inspired the story of El Zorro has endured and evolved over almost 200 years. To the American authorities in California during the Gold Rush, he was a notorious criminal, but to Mexicans, he was El Patrio: the patriotic avenger who came to symbolize defiance of U.S. oppression.
The facts of Murrietas life are elusive, but the story really begins with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed on February 2, 1848, between the United States and Mexico. The terms which ended the Mexican-American war forced Mexico to cede more than 50% of its territory including the present-day states of California, Nevada, Utah and New Mexico; most of Arizona and Colorado; and parts of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Wyoming.
An artists conception of Joaquín Murrieta. (California State Library)
That same year, Murrieta, at age 18, migrated from Sonora, Mexico, to California with his wife, brothers and three of his brothers-in-law to prospect for gold during the California Gold Rush. By all accounts, Murrieta was a successful forty-niner, but as a Mexican, he suffered persecution and discrimination.
Cherokee novelist John Rollin Ridge (Yellow Bird), who wrote The Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta: The Celebrated California Bandit in 1854, says an assault in 1849 changed Murrieta from a peaceful miner into an outlaw.
Murrieta and his family were attacked by a group of U.S. miners who stole his land and home, hanged his brother for a crime he didnt commit, horse-whipped Murrieta and raped and murdered his young wife.
At the time, authorities in California were engaged in efforts to expel Mexicans from California and turned a blind eye to such attacks.
More:
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/culture/how-mexican-49er-became-zorro/
NOT Zorros.