
Oddlet: "Grizzly" Adams · 1 min read
Apr 18, 2026
The Shoemaker Who Became a Bear
A grizzly attack left him with a silver-dollar-sized hole in his skull — and that bear ended up on the California state flag.
John "Grizzly" Adams was a cobbler from Massachusetts. He was not a particularly good one. A fire destroyed his shop in 1849, and the Gold Rush destroyed what came next — business partners swindled him, creditors took his ranch, and by 1852, at the age of forty, he had failed at essentially everything.
So he walked into the Sierra Nevada and decided to live with grizzly bears instead.
He tamed a female grizzly named Lady Washington and trained her to carry his pack, pull his sled, and let him ride on her back. He raised a cub he called Benjamin Franklin, who once saved his life during an attack by another bear. He captured a 1,500-pound grizzly named Samson, one of the largest ever taken alive. San Franciscans grew accustomed to seeing Adams strolling the city streets with two grizzlies at his side, as though walking a pair of very large dogs.
A grizzly attack left Adams with a silver-dollar-sized hole in his skull, his brain tissue visible to air. That bear became the subject of an 1855 painting by Charles Nahl. That painting became the model for the California state flag.
Adams never knew. He died in 1860, back in Massachusetts, at forty-eight. The bear on the flag of the world's fifth-largest economy belongs to a man who couldn't keep a shoe shop open.
One suspects the bears were easier.
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- Wikipedia — John "Grizzly" Adams — Comprehensive, well-cited article; primary source for dates, names, and event sequences. Reliable for factual scaffolding.
- JSTOR Daily — "The True Story of Grizzly Adams" — Scholarly-adjacent summary drawing on Jon Coleman's academic work; reliable for critical perspective on the Adams myth vs. reality.
- HistoryNet — "Grizzly Adams: Bear Man of California" — Narrative history article with period newspaper citations (Daily Alta California, Daily Evening Bulletin); good for color detail and contemporary press quotes.
- Legends of America — "John 'Grizzly' Adams" — Solid popular history site; corroborates key dates and events across multiple sources.
- KQED — "Who Is the Bear on the California Flag?" — Public radio journalism with academic sourcing (UC Santa Barbara professor); reliable for the Samson/flag connection, noting some scholarly dispute remains.
- Find a Grave — John Boyden "Grizzly" Adams

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