What I Saw in California
by Edwin Bryant
Part 1.
Chapters 1-9:
From Independence, Missouri, to the Green River, May 1-July 14, 1846.
PREFACE
IN the succeeding pages, the author has endeavored to furnish a faithful sketch of the country through which he travelled—its capabilities, scenery, and population. He has carefully avoided such embellishment as would tend to impress the reader with a false or incorrect idea of what he saw and describes. He has invented nothing to make his narrative more dramatic and amusing than the truth may render it. His design has been to furnish a volume, entertaining and instructive to the general reader, and reliable and useful to the traveller and emigrant to the Pacific. If he has succeeded in this, it is as much as he can hope. The facts in reference to those military and naval operations in California which did not come under his personal observation, have been derived from authentic sources.
THE AUTHOR.
INTRODUCTION
Leave Louisville – Independence, Mo. – New-Mexican teamsters – Outfitting – Masonic celebration – Improbable rumors – Mormons – Indians – Marvellous stories.
With my travelling companions for a journey over the Rocky mountains to
California, (Mr. R. T. Jacob and Mr. R. Ewing,) I left Louisville, Ky., on
the 18th of April, 1846; and arrived at Independence, Mo., the
starting-point, on the 1st of May.
The town of Independence is situated about six miles from the Missouri
river, on the southern, or left-hand side as you ascend it. The surrounding
country is undulating, picturesque, and highly fertile. The growth of timber
is various, and all indicative of a fat and exuberantly productive soil. Its
population is about one thousand; and, at this season, every man seems to be
actively and profitably employed. It has been for some years the principal
outfitting point for the Santa Fé
traders, and will probably so continue. Many of the houses around the public
square are constructed of brick, but the majority of the buildings are
frames. I noticed, among the busy multitude moving to and fro through the
streets, a large number of New-Mexicans, and half-breed Indians, with their
dusky complexions and ragged and dirty costumes. They were generally mounted
on miserably poor mules or horses, and presented a most shabby appearance.
Long trains of oxen, sometimes as many as ten or fifteen yokes, strung
together and pulling huge tented-wagons, designed for some Santa Fé
trading expedition, were moving about the streets, under the direction of
numerous drivers, cracking their whips and making a great noise. Ox-teams
seem to be esteemed as preferable, in these journeys, to either mules or
horses. Following the example of others more experienced in these matters
than ourselves, we determined to procure oxen, instead of mules, for our
wagon, as originally we had intended.
Accordingly I purchased three yokes of oxen, which it was believed would
be a team sufficiently powerful for the transportation of our baggage and
provisions. The average price paid per yoke was $21.67, which was considered
very cheap. The streets were filled with oxen offered for sale by the
neighboring farmers, but few of them were in good condition or well trained.
This was the case in regard to those we purchased; but they were all young
cattle, and improbable. Young and medium-sized cattle should be selected for
a journey over the plains and mountains, in preference to the heavy-bodied
and old; the latter almost invariably become foot-sore, and give out after travelling a few hundred miles. We engaged a man, who had spent some time in
the Rocky Mountains as a servant of the trading and trapping companies, for
our driver and cook, and the cattle were placed under his charge to be
educated. Although we had made many purchases in St. Louis, we found upon
consultation after our arrival here, that there was a long list of small
articles necessary for the journey yet to be procured. These I obtained at
reasonable rates, of Messrs. Wilson & Clarke, who keep a general furnishing
store for these expeditions. Other mercantile houses in the place were also
well supplied, and sold their wares at fair prices.
The masonic lodges of Independence commemorated the departure of their
brother masons, connected with the Santa Fé
and emigrating parties, by a public procession and an address, with other
religious exercises. The lady-masons, that is, the wives of the members of
the fraternity, walked in the procession to and from the church. A large
audience was collected to hear the address, and participate in the exercises. The
address was delivered by Mr. REESE, the grand-master, or principal masonic
officer in the place. It was appropriate to the occasion, except, as I
thought, that it was rather over strained in pathos. The orator, at the
close of his discourse, consigned us all to the grave, or to perpetual
exile. He was responded to in suitable and eloquent terms, on behalf of the
Santa Fé traders and the emigrants to
Oregon and California, by Col. Waul and Col. Russell. After the addresses,
an original hymn, written for the occasion, as I understood, was sung with
much feeling by the whole audience, to the tune of "Old Rosin the Bow."
These farewell ceremonies were concluded by an affecting prayer and
benediction. The ladies of the auditory, I thought, were the most interested
in and excited by these proceedings. Some of them wept, and manifested
strong emotions.
It rained heavily and incessantly the whole day on the 3d, and the
unpaved streets of the town were so muddy and so much inundated with water,
that walking about was quite out of the question. We therefore confined
ourselves to our room in the hotel, where we had scores of visitors; who,
finding it impossible to do any thing else, lounged and talked over the
various rumors connected with the several expeditions.
One of these rumors was, that five thousand Mormons were crossing, or had
crossed, the Kansas river; that they marched with ten brass fieldpieces, and
that every man of the party was armed with a rifle, a bowie-knife, and a
brace of large revolving pistols. It was declared that they were
inveterately hostile to the emigrant parties; and when the latter same up to
the Mormons, they intended to attack and murder them, and appropriate to
themselves their property. Another rumor was, that the Kansas Indians had
collected in large numbers on the trail, for the purpose of robbery and
murder. A third was, that a party of five Englishmen, supposed to be
emissaries of their government, had started in advance of us, bound for
Oregon; and that their object was to stir up the Indian tribes along the
route, and incite them to deeds of hostility towards the emigrants; to
attack their trains, rob, murder, and annihilate them. All these reports
were sufficiently appalling to deter prudent men from incurring the dangers
which they suggested, had there been any foundation for them to rest upon.
Similar rumors will probably be current every year, about the time that
emigrants are organizing their companies to start west.
Among the gentlemen who honored us with their company during the day,
were--Mr. Webb, editor of the "Independence Expositor," to whom I was
indebted for several acts of kindness; Mr. [Benjamin S.] Lippincott, a gentleman from New
York, visiting California for commercial purposes; and Mr. Curry, late one
of the editors of the "St. Louis Reveille," who will be our fellow traveller over the plains and mountains. Many tales of Rocky Mountain
adventure, some of which were sufficiently dismal and tactical for the most
horror-tinctured taste, others contrasting as widely there from as possible,
were related. The merits of the countries bordering the Pacific were
discussed by some they were denounced as abodes suitable only for the
condemned and abandoned of God and man; by others they were extolled, as
being scarcely inferior in their attractions to the Eden described in the
history of the creation, and presenting such fascinations as almost to call
the angels and saints from their blissful gardens and diamond temples in the
heavens. Such are the antipodes of opinion among those who rely upon
second-hand testimony for their information, or are governed by their
prejudices, in reference to this subject.
A story was told in regard to the climate of California, which, because
it serves to illustrate the extravagances above referred to, I will endeavor
to recite. It was of a man who had lived in California, until he had reached
the advanced age of two hundred and fifty years! Although that number of
years had passed over him, such were the life-giving and youth-preserving
qualities of the climate, that he was in the perfect enjoyment of his
health, and every faculty of mind and body which he had ever possessed. But
he was tired of life. Having lived so long in a turbulent and unquiet world,
he anxiously desired some new state of existence, unincumbered with its
cares, and unruffled by its passions and its strifes. But notwithstanding
all his efforts to produce a result which he so much wished, and for which
he daily and hourly prayed to his Maker, health, and vigor, and life still
clung to him--he could not shake them off. He sometimes contemplated
suicide; but the holy padres, to whom he confessed his thoughts, admonished
him that that was damnation: he was a devout Christian, and would not
disobey their injunctions. A lay friend, however, (his heir, probably,) with
whom he daily consulted on this subject, at last advised him to a course
which, he thought, would produce the desired result. It was to make his
will, and other arrangements, and then travel into a foreign country. This
suggestion was pleasing to our venerable Californian patriarch in search of
death, and he immediately adopted it.
He visited an adjoining country; and very soon, in accordance with his
plan and his wishes, he took sick and died. In his will, however, he
required his heir and executor, upon pain of disinheritance, to transport
his remains to his own country and there entomb them. This requisition was
faithfully complied with. His body was interred with great pomp and ceremony
in his own cemetery, and prayers were rehearsed in all the churches for the
rest of his soul. He was happy, it was supposed, in heaven, where, for a
long series of years, he had prayed to be; and his heir was happy that he
was there. But what a disappointment! Being brought back and interred in
Californian soil, with the health-breathing Californian zephyrs rustling
over his grave, the energies of life were immediately restored to his
inanimate corpse ! Herculean strength was imparted to his frame, and
bursting the prison walls of death, he appeared before his chapfallen heir
reinvested with all the vigor and beauty of early manhood! He submitted to
his fate, and determined to live his appointed time. Stories similar to the
foregoing, although absurd, and so intended to be, no doubt leave their
impressions upon the minds of many, predisposed to rove in search of
adventures and Eldorados.
A party of gentlemen from Baltimore, bound for Santa Fé
on a pleasure excursion, among whom were Messrs. Hoffman, Morris, and
Meredith, arrived. The small town seemed to be literally overflowing with
strangers of every grade of character and condition of life, collected from
all parts of the continents of America and Europe, civilized and
uncivilized. On the 4th our additional purchases were made and other
arrangements completed, with the exception of some fixtures to our wagon,
with duplicate axletrees, ox-bows, &c. &c., which were promised to be in
readiness the next morning. From the 5th, therefore, I shall date the
commencement of our journey, describing as minutely as will be interesting
or useful the events and observations of each day consecutively, from notes
taken at the close of our several diurnal marches.
I bespeak the patience of the reader whenever these pages shall appear to
him monotonous, as they doubtless frequently will. My design is to give a
truthful and not an exaggerated and fanciful account of the occurrences
of the journey, and of the scenery, capabilities, and general features of
the countries through which we shall pass, with incidental sketches of the
leading characteristics of their populations. The journey across the Rocky
Mountains to the Pacific, is one of protracted duration, owing to the
necessarily slow progress of those who undertake it, arising from the
numerous difficulties and obstructions they must encounter. The scenery is
neither so diversified, nor are the incident and adventure so dramatic and
striking as most readers may suppose, from having perused the many
unauthenticated histories, fabulous and imaginary, with which the press has
of late teemed, professing to be descriptive of mountain and prairie life.
The vast interior of North America, with the reputed Eldorado on the shore
of the Pacific, furnishes, however, much that is worthy of the inquiry,
examination, and admiration of the naturalist, and much that is calculated
to awaken and please the desultory curiosity of the mass. Whatever I saw and
noted at the time, with the impressions made upon my mind, will be
faithfully and truthfully recorded.
Appearance of the country – Vexatious difficulties of starting – First camp – Violent thunder-storm – Four-footed tragedian – First view of the prairie – Soil – Flowers – Emigrant camp – Frontier family – Thunder-storm on the prairie – Lodgings on the frontier – More of the Mormons – Rainbow on the prairie Indian Creek – Place of organization – Straying of cattle and horses – Election on the prairies – Shawnee Indians.
MAY 5. – The beauties and glories of spring are now unfolding themselves,
and earth and sky seem to vie with each other in presenting the most
pleasing influences to the eye and upon the sensibilities. Vegetable nature
in this region has arrayed herself in a gorgeous garniture, and every object
that raises it self above the surface of the ground, is so adorned with
verdure and all the variegated and sparkling array of floral coloring, as to
challenge the admiration of the most unobservant eye.
Our wagon, which has been in the hands of the smith several days for the
purpose of adapting it in all respects to our journey, we expected would be
ready early this morning; but when I went to the shop to ascertain if the
alterations and fixtures were completed, I found but little done. The smith
made his excuses as usual in such cases, but promised to go about the work
and finish it immediately. I had learned how to value his promises, and
determined not to leave the spot until I saw the work finished. This was
done about three o’clock, P. M. Our ox-team, which had been kept in
readiness for several hours, was immediately attached to the wagon, and our
luggage placed in it with all dispatch, and at four o’clock the wagon and
team, under the guidance of Brownell the driver, left the town. Business
detaining me a short time, I did not overtake the wagon, until it had
"rolled," as the teamster’s expression is, about a mile from its
starting-point, where I found it firmly and immoveably stalled in the mud,
so far as the power of our team could be considered an agent for its
extrication. The oxen being untutored and unmanageable, could not be
prevailed upon to unite their strength. I dismounted from my horse, and with
the aid of Curry, McKinstry, and Nuttall, endeavored to raise the wheels and
thus assist the oxen in their efforts. But all our exertions were vain.
Fortunately a negro man with a well-trained yoke of oxen came down the road,
while we were thus engaged, and hitching his team to ours the wagon was
immediately drawn out of the mud, and, to use a nautical expression, we were
"set afloat" again.
Proceeding a mile farther, I determined to encamp for the night, it being
nearly sunset, on a small stream which crossed the road. Having selected the
site of our camp in a grove near a log-house, the wagon, driven by Brownell,
soon came up, but in attempting to cross a causeway thrown over the stream,
the wheels ran off on one side, and we were stalled a second time. We were
relieved finally from this difficulty by a Santa Fé
teamster and his oxen, who came down the road during our labors to extricate
the wagon. A Mr. Ross, of Independence, passing at the time, acted as
master-teamster on the occasion, and performed his duty to admiration. The
oxen seemed willing to obey him, when they would not heed the commands of
others. We ascended a small elevation and encamped for the night.
Our provisions and cooking utensils, in the haste of departure, had been
packed in the wagon without much regard to convenience, in case we should be
obliged to make use of them; and we were consequently compelled to remove
many heavy boxes and trunks before arriving at our meal, flour, and bacon,
and the pans and dishes of our kitchen and table. Upon a careful inspection,
we moreover found that sundry pots, skillets, and frying-pans, which we had
specially ordered and paid for, were wanting.
During the process of cooking supper, it commenced raining and blowing
with great violence. Our fire was nearly extinguished by the deluge of water
from the clouds, and our dough was almost turned to batter. Curry,
after most persevering and praiseworthy efforts, succeeded in browning the
coffee, but Jacob, when he set about grinding it, could not make the
coffee-mill perform its appropriate duty, and it was voted a cheat. The rain
came down so copiously at last, that our fire was entirely extinguished, and
our culinary operations were suspended until nearly 10 o’clock. The violence
of the storm abated at that hour. Brownell soon after succeeded in placing
before us a supper of half-baked corn-bread, fried bacon, and coffee. We ate
standing, with the rain falling, and our clothing completely saturated with
water.
Our oxen become entangled in the ropes by which we had secured them from
straying during the night, and it was not without much labor and difficulty
that they were released. Jacob and myself made our bed, or rather took
shelter from the storm, among the boxes in our wagon; McKinstry and Brownell
bivouacked under the wagon, and Curry and Nuttall under a large tree. The
suspension of the fury of the storm lasted until about 2 o’clock in the
morning, when the rain recommenced falling in torrents, accompanied by peals
of crashing thunder and flashes of lightning so brilliant, as to illuminate
the whole vault of the heavens. Notwithstanding all these inconveniences, we
rested pretty well. Distance two miles.
May 6. – The atmosphere was clear and calm, and thousands of birds were
chanting their matin hymn, rendering the grove musical with their melodies.
Three Santa Fé wagons which passed
our camp last night during the storm, were stalled in the road just beyond
us. We purchased some corn for our oxen at the log-dwelling near by, which
they devoured with a good appetite, having eaten nothing for about eighteen
hours. Our breakfast, which consisted of badly-baked corn-bread, bacon, and
coffee, being over, we readjusted the baggage and resumed our journey. Just
as we were starting, one of our best oxen having become entangled in the
rope by which he was tied, was thrown to the ground with great force, and
after struggling some time he rolled up his eyes, which became fixed, and he
manifested all the symptoms of death by a broken neck, or some other fatal
injury. The rope was cut, but he was motionless and apparently breathless.
Here, as we supposed, was a disaster, stopping further progress until we
could supply the place of the dead ox. I was about starting back to town to
purchase another animal, when he very calmly and deliberately rose upon his
legs, and began to feed upon the corn as composedly as if nothing had
occurred. He evidently, after struggling with the rope a long time, thought
himself dying, and made signs accordingly.
As we approached what is called the Blue Prairie, the road became much
drier and less difficult. The vast prairie itself soon opened before us in
all its grandeur and beauty. I had never before beheld extensive scenery of
this kind. The many descriptions of the prairies of the west had forestalled
in some measure the first impressions produced by the magnificent landscape
that lay spread out before me as far as the eye could reach, bounded alone
by the blue wall of the sky. No description, however, which I have read of
these scenes, or which can be written, can convey more than a faint
impression to the imagination of their effects upon the eye. The view of the
illimitable succession of green undulations and flowery slopes, of every
gentle and graceful configuration, stretching away and away, until they fade
from the sight in the dim distance, creates a wild and scarcely controllable
ecstasy of admiration. I felt, I doubt not, some of the emotions natural to
the aboriginal inhabitants of these boundless and picturesque plains, when
roving with unrestrained freedom over them; and careless alike of the past
and the future, luxuriating in the blooming wilderness of sweets which the
Great Spirit had created for their enjoyment, and placed at their disposal.
The soil of these prairies is of the most inexhaustibly fertile
composition, being a black loam, usually several feet in depth. Among the
flowers which spangle the waves of this ocean of luxuriant vegetation, were
the wild pink-verbena, and the wild indigo, with a blue bean-like blossom.
The larkspur, and myriads of smaller flowers, ornament the velvety carpet of
grass. Having alighted from my horse to gather some fine specimens of these
flowers, when I was carelessly remounting, encumbered with my gun and
several other articles, the saddle turned, and my horse becoming restive or
alarmed, threw me with great violence to the ground. My wrist and both
shoulders were much injured, and my right side was severely bruised.
At two o’clock we reached an encampment, composed of the wagons of
Colonel Russell and the family of Mr. West, of Calloway county, Mo., and
some others. They were emigrating to California. The wagons numbered in all
about fifteen. When our wagon arrived it was drawn up alongside the others,
and our oxen released to feed upon the grass of the prairie. I visited the
tents of our fellow-travellers, and found the ladies busily employed, as if
sitting by the fireside which they had recently left for a long and
toilsome, if not a dangerous journey, and a country of which they knew but
little. Mrs. West, a lady of seventy, and her daughter, Mrs. Campbell, were
knitting. Mr. West, the head of his family, was originally from Virginia,
and was, he told me, seventy-five years of age. His four sons and
son-in-law, Major Campbell, having determined to emigrate to California, he
and his wife had resolved to accompany them. Mr. and Mrs. W, although so
much advanced in life, appeared to be as resolute as the youngest of their
family, and to count with certainty upon seeing the Eldorado of the Pacific.
The former realized this expectation, the latter did not.
A log-house, the residence of a Mr. Milliron, an emigrant to this country
from Virginia, was situated about half a mile from our encampment. We
visited this house soon after we encamped. The family, consisting of Mr. and
Mrs. M. and several sons and daughters, have resided here, on the outskirts
of civilization, four years. They have annually been afflicted with the
prevailing sickness of the country, (the fever and ague,) except their
eldest daughter, a very fair-skinned, handsomely-featured and graceful young
woman. In a field not far from the house, one of the sons of Mr. M., with a
horse-team, was plowing up the ground. I followed the plow several times
backwards and forwards, and I never saw a soil indicative of a higher degree
of fatness, or more productive qualities.
About five o’clock, P.M., a very black and threatening cloud, which had
been gathering for some hours in the west, rose over us, and discharged rain
with the copiousness of a water-spout, accompanied with brilliant and
incessant flashes of lightning, and crashing peals of thunder. The scene,
during the violence of the storm, was inexpressibly grand. I had never
previously witnessed any meteoric displays comparable with it. The storm
continuing after dark, we determined to shelter ourselves in the house for
the night.
A good supper of fried bacon, eggs, fresh butter, and hot corn-bread and
biscuit, with a cup of coffee, was prepared for us, to the merits of which
we did ample justice. I met at the supper-table a traveller named O’Bryant.
He was a young man, and last from Santa Fé,
bound for Independence. He had been absent from the United States six years,
during which time, impelled by the spirit of adventure and the temptations
of gain, he had visited Santa Fé,
Chihuahua, Mexico, the mines of Sonora, and the country of Lower California.
He could, however, give us no information respecting the route we were about
to travel. The capacity of the log-house in which we had taken lodgings for
the night, was confined to two small rooms; and of men, women, and children,
all counted, there were some fifteen persons to be accommodated. But this,
singular as it may seem to the uninitiated in frontier life, was done to the
perfect satisfaction and comfort of all concerned. Such are the inventions
of necessity, and so soon do our real wants and comforts overshadow and
annihilate the artificial desires and luxuries of civilization to which we
have been accustomed. I retired early, but the feverish and painful
sensations produced by the injuries of the morning, together with the
exciting impressions upon my imagination made by the remarkable aspect of
the country through which we had travelled, prevented sleep. We were now on
the line which divides savage life and civilization. A few miles further,
and we shall pass beyond the incorporated territories of the United States
into the countries inhabited by the untutored tribes of the wilderness. But
notwithstanding such is our position, the scenery around us presents greater
pastoral charms than I have witnessed in the oldest and most densely
populated districts of the United States; houses alone are wanting to render
the landscape perfect. It would seem as if in mockery of the puny efforts
and circumscribed results of the labors of man to ornament the landscape by
art and cultivation, the power and taste of Omnipotence had here been
manifested, preparing for his children a garden as illimitable in extent as
it is perfect, grand, and picturesque in appearance. Distance 10 miles.
May 7. – A rainbow formed a perfect and brilliant arch in the west, as
the sun rose above the eastern horizon. A black curtain of clouds shaded the
entire heavens, with the exception of a narrow fringe of yellow light above
the far-off green undulations to the east. The impending masses of watery
vapor soon, however, shut down, and closing this, the whole heavens were
shrouded in deep gloom.
The rain fell almost incessantly during the night, accompanied by loud
and continual peals of thunder, and flashes of lightning so vivid as to
illuminate the apartment in which we slept, through the unchinked crevices
between the logs. During these fierce bursts of the storm, I could not but
sympathize with my fellow-travellers without, with no shelter but the thin
covering of their tent-cloths, and no floor to rest upon but the wet, cold
ground. Such are the exposures of the western emigrants.
We resumed our march in the rain, at 9 o’clock, accompanied by Colonel
Russell and his wagon, leaving the other wagons encamped where we found
them. We travelled about four miles to a small creek which is called "Blue
Creek," and finding the waters so much swollen by the late heavy rains, that
it was not fordable, we encamped in a narrow, timbered bottom, a hundred
yards from the stream. About twelve o’clock the dark masses of clouds which
had obscured the heavens, and poured out upon the earth such floods of
water, cleared away, and the sun shone out warm and bright. We took
advantage of this interregnum in the water dynasty to dry our drenched
clothing. Large fires were made of the dead and fallen timber. the bottom,
and an excellent dinner of fried bacon and corn bread was prepared by our
cook. The severe bruises which I received from the accident of yesterday,
aggravated by the of the weather, were excessively painful, and rendered
quite unfit for travelling.
Ewing, who had been dispatched yesterday to Fort Leaven to ascertain the
truth of the various rumors respecting the numbers of the Mormons bound
west, their disposition, etc. etc., came into camp whooping, about o’clock,
P.M., with a man (McClary) riding behind him on his horse. He brought from
Colonel Kearny, commandant of the fort, the purport of which was, that a
thousand Mormons had crossed the Missouri river about four weeks since, and
that a number about equal to the foregoing were now crossing at St.
Joseph’s. Others, it was reported, were soon to follow, but with proper
circumspection on our part, no difficulties with them need be apprehended.
The emigrants with whom I have met, express generally much apprehension
in regard to the designs of the Mormons. Many predict collisions with them
and fatal results; and it is probable that some who have started will turn
back in consequence of these apprehensions.
We sounded the creek this evening, but found the depth of water too great
for fording. We consequently resolved to encamp for the night, and pitched
our tent for the first time. Just before sunset another storm of lightning,
thunder, and rain rose in the west, and passing over us to the east, the
most perfect and brilliant rainbow I ever beheld was defined upon the face
of the dark masses of clouds, displaying by a most brilliant presentation
all the colors of the prism. Distance, four miles.
May 8. – The creek had fallen several feet during the night, and, much to
our gratification, was now fordable. But our oxen had strayed away, and it
was not until after a long search through the brushy and timbered bottom of
the creek, that they were found. These difficulties in respect to cattle are
always experienced at the outset of a journey over the prairies. At 9
o’clock we resumed our march. Fording the creek, and crossing the timbered
bottom of the stream over a very deep and muddy road, we entered another
magnificent prairie beyond the Missouri line and within the Indian
territory. It is impossible for me to convey to the reader the impressions
made upon my mind by a survey of these measureless undulating plains, with
their ground of the freshest verdure, and their garniture of flame-like
flowers, decorating every slope and hilltop. It would seem as if here the
Almighty had erected a finished abode for his rational creatures, and
ornamented it with beauties of landscape and exuberance and variety of
production far above our feeble conceptions or efforts at imitation.
Our cow, which we found it impossible to drive before us, we secured by a
rope attached to her head, and tied to the rear of the wagon. In the course
of the day she became entirely exhausted by her own intractability, and fell
down in the road. We were compelled to leave her, and forego the luxury of
milk on our journey. Some distance to the right of our trail, about two
o’clock, P. M., we saw an encampment of several emigrant wagons. Colonel
Russell and myself proceeded to them. Composing a portion of this party,
were Mr. and Mrs. Newton, recently from Virginia and bound for California.
Mrs. N. is a lady of good appearance and manners, and of cultivated taste.
We dined with Mr. and Mrs. N.; and although our dinner was not set out in
the style of the St. Charles, the Gait House, or the Astor House, nor the
viands so various, I certainly enjoyed it more than I ever did a repast at
either of those celebrated places of luxury and resort.
Pursuing our journey, after dinner, we overtook ten emigrant wagons, with
a numerous drove of cows and other stock. most of these wagons are the
property of Mr. Gordon, of Missouri, who, with his entire family, consisting
of several sons and daughters, is removing to California. After some
conversation we passed them, and overtook our own wagons just as they were
driving up to the encampment on Indian Creek, where the organization for our
journey is to take place. The position of this encampment is highly
picturesque. The margin of the small stream is fringed with a grove of
timber, and from the gentle slope, where our wagons are drawn up, the
verdant prairie, brilliant with flowers of every dye, stretches far away on
all sides, diversified in its surface by every conceivable variety of
undulation.
We found two wagons encamped here, one of which belonged to Mr.
[Andrew Jackson] Grayson,
of St. Louis. Mrs. G., an intelligent and cultivated lady, with a small
child, accompanies her husband to the shores of the Pacific. A party from
Michigan, under the direction of Mr. [George W.] Harlan, we learned, was encamped in a
grove of timber about a mile beyond us. They left Michigan in October last,
and wintered near Lexington, Mo. From thence, this spring, by land, they had
proceeded thus far on their journey to the Pacific. I visited them in the
afternoon; and, as usual among the emigrants, found them cordial and
friendly in their salutations. They had been in their present encampment
more than a month, but appeared to be contented and happy, and, with the
numerous women and children, who greatly outnumber the men, to possess a
persevering energy and confidence in the future, that would sustain them in
a journey round the globe, whatever might be its difficulties.
Returning to our camp, and accompanied by Curry and Nuttall, I walked
some distance down the creek to try my luck at angling. The aggregate result
of two hours’ patient toil, was about fifteen small fish, with which we
returned to camp. They were cooked in the pan, and our appetites were such
that we enjoyed them with a relish unknown to the epicure of the
"settlements."
Among the flowers and plants which I have noticed to-day, are the verbena
and the indigo-plant, in larger quantities and a higher degree of
perfection. Also a species of wild geranium, and the rosin-weed, the stalk
of the last of which, on being broken, exudes a gum of the consistence and
odor of turpentine. The lupin (not in bloom) in many places seems to dispute
the occupancy of the soil with the grass. I observed, also, a plant
producing a fruit of the size of the walnut, called the prairie pea. The
fruit has an agreeable taste, resembling that of the green pea of our
gardens. In a raw state, it is eaten by travellers on the plains to quench
thirst. It makes a most excellent pickle, as we afterwards discovered,
scarcely inferior to the olive.
I killed a moccasin-snake this afternoon, when returning from our angling
excursion down the creek. I had nearly stepped upon him before he was
discovered, and from his attitude, he was evidently prepared to strike at
me. He was about three feet in length.
The sky, since twelve o’clock, A.M., has been perfectly clear, and the
atmosphere calm. At eight o’clock, P.M., the moon and stars are shining in
all their splendor, presenting to the eye a scene of imposing sublimity, and
of the most profound solitude. Distance, 16 miles.
May 9. – Immediately after breakfast I commenced the arrangement of our
baggage and provisions, so as to render them convenient of access in our
wagon. A party which went out in the morning to angle, brought in an
abundant supply of small fish about 12 o’clock. Several emigrant wagons have
arrived during the day and encamped alongside of us. The wagons at our camp
this evening numbered thirty-four. We were visited by Mr. Harlan and a
number of his party.
It was proposed to-day, and there was a general concurrence to the
proposition, that the party for California should be organized and officered
by the free choice of those concerned, on Monday next. Singular as it may
appear, there is as much electioneering here for the captaincy of this
expedition, as there would be for the generalship of an army, or for the
presidency of the United States. The many interests of the ambitious
aspirants to office, and the vehemence with which their claims are urged by
their respective friends, augur unfavorably to harmony on the journey.
Our camp this evening presents a most cheerful appearance. The prairie,
miles around us, is enlivened with groups of cattle, numbering six or seven
hundred, feeding upon the fresh green grass. The numerous white tents and
wagon-covers before which the camp-fires are blazing brightly, represent a
rustic village; and men, women, and children are talking, playing, and
singing around them with all the glee of light and careless hearts. While I
am writing, a party at the lower end of the camp is engaged in singing hymns
and sacred songs.
The dew is very heavy, the grass being as wet as if a hard shower had
fallen during the night. This diurnal condensation of dampness, and the
great difference between the temperature of the day and the night, are
doubtless strong agents in producing the prevailing diseases of this
country,--the ague and bilious fevers.
Several of the oxen and horses belonging to ourselves and others of the
party encamped, strayed away and could not be found this morning. A general
hunt to recover this valuable property became necessary, and it proved
successful. Emigrants cannot be too watchful of their cattle and horses when
first starting upon this journey. They are all more or less disposed to
stray and return to the settlements, and frequently they range to such a
distance, that they cannot be recovered.
Numerous parties of ladies and gentlemen from the neighboring villages
visited our camp in the course of the day, and attended divine service, the
exercises of which were performed by the Rev. Mr. Dunleavy of the Methodist
Episcopal church, one of the emigrants to California.
Six additional wagons came into our camp in the course of the afternoon,
one of which, drawn by mules, belonged to Mr. Lippincott of New York, whom I
have already mentioned. The sun, until late in the afternoon, shone with
scorching intensity. Just before sunset I took a stroll over the verdant
plain to gather flowers for preservation. I strayed to a stone monument
erected by an emigrating company, commemorative of their departure for
Oregon, on a commanding position of the prairie.
Ex-governor Boggs, of Missouri, who, with his family, designs to emigrate
to California, came to our camp this evening, and soon after left, returning
to Independence, his residence. He stated that it was impossible for his
wagons to come up with us until Thursday.
May 11. – This day had been appointed for the organization of the
emigrant company bound for California, the choice of officers, &c. Mr.
HARLAN and his party came over, and at nine o’clock, A. M., all the men were
assembled in the grove to proceed to business.
EDWIN BRYANT was chosen chairman, and Mr. CURRY appointed secretary of
the meeting. Mr. Harlan, after the organization of the meeting, moved a
postponement of the election of officers, until the emigrants had passed the
Kansas River. This motion was rejected. Mr. H. then requested leave to
withdraw from the meeting, and by a vote his request was granted. He then
withdrew, stating, however, before he left, his belief that companies of
moderate size would travel with much more convenience and celerity than
large companies, and that his party added to those on the ground, he
believed, would render the train too unwieldy for convenience and progress.
This view was afterwards found to be entirely correct.
Colonel W. H. Russell was then chosen captain of the party encamped
around us. A committee was appointed, of which Governor Boggs was chairman,
to draft rules or laws for the government of the party during their journey.
They reported in the afternoon, and it was further resolved that we should
recommence our journey in the morning. A guard was set over our cattle
to-night, for the first time, to prevent them from straying.
A male and female of the Shawnee Indian tribe came into our camp this
afternoon. Their age apparently was about fifty. They were mounted on
ponies, and the female rode sidewise on the saddle. They were dressed in the
costume of the whites of the frontier. They were very taciturn, and soon
left us.
Leave Indian Creek – "Catching up" – A corral – Droves of mules from New Mexico – Santa Fé traders returning – Dismal accounts of the journey – Leave the Santa Fé trail – Wild onions – Difficult crossings – Potawattomie Indian – Ex-governor Boggs and other emigrants come up – Reasons assigned for emigration – Solitude of the prairies – More Indians – First news of war with Mexico -- Signs of dissolution of the party – An adventure almost – Extreme heat – Sufferings of cattle ‘Division’ – Kansas River – A luxury in the wilderness – New-comers – Rumors of war confirmed.
MAY 12. All the wagons and teams were this morning inspected by a
committee appointed for that purpose. It appeared from their report that the
number of wagons belonging to the company was 63; of men 119; of women 59;
of children, male and female, 110; pounds of breadstuffs 58,484; of bacon
38,080; of powder 1,065; of lead 2,557; number of guns, mostly rifles, 144;
pistols 94. The number of cattle was not reported, but I estimate it at 700,
including the loose stock, and 150 horses.
The scene of "catching up," as the yoking and attaching of the oxen to
the wagons is called in emigrant phraseology, is one of great bustle and
confusion. The crack of the ox-goad, the "whoa-haws" in a loud voice, the
leaping and running about of the oxen to avoid the yoke, and the bellowing
of the loose stock, altogether create a most Babel-like and exciting
confusion. The wagons commenced moving at nine o’clock, and at ten the camp
was entirely deserted. In consequence of there being no order of march
to-day, the train of wagons was strung out two or three miles in length. The
views of this long procession, occasionally sinking into the depressions of
the prairie, and then rising therefrom and winding along the curves of the
ridges to avoid the wet and soft ground, were highly picturesque.
Our journey has been over a prairie entirely destitute of timber, or
shrubbery of any kind. The soil is generally composed of a black
argillaceous loam, several feet in depth. The summits of the highest
elevations exhibit a more sandy composition of soil, with a debris of flint
and porous sandstone. The grouse, or prairie-hens, have been frequently
flushed during our march. Smaller birds are not very numerous. The heat of
the sun has been extremely oppressive.
At one o’clock, P.M., we reached a small grove, composed of a few oaks,
cotton-wood, maple, and hickory trees, on the banks of a small branch, (head
of Blue Creek,) where we encamped for the day. The wagons, in forming the
encampment, were what is called corraled, an anglicised Spanish word,
the significance of which, in our use of the term, is, that they were formed
in a circle; constituting a wall of defence in the event of an attack from
the Indians, and a pound for the confinement of the cattle and
horses, whenever necessary or desirable. A Spanish corral is a common
cattle or horse pound. The area of this circle is sufficiently large to
graze, during the night, such horses and cattle as are most likely to stray,
if not thus confined. On the outside of the corral the tents are
pitched, with their doors outwards; and in front of these the camp-fires are
lighted, and the culinary operations for the several families, or messes,
performed.
This afternoon the company was divided into four sections, and a leader
for each was appointed, to superintend their order of march. Several
subordinate or staff officers were appointed, as assistants to the captain,
etc., etc. Regular guard-duty was established, and our organization,
theoretically, appeared to be very perfect, and entirely sufficient for all
the purposes required of it. Distance, six miles.
May 13. – Brownell, our driver, having left camp last night, to ride a
distance of ten or twelve miles on some business, did not return until after
we had commenced our march. It was not without great trouble that we
collected our oxen, and succeeded in attaching them to the wagons. Nuttall
volunteered to act as driver pro tern. for the day, or until Brownell
returned.
Our march was along the Santa Fé
trail, through an undulating prairie-country, occasionally dotted with a few
trees and clumps of small hazel-bushes. But generally there was no object
for the eye to rest upon but the green and flowery slopes and gentle and
ever-varying irregularities in the surface of the prairie. About one o’clock
we passed what is called the "Lone Elm," a solitary tree, standing near a
pool of water.
I met, this afternoon, three returning Santa Fé
trading-companies; two of them with three or four wagons, and the other with
twelve wagons, all drawn by mules. They were driving before them several
large herds of mules, in the aggregate about one thousand. The mules were so
lean that the ribs of most of them were defined with precision, and the
bones of some of them appeared to have worn through the flesh. I never saw a
more ghostly collection of animals. The operative men composing these
companies were principally New-Mexicans; the chiefs of the parties, however,
were Americans. They all presented a most tagged and worn appearance.
I stopped and conversed some time with one of the leading men of these
companies. lie was intelligent, notwithstanding his soiled and ragged
costume, and appeared to be very candid in all his statements. He said that
the principal part of the mules had been driven from Chihuahua, and cost
there twenty dollars per head; that they were taken in exchange for such
commodities as had been carried out with them, and he expected to dispose of
them at a profit on his arrival in the settlements of Missouri. He said that
the journey to Santa Fé and Chihuahua
was one of great fatigue and hardship, as he knew, but that the journey to
California was infinitely more so; that our lives would be shortened ten
years by the trip, and before we returned, if we experienced such good
fortune, our heads would be white, not with the frosts of age, but from the
effects of exposure and extreme hardships. This was not very cheering
information, and bidding him a polite good-day, we left him.
About 4-o’clock, P.M., I reached the point where I supposed the Oregon
trail diverged from the Santa Fé road.
It was raining copiously. At some distance in the prairie, I saw man mounted
on a horse, with a loose mule feeding near him. Supposing him to be a member
of some of the front emigrating parties, I rode up to him and inquired the
probable distance to the next camping-ground. He was a man of that
non-committal order sometimes met with, from whom no satisfactory or
explanatory information can be drawn by any inquiry, however pointed. He
appeared to be afraid of exposing his own ignorance by committing himself in
any direct reply; and in & vain effort to seem eminently wise and discreet,
his affirmative responses were rebutted by such a volume of negative
qualifications and reservations, that he was entirely incomprehensible.
The rain had abated before this unsatisfactory colloquy was ended, and a
bright rainbow was formed in the east, the arch of which was not raised more
than one degree above the horizon. Our train of wagons coming up, we
continued on the Santa Fé trail four
miles farther, when we left it on the right hand, and soon afterwards
crossing a small creek with high and steep banks, we encamped on the western
side of it, in a small grove which fringes the margin of the stream. Large
quantities of wild onions were gathered by many of our party to-day, and
being cooked with their bacon, composed the vegetable portion of their
evening meal. Their odor is rank, and any thing but agreeable. The rain
recommenced falling before we could pitch our tent, heavily and steadily,
with every prospect of stormy night. Distance 16 miles.
May 14. – The rain of yesterday and last night has again so much
saturated and softened the ground, as to render travelling with wheels very
difficult.
The first mile and a half of our route was through the timbered bottom of
the branch on which we had encamped. Our progress through this was very
greatly obstructed by the unevenness of the ground and its soft and miry
condition. We were frequently obliged to fell trees and to cut down large
quantities of small brush and throw them into the muddy vines, in order to
enable our animals and wagons to pass over them. These difficulties operate
as serious discouragements upon the energies of many, but I look for a
better road before we advance a great distance. Throughout the day the travelling has been very fatiguing to our oxen, the wagons frequently
stalling in the mud-holes and the crossings of the small branches. Three or
four hours were occupied in fording a diminutive tributary of the Wakarusa
creek. The banks on the eastern side are so steep, that the wagons were let
down with ropes, and the teams were doubled, sometimes quadrupled, in order
to draw them up on the other side.
The largest portion of our train reached the banks of the Wakarusa about
5 o’clock, and encamped on a sloping lawn in a curve of the stream, carpeted
with verdant and luxuriant grass. A. grove of small trees (oak, hickory,
dogwood, and willows) nearly surrounds our camp. Their foliage is of the
deepest green, and flowers of all the brilliant, and the softer and more
modest hues, enliven the landscape around us. The face of the country over
which we have travelled to-day, has been more broken and picturesque than
yesterday. We passed during our march an elevated conical swell of the
plain, which I ascended; and the view from it was one of commanding extent
and great richness and beauty. The configuration of the vast diameter of the
plain which can be observed from this, presents all the graceful and gentle
curves, and the delicate shading and coloring that would charm the
enthusiastic landscape artist in his dreaming sketches.
A number of wagons being behind at dark, a party was formed and returned
on the trail to their assistance. We found two or three of the wagons
stalled in the deep mud, and the tongue of one of them, belonging to some
highly worthy young men from Lexington, Ky., named Putnam, was broken. After
great exertions they were all drawn out and up to the camp, but it was near
midnight before this was accomplished. Distance 15 miles.
May 15. – A Potawattomie Indian, accompanied by a halfbreed who spoke
English correctly, came to our camp early this morning. The Potawattomie was
a tall, athletic young man of a symmetrical figure, and rode a fat and
handsome Indian pony, which several of our party made overtures to purchase,
but they were not successful. He was dressed in a calico shirt, with
buckskin pantaloons, gaiters, and moccasins. He brought with him several
pairs of moccasins, some of them second-hand, which he wished to trade for
meat. He soon sold out his small stock of wares and left us. The morning was
spent in cleaning our rifles and pistols, which had become rusty and foul
from the frequent rains.
In the afternoon we were joined by Ex-governor
[Lilburn W.] Boggs, of Missouri, and
Colonel [J. Quinn] Thornton and another gentleman from Illinois. The general reason
assigned for emigration to the Pacific, by those from the frontier
settlements of Illinois and Missouri, is the extreme unhealthiness of those
districts. They state that during the summer and autumnal months they are
afflicted with the ague and fever; and of late years, in the winter season,
the congestive fever prevails, and sometimes it is so fatal in its ravages
as nearly to depopulate whole neighborhoods. They emigrate to the Pacific in
search of health, and if they can find this with a reasonable fertility of
soil on their arrival, they will not only be satisfied but feel thankful to
Providence for providing them such a retreat from the miseries they have
endured.
In the afternoon we crossed the Wakarusa creek, and en camped on the
opposite bank in a grove of large timber. Several Shawnee Indians came to
our camp in the evening; one of whom, calling himself John Wolf, spoke
English. They begged for whiskey. Distance 1 mile.
May 16. – Several Potawattomie Indians, male and female, visited our camp
this morning. None of them spoke English. They could, however, pronounce the
word "whiskey," and uttering this and at the same time exhibiting small
pieces of silver, was the common salutation of these miserably-clad,
half-starved creatures. They excited mingled emotions of loathing and
commiseration. John Wolf, the Shawnee, whose acquaintance I made yesterday,
applied to me to indite for him a letter, and to carry it westward to some
great Indian captain of his tribe. The letter, written from his dictation,
was only four lines in length. It informed his friend that two Shawnee
chiefs, named Henry Clay and Ben Kiasas, and a sister of the Indian
addressed, named Black Poddee, were dead. I folded, sealed, and superscribed
the letter, but I could never hear of the friend of John Wolf, and
consequently the brief epistle was never delivered.
The grove in which we were encamped presented, this morning, a most noisy
and animated scene. The oxen belonging to our teams, and in daily use, now
number about seven hundred; and the mules, horses, and other loose animals,
amount to three hundred, numbering, in the aggregate, one thousand head of
cattle and horses. "Gee-up !" "gee-haw !" and "whoahaw !" with incessant
cracks of the whip, resounded on all sides, as soon as the word to "catch
up" was given. As usual, a portion of the cattle could not be found when
wanted, notwithstanding a guard had been placed over them during the night;
and it was ten o’clock, A.M., before the rear division of the train left the
encampment.
Our route, with the exception of the low rich bottom of the Wakarusa, has
been over the high rolling prairie. In the far distance we could see the
narrow dark lines of timber, indicating the channels of the small
water-courses, stretching far away, until lost in the haze, or concealed
from our view by the interposition of the horizon. Some of the slopes of the
plain, in the perspective, were beautifully ornamented with clumps and rows
of trees, representing the parks, avenues, and pleasure grounds of some
princely mansion, which the imagination was continually conjecturing might
be hidden behind their dense foliage. Not a living or moving object of any
kind appears upon the face of the vast expanse. The white-topped wagons, and
the men and animals belonging to them, winding slowly over the hill-tops and
through the hollows, are the only relief to the motionless torpor and
tomblike stillness of the landscape. A lovelier scene was never gazed upon,
nor one of more profound solitude.
A short time before we encamped, this afternoon, a small party of Indians
were seen in a hollow about a mile to our right. We rode to them. and
ascertained them to be Kachinga, a chief of the Kansas tribe, two warriors,
and two squaws, with their families of children. They were here encamped,
their tents being smoke-colored skins sewn together, and raised on small
sticks, about two feet from the ground. Kachinga carried a rifle, which
appeared to be new. He did not seem to understand very well the use of it.
He was rouged with vermilion paint, and his hair was shorn to the skin,
except a small tuft on the crown of his head, and under Iris chin. He wore,
suspended by a buckskin string from his neck, two medals, one representing,
in alto relievo, the likeness of Thomas Jefferson, President of the
United States. The other medal, the device on which I do not recollect,
purported, from the inscription, to have been presented to him by a citizen
of Hartford, Ct.,--evidently a "Yankee notion." Kachinga appeared to be a
man of about sixty, and the expression of his countenance and his general
appearance were prepossessing. The two squaws were miserable-looking objects
in their features, figures, and clothing. The Indians broke up their
encampment when we left them, and soon overtaking our train, travelled along
with us. The two squaws had each a pony, heavily laden with baggage. The
children were in a state of nudity, and the infants were carried by their
mothers, being fastened to their backs by closely-drawn blankets. They came
around us while eating supper, and begged something to eat, which we gave
them. Their appearance was extremely wretched.
We were overtaken to-day, during our march, by a man belonging to one of
the forward trains, but who left the settlements since we did. He brought
with him a late number of the "St. Louis Republican," from the columns of
which we derived intelligence of the first overt acts of hostility between
Mexico and the United States. The paper contained an account of the defeat
and capture of a company of dragoons on the Rio Grande, under the command of
Captain Thornton, by the Mexicans, and also of the supposed critical
situation of the United States troops composing the command of General Z.
Taylor. Notwithstanding this warlike demonstration, none of the emigrants to
California, so far as I could learn, manifested a disposition to turn back
in consequence of it.
That discordance, arising from many trifling circumstances and
unavoidable inconveniences, which I had heard mentioned as inevitable
concomitants of this journey, was displayed in several instances to-day.
Many of the men manifested much petulance, incivility, and the want of a
spirit of accommodation. In short, there appears to be considerable
wrangling and intrigue in camp, which will probably result in a division of
our party. Distance, 12 miles.
May 17. – The morning was so delightful and the atmosphere so bracing,
that I started on foot in advance of the train; and noticing on the right
some attractive objects at a distance of two or three miles, I left the
trail, and proceeding towards them, passed over two or three elevated swells
of the prairie and through several deep and lonely hollows. In one of the
latter I saw two horses grazing. My first conjecture, seeing no signs of
emigrants or Indians about, was, that these horses had strayed either from
our own camp or from some of the forward emigrating parties, and I attempted
to drive them before me; but they were not to be controlled, running off in
a contrary direction, prancing and snorting.
In the next hollow, through which flows a small spring branch, I saw the
embers of an Indian camp-fire, with the low, rude frame upon which their
tent-skins had been spread surrounding it. I stirred the ashes and
discovered a few live coals, showing that the camp had been occupied last
night. The diminutive bottom bordering the miniature stream was covered with
hazel brush, with a few alders and larger shrubbery. I crossed through the
brush, and was commencing the ascent on the other side, when six Indians,
mounted on horses, came in sight on the top of the hill, and began to
descend it. They did not discover me immediately, but as soon as they did,
they halted on the side of the hill. I was sufficiently near to see that one
of them carried in his hand a broadsword, with a bright metal scabbard,
which glittered in the sunbeams. This Indian, the foremost of the party, was
leading a horse. When he saw me he gave the horse in charge of another. I
had very carelessly, in order to be unencumbered by weight, left all my arms
in the wagon, except my hatchet. I was now several miles distant from our
train and entirely concealed from them, and there was no probability of any
of our party passing this way. Not liking the manoeuvres of the Indians, or
knowing what might be their designs, I never felt more regret for any
misadventure, than for not bringing my gun and pistols with me. Ascertaining
that my hatchet was in a right position for use, if necessary, I advanced up
the hill to the place where the Indians had halted, and stopped.
I ascertained that the party was composed of three men and three squaws.
The men were armed with bows and arrows and tomahawks. The leader spoke to
me in English, and said, "How do?" I replied and reciprocated the inquiry in
the usual manner. He then asked, in his broken English, if there were more
white men with me? I replied that there was a great number just behind. He
nodded his head and looked at his companions with an expression of
disappointed intelligence. I asked him if he was a Kansas? His reply was,
"No,--Sac." I then passed, leaving them standing and apparently in earnest
consultation.
I was glad to be relieved of their company, for I felt doubtful of their
intentions, and my arms were insufficient for a successful defence against
them, if they had made an attack,--from which I believe they were deterred
by the supposition that my fellow-travellers would immediately be upon them.
I rose the hill, and saw, at a distance of about two miles, a man on
horseback riding in such a direction across the prairie that I could easily
intercept him. I soon came up to him and found it to be Mr. Grayson, one of
our own company, out hunting. We walked onward. and came up to the caravan
while our party were nooning.
After procuring from our wagon some refreshments, and resting an hour,
accompanied by Mr. Curry I again started a pedestrian, in advance of the
train of wagons, for a walk of twelve or fifteen miles, the nearest point in
our route, to water. The fresh breeze which had fanned us during the
forenoon, died away entirely, and the sun shone with an almost scorching
fervency of heat, unmitigated by a solitary cloud on the face of the sky.
The trail is smooth and hard, running over the high table-land of the
prairies. Clumps and rows of timber could be seen at long distances, giving
to the background of the scenery a cultivated and inhabited aspect. The
effects of the intense heat, aggravated by the severe exercise of fast
walking, became intolerably oppressive, and produced a thirst and faintness
such as I had not before experienced. We hunted along the roadside for even
a puddle of water to moisten our mouths and throats, but could discover
none. Finding some prairie peas, we filled our pockets with them, and their
juice afforded a little relief to our thirst. At length we arrived within
the distance of two miles of a line of timber on the left, indicative of
water. Leaving the trail we marched directly towards it, and reaching its
banks we found it to be a small creek which empties into the Kansas river,
about five miles distant. We satisfied our thirst with long draughts of the
tepid water, and then plunged into the current of the stream to cool our
almost broiling flesh and purify our bodies from the dust accumulated upon
them by the day’s march.
Refreshing ourselves, in the manner above described, for an hour, the
invigorating effects of which were most salutary, we returned again to the
trail, just as the train of wagons was coming up and passing. Many of the
oxen were so much exhausted that they could with difficulty move forward at
a very slow pace. Their tongues were hanging out, and several had fallen
down, being unable to proceed. One had died on the march. The order had been
given to encamp on the opposite side of the stream, and several of the front
wagons when they reached it attempted to cross; but the oxen, mad with
thirst and heat, when they came in sight of the water, became
uncontrollable, and ran down the steep bank into the stream, threatening
destruction to tile wagons and there contents. All efforts to prevail upon
them to leave the water and ascend the opposite bank, for a long time, were
unavailing. Such being the difficulties, the order was countermanded, and
our camp formed on the southeastern bank of the stream.
Near our camp there is a crescent-shaped chain of elevated mounds, the
natural undulations of the prairie, which I had plainly seen this morning
when we commenced our march. These mounds stretch some four or five miles,
and their bases being precipitous and wall-like, but for their extent, in
outline they would represent the foundations and the fallen and ruined
superstructure of some vast temple or overthrown city.
This evening, after we had encamped, it appeared from a speech delivered
by Mr. Dunleavy, that a portion of the company had determined to separate
from the main party, being dissatisfied with its present organization.
Distance 24 miles.
May 18. – Mr. Jacob, who had been appointed sub-captain of one of our
divisions; Mr. Kirkendall, who had been appointed quartermaster; and Mr.
Greenbury, our pilot, were dispatched early this morning to a mission about
ten miles distant up the Kansas river, to ascertain if the river was
fordable at that point. Colonel Russell, our captain, rode to the Kansas
ferry, five miles distant, to ascertain if the ferry-boats were disengaged,
and could, if we deemed it expedient to cross here, ferry our wagons over
the river.
Although the morning was fine and pleasant, it clouded up before eight
o’clock and commenced raining, accompanied by thunder. After considerable
labor and difficulty we succeeded in crossing the creek without any
accident, except the breaking of an axletree of one of the wagons in
descending the steep bank. Colonel Russell met us on the opposite bank, and,
some conversation ensuing with the leaders of the disaffected party, it was
proposed that the company should divide, it being too numerous and cumbrous
for convenient progress. Those who were in favor of remaining with the
originally organized company were requested to move towards the ferry.
Thirty-five of the wagons moved forward, and the remainder separated from
them.
The signs were so strongly indicative of a heavy rain, that it was
thought imprudent to delay crossing the Kansas until the return of the
gentlemen dispatched up the river this morning, but that we should proceed
to the ferry and cross forthwith. The Kansas, at the ferry, which is owned
by two half-breed Indians, is about two hundred yards in width at this time;
but at some seasons of the year, from its banks, it evidently is much
narrower. The approach to it, on either side, is through a timbered bottom
about three-fourths of a mile in width. The trees are chiefly oak, linden,
and hickory. Hazel and a variety of underbrush and grapevines, make up the
small shrubbery of the bottom.
The labor of ferrying our wagons over was commenced at one o’clock. The
wagons were hauled as near the boat-landing as they could be by the teams,
and then with their loads in them were lifted and pushed into the boats by
the united strength of the men. By hard and unremitting toil the thirty-five
wagons, which now constituted our train, were safely transported to the
other side; and all our oxen, horses, and loose stock swam over, by six
o’clock, P.M. The fee for ferriage, per wagon, was one dollar. Two boats are
employed, and they are large enough to transport two wagons each trip. They
are pushed across the stream with long poles handled by Indians. All being
over, we moved forward about three miles and encamped on the bank of Soldier
Creek, a small stream emptying into the Kansas.
While on our march from the Kansas to our encampment, Mr. Branham and
myself, being in advance of the main party, discovered an abundance of ripe
strawberries. We stopped and gathered several quarts, and, carrying them to
camp, they were served up by Mrs. B., with rich cream and loaf-sugar, a
genuine luxury in this wild region.
This morning, before we commenced our march, a Mrs. Hall, the wife of one
of the emigrants, was safely delivered of a pair of twins. Thus two were
added to our number. These young natives of the wilderness were
appropriately named. The mother and children were doing well this evening.
Mr. Webb, editor of the "Independence Expositor," accompanied by Mr. Hay,
a great-grandson of Daniel Boone, arrived at our camp, direct from the
settlements, just after dark. They came express to communicate to us the
last intelligence we shall receive from the United States, before reaching
the Pacific. They brought with them all the letters at the Independence and
Westport post-offices addressed to emigrants, and several files of papers to
the latest dates. These gave positive information of the existence of
hostilities between Mexico and the United States on the Rio Grande, and
confirmed the rumor respecting the perilous situation of Gen. Taylor. How
this important event is to affect us upon our arrival in California, it is
impossible to foresee. No one, however, is in the least disposed to turn
back in consequence of it. Distance 10 miles.
Methodist Mission on the Kansas – Soldier Creek – Lustration – A ruined Indian town – A rose in the wilderness -- Another division – Kansas Indian towns – Ki-he-ga-wa-chuck-ee – Prairie potato – Mountain trappers – Beauty of scenery and fertility of soil – Vermilion Creek – Brilliant meteor – Big Blue River – Prairie-pea – Legislation on the prairies.
MAY 19. – We remained encamped to-day, in order to enable Mr. Boone, a
grandson of Daniel Boone, and his family and party, who wish to join us, to
come up. Messrs. Kirkendall, Jacob, and Greenbury, reached camp this morning
about seven o’clock, relieving me of some uneasiness on their account. They
had found a ford, near the mission, about twelve miles up the Kansas; but
when they returned to the ferry, finding that our train had all passed over,
and it being late, they remained during the night with the party that
separated from us this morning. The mission which they had visited, and at
which they were well received and entertained, is an establishment for the
education and christianization of the Indians, supported in part by the
United States government, and under the patronage and superintendence of the
Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States. There is a blacksmith’s
shop at the mission, and an extensive farm under cultivation.
The stream on which we are encamped is called "Soldier Creek," from the
circumstance, as I learned, that, some years since a company of traders
having smuggled into the Indian territory a quantity of whiskey, were
pursued by a detachment of United States soldiers, and overtaken at the spot
where our wagons are formed into a corral. Their whiskey was taken
and emptied into the stream; and the soldiers having encamped here during
these proceedings, gave its present name to the creek. The bank of the small
rivulet was lined at an early hour after breakfast with fires, kettles,
washtubs, and piles of unwashed linen, showing conclusively that a general
lustration was to be performed by the female portion of our party. The
timber on the creek consists of oak, linden, and some maple trees. They are
of good size, and in several places the bends of the stream are well covered
with them. I had heard reports of the creek being richly stocked with a
variety of fish; but after two trials of several hours each, without a
single nibble at my hook, I was compelled to entertain strong doubts of the
accuracy of the reports. The whiskey poured into the stream may have
poisoned the fish, as it would have done the Indians, had the traders been
successful in their designs.
The soil of the Kansas bottom, and where we are encamped, is a rich
argillaceous loam, of great depth, and capable of producing any crop adapted
to this latitude. The natural grasses grow with great luxuriance, but they
are of a coarse species, and when matured must be rather tough, and not very
nutritious.
A new census of our party was taken this morning, and it was found to
consist of 98 fighting-men, 50 women, 46 wagons, and 350 cattle. Two
divisions were made of the wagons, for convenience in marching. We were
joined to-day by nine wagons from Illinois, belonging to
Mr. [James F.] Reed and the
Messrs. [George and
Jacob] Donner, highly respectable and intelligent gentlemen, with
interesting families. They were received into the company by a unanimous
vote.
A Kansas Indian village was visible from our camp on the plain to the
south, at a distance of two or three miles. As soon as the sun was
sufficiently low in the afternoon, accompanied by Jacob, I visited this
village. The walk was much longer and more fatiguing than we expected to
find it. While on the way we counted, for a certainty, on our arrival, to be
received and entertained by the female élite
of the Kansas aristocracy, clad in their smoke-colored skin costumes, and
with their copper complexions rouged until they vied, in their fiery
splendors, with the sun, seen through a vapor of smoke. We carried some
vermilion and beads along with us for presents, to ornament the most
unadorned, in accordance with the taste of the savages. But, alas! after all
our toil, through the rank and tangled grass, when we approached the village
not a soul came out to welcome us. No Kansas belle or stern chief made her
or his appearance at the doors of any of the wigwams. We entered the
village, and found it entirely deserted and desolate, and most of the
wigwams in a ruinous state.
A large wigwam, or cabin, near the centre of the village, had recently
been burnt to the ground. The whole number of the buildings standing was
fourteen. They varied in dimensions, from twenty to thirty-six feet in
length, by fifteen in breadth. The cabins are constructed by inserting in
the ground hickory saplings, and bending them so as to form an arch about
eight or ten feet in height at the top. These saplings are bound firmly
together by willow twigs, making a strong, though light framework. This
frame is shingled over with bark, peeled from the linden and other large
trees, in strips of about twelve inches in breadth and five feet in length.
Over this is another frame of saplings and willow-withes, securing the roof
and walls, and binding the whole building together. Each cabin has one small
entrance, about four feet in height, and three feet in breadth. We passed
through, and examined four or five of them. The bark-walls, on the inside,
were ornamented with horses; horses with men mounted upon them, and engaged
in combat with the bow and arrow; horses attached to wagons; and, in one
instance, horses drawing a coach. Another group represented a plow, drawn by
oxen. There were various other figures of beasts and reptiles, and some
which I conjectured to be the Evil Spirit of the Indian mythology. But they
were all done in a style so rude, as to show no great progress in the fine
arts. None of the cabins which we entered contained a solitary article of
any kind. I returned to our camp, disappointed in my expectations of meeting
the Indians at their village, and saddened by the scene of desolation I had
witnessed.
In reference to the present number of the Kansas tribe of Indians, I
could obtain little satisfactory information. They appear to be wretchedly
poor. The country they claim as theirs, and inhabit, affords little or no
game; and so far as my observation has extended, they give no attention to
agriculture. The number of warriors which the tribe can assemble, I heard
estimated at three hundred; but I have no means of judging of the accuracy
of this estimate.
May 20. – Our driver was helplessly sick this morning from the effects of
an over-night’s drunken frolic, upon some wretched, adulterated whiskey
which he had procured somewhere in the camp. We were compelled to employ a
new driver for the day, and to haul our old one in the wagon.
We travelled several miles over a flat plain, in some places wet and
boggy. The Kansas river skirted with timber, with a rich and extensive
landscape beyond, could be seen on our left; and on our right Soldier Creek,
with scenery equally attractive.
I saw near the trail this morning, a solitary wild rose, the first I have
seen blooming in the prairies, the delightful fragrance of which instantly
excited emotions of sadness and tenderness, by reviving in the memory a
thousand associations connected with home, and friends, and civilization,
all of which we had left behind, for a weary journey through a desolate
wilderness. It is not possible to describe the effect upon the sensibilities
produced by this modest and lonely flower. The perfume exhaled from its
petals and enriching the "desert air," addressed a language to the heart
more thrilling than the plaintive and impassioned accents from the inspired
voice of music or poesy.
We encamped at 3 o’clock, P.M., in a heavy rain, accompanied by thunder
and lightning, which had been pouring down upon us three hours. Our camp is
on the high ground of the prairies, a mile from wood and water, which
necessary articles have to be hauled to it in the rain and through the deep
mud.
The Indians have, thus far, made no attempts to steal our cattle. They
generally keep a respectful distance, showing themselves in small numbers on
the summits of the prairie, adjacent to the route of our train. I watched
to-night until one o’clock. The howls and sharp snarling barks of the
wolves; the mournful hootings of the owl, and the rush of the winds through
the tree-tops of the neighboring grove, are the only sounds disturbing the
deep solitude of the night. Distance eight miles.
May 21. – The views from the high elevations of the prairie, have, as
usual, been strikingly picturesque. The country we have passed through for
the last one hundred miles, presents greater attractions to the eye than any
that I have ever previously seen. What the climate may be in winter, or how
it may effect the health of settlers in summer and autumn, I have no means
of judging. Its elevated and undulating surface, however, would seem to
indicate salubrity.
About noon we arrived at another small creek, the banks of which on both
sides are steep, and very difficult to pass. Our wagons were lowered down by
ropes, and by doubling teams, they were all finally drawn out of the bed of
the stream, and up the opposite bank. It was four o’clock when this was
accomplished. We encamped in a bend of the stream, about a mile from where
we crossed it.
The day has been delightful, and a more cheerful spirit seems to prevail
in our party than usual. Mr. [Alphonso D.] Boone, whom we have been expecting several
days, came up and joined us this afternoon. The men amused themselves, after
we encamped, by firing at a target. The distances were 80 and 200 yards.
Among the best shots, with the rifle, were those of Brown of Lexington, Ky.
At dark our cattle were driven into the corral to prevent them from
straying, and from being stolen by the Indians. Distance 6 miles.
May 22. – This morning thirteen wagons, about half of which belonged to
Mr. [Joseph] Gordon, of Jackson county, Mo., separated from the main party, assigning
as a reason therefor, that the company was too large, and that as a
consequence of this, our progress was too slow for them. This is the second
division in our party which has taken place since we started, and there is a
strong probability that soon there will be others. A restlessness of
disposition, and dissatisfaction from trivial causes, lead to these frequent
changes among the emigrating parties.
The trail along which we have travelled to-day, has been dry, compact,
and easy for our teams. it runs over a high undulating country, exhibiting a
great variety of rich scenery. As the traveller rises the elevated swells of
the prairie, his eye can frequently take in at a glance, a diameter of 60 or
80 miles of country, all clothed at this season with the deepest verdure,
and the most luxuriant vegetation. We encamped for the day on what was
called by some "Black Paint" Creek, by others "Sandy," a tributary of the
Kansas river. The bottom on either side of the creek, is timbered with large
and handsomely-shaped oaks.
Mr. Kirkendall and myself were two or three miles in advance of our
train, when we commenced winding through the ravines of the bluffs, in order
to descend to the bottom-lands bordering the stream. We were met here by
four young Indians, apparently riding a race. They were mounted on fat
ponies, which they urged forward at their highest powers of speed, until
coming up to us they drew their horses in, and passing by a short distance,
wheeled about and rode along at our side to the bank of the stream. Here we
met some forty or fifty more Indians, and we soon discovered that about two
miles below there were two large Kansas villages.
One of those whom we met at the creek was a very hand some young man, (a
chief,) whose dress was much more cleanly and of better materials than his
followers or associates. He carried in his hand a small looking-glass, which
he consulted with great frequency and earnestness, evidently much pleased
with his personal appearance. A profusion of bone and tin trinkets
ornamented his ears, and nose, and neck. A medal with the likeness on one
side of "John Tyler, President of the United States," was suspended on his
breast. On the other side there was a device of a pipe and a tomahawk, and
the following inscription, "Peace and Friendship." This Indian appeared to
have great influence over the young men of his tribe. I did not learn his
name.
Our train came up and encamped, and it was not long before the two
villages appeared to be entirely emptied of their men, women, and children.
The camp was filled and surrounded by them. They numbered probably some four
or five hundred. Those who last came from the villages were mostly in a
wretched condition, so far as their clothing was concerned. An exceedingly
foul blanket, more than half worn, and sometimes in tatters, with a pair of leggins, constituted their suits of garments. A large portion of the men
were well-proportioned and above medium stature; and the countenances of
many were prepossessing and intelligent, if not handsome. Some of them wore
their hair long, and it presented a tangled and matted appearance. The heads
of others (probably warriors) were shorn close to the skin, except a tuft
extending from the forehead over the crown of the head down to the neck,
resembling the comb of a cock. The faces of many were rouged,--some in a
fanciful manner, with vermilion. The eyelids and lips only, of several, were
painted; the cheeks and ears of others, and the forehead and nose of others.
There appeared to be a great variety of tastes and no prevailing fashion. I
noticed that the ears of a great number of the men were bored with four
large holes in each, so large that the finger could be passed through the
perforations, from which were suspended a variety of ornaments, made of
bone, tin, and brass. Small globular and hollow metal buttons, with balls in
them, were strung around the neck or fastened to the leggins of others, so
that every motion of their bodies created a jingling sound.
Such as rode ponies were desirous of swapping them for the
American horses of the emigrants, or of trading them for whiskey. They all
appeared to be most unblushing and practised beggars. There was scarcely an
object which they saw, from a cow and calf to the smallest trinket or button
upon our clothing, that they did not request us to present to them. Bread,
meat, tobacco, and whiskey, they continually asked for; and the former we
gave to them, the last we had not to give-and if we had had it, we should
not have given it. Among these very troublesome visitors was
Ki-he-ga-wa-chuck-ee, (words importing "the rashly brave," or "fool-hardy.")
This personage is ,. principal chief of the Kansas tribe. His wife
accompanied him. He appeared to be a man of about fifty-five years of age,
of commanding figure, and of rather an intellectual and pleasing expression
of countenance. I presented his squaw, whose charms were not of the highest
order, with a dozen strings of glass beads, with which she and her spouse
seemed to be much delighted. They both spoke and said, "Good! very good !" A
turban; a soiled damask dressing gown of originally brilliant colors, but
much faded; buckskin leggins and moccasins, composed the dress of
Ki-he-ga-wa-chuck-ee. He wore the usual quantity of bone and tin ornaments
about his ears and neck, and the little jingling buttons or bells on his
legs. His face was painted with vermilion.
The reputation of the Kansas Indians for honesty is far from immaculate
among the emigrants, and a strong guard was placed around the camp and over
our cattle, notwithstanding the pledge of Ki-he-ga-wa-chuck-ee, that none of
his people should steal from or molest us in any manner. About 10 o’clock at
night, two Indians were taken prisoners by the sentinels on duty. They were
greatly alarmed when brought to the guard-tent, expecting immediate
punishment. An investigation took place, and it turned out, that they had
come into the camp by appointment with some individual of our party, who had
promised to trade with them for a horse, for which they were to receive four
gallons of whiskey. Their motive in coming late at night was, that they
wished to conceal the trade from the Indians generally, as in the event of
its being known, they would be compelled to divide the whiskey among the
whole tribe, whereas they wished to drink it themselves. The trade was
broken off, and the Indian captives, much to their relief, were discharged.
Several of the young men from our camp visited the nearest Kansas village
after dark. They had not been in the village long, before the cry of
"Pawnee! Pawnee!" was raised by the Indians, and several guns were
discharged immediately. This alarm was probably raised by the Indians, to
rid themselves of their white visitors, and the ruse was successful. The
Pawnees, as I learned, had a short time previously made an attack upon the
Kansas, and besides killing a number of the latter, had burnt one of their
villages. Distance 18 miles.
May 23. – The Indians were in and around our camp before we were fairly
aroused from our slumbers, begging with great vehemence for bread and meat.
Ki-he-ga-wa-chuck-ee, and his wife, took their seats upon the ground near
our tent, it being headquarters, and there remained until the train was
ready to move. In consideration of the fulfilment of the promise of the
chief that nothing should be stolen from us by his people, a general
contribution was made, of flour, bacon, and sundry other articles, amounting
in the aggregate to a large quantity, which was given to the chief to be
divided as he saw fit among his people. This appeared to give general
satisfaction to our visitors, and we left them in the full enjoyment of
their luxuries.
The ford of the small creek on which we encamped last night was
difficult, owing to its steep banks and muddy channel. We were obliged to
fell small trees and a large quantity of brush, and fill up the bed of the
stream, before the wagons could pass over. Our route for several miles was
through a highly fertile valley, bounded on the east by a chain of mound
shaped elevations of the prairie, on the west and in front by "Hurricane
Creek," the timber skirting which is plentiful and large. The most
enthusiastic votary of agriculture and a pastoral life, could here, it seems
to me, realize the extent of his desires--the full perfection of rural
scenery, and all the pleasures and enjoyments arising from the most fruitful
reproduction in the vegetable and animal kingdoms. Granite, flint, and
sandstone are exhibited in boulders and a debris on the slopes of the
highest elevations.
Several of the Kansas Indians followed us from our last encampment. One
of them presented to me a root or tuber, of on oval shape, about one and
one-half inch in length, and an inch in diameter. This root is called the
prairie potato. Its composition is farinaceous and highly nutritious, and
its flavor is more agreeable than that of the finest Irish potato. I have
but little doubt, if this plant was cultivated in our gardens, it would be
an excellent and useful vegetable for ordinary consumption; and very
probably it would be so improved as to form a substitute for the potato. The
wild rose, which is now in full bloom, perfumes the atmosphere along our
route with & delicious fragrance. The wild tulip, (yellow and variegated,) a
plume-shaped white flower, and several flowers of the campanella or
bell-shaped classification, have ornamented the prairie to-day.
We crossed the creek on our left at 12 o’clock, M. Two hours were
occupied in passing our wagons over it. Our route from the creek continued
over an open and rolling prairie, broken by small branches and ravines
;--the last of which are now dry, but seem to serve as aqueducts to convey
the water from the rolling plains to the principal streams in rainy seasons,
or during the melting of the snows early in the spring.
In the afternoon, near a small pond of water, we met four trappers from
the Rocky Mountains, returning to the "settlements." They were accompanied
by several Delaware Indians, all of whom spoke English so as to be
understood. There were suspended from the saddle of one of the trappers, a
wild turkey, a racoon, and several squirrels, which they had taken last
night. To acquire the trapper’s art, a long apprenticeship is evidently
requisite. Although the country through which we are travelling abounds in
all the natural vegetable riches which a most generous soil can be supposed
to produce without cultivation, we have rarely seen signs of game of any
description, beast or bird. By the mystery of their art, however, these
hunters of the mountains have contrived to supply themselves with a
sufficiency of meat to keep themselves from starvation. They were packing
several large sacks of fur-skins. They reported that on the Platte, some one
or two hundred miles in advance of us, there were large herds of buffaloes,
and that we should experience no difficulty while in this region in
supplying ourselves with fresh meat. The costume of these men was outré
surpassing description.
We encamped this afternoon in a small depression of the prairie, near a
fine spring of cold pure water, surrounded by a few trees. The water of this
spring was as grateful to us as nectar to the fabled deities of heathen
mythology. Several of the Kansas Indians followed us all day, and are with
us tonight. Distance 12 miles.
May 24. – The first five miles of our march was over a rolling prairie
country, dotted with occasional clumps of timber. We then crossed a creek
with a rapid and limpid current, flowing over a rocky and gravelly bed. This
stream would afford fine water-power for mills. The banks above and below
the ford are well supplied with oak, elm, and linden trees, of good size;
and the laud, which on the western side rises from the creek in gentle
undulations, is of the richest composition, and covered with a carpet of the
greenest and most luxuriant vegetation. We found here, gushing from a ledge
of limestone rock, a spring of excellent water, from which we refreshed
ourselves in draughts that would be astonishing to the most fanatical cold
water advocate.
Rising from the bottom of this stream, upon the table-land, the scenery
for a long distance to the north and the south is surpassingly attractive.
On the eastern bank of the rivulet, a chain of mound-shaped bluffs stretches
far away to the right and the left, overlooking the gentle slopes and
undulations on the western side. It is impossible to travel through this
country with the utilitarian eye and appreciation natural to all Americans,
without a sensation of regret, that an agricultural resource of such immense
capacity as is here supplied by a bountiful Providence, is so utterly
neglected and waste. The soil, l am persuaded, is capable of producing every
variety of crop adapted to this latitude, which enters into the consumption,
and conduces to the comfort and luxury of man, with a generosity of
reproduction that would appear almost marvelous to the farmers of many of
our agricultural districts on the coast of the Atlantic. This fair and
extensive domain is peopled by a few wandering, half-naked and half-starved
Indians, who have not the smallest appreciation of the great natural wealth
of the country over which they roam in quest of such small game as now
remains, to keep themselves from absolute famine. Having destroyed or driven
farther west all the vast herds of deer, elk, and buffalo which once
subsisted here upon the rank and nutritious vegetation, they are now
starving, and have turned pensioners upon the government of the United
States, and beggars of the emigrants passing west, for clothing and food.
Beautiful as the country is, the silence and desolation reigning over it
excite irrepressible emotions of sadness and melancholy.
Passing over the undulations, in a few miles we discovered, on the
right-hand of the trail, another spring of cold water, from which again we
refreshed ourselves. At this point the country becomes much more elevated,
and the view on all sides still more extensive, bounded by the far, far-off
green hill-tops, without a solitary tree in the vast expanse. Where timber
exists on these plains, it is usually in the ravines and bottoms, and along
the water-courses, frequently entirely concealed from the eye of the traveller when surveying the country from the ridges.
I noticed this morning, in a ravine near our camp, a species of
honeysuckle. its blossom was white, and without fragrance. The wild rose,
perfuming the atmosphere with its delicate and delicious fragrance, the
sweetbrier, tulip, and the usual variety of other flowers, have exhibited
themselves on our march.
The oxen, overcome by the extreme heat of the sun during the marches, are
beginning to perish. I saw two dead oxen by the wayside, this morning, which
belonged to some of the forward companies. We encamped, this afternoon, in a
hollow where there is a fine spring of cold, pure water, but no timber, with
the exception of three elm-trees. A dead and fallen elm has been drawn to
our camp, and divided among the several messes for fuel. This tree was
entirely consumed by us, and the next three emigrating parties will consume
the three standing elms. Our progress is very slow. But notwithstanding
this, many of the wagons are late in reaching camp, and the train is
frequently strung out several miles. I am beginning to feel alarmed at the
tardiness of our movements, and fearful that winter will find us in the
snowy mountains of California, or that we shall suffer from the exhaustion
of our supply of provisions. I do not fear for myself, but for the women and
children of the emigrants. Singular as it may seem, there are many of our
present party who have no just conceptions of the extent and labor of the
journey before them. They appear to be desirous of shortening each day’s
march as much as possible, and when once encamped are reluctant to move,
except for the benefit of fresh grass for their cattle, and a more
convenient and plentiful supply of wood for the purposes of cooking. There
are several persons in camp ill with bilious complaints. Distance 10 miles.
May 25. – Our route to-day has been over a more broken country than I
have seen since entering upon the prairies. The timber fringing the margin
of Vermilion Creek, seen in the distance, has been the only relief to the
nakedness of the country, with the exception of two or three solitary trees,
standing isolated on the verdant plain. We reached the Vermilion about noon.
The bank of this stream on the eastern side was so steep, and the ford in
other respects so difficult, that we were detained several hours in crossing
it. The Vermilion is the largest watercourse we have crossed since leaving
the Kansas. Its current is more rapid than has been usually exhibited by the
streams of these prairies, and would afford very good water-power. The
timber at this point on its banks, is about a quarter of a mile in width,
and consists chiefly of oak and elm. It has been reported to be abundantly
supplied with a variety of fish. Ewing and Nuttall, who encamped with an
emigrant party here last night, caught two good-sized catfish, but none of a
different species.
Between this and the Big Blue, on the trail, there was said to be neither
wood nor water, and consequently our water-casks were filled, and a supply
of wood placed in our wagons, sufficient for fires at night and in the
morning. We encamped this afternoon on a high elevation of the prairie,
about five miles west of the Vermilion. Just as our wagons were forming the
corral, a storm of thunder, lightning, rain and wind, burst upon us,
drenching us to the skin, and nearly upsetting some of our wagons with its
furious violence. The cloud rose from the west, and soon passing over to the
east, within a hundred yards of us the most brilliant rainbow I ever beheld
was formed, the bases of the arch resting upon two undulations between which
we had passed. No Roman general, in all his gorgeous triumphal processions,
ever paraded beneath an arch so splendid and imposing. The clouds soon
cleared away, the rain ceased, and the brilliant meteor faded, leaving
nature around us freshened and cleansed from the dust and impurities, which
for two days past have been excessively annoying.
The ridges over which we had marched to-day, have generally exhibited a
coarse gravel of flint and sandstone, with boulders of the latter, and of
granite. Distance 15 miles.
May 26. – Our route to-day has continued over a rolling, and rather
broken country, compared with former marches. We crossed a small stream
about three miles from our encampment, the limpid waters of which flow
merrily over a gravelly bed, and a few straggling trees ornament its banks.
From this we continued to ascend over elevated ridges, until we reached the
bluffs which overlook Big Blue River. Descending from these, and
ascertaining that from the late rains the stream was so much swollen as not
to be fordable, we encamped on a slope of the prairie, near the timber, at
one o’clock, P.M.
The Big Blue in its present state, at the ford, is a stream about one
hundred yards in width, with turbid water and a strong and rapid current. A
large quantity of drift is floating on its surface. The timber on it at this
point is about half a mile in width, and is composed of oak, cotton-wood,
walnut, beach, and sycamore. The trees are large, and appear to be sound and
thrifty. A small spring branch empties into the main river, which here runs
nearly from the north to the south, just above the ford. The waters of the
branch are perfectly limpid, and with a lively and sparkling current bubble
along over a clear bed of gravel and large flat rocks. In the banks and the
bed of this small stream, there are several springs of delicious cold water,
which to the traveller in this region is one of the most highly prized
luxuries. Should our government determine to establish military posts along
the emigrant trail to Oregon, a more favorable position than this, for one
of them, could not be selected. The range of bluffs on the eastern side of
the river, about two hundred yards from it, overlooks and commands the
entire bottom on both sides, forming a natural fortification.
The river has continued to rise rapidly since our arrival here, and at
sunset the muddy waters were even with its banks. It is not probable that we
shall be able to ford it for two or three days. The two companies
immediately in advance of us, were so fortunate as to reach the stream last
night before the great rise took place, and we saw them on our arrival
wending their way west, over the high and distant ridges.
A fruit called the prairie pea, which
I have previously noticed has been very abundant along our route. The plant
which produces it is about eight inches in length, and has a leaf similar to
that of the wild pea vine. The fruit, which varies from half an inch to an
inch in diameter, has a tough rind, with a juicy pulp, the flavor of which
resembles that of the green pea in its raw state. In the heart of the fruit
there are a number of small seeds. Mrs. Grayson, having the necessary
spices, &c., made of the prairie pea a jar of pickles, and they were equal
if not superior to any delicacy of the kind which I have ever tasted. The
wild rose with its delicate perfume, and the wild tulip, have been the most
conspicuous flowers.
The afternoon has been devoted, by the female portion of our party, to
the important duty of "washing." I noticed that the small branch was lined
with fires, kettles, tubs, and all the paraphernalia necessary to the
process of purifying linen. The Big Blue is said to abound in fish, but its
extreme height, has prevented much success with our anglers. A catfish about
three feet in length was taken this evening by one of our party.
While I am writing, a public meeting is being held in the area of the
corral. There is much speaking and voting upon questions appertaining to the
enforcement of by-laws, and regulations heretofore adopted, but rarely
enforced. We are a pure democracy. All laws are proposed directly to a
general assembly, and are enacted or rejected by a majority. The court of
arbitrators, appointed to decide disputes between parties, and to punish
offenders against the peace and order of the company, does not appear to
have much authority. The party condemned is certain to take an appeal to an
assembly of the whole, and he is nearly as certain of an acquittal, whatever
may have been his transgressions.
The day has been delightful. No disagreeable incident has marred the
general harmony and good feeling. The new moon exhibited its faint crescent
above the tree-tops contiguous to our camp, soon after the sun sank behind
the western horizon. She was recognised as an old and familiar acquaintance
of the great family of Adam, with whom our friends of the orient might be
shaking hands at the same time that we were gazing upon her pleasing
features. Distance 10 miles.
Terrible storm – More Legislation – Alcove spring – Honey – A death and funeral – Boat – launch – Blue River Rover – Soil and scenery along the Blue – Fresh graves – Pawnee country – Quarrels in camp – Withdrawal Of the Oregon emigrants Indian hunters – Indian appetites – More fighting – Antelopes – False buffalo chase – Blacksmithing on the plains.
MAY 27. – A terrific thunderstorm roared and raged, and poured out its
floods of water throughout a great portion of night. But for the protection
against the violence of the wind, afforded by the bluffs on one side and the
timber on the other, our tents would have been swept away by the storm. The
whole arch of the heavens for a time was wrapped in a sheet of flame, and
the almost deafening crashes of thunder, following each other with scarcely
an intermission between, seemed as if they would rend the solid earth, or
topple it from its axis. A more sublime and awful meteoric display, I never
witnessed or could conceive.
The river since last night has risen several feet, and there is now no
hope of fording it for several days. At eight o’clock, A.M., an adjourned
meeting of the company was held in the corral, to hear and act upon a report
of a committee, appointed by the meeting last night, to draw up additional
regulations for our government during the journey. As usual in these
assemblies, violent language was used, producing personal altercation and
much excitement. A motion having been made by one of the company, to appoint
a standing committee to try the officers, when charged with tyranny or
neglect of duty by any individual of the party, it was carried; whereupon
all the officers announced their resignations, and we were thrown back into
our original elements, without a head and without organization. I felt fully
satisfied that a large majority of the emigrants composing our party were in
favor of order, and a restraining exercise of authority on the part of their
officers, and that they had voted without understanding the effects which
must follow the measure adopted. Not having participated in the proceedings
of the meeting previously, I moved a reconsideration of the vote just taken,
and explained the reasons therefor. My motion was carried by a large
majority; the resolution raising the standing committee was rescinded, and
the officers who had just resigned were re -elected by acclamation! These
matters I describe with some minuteness, because they illustrate emigrant
life while on the road to the Pacific, where no law prevails except their
will. So thoroughly, however, are our people imbued with conservative
republican principles, and so accustomed are they to order and propriety of
deportment, that with a fair understanding, a majority will always be found
on the side of right, and opposed to disorganization. "Our glorious
constitution," is their motto and their model, and they will sanction
nothing in derogation of the principles of the American constitution and
American justice. There are, however, men in all emigrating parties,
desperate and depraved characters, who are perpetually endeavoring to
produce discord, disorganization, and collision; and after a proper
organization of a party, as few public assemblages as possible should be
convened for legislative purposes.
This afternoon, accompanied by several of the party, I strolled up the
small branch, which I have previously mentioned as emptying into the river
just above the ford. About three fourths of a mile from our camp we found a
large spring of water, as cold and pure as if it had just been melted from
ice. It gushed from a ledge of rocks, which composes the bank of the stream,
and falling some ten feet, its waters are received into a basin fifteen feet
in length, ten in breadth, and three or four in depth. A shelving rock
projects over this basin, from which falls a beautiful cascade of water,
some ten or twelve feet. The whole is buried in a variety of shrubbery of
the richest verdure, and surrounded by small mound -shaped inequalities of
the prairie. Altogether it is one of the most romantic spots I ever saw. So
charmed were we with its beauties, that several hours unconsciously glided
away in the enjoyment of its refreshing waters and seductive attractions. We
named this the "Alcove Spring;" and future travellers will find the name
graven on the rocks, and on the trunks of the trees surrounding it.
There are indications of the existence of mineral coal on the Big Blue.
Mr. Grayson and others went out in search of honey this morning, and
returned in the afternoon with several buckets full of the pure and
delicious product of the labors of the bee. Our hunters and fishermen met
with no success. Some of them discovered a large, but deserted Indian
encampment, about four miles up the river, which they conjectured had been
occupied by the Pawnees.
May 28. – The river having fallen only fifteen inches during the night,
after breakfast the whole party capable of performing duty were summoned to
repair to a point on the river about half a mile above us, to assist in the
construction of a raft to ferry our wagons over the stream. The response to
this call was not very general; but a number of the men armed with their
axes, adzes, and a variety of other mechanical tools, immediately assembled
and repaired to the place designated. We labored industriously the entire
day, in making "dug-outs." Two large cotton -wood trees were felled, about
three and a half or four feet in diameter. From these canoes were hollowed
out, twenty-five feet in length. The two canoes are to be united by a cross-frame, so as to admit the wheels of our wagons into them. Lines are then to
be attached to both ends, and our water-craft is thus to convey our wagons
over the river, being pulled backwards and forwards by the strength of the
men.
I strolled up another small branch, which empties into the Big Blue not
far distant from our encampment. The water is abundant, and of the finest
quality, and the scenery most picturesque and romantic. I procured in my
rambles a plentiful supply of the prairie pea for pickling, and I would
recommend all emigrants travelling this road to do the same. A man belonging
to one of the forward companies returned back this afternoon, in search of
some lost cattle or horses. He reported that a child of Judge Bowlin [Josiah
Morin], one of
the emigrants to Oregon, died yesterday. The man in crossing the river was
thrown from his horse, and it was with great difficulty that he could save
himself from drowning. He sank several times, and was carried down the
stream by the rapid current; at last he succeeded in grasping the tail of
his horse, and was thus kept above water until he was drawn to the shore.
May 29. – Last night Mrs. SARAH KEYES, a lady aged 70, a member of the
family of Mr. J. H. [sic] Reed of Illinois, and his mother-in -law,
died. Mr. Reed, with his family, is emigrating to California. The deceased
Mrs. Keyes, however, did not intend to accompany him farther than Fort Hall,
where she expected to meet her son who emigrated to Oregon two or three
years since. Her health, from disease and the debility of age, was so
feeble, that when she left her home, she entertained but faint hopes of
being able to endure the hardships of the journey. Her physicians had
announced to her that she could live but a short time, and this time she
determined to devote to an effort to see her only son once more on earth.
Such is a mother’s affection! The effort, however, was vain. She expired
without seeing her child.
The event, although it had been anticipated several days, cast a shade of
gloom over our whole encampment. The construction of the ferry-boat and all
recreations were suspended, out of respect for the dead, and to make
preparations for the funeral. A cotton-wood tree was felled, and the trunk
of it split into planks, which being first hewn with an axe and then planed,
were constructed into a coffin, in which the remains of the deceased were
deposited. A grave was excavated a short distance from the camp, under an
oak-tree on the right-hand side of the trail. A stone was procured, the
surface of which being smoothed, it was fashioned into the shape of a
tombstone, and the name and age, and the date of the death of the deceased,
were grayed upon it.
At 2 o’clock, P. M. a funeral procession was formed, in which nearly
every man, woman, and child of the company united, and the corpse of the
deceased lady was conveyed to its last resting-place, in this desolate but
beautiful wilderness. Her coffin was lowered into the grave. A prayer was
offered to the Throne of Grace by the Rev. Mr. [Josephus Adamson] Cornwall. An appropriate hymn
was sung by the congregation with much pathos and expression. A funeral
discourse was then pronounced by the officiating clergyman, and the services
were concluded by another hymn and a benediction. The grave was then closed
and carefully sodded with the green turf of the prairie, from whence
annually will spring and bloom its brilliant and many-colored flowers. The
inscription on the tombstone, and on the tree beneath which is the grave, is
as follows: "MRS. SARAH KEYES, DIED MAY 29, 1846: AGED 70."
The night is perfectly calm. The crescent moon sheds her pale rays over
the dim landscape; the whippoorwill is chanting its lamentations in the
neighboring grove; the low and mournful hooting of the owl is heard at a
far-off distance, and altogether the scene, with its adjuncts around us, is
one of peace, beauty, and enjoyment.
May 30. – The river having remained stationary during the night, and from the frequency of rains there being no present probability of its falling so as to be fordable, the business of completing our ferry-boat was resumed with energy at an early hour. This work being finished, the nondescript craft was christened the "Blue River Rover," and launched amid the cheers of the men. She floated down the stream like a cork, and was soon moored at the place of embarkation. The work of ferrying over was commenced immediately. Much difficulty, as had been anticipated, was experienced in working the boat, on account of the rapidity of the stream and the great weight of many of the wagons. The current was so strong, that near the shore, where the water was not more than three or four feet in depth, the strength of a man could with difficulty breast it. One of the canoes was swamped on the western side in drawing the third wagon from it. The damage, however, was soon repaired and the work resumed. Nine wagons and their contents were safely ferried over during the afternoon.
May 31. – The business of ferrying was resumed at an early hour, and
continued with vigor until nine o’clock at night, when all the wagons, oxen,
and horses were safely landed on the western bank of the river, where our
corral was formed. The labor has been very severe, and sometimes dangerous;
but was rendered still more disagreeable by a very sudden change in the
temperature. A chilling wind commenced blowing from the northwest at four
o’clock, P. M. Soon after dark masses of clouds rolled up, and it rained
violently. At six o’clock the thermometer had fallen to 48N;
and our men, many of whom have been standing in the water the whole day,
when they came into camp were shivering as if under the influence of a
paroxysm of the ague.
A fisticuff fight, in the progress of which knives were drawn, took place
near the river bank, between two drivers, who ordinarily were very peaceable
and well-disposed men. Fortunately, by the interposition of those standing
by, serious results were prevented. The pugnacious and belligerent
propensities of men display themselves on these prairie excursions, for
slight causes and provocations. The perpetual vexations and hardships are
well calculated to keep the nerves in a state of great irritability.
Jacob was taken quite sick this evening from the effects of the wet and
the cold. He was relieved, however, in a short time. The growth of timber on
the western bank of the river, is oak, walnut, elm, a few poplars,
cotton-wood, the black haw, (in bloom,) dog-wood, and a variety of small
shrubbery. Grapevines cover many of the trees. Distance one mile.
June 1. – Cloudy, with a cold, raw wind from the northwest. The great and sudden change of the temperature, connected with the heavy fall of rain last night, completely drenching every thing exposed to it, is exceedingly distressing to the women and children, who generally arc thinly clothed, and unprepared to resist the effects of exposure and atmospheric eccentricities. Many of them suffered greatly last night, and this morning