
The Old Santa Fe Trail
By COLONEL HENRY INMAN
CHAPTER XVI.
KIT CARSON.
Of the famous men whose lives are so interwoven with the history
of the Old Santa Fe Trail that the story of the great highway is
largely made up of their individual exploits and acts of
bravery,
it has been my fortune to have known nearly all intimately,
during
more than a third of a century passed on the great plains and in
the Rocky Mountains.
First of all, Christopher, or Kit, Carson, as he is familiarly
known
to the world, stands at the head and front of celebrated
frontiersmen,
trappers, scouts, guides, and Indian fighters.
I knew him well through a series of years, to the date of his
death
in 1868, but I shall confine myself to the events of his
remarkable
career along the line of the Trail and its immediate environs.
In 1826 a party of Santa Fe traders passing near his father's
home
in Howard County, Missouri, young Kit, who was then but
seventeen
years old, joined the caravan as hunter. He was already an
expert
with the rifle, and thus commenced his life of adventure on the
great plains and in the Rocky Mountains.
His first exhibition of that nerve and coolness in the presence
of
danger which marked his whole life was in this initial trip
across
the plains. When the caravan had arrived at the Arkansas River,
somewhere in the vicinity of the great bend of that stream, one
of
the teamsters, while carelessly pulling his rifle toward him by
the
barrel, discharged the weapon and received the ball in his arm,
completely crushing the bones. The blood from the wound flowed
so
copiously that he nearly lost his life before it could be
arrested.
He was fixed up, however, and the caravan proceeded on its
journey,
the man thinking no more seriously of his injured arm. In a few
days,
however, the wound began to indicate that gangrene had set in,
and
it was determined that only by an amputation was it possible for
him
to live beyond a few days. Every one of the older men of the
caravan
positively declined to attempt the operation, as there were no
instruments of any kind. At this juncture Kit, realizing the
extreme
necessity of prompt action, stepped forward and offered to do
the job.
He told the unfortunate sufferer that he had had no experience
in
such matters, but that as no one else would do it, he would take
the chances. All the tools that Kit could find were a razor, a
saw,
and the king-bolt of a wagon. He cut the flesh with the razor,
sawed through the bone as if it had been a piece of joist, and
seared
the horrible wound with the king-bolt, which he had heated to a
white glow, for the purpose of stopping the flow of blood that
naturally followed such rude surgery. The operation was a
complete
success; the man lived many years afterward, and was with his
surgeon
in many an expedition.
In the early days of the commerce of the prairies, Carson was
the
hunter at Bent's Fort for a period of eight years. There were
about
forty men employed at the place; and when the game was found in
abundance in the mountains, it was a relatively easy task and
just
suited to his love of sport, but when it grew scarce, as it
often
did, his prowess was tasked to its utmost to keep the forty
mouths
from crying for food. He became such an unerring shot with the
rifle during that time that he was called the "Nestor of the
Rocky
Mountains." His favourite game was the buffalo, although he
killed
countless numbers of other animals.
All of the plains tribes of Indians, as did the powerful Utes of
the mountains, knew him well; for he had often visited in their
camps, sat in their lodges, smoked the pipe, and played with
their
little boys. The latter fact may not appear of much consequence,
but there are no people on earth who have a greater love for
their
boy children than the savages of America. The Indians all feared
him, too, at the same time that they respected his excellent
judgment,
and frequently were governed by his wise counsel. The following
story will show his power in this direction. The Sioux, one of
the
most numerous and warlike tribes at that time, had encroached
upon
the hunting-grounds of the southern Indians, and the latter had
many
a skirmish with them on the banks of the Arkansas along the line
of
the Trail. Carson, who was in the upper valley of the river, was
sent for to come down and help them drive the obnoxious Sioux
back
to their own stamping-ground. He left Fort Bent, and went with
the
party of Comanche messengers to the main camp of that tribe and
the
Arapahoes, with whom they had united. Upon his arrival, he was
told
that the Sioux had a thousand warriors and many rifles, and the
Comanches and Arapahoes were afraid of them on account of the
great
disparity of numbers, but that if he would go with them on the
war-path, they felt assured they could overcome their enemies.
Carson, however, instead of encouraging the Comanches and
Arapahoes
to fight, induced them to negotiate with the Sioux. He was sent
as mediator, and so successfully accomplished his mission that
the
intruding tribe consented to leave the hunting-grounds of the
Comanches as soon as the buffalo season was over; which they
did,
and there was no more trouble.
After many adventures in California with Fremont, Carson, with
his
inseparable friend, L. B. Maxwell, embarked in the wool-raising
industry. Shortly after they had established themselves on their
ranch, the Apaches made one of their frequent murdering and
plundering
raids through Northern New Mexico, killing defenceless women and
children, running off stock of all kinds, and laying waste every
little ranch they came across in their wild foray. Not very far
from the city of Santa Fe, they ruthlessly butchered a Mr. White
and his son, though three of their number were slain by the
brave
gentlemen before they were overpowered. Other of the
blood-thirsty
savages carried away the women and children of the desolated
home
and took them to their mountain retreat in the vicinity of Las
Vegas.
Mr. White was a highly respected merchant, and news of this
outrage
spreading rapidly through the settlements, it was determined
that
the savages should not go without punishment this time, at
least.
Carson's reputation as an Indian fighter was at its height, so
the
natives of the country sent for him, and declined to move until
he came. For some unexplained reason, after he arrived at Las
Vegas,
he was not placed in charge of the posse, that position having
already been given to a Frenchman. Carson, as was usual with
him,
never murmured because he was assigned to a subordinate
position,
but took his place, ready to do his part in whatever capacity.
The party set out for the stronghold of the savages, and rode
night
and day on the trail of the murderers, hoping to surprise them
and
recapture the women and children; but so much time had been
wasted
in delays, that Carson feared they would only find the mutilated
bodies of the poor captives. In a few days after leaving Las
Vegas,
the retreat of the savages was discovered in the fastness of the
mountains, where they had fortified themselves in such a manner
that
they could resist ten times the number of their pursuers.
Carson,
as soon as he saw them, without a second's hesitation, and
giving
a characteristic yell, dashed in, expecting, of course, that the
men
would follow him; but they only stood in gaping wonderment at
his
bravery, not daring to venture after him. He did not discover
his
dilemma until he had advanced so far alone that escape seemed
impossible. But here his coolness, which always served him in
the
moment of supreme danger, saved his scalp. As the savages turned
on him, he threw himself on the off side of his horse, Indian
fashion,
for he was as expert in a trick of that kind as the savages
themselves,
and rode back to the little command. He had six arrows in his
horse
and a bullet through his coat!
The Indians in those days were poorly armed, and did not long
follow up the pursuit after Carson; for, observing the squad of
mounted Mexicans, they retreated to the top of a rocky
prominence,
from which point they could watch every movement of the whites.
Carson was raging at the apathy, not to say cowardice, of the
men
who had sent for him to join them, but he kept his counsel to
himself;
for he was anxious to save the captured women and children. He
talked
to the men very earnestly, however, exhorting them not to flinch
in the duty they had come so far to perform, and for which he
had
come at their call. This had the desired effect; for he induced
them to make a charge, which was gallantly performed, and in
such
a brave manner that the Indians fled, scarcely making an effort
to
defend themselves. Five of their number were killed at the
furious
onset of the Mexicans, but unfortunately, as he anticipated,
only
the murdered corpses of the women and children were the result
of
the victory.
President Polk appointed Carson to a second lieutenancy,[48] and
his
first official duty was conducting fifty soldiers under his
command
through the country of the Comanches, who were then at war with
the
whites. A fight occurred at a place known as Point of Rocks,[49]
where on arriving, Carson found a company of volunteers for the
Mexican War, and camped near them. About dawn the next morning,
all the animals of the volunteers were captured by a band of
Indians,
while the herders were conducting them to the river-bottom to
graze.
The herders had no weapons, and luckily, in the confusion
attending
the bold theft, ran into Carson's camp; and as he, with his men,
were ready with their rifles, they recaptured the oxen, but the
horses were successfully driven off by their captors.
Several of the savages were mortally wounded by Carson's prompt
charge, as signs after they had cleared out proved; but the
Indian
custom of tying the wounded on their ponies precluded the chance
of
taking any scalps. The wily Comanche, like the Arab of the
desert,
is generally successful in his sudden assaults, but Carson, who
was
never surprised, was always equal to his tactics.
One of the two soldiers whose turn it had been to stand guard
that
morning was discovered to have been asleep when the alarm of
Indians
was given, and Carson at once administered the Indian method of
punishment, making the man wear the dress of a squaw for that
day.
Then going on, he arrived at Santa Fe, where he turned over his
little command.
While there, he heard that a gang of those desperadoes so
frequently
the nuisance of a new country had formed a conspiracy to murder
and
rob two wealthy citizens whom they had volunteered to accompany
over
the Trail to the States. The caravan was already many miles on
its
way when Carson was informed of the plot. In less than an hour
he
had hired sixteen picked men and was on his march to intercept
them.
He took a short cut across the mountains, taking especial care
to
keep out of the way of the Indians, who were on the war-path,
but
as to whose movements he was always posted. In two days he came
upon a camp of United States recruits, en route to the military
posts in New Mexico, whose commander offered to accompany him
with
twenty men. Carson accepted the generous proposal, by forced
marches
soon overtook the caravan of traders, and at once placed one
Fox,
the leader of the gang, in irons, after which he informed the
owners
of the caravan of the escape they had made from the wretches
whom
they were treating so kindly. At first the gentlemen were
astounded
at the disclosures made to them, but soon admitted that they had
noticed many things which convinced them that the plot really
existed,
and but for the opportune arrival of the brave frontiersman it
would
shortly have been carried out.
The members of the caravan who were perfectly trustworthy were
then
ordered to corral the rest of the conspirators, thirty-five in
number,
and they were driven out of camp, with the exception of Fox, the
leader, whom Carson conveyed to Taos. He was imprisoned for
several
months, but as a crime in intent only could be proved against
him,
and as the adobe walls of the house where he was confined were
not
secure enough to retain a man who desired to release himself, he
was
finally liberated, and cleared out.
The traders were profuse in their thanks to Carson for his
timely
interference, but he refused every offer of remuneration. On
their
return to Santa Fe from St. Louis, however, they presented him
with
a magnificent pair of pistols, upon whose silver mounting was an
inscription commemorating his brave deed and the gratitude of
the
donors.
The following summer was spent in a visit to St. Louis, and
early
in the fall he returned over the Trail, arriving at the Cheyenne
village on the Upper Arkansas without meeting with any incident
worthy of note. On reaching that point, he learned that the
Indians
had received a terrible affront from an officer commanding a
detachment
of United States troops, who had whipped one of their chiefs;
and
that consequently the whole tribe was enraged, and burning for
revenge
upon the whites. Carson was the first white man to approach the
place since the insult, and so many years had elapsed since he
was
the hunter at Bent's Fort, and so grievously had the Indians
been
offended, that his name no longer guaranteed safety to the party
with whom he was travelling, nor even insured respect to
himself,
in the state of excitement existing in the village. Carson,
however,
deliberately pushed himself into the presence of a war council
which
was just then in session to consider the question of attacking
the
caravan, giving orders to his men to keep close together, and
guard
against a surprise.
The savages, supposing that he could not understand their
language,
talked without restraint, and unfolded their plans to capture
his
party and kill them all, particularly the leader. After they had
reached this decision, Carson coolly rose and addressed the
council
in the Cheyenne language, informing the Indians who he was, of
his
former associations with and kindness to their tribe, and that
now
he was ready to render them any assistance they might require;
but
as to their taking his scalp, he claimed the right to say a
word.
The Indians departed, and Carson went on his way; but there were
hundreds of savages in sight on the sand hills, and, though they
made no attack, he was well aware that he was in their power,
nor
had they abandoned the idea of capturing his train. His coolness
and deliberation kept his men in spirit, and yet out of the
whole
fifteen, which was the total number of his force, there were
only two
or three on whom he could place any reliance in case of an
emergency.
When the train camped for the night, the wagons were corralled,
and
the men and mules all brought inside the circle. Grass was cut
with
sheath-knives and fed to the animals, instead of their being
picketed
out as usual, and as large a guard as possible detailed. When
the
camp had settled down to perfect quiet, Carson crawled outside
it,
taking with him a Mexican boy, and after explaining to him the
danger
which threatened them all, told him that it was in his power to
save
the lives of the company. Then he sent him on alone to Rayedo,
a journey of nearly three hundred miles, to ask for an escort of
United States troops to be sent out to meet the train,
impressing
upon the brave little Mexican the importance of putting a good
many
miles between himself and the camp before morning. And so he
started
him, with a few rations of food, without letting the rest of his
party know that such measures were necessary. The boy had been
in
Carson's service for some time, and was known to him as a
faithful
and active messenger, and in a wild country like New Mexico,
with
the outdoor life and habits of its people, such a journey was
not
an unusual occurrence.
Carson now returned to the camp, to watch all night himself, and
at daybreak all were on the Trail again. No Indians made their
appearance until nearly noon, when five warriors came galloping
up
toward the train. As soon as they came close enough to hear his
voice, Carson ordered them to halt, and going up to them, told
how
he had sent a messenger to Rayedo the night before to inform the
troops that their tribe were annoying him, and that if he or his
men
were molested, terrible punishment would be inflicted by those
who
would surely come to his relief. The savages replied that they
would look for the moccasin tracks, which they undoubtedly
found,
and the whole village passed away toward the hills after a
little
while, evidently seeking a place of safety from an expected
attack
by the troops.
The young Mexican overtook the detachment of soldiers whose
officer
had caused all the trouble with the Indians, to whom he told his
story; but failing to secure any sympathy, he continued his
journey
to Rayedo, and procured from the garrison of that place
immediate
assistance. Major Grier, commanding the post, at once despatched
a troop of his regiment, which, by forced marches, met Carson
twenty-five miles below Bent's Fort, and though it encountered
no
Indians, the rapid movement had a good effect upon the savages,
impressing them with the power and promptness of the government.
Early in the spring of 1865, Carson was ordered, with three
companies,
to put a stop to the depredations of marauding bands of
Cheyennes,
Kiowas, and Comanches upon the caravans and emigrant outfits
travelling
the Santa Fe Trail. He left Fort Union with his command and
marched
over the Dry or Cimarron route to the Arkansas River, for the
purpose
of establishing a fortified camp at Cedar Bluffs, or Cold
Spring,
to afford a refuge for the freight trains on that dangerous part
of
the Trail. The Indians had for some time been harassing not only
the caravans of the citizen traders, but also those of the
government,
which carried supplies to the several military posts in the
Territory
of New Mexico. An expedition was therefore planned by Carson to
punish them, and he soon found an opportunity to strike a blow
near
the adobe fort on the Canadian River. His force consisted of the
First Regiment of New Mexican Volunteer Cavalry and seventy-five
friendly Indians, his entire command numbering fourteen
commissioned
officers and three hundred and ninety-six enlisted men. With
these
he attacked the Kiowa village, consisting of about one hundred
and
fifty lodges. The fight was a very severe one, and lasted from
half-past eight in the morning until after sundown. The savages,
with more than ordinary intrepidity and boldness, made repeated
stands against the fierce onslaughts of Carson's cavalrymen, but
were at last forced to give way, and were cut down as they
stubbornly
retreated, suffering a loss of sixty killed and wounded. In this
battle only two privates and one noncommissioned officer were
killed,
and one non-commissioned officer and thirteen privates, four of
whom
were friendly Indians, wounded. The command destroyed one
hundred
and fifty lodges, a large amount of dried meats, berries,
buffalo-robes,
cooking utensils, and also a buggy and spring-wagon, the
property
of Sierrito,[50] the Kiowa chief.
In his official account of the fight, Carson states that he
found
ammunition in the village, which had been furnished, no doubt,
by
unscrupulous Mexican traders.
He told me that he never was deceived by Indian tactics but once
in his life. He said that he was hunting with six others after
buffalo, in the summer of 1835; that they had been successful,
and
came into their little bivouac one night very tired, intending
to
start for the rendezvous at Bent's Fort the next morning. They
had
a number of dogs, among them some excellent animals. These
barked
a good deal, and seemed restless, and the men heard wolves.
"I saw," said Kit, "two big wolves sneaking about, one of them
quite
close to us. Gordon, one of my men, wanted to fire his rifle at
it,
but I did not let him, for fear he would hit a dog. I admit that
I had a sort of an idea that those wolves might be Indians; but
when
I noticed one of them turn short around, and heard the clashing
of
his teeth as he rushed at one of the dogs, I felt easy then, and
was
certain that they were wolves sure enough. But the red devil
fooled
me, after all, for he had two dried buffalo bones in his hands
under
the wolfskin, and he rattled them together every time he turned
to
make a dash at the dogs! Well, by and by we all dozed off, and
it
wasn't long before I was suddenly aroused by a noise and a big
blaze.
I rushed out the first thing for our mules, and held them. If
the
savages had been at all smart, they could have killed us in a
trice,
but they ran as soon as they fired at us. They killed one of my
men,
putting five bullets in his body and eight in his buffalo-robe.
The Indians were a band of Sioux on the war-trail after a band
of
Snakes, and found us by sheer accident. They endeavoured to
ambush
us the next morning, but we got wind of their little game and
killed
three of them, including the chief."
Carson's nature was made up of some very noble attributes. He
was
brave, but not reckless like Custer; a veritable exponent of
Christian
altruism, and as true to his friends as the needle to the pole.
Under the average stature, and rather delicate-looking in his
physical
proportions, he was nevertheless a quick, wiry man, with nerves
of
steel, and possessing an indomitable will. He was full of
caution,
but showed a coolness in the moment of supreme danger that was
good
to witness.
During a short visit at Fort Lyon, Colorado, where a favourite
son
of his was living, early in the morning of May 23, 1868, while
mounting his horse in front of his quarters (he was still fond
of
riding), an artery in his neck was suddenly ruptured, from the
effects
of which, notwithstanding the medical assistance rendered by the
fort surgeons, he died in a few moments.
His remains, after reposing for some time at Fort Lyon, were
taken
to Taos, so long his home in New Mexico, where an appropriate
monument
was erected over them. In the Plaza at Santa Fe, his name also
appears cut on a cenotaph raised to commemorate the services of
the
soldiers of the Territory. As an Indian fighter he was
matchless.
The identical rifle used by him for more than thirty-five years,
and which never failed him, he bequeathed, just before his
death,
to Montezuma Lodge, A. F. & A. M., Santa Fe, of which he was a
member.
James Bridger, "Major Bridger," or "Old Jim Bridger," as we was
called,
another of the famous coterie of pioneer frontiersmen, was born
in
Washington, District of Columbia, in 1807. When very young, a
mere
boy in fact, he joined the great trapping expedition under the
leadership of James Ashley, and with it travelled to the far
West,
remote from the extreme limit of border civilization, where he
became
the compeer and comrade of Carson, and certainly the foremost
mountaineer, strictly speaking, the United States has produced.
Having left behind him all possibilities of education at such an
early age, he was illiterate in his speech and as ignorant of
the
conventionalities of polite society as an Indian; but he
possessed
a heart overflowing with the milk of human kindness, was
generous
in the extreme, and honest and true as daylight.
He was especially distinguished for the discovery of a defile
through
the intricate mazes of the Rocky Mountains, which bears his
name,
Bridger's Pass. He rendered important services as guide and
scout
during the early preliminary surveys for a transcontinental
railroad,
and for a series of years was in the employ of the government,
in the old regular army on the great plains and in the
mountains,
long before the breaking out of the Civil War. To Bridger also
belongs the honour of having seen, first of all white men, the
Great
Salt Lake of Utah, in the winter of 1824-25.
After a series of adventures, hairbreadth escapes, and terrible
encounters with the Indians, in 1856 he purchased a farm near
Westport,
Missouri; but soon left it in his hunger for the mountains, to
return
to it only when worn-out and blind, to be buried there without
even
the rudest tablet to mark the spot.
"I would rather sleep in the southern corner of a little country
churchyard, than in the tomb of the Capulets." This quotation
came
to my mind one Sunday morning two or three years ago, as I mused
over Bridger's neglected grave among the low hills beyond the
quaint
old town of Westport. I thought I knew, as I stood there, that
he
whose bones were mouldering beneath the blossoming clover at my
feet,
would have wished for his last couch a more perfect solitude and
isolation from the wearisome world's busy sound than even the
immortal Burke.
The grassy mound, over which there was no stone to record the
name
of its occupant, covered the remains of the last of his class, a
type
vanished forever, for the border is a thing of the past; and
upon
the gentle breeze of that delightful morning, like the droning
of
bees in a full flowered orchard, was wafted to my ears the hum
of
Kansas City's civilization, only three or four miles distant, in
all
of which I was sure there was nothing that would have been
congenial
to the old frontiersman.
At one time early in the '60's, while the engineers of the
proposed
Union Pacific Railway were temporarily in Denver, then an
insignificant
mushroom-hamlet, they became somewhat confused as to the most
practicable point in the range over which to run their line.
After
debating the question, they determined, upon a suggestion from
some
of the old settlers, to send for Jim Bridger, who was then
visiting
in St. Louis. A pass, via the overland stage, was enclosed in a
letter to him, and he was urged to start for Denver at once,
though
nothing of the business for which his presence was required was
told
him in the text.
In about two weeks the old man arrived, and the next morning,
after
he had rested, asked why he had been sent for from such a
distance.
The engineers then began to explain their dilemma. The old
mountaineer
waited patiently until they had finished, when, with a look of
disgust
on his withered countenance, he demanded a large piece of paper,
remarking at the same time,--
"I could a told you fellers all that in St. Louis, and saved you
the expense of bringing me out here."
He was handed a sheet of manilla paper, used for drawing the
details
of bridge plans. The veteran pathfinder spread it on the ground
before him, took a dead coal from the ashes of the fire, drew a
rough
outline map, and pointing to a certain peak just visible on the
serrated horizon, said,--
"There's where you fellers can cross with your road, and nowhere
else,
without more diggin' an' cuttin' than you think of."
That crude map is preserved, I have been told, in the archives
of
the great corporation, and its line crosses the main spurs of
the
Rocky Mountains, just where Bridger said it could with the least
work.
The resemblance of old John Smith, another of the coterie, to
President Andrew Johnson was absolutely astonishing. When that
chief magistrate, in his "swinging around the circle," had
arrived
at St. Louis, and was riding through the streets of that city in
an
open barouche, he was pointed out to Bridger, who happened to be
there. But the venerable guide and scout, with supreme disgust
depicted on his countenance at the idea of any one attempting to
deceive him, said to his informant,--
"H---l! Bill, you can't fool me! That's old John Smith."
At one time many years ago, during Bridger's first visit to St.
Louis,
then a relatively small place, a friend accidentally came across
him
sitting on a dry-goods box in one of the narrow streets,
evidently
disgusted with his situation. To the inquiry as to what he was
doing
there all alone, the old man replied,--
"I've been settin' in this infernal canyon ever sence mornin',
waitin'
for some one to come along an' invite me to take a drink.
Hundreds
of fellers has passed both ways, but none of 'em has opened his
head.
I never seen sich a onsociable crowd!"
Bridger had a fund of most remarkable stories, which he had
drawn
upon so often that he really believed them to be true.
General Gatlin,[51] who was graduated from West Point in the
early
'30's, and commanded Fort Gibson in the Cherokee Nation over
sixty
years ago, told me that he remembered Bridger very well; and had
once asked the old guide whether he had ever been in the great
canyon
of the Colorado River.
"Yes, sir," replied the mountaineer, "I have, many a time.
There's
where the oranges and lemons bear all the time, and the only
place
I was ever at where the moon's always full!"
He told me and also many others, at various times, that in the
winter
of 1830 it began to snow in the valley of the Great Salt Lake,
and
continued for seventy days without cessation. The whole country
was
covered to a depth of seventy feet, and all the vast herds of
buffalo
were caught in the storm and died, but their carcasses were
perfectly
preserved.
"When spring came, all I had to do," declared he, "was to tumble
'em
into Salt Lake, an' I had pickled buffalo enough for myself and
the
whole Ute Nation for years!"
He said that on account of that terrible storm, which
annihilated
them, there have been no buffalo in that region since.
Bridger had been the guide, interpreter, and companion of that
distinguished Irish sportsman, Sir George Gore, whose strange
tastes
led him in 1855 to abandon life in Europe and bury himself for
over
two years among the savages in the wildest and most unfrequented
glens of the Rocky Mountains.
The outfit and adventures of this titled Nimrod, conducted as
they
were on the largest scale, exceeded anything of the kind ever
before
seen on this continent, and the results of his wanderings will
compare favourably with those of Gordon Cumming in Africa.
Some idea may be formed of the magnitude of his outfit when it
is
stated that his retinue consisted of about fifty individuals,
including secretaries, steward, cooks, fly-makers, dog-tenders,
servants, etc. He was borne over the country with a train of
thirty
wagons, besides numerous saddle-horses and dogs.
During his lengthened hunt he killed the enormous aggregate of
forty
grizzly bears and twenty-five hundred buffalo, besides numerous
antelope and other small game.
Bridger said of Sir George that he was a bold, dashing, and
successful
hunter, and an agreeable gentleman. His habit was to lie in bed
until
about ten or eleven o'clock in the morning, then he took a bath,
ate his breakfast, and set out, generally alone, for the day's
hunt,
and it was not unusual for him to remain out until ten at night,
seldom returning to the tents without augmenting the catalogue
of
his beasts. His dinner was then served, to which he generally
extended an invitation to Bridger, and after the meal was over,
and
a few glasses of wine had been drunk, he was in the habit of
reading
from some book, and eliciting from Bridger his comments thereon.
His favourite author was Shakespeare, which Bridger "reckin'd
was
too highfalutin" for him; moreover he remarked, "thet he rather
calcerlated that thar big Dutchman, Mr. Full-stuff, was a leetle
too fond of lager beer," and thought it would have been better
for
the old man if he had "stuck to Bourbon whiskey straight."
Bridger seemed very much interested in the adventures of Baron
Munchausen, but admitted after Sir George had finished reading
them,
that "he be dog'oned ef he swallered everything that thar Baron
Munchausen said," and thought he was "a darned liar," yet he
acknowledged that some of his own adventures among the Blackfeet
woul be equally marvellous "if writ down in a book."
A man whose one act had made him awe-inspiring was Belzy Dodd.
Uncle Dick Wooton, in relating the story, says: "I don't know
what
his first name was, but Belzy was what we called him. His head
was
as bald as a billiard ball, and he wore a wig. One day while we
were all at Bent's Fort, while there were a great number of
Indians
about, Belzy concluded to have a bit of fun. He walked around,
eying
the Indians fiercely for some time, and finally, dashing in
among
them, he gave a series of war-whoops which discounted a Comanche
yell,
and pulling off his wig, threw it down at the feet of the
astonished
and terror-stricken red men.
"The savages thought the fellow had jerked off his own scalp,
and not
one of them wanted to stay and see what would happen next. They
left
the fort, running like so many scared jack-rabbits, and after
that
none of them could be induced to approach anywhere near Dodd."
They called him "The-white-man-who-scalps-himself," and Uncle
Dick
said that he believed he could have travelled across the plains
alone
with perfect safety.
Jim Baker was another noted mountaineer and hunter of the same
era as
Carson, Bridger, Wooton, Hobbs, and many others. Next to Kit
Carson,
Baker was General Fremont's most valued scout.
He was born in Illinois, and lived at home until he was eighteen
years of age, when he enlisted in the service of the American
Fur
Company, went immediately to the Rocky Mountains, and remained
there
until his death. He married a wife according to the Indian
custom,
from the Snake tribe, living with her relatives many years and
cultivating many of their habits, ideas, and superstitions. He
firmly
believed in the efficacy of the charms and incantations of the
medicine men in curing diseases, divining where their enemy was
to
be found, forecasting the result of war expeditions, and other
such
ridiculous matters. Unfortunately, too, Baker would sometimes
take
a little more whiskey than he could conveniently carry, and
often
made a fool of himself, but he was a generous, noble-hearted
fellow,
who would risk his life for a friend at any time, or divide his
last
morsel of food.
Like mountaineers generally, Baker was liberal to a fault, and
eminently improvident. He made a fortune by his work, but at the
annual rendezvous of the traders, at Bent's Fort or the old
Pueblo,
would throw away the earnings of months in a few days'
jollification.
He told General Marcy, who was a warm friend of his, that after
one
season in which he had been unusually successful in accumulating
a
large amount of valuable furs, from the sale of which he had
realized
the handsome sum of nine thousand dollars, he resolved to
abandon his
mountain life, return to the settlements, buy a farm, and live
comfortably during the remainder of his days. He accordingly
made
ready to leave, and was on the eve of starting when a friend
invited
him to visit a monte-bank which had been organized at the
rendezvous.
He was easily led away, determined to take a little social
amusement
with his old comrade, whom he might never see again, and
followed him;
the result of which was that the whiskey circulated freely, and
the
next morning found Baker without a cent of money; he had lost
everything. His entire plans were thus frustrated, and he
returned
to the mountains, hunting with the Indians until he died.
Jim Baker's opinions of the wild Indians of the great plains and
the mountains were very decided: "That they are the most
onsartinist
varmints in all creation, an' I reckon thar not more'n half
human;
for you never seed a human, arter you'd fed an' treated him to
the
best fixin's in your lodge, jis turn round and steal all your
horses,
or ary other thing he could lay his hands on. No, not adzactly.
He would feel kind o' grateful, and ask you to spread a blanket
in
his lodge ef you ever came his way. But the Injin don't care
shucks
for you, and is ready to do you a lot of mischief as soon as he
quits
your feed. No, Cap.," he said to Marcy when relating this, "it's
not
the right way to make 'em gifts to buy a peace; but ef I war
gov'nor
of these United States, I'll tell what I'd do. I'd invite 'em
all
to a big feast, and make 'em think I wanted to have a talk; and
as
soon as I got 'em together, I'd light in and raise the har of
half
of 'em, and then t'other half would be mighty glad to make terms
that would stick. That's the way I'd make a treaty with the
dog'oned
red-bellied varmints; and as sure as you're born, Cap., that's
the
only way."
The general, when he first met Baker, inquired of him if he had
travelled much over the settlements of the United States before
he
came to the mountains; to which he said: "Right smart, right
smart,
Cap." He then asked whether he had visited New York or New
Orleans.
"No, I hasn't, Cap., but I'll tell you whar I have been. I've
been
mighty nigh all over four counties in the State of Illinois!"
He was very fond of his squaw and children, and usually treated
them kindly; only when he was in liquor did he at all maltreat
them.
Once he came over into New Mexico, where General Marcy was
stationed
at the time, and determined that for the time being he would
cast
aside his leggings, moccasins, and other mountain dress, and
wear
a civilized wardrobe. Accordingly, he fitted himself out with
one.
When Marcy met him shortly after he had donned the strange
clothes,
he had undergone such an entire change that the general remarked
he should hardly have known him. He did not take kindly to this,
and said: "Consarn these store butes, Cap.; they choke my feet
like
h---l." It was the first time in twenty years that he had worn
anything on his feet but moccasins, and they were not ready for
the
torture inflicted by breaking in a new pair of absurdly fitting
boots. He soon threw them away, and resumed the softer foot-gear
of the mountains.
Baker was a famous bear hunter, and had been at the death of
many
a grizzly. On one occasion he was setting his traps with a
comrade
on the head waters of the Arkansas, when they suddenly met two
young
grizzly bears about the size of full-grown dogs. Baker remarked
to his friend that if they could "light in and kill the
varmints"
with their knives, it would be a big thing to boast of. They
both
accordingly laid aside their rifles and "lit in," Baker
attacking
one and his comrade the other. The bears immediately raised
themselves on their haunches, and were ready for the encounter.
Baker ran around, endeavouring to get in a blow from behind with
his
long knife; but the young brute he had tackled was too quick for
him, and turned as he went around so as always to confront him
face to face. He knew if he came within reach of his claws, that
although young, he could inflict a formidable wound; moreover,
he was
in fear that the howls of the cubs would bring the infuriated
mother
to their rescue, when the hunters' chances of getting away would
be slim. These thoughts floated hurriedly through his mind, and
made him desirous to end the fight as soon as he could. He made
many vicious lunges at the bear, but the animal invariably
warded
them off with his strong fore legs like a boxer. This kind of
tactics, however, cost the lively beast several severe cuts on
his
shoulders, which made him the more furious. At length he took
the
offensive, and with his month frothing with rage, bounded toward
Baker, who caught and wrestled with him, succeeding in giving
him
a death-wound under the ribs.
While all this was going on, his comrade had been furiously
engaged
with the other bear, and by this time had become greatly
exhausted,
with the odds decidedly against him. He entreated Baker to come
to
his assistance at once, which he did; but much to his
astonishment,
as soon as he entered the second contest his comrade ran off,
leaving
him to fight the battle alone. He was, however, again
victorious,
and soon had the satisfaction of seeing his two antagonists
stretched
out in front of him, but as he expressed it, "I made my mind up
I'd
never fight nary nother grizzly without a good shootin'-iron in
my paws."
He established a little store at the crossing of Green River,
and
had for some time been doing a fair business in trafficking with
the emigrants and trading with the Indians; but shortly a
Frenchman
came to the same locality and set up a rival establishment,
which,
of course, divided the limited trade, and naturally reduced the
income of Baker's business.
This engendered a bitter feeling of hostility, which soon
culminated
in a cessation of all social intercourse between the two men.
About
this time General Marcy arrived there on his way to California,
and
he describes the situation of affairs thus:--
"I found Baker standing in his door, with a revolver loaded and
cocked in each hand, very drunk and immensely excited. I
dismounted
and asked him the cause of all this disturbance. He answered:
'That
thar yaller-bellied, toad-eatin' Parly Voo, over thar, an' me,
we've
been havin' a small chance of a scrimmage to-day. The sneakin'
pole-cat, I'll raise his har yet, ef he don't quit these
diggins'!'
"It seems that they had an altercation in the morning, which
ended
in a challenge, when they ran to their cabins, seized their
revolvers,
and from the doors, which were only about a hundred yards from
each
other, fired. Then they retired to their cabins, took a drink of
whiskey, reloaded their revolvers, and again renewed the combat.
This strange duel had been going on for several hours when I
arrived,
but, fortunately for them, the whiskey had such an effect on
their
nerves that their aim was very unsteady, and none of the shots
had
as yet taken effect.
"I took away Baker's revolvers, telling him how ashamed I was to
find a man of his usually good sense making such a fool of
himself.
He gave in quietly, saying that he knew I was his friend, but
did not
think I would wish to have him take insults from a cowardly
Frenchman.
"The following morning at daylight Jim called at my tent to bid
me
good-by, and seemed very sorry for what had occurred the day
before.
He stated that this was the first time since his return from
New Mexico that he had allowed himself to drink whiskey, and
when
the whiskey was in him he had 'nary sense.'"
Among the many men who have distinguished themselves as
mountaineers,
traders, and Indian fighters along the line of the Old Trail,
was
one who eventually became the head chief of one of the most
numerous
and valorous tribes of North American savages--James P.
Beckwourth.
Estimates of him vary considerably. Francis Parkman, the
historian,
who I think never saw him and writes merely from hearsay, says:
"He is a ruffian of the worst class; bloody and treacherous,
without
honor or honesty; such, at least, is the character he bears on
the
great plains. Yet in his case the standard rules of character
fail;
for though he will stab a man in his slumber, he will also do
the
most desperate and daring acts."
I never saw Beckwourth, but I have heard of him from those of my
mountaineer friends who knew him intimately; I think that he
died
long before Parkman made his tour to the Rocky Mountains.
Colonel
Boone, the Bents, Carson, Maxwell, and others ascribed to him no
such traits as those given by Parkman, and as to his honesty, it
is
an unquestioned fact that Beckwourth was the most honest trader
among the Indians of all who were then engaged in the business.
As Kit Carson and Colonel Boone were the only Indian agents whom
I ever knew or heard of that dealt honestly with the various
tribes,
as they were always ready to acknowledge, and the withdrawal of
the
former by the government was the cause of a great war, so also
Beckwourth was an honest Indian trader.
He was a born leader of men, and was known from the Yellowstone
to
the Rio Grande, from Santa Fe to Independence, and in St. Louis.
From the latter town he ran away when a boy with a party of
trappers,
and himself became one of the most successful of that hardy
class.
The woman who bore him had played in her childhood beneath the
palm
trees of Africa; his father was a native of France, and went to
the
banks of the wild Mississippi of his own free will, but probably
also from reasons of political interest to his government.
In person Beckwourth was of medium height and great muscular
power,
quick of apprehension, and with courage of the highest order.
Probably no man ever met with more personal adventures involving
danger to life, even among the mountaineers and trappers who
early
in the century faced the perils of the remote frontier. From his
neck he always wore suspended a perforated bullet, with a large
oblong bead on each side of it, tied in place by a single thread
of sinew. This amulet he obtained while chief of the Crows,[52]
and it was his "medicine," with which he excited the
superstition
of his warriors.
His success as a trader among the various tribes of Indians has
never been surpassed; for his close intimacy with them made him
know what would best please their taste, and they bought of him
when other traders stood idly at their stockades, waiting almost
hopelessly for customers.
But Beckwourth himself said: "The traffic in whiskey for Indian
property was one of the most infernal practices ever entered
into by
man. Let the most casual thinker sit down and figure up the
profits
on a forty-gallon cask of alcohol, and he will be thunderstruck,
or
rather whiskey-struck. When it was to be disposed of, four
gallons
of water were added to each gallon of alcohol. In two hundred
gallons
there are sixteen hundred pints, for each one of which the
trader
got a buffalo-robe worth five dollars. The Indian women toiled
many
long weeks to dress those sixteen hundred robes. The white
traders
got them for worse than nothing; for the poor Indian mother hid
herself and her children until the effect of the poison passed
away
from the husband and father, who loved them when he had no
whiskey,
and abused and killed them when he had. Six thousand dollars for
sixty gallons of alcohol! Is it a wonder with such profits that
men got rich who were engaged in the fur trade? Or was it a
miracle
that the buffalo were gradually exterminated?--killed with so
little
remorse that the hides, among the Indians themselves, were known
by the appellation of 'A pint of whiskey.'"
Beckwourth claims to have established the Pueblo where the
beautiful
city of Pueblo, Colorado, is now situated. He says: "On the 1st
of October, 1842, on the Upper Arkansas, I erected a
trading-post
and opened a successful business. In a very short time I was
joined
by from fifteen to twenty free trappers, with their families.
We all united our labour and constructed an adobe fort sixty
yards
square. By the following spring it had grown into quite a little
settlement, and we gave it the name of Pueblo."

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