HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN FUR TRADE OF THE FAR WEST feSSSK American Fur Trade OF THE Far West A History of the Pioneer Trading Posts and Early Fur Companies of the Missouri Valley and the Rocky Mountains and of the Overland Commerce with Santa Fe. MAP AND ILLUSTRATIONS HIRAM MARTIN CHITTENDEN Captain Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Author of "The Yellowstone." THREE VOLUMES APPENDICES. A- i COPY OF LETTER FROM PIERRE MENARD TO PIERRE CHOUTEAU. I : An account of the first attack by the Blackfeet upon the Missouri Fur Company at the Three Forks of the Missouri in the summer of 1810. Below are given in the original and corrected French and in English translation copies of a letter found among the Chouteau papers. It is probably the only document in existence that was written upon the identical spot where the old fort of the St. Louis Missouri Fur Company stood at the Three Forks of the Missouri. It narrates an important event in the series of disasters which overtook the company in that quarter, and is a genuine messenger from that forlorn band under Henry who later, when driven from this position, crossed the Divide and built the first trading establishment upon Columbian waters. The original of this letter, in four pages, written upon a sheet of fine light blue paper, full letter size, and still in excellent preservation, is in the possession of Mr. Pierre Chouteau of St. Louis. The names in brackets marked * are as printed in the Louisiana Gazette of July 26, 1810, from an interview with Menard. trois fourches du Missourie 21 Avrill 1810 Trois Fourches du Missouri, 21 Avril, 1810. Monsieur Monsieur Pierre Chouteau eqr Pierre Chouteau eqr. Je matandais } Monsieur et beau frere Monsieur et beau-frere Pourvoire vous Ecrire Plus favorable que Je m'attendais pouvoir vous ecrire plus favorablement que i 894 ATTACKED BY THE BLACKFEET. Je ne suis Ameme de le faire a present Les prospect de vent je ne suis a mSme de le faire a present Les prospects devant nos yeux il lia dix Jours etait Beaucoup Plus flateurs quil le nos yeux il y a dix jours €taient beaucoup plus flatteurs qu'ils ne sont aujourdhuit un party de nos Chasseurs on Etez de fait Par sont aujourd'hui. Une partie de nos chasseurs a 6t6 d6faite par les pied noirs le 12 du present il lia heus Deux homme De tuez les Pieds-noirs le 12 du present. II y a eu deux hommes de tues, tous leurs castors pilliez et Beaucoup de pieges De perdues et tous leurs castors pilles, et beaucoup de pieges de perdus, et lamoniton de plusieur de nos Chasseurs et 7 de nos Chevaaux Pamonition de plusieurs de nos chasseurs, et 7 de nos chevaux. Nous avont Etez aleure poursuite maist malheureusement nous Nous avons 6t€ a leur poursuite, mais malheureusement nous navont pas pux les rejoindre Nous avon ramasse 44 piege et n'avons pas pu les rejoindre. Nous avons ramasse 44 pieges et 3 chevau que nous avont Ramene icy et nous Esperont trouvez En- 3 chevaux que nous avons ramenes ici, et nous esperons trouver encore quelque piege Set malheureuse afaire a toute afet core quelques pieges. Cette malheureuse affaire a tout a fait Decouragez Nos Chasseurs II ne veulle plus aller a la chasse decourage" nos chasseurs. Ils ne veulent plus aller a la chasse icy^ il en partira se pendent de mains 30 qui son tous de gens ici. lis en partiront. cependant demain 30, qui sont tous de gens a gage les 14 Lous et 16 Fransais il vont allandroit ou les a gage, les 14 loues et 16 Frangais. Ils vont a 1'endroit ou les autres on Etez De fait Je ne leur donne que 3 pieges Chaque ne autres ont et6 d6faits. Je ne leur donne que 3 pieges chacun, ne croient point prudent Dans risque daventage et surtous lorsque croyant point prudent d'en risquer davantage, et surtout lorsqu' il ne doive point Se Se pare et La moitier devent tonjours ils ne doivent point se separer, et la moitie doivent toujours Eti?es au campement. Le parti qui a etez de faite Consistait Au Stre au campement. La partie qui a H.6 defaite consistait en onze personne et les trois quare Etait a lez tendre Leurs onze personnes, et les trois quarts Etaient alles tendre leurs piege Lorsque les Sauvages on fonce au campement Le deux per- pieges lorsque les sauvages enfoncaient le campement. Les deux per- INCIDENTS OF THE FIGHT. 895 son tuez Son James Chique [Cheeks*] et un nomez haire [Ayres*] sonnes tues sont James Chique [Cheeks] et un nomine" Haire [Ayres], Angage de Mes Crou [Crooks] et McLanell [McLellan] que Mess engages de Messrs Crou [Crooks] et McLanell [McLellan] que Messrs Silvestre [Chouteau] & Auguste [Chouteau] avait equips Pour "chasse Silvestre [Chouteau] & Auguste [Chouteau] avaient equip6s pour chasser de Moitiez il manque autres ses deux Le Jeune Hulle [Hull*] qui de moiti6. II manque, outre ces deux, le jeune Hulle [Hull] qui etait du m§me camp et flyharte [Freehearty*] et son homme qui Etait etait du m6me camp, et flyharte [Freehearty] et son homme qui etaient campez Environ 2 mill Plus haut Nous avont trouvez 4 des piege campes environ 2 milles plus haut. Nous avons trouv6 4 des pieges de se derniers et La place ou les Sauvages les on poursuive mait de ces derniers et la place ou les sauvages les ont poursuivis, mais nous navont point trouvez la place ou il on Etez tuez Dans le nous n'avons point trouvS la place ou ils ont 6t6 tues. Dans le Campement ou les deux premier on Etez tuez Nous avon trouvez un campement ou les deux premiers ont 6te tues nous avons trouves un Pied noire qui avait aussi Etez tuez et en suivant leure trase Pied-Noir qui avait aussi ete tu6, et en suivant leur trace, Nous avon vus quil En avait une autre de Blesse dangereusement nous avons vu qu'il y en avait un autre de bless€ dangereusement. tous les Deux Sil le blese meure on recu Leure more de la main Tous les deux, si le bless6 meurt, ont recu leur mort de la main de Chique [Cheeks] car il ni a que Lui qui sai defendue Set de Chique [Cheeks], car il n'y a que lui qui s'est d6fendu. Cette malheureuse affaire nous Cause une perte considerable maist Je ne malheureuse affaire nous cause une perte considerable, mais je ne croi pas pour Sela de vaire perdre Courage Les ressource de Se crois pas pour cela devoir perdre courage. Les ressources de ce payis Son imance en Castors il est vrait que nous ne feront pays sont immenses en castor. II est vrai que nous ne ferons rein Se printemp mait Je me flate que nous feront Lautone pro- rien ce printemps, mais je me flatte que nous ferons Al'automne pro- {quelque chose] chaine Jes pert que Diei a mon De pare Jevairais les Ser pent chaine. J'espere que, d'ici a mon depart, je verrai les Serpents M 896 VISIONARY SCHEME. et les taite plate Mon Intention est de les faire Reste icy Si et les TSte-plates. Mon intention est de les faire rester ici, si Je puis et de les Encourage a la Guere Contre Les pied noirs Jus" je puis, et de les encourager a la guerre contre les Pieds-noirs, jus- qua Se que nous puission Enprend pri Son nice et en renvoiez qa'k ce que nous puissions en prendre prisonniers, et en renvoyer un pour faire des proposion de pais Seque Je croi Serat ayse un pour faire des propositions de paix, ce que je crois sera ais6 En leur Lesent des traiteurs au bat de la Chute (word torn out) en leur laissant des traiteurs au bas de la chute [du Missouri.] Si nous navont point La paix avec Ses ma- (rest of word gone) ou Si nous n'avons point la paix avec ces ma[udits (?)], ou quil ne Soi point detruit nous ne devont point pense a qu'ils ne soient point detruits, nous ne devons point penser a havoire detablisement icy assure Madame Chouteau de mon es- avoir d'^tablissement ici. Assurez Madame Chouteau de mon es- time la plus Sain Saire ainsi. que vos Chers enfants et Croiez Moix time le plus sincere ainsi que vos chers enfants, et croyez-moi pour La vie votre Devouez pour la vie votre devout. Pierre Menard Pierre Menard, tous les jours Devoire ) ir ) Nous nous atendont Nous nous attendons tous les jours de voir les pied noire icy et nous Le desiront les Pieds-noirs ici, et nous le desirons Faveur de Mr. Wm. Bryante (Address on back of letter) Monsieur Pierre Chouteau St. Louis. (Brief put on after receipt of letter) Lettre de Monsr. P. Menard du 21 Avril 1810. DISCOURAGING PROSPECTS. (Translation.) 897 Three Forks of the Missouri, April 21, 1810. Mr. Pierre Chouteau, Esq., Dear Sir and Brother-in-law :—I had hoped to be able to write you more favorably than I am now able to do. The outlook before us was much more flattering ten days ago than it is today. A party of our hunters was defeated by the Blackfeet on the 12th inst. There were two men killed, all their beaver stolen, many of their traps lost, and the ammunition of several of them, and also seven of our horses. We set out in pursuit of the Indians but unfortunately could not overtake them. We have recovered forty-four traps and three horses, which we brought back here, and we hope to find a few more traps. This unfortunate affair has quite discouraged our hunters, who are unwilling to hunt any more here. There will start out tomorrow, however, a party of thirty who are all gens a gage, fourteen loues and sixteen French. They go to the place where the others were defeated. I shall give them only three traps each, not deeming it prudent to risk more, especially since they are not to separate, and half are to remain in camp. The party which was defeated consisted of eleven persons, and eight or nine of them were absent tending their traps when the savages pounced upon the camp. The two persons killed are James Cheeks, and one Ayres, an engage of Messrs. Crooks and McLellan whom Messrs. Silvester and Auguste [Chouteau] had equipped to hunt on shares. Besides these two, there are missing young Hull who was of the same camp, and Freehearty and his man who were camped about two miles farther up. We have found four traps belonging to these men and the place where they were pursued by the savages, but we have not yet found the place where they were killed. In the camp where the first two men were killed we found 898 HEAVY LOSSES. a Blackfoot who had also been killed, and upon following their trail we saw that another had been dangerously wounded. Both of them, if the wounded man dies, came to their death at the hand of Cheeks, for he alone defended himself. This unhappy miscarriage causes us a considerable loss, but I do not propose on that account to lose heart. The resources of this country in beaver fur are immense. It is true that we shall accomplish nothing this spring, but I trust that we shall next autumn. I hope between now and then to see the Snake and Flathead Indians. My plan is to induce them to stay here, if possible, and make war upon the Blackfeet so that we may take some prisoners and send back one with propositions of peace—which I think can easily be secured by leaving traders among them below the Falls of the Missouri. Unless we can have peace with these (ma—?) or unless they can be destroyed, it is idle to think of maintaining an establishment at this point. Assure Madame Chouteau of my most sincere esteem as well as your dear children, and believe me always your devoted Pierre Menard. We are daily expecting to see the Blackfeet here and are desirous of meeting them. (Address on back of letter.) Monsieur Pierre Chouteau, St. Louis. Through the kindness of Mr. Wm. Bryant. (Brief on back of letter after receipt.) Letter from Mr. P. Menard, April 21, 1810. B. LETTER FROM MANUEL LISA TO GENERAL CLARK. On the conduct of Lisa's office as Indian agent. St. Louis, July ist, 1817. To His Excellency, Governor Clark: Sir :—I have the honor to remit to you the commission of sub-agent, which you were pleased to bestow upon me, in the summer of 1814, for the Indian nations who inhabit the Missouri river above the mouth of the Kansas, and to pray you to accept my resignation of that appointment. The circumstances under which I do this, demand of me some exposition of the actual state of these Indians, and of my own conduct during the time of my sub-agency. Whether I deserve well or ill of the government, depends upon the solution of these questions: 1. Are the Indians of the Missouri more or less friendly to the United States than at the time of my appointment ? 2. Are they altered, better or worse, in their own condition at this time ? 1. I received this appointment when war was raging between the United States and Great Britain, and when the activity of British emissaries had armed against the Republic all the tribes of the Upper Mississippi and of the northern lakes. Had the Missouri Indians been overlooked by British agents? No, your excellency will remember that more than a year before the war broke out, I gave you intelligence that the wampum was carrying by British influence along the banks 900 HOSTILE INDIANS. of the Missouri, and that all the nations of this great river were excited to join the universal confederacy then setting on foot, of which the Prophet was the instrument, and British traders the soul. The Indians of the Missouri are to those of the Upper Mississippi as four is to one. Their weight would be great, if thrown into the scale against us. They did not arm against the Republic; on the contrary, they armed against Great Britain and struck the Iowas, the allies of that power. When peace was proclaimed more than forty chiefs had intelligence with me; and together, we were to carry an expedition of several thousand warriors against the tribes of the Upper Mississippi, and silence them at once. These things are known to your excellency. To the end of the war, therefore, the Indians of the Missouri continued friends of the United States. How are they today when I come to lay down my appointment ? Still friends, hunting in peace upon their own ground, and we trading with them in security, while the Indians of the Upper Mississippi, silenced but not satisfied, give signs of enmity, and require the presence of a military force. And thus the first question resolves itself to my advantage. 2. Before I ascended the Missouri as sub-agent, your excellency remembers what was accustomed to take place. The Indians of that river killed, robbed and pillaged the traders; these practices are no more. Not to mention the others, my own establishments furnish the example of destruction then, of safety now. I have one at the Mahas more than six hundred miles up the Missouri, another at the Sioux, six hundred miles further still. I have from one to two hundred men in my employment, large quantities of horses, and horned cattle, of hogs, of domestic fowls; not one is touched by an Indian; for I count as nothing some solitary thefts at the instigation of white men, my enemies; nor as an act of hostility the death of Pedro Antonio, one of my people, shot this spring, as a man is sometimes shot among us, without being stripped or mutilated. And thus ENERGETIC MEASURES. QOI the morals of these Indians are altered for the better, and the second question equally results to my advantage. But I have had some success as a trader; and this gives rise to many reports. "Manuel must cheat the government, and Manuel must cheat the Indians, otherwise Manuel could not bring down every summer so many boats loaded with rich furs." Good. My accounts with the government will show whether I receive anything out of which to cheat it. A poor five hundred dollars, as sub-agent salary, does not buy the tobacco which I annually give to those who call me father. Cheat the Indians! The respect and friendship which they have for me, the security of my possessions in the heart of their country, respond to this charge, and declare with voices louder than the tongues of men that it cannot be true. "But Manuel gets so much rich fur!" Well, I will explain how I get it. First, I put into my operations great activity; I go a great distance, while some are considering whether they will start today or tomorrow. I impose upon myself great privations; ten months in a year I am buried in the forest, at a vast distance from my own house. I appear as the benefactor, and not as the pillager, of the Indians. I carried among them the seed of the large pompion, from which I have seen in their possession the fruit weighing 160 pounds. Also the large bean, the potato, the turnip; and these vegetables now make a comfortable part of their subsistence, and this year I have promised to carry the plough. Besides, my blacksmiths work incessantly for them, charging nothing. I lend them traps, only demanding preference in their trade. My establishments are the refuge of the weak and of the old men no longer able to follow their lodges; and by these means I have acquired the confidence and friendship of these nations, and the consequent choice of their trade. These things I have done, and I propose to do more. The Aricaras, the Mandans, the Gros-Ventres, and the Assiniboines, find themselves near the establishment of Lord Sel- 8SSS3 902 LOYALTY TO THE GOVERNMENT. kirk upon the Red river. They can communicate with it in two or three days. The evils of such communication will strike the minds of all persons, and it is for those who can handle the pen to dilate upon them. For me I go to form another establishment to counteract the one in question, and shall labor to draw upon us the esteem of these nations, and to prevent their commerce from passing into the hands of foreigners. I regret to have troubled your excellency with this exposition. It is right for you to hear what is said of a public agent, and also to weigh it, and to consider the source from which it comes. In ceasing to be in the employment of the United States, I shall not be less devoted to its interests. I have suffered enough in person and property, under a different government, to know how to appreciate the one under which I now live. I have the honor to be, with the greatest respect, your excellency's obedient servant. Manuel Lisa. c. NOTES ON THE ASTORIAN ENTERPRISE. Numbers of the Astorians — Arrivals and departures from Astoria — Deaths among the Astorians — Biographical notes — Loss of the Tonquin. THE NUMBER OF THE ASTORIANS. The Astorians, properly so called, included those persons in the service of the Pacific Fur Company who went to the Columbia by the Tonquin, the Beaver, or by Hunt's overland expedition. There^were a few scattering arrivals besides theseT" The Tonquin arrived within the mouth of the Columbia March 25th, 1811, and the Beaver May 9th, 1812. One detachment of HunFsTparty arrived January 18, 1812; another February 15, 1812; a third (Crooks and Day) May 10, 1812; and a fourth January 6th, 1813. The principal departures were by the Tonquin June 1, 1811; by Stuart's overland expedition June 29, 1812; by the Pedler, April 3, 1814; and by the Northwest brigade April 4, 1814. ARRIVALS. By the Tonquin: There sailed from New York by the Tonquin 22 crew and 33 passengers. There were taken on 24 Sandwich Islanders, making a total of 79. There were left at the Islands 2 (crew) leaving 77 who arrived at the mouth of the Columbia. There were lost in crossing the bar 8 (4 passengers, 3 crew and 1 Sandwich Islander), leaving 69 who entered the Columbia. There sailed on the Tonquin 27 (16 crew, 3 Astorians and 8 Islanders). There remained at Astoria 42 (27 whites and 15 Islanders). One of the crew had left the ship and remained at Astoria. mm 904 ARRIVALS AT ASTORIA. The Overland Expedition—West: The total number of persons who left the Aricara villages July 18, 1811, with Mr. Hunt, was 64, as we learn definitely for the first time on the journey at the Caldron Linn, November 8, 1811. The number is arrived at as follows: September 2 Left among the Crows Edward Rose ..... I October 1 Trapping party detached at Snake river 4 October 10 Trapping party detached at Fort Henry 5 October 28 Antoine Clappine drowned at Caldron Linn ... I October 30 Reed and 3 men set out down river from Caldron Linn, 2 returning 2 October 31 McLellan's party sets out from Caldron Linn . . 4 October 31 McKenzie's party sets out from Caldron Linn . . 5 November 9 Hunt's party sets out from Caldron Linn . . . . . 23 November 9 Crook's party sets out from Caldron Linn .... 19 ~4 This number includes 1 woman and 2 children. The number given by Crooks is 60, but he doubtless omitted Rose and the woman and children. Jan. 18, 1812, arrived at Astoria parties of Reed, McLellan and McKenzie II Feb. 15 " I " " Hunt's party 34 May 10 I J I " Crooks and Day 2 Jan. 6, 1813 I I " Carson, Delauney, St. Michael, Dubreuil, LaChapelle, Landry, and Turcot 7 Still detached, including Rose (for Cass and Detaye, see next line) 5 Perished—Clappine, Detaye, Cass, Carriere, Provost .... 5 1' . 64 The total number who reached Astoria was 54. On the Beaver: Irving says that the Beaver sailed with 1 partner, 5 clerks, 15 American laborers and 6 voyageurs, and took on 12 Islanders. One of the company's men died en route which would leave in all 38. Franchere places the number who arrived at Astoria at 33, and Cox, who was one of the passengers, at 36. Fugitive Arrivals: There were 7 arrivals from various sources, but none of them of importance. The total number of persons who entered the company's service on the Columbia, including the Islanders and fugitive LOSS OF LIFE. 905 arrivals, was therefore 144. This is a maximum number, the minimum given by any authority being 135. PERISHED. The following is the number of Astorians who are known to have lost their lives during the continuance of the enterprise : On the Columbia Bar 4 In the Tonquin massacre 3 On the Beaver ~ . . . 1 Of the Overland Party 5 With Reed on Snake river 10 Lost at Astoria from various causes (Ross) . . 4 Total . 27 Ship crews lost: On Columbia Bar (including 1 islander) ... 4 Tonquin Massacre (including 8 islanders) . . 24 On the Beaver 2 Shipwreck of the Lark 8 Total 38 Grand total 65 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES. Cox, Ross, was one of the clerks of the Pacific Fur Com- panyfcame to Astoria in the Beaver and entered the Northwest service in 1813. He was commonly known by the soubriquet of "Little Irishman." He remained on the Columbia six years, ascending the river nine times and descending it eight. His chief importance in Astorian history arises from the fact thatThe published an account of the enterprise which, although the least trustworthy of the original authorities, is still an important work. Its-~title is Adventures on~'the Columbia River, London, 1831. Day, John, a hunter in the overland party under Hunt. According to Irving he was a Virginia backwoodsman, but had for several years been on the Missouri in the service of Crooks and others. He was about forty years old in 1811, six feet two inches high, in form erect, with a step elastic, and "a handsome, open, manly countenance." He was a true representative of the American hunter. He joined Hunt's party h 1 906 DAY AND DORION. and went with the overland expedition to Astoria. He was somewhat broken in health at this time and fell behind with Crooks on Snake river when Hunt went on with the main party in the winter of 1811-12. He and Crooks were robbed of everything and stripped naked in the following spring on the Columbia. A large southern tributary of the Columbia that enters the river at this point is still called John Day's river. Not liking the prospect at Astoria, Day resolved to return with the overland party under Robert Stuart; but before he reached the Walla Walla he became violently insane and was taken back to Astoria. Irving says that he died within a year, but this must have been a mistake for he was certainly alive in the spring of 1814. As a matter of fact Day seems to have remained in the service of the Northwest Company for upwards of seven years and to have died in the upper Snake river country in 1819.. Ross speaks in his Fur Hunters of a "defile where the veteran John Day died in 1819," and elsewhere refers to " Day's Valley." It was somewhere near Godin river. Ferris repeatedly refers to this valley as " Day's Defile." Dorion, Pierre, a half-breed, and son of the Dorion who accompanied Lewis and Clark on a portion of their expedition across the continent. He was hired by Hunt as an interpreter and joined the overland expedition with his Indian wife and two children. He figures frequently in Irving's account of the expedition and generally in an interesting way. His death at the hands of the Indians near Boise river, Idaho, has already been related. Dorion's wife was a woman of remarkable fortitude and perseverance, as will be seen from her experiences as related in the text. She and her children were still living in Oregon in 1850. One of the boys, Baptiste Dorion, was guide to the naturalist, Townsend, on a trip along the Columbia in 1834. Franchere, Gabriel, one of the clerks who sailed in the Tonquin. His service on the Columbia was entirely at Astoria, and he was an eye witness of all the events which FRANCHERE, HUNT AND MILLER. 907 transpired there from March 25, 1811, when the Tonquin entered the Columbia, until April 4, 1814, when he left Fort George for home. Whatever is known of Franchere is to his credit. He was a man of ability and strictly honorable in all his relations. It is greatly to his honor that he had no hand in the negotiations connected with the transfer of Astoria and emphatically disapproved of McDougal's conduct. Franchere did an inestimable service to the cause of Western history in leaving an admirable account of events at Astoria. It is written in a clear, simple and direcTstyle, and is our best authority, except Irving's work, upon Mr. Astor's great enterprise. Franchere's Narrative was written in French and published in Montreal, 1819. An edition in English was published in 1854. Franchere, after his return to Montreal, continued his connection with the fur business. He was engaged to the Northwest Company for several years, and in 1833 was employing men in Montreal for the American Fur Company. Hunt, Wilson Price, chief partner jn the Pacific^Fur Company, except Mr. AstorJ and leader of the overland Astorian expedition:" Born at Asbury, New Jersey, date uncertain. Went to St. Louis in 1804 and was in business with John Hankinson in that city until Mr. Astor began to negotiate with him concerning his proposed enterprise on the Pacific. After the affairs of the Pacific Fur Company were wound up Hunt returned to business in St. Louis. In 1822 he was appointed postmaster of St. Louis by President Monroe. He was one of St. Louis' prominent business men and was highly respected by those who knew him. The events of his life which are most important in the present connection have already been related. Miller, Joseph, "a gentleman well educated and well informed, and of a respectable family in Baltimore. He had been an officer in the army of the United States, but had resigned in disgust at being refused a furlough, and had taken to trapping beaver and trading with the Indians." I 908 REED, ROSS AND STUART. (Irving.) Miller was with Crooks and McLellan in 1809 and joined the Pacific Fur Company with these gentlemen. The same imperious temper which drove him out of the army caused him to quit the new company when Hunt's expedition was about half way across the continent. After spending the fall and winter trapping and roving over the country until from one cause or another he was reduced almost to starvation, he was picked up by Robert Stuart in 1812 and acted as guide to Stuart's party from Snake to Bear river. For this very excellent service he was taken to task by the rest of the party, who thought that he was leading them too far to the south. They accordingly abandoned his guidance and made their senseless detour to the north. Miller's course was exactly right and to him belongs the credit of opening that part of the Oregon Trail which lay between Snake and Bear rivers. It is quite possible that Miller may have seen Salt Lake in the winter of 1811-12. Miller returned to St. Louis with Stuart's party and nothing further is known of him. Reed, John, a clerk in the Pacific Fur Company, an Irishman by birth, and one of the unluckiest of the Astorians. His unfortunate affair with the tin box on the Columbia, and his untimely death on the Boise have already been related. Nothing is known of him except his connection with Astoria. Ross, Alexander, a clerk of the Pacific Fur Company, who sailed with the Tonquin. After the downfall of Astoria he entered the Northwest service and remained there for many years. Much of his work was in the country around the headwaters of the Snake river. The greatest service which Ross performed was the publication of his two works, Adventures on the Oregon or C^lMmBta~ftver and Fur Hunters of the Far West. Both of these works are valuable contributions to the history of the fur trade. Stuart, Robert, of Scotch extraction and a nephew of David Stuart. Both were partners in the Pacific Fur Company and both sailed in the Tonquin. Young Robert Stuart LOSS OF THE TONQUIN. 909 appears to have been a man of great ability and spirit. It was he who forced Captain Thorn, at the pistol's mouth, to turn about the ship at the Falkland Islands. He was selected to take charge of the returning overland expedition, although he had not crossed the country before and although there were in the party both Crooks and McLellan, who had crossed. After the affairs of the Pacific Fur Company were closed up, Crooks and Stuart entered Mr. Astor's service on; the Great Lakes. When Crooks rose to the general agency of the company, Stuart was placed in charge of the Northern Department with headquarters at Michilimackinac. Many of his letters may still be seen in the old Astor letter books. LOSS OF THE TONQUIN. The following account of the loss of the Tonquin appeared in the Missouri Gazette of May 15, 1813, being the first published account of that disaster. It has never before been reproduced. I Loss of the Ship Tonquin near the Mouth of the Columbia. 1 A large ship {The Beaver'] had arrived from New York after a passage of near seven months, with merchandise and provisions for the company. It was here we learnt with sorrow that the story of the Tonquin having been cut off was but too true. The circumstances have been related in different ways by the natives in the environs of the establishment, but that which, from their own knowledge, carries with it the greatest appearance of truth is as follows: That vessel, after landing the cargo intended for Astoria, departed on a trading voyage to the coast north of Columbia river with a company of (including officers) 23 men, and had proceeded about 400 miles along the seaboard when they stopped on Vancouver's Island at a place called Woody Point, inhabited by a powerful nation called Wake-a-ninishes. These people came on board to barter their furs for merchandise, and conducted themselves in the most decorous and friendly manner during the first day, but the same evening f I "J" I 910 MASSACRE OF THE CREW. Information was brought on board by an Indian, whom the officers had as interpreter, that the tribe where they then lay were ill-disposed and intended attacking the ship next day. Captain Jonathan Thorn affected to disbelieve this piece of news, and even when the savages came next morning in ;great numbers, it was only at the pressing remonstrance of Mr. McKay that he ordered seven men aloft to loosen the sails. In the meantime about 50 Indians were permitted to come on board, who traded a number of sea otters for blankets and knives; the former they threw into their canoe as soon as received, but secreted the knives. Every one when armed moved from the quarter deck to different parts of the vessel, so that by the time they were ready, in such a manner were they distributed that at least three savages were opposite every man of the ship, and at a signal given they rushed on their prey, and notwithstanding the brave resistance of every individual of the whites they were all butchered in a few minutes. The men above, in attempting to descend, lost two of their number, besides one mortally wounded, who, notwithstanding his weakened condition, made good his retreat with the four others to the cabin, where, finding a quantity of loaded arms, they fired on their savage assailers through the skylights and companion-way, which had the effect of clearing the ship in a short time, and long before night these five intrepid sons of America were again in full possession of her. Whether from want of abilities or strength, supposing themselves unable to take the vessel back to Columbia, it cannot be ascertained. This fact only is known, that between the time the Indians were driven from the ship and the following morning, the four who were unhurt left her in the long boat in hopes of regaining the river, wishing to take along with them the wounded person, who refused their offer saying that he must die before long and was as well in the vessel as elsewhere. " Soon after sunrise she was surrounded by an immense number of Indians in canoes [who had] come for the express purpose of unloading her, but who, from the warm recep- W* DESTRUCTION OF THE SHIP. 911 tion they met with the day before, did not seem to vie with each other in boarding. The wounded man showing himself over the railing, made signs that he was alone and wanted their assistance, on which some embarked, who, finding what he said was true, spoke to their people wno were not any longer slow in getting on board; so that in a few seconds the deck was considerably thronged, and they proceeded to undo the hatches without further ceremony. " No sooner were they completely engaged in thus finishing this most diabolical of actions, than the only survivor of the crew descended into the cabin and set fire to the magazine containing nearly nine thousand pounds of gunpowder, which in an instant blew the vessel and every one on board to atoms. The nation acknowledge their having lost nearly one hundred warriors, besides a vast number wounded, by the explosion, who were in canoes round the ship. It is impossible to tell who the person was that so completely avenged himself, but there cannot exist a single doubt that the act will teach these villains better manners and will eventually be of immense benefit to the coasting trade. The four men who set off in the long boat were two or three days after driven ashore in a gale and massacred by the natives." D. THE "FLATHEAD DEPUTATION" OF 1832. [Letter from G. P. Disoway to the Christian Advocate and Journal and Zion's Herald, Friday, March 1, 1833.] THE FLATHEAD INDIANS. The plans to civilize the savage tribes of our country are among the most remarkable signs of the times. To meliorate the condition of the Indians, and to preserve them from gradual decline and extinction, the government of the United States have proposed and already commenced removing them to the region westward of the Mississippi. Here it is intended to establish them in a permanent residence. Some powerful nations of these aborigines, having accepted the proposal, have already emigrated to their new lands, and others are now preparing to follow them. Among those who still remain are the Wyandots, a tribe long distinguished as standing at the head of the great Indian family. The earliest travelers in Canada first discovered this tribe while ascending the St. Lawrence, at Montreal. They were subsequently driven by the Iroquois, in one of those fierce internal wars that characterize the Indians of North America, to the northern shores of Lake Huron. From this resting place also their relentless enemy literally hunted them until the remnant of this once powerful and proud tribe found a safe abode among the Sioux, who resided west of Lake Superior. When the power of the Iroquois was weakened by the French the Wyandots returned from the Sioux country, and settled near Michilimackinac. They finally took up their abode on the plains of Sandusky, in Ohio, where they continue to this day. EXCHANGE OF TERRITORY. 913 The Wyandots, amounting to five hundred, are the only Indians in Ohio who have determined to remain upon their lands. The Senecas, Shawnees, and Ottawas have all sold their Ohio possessions, and have either removed or are on their way to the west of the Mississippi. A small band of about seventy Wyandots from the Big Spring have disposed of their reservation of 16,000 acres, but have not accepted the offered lands of the government in exchange. They will retire into Michigan, or Canada, after leaving some of their number at the main reservation of Upper Sandusky. The wonderful effects of the Gospel among the Wyandots are well known. Providence has blessed in a most remarkable manner the labors of our missionaries for their conversion. Knowledge, civilization, and social comforts have followed the introduction of Christianity into their regions. To all of the Indians residing within the jurisdiction of the states or territories the United States propose to- purchase their present possessions and improvements, and in return to pay them acre for acre with lands west of the Mississippi" river. Among the inducements to make this exchange are the following: perpetuity in their new abodes, as the faith of the government is pledged never to sanction another removal ; the organization of a territorial government for their use like those in Florida, Arkansas, and Michigan, and the privilege to send delegates to Congress, as is now enjoyed by the other territories. Could the remaining tribes of the original possessors of this country place implicit reliance upon these assurances and prospects, this scheme to meliorate their condition, and to bring them within the pale of civilized life, might safely be pronounced great, humane, and rational. The Wyandots, after urgent and often repeated solicitations of the government for their removal, wisely resolved to send agents to explore the region offered them in exchange, before they made any decision upon the proposal. In November last the party started on the exploring expedition, 1 914 A LAND OF SAVAGES. and visited their proposed residence. This was a tract of country containing about 200,000 acres, and situated between the western part of Missouri and the Missouri river. The location was found to be one altogether unsuitable to the views, the necessities, and the support of the nation. They consequently declined the exchange. Since their return, one of the exploring party, Mr. Wm. Walker, an interpreter, and himself a member of the nation, has sent me a communication. As it contains some valuable facts of a region from which we seldom hear, the letter is now offered for publication. Upper Sandusky, Jan. 19, 1833. Dear Friend:—Your last letter, dated Nov. 12, came duly to hand. The business part is answered in another communication which is inclosed. I deeply regret that I have had no opportunity of answering your very friendly letter in a manner that would be satisfactory to myself; neither can I now, owing to a want of time and a retired place, where I can write undisturbed. You, no doubt, can fancy me seated in my small dwelling, at the dining table, attempting to write, while my youngest (sweet little urchin!) is pulling my pocket-handkerchief out of my pocket, and Henry Clay, my only son, is teasing me to pronounce a word he has found in his little spelling book. This done, a loud rap is heard at my door, and two or three of my Wyandot friends make their appearance, and are on some business. I drop my pen, dispatch the business, and resume it. The country we explored is truly a land of savages. It is wild and romantic; it is a champaign, but beautifully undulated country. You can travel in some parts for whole days and not find timber enough to afford a riding switch, especially after you get off the Missouri and her principal tributary streams. The soil is generally a dark loam, but not of a durable kind for agriculture. As a country for agricultural pursuits, it is far inferior to what it has been CHARACTER OF THE COUNTRY. 915 represented to be. It is deplorably defective in timber. There are millions of acres on which you cannot procure timber enough to make a chicken coop. Those parts that are timbered are on some of the principal streams emptying into the great Missouri, and are very broken, rough, and cut up with deep ravines; and the timber, what there is of it, is of an inferior quality, generally a small growth of white, black, and bur oaks; hickory, ash, buckeye, mulberry, lin- wood, coffee bean, a low scrubby kind of birch, red and slippy elm, and a few scattering walnut trees. It is remarkable, in all our travels west of the Mississippi river, we never found even one solitary poplar, beech, pine, or sassafras tree, though we were informed that higher up the Missouri river, above Council Bluffs, pine trees abound to a great extent, especially the nearer you approach the Rocky mountains. The immense country embraced between the western line of the state of Missouri, and the territory of Arkansas, and the eastern base of the Rocky mountains on the west, and Texas and Santa Fe on the south, is inhabited by the Osage, Sioux (pronounced Sooz), Pawnees, Comanches, Pancahs, Arrapohoes, Assinaboins, Riccarees, Yanktons, Omahaws, Blackfeet, Ottoes, Crow Indians, Sacs, Foxes, and Iowas; all a wild, fierce, and war-like people. West of the mountains reside the Flatheads, and many other tribes, whose names I do not now recollect. I will here relate an anecdote, if I may so call it. Immediately after we landed in St. Louis, on our way to the West, I proceeded to Gen. Clark's, superintendent of Indian affairs, to present our letters of introduction from the Secretary of War, and to receive the same from him to the different Indian agents in the upper country. While in his office and transacting business with him, he informed me that three chiefs from the Flathead nation were in his house, and were quite sick, and that one (the fourth) had died a few days ago. They were from the west of the Rocky mountains. Curiosity prompted me to step into the adjoining room to see them, having never seen any, but often heard THE FLATHEAD DEPUTATION. of them. I was struck with their appearance. They differ in appearance from any tribe of Indians I have ever seen: small in size, delicately formed, small limbs, and the most exact symmetry throughout, except the head. I had always supposed from their being called " Flatheads," that the head was actually flat on top; but this is not the case. The head is flattened thus: From the point of the nose to the apex of the head, there is a perfect straight line, the protuberance of the forehead is flattened or leveled. You may form some idea of the shape of their heads from the rough sketch I have made with the pen, though I confess I have drawn most too long a proboscis for a flat-head. This is produced by a pressure upon the cranium while in infancy. The distance they had traveled on foot was nearly three thousand miles to see Gen. Clark, their great father, as they called him, he being the first American officer they ever became acquainted with, and having much confidence in him, they had come to consult him as they said, upon very important matters. Gen, C. related to me the object of their mission, and, my dear friend, it is impossible for me to describe to you my feelings while listening to his narrative. I will here relate it as briefly as I well can. It appeared that some white man had penetrated into their country, and happened to be a spectator at one of their religious ceremonies, which they scrupulously perform at stated periods. He informed them that their mode of worshipping the supreme Being was radically wrong, and instead of being acceptable and pleasing, it was displeasing to him; he also informed them that the white people away toward the rising of the sun had been put in possession of the true mode of worshipping the great Spirit. They had a book containing directions how to conduct themselves in order to enjoy his favor and hold converse with him; and with this guide, no one need go astray; but every one that would follow the directions laid down there could enjoy, in this life, his favor, and after death would be received into the country where the great Spirit resides, and live for ever with him. INTERVIEW WITH GEN. CLARK. 917 Upon receiving this information, they called a national council to take this subject into consideration. Some said, if this be true, it is certainly high time we were put in possession of this mode, and if our mode of worshipping be wrong and displeasing to the great Spirit, it is time we had laid it aside. We must know something about this, it is a matter that cannot be put off, the sooner we know it the better. They accordingly deputed four of the chiefs to proceed to St. Louis to see their great father, Gen. Clark, to inquire of him, having no doubt but he would tell them the whole truth about it. They arrived at St. Louis, and presented themselves to Gen. C. The latter was somewhat puzzled being sensible of the responsibility that rested on him; he, however, proceeded by informing them that what they had been told by the white man in their own country was true. Then went into a succinct history of man, from his creation down to the advent of the Saviour; explained to them all the moral precepts contained in the Bible, expounded to them the decalogue; informed them of the advent of the Saviour, his life, precepts, his death, resurrection, ascension, and the relation he now stands to man as a mediator—that he will judge the world, etc. Poor fellows, they were not all permitted to return home to their people with the intelligence. Two died in St. Louis, and the remaining two, though somewhat indisposed, set out for their native land. Whether they reached home or not is not known. The change of climate and diet operated very severely upon their health. Their diet when at home is chiefly vegetables and fish. If they died on their way home, peace be to their manes! They died inquirers after the truth. I was informed that the Flatheads, as a nation, have the fewest vices of any tribe of Indians on the continent of America. I had just concluded I would lay this rough and uncouth scroll aside and revise it before I would send it, but if I lay it aside you will never receive it; so I will send it to you just i -A aaramn 918 FLATHEAD INDIANS. as it is, I with all its imperfections," hoping that you may be able to decipher it. You are at liberty to make what use you please of it. Yours in haste, Wm. Walker. G. P. Disoway, Esq. The most singular custom of flattening the head prevails among all the Indian nations west of the Rocky mountains. It is most common along the lower parts of the Columbia river, but diminishes in traveling eastward, until it is to be scarcely seen in the remote tribes near the mountains. Here the folly is confined to a few females only. The practice must have commenced at a very early period, as Columbus noticed it among the first objects that struck his attention. An essential point of beauty with those savages is a flat head. Immediately after the birth of the child the mother, anxious to procure the recommendation of a broad forehead for her infant, places it in the compressing machine. This is a cradle formed like a trough, with one end where the head reposes more elevated than the other. A padding is then placed upon the forehead, which presses against the head by cords passing through holes on each side of the cradle. The child is kept in this manner upward of a year, and the operation is so gradual as to be attended with scarcely any pain. During this period of compression the infant presents a frightful appearance, its little keen black eyes being forced out to an unnatural degree by the pressure of bandages. When released from this process the head is flattened, and seldom exceeds more than one or two inches in thickness. Nature with all its efforts can never afterward restore the proper shape. The heads of grown persons often form a straight line from the nose to the top of the forehead. From the outlines of the face in Mr. Walker's communication I have endeavored to sketch a Flathead for the purpose of illustrating more clearly this most strange custom. The dotted lines will show the usual rotundity of a human head, and the cut how widely a Flathead differs from the rest of the great family of man. So great is this m*+3 TRADITION OF THE BEAVER. difference as to compel anatomists themselves to confess mat an examination of such skulls and ocular demonstration only could have convinced them of the possibility of moulding the head into this form. The " human face Divine " is thus sacrificed to fantastic ideas of savage beauty. They allege also, as an apology for this custom, that their slaves have round heads, and that the children of a brave and free race ought not to suffer such a degradation. This deformity, however, of the Flathead Indians is redeemed by other numerous good qualities. Travelers relate that they have fewer vices than any of the tribes in those regions. They are honest, brave, and peaceable. The women become exemplary wives and mothers, and a husband with an unfaithful companion is a circumstance almost unknown among them. They believe in the existence of a good and evil Spirit, with rewards and"punishments of a future state. Their rel jflmrt. promigpg tr> th^ virtunus a-for death a ch*mPtp wh^rp p^rppf^p] gtpmpr wiH shine over plains filled with their much beloved buffalo, and upon streams abounding in the most delicious fish. HenTthey wilt spend their time in hunting and fishing, happy and undisturbed fiuin every enemy7 while the bad Indian will be consigned to a place of eternal snows, with fires in his sight that he cannot enjoy, anrThuffalo and deer that cannot be caught to satisfy his hunger. A curious tradition prevails among them concerning beavers. These animals, so celebrated for their sagacity, they believe are a fallen race of Indians, who have been condemned on account of their wickedness by the great Spirit, to their present form of the brute creation. At some future period they also declare that these fallen creatures will be restored to their former state. How deeply touching is the circumstance of the four natives traveling on foot 3,000 miles through thick forests and extensive prairies, sincere searchers after truth! The story has scarcely a parallel in history. What a touching theme does it form for the imagination and pen of a Mont- ■ Mi ; am ii i 920 MISSIONARY FIELD. gomery, a Mrs. Hemans, or our own fair Sigourney! With what intense concern will men of God whose souls are fired with holy zeal for the salvation of their fellow beings, read their history! There are immense plains, mountains, and forests in those regions whence they came, the abodes of numerous savage tribes. But no apostle of Christ has yet had the courage to penetrate into their moral darkness. Adventurous and daring fur traders only have visited these regions, unknown to the rest of the world, except from their own accounts of them. If the Father of spirits, as revealed by Jesus Christ, is not known in these interior wilds of America, they nevertheless often resound the praises of the unknown, invisible great Spirit, as he is denominated by the savages. They are not ignorant of the immortality of their souls, and speak of some future delicious island or country where departed spirits rest. May we not indulge the hope that the day is not far distant when the missionaries will penetrate into these wilds where the Sabbath bell has never yet tolled since the world began! There is not, perhaps, west of the Rocky mountains, any portion of the Indians that presents at this moment a spectacle so full of interest to the contemplative mind as the Flathead tribe. Not a thought of converting or civilizing them ever enters the mind of the sordid, demoralizing hunters and fur traders. These simple children of nature even shrink from the loose morality and inhumanities often introduced among them by the white man. Let the Church awake from her slumbers and go forth in her strength to the salvation of these wandering sons of our native forests. We are citizens of this vast universe, and our life embraces not merely a moment, but eternity itself. Thus exalted, what can be more worthy of our high destination than to befriend our species and those efforts that are making to release immortal spirits from the chains of error and superstition, and to bring them to the knowledge of the true God. G. P. D. New York, Feb. 18, 1833. i ORIGIN OF THE DEPUTATION. 921 'The following letters were published in the Christian Advocate of May 10, 1833.] THE FLATHEAD INDIANS. The following correspondence and communication will be read with great interest. Is it not the voice of Heaven to us ? The field opens gloriously. Read Mr. M'Allister's letter below. The men are ready; let the Missionary Society have the means. Let the whole Church become a missionary band; not for this object particularly, but for every object. These documents necessarily shorten our notice of the missionary anniversary of our Church, held on the evening of the 23d of April, but we shall continue it in our next. St. Louis, Mo., April 16. [1833.] Dear Brethren:—The communication respecting the Flat Head Indians, which appeared a few weeks since in your paper, and the call of Dr. Fisk, have excited considerable attention. I have just received a letter from Brother Brunson, propounding several questions, which he wished me to have answered here, so that the desired information might be rendered available to the Christian public. I called immediately upon Gen. Clark, who received me kindly. He informed me he was just answering, or had just answered, some communications upon the subject. I was struck with the propriety of an immediate communication from this place; I therefore send you this, sincerely wishing it may be useful. Gen. Clark informed me that the publication which had appeared in the Advocate was correct. Of the return of the two Indians nothing is known. He informed me the cause of their visit was the following: Two of their number had received an education at some Jesuitical school in Montreal, Canada, had returned to the tribe, and endeavored, as far as possible, to instruct their brethren how the whites approached the Great Spirit. The consequence was a spirit of I 'n Z.& 922 LETTER FROM ROBERT CAMPBELL. inquiry was aroused, a deputation appointed, and a tedious journey of three thousand miles performed, to learn for themselves of Jesus and him crucified. Will not these Indians rise up in the day of judgment to the condemnation of hundreds and thousands who live and die unforgiven in Christian lands? I had the good fortune to become acquainted with Mr. Campbell, who was one of the first traders among those Indians. He left on yesterday for the Rocky mountains and the country beyond. A few hours before his departure he favored me with the enclosed letter, which I wish you to publish with these remarks. Mr. Campbell is a very intelligent and gentlemanly man, and you may rely upon his information. Yours as ever, E. W. Sehon. Rev. Mr. Sehon: Dear Sir :—In compliance with your request I shall give you a few very brief answers to the questions you have put respecting the Flat Head Indians. i. Prospects of a mission? I cannot pretend to say what prospects there would be in a religious point of view. The Flat Head Indians are proverbial for their mild disposition and friendship to the whites, and I have little hesitation in saying a missionary would be treated by them with kindness. 2. Distance from St. Louis to Council Bluffs? The distance is about five hundred miles. 3. Whether suitable interpreters can be obtained for the Flat Head Indians? There would be some difficulty to have religious matters explained, because the best interpreters are half-Indians, that you could not explain to their minds the matter you would require to have told to the Indians. 4. The number of the Indians? There are about forty lodges of these Indians, averaging, say seven Indians to a lodge. LETTER FROM MR. M ALLISTER. 92S 5. Do steamers go as far as the Council Bluffs ? With the exception of the American Fur Company's steamboats, which ascend as high as the Yellow Stone, none go as far as the Bluffs. 6. Do fur traders go to the Flat Head country, and at what seasons of the year, and will they allow the missionaries to go in their company ? There is every season one or more companies leaving St. Louis in the month of March* and I doubt not but they would willingly allow a missionary to accompany them; but the privations that a gentleman; of that profession would have to encounter would be verjr great, as the shortest route that he would have by land would not be less than one thousand miles, and when he reached his destination he would have to travel with the Indians, as- they have no permanent villages, nor have the traders an)r houses, but, like the Indian, move in their leather lodges, from place to place throughout the season. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, Robert Campbell.. St. Louis, April 13, 1833. St. Louis, April 17, 1833. Messrs. Editors :—The visit of the Flat Head and Nose Pierce, or Pierced Nose, Indians to our place to inquire of the white man how he ascertains the will of the Great Spirit, has excited much interest in their behalf among the benevolent in different parts of the United States, and well it may* when we consider the distance they traveled, and the countless hardships they endured to learn by what means we have access into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in the hope of the resurrection of the dead and the glory of God. Interrogatories have been proposed in reference to the tribe or band of Flat Heads, who sent the deputation to this city to wait on Gen. Clark, and in answering the question as to their number, Mr. Campbell confines his answer to that particular band, and states the number at about two hundred and eighty. This statement, though strictly true and fulbg if U 924 PACIFIC COAST INDIANS. covering the inquiry proposed, might induce many not otherwise informed to suppose that the Flat Heads constitute a mere handful of people buried in the deep recesses of the stony mountains, near three thousand miles from the abodes of civilized man, and are scarcely worth looking after. This is not the fact: the deputation was from the Cho-pun-ish tribe, residing on Lewis river, above and below the mouth of the Koos-koos-ka river, and a small band of Flat Heads who live with them. The Cho-pun-ish or Pierce Nose Indians are about seven thousand in number, according to Gen. Clark's account. The Indians residing on the tide water of the Oregon and below the great falls are about eight thousand in number. Those residing on the northwest of the Oregon, on the coast of the Pacific, number about six thousand. Those on the southwest on the same coast number about ten thousand two hundred; all these Indians are Flat Heads except one tribe— the Cook-koo-oose—living on the coast of the Pacific; these do not flatten the head, and are fairer in their complexion, and number about fifteen hundred. The Flat Heads living on Kilmox bay speak the same language with the Lucktons, Ka-kun-kle, Lick-a-wis, Yorich-cone, Neek-e-to, Ul-le-ah, You-itts, Shia Stuck-kle, and Kila-evats. The presumption is that it is the vernacular language of all those tribes living on the Oregon below the Great Falls and on the Pacific coast, northwest and southwest of the mouth of the Oregon. Gen. Clark discovered on the waters of the Oregon and coast of the Pacific more than sixty tribes of Indians, numbering about eighty thousand souls. It is not, however, to be presumed that his account is complete. It is highly probable that the coast of the eastern Pacific is frequented by Indians from Behring's Straits to Upper California, and many tribes no doubt exist in the interior both south and north of the Oregon, which did not come to the knowledge of Messrs. Lewis and Clark. How ominous this visit of the Cho-pun-nish and Flat Head Indians! How loud the call to the missionary spirit «r-*U THE CROSS ON THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. 9^5 of the age! It calls to my mind a declaration made by Bishop Soule, when preaching at a camp in this country. Speaking of the missionary zeal of the Methodist preachers, of their extended field of labors, their untiring perseverance to compass the earth and spread Scriptural holiness through all the world: " We will not cease," said he, " until we shall have planted the standard of Christianity high on the summit of the Stony Mountains." Already would it seem that a door is open, and the Indians from the lofty summit of the Rocky mountains look far east with burning desire to behold the coming of the messenger of God. Among the Cho-pun-nish and Flat Heads of Lewis river the work will commence; the honesty, hospitality, docility,, and mildness of these Indians strongly recommended them first to the consideration of the civilian and Christian missionary; here the missionary may learn perhaps the language spoken by those of Kil-a-man bay on the Pacific: this will give access to perhaps twenty or thirty thousand below the Great Falls and on the Pacific. One word more and I shall close. Many of our fellow- citizens have gone from this country so diseased as to render it doubtful whether they could ever reach the mountains and have returned from thence with constitutions restored and health renewed, to the astonishment of all that knew them. If you think the information herein contained would serve the purposes of Christian benevolence, give it a place in your Journal. Yours affectionately, A. M'Allister. V Wm n m v^^ , MISCELLANEOUS DATA RELATING TO THE FUR TRADE. State of the fur trade in 1831 — General Ashley's method of moving parties through the Indian country — A fur hunter's business accounts. STATE OF THE FUR TRADE IN 1831. [Letter from Thomas Forsyth to Lewis Cass, Secretary of War, Manuscript Department, State Historical Society of Wisconsin.] St. Louis, October 24, 1831. Sir:—In compliance with the request contained in your letter of the 9th ultimo, I have the honor to give the following as answers to your queries. I am sorry to say that these •answers are not so complete as I would wish them to be, but it seems impossible to collect more detailed or comprehensive information in this country on the subject of the trade from this place to Mexico and to the base and west of the Rocky mountains. Several persons with whom I have conversed, and who have decidedly the best knowledge of the subject, are unwilling to say anything about it, while others, who pretend to much knowledge of the business, are too ignorant to .give even a plain common account, but tell so many wild stories and deal so much in the marvelous, that it appears unsafe to depend on anything they relate— THE FUR TRADE ON THE FRONTIERS. The fur trade of the countries bordering on the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, as high up the former river as above the Falls of St. Anthony, and the latter as the Sioux establishment some distance above Council Bluffs, is carried on now THE ST. LOUIS TRADERS. 927 in the same manner as it ever has been. This trade continues to be monopolized by the American Fur Company, who have divided the whole of the Indian country into departments as follows: Farnham & Davenport have all the country of the Sauk and Fox Indians, as high up the Mississippi river as Dubuque's mines (without including the Fox Indians who reside at that place) as also all the Winnebago and other Indians who reside on the lower parts of Rock river; also the Iowa Indians who live at or near the [Black] Snake Hills on the Missouri river. The division of Mr. Rolette includes all the Indians from Dubuque's mines to a point above the Falls of St. Anthony, and up the St. Peters [Minnesota] river to its source, as also all the Indians on the Wisconsin and upper parts of Rock river. Mr. Cabanne (who is a member of the American Fur Company) has in his division all the Indians on the Missouri as high as a point above the Council Bluffs, including the Pawnee Indians of the interior, in about a southwest direction from his establishment. Mr. Auguste P. Chouteau has within his department all the Indians of the Osage country and others who may visit his establishment, such as the Cherokees, Chickasaws, and other Indians. Messrs. McKenzie, Laidlaw & Lamont have in their limits the Sioux Indians of the Missouri, and as high up the river as they choose to send or go. The American Fur Company bring on their goods annually in the spring season to this city from New York, which are then sent up the Missouri river to the different posts in a small steamboat. At those places the furs are received on board and brought down to St. Louis, where they are opened, counted, weighed, repacked, and shipped by steamboats to New Orleans, thence on board of vessels to New York, where the furs are unpacked, made up into bales, and sent to the best markets in Europe, except some of the finest (particularly otter skins), which are sent to China. Mr. Rolette procures his goods at Mackinaw, takes them on in Mackinaw boats to Prairie du Chien (by way of Green 1 Sf (I ft 928 FUR TRADE MERCHANDISE. Bay, the Fox and Wisconsin rivers), where he assorts them. They are then forwarded, by clerks hired for the purpose, with the same boats and men, to the different trading posts. Farnham & Davenport take up their goods from this city to the Indian villages in keelboats, with their clerks and men. Mr. Cabanne and Mr. McKenzie & Company take up their goods in the American Fur Company steamboats as before stated. The goods of Mr. A. P. Chouteau are transported by water in keelboats, as high up the Osage river as the water will admit; from thence they are carried in wagons to his establishment in the interior of the country. In the spring of the year when the Arkansaw is high Mr. Chouteau sends his furs down that river to New Orleans from whence they are shipped to New York.1 By the time that the Indians have gathered their corn, the traders are prepared with their goods to give them credits. The articles of merchandise which the traders take with them to the Indian country are as follows: viz., blankets 3 points, 2^2, 2, ij4, 1; common blue stroud; ditto red; blue cloth; scarlet do; calicoes; domestic cottons; rifles and shot guns, gunpowder, flints, and lead; knives of different kinds; looking glasses; vermilion and verdigris; copper, brass, and tin kettles; beaver and muskrat traps; fine and common bridles and spurs; silverworks; needles and thread; wampum ; horses; tomahawks and half axes, etc. All traders at the present day give credit to the Indians in the same manner as has been the case for the last sixty or eighty years. That is to say, the articles which are passed on credit are given at xThe reader will remember that the two principal divisions of the American Fur Company's field of operations were the Northern Department, headquarters at Michilimacinac, and the Western Department, headquarters at St. Louis. What the writer here calls departments were really sub-departments of these two. Rolette belonged to the Northern Department, Farnham and Davenport to the Western Department, as of course did the Missouri traders. Whether Auguste P. Chouteau, who controlled the trade with the Osage Indians, was connected with the American Fur Company, or wholly independent of it, is not very clear from the records. DETAILS OF THE BUSINESS. 929 very high prices. Formerly, when the opposition and competition in the Indian trade were great, the traders would sell in the spring of the year, payment down, for less than one- half of the prices at which they charged the same articles to the same Indians on credit the preceding autumn. This was sometimes the occasion of broils and quarrels between the traders and the Indians, particularly when the latter made bad hunts. The following are the prices charged for some articles given on credit to the Sauk and Fox Indians, whose present population exceeds six thousand souls and who are compelled to take goods, etc., of the traders at their very high prices, because they cannot do without them, for if the traders do not supply their necessary wants and enable them to support themselves, they would literally starve. An Indian takes on credit from a trader in the autumn— A 3-point blanket at $10.00 A rifle gun 30.00 A pound of gunpowder . . 4.00 Total Indian dollars $44.00 The 3-point blanket will cost in England, say 16 shillings per pair 1 blanket at 100 per cent is equal to $ 3.52 A rifle gun costs in this place from $12 to 13.00 A pound of gunpowder .20 $16.72 Add 25 per cent for expenses 4.18 $20.90 Therefore, according to this calculation (which I know is correct), if the Indian pays all his debt, the trader is a gainer of more than 100 per cent. But it must be here observed that the trader takes for a dollar a large buckskin, which may weigh six pounds, or two doeskins, four musk- rats, four or five raccoons, or he allows the Indian three dollars for an otterskin, or two dollars a pound for beaver. And in my opinion the dollar which the trader receives of the Indian is not estimated too high at 125 cents, and perhaps in some instances at 150 cents. I *-mm 93° CREDIT TO THE INDIANS. In the spring the trader lowers his price on all goods, and will sell a 3-point blanket for five dollars, and other articles in proportion as he receives the furs down in payment, and as the Indians always reserve the finest and best furs for the spring trade. In the autumn of every year the trader carefully avoids giving credit to the Indians on any costly articles, such as silverworks, wampum, scarlet cloth, fine bridles, etc., unless it be to an Indian who he knows will pay all his debt; in which case he will allow the Indian on credit everything he wishes. Traders always prefer giving on credit gunpowder, flints, lead, knives, tomahawks, hoes, domestic cottons, etc., which they do at the rate of 300 or 400 per cent, and if one-fourth of the prices of those articles be paid, he is amply paid. After all the trade is over in the spring it is found that some of the Indians have paid all for which they were credited, others one-half, one-third, one- fourth, and some nothing at all; but taken altogether, the trader has received on an average one-half of the whole amount of Indian dollars for which he gave credit the preceding autumn, and calls it a tolerable business; that is, if the furs bear a good price the trader loses nothing, but if any fall in the price takes place he loses money. The American Fur Company ought to be satisfied with the Indians, for they have monopolized all the trade, especially at the posts before mentioned. There is a man now in this city who receives annually a sum from that company on condition that he will not enter the Indian country.2 They have also monopolized the whole trade on the frontiers together with the Indian annuities, and everything an Indian has to sell, yet they claim a large amount for debts due them for non-payment of credits given to the Indians at different periods. TRADE TO AND WEST OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. I visited this country as early as April, 1798, and in many? conversations I had with the French people of this place, all aIt is difficult to imagine who this individual was, if not General William H. Ashley, the founder of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. MANUEL LISA. 931 that they could say^n_thesubject of the Indian trade was that thergLw.ere-ma nyjkadjan nations inhabiting the country bordering on the Missouri river who were exceedingly^ cruel t5~all tEe white people thafwent among tlrem. "TnTTughest point then known up the Missouri river was Cedar Island, which is somewhere in the Arikara country. The Arikara, Mandan, Blackfeet, Crow, Arapahoe, Assiniboin, and other Indians were well known in those days (1800) to the Hudson Bay and Northwest Companies Clerks belonging to those companies with their men would visit the Missouri annually at different places for the purpose of trading with the Indians. After the arrival of Lewis and Clark from the Pacific, a company was organized at this place for the purpose of trading with the Indians up the Missouri river to its forks and higher if necessary. That company did not exist long, as it appeared they were deficient in management and understanding of their new business. After their dissolution a Mr. Manuel Lisa carried on a trade with the nations as high up as the Sioux Indians. He afterwards with others, formed a company who extended their trade up the Missouri river to the Mandan villages. Mr.j Manuel Lisa appeared quite sanguine of success, having the sole management of this company, and it is supposed by some people that if he had been well assisted by his partners, he might have done something; but all his endeavors fell to the ground, and he died some years ago, insolvent. Mr. Manuel Lisa and his partners followed the custom of employing men to hunt in the Indian country. After the war with Great Britain commenced our Indian \ trade almost ceased to exist, except where it was continued ( by some few hunters who got up among the Indians and j would, in the spring season, bring down a few furs; yet the Hudson Bay and the Northwest companies at the same 1 time extended their trade, and sent hunting parties to different points on the Missouri river as also to the Rocky mountains. This kind of trade or business of hunting was con- 1 932 GENERAL ASHLEY. ducted on a small scale until General Ashley took it in hand about the year 1821 or 2, when he took a number of hunters up towards the mountains as also some goods to trade with the Indians. In 1823 Gen1. Ashley was attacked by the Arikaras. He then descended the Missouri river to Council Bluffs when Colonel Leavenworth went up (Gen1. Ashley and party being in company) and severely punished the Indians for their audacity. After this Gen1. Ashley took more men as hunters and more goods up towards the base of the Rocky mountains. About this time (say 1824-5) Gen1. Ashley was nearly one hundred thousand dollars in debt, as I have been informed, since which he has paid off all his-debts and has now an independent fortune. Some years back Gen1. Ashley extended his trade and hunting excursions west of the mountains, but he has since sold out to MessrL. Sublette, Jackson & Smith and now has nothing more to do with the business either of hunting or trading about the mountains. He brings on goods &c. from the eastward to this city and furnishes Sublette, Jackson & Smith with all they require and receives annually from them their furs in payment. Sublette & C°. transport their goods by water from this place up the Missouri to the Little Platte, thence in wagons to a given point on the Missouri river east of the mountains, as also round a spur of the^mountains to the waters of Columbia. From what I can learn, there is but little trading done on either side of the Rocky mountains by Sublette, Jackson & Smith. It is altogether by hunting that they collect so many furs. In the Hudson Bay establishments on Red river there are many half-breeds who are altogether brought up to hunting. ■ They were formerly provided with an outfit to hunt by some of the Hudson Bay trading establishments, so that they became well acquainted with all the country on each side of the Rocky mountains. From them the Hudson Bay Company collected much fur. But Gen1. Ashley (as I have been told) has had the address to gain over many of those half- THE COLUMBIA FUR COMPANY. 933 breeds to the American concern, by which means the returns of fur to the Hudson Bay establishments have been much curtailed. Messr*5. McKenzie, Laidlaw and Lamont are three young Scotchmen, of whom the two former were once in the employ of the Hudson Bay Company. But when that company and the Northwest Company joined their concerns together, about nine hundred clerks and men were dismissed that service. McKenzie and Laidlaw were among that number, and coming to St. Louis, they formed a concern with Lamont and others, calling themselves the Columbia Fur Company and trading under that firm. They~were unsuccessful at the commencement and at one time were forty or fifty thousand dollars in debt, but one fortunate season of trade enabled them to pay off all their debts, leaving much money for themselves. After this they made arrangements with the American Fur Company for goods, and have been doing a good business ever since, so as to be now wealthy. Messrs. McKenzie & C°. send goods and hunters up the Missouri river from their establishments, toward the mountains, and from the knowledge McKenzie and Laidlaw obtained (during their employment in the Hudson Bay Company) of the country and Indians, they now trade with the Blackfeet and other Indians who always heretofore were in favour of the Hudson Bay Company. Perhaps it would not be exceeding the truth to say that half a million of dollars in furs are now annually brought down the Missouri river that formerly went to Hudson Bay, and it is the enterprising spirit of Gen1. Ashley which has occasioned the change of this channel of trade. All traders procure as much wild meat as possible from the Indians, but where this article is scarce they have the pre^ caution to take provisions with them in the fall of the year as they go into the Indian country. I am informed that Mr. A. P. Chouteau has a very large farming establishment in the Osage country, where he raises every article of necessary food and in greater abundance than is necessary for himself, 934 LOSSES IN THE FUR TRADE. his very numerous family and followers. Messrs. McKen- zie & C°. have some domestic animals at their establishment; but the buffalo, elk, bear and deer (particularly the buffalo) are so numerous that they are never in want of provisions of the meat kind. Their corn they can obtain in abundance from the Arikara and Mandan Indians and they can be supplied with I little flour from St. Louis so that they can never be in want. It is said that Sublette, Jackson and Smith take with them some horned cattle, which they drive with their wagons and which serve for provisions until they reach the buffalo country. It is impossible for me to ascertain the number of lives that have been lost on the routes to and from the Rocky mountains or Mexico. In the Indian country bordering on the frontiers no lives have been lost, according to my present recollection for the last fifteen years, except Findley and two others on Lake Pepin in the summer of 1824, and two men by the Winnebagos near Prairie du Chien in the summer of 1828. Smith (the partner of Sublette and Jackson) was killed this past summer on his way to Santa Fe, having gone that way with some goods. I have no doubt that in most of the misunderstandings which take place between the whites and Indians in the interior of the Indian country, the fault is with the white people, except among the Comanches, or Hietans, as some call them. They are a roving, plundering, murdering nation. The following are the names of the different nations of Indians who inhabit the country between this and the Rocky mountains and west of the Mississippi, viz., Sauks, Foxes, Sioux, Otoes, Iowas, Mahas, Pawnees, Paducas, Snakes, Shoshones, Delawares, Peorias and Kickapoos, and there may be others that I have never heard of, or having heard of, have forgotten. TRADE TO MEXICO. The trade to Mexico from this country is carried on by individuals. Sometimes two, three, or more individuals THE SANTA FE TRADE. 935 will join their small adventures together, either at St. Louis or on the route, and sell them to the best advantage at Santa Fe or other places in Mexico, during the winter months. Those people who are inclined to go to Mexico, prepare by purchasing goods, wagons, mules, and horses and hiring of men. The whole cavalcade rendezvous at Independence, Jackson county, in this state, about the month of May. They then move off together after having formed such regulations among themselves as are deemed beneficial to the whole, which regulations continue in force on the whole route from this state to Santa Fe. From what I can learn there is little or no danger between this and the supposed line dividing Mexico and the United States, unless the cavalcade fall in with a war party of Pawnees or Paducas on their way to war against the Comanches or Hietans (as some call them), and then if the party of whites have in number say ioo or 150 men, the Indians will not attack them, but will try every stratagem to steal their horses and mules, because those Indians know that when they have once got the horses and mules, the white people cannot get their wagons away, but will abandon them, whereby the Indians will get much booty. By this mode they have succeeded in more than one instance, and after carrying away what they can they destroy the balance both of the goods and wagons. In May last upwards of two hundred men left Independence for Santa Fe and from what I am informed they did not meet with any difficulty either in going or returning. This was told me by a few who have returned. It appears that after the line above mentioned is crossed (in going outwards) the white people are more apt to fall in with the Hietans who follow the buffalo near the base of the mountains to the northward during the spring and summer months, and to the southward during the autumn. Parties from this place on their arrival in the mountains, hide their goods and then they go into the settlements to make the necessary arrangements, after which, by means of RELATIONS WITH THE INDIANS. bribes, their goods are smuggled in. They then sell them so as to be here again about this time (October) or ensuing month with the returns, whatever they may be. I cannot form any idea, neither can I gain any information as to the amount of goods taken, or the number of men employed, in the annual trade to Mexico, and I am equally uninformed as to the amount of returns from that place. In August last Mr. Charles Bent set out from St. Louis with a number of wagons loaded with goods for Santa Fe and drawn by oxen. His party consisted of from thirty to forty men, and if he succeeds with his ox wagons the oxen will answer the triple purpose: Ist, drawing the wagons; 2nd, the Indians will not steal them as they would horses and mules- and 3rdly, in cases of necessity part of the oxen will answer for provisions. OBSERVATIONS RESPECTING OUR RELATIONS WITH THE INDIAN NATIONS. It is lamentable indeed for any one who has the least knowledge of Indians to observe that not only those who visit this place, but also those who have never been at any of the military posts, should have so little respect for the American people. In March, 1818, when I was at the city of Washington, I had several long conversations with Mr. Calhoun (then Secretary of War) on Indian affairs. I told him that it must appear strange to many people to perceive that we, as Americans, speaking the same language with the British, whose manners and customs were the same, exceeding them perhaps in our Indian expenditures, and having all the Indians residing within our own territories, still had not the same influence over them that the British had. Therefore (said I) there must be a fault somewhere. To this Mr. Calhoun replied, that I ought not to point out an evil without showing a remedy for it. I answered by saying that we ought to follow the same policy (so far as possible) towards the Indians that the British pursued with such success. The British government have a well-regulat- DEFECTS OF AGENCY SYSTEM. 937 ed Indian Department. No person is eligible for an Indian agency under that government unless he can speak some one of the Indian languages; for it is natural to suppose that a man understands at least the general manners and customs of all Indians if he has been among them long enough to learn any one of their languages, and they (the British) have brought their Indian affairs to a perfect system. But our government appoints young men to Indian agencies, generally from the interior of the United States, who, in all probability, have never seen more than three or four Indians together in the course of their lives, and those Indians perhaps civilized. When the old chiefs and warriors hear of the arrival of their new father (as they term the new agent) they call at the agency to see him, but the agent does not know what to say or do to them and perhaps does not give them a pipe of tobacco, or even a good or bad word. The Indians then go away dissatisfied, and consequently in cases of this kind, everything depends on the interpreter. If the interpreter is an honest man he may teach the agent something in the course of years; but on the contrary, if he is a designing man, and wishes that no one should share his influence, he will keep the agent and the Indians in continual broils and quarrels, and nothing being rightly done, the public service must suffer. Instead of trying to heal the old sores that have existed for the last fifty or sixty years between the American people and the Indians, the breach is made wider and fuel is added to the flame. I have been told that a young man who was appointed an Indian agent on the Missouri river cut off the ears of a half-breed who resided among the Sioux Indians because, being in a state of intoxication, he made use of some extravagant language disrespectful of the American people. Another agent on the Mississippi turned out of the guard-house an innocent Indian to other Indians, his enemies, who shot him down and butchered him in a horrid manner, in the presence of an American garrison of soldiers. Another Indian agent also invited some chiefs to a council, when a number of their ene- 938 ASHLEY S METHOD OF MARCHING. mies arrived at the agency, organized themselves, descended the Mississippi river, attacked the chiefs and others who were invited, and on their way to the council, killed nine and wounded three out of sixteen persons. In my intercourse with the Indians for the last forty years I never found that coercive measures ever had any good effect with them, but that conciliatory measures always tended to produce every purpose required. I am, &c., Thomas Forsyth, The Honorable Lewis Cass, Secretary of War, Washington City. (Thomas Forsyth's Letter Book, 1822-33. Mss. Dept State Historical Society of Wisconsin.) GENERAL ASHLEY S METHOD OF MOVING PARTIES THROUGH THE INDIAN COUNTRY. In compliance with your request in relation to my manner of equipping and moving parties of men through the Indian country in the course of my general excursions to the Rocky mountains, I will observe that, as mules are much the best animals for packing heavy burthens, each man has charge of two of them for that purpose, and one horse to ride. The equipage of each horse or mule consists of two halters, one saddle, one saddle blanket, one bear skin for covering the pack or saddle, and one pack strap for the purpose of binding on the pack, and a bridle for the riding horse. One of the halters should be made light for common use, of beef hide, dressed soft; the other should be made of hide dressed in the same way, or tarred rope, sufficiently strong to hold the horse under any circumstances, and so constructed as to give pain to the jaws when drawn very tight. The rein of each halter should not be less than sixteen feet long. A stake made of tough, hard wood, about two inches in diameter, and two feet long, with an iron socket, pointed at one end to penetrate the earth, and at the CARE OF THE HORSES. 939 other end a band of iron to prevent its splitting, should be provided, to be used when in the prairies, with the halter last described. This stake, when well set in the ground, will hold any horse. In the organization of a party of, say from 60 to 80 men, four of the most confidential and experienced of the number are selected to aid in the command; the rest are divided in messes of eight or ten. A suitable man is also appointed at thehrnd of ench mri^- whoie duty it is to make "known the wants of his mess, receive supplies for them, make distributions, 'watcff^oySTKiFconduct, enforce order, etc., etc. The party thus organized, each man receives the horse and mules allotted to him, their equipage, and the packs which his mules are to carry; every article so disposed of is entered in a book kept for that purpose. When the party reaches the Indian country, great order and vigilance in the discharge of their duty are required of every man. A variety of circumstances confines our march very often to the borders of large water courses; when that is the case, it is found convenient and safe, when the ground will admit, to locate our camps (which are generally laid off in a square) so as to make the river form one line, and include as much ground in it as may be sufficient for the whole number of horses, allowing for each a range of thirty feet in diameter, < On the arrival of the party at their camping ground, the position of each mess is [jointed out; wneretheir packs, saddles, etc., are takefToff, and with them a breastwork immediately put up, to cover them frdnTa night"attack bylndians; the horses are then watered and delivered to the horse guard, who keep them on the best grass outside and near the encampment, where they graze until sunset; then each man brings his horse within the limits of the camp, exchanges the light halter for the other more substantial, sets his stakes, which are placed at the distance of thirty feet from each other, and secures his horses to them. This range of thirty feet, in addition to the grass the horse has collected outside the camp, will be all-sufficient for him during the night. After these 940 PRECAUTIONS EN ROUTE. regulations, the proceedings of the night are pretty much the same as are practiced in military camps. At day light (when in dangerous parts of the country) two or more men are mounted on horseback, and sent to examine ravines, woods, hills, and other places within striking distance of the camp, where Indians might secrete themselves, before the men are allowed to leave their breastworks to make the necessary morning arrangements before marching. When these spies report favorably, the horses are then taken outside the camp, delivered to the horse guard, and allowed to graze until the party has breakfasted, and are ready for saddling. In the line of march, each mess march together, and take their choice of positions in the line according to their activity in making themselves ready to move, viz.: the mess first ready to march moves up in the rear of an officer, who marches in the front of the party, and takes choice of a position in the line, and so they all proceed until the line is formed; and in that way they march the whole of that day. Spies are sent several miles ahead to examine the country in the vicinity of the route, and others are kept at the distance of a half mile or more from the party, as the situation of the ground seems to require, in front, rear, and on the flanks. In making discoveries of Indians, they communicate the same by signal or otherwise to the commanding officer with the party, who makes his arrangements accordingly. In this way I have marched parties of men the whole way from St. Louis to the vicinity of the Grand lake, which is situated about one hundred and fifty miles down the waters of the Pacific ocean, in 78 days. In the month of March, 1827, I fitted out a party of 60 men, mounted a piece of artillery (a four pounder) on a carriage which was drawn by two mules; the party marched to or near the Grand Salt lake beyond the Rocky mountains, remained there one month, stopped on the way back fifteen days, and returned to Lexington, in the western part of Missouri, in September, where the party was met with everything necessary for another outfit, and did return (using the A FREE HUNTERS ACCOUNTS. 941 same horses and mules) to the mountains by the last of November, in the same year. A FREE HUNTER'S BUSINESS ACCOUNTS. The following seven exhibits, taken from many hundreds still among the Chouteau papers, will convey a good idea of the business transactions of the wilderness, and will show to what an extent the methods of business in the older and settled portions of the country obtained even in these remote sections where civilized man was yet almost an entire stranger. The particular person, whose accounts are here exhibited appears now and then in the narratives of that period and is believed to be the one for whom Gardiner river in the Yellowstone National Park is named. COPY OF A FREE HUNTER'S CONTRACT. Articles of agreement made and entered into at Fort Union, Upper Missouri, on the fifth day of July, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two, by and between Kenneth Mackenzie, agent of the American Fur Company, and Johnson Gardner, citizen of the United States and free hunter in the Indian country The said Johnson Gardner hereby agrees to sell, and the said Kenneth Mackenzie agrees to purchase, all his stock of beaver skins now en cache on the Yellowstone river, at and for the price per pound net weight of four dollars twelve and a half cents, to be delivered by the said Johnson Gardner to the agent or servants of the said Kenneth Mackenzie on the spot where it is cached, the weight thereof to be regulated and adjusted by Francis A. Chardon and James A. Hamilton on its arrival at Fort Union, the number of skins being .... and the weight now considered to be The said Johnson Gardner further agrees to sell, and the said Kenneth Mackenzie agrees to purchase, all his stock of castorum at and for the price per pound of three dollars, the weight thereof to be adjusted by the parties aforesaid. The said Kenneth Mackenzie hereby further agrees to and with the CONTRACT WITH JOHNSON GARDNER. said Johnson Gardner to furnish and supply and equip two men to hunt and trap beaver for the fall and spring seasons next ensuing, at the entire charge and cost of the said Kenneth Mackenzie, to hunt and trap under the direction of the said Johnson Gardner; and the said Kenneth Mackenzie further agrees to furnish a third man, and at his cost and charge to supply a moiety or one-half of the requisite, necessary and usual equipment for a beaver hunter, and the said Johnson Gardner hereby agrees to supply the said third man with the other moiety or half part of the needful equipment usual for a beaver hunter, and it is hereby agreed by and between the said Kenneth Mackenzie and the said Johnson Gardner that an entire moiety or half part of the beaver skins and castorum killed, taken and secured by the united skill and exertions of the said Johnson Gardner and the said three men to be furnished as aforesaid shall be the just and lawful share of the said Kenneth Mackenzie, the other moiety or half part to be the just and lawful share of the said Johnson Gardner, and it is further agreed that the said moiety or half part which shall become the property of the said Johnson Gardner shall be purchased of him by the said Kenneth Mackenzie at and for the price of three dollars fifty cents per pound for beaver skins taken and secured in the fall approaching, and four dollars per pound for beaver skins taken and secured in the spring following, and three dollars per pound for castorum. Signed, sealed and delivered by the said Kenneth Mackenzie and said Johnson Gardner at Fort Union the day and year first above written. In the presence of J. A. Hamilton. Kenneth Mackenzie, ;H * -|. AgtU. M.O. his Johnson X Gardner. mark BUSINESS PAPERS. 943 COPY OF AN ACCOUNT CURRENT BETWEEN JOHNSON GARDNER AND THE AMERICAN FUR COMPANY. " Mr. Johnson Gardner in account with the American Fur Company, U. M. O. DR. CR. 1831, 1820-1833. To Sundries ad July 12. By 53 Beaver Skins vanced as per at $6.50,. \ . $ 344.50 account A. . . $4,034.70 1832, July 21. " 1 Otter skin, . 2.50 " 206 Beaver skins J — 278 lbs. at / $4 V6i .... 1,146.75 / " 1 Otter skin, . 2.00 / " 27^ lbs. Beaver 1 skin (at Fort / Cass) at 3 60-100 95.37 / " Note on Smith, / Sublette & Co. 1,321.48 / 1833, / June 30. *' 16 Beaver Traps left at Fort Pierre, . . . " Balancecarried 192.00 / $4,034.70 down, . . . 930.10 $4,034.70 1833, June 30. To balance, . . . $930.10 For Am. Fur Company, J. Archdale Hamilton. Fort Union, Sept. 12, 1833. Copy of receipt for note referred to in above account current: "$1371.48. Received of Johnson Gardner a note on Messrs. Smith, Sublette, and Jackson for thirteen hundred and seventy-one dollars forty-eight cents, which he wishes me to collect for him and be placed to his credit at 5 per cent interest, which I will endeavor to do if no unavoidable accident will happen to me or the note. (Signed) K. Mackenzie. The above is a true copy of the receipt. Witness: S. P. Winter." 944 LIQUOR AND FEASTING. Copy of weigh-bill of beaver mentioned in above account current. " Fort Union, August 6, 1832. We, Francis A. Chardon and J. Archdale Hamilton, hereby certify that we have carefully weighed two hundred and six beaver skins purchased by the American Fur Company of Johnson Gardner and declare the weight thereof to be two hundred and seventy-eight pounds, as witness our hands the day and year first above written. (Signed) F. A. Chardon. J. Archdale Hamilton." Extract from Account | A " referred to in above account current. 11832. June 28 July July 29 30 2 5 6 7 8 Your share of advances to Tullock & Co. $ 12 00 Liquor 8.00, Feast 4.00 $ 12 00 Ditto 4.00 4 00 Shirts 8.00, Pantaloons 5.00 13 00 Liquor 11.00, Feast 2.00 13 00 Ditto 6.00, Suit of clothes 70.00 ... 76 do Knives 4.00, Powder .75, Shoeing horse 3.00 7 75 Tobacco .75, Cow skin 1.00 1 75 Liquor 3 00 Ditto . . . e~ 12 00 Ditto 10.00, Tea 2.00, Pork 2.00 . . 14 00 Blanket 12.00, Vinegar 1.00, Axe 6.00 . 19 00 Sugar 1.00 1 00 Thread 1.00, Biscuit 8.50 9 50 Salt 6.00, Pepper 4.00, Handkfs 4.00 . 14 00 Coffee 18.00, Tea 8.00, Sugar 24.00 . 50 00 File 1.50, Tin Pans 2.00, Kettle 5.00 . . 8 50 Tin Cups 2.00, Knives 4.00, Awls 1.50 . 7 50 Tobacco 15.00, Sirsingles 6.00 .... 21 00 Liquor 14.00 14 00 Rice 4.00, Knife 2.00, Liquor and Keg 27.00 3$ 00 $334 00 Total . $346 00" This amount seems to have been spent by Gardner while at Fort Union between spring and fall hunt. It is worth note that of this amount $109, or about one-third, is for liquor and feasting. OUTFIT FOR FALL HUNT. COPY OF GARDNER S SHIPPING BILL. "Shipped in good order per bull boat Antoine four pac- tons of beaver fur marked and weighing as follows: No. i 56 skins weighing 73 lbs. marked J G 1 2 50 I " 81 " " 3 50 " " 76 " " 4 50 " I 74 I Total 206 304 N. B. 1 Otter Skin. Crossings of the Yellowstone, July 18, 1832. The above boat is bound for Fort Union." COPY OF BILL FOR AN EQUIPMENT FOR FALL HUNT. "Equipment for hunt, July 9th, 1832, viz.: 16 Traps 12.00 $192 00 5 Horses 60.00 300 00 1 Horse in January, 1833 60 00 S Saddles and apichemons 25 00 8 Trap springs 16.00, Flints 1.00 17 00 Powder 9.00, Balls 12.00, File 1.50 . . . . 22 50 Knives 7.50, Kettle 5.00, Axe 3.00 .... 15 50 Wages of 3 men 750 00 $1382 oo" COPY OF A TRADER'S ENGAGEMENT. "Before the subscribing witness personally appeared the undersigned Colin Campbell, who voluntarily binds and bv these presents does engage himself to Pierre D. Papin, agent of Pratte, Chouteau & Co., for Sioux outfit on the following terms and conditions to say— The said Campbell engages himself to said Papin, agent for said Sioux outfit, for and during the term of two and a half years from the first of June one thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine. "The said Papin, agent as aforesaid, for services faithfully rendered, promises to pay the said Campbell the sum of three thousand six hundred and sixteen dollars lawful money of the United States. The said Campbell on his part binds himself to serve, obey and execute with fidelity 946 TRADER S ENGAGEMENT. the orders or known wishes of his employers or any other persons entrusted with their business, to keep their secrets, make them acquainted with any thing which may come to his knowledge affecting their interest, and to do all such things as are usually done or ought to be done by a good and faithful clerk and trader. In testimony whereof we have hereunto set our hand and seals this eighth day of November one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six. C. Campbell, (Seal)'1 [No signature.] (Seal) Witness: Jacob Halsey. Ji F. LIST OF TRADING POSTS. List of trading posts in the country west of St. Louis during the period from 1807 to 1843, with a few belonging to the periods before and after, and also a few military posts—The total number of posts referred to in this list is about one hundred and forty. MISSOURI RIVER POSTS. Fort Orleans. This was the first fort ever built on the Missouri river. In 1720 the Spanish sent an expedition of two hundred men to the Missouri to destroy the tribe of the Missouris who were friendly to the French. Their plan was to join the Pawnees, who were at war with the Missouris. They unfortunately lost their way and came first to the latter tribe. Supposing them to be Pawnees, the Spanish unfolded their scheme directly to their intended victims. The astonished Missouris did not acquaint them with their mistake, but made instant preparations, took the Spaniards by surprise, and destroyed the entire party. As a result of this expedition the Louisiana government ordered the erection of a fort on the Missouri. TJie work was entrusted to M. Bourgemont, who built Fort Orleans, in 1772, on an island in the Missouri, some two hundred and fifty miles above its mouth. The actual location was about five miles below the mouth of Grand river, opposite the old village of the Missouris. The fort was the scene of considerable activity for several years, and from it M. de Bourgemont made an important expedition to the country of the Paducas in 1724. There is a tradition that when Bourgemont left the fort a year or two later to go down to New Orleans, the Indians attacked it and massacred every in- 948 FORT OSAGE. 1) mate. De Margry says that | en 1726 la Compagnie des Indes supprima cette poste."1 In the valley of the Osage river, and for the accommodation of the Osage Indians, there were several posts, but they are scarcely ever mentioned in the annals of the time. They played a quite insignificant part in the history of the trade. Among these may be mentioned Forts Carondelet, Marais de Cygnes, and Pomme de Terre. Fort Osage, or Fort Clark, stood near the site of Sibley, Missouri, about forty miles below the mouth of the Kansas. General William Clark passed this point in 1808 with a troop of cavalry on his way to make a treaty with the Osages. He selected the site for a post on his return. Lewis and Clark, June 23, 1804, had notejd it as a good site for a fort. The post was occupied off and on until 1827, but not continuously with a regular garrison. It was permanently abandoned on the founding of Fort Leavenworth. It was here that was located the only government trading factory west of the Mississippi. (See further, Part III., Chapter VI.) If Chouteau's Post, or the Kansas Post. This was first established by Francis G. Chouteau on an island three miles below the mouth of the Kansas river for the trade of the Kansas Indians. The great flood of 1826 washed it into the river, and Chouteau then went about ten miles up the Kansas river, where he would be safe from a similar calamity in the future, and built a post on the right bank of the river. It was maintained for many years. French Fort. This post is noted by Lewis and Clark in 1804, and by Doctor James in 1819 as being in ruins. It was on the Kansas shore, opposite the upper end of Kickapoo Island, back on the bluffs and in rear of an old village of the 1« There was a French post for some time on an island a few leagues in length over against the Missouris. The French settled in this fort at the east point [of the island] and called it Fort Orleans."— Du Pratz. mr COUNCIL BLUFFS. 949 Kansas Indians. Whether built as a trading post or a military fort is unknown. Bogy in his history of Missouri says that "the French government had a regular post and officer at [near?] the mouth of the Kansas river." Camp Martin was a name given to a winter cantonment of United States troops at Isle a la Vache during the winter of 1818-19. The troops were a part of the Yellowstone Expedition and were commanded by a Captain Martin. Leavenworth Fort. For circumstances of early history of this post see Part III., Chapter VI. Blacksnake Hills, a post established by Joseph Robidoux where the city of St. Joseph now stands. Audubon in 1843 uttered the following prediction concerning the situation: " I was delighted to see this truly beautiful site for a town or city, as will be, no doubt, some fifty years hence." Nishnabotna. In 1819 Robidoux, Papin, Chouteau, and Berthold, trading with a capital of $12,000, had their principal establishment near the mouth of this stream. Name variously spelled. Council Bluffs. This name, though not specifically applied to any post, denoted a locality where many trading posts have been built. It was one of the most important points on the whole course of the Missouri and was resorted to by traders from the very commencement of the fur trade on the upper river. The meeting of the two great valleys, the Missouri and the Platte, which was in this vicinity, had something to do with the importance of the place. - The particular situation always known in those early years as Council Bluffs was twenty-five miles above the modern city of that name, and on the opposite side of the river about where the little town of Calhoun is now located. On the 3rd of August, 1804, Lewis and Clark held a council there with the Oto and Missouri Indians and gave the name from this circumstance. In the course of the next fifty years there were probably not fewer than twenty posts established between this point and the mouth of the Platte, but all are now swallowed up in the great cities that have taken 95o BELLEVUE. »} their places on both sides of the river. It is impossible now to recover the names of all, or the locations of some whose names are known. Even those which are best known it is difficult to locate precisely. Crooks and McLellan's post in 1810 was on the west bank of the river a little above the mouth of Papillon creek and therefore near the later site of Bellevue. It was broken up in the spring of 1811 when its proprietors entered the service of the Pacific Fur Company. Bellevue. This was an important place during most of the fur-trading era and promised at one time to be the progenitor of the future city which was bound to arise in that vicinity. The early history of Bellevue is exceedingly obscure. Some authorities say that Lisa built the first post there in 1805 and gave it its present name. This is a mistake. Crooks and McLellan seem to have been the first to locate near there. The next occupant was the Missouri Fur Company under Joshua Pilcher, who must have moved down there soon after Lisa's death. Fontenelle and Drips apparently bought Pilcher's post and established it in their own name, which it retained for many years. At a date between 1830 and 1840, which is not exactly known, the American Fur Company moved to Bellevue from Cabanne's post some distance above, and established a new post there under the management of P. A. Sarpy. The Indian agency of John Dougherty was also located near there at about the same time. The agency was at Cote a Quesnelle just above the American Fur Company post. Fort Croghan, a military post of temporary character which stood a little above the present Union Pacific bridge in Omaha. When it was established is uncertain, but it was abandoned in the fall of 1843. Cabanne's Post was located near the old site of Rockport, nine or ten miles (by land) above the Union Pacific bridge in Omaha and six or seven miles below Fort Calhoun. It was established between 1822 and 1826 for the American Fur Company by J, P. Cabanne, who remained in charge mm POSTS NEAR COUNCIL BLUFFS. 951 until 1833, when he had to leave the country on account of the Leclerc affair. Pilcher succeeded him, and the post was later moved down to Bellevue. The Columbia Fur Company also had a post near here which was absorbed by Ca- banne's establishment in 1827. Fort Lisa was located about a mile above Cabanne's post and five or six miles below old Council Bluffs. It was founded by Manuel Lisa as early as 1812 and it continued to be occupied as late as 1823. During this period it was the most important post on the Missouri river. It commanded the trade of the Omahas, Pawnees, Otoes, and other tribes. Engineer Cantonment, " about half a mile above Fort Lisa, five miles below Council Bluffs, and three miles above the mouth of Boyer river " (James), was the winter encampment of Major Long's scientific party in 1819-20. Camp Missouri was the winter encampment of the troops attached to the Yellowstone expedition of 1819-20. It was located at the old Council Bluffs and on or near its site was built the post which for several years after was known as Fort Atkinson. It was abandoned in the spring of 1827. The post formed a quadrangle with the usual bastions or block houses at two opposite corners. Fort Calhoun is the name which has succeeded to that of Fort Atkinson in the history of this locality and survives in the name of a little village near by. How it came to be applied to this post is not very well understood. Cruzcite's Post, an early trading establishment two miles above old Council Bluffs, built in 1802. (Lewis and Clark.) Ill ||§££§ 8 Fort Charles was an old trading post which stood about six miles below the present Omadi, Nebraska. It was occupied in 1795-6 by a Mr. McKay. (Lewis and Clark.) Pratte and Vasquez, in 1819, had a trading post at the Omaha village a considerable distance above Council Bluffs, possibly at the old village above Blackbird Hill nearly oppo- a 952 MISCELLANEOUS ESTABLISHMENTS. site the modern town of Onawa, Iowa. The exact location is nowhere stated. Big Sioux Post, an American Fur Company post at one time maintained near the mouth of the Big Sioux river by one Laf ramboise. Vermillion Post was an important trading post for the convenience of the lower Sioux tribes. It was located just below the mouth of the Vermillion river about on the present line between Clay and Union counties, South Dakota. Another Vermillion fort of earlier date and sometimes called Dickson's Post stood on the north bank of the river about half way between the Vermillion and the James. The Columbia Fur Company also had a post there. Riviere a Jacques. The Columbia and American Fur Companies had establishments at this point for the trade of the Yankton band of the Sioux. Ponca Post was established for the trade of the Indians of this name. It was just below the mouth of the Niobrara. The Columbia Fur Company also had a post here. Fort Mitchell. This post was established in 1833 Dv Nar- cisse Le Clerc and named for D. D. Mitchell. It was abandoned four years later, and for several years furnished excellent fuel for steamboats until the old palisades were all used up. Handy's Post was situated on the west bank of the Missouri where Fort Randall later stood. Very little is known of its history. Trudeau's House, also called Pawnee House, was an establishment occupied by one Trudeau in the years 1796-7. It was on the left bank of the river a little above and opposite the site where Fort Randall later stood. Fort Recovery was located at the lower end of American or Cedar Island a mile below the modern city of Chamberlain, South Dakota. This post was established in 1822 by the Missouri Fur Company which then included the prominent traders, Pilcher, Charles Bent, Fontenelle, and Drips. It was also called Cedar fort and may have been first so mxr^M 3>T FORT KIOWA. 953 named. This may have been the site of the old Missouri Fur Company post which burned in 1810 and the fact of its reestablishment may have given it its name. Leavenworth in 1823 refers to it as a post " called by the Indian traders Fort Recovery and sometimes Cedar fort." " Fort Brasseaux " was located in this vicinity, or possibly ten or twenty miles above. The only reference to it that has fallen under the author's notice is in a letter by Gen. Ashley dated at this post July 19, 1823, written to Major O'Fallon, Indian agent, in regard to the Aricara campaign then in progress. Fort Lookout was a post of the Columbia Fur Company and must have been built as early as 1822. Near it was Fort Kiowa, belonging to the American Fur Company and also built as early as 1822, or immediately after the Western Department went to St. Louis. The sites were so close together that early references confused the two more or less. They were situated on the right bank of the Missouri some ten miles above where Chamberlain, South Dakota, now stands. The journal of the Yellowstone expedition of 1825 says of the American Fur Company post: " Fort Kiowa consists of a range of log buildings containing four rooms, a log house and a storehouse forming a right angle, leaving a space of some thirty feet. At the south corner of the work is erected a block-house near which stands a smith's shop. At the north corner is erected a small wooden tower. The whole work is enclosed by cottonwood pickets. The sides or curtains of the work are 140 feet each." Referring to Fort Lookout in 1833, when it was used as an Indian agency, Maximilian says that it " is a square of about sixty paces surrounded by pickets twenty or thirty feet high [ !] made of square trunks of trees placed close together." The buildings consisted of three blockhouses. Sublette and Campbell had a house near here in 1834. Fort Defiance was built by Harvey, Primeau and Company about 1845-6. They were ex-clerks of the American ££■**—"" " rl- ^ 954 LOISELL S POST. Fur Company, bold and energetic men, who had set up an opposition on their own account in defiance of the American Fur Company. The location is on the right bank of the Missouri about six miles above the upper end of the Great Bend, near the mouth of Medicine Creek. This was also called Fort Bouis from one of the firm. Cedar Fort, or Fort aux Cedres, is a name which was applied to at least two different posts on as many Cedar Islands in the Missouri river. Their history is confused and uncertain. We have noted one already. The oldest one was at one time known as Loisell's Post and was probably the first trading establishment built in the Sioux country along the Missouri river. It was about thirty-five miles below Fort Pierre. Loisell was in possession in 1803-4. The post was 65 to 70 feet square, with the usual bastions. The pickets were about 14 feet high. There was a building inside 45 x 32 feet divided into four equal rooms. This was probably the real Fort aux Cedres which is so known in the narratives of the times. Several authorities speak of it as an old Missouri Fur Company trading post, but if so it was possibly the one which burned in the spring of 1810, for no such post is mentioned by Bradbury or Brackenridge in 1811, or by Leavenworth in 1823. Fort George, a post belonging to Fox, Livingston and Company, 21 miles below Fort Pierre, on the right bank of the Missouri. It was built by Ebbetts and Cutting, agents of the firm, in 1842. The post was probably not occupied more than three or four years, for Fox, Livingston and Company did not remain long in the country. Teton River posts. The mouth of the Teton river (first called Little Missouri and now Bad river) was the most important locality in the Sioux country. At this point the Missouri river, after a long southerly course, turns abruptly east and continues in this direction for many miles, gradually bearing off to the southeast. This bend was nearest of any point on the river to the Black Hills and the upper Platte FORT TECUMSEH. 955 country. It therefore became a natural shipping point for all the region round about. The local situation was ideal. A fine bottom about a mile wide and six miles long lay along the right bank of the Missouri river immediately above the Teton. The treeless bluffs were so far back that hostile bands of Indians could not approach the fort unobserved. The bottoms were fertile and afforded a camping ground for Indians and grazing for stock. Who built the first post here is not known, but very likely it was the original Missouri Fur Company. It is hardly probable that they would have overlooked so important a situation. The earliest definite record is that of Fort Tecumseh, which stood two or three miles above the mouth of the Teton. It was the principal establishment of the Columbia Fur Company upon the Missouri and was probably established in 1822. It was turned over to the American Fur Company December 5, 1827, with an inventory of property amounting to $14,453. I* retained its name for five years after this event and was managed by William Laidlaw, one of the old Columbia Fur Company men. In the course of time the river began to cut into the bottom where the fort stood and necessitated the rebuilding of it in a less exposed situation. The new site was 3 miles above the mouth of the Teton and back about a quarter of a mile from the Missouri. Work was begun in 1831 and a large part of the lumber was manufactured during the following winter. The erection was so far completed in the spring of 1832 that on the 15th of April Mr. Laidlaw and Mr. Halsey, the clerk, moved into it. Work was continued on it during the summer and the full change was not accomplished before the end of the season. On the occasion of the visit of the steamboat Yellowstone between May 31 and June 5, 1832, with Mr. Pierre Chouteau on board, the new post was christened Fort Pierre, in honor of the distinguished visitor and representative of the house at St. Louis. The new post was 325 by 340 feet and contained about two and a half acres of V POSTS NEAR MOUTH OF TETON RIVER. ground. It was one of the finest on the river and was the most important establishment except Fort Union* The Navy Yard or Chantier of Fort Pierre was located some distance above, probably near Chantier creek. It was here that boats and lumber for the post were manufactured. Teton Post is a name which may be used to designate a post belonging to the firm of P. D. Papin & Co., which Maximilian calls the French Fur Company. The members of the company were Papin, the Cerre brothers and Honore Picotte. The post was probably built about 1828 or 1829. It stood just below the mouth of the Teton. The firm sold out to the American Fur Company and entered its service October 14, 1830, and the property was at once moved up to Fort Tecumseh. Sublette and Campbell commenced erecting an opposition post a "little below old Fort Tecumseh" October 17, 1833. The post continued to do business only a year when it was sold to the American Fur Company. Scattered through the Sioux country on both sides of the Missouri there were many subordinate posts or houses of the American Fur Company dependent upon Fort Pierre. There were no fewer than three in the valley of James river (Riviere a Jacques). There was one at the forks of the Cheyenne, another at its mouth, one at the Aricara villages and others on Cherry, White and Niobrara rivers, and among the Brule, Ogallala and other bands of the Sioux. In fact wherever there was an inducement to trade these temporary houses were erected. Old Fort George was below but near the mouth of the Cheyenne river. Nothing further is known of it. Aricara Post. Manuel Lisa had a post in this vicinity, but its exact location or particular name is not known. Fort Manuel was on the west bank of the river—just above latitude 460 N. The Mandan Villages were another important locality and the site of several posts. The course of the river here changed from a general easterly direction to one nearly due POSTS NEAR THE MANDANS. 957 south. It was the point nearest the Red river settlements, and was the home of the Mandan and Minnetaree Indians. Fort Mandan, the first structure built here, was the winter quarters of Lewis and Clark in 1804-5. ft stood on the left bank of the Missouri 7 or 8 miles below the mouth of Big Knife river and opposite, though a little above, the site where •Fort Clark later stood. Lisa's Fort was the next one built in this locality. It was situated on the right or south bank of the river some ten or twelve miles above the mouth of the Big Knife near where the names Emanuel Rock and Emanuel Creek now are. The post was abandoned upon the breaking out of the War of 1812, but was occupied by Pilcher in 1822 or 1823 under the name of Fort Vanderburgh. Sublette and Campbell had a post in 1833 a little below this point. Tilton's Fort was built by James Kipp in 1822 for the Columbia Fur Company. It was on the opposite side of the river from the Mandan villages and a little above the site of Fort Clark. Being driven from this position in 1823 by the Aricaras he crossed and established a house in the Mandan Villages. In the winter of 1825-6 Kipp went to the mouth of White Earth river, 140 miles above, and built a post for the Assiniboine trade. This post passed into the hands of the American Fur Company in 1827 with the rest of the Columbia Fur Company posts. In 1830 McKenzie ordered the erection of a new post for the Mandan trade and Kipp was put in charge of the work. It was built in the spring of 1831 and was named Fort Clark, for General William Clark. It was on a bluff in an angle of the river and on its right bank, 55 miles above the N. P. R. R. bridge at Bismarck, N. D. The post was 132 by 147 feet, on the typical plan, and was a substantial structure. It ranked as one of the most important posts on the river. The Mouth of the Yellowstone was the next important I v< 958 POSTS NEAR MOUTH OF YELLOWSTONE. ?lfl point above the Mandans and several posts sprang up here during the fur trade. It does not appear that the Missouri Fur Company ever established a post here, although it is not easy to understand why they did not. The first post was built by Ashley and Henry in 1822 on the tongue of land between the two rivers about a mile above the junction and next to the Missouri. It was abandoned in the fall of 1823. In 1825 three sides of the stockade and a part of the buildings were still standing. No other attempts were made to establish a post in this vicinity until 1828, when Kenneth McKenzie, then the leading partner in the "U. M. O." sent a party to the mouth of the Yellowstone to build a post. They probably commenced work about October 1 of that year. This post seems to have been named Fort Floyd, while the name Fort Union was applied to another post two hundred miles farther up. The name Union was, however, soon transferred to the mouth of the Yellowstone, and the advanced post was abandoned. Maximilian says that Union was begun in 1829. There is some confusion in regard to the establishment of the important post of Fort Union, and to enable the reader to draw his own conclusions the correspondence of the American Fur Company relating to the subject will be reproduced here. McKenzie wrote to Chouteau from the Vermillion river October 2, 1828, that he had just returned with Indian Agent Sanford from the Mandans; that four days before he left, the keelboat Otter had left for the Yellowstone to establish a post for the Assiniboine trade. And in a letter from Fort Tecumseh December 26, 1828, he said: "The Otter arrived at the Yellowstone in sufficient time to build a fort and have all necessary preparations made for security." This establishes the fact that a post was built at the Yellowstone in 1828 and fixes October ist as pretty close to the actual date of commencement. FORT UNION. 959 In a letter written at Fort Tecumseh March 15, 1829, McKenzie says: "Your favor of the 5th of December reached me on the 25th ult., the date of my arrival from Fort Floyd near the Yellowstone"; and again in the same letter, " Old Glass came to Fort Floyd last fall." In a letter to W. B. Astor April 19, 1830, Pierre Chouteau, Jr., says: "A mon arrivee ici [St. Louis] le 16, j'ai trouve des lettre de Mr. McKenzie du 28 December, 1829, et de 2 et 20 Janvier, 200 milles au dessus de la Roche Jaune. Les chasseurs des montagnes n'avaient pas aussi bien reussi dans la chasse d'automne qu'il esperait, mais il esperait un meilleur succes pour le printemps. II est d'opinion qu'il fera beaucoup plus de robes cette annee que de coutume; c'est a dire dans les trois posts d'en haut, chez les Mandans, a l'embouchure de la Roche Jaune, et Fort Union 200 milles audessus, et il dit que le pays du haut est tres rich en castors et robes." Taken as they read these extracts mean that there were three posts on the upper river in 1829, the Mandan post, Fort Floyd and Fort Union 200 miles farther up. The only clue to the origin of the name "Union" that has come to our notice is in a letter from McKenzie in which he discusses the trade situation and his desire to fix upon some point at which he can unite all the routes of trade. "Keeping in view a union at some convenient point above with the free hunters," he thought that he could control the trade both of the rivers and of the mountains. Fort Union was the best built post on the Missouri, and with the possible exception of Bent's fort on the Arkansas, the best in the entire West. It was 240 by 220 feet, the shorter side facing the river, and was surrounded by a palisade of square hewn pickets about a foot thick and twenty feet high. The bastions were at the southwest and northeast corners, and consisted of square houses 24 feet on a side and 30 feet high, built entirely of stone and surmounted with pyramidal roofs. There were two stories; the lower one was pierced for cannon and the upper had a balcony for better trnsm 960 FORT WILLIAM. ) observation. The usual banquette extended around the inner wall of the fort. The entrance was large and was secured with a powerful gate which in 1837 was changed to a double gate on account of the dangerous disposition of the Indians owing to the smallpox scourge. On the opposite side of the square from the entrance was the house of the bourgeois, a well-built, commodious two-story structure, with glass windows, fire-place and other "modern conveniences." Around the square were the barracks for the employes, the store houses, work shops, stables, a cut stone powder magazine capable of holding 50,000 pounds, and a reception room for the Indians. In the center of the court was a tall flag staff around which were the leathern tents of half-breeds in the service of the company. Near the flagstaff stood one or two cannon trained upon the entrance to the fort. Somewhere in the enclosure was the famous distillery of 1833-4. All of the buildings were of cottonwood lumber and every thing was of an unusually elaborate character. Nathaniel J. Wyeth, when he visited Union in 1833, declared that he had seen no British post that could compare with it. Fort Union always had a large complement of clerks, artisans, and engages about and was the most extensively equipped of any of the posts. It had the honor of entertaining numerous distinguished visitors, among whom were Catlin in 1832, Maximilian in 1833, and Audubon in 1843. (For a very elaborate and detailed description of the fort see Audubon and His Journals, vol. II., p. 180.) Fort William was a fort belonging to Sublette and Campbell and was named for the former. It was located on the left bank of the Missouri opposite the mouth of the Yellowstone and on the site where Fort Buford was afterwards built. It was commenced August 29, 1833, and was abandoned when Sublette sold out to the American Fur Company a year afterward. Fort Mortimer was Fort William resurrected under a new FORT JACKSON. 961 firm, Fox, Livingston & Co., of New York. This event took place in 1842 and the post succumbed to the American Fur Company three years later. Fort Assiniboine was a temporary post at a point some distance above Union where the steamer Assiniboine was caught by low water in the summer of 1834 and compelled to spend the winter. The intention probably was to make it an outpost of Union. It was 100 feet square and the buildings ranged round the interior were in all 134 feet long and 18 feet deep. The post was abandoned April 2, 1835, and Lamont, who was in charge, brought the property back to Union. It is not known how far above Union this post was located, but wherever it was it marks the first advance of steamboats beyond the mouth of the Yellowstone. Fort Jackson was built by C. A. Chardon in December, 1833, at the mouth of Poplar river (Riviere aux Trembles). Chardon had a force of twenty men with a strong equipment and built a post fifty feet square. The name was probably given for Andrew Jackson, for in a letter from this point Chardon says, " We are all Jackson men." McKenzie thus states the purpose of the establishment: "I consider it desirable to establish a wintering post west of this, partly for the convenience of the Indians who frequent that section, but principally with a view of compelling our opponents [Sublette and Campbell] to divide their forces, for the principle of divide and conquer has often been verified/' The next important point above the mouth of the Yellowstone was the Blackfoot country near the mouth of the Marias. Prior to 1831 no post had been successfully established in the country of these Indians. About October ist of that year James Kipp commenced one on the left bank of the Missouri just above the Marias and called it Fort Piegan in honor of the Piegan band of Blackfeet. The post was occupied only during the winter, when it was abandoned by Kipp, who went down the river with the returns. It was then burned by the Indians. In the spring of 1832 D. D. Mitchell went up the river and built a new 1 .■rJMBtaM ! 962 FORT M KENZIE. m post about six miles above the mouth of the Marias on the left bank of the river and called it Fort McKenzie. It stood 120 yards back from the river. It was 140 feet square and was built on the regular plan, but with an exceptionally strong gate provided with double doors. In 1833 Alexander Culbertson selected a new site for a post on the right bank of the Missouri at the mouth of the Shonkin, but it does not appear that a post was actually built here. Fort McKenzie was occupied as late as 1843, for there is extant a letter from William Laidlaw written at Fort Union December 5, 1843, in which the writer says that he has "lately heard from Mr. Chardon, who is in charge of Fort McKenzie at the Blackfeet;" and he adds that "the Blackfeet are getting more and more troublesome in consequence of certain retrenchments of liquor heretofore given them in their ceremonies, the discontinuation of which had become absolutely necessary for the better regulation of that post. They, however, are so much dissatisfied that Mr. Chardon says that he can not get out at the gate more than once a week." Tradition says that the hostile feeling of the Blackfeet was due to the wanton massacre of some of their number by Chardon and Harvey the winter before. In any event Chardon was compelled to move down stream into a different neighborhood and build a new fort. After he left, the Indians burned Fort McKenzie and the post was often referred to afterward as Fort Brule. The site is known to this day as Brule Bottom. ( For a more complete description of this post see Audubon and His Journals, vol. IL, p. 188; also the works of Maximilian, Prince of Wied.) Fort Chardon was the name of the new post at the mouth of the Judith. It was probably built in the fall of 1843 — not before that. It was occupied only for a short time when Alexander Culbertson moved the establishment to a point on the right bank of the Missouri opposite Pablois Island, about 18 miles above where the Fort Benton bridge now THE THREE FORKS. 963 crosses the river. This event probably took place in 1845, and the new post was called Fort Lewis, in honor of the explorer, Captain Meriwether Lewis. The situation proving unfavorable to the trade, the post was torn down in 1846 and rebuilt in a more favorable location farther down stream and on the left bank. The name Lewis was retained for several years. In 1850 the post was rebuilt of adobe and was dedicated amid grand festivities on Christmas day of that year. At the same time it was rechristened by Mr. Culbertson Fort Benton, in honor of Thomas H. Benton, who had so often rescued the company from disaster. This noted post, situated at the head of navigation on the Missouri river, belongs to a later period than that covered by this work. The Three Forks of the Missouri. The Missouri Fur Company built a large post here early in the year 1810. According to Lieut. James H. Bradley, who visited the site of the post in 1870, and could still make out enough from the ruins to trace the general outline, "it was a double stockade of logs set three feet deep, enclosing an area of about three hundred feet square, situated upon the tongue of land (at that point only half a mile wide) between the Jefferson and Madison rivers, about two miles from their confluence, upon the south bank of the channel of the former stream called Jefferson slough.'' {Transactions of the Montana Historical Society, vol. II.) The site was at that time mostly washed away by the river and is believed to be now entirely gone. The post was abandoned in the fall of 1810 owing to the persistent attacks of the Blackfeet. An anvil was left behind and remained on the site for upwards of forty years afterward and may now be in the bed of the river. With the lapse of years and the partial oblivion which overtook those early events, tradition linked this post with the expedition of Lewis and Clark, and it was the popular belief that these explorers passed a winter there. The post came to be known locally as " Lewis and Clark's fort." The only relic of this post still in existence is a letter written on the spot in m\ TWm 964 POSTS AT MOUTH OF THE BIGHORN. the spring of 1810. It is reproduced elsewhere in this work. (Appendix A.) This completes the list of posts on the Missouri proper, but there were several important ones on the Yellowstone which were directly dependent upon Fort Union. Braseau's Houses were on the left bank of the Yellowstone about 50 miles above the mouth. They were built by a well-known trader who flourished upon the upper river in the early years of the trade. The Crow country was favored with numerous trading posts, the principal situation being at the mouth of the Bighorn river. The first post built here, and the first known to have been built above old Fort aux Cedres on the Missouri was Fort Manuel, Manuel's Fort, or Fort Lisa, built by Manuel Lisa in 1807. It was situated on the right bank of both rivers. In 1809 it passed into the hands of the Missouri Fur Company and was probably abandoned in the summer of 1811 when Henry came down the river after the abandonment of his post on the Snake. Fort Benton was the second post built here, but whether upon the same site as Fort Manuel is uncertain. It was built by the Missouri Fur Company under Joshua Pilcher in 1822 and was abandoned in the following year. Ashley and Henry built a post in this locality in the fall of 1823. It was abandoned probably in 1824. Fort Cass. This was the first American Fur Company post in the Crow country. Its establishment is duly referred to in the American Fur Company correspondence. The following extracts from Wyeth's Journal of August 17 and 18, 1833, give the essential facts relating to it: "About 3 miles below the mouth of the Bighorn we found Fort Cass 1; it " is situated on the east [right] bank of the Yellowstone river, is about 130 feet square, made of sapling cottonwood pickets with two bastions at the extreme corners, and was erected in the fall of 1832." It was built OTHER POSTS ON THE YELLOWSTONE. by Samuel Tulloch and was often known as Tulloch's fort. It was abandoned in 1835. Fort Van Buren was the second American Fur Company post on the Yellowstone. It was built in the fall of 1835 an(^ named for the Vice President of the United States and was abandoned in 1843. ft was on the right bank of the Yellowstone near the mouth of Tongue river. Fort Alexander, the third Crow post of the American Fur Company, was built as early as 1839. Larpenteur says that it was built by himself in 1842, but it is mentioned in the company's license for 1839. The post was on the left bank of the Yellowstone opposite the mouth of the Rosebud. It was abandoned in 1850. Fort Sarpy was the last of the Crow posts of the American Fur Company and was not built until after 1843. fts date was 1850; its name was for John B. Sarpy; it stood on the right bank of the Yellowstone about twenty-five miles below the mouth of the Bighorn, and it was abandoned between September, 1859, and September, i860. The post was 100 feet square, with pickets 15 feet high, but no flanking arrangements. Fox, Livingston & Company built a post, probably in 1843, on the Bighorn river at the mouth of the Little Bighorn. It was soon abandoned. There were many posts in the Missouri valley whose location is not known. Forts Volcano, Lucien and Madison are of the number, the last being in the vicinity of the Mandans. In the letter books of the American Fur Company may still be seen applications for licenses to trade on the upper river, and from these we may form some idea of the development and gradual decline of its trade. The posts received from the Columbia Fur Company in 1827 were Council Bluffs, Vermillion, Riviere a Jacques, Ponca, Tecumseh, and the Mandans. In 1831 the "U. M. O." licenses were for Vermillion, Riviere a Jacques, Ponca, Lookout, Forks White river, 966 THE PORTUGUESE HOUSES. Tecumseh, Hollowood on Teton, Mouth Cheyenne, Little Cheyenne, Aricara villages, Heart river, Mandans, Mouth Yellowstone, Mouth Marias. It will be noted that Union, Clark, and Piegan are not yet mentioned by name. Fort Cass was first mentioned in 1833. In 1839 the list included Vermillion, Sioux, Lucien, Pierre,. John, Clark, Union, Alexander, Van Buren and McKenzie. The name Lucien has not elsewhere come to our notice. It was doubtless given in honor of Lucien Fontenelle to some post ordinarily mentioned by locality only. Fort John was the post on the Laramie to be described farther on. In 1851 the company maintained Vermillion, John, Pierre, Clark, Berthold, Union, Alexander, and Benton. In 1859 there were Pierre, Clark, Berthold, Union, Sarpy, and Benton. CIS-MONTANE POSTS. Under this heading will be considered those posts along the eastern base of the Rocky mountains which were not immediately dependent upon the Missouri river as their line of communication with St. Louis. The Portuguese Houses stood very near the junction of the North and South Forks of Powder river, near where the military post of Fort Reno later stood. All we know of them is from the following extract from the report of Captain W. F. Raynolds, who explored the country around the sources of the Yellowstone in 1859 and i860, and visited the site of these houses on the 26th of September, 1859. "After a ride of about 15 miles we came to the ruins of some old trading posts, known as the 'Portuguese houses,' from the fact that many years ago they were erected by a Portuguese trader named Antonio Mateo. They are now badly dilapidated, and only one side of the pickets remains standing. These, however, are of hewn logs, and from their character it is evident that the structures were originally very strongly built. Bridger recounted a tradition that at one time this post was besieged by the Sioux for forty days, 1 POSTS AT THE MOUTH OF THE LARAMIE. 967 resisting successfully to the last alike the strength and the ingenuity of their assaults, and the appearance of the ruins renders the story not only credible but probable." Fort William, named for William L. Sublette, was the first trading establishment ever built at what later became an important situation—the confluence of the North Platte and Laramie rivers. The work was begun with 13 men about June 1, 1834. (Wyeth.) " William L. Sublette has built such a fort as Fort Clark (Mandans) on Laramie Fork of the river Platte and can make it a central place for the Sioux and Cheyenne trade." (Fontenelle, Sept. 17, 1834.) "Fort Laramie was built in 1835 [1834] by Robert Campbell and was called Fort William." (Wislizenus, 1839.) The post was located on the left bank of the Laramie about a mile above its mouth. Sublette sold it to Fitzpatrick, Sublette and Bridger in 1835, and these gentlemen entered into relations with Fontenelle the same year, thus virtually turning the post over to the American Fur Company. The post was then, or soon after, rechristened Fort John, for Mr. John B. Sarpy. Its early history is exceedingly obscure. In 1839 it was noted by Wislizenus as being rectangular in shape, 80 by 100 feet, surrounded by a palisade of cottonwood pickets 15 feet high, with flanking towers on three sides and a very strong gate. At this time the name Laramie was coming into popular use and gradually replaced "Fort John" in common usage, but the latter name alone was used in the business transactions of the American Fur Company. Before 1846 another post was built about a mile farther up stream and to this the name Fort Laramie was given. Fort John is said to have been demolished soon after. About 1849 the American Fur Company sold out to the government and moved some distance down the river. The famous military post of Fort Laramie then began its career and was for many years a principal base of operations against the hostile Indians. Fort Platte was situated on the right bank of the Platte 968 POSTS ON THE SOUTH PLATTE. in the tongue of land between the Platte and the Laramie and about three-fourths of a mile above the junction. It was built about 1840, for it receives no notice from Wislizenus in 1839, but was visited by Sage in 1841. Fremont in 1842 noted it as belonging to Sybille Adams & Company, but in 1843 it belonged to Pratte, Cabanne & Company. It probably lasted only a few years. La Bonte was a temporary trading house on the Platte at the mouth of La Bonte creek. It was in operation in 1841. ' In the valley of the South Platte, some thirty or forty miles below where Denver now stands, were several trading establishments whose history it is impossible to make out satisfactorily. Fort Lupton stood on the right bank of the river about ten miles above the mouth of the St. Vrain. It was an adobe structure, the ruins of which are still visible. Fort Lancaster was noted by Fremont in 1843 as being "the trading establishment of Mr. Lupton" and was apparently identical with Fort Lupton. Fort St. Vrain was also on the right bank of the river and about opposite the mouth of the St. Vrain. It belonged to Bent and St. Vrain. This post was also known as Fort George, and was in charge of Marcellus St. Vrain in 1841. Between Lupton and St. Vrain there were two other posts at some indefinite time before 1842. Sage noted them in that year and Fremont two years later, and both speak of one of them as having been abandoned for a long time and the other as only recently abandoned. It appears that the lower of these two posts, which was about six miles above Fort St. Vrain, belonged to two traders by the names of Locke and Randolph. They failed in their enterprise and abandoned their post in May, 1842. The other post belonged to Vasquez and Sublette. It was occupied in 1839 when Wislizenus passed it. The valley of the Arkansas below the mountains was / POSTS ON THE UPPER ARKANSAS. 969 always an important one in the fur trade, and there were many posts or houses, mostly of a temporary character, located here. The first habitation ever built here, so far as we have any knowledge, dates from some time prior to 1763, when a trader visited the Arkansas and built a temporary fort on its upper course near the foot of the mountains. The fact is recorded by Amos Stoddard in his Sketches of Louisiana. In 1806 Lieutenant Pike built a small temporary redoubt on the south bank of the Arkansas, a little above the mouth of Fountain creek. In all probability Chouteau and De Munn had a temporary house in this locality during their three years' stay there in 1815-17, but there is no record of it. In the winter of 1821-2 Jacob Fowler built a log house on the modern site of Pueblo, Colorado, and occupied it for upwards of a month. Gant and Blackwell built a post on the upper Arkansas, about six miles above Fountain creek, in 1832. Captain Gant is said to have been the first hunter to form friendly relations with the Arapahoes. In 1842 a trading post was built at the mouth of Fountain creek. James P. Beckwourth claims that it was built under his direction in October of that year. Sage confirms the date of 1842, but simply says that it was built by "independent traders." He adds that it was called the "Pueblo." Other authorities mention George Simpson and his associates as builders of the post. By whomever built, the date seems clearly to have been 1842. Wislizenus in 1839 found a small post called Fort Pueblo four miles above Bent's fort, " inhabited principally by Mexicans and Frenchmen." Farnham mentions the same post and calls it El Pueblo. He locates it five miles above Bent's fort on the north bank of the river. There were in 1843 *wo posts in this locality, one on American soil and one on Mexican, from which smuggling operations, particularly in liquor, were carried on exten- £s*l —fc*r 970 BENT S FORT. sively from Santa Fe to the trading posts farther north. From these obscure and unsatisfactory references it is clear that there were, all through the period of the fur trade, small and transient trading houses in the valley of the Arkansas from Bent's fort to the mountains. None of them amounted to anything of note. The one post of importance in this entire section was the celebrated Bent's Fort,or Fort William,which stood on the left bank of the river about half way between the present towns of La Junta and Las Animas, Colorado. The Bent brothers first built a stockade near the mouth of Fountain creek, but afterward moved down stream where they would be more in line with the trade between the United States and Taos on the mountain branch of the Santa Fe Trail. The fort was thus in touch with the trade of Santa Fe and that of the mountains. It was founded in 1829 and became a very important post. It was 150 by 100 feet in size, the longer sides extending north and south. The walls were adobe, about six feet thick at the base and 17 feet high. The entrance was through a large gate on the east side. At the northwest and southwest corners were cylindrical bastions or towers ten feet inside diameter and 30 feet high, loop- holed for musketry and cannon. The interior was divided into two parts, one of which was devoted to the buildings and the other to corrals, wagon sheds and material and stock generally. The buildings had clay floors and gravel roofs. In 1839 the fort had in its employ from 80 to 100 men. It was in full operation in 1843. In 1852 it was destroyed by Colonel William Bent, for whom it had received its name, Fort William. Glenn's Post was a temporary trading house in the Osage country on the Verdigris river about a mile above its mouth. It was built by Hugh Glenn and was apparently abandoned in 1821, when Glenn joined Jacob Fowler in an expedition to Sante Fe. FORT DAVY CROCKETT. 971 TRA-MONTANE POSTS. On the western side of the Continental Divide there were few American posts, and fewer still of any permanence or importance. Robidoux's Post on the Gunnison stood on the left bank of that stream a short distance below the mouth of the Uncompahgre river. Fort Uintah, built by the same Robidoux who built the post on the Gunnison, stood on the banks of the Uintah river some distance above the mouth of the Du Chesne and in the foot hills of the Uintah mountains. These were early posts although the dates of their establishment are not known. Robidoux was in the country as early as 1825. Fremont, who passed Fort Uintah in June, 1844, records that the fort was attacked shortly afterward by the Utah Indians and all its garrison massacred except Robidoux, who happened to be absent. If this is a correct report, it is the only instance of a successful attack by the Indians upon a trading post of the West. j" ff 3:|| ll. Fraeb's Post, built by Henry Fraeb and James Bridger, stood on St. Vrain's fork of Elkhead river, itself a branch of Yampah river, Colorado. Fraeb was killed in the latter part of August, 1841, in a battle between his own party of sixty men and a war party of Sioux. The whites lost five men and the Indians ten. The post was probably abandoned soon after. Fort Davy Crockett was an inferior trading post located in the beautiful valley of Brown's Hole on Green river and stood upon the left bank of the stream. Very little is known of it. As seen by Wislizenus in 1839 it was a low one-story building with three wings and was built of lumber and adobe. It was not surrounded with pickets. According to Farnham, who also saw it in 1839, it was a "hollow square of one story log cabins with roofs and floors of mud, constructed in the same manner as those of Fort William," on the Arkansas. It belonged at this time to three Americans by the names of Thompson, Craig and St. Clair, In the 1 1 .Sear" FORT BRIDGER. closing years of the fur trade, just before the founding of Fort Bridger, it was a favorite rendezvous and wintering ground for the free trappers. The situation, however, despite the sublime natural environment, was wretched in the extreme, and the post was familiarly known among the trappers as "Fort de Misere." Fort Bridger, which stood in the beautiful valley of Black's Fork of Green river, was one of the famous posts of the West. Its history, however, belongs to the emigration period and it was founded in the very year which has been designated as the dividing line between this period and that of the fur trade. It has the further distinction of being founded by one of the most noted characters which either period produced. Fortunately we have the founder's own account of the establishment of the post (Letter from James Bridger to Pierre Chouteau, Jr., Dec. 10,1843). It is as follows : " I have established a small fort with a blacksmith shop and a supply of iron in the road of the emigrants on Black's Fork of Green river which promises fairly. They, in coming out, are generally well supplied with money, but by the time they get there are in want of all kinds of supplies. Horses, provisions, smith work, etc., bring ready cash from them, and should I receive the goods hereby ordered will do a considerable business in that way with them. The same establishment trades with the Indians in the neighborhood, who have mostly a good number of beaver among them." There is no more important landmark in the history of the West than the event thus described. Fort Bonneville or Bonneville's Fort are names applied to a rude stockade which Captain Bonneville built on the right bank of Green river, five miles above the mouth of Horse creek, early in August, 1832. Though apparently commenced with a view of making it a trading post it was abandoned as soon as built and was never of any consequence whatever in the trade. The trappers called it " Fort Nonsense," or"" Bonneville's Folly." We are fortunate in having a detailed description of this mm FORT BONNEVILLE. 973 establishment from the pen of one who saw it during construction and the year following. It is from Life in the Rocky Mountains, by W. A. Ferris: " This establishment was doubtless intended for a permanent trading post by its projector, who has, however, since changed his mind and quite abandoned it. From the circumstances of a great deal of labor having been expended in its construction, and the works shortly after their completion deserted, it is frequently called f Fort Nonsense.' It is situated in a fine open plain, on a rising spot of ground, about three hundred yards from Green river on the west side, commanding a view of the plains for several miles up and down that stream. On the opposite side of the fort, about two miles distant, there is a fine willowed creek, called Horse creek, flowing parallel with Green river, and emptying into it about five miles below the fortification. The view from the fort in one direction is terminated by a bold hill rising to a height of several hundred feet on the opposite side of the creek, and extending in a line parallel with it. Again on the east side of the river, an abrupt bank appears rising from the water's edge, and extends several miles above and below, till the hills, jutting in on the opposite side of the river, finally conceal it from sight. The fort presents a square enclosure, surrounded by posts or pickets of a foot or more in diameter firmly set in the ground close to each other and about fifteen feet in length. At two of the corners diagonally opposite to each other block houses of unhewn logs are so constructed and situated as to defend the square outside of the pickets and hinder the approach of an enemy from any quarter. The prairie in the vicinity of the fort is covered with fine grass, and the whole together seems well calculated for the security both of men and horses." Ashley's Fort was a temporary trading house, said to have been built in 1825, on the west shore of Utah Lake near where Provo, Utah, now stands. It was to this point that Ashley is supposed to have hauled his wheeled cannon in 1826. - 974 FORT HALL. Fort Hall was built by Nathaniel J. Wyeth in the year 1834 on the left bank of the Snake river, a little above the mouth of the Portneuf. The circumstances of its founding have been fully outlined in the chapters on Wyeth's enterprise in Part II. of this work. Its history as a trading post is almost entirely associated with the Hudson Bay Company, to whom Wyeth sold it in 1836. It was an exceedingly important point during the emigration period, and later became a military post of considerable note. Fort Henry was built by Andrew Henry in the fall of 1810 on Henry Fork of Snake river, near the mouth of the Teton, and probably near where the village of Egin, Idaho, now stands. It was abandoned by Henry in the spring of 1811, and was occupied for ten days by Hunt and the overland Astorians in October of that year. Nothing is known of it after this time. It consisted only of two or three log houses. Camp Defiance " on the supposed waters of the Bonaven- tura " is the description of a trading locality mentioned by William L. Sublette in his application for a trading license for the year 1832. Astoria was the Pacific Fur Company post on the Columbia river. For its history see the chapters on Astoria, Part II. I Fort William was a post established by Nathaniel J. Wyeth on the upper end of Wappatoo Island, at the mouth of the Willamette river, in the winter of 1834-5. It was occupied only for a short time. See chapter on Wyeth's enterprise, Part II. This list will not describe the Hudson Bay Company posts which were located within what is now United States territory, for the reason that their history, except as related to the Astorian enterprise, is not a part of this work. There were nine of these posts besides Fort Hall—Vancouver, Nis- qually, Simcoe, Walla Walla, Okanagan, Spokane Flathead, Owen, Boise, and possibly one or two others. Of these Okanagan, Spokane, and the Flathead post were founded by the Astorians. G. THE FORT.TECUMSEH AND PIERRE JOURNAL. Below are some extracts from the daily journal kept at Fort Tecumseh and its successor, Fort Pierre, which give as clear a picture as can now be had of the kind of life led at a fur trading post of the better class. The year is 1832. " Saturday, [March] 3rd. Fair, pleasant weather. Mr. Laidlaw and the Indians went out to surround [hunt buffalo]. They returned at 1 P. M., having killed meat enough to load their horses. " Sunday, 4th. Moderate and cloudy with rain at intervals. Gabriel V. Fipe and five Indians arrived from White river post with seven horses and mules and two hundred buffalo tongues. . . . " Wednesday, 7th. Weather continues the same as yesterday. Several Indians of Gens de Poches band arrived on a begging visit. The Blackfeet Indians [Sioux band] who arrived yesterday left us today. One of them stole a kettle; we fortunately missed it before the fellow had pro> ceeded far. Mr. Laidlaw and some Indians went out after them and succeeded in recovering the kettle. The Gens de Poches, who arrived today, say that Baptiste Dorion has been lately killed by a Sawon Indian; but we have reason to suppose the story to be fictitious. . I Friday, 9th. A continuation of fair, pleasant weather. Five more lodges Yanctons arrived and camped. There is now about three feet of water on top of the Missouri ice. Two men arrived from Cedar island. They were obliged to leave their plank [for new fort] and trains on the way— the ice being so bad that they could not travel on it. . . . "Tuesday, 13th. Still continue strong gales from the mm |p 'liii- 976 FINE, PLEASANT WEATHER. north and colder, but the weather is now clear and the Indians are crossing on the ice in great numbers with robes to trade (Gens de Poches). . . . "Friday, 16th. Strong north winds, cold and cloudy, with snow at intervals. Baptiste Defond arrived last evening from the Sawon post with horses and mules. . . . " Sunday, 18th. Moderate and clear. Two Indians arrived from White river post with a letter from Mr. Papin, the commandant. " Monday, 19th. Mild and clear throughout the day. Nothing new. Finished duplicate ledger. " Tuesday, 20th. Still mild and pleasant weather. Employes making packs and pressing them. . . . " Friday, 23rd. Still continues fine weather. Most of the lodges left us today. They have gone up the Little Missouri [Teton]. The Missouri ice broke up at this place today. . . . " Wednesday, 28th. Same weather as yesterday. Ice still drifting a little. Missouri four feet above low water mark. Mr. Picotte and a voyageur arrived from the Navy Yard in a canoe. . . . " Friday, 30th. Fine weather. Ice commenced drifting at 9 P. M., and the water rose about four feet from sunrise to sunset. In the morning Baptiste Defond departed down stream to meet the steamboat Yellowstone. . . . "Tuesday [April], 3rd. Moderate and pleasant. Missouri still rising. It is now eight and one-half feet above low water mark. Last evening J. Jewett arrived here from the Ogallala post with horses and mules, in all sixteen. I Wednesday, 4th. A continuation of fine, pleasant weather. " Thursday, 5th. Same weather as yesterday. Messrs. Laidlaw and Halsey moved up with their baggage to the new fort [Pierre]. " Friday, 6th. Still fine and pleasant. Hands employed variously. Two men arrived from the Yankton post with* three horses. They report the arrival of Mr. P. D. Papin w umm A MURDER ON CHEYENNE RIVER. 977 at the mouth of the White river with two skin canoes laden with buffalo robes. | Saturday, 7th. Mr. William Dickson arrived from Riviere au Jacques with twelve packs furs. I Sunday, 8th. Two men arrived from the Navy Yard with the news that the Indians have stolen all the company's horses at that place. " Monday, 9th. Clear and moderate with north wind. Missouri falling fast. On the 6th inst. the water was so high that the old fort was nearly surrounded with water. Employed variously hauling property from the old fort, etc., etc. At 11 A. M. five skin canoes loaded, with buffalo robes under charge of Colin Campbell arrived from the Ogallala post on Cheyenne river. They bring news of the murder of Frangois Querrel by Frederick Laboue, the company's trader at Cherry river. Laboue arrived in the canoes. . . " Wednesday, 1 ith. Moderate north winds and pleasant. Several Sawons arrived last evening. The Missouri rising. . . . " Friday, 13th. Strong northerly winds and pleasant. Mr. Dickson left for Riviere au Jacques. . . . I Friday, 20th. We had a shower of rain in the morning. At 10 A. M. it cleared off. Hands employed variously. At 3 P. M. four men arrived from the Navy Yard. Buffalo in sight from the houses. Mr. Laidlaw and some Indians went out and they returned at 4 P. M., having killed four cows. "Saturday, 21st. Calm and cloudy. Sent off Campbell and twenty-two men to Cherry river to bring down the peltries at that place. " Sunday, 22nd. Clear and moderate winds from the northwest. Monday, 23rd. Fair, pleasant weather. Tuesday, 24th. Same weather as yesterday. Wednesday, 25th. A continuation of fine, pleasant weather. Nothing new. n u « i1 m 978 ARRIVALS WITH FURS. "Thursday, 26th. Still fine, pleasant weather. " Friday, 27th. Weather same as yesterday. At five o'clock P. M. Messrs. McKenzie, Kipp, and Bird with nine Blackfeet [Sihasapa] Indians arrived in a bateau from Fort Union. McKenzie brought down one hundred and eleven packs of beaver skins. . . . " Wednesday, [May] 2nd. Cloudy with rain at intervals. Mr. Cerre arrived yesterday from the Yanctonnais with ninety odd packs robes. Hands employed making and pressing them. " Thursday, 3rd. Clear and pleasant.. Nothing new. Hands employed pressing packs, etc., etc The Indians are now coming in every day to trade " Friday, 4th. Moderate and clear. Mr. Bird and the Indians returned from the Sawon camp. . . . 1 Monday, 7th. Moderate winds and disagreeable rainy weather. Colin Campbell, with eleven skin canoes laden with buffalo robes, arrived from Cherry river. Mr. Campbell, while at Cherry river, disinterred the body of the deceased F. Querrel; and, as seven wounds were found in the body, Frederick Laboue was put in irons immediately on the arrival of the canoes. . . . "Friday, nth. Fair, pleasant weather. Sent off two men to the Rees with goods for the trade of those Indians. Pierre Ortubize and two men left in a skiff in search of the steamboat. Hands employed in making and pressing packs. " Monday, 14th. Clear and pleasant. Crossed sixty- four horses to the other side of the Missouri. At 4 P. M. had a thunder shower. Indians coming in from every quarter to trade. . . . "Thursday, 17th. Clear and fine. Employed crossing horses for Fort Union, etc., etc. . . . " Saturday, 19th. Still continues clear and pleasant weather. But no news of consequence. At 4 P. M. two men arrived. Halsey's child was born. . . . " Monday, 21st. Clear and pleasant. Sent off twenty mmm ARRIVAL OF THE "YELLOWSTONE." 979 men to the Navy Yard to cut timber and bring it down on rafts. " Tuesday, 22nd. Fine, pleasant weather. Mr. Fontenelle, with twenty men and a number of horses, arrived here from St. Louis. They bring news of the steamboat Yellowstone. She is now between this place and the Poncas. " Wednesday, 23rd. Cloudy with rain at intervals. Eighteen men arrived from steamboat Yellowstone. She is stopped for want of water about sixty miles below White river. William Dickson and family arrived from Riviere au Jacques. . . . " Friday, 25th. Clear and fine. Baptiste Defond arrived from the steamboat at the Big Bend. Messrs. McKenzie, Fontenelle, and others left here in a keelboat to meet her. . . . "Thursday, 31st. Same weather as yesterday. Missouri still rising. Four men arrived from White River post with horses, robes, etc. Steamboat Yellowstone arrived at 5p.m.... mm I " Tuesday, [June] 5th. Fine and pleasant weather. Steamboat Yellowstone left here for Ft. Union. Water falling. " Wednesday, 6th. Fine and pleasant weather. Mr. Fontenelle left here with forty odd men for Ft. Union and, one hundred and ten or fifteen horses. Water rising. • • • I Monday, nth. Fine weather with south winds. Keelboat Flora left here for Fort Union with a cargo of merchandise, etc. Keelboat Male Twin left here for the Navy Yard to bring down timber. I Friday, 15th. Hot and sultry the first part of the day. Keelboat Male Twin arrived from the Navy Yard. Latter part of the day we had a fine, refreshing shower. I forgot to say that four bateaux also arrived from the Navy Yard today. They, as well as the Male Twin, were loaded with pickets for the fort. . . . \ Sunday, 17th. Keelboat Male Twin and four bateaux m •draft „< 98O SHIPMENT OF FURS. conducted by Mr. Honore Picotte left here for St. Louis loaded with 1,410 packs buffalo robes. "Wednesday, 20th. Fine, pleasant weather with moderate southerly winds. The Missouri still rising. It is now nearly over the bank. Joseph Jewett, who left here on the 10th, arrived today from the Ogallalas with dry meat, lodges, etc. 480 lbs. dry meat was left here in the spring, but the wolves broke into the house and ate it all except about 20 pieces. . . . I Sunday, 24th. Steamboat Yellowstone arrived from Ft. Union. Sent down 600 packs robes on board of her. '*' Monday,. 25th. Steamboat Yellowstone left us for St. Louis with a cargo of 1,300 packs robes and beaver. Mr. Laidlaw went on board. He is to go down as far as Sioux agency and return by land. Ortubize has got a keg of whiskey and is continually drunk himself and he tries to make as many of the men drunk as will drink with him. " Sunday, [July] ist. Messrs. Laidlaw and Dickson left us for Lac Traverse in quest of some Canadian Pork Eaters expected here this summer. Castorigi sick and off duty. " Sunday, 8th. Same weather as yesterday, with the exception of a light shower in the morning. At 2 P. M. Messrs. Brown, Durand, and two Americans (all beaver trappers) arrived with about a pack of beaver. " Monday, 9th. Fine weather; at 6 A. M. Henry Hart arrived from Ft. Union with three bateaux loaded with robes, etc. Loaded one boat with 120 packs beaver and other skins and put on board of another 30 packs of robes. She is to take on 120 or 130 packs at Yancton post. " Tuesday, 10th. Strong gales from the north. Four bateaux ready to start for St. Louis, but they were detained here all day by the wind. " Wednesday, nth. Four bateaux laden with 355 packs buffalo robes and 10,230 lbs. beaver skins left here for St. Louis. They will take in 120 or 130 packs robes at Yancton w *5S*m*mmm CATLIN AT FORT PIERRE. 981 post. Water rising fast. It is now five feet above low water mark. . . . " Thursday, 19th. Jewett and Ortubize returned from hunting, having killed two bulls. On their arrival on this side of the river, we discovered two more bulls on the opposite side, when we immediately recrossed them. At night they returned, having killed one more bull. j Friday, 20th. Cloudy, and hot, sultry weather. Vas- seau and two men belonging to Le Clerc Company arrived at the mouth of Teton river for the purpose of building and establishing a trading house there. Leclaire and a few men arrived here from Fort Lookout. . . . i Sunday, 29th. Pleasant weather and light northerly winds. At 10 A. M., Mr. Laidlaw arrived on the other side from the east with 36 Pork Eaters. He lost two on the road. Employed the greatest part of the day crossing the men and their baggage. At 12 M. Cardinal Grant arrived from the Yancton post. . . " Thursday, August 2nd. Calm and pleasant. Plenty of buffalo. Mr. Laidlaw went out to hunt them and killed three. . . . I Saturday, 4th. Four Brule Indians arrived in search of a trader. They are encamped five days' march from this. . . . " Monday, 6th. Baptiste Dorion, Charles Primeau, and Hipolite Neissel left here this morning with four Indians, who arrived on the 4th with Mdse., to trade meat, etc., etc. Sent up Ortubize to the Navy Yard (or shanty) [Chantier] to hunt for our men at work there. . . . " Tuesday, 14th. Messrs. Catlin and Bogart arrived from Ft. Union on their way to St. Louis. "Wednesday, 15th. A fine, pleasant day. Baptiste Dorion and G. P. Cerre arrived from the Brule camps, with dry meat, robes, etc. " Thursday, 16th. Light southerly winds. Mr. Catlin left us for St. Louis, accompanied by Mr. Bogart, in a skiff. I Friday, 17th. A fine, pleasant day, with a refreshing tl ; 982 DORION KILLS AN INDIAN. shower in the evening. In the early part of the day news was brought in of a band of buffalo not being far from the fort. Consequently a party went out to hunt them. Baptiste Dorion was one of the party; they all returned without killing any buffalo; but Dorion fell in with a Stiaago [ ?] Indian riding off with one of the Company horses. After a little scuffle he killed the Indian and we got back the horse. We suppose he was a Ree. Dorion did not fire at the Indian till he had fired two arrows at him. " Saturday, 18th. Hot, sultry weather. Hands employed variously. Finished hay-making and have five mud chimneys under way. Brown arrived from the lumber yards, also two rafts of timber. . . . "Tuesday, 21st. Weather as yesterday. At 11 A. M. Mr. Brown arrived from the lumber yards. Two of the men there, Louis Turcot and James Durant, having stolen a canoe and deserted last evening. Mr. Brown, with one man, left here in a canoe at 12 M. in pursuit of them. Several lodges, Yanctons and Esontis [ ?] arrived on the other side the Missouri and camped there. " Thursday, 23rd. Fine weather. Mr. Brown arrived with the two deserters, Turcot and Durant. He caught them in the middle of the Big Bend. " Friday, 24th. A continuation of fine, pleasant weather. Twelve or thirteen lodges Indians crossed the river and camped alongside of us. Commenced planting the pickets of the fort. . . . " Sunday, Sept. 9th. Southerly winds and pleasant weather. The prairies are on fire in every direction. G. P. Cerre arrived from the Sawon Camp. " Monday, 24th. Laidlaw, Halsey, Campbell, Demaney, and an Indian left for Sioux agency, near Fort Lookout, and on 1 Sunday, the 30th, they returned, accompanied by Dr. Martin, who visits this place for the purpose of vaccinating the Indians. Messrs. McKenzie and Fontenelle, with several others, arrived from Ft. Union in a bateau, having M KENZIE FROM FORT UNION. 983 on board about 6,000 lbs. beaver skins. In the evening Wm. Dickson arrived from River Bois Blanc in quest of Mdse. for the trade there." '.,; *3g*^<«-; H. JOURNAL OF A STEAMBOAT VOYAGE FROM ST. LOUIS TO FORT UNION. The journal which follows, like that which has just been given, affords a better idea of one of the peculiar features of fur trade life than can be had in any other way. The navigation of the Missouri river was a science sui generis. The reader will note especially the hourly presence of serious obstacles, such as sand bars and snags; the great annoyance from winds and storms; and the overshadowing importance of the wood question. He will also note how few of the old river names still survive, and how many " forts " or trading houses were then in existence whose very names are now utterly forgotten. The following statistics show the rate of speed made by the vessels whose annual voyages are recorded in the Sire Journal. The distance from St. Louis to Fort Union was about 1,760 miles: In 1841 In 1842 In 1843 In 1844 In 1845 In 1846 In 1847 the trip the trip the trip the trip the trip the trip the trip up consumed up consumed up consumed up consumed up consumed up consumed up consumed 80 days and the trip down 21 days. 76 days and the trip down 22 days. 49 days a*id the trip down 15 days. 54 days and the trip down 16 days. 42 days and the trip down 15 days. 44 days and the trip down 31 days. 40 days and the trip down 14 days. The trip of 1847 was the shortest both ways of those here given. The average daily speed up was 44 miles: down. 123 miles. THE STEAMBOAT "OMEGA." 985 log of steamboat omega, from St. Louis to Fort Union, 1843- Joseph A. Sire, Master. Joseph La Barge, Pilot. Among the passengers were the Naturalist Audubon and party. (Translated from the original French.) April 25. Tuesday. Left St. Louis at 11 A. M. Water high but falling slightly. Current strong. We make slow progress. Reach St. Charles at 4 o'clock next morning, when we put Sarpy on shore, who returns to St. Louis. April 26. Wednesday. Set out at 6 A. M. Current still strong. Took wood twice. The steamboat Rowena passed us at the entrance to the channel along Bonhomme Island. Met the Troja at Leve Cul. Camped at South Point at 8:30 P. M. The river is undoubtedly in fine condition for night running; but it is dark and the weather threatening. Moreover, we have too much to lose to risk our cargo for the sake of gaining a little time. April 27. Thursday. Set out rather late. At times our progress was very slow. It was 9 P. M. when we passed Portland. As the weather is clear we run all night. Passed the mouth of the Osage at day-hreak. April 28. Friday. The current still strong and the river rising. Passed Jefferson City, where we met the Mary Tompkins and the Weston going to St. Louis. Wooded* at 11 A. M., 9 miles above Jefferson City. Much difficulty in finding wood. We found some by chance, 4^ cords, below the large island 4 miles below Rocheport We tried in vain to stem the current along the bluffs (de monter les cotes). At 10 P. M. I decided to put to shore on a little island in order not to consume our wood to no purpose. We had the good fortune to find some poles (perches) and I had 300 brought on board. April 29. Saturday. Set out as soon as it was light, * I /j 986 CROSSWISE of the channel. which enabled us to take some advantage of the current. We succeeded in ascending. Wood still scarce and poor. Stopped at Boonville to take on Booker, a mulatto. Passed Glasgow at 7 o'clock. Great difficulty in doubling the point opposite the mouth of the Chariton. Camped on the island below Old Jefferson at 9 :i5 P. M. I send the yawl to look for some poles. April 30. Sunday. Set out at 4 A. M. Current still strong, and to cap the climax the wind rises with incredible force. It is useless to try to keep on. and we put to shore 4 miles from our last camp, where, most fortunately, we find poles and dry mulberry, which permits us to fill the boat. At 1 P. M. the wind seems to moderate. We set out, and thanks to the wood which we had chopped and the poles we had taken, we get along very well. As the night is fine we continue our voyage, and at break of day are at the 1 Coupe du Petits O." Took 5 cords of wood at Fine's. Passed Lexington at the dinner hour, where we were overtaken by the John Auld, which pushed along by. May 1. Monday. Current still strong. Overtook the John Auld at camp, where we took 6 cords of wood and then lay to for the night at the head of the chute. May 2. Tuesday. Set out before day. It seems that we are making better progress. In fact, since the water is falling the current is less strong. Stop at Owen's, where I take 12 barrels flour for Richardson. Stopped at Liberty Landing for dispatches from Mr. Laidlaw, and at Madame Chouteau's, where I find everything abandoned. Passed the bad place at the mouth of the Kansas river after sunset. The weather was so fine that I decided to run all night. At 6 A. M. we reached Leavenworth. May 3. Wednesday. Set out at 8 A. M. We got along well, although often slowly. At 4 P. M. we reached the little island below village 24. In order to avoid a bad chute on the right we took the left hand channel and had the misfortune to run aground. We got ourselves clear once, but had the misfortune to get fast crosswise the channel. It frightful gales. 987 rained and blew in a frightful manner. We were compelled to stay where we were for the night in the hope of extricating ourselves in the morning. May 4. Monday. We get clear, but by a false maneuver of the pilot we get aground again. Broke our large cable. Finally succeeded in getting off by shoving the stern around. The wind blows with incredible force, and we have to pass a place very dangerous on account of snags. We remain at the bank until 6 P. M., and finally camp at the wood yard above village 24. May 5. Friday. Set out at day-break. Took o cords of wood 400 yards farther on. The strong wind annoys us much. Arrived at Robidoux [Blacksnake Hills or St. Joseph] at 1 P. M. and remained there an hour taking 5 cords of wood, 10 barrels lard, and some provisions. The wind increases. We enter the Nadowa chute We have hard work to overcome the wind at Nadowa Island, and it is with difficulty that we arrive opposite our last year's encampment at 8 P. M. May 6. Friday. The wind blows frightfully all night, with such violence that it seems as though the smoke-stacks would be blown down. It moderates a little at sun rise and we set out. We do not go far before it blows as strong as it did before. We land to cut some axe helves and get a little wood. It is one o'clock when we resume our journey, and in spite of wind and current we arrive at the Iowas at sunset, where I discharge the freight for the agent. We go on to Jeffrey's Point, where I take 10 cords of wood for which I give an order upon the House for $20. May 7. Sunday. We set out at day-break. Good wood, calm weather, and good progress. Passed the Grand Nemaha (Tapon Glaire) and stopped at Brown's at Nishna- botana, where I take 5 cords of wood that I do not pay for. (I forgot to say that we chopped some wood at the point above Tapon Glaire.) Passed the Little Nemaha, where we were obliged de muler pour prendre d droite. We lost 988 BOAT INSPECTED FOR LIQUOR. fully an hour. Finally we camped at a point on the left in view of Long Island. May 8. Monday. We made good progress as far as to Beau Soleil Island, where we tried in vain to pass to the right along the prairie. It was necessary to take the old channel. Took 8j^ cords of wood at Hank Roberts. We found everything carried off by the water at Akays (?). Passed to the left de I'Isle de VEtroit; passed the Grand deboulis. A little farther all the houses are demolished by the flood. Passed Table river. Stopped at McPherson's, where we bought and cut some wood, and finally went into camp opposite the mouth of the Weeping Water. May 9. Tuesday. Passed Trudeau Island, Five Barrels Island, la Purre a Calumet, L Oeil de fer. I find no wood. I decide to have some cut a little further on. Tried the left hand channel, where the steamboat Pirate was lost, but could not get through. Tried the right hand, but it was shallow, bouleverse and full of sand bars. Found 5 cords of wood at Baptiste Le Clair's, which we took. Crossed to Abbadie's, where we put off his freight. Went on to L'Issue, where I put off freight for the sutler and for Captain Burgwin. Set out at 7 P. M. and camped above the bad sand bar near the marsh at Hart's cut-off at 9 P. M. May 10. Wednesday. We progressed finely as far as Hart's Bluffs (cotes a Hart), where, at 7 A. M., we were summoned by an officer and four dragoons to land. I received a polite note from Captain Burgwin, informing me that his duty obliged him to make an inspection of the boat. We put ourselves to work immediately, while Mr. Audubon goes to call upon the Captain. They return in about two hours. I compel, as it were (en quelque sort), the officer to make the strictest possible inspection, but on the condition that he would do the same with the other traders. I have the men chop 15 cords of liard vert for the return trip. Heaven knows if it will be there when I get back. Resumed our journey at noon. Passed the house of Mr. Cabanne, Boyer river, Fort Manuel, and stopped for the night at the head of ROSIN TO MAKE WOOD BURN. 989 Four-house Cut-off in the hope of finding wood there. I was cruelly disappointed. There is nothing but some elms there, which will be very difficult to split. I dread to use drift wood, but we shall have to come to it and will use rosin to make it burn. May 11. Thursday. We soon find some drift wood, which we proceed to cut, since there is no other kind in this country. As I expected, it will burn only by the aid of rosin. Passed Soldier river. Proceeded slowly on account of the wood. Cut some more wood, which was worse than the other. It is almost impossible to keep going. We camp at 8:30 P. M. Tomorrow I hope to find some ash at Little Sioux river. The water rose 5 feet last night. May 12. Friday. Scarcely had we started when we were obliged to lay to on account of the fog. Started again half an hour later. Found the difficult chute of the Little River of the Sioux stopped up, and the channel passing through the mud bars. Stopped at the end of the long straight stretch and chopped some ash. It is a good place for this kind of wood. Passed Pratt cut-off, Wood's bluffs, and camped at Blackbird. The water rose last night 2j4 feet. May 13. Saturday. Just as we were on the points of starting a fog arose, which compelled us to remain in camp until 6:30 A. M. During this time I had some ash cut. Came on in good shape. Passed McClellan's Bluffs, where a cut-off has formed on the opposite side, which saves two or three miles. Chopped some liard sec below the prairie, where the Omaha village stands. Passed this prairie. Chopped some more wood about 3 miles below Sergeant's Bluffs. There is enough here for several years. Passed Setting Sun Bluffs. Camped at the mouth of the Big Sioux. It is wretched weather, rainy and windy. Last night the river stopped rising. May 14. Sunday. We depart before day break by moonlight. The weather is uncertain all the morning. At 11:30 A. M. we stopped at the point where we arrested 4 . . . 990 UN COURANT D ENFERS. deserters two years ago, and loaded the boat with dry wood. We push on at i :30 P. M., but the wind, which had risen with incredible force, and the strength of the current (for the water commenced to rise again last night) made us give it up. I had the boat put to shore and set the men to cutting wood for the return trip. Instead of subsiding the wind increases. It is rather a hurricane. I am momentarily in fear that the smoke stacks will fall down. If this wind continues it will be a sleepless night (nuit blanche) for me. May 15. Monday. The wind continues* to blow as hard as yesterday. I set the men to cutting bois de liard again. At about 3 P. M. the wind seems to soften. In case it continues [to fall?] I will have the boilers pumped up so that we may be ready if it falls enough. We set out, but Great Heaven, how slow we go! Often we drift backward by the force of the current. We come as far as to the foot of the bluffs of Little Iowa river. Last night the river rose 14 inches, and I think that it is still rising. The Omega does all she can, but she is too heavily loaded to continue against a strong current like this, and the wind of this country, which is almost always strong. May 16. Tuesday. The river rose 11 inches last night, and consequently we have a h—1 of a current (un courant d'enfers). It is 11:30 A. M. when we reach the Vermillion houses. We set out again at 12:30, after having taken on some wood which I left there last year; but scarcely had we doubled the point of the island when the engineer announced the sad news that one of our boilers had burned out. We have to tie up, and I much fear that we shall be here a part of tomorrow. I set the men to cutting green liard. which will be of use, if not for the return trip, then for next year. May 17. Wednesday. We remain here longer than I thought we should, for at the hour of this writing we have not finished [the repairs]. I have more wood cut and we have 50 to 60 cords. The water, which had risen last night, has commenced falling since dinner. May it so continue until we reach Fort Pierre. fl ^s. LAID UP FOR REPAIRS. 99* May 18. Thursday. It takes us another day to complete our repairs. This is due to the difficulty of introducing rivets between the flues and the wall of the boiler. The water continues to fall rapidly — 3 feet since yesterday noon. Messrs. Laidlaw and Drips passed down at 8 o'clock with 4 Mackinaw boats. I write to the house and Mr. Audubon sends his dispatches. May 19. Friday. We push on at day break. We find the current still strong in spite of the fall of water. Lost considerable time in passing the mouth of the Vermillion. It is necessary to sound, and we find only 4J4 feet. Cut 8 or 10 cords of.wood at the first point on the left above the Vermillion. We find the channel which follows the bluffs below the Petit Arc extremely bad (there is considerable ash at this place). We cut some more dry liard at the beginning of the point below the Perkins' woods. We went into camp at the said woods. May 20. Saturday. The water fell only 2j^ inches last night. We set out at break of day in spite of wind and rain, which hinder us a great deal. We arrive at noon at the ash point on the right going up, below Bonhomme Island. It is useless to try to chop any: the water has flooded everything. I am seriously embarrassed; when opposite the entrance to the Bonhomme channel we find enough dry liard to fill the boat. It is half past three. All day long the wind blows as it only can on the upper Missouri. Often we scarcely move at all. We pass to the left of the island. The water is shallow and swift. Finally we come to the first prairie to the right, where there is a good quantity of drift. Camped at 8130. May 21. Sunday. Set out at 3:15 A. M. The wind blew all night and is blowing still. We still see a good deal of drift wood, but we are not in need of any. Passed Manuel river and Bazille river. A little below we saw a band of cows [buffalo], something that has not been seen here for many years. At 10 A. M. we arrive at Fort Mitchell, where we cut dry wood from the pickets, houses and fences. If 11 to / 992 A VOLLEY FROM SHORE. the Indians or others do not burn this establishment, there will be enough dry wood there for two or three years. Resumed our voyage at n A. M., but the wind, which increases, retards us considerably. Passed Chouteau river. There the wind becomes almost irresistible. Nevertheless we enter the channel of Ponca Island, but at the head of the island, where the bluffs rise directly from the water (trem- pent a I'eau), we are forced to stop. I land on the island and go to cutting green wood, which will be of use on the return trip or next year. It is 3 P. M. Finally, toward 6 o'clock, the wind seems to moderate. We set out and follow those interminable bluffs, which trempent a I'eau, and go into camp on the opposite shore at the commencement of the prairie at 8:30 P. M. Last night the water fell only an inch and a half. May 22. Monday. We push out at 3 A. M. Passed the town at 4:30. All along the bluffs (cotes), where it is shallow, we move slowly. Cut more wood at 6 A. M., some miles below Handy's. It is necessary to take wood wherever one can find it. In passing Handy's point a party of savages fired a volley at us, two shots of which passed through the men's cabin. Fortunately no one was hit. It is probably those rascally Santees; no one else would be capable of such an attack. We had much difficulty in passing the point of oaks opposite the river Pratte. We had to sound, and found only 4 feet large. During this time I had some oak wood cut, poor fuel for steam. Finally we lay to at 8 P. M. at Little Cedar Island. It will be necessary to chop some wood in the morning, notwithstanding that we have commenced this evening. May 23. Tuesday. After cutting some wood we set out at 5 130 A. M. Cedar Island is no longer worth the trouble of stopping there, since it is impracticable to land where the best wood is. Took the same route as last year; passed to the right of Snag Island (Isle aux Chicots). Took on board the hunters whom I sent out last night. Passed the Three Islands safely, but opposite the Bijoux X A BROKEN SPAR. 993 Hills at Desire Island I plunge into the sand bars and soon we are aground athwart the current. Our spars break and it is dark before Durack returns with others. We will begin again tomorrow morning. The heat has been unsupport- able all day. Thermometer 92 °. May 24. Wednesday. We find the boat in the morning pretty much in the same situation. We set at work immediately and are just about to get afloat again when one of the spars breaks, and we are obliged to send 2 miles to look for another on an island where they are very scarce. It is 10 A. M. and the yawl has not yet returned. We met La Charite, who is descending the river in a skin canoe with goods for the Poncas and brings me a letter from Mr. Honore Picotte. The yawl returns at last and we succeed in extricating ourselves, but we go aground again, again get off, and after having sounded again find only one passage and that a doubtful one. We lurch and break one of our rudders, but 10 minutes afterward we are afloat. We put to shore to mend the rudder, and meanwhile I have some wood cut from drift. At 6 P. M. we resume our journey and come to the head of the Bijoux Hills before night, where I send out men to chop a little wood. The river continues to fall slowly. The wind has changed to the N. W., and it has turned cold. May 25. Thursday. We did not get off until 6 A. M. because I had a full load of dry wood taken on. The wind rises with rain and the weather is frightful. We are obliged to stop and sound before we reach John's Bluffs. We run with difficulty on 4 feet of water. The river has fallen considerably and in many places we find no more water than we have to have. Passed White river. At American river (Riviere des Americans) we spend a good deal of time in sounding. At the head of the channel at Cedar Island we find no way out. Nevertheless, Desire, whom I send to sound, reports 4.4 feet. We shall try it tomorrow morning. May 26. Friday. We are a little late in starting, for it is very necessary to see clearly before leaving the channel. ssmmm / 994 AUDUBON CROSSES THE GREAT BEND. R/f i Sent out the yawl. Found the same depth again, 4ft. 4 inches. Passed through. Stopped at the foot of the bluffs below Fort Lookout, where we cut more cedar, which we have to go a good way for. We had much trouble at two places in passing Fort Lookout point. We passed to the right of Deslaurier's Island for the first time. I believe that the [good] water was that way last year, but it did not suit Francis [pilot] to try it, and I was compelled to lighten the boat of her whole cargo. At the head of the chute we had to sound, and found just enough water to pass. If we drew 4 inches more we should frequently have had to lighten half the cargo. Much trouble in passing along the bluffs below the Great Bend. Put ashore Mr. Audubon, his companions, and 3 men, who will camp on the other side of the Bend and wait for us there. Chopped more drift wood and camped at 8:15 at the first bluffs on the right going up. I forgot to say that I have sent 3 men express to Fort Pierre with papers for that establishment. May 27. Saturday. Scarcely have we set out when we consumed two hours making a crossing. A little farther it looks for a moment as if we should be obliged to lighten the cargo a half (it was raining in torrents), but we have the good luck to get through. Passed the chain of rocks at dinner time, and at 3 P. M. arrived at the head of the Great Bend, where I have some wood cut, and Mr. Audubon and companions return on board. We try in vain to pass to the right of the island below the mouth of Medicine river. We have to return and take the small channel to the left. There is a good deal of good cedar wood at the entrance and if the channel remains there it will be a good place to get wood. Camped near the head of the channel at 8:30 P. M. May 28. Sunday. As far as to the mouth of the Medicine river there is good wood. We have much difficulty to the point where we broke our rudder last year. We get along very well after that. I do not cut any wood at the bluffs below the Grand Cedar Island, because I expect to find some where I cut some last year opposite La Chapelle ^v ARRIVAL AT FORT PIERRE. 995 Island. But a large sand bar has formed there. I am compelled to stop in sight of Simeneau Island at i :30 P. M. to cut some poor wood. Resumed our voyage at 2:15. We got along well to Ebbitt's house, where I take on 30 packs of robes and Major Hamilton. At the head of Simeneau Island there is not enough water, only 3 feet large. To take off half the cargo will not be enough. I therefore decide to await until tomorrow morning. Perhaps some changes will take place. May 29. Monday. I send out to sound the channel. No more water than yesterday, but appearances are more favorable. Where there was no water yesterday we find 3 feet 6 inches. The gentlemen from Fort George pay us a visit and take dinner with us. May 30. Tuesday. In one place we find 4 feet. In the other 3 feet 10 inches. We set to work and it is 5 P. M. before we have passed those two cursed bars. We were obliged to send the yawl for wood. Messrs. Picotte, Chardon, and several others arrive from the fort [Pierre]. Camped at 8 P. M. opposite Fleury Island, where we loaded up with dry wood. Fleury, who came on board, tells me that the river has risen 7 inches since noon. May 31. Wednesday. It seems that we may not be able to reach the fort [Pierre], for we shall not be able to pass along the small island below the fort. We resolve to try the small channel to the left, but after a long trial we are convinced that it is impossible. I send to the fort for the ferry boat and a Mackinaw boat, and having transferred some lead and tobacco we are able to pass up the right of the island. We reach the fort at 3 P. M. The unloading of the freight for this post is finished at sundown. June 1. Thursday. I remain at the fort a part of the forenoon on account of business. Write to the House and to Durack with my instructions concerning the Trapper. Crossed at 11 A. M. Took on some articles I had need of. Gave some provisions to Durack for his journey. Cut 2 cords of drift wood and stopped for the night above old ■ 996 SHORT OF WOOD. Fort George at 9:30 P. M. (There is a good deal of drift wood at the old dirt village.) June 2. Friday. We set out at 3 A. M. Passed the Big Cheyenne, the island at Ash point, to the left of Assiniboine Island, where we could not land and consequently could not take on the wood which I left there last year. Stopped five times to take on drift wood. Passed to the left of Little Cheyenne Island and camped about 2 miles below the Little Cheyenne at 8:45 P. M. June 3. Saturday. The wind blows violently all night and has not stopped when we set out. We try to pass to the left of Touchon Kaksah, but are obliged to go back about 2 miles and take the right hand channel, and we pass to the head of a small willow island. We come along very well, although there are some bad places. It is not surprising for we are today in the worst part of the Missouri. -Stopped at the willow island below the mouth of the Moreau at 10 A. M. and took on some very poor drift wood, but there is no other. We try the right hand of Prele Island, where we went down last year, but we find no way out. We go back and take the left hand channel, where we lost 2 days last year, and find good water. Passed Grand river, where I thought I could land and cut up an old house for wood, but we could not get in there. Passed the rampart and landed opposite the little island below the old Aricara village. The weather is threatening, and I believe a bad storm is on. I have scarcely a cord of wood for the start tomorrow morning, but I hope I have enough to reach the ash point below the old village. It is 8:30 P. M. June 4. Sunday. We get a late start on account of our bad wood. Stopped a little farther on at Ash point below the old Aricara village. Stopped again at La Chapelle Point where we take in the remains of the Primeau houses. Passed La Bourbeuse, Fort Manuel, and camped at Pri- meau's fort a little below Beaver river, where we load up with cord wood, leaving some for the return trip. I note that this side of the Bourbeuse, and even below there is a M EFFORTS TO GET FUEL. 997 good deal of drift wood. All day we have had a north wind which has delayed us a good deal. But for that we should have made a much better day. June 5. Monday. We have just enough water at the second Beaver river crossing. Passed Cannon Ball river, Mitchell's wintering house, Bouis' wintering house, where we fill the boat with worthless wood, which makes me curse all the rest of the day. It is only by the aid of rosin that we can raise barely enough steam to keep us moving very slowly. I have left several cords of the same wood for the down trip. Passed Apple river, the place where the Assiniboine burned, and finally went into camp at 9:20 P. M., at the beginning of Heart River Point. We have passed today a good deal of drift wood between and considerably below Bouis' wintering ground. If the water does not carry it off between now and next year it will be very easy to get. The water seems to be rising rapidly all day. It rose two inches last night. I forgot to say that we were not able to land opposite the mouth of the Riviere au Berchet, where I had chopped some oak wood last year. It is necessary therefore to go there again, although the report is that the Indians have burned a part of it. June 6. Tuesday. We set out at day break. We lose a good deal of time in finding the channel a little above the mouth of Heart river. It is 9 A. M. when we get clear. We meet Kipp with four barges at the Square Buttes. He joins us. I write to St. Louis by the barges, care Mr. Bur- guiere. Passed the Square Buttes, where we cut some ash wood. Camp at the point where the Assiniboines met us two years ago. Filled the boat with poor ash wood, which Mr. Chardon had cut for us. All day the weather has been miserable, rain and an east wind. July 7. Wednesday. Bad weather continues all night. We reach Fort Clark early. We are much delayed in getting the freight ashore, for it rains continually. The wind rises with such force that I decide to remain here all day. r 998 DIVERS EMBARRASSMENTS. Give a feast to the Aricaras and get everything ready to start at daybreak tomorrow. June 8. Thursday. We are off at 2:45 A. M. We pass safely the Grosventre bar because the water is up; otherwise I think we should have had a hard time of it there. Stopped with these Indians and lose an hour in being polite to them. Passed the Great Rock. Passed the wintering ground of the Aricaras last year, which is situated a little below Dancing Bear, where there are three wagons which I must take to Fort Clark on my way down. At the same time we can cut some wood from the lodges and houses. Camped a little above the wintering ground at 8 P. M. I have the boat loaded with ash and dry liard. Three times today we have cut bois de bature. The river continues to rise. It is high enough for a good down trip. June 9. Friday. We set out again at the same hour. Passed Dancing Bear an hour later. This point has de- boulee a good deal and it will be of use to cut wood there for the down trip. Passed without difficulty the place which used to be so bad. The channel has improved greatly. Passed the mouth of the Little Missouri and all the bad places below and above the river without difficulty. Stopped at the prairie a little below the foot of the Great Bend to pack our cylinder. During this time we kill a cow. We pass to the left of the little island. In passing the chute our yawl is considerably damaged. We land for a moment to put it on deck and during this time I have some bois de bature cut. We get ourselves entangled in a channel tout le long de terre, which has no outlet. We have to back out and follow the island. We do not go far along the bluffs qui trempent a I'eau, when we run into the same difficulty and have to withdraw. We lie to finally at 10:30 P. M. at the place where we cut wood every year. I will have the boat loaded tomorrow morning. June 10. Saturday. We cut wood until 4:30 A. M. Stopped a moment and killed two bulls. Passed the Little Knife river at 12 o'clock. A little farther we cut some dry m\ ARRIVAL AT FORT UNION. 999 Hard. Passed the chain all right. Met four lodges of Assiniboines at the beginning of White River Point. Again we cut a good lot of dry liard, little more than we cut last year, at the upper end of the point. Met the same Indians again at 7 P. M. Camped near the Butte au Cure at 8145 P. M. Strong wind and rain. June 11. Sunday. We start a little late on account of bad weather. Cut some ash wood at 9:3c Continued our journey at 11 o'clock. It blows strong all day and at times we scarcely move. Do our best we cannot reach the Muddy. We camp at 9 P. M. at the foot of the bluffs below that river. The water has fallen a little since day before yesterday. June 12. Monday. The water fell last night about three inches. We set out at 3 :i5 A. M. and soon pass the Muddy. Stopped to cut a little dry wood. We have no more. Stopped again at 11 A. M. at the place where we usually cut wood. We fill the boat with dry liard. I am indeed afraid that we shall not reach [the fort] this evening. Wind strong and frequent rain. Finally we start at 12:45. We make but slow progress on account of wind and current. Passed Fort Mortimer opposite the mouth of the Yellowstone, and reached Fort Union at sunset. The water continues to fall. June 13. Tuesday. We discharged the freight for the fort in a short time, made some repairs, and spent the rest of the day at the fort. The water is still falling, but not fast. June 14. Wednesday. It was after breakfast when we set out [on the return trip]. Stopped a little way down and took on enough wood, if we do not run aground, to carry us to Fort Clark. It is 9:30 A. M. when we pass the mouth of the Yellowstone. Made good progress the rest of the day. Stopped for the night at 8 :i5 a little below the mouth of Knife river. The water continued to fall last night. June 15. Thursday. As I anticipated we had a good ,7% Wi iooo ASSINIBOINES ABOARD. deal of trouble at the head of the island at Little Knife river. Run aground, worked a long while, and did not get off till noon. We ran the Great Bend without difficulty until we reached the island at the foot, where we ran hard aground again and did not get off until sunset. Camped eight or ten miles farther down. Tomorrow will be another bad day. I forgot to say that at midnight there came on board a band of Assiniboines who, in my inmost soul, I would like to send to the devil. I had to pass the rest of the night with them, and to take ten of them along with us as far as to the Grosventres. June 16. Friday. Contrary to my expectations we did not ground at the mouth of the Little Missouri. Stopped opposite Dancing Bear, where I took on several wagons for Fort Clark and also some good dry wood from Chardon's houses. Farther down we stopped at an old village where there was some more good wood. A little farther down we had to cast anchor because of a break of a valve stem. We came slowly to the bank and resume our voyage at 5 P. M. Put off the Assiniboines at the Grosventres. We soon came to the bad sand bar. We looked for a channel a long while without finding a sure one. It being already late and a prospect of bad weather, I put to shore a little below the mouth of Knife river. Tomorrow morning we must sound. River stationary last night. June 17. Saturday. We sound the channel—scarcely enough water, but by aid of the spars we force ourselves over the bar. We are soon at the Mandans, where I take on board 500 odd packs. Set out at 2:30, make good progress. Took the rest of the wood that Chardon had had cut; passed Heart river after sunset; struck the bar but had the good luck to back off. Camped at the same place where we camped on our way up on the 5th. River stationary. June 18. Sunday. Started a little late. Passed Cannon Ball river. Killed a cow and a bull. Wooded at Beaver river. I left four cords which were too far to go after, and we have enough anyway, and the heat is insupportable. nmmmm mm AT PIERRE ON DOWN TRIP. IOOI In backing up we scuttled our yawl. Ran aground at the same place, but got off soon. Put to the bank a moment. After that we got along all right. Camped a little above Prele Island, where we remained two days last year waiting for the channel to cut out. The river is still stationary. June 19. Monday. This has been a day of running aground and of fatigue, but we expected it. We find all the channels changed. Passed the Moreau and ran aground a little below. Aground again opposite Touchon Kaksa. Stopped at the bluffs opposite the Little Cheyenne, where we cut a little cedar, but set out again three-quarters of an hour later. Stopped at Assiniboine Island at 6:30 P. M., where I have the yawl fetch the wood which I left there last year. The heat is extremely oppressive today. The water does not fall any yet. As I am writing a hurricane rises accompanied with thunder and rain, lasting much of the night. It already commences to turn cold. June 20. Tuesday. It is still blowing too hard this morning to set out, but at 5 A. M. the wind seems to fall a little. I have the fire lighted. As nearly as I can judge by the water marks the river has risen four inches. Passed the island at Ash point, where there is a bad place. We soon reach the Big Cheyenne. We have much trouble at the crossing and more at the place where we generally cut cedar. The weather is so bad that I stop and go to cutting wood. I send and have the channel sounded, which takes a long while on account of the wind. Finally we get by. Stopped at 7 P. M. a little above the dirt village, where we gathered all the drift wood we could find. Finished work at 8:30. All day we have had wind and rain. The river still seems to be rising. June 21. Wednesday. We soon reach the fort [Pierre]. I learn with pleasure that the Trapper left nine days ago. The water rose last night and is still rising. I therefore wait all day at the fort. It is frightful weather all day. June 22. Thursday. Set out a little late. Arrived at /', 1002 MOSQUITOES IN EVIDENCE. I the farm, where we take on wood which is all soaked. It is not surprising, for it has rained and blown ever since we left Fort Clark. Resumed our voyage at 8 o'clock. A little trouble below the farm and a little above Lachappelle Island (always a bad place) passed Frederick with six barges and camped at foot of the bluffs below White river. The wind is still high. The river stopped rising last night. June 23. Friday. A little late in starting again. But that is on account of the gloomy weather which we have had for some time. Today it has turned out pleasant. Made good progress all day. We take more of the cut wood on Ponca Island. It is too far to carry it. We stop below Manuel river, where we cut up some good drift wood. There is a good deal of it from the head of Bonhomme Island to Manuel river, and it will be a good resource for next year. Camped at the point above Vermillion. I would much have preferred to have reached the place where we cut some wood on the way up, but it is too late and here we are in the land of snags. The river rose an inch last night. June 24. Saturday. We reach a wood pile in a little while. Wooded quickly. Stopped at the Vermillion houses where the channel is so full of snags that we cannot get to the bank. I land with the yawl. As Paschal has not the means of sending the packs to me—all his horses having been stolen and one man killed by those brigand Santes, probably the same who fired on us on our way up—I bring four packs in the yawl and at 10 A. M. we set out. I do not stop where we have some wood cut below Little Iowa river, because we have enough to take us to Hart's bluffs. We came along finely and camped at Little Sioux river where the mosquitoes eat us up. The weather threatens wind and rain. June 25. Sunday. We came along very well. Stopped at the cut-off at Hart's bluffs, where we take on the rest of the wood that we cut on our way up. Stopped at Hardin's and at Sarpy's, where we met the Oceana. We remained BACK AT ST. LOUIS. IOO3 some time and put off 11 barrels of lard and two of biscuit. Took some wood from opposite Baptiste Leclair's. Stop again at Arcot's, where we take three cords that I do not pay for. We came along very well until in sight of the narrows, when our packing blows out. We can scarcely reach the bank, being in a place full of snags. It is dark when we stop. June 26. Monday. We have a good deal of trouble in extricating ourselves from the obstructions in which our wheels are buried. It is necessary to repair the arms. The sun is already high when we set out. Stopped at Brown's and took five cords of wood which I do not pay for. Stopped at Robidoux, where I take on six cords more, which I do not pay for non plus a $1.50. Finally we camped at Leavenworth. Met the steamboat Admiral at Weston. June 27. Tuesday. Set out as usual. Stopped at Madame Chouteau's. Took wood at Sharp's; also at the chute of Mammy's wood yard. Camp at Old Jefferson, where we take three cords of wood to fill the boat. June 28. Wednesday. In spite of wind and rain we make good progress. Took five cords at Bear river. Continued our journey and camped at night opposite St. Charles where we took four cords of wood at Chauvain's. June 29. Thursday. Reached St. Louis in time for breakfast. my: INDEX. Abbott, Samuel, in service of Am. F. Co., 312, 318, 319 Absaroka mountains, 733 et seq. Absaroka, name of the Crow Indians, 855 Act of Congress excluding British traders, 310 prohibiting liquor traffic, 355 Affair of 1780, 103 Albatross, The, chartered by Mr. Hunt, 220 Alexander, Fort, 388, 965 Algonquian family, 847 American Falls, 480 American Fur Company, business methods, 375 et seq. buys out S. W. Co., 311 chartered, 167 J competition in trade, 295, 344 enters mountain trade, 295, 299, 329, 365 established on the Upper Missouri, 337 factory system opposed by, I5» .319 history of, 309 et seq. liquor traffic embarrassments, 24, 355 et seq., 367 Northern Department, 320, 928 opposition traders, 380 promotion of science, 380 Western Department, 320, 928 American fur trade, early development of, 83 et seq. on Northwest coast, 95 situation ofln 1807, 95 American hunter, 55 American Revolution, 77 American State Papers, x Antelope, 827 Ants, used as food, 839 Apache Indians, 883 Arapaho Indians, 852, 878 Aricara Indians, 264, 861 attack Ensign Pryor's party, 121 attack General Ashley, 267 depredations of, 324, 603 influence of Leavenworth's campaign upon, 603 Lisa's difficulties with, 117 perfidious character of, 264, 862 smallpox among, 623 treaty of peace with, 598 villages of, 266 Aricara Indian campaign, 588 et seq. criticism of, 600 et seq. list of officers in, 590 negotiations for peace in, 597 et seq. Aricara Post, 956 Arkansas river, 774 fords of, 539 its relation to the Santa Fe Trail, 537 "". trading posts, 490, 969 Armigo, Governor, lays duty on wagons, 529 Artisans, 57 Ashley, Gen. W. H., advertises for young men, 262 biographical sketch, 247 et seq. cRange^in business methods, 273 defeated by Aricaras, 248, 267, 588 defeated for Gov. of Mo., 273 descends Green river by boat, 274, 779 elected to Congress, 249 expeditions of, 249, 263, 264, 274,. 932 grave of, 250 in Aricara campaign, 588 et seq. inventory of merchandise, 4 meets Gen. Atkinson at mouth of Yellowstone, 278, 615 method of moving parties through Indian country, 938 '1 A ioo6 INDEX. quoted, 267 relations with Am. F. Co., 249, 930 sells out to Smith, Jackson and Sublette, 4, 279 south of Great Salt Lake, 276 success of, 248, 281, 327 takes cannon to Great Salt Lake, 279, 940 transaction with Ogden, 277 Ashley beaver, 249 Ashley creek, 274, 275 Ashley's Fort, 277, 973 Ashley—Henry posts, 263, 271, 958, 964 Ashley Lake, 276 Assiniboine, Fort, 961 Assiniboine, Indians, 857 attack Piegans at Fort McKenzie, 674 smallpox among, 625 threaten to stop Lisa, 118 treaty of peace with Blackfeet, 332, 673 Assiniboine, the steamboat, 38, 357 Astor, J. J., biographical sketch, 163 et seq.— founder of Am. F. Co., 94, 167 quoted, 21, 26, 341 relations with N. W. Co., 168, 229 relations with Russian Government, 170 relations with St. Louis traders, 147, 229, 319 relations with U. S. Government, 167, 237 retires from business, 363, 364 views on Pacific fur trade, 165 et seq. Astor medals, the, 342 Astor, W. B., quoted on Leclerc affair, 349 Astor, W. W., quoted, 167 Astoria, beginnings^ at. 200 closing affairs of, 223 et seq. criticisrpu-©f enterprise, 239 et "-"SeqT establishment of, 175 . expeditions from, 265 —" fort, 974 overland connection with St. Louis, 228 rechristened Fort George, 223 sale of, 221 United States to blame for failure of, 237 Astoria criticism of, 239 et seq. Astorians, the, at Aricara villages, 188 at Caldron Linn, 192 at Cheyenne village, 189 at "Devil's Gate," 474 at Fort Henry, 191 at Nadowa, 183 final departure from the Columbia, 224 number of, 903 number of who perished, 238 905 Oregon Trail opened by, 45^ avefland"~~j ourneys of, 189 efi seq., 206 et seq. reach the Columbia, 194 routes of, 196, 214, 241, 457 Atkinson, Fort, 630, 951 Atkinson, Gen. Henry, biographical sketch, 618 commissioned with B. O'Fallon to treat with Indians, 608 meets Ashley at mouth of Yellowstone, 278, 615 on Yellowstone Expedition of 1819, 567 on Yellowstone Expedition of 1825, 608 et seq. sends treaties to Washington, 616 Athapascan family of Indians, 848 Audubon, cited x, 620, 627 crosses Great Bend of the Missouri, 994 passenger on the Omega, 678, 985 quoted, 277, 949 B Bad lands, 753 Baird and Chambers take a party to Santa Fe, 504 Baird, James, see McKnight, Baird and Chambers Bancroft, H. H., cited, 655 criticism of Irving's writings, 244, 432 Bannock Indians, 886 "Battle ground," Santa Fe Trail, 540, 54i Battle of Fort McKenzie, 673 et seq. INDEX. IOO7 Battle of Pierre's Hole, 657 et seq. Bayou Salade, 749 Bear, black, 825 Bear, Grizzly, see Grizzly bear Bear lake, 793 Bear river, 477, 793 Beaver, commercial importance of, 818 description of, 818 et seq. methods of capture, 820 Beaver fur, caring for, 821 decline in price of, 364 pack of, 40, 821 Beaver, The, arrives at Astoria, 204 cruises the Pacific ocean, 218 et seq. Becknell, William, father of the Santa Fe Trail, 501, 503 on Green river, 506 takes first wagons to Santa Fe, 50i, 504 Beckwourth, James P., biographical sketch, 688 et seq. cited, x, 277, 969 in Am. F. Co. service, 351, 690 with General Ashley, 275, 689 Beer Springs, see Soda Springs Bell, Captain, descends the Arkansas, 1820, 577, 583 Bellevue, post at, 391, 950 Bent and St. Vrain, notice of, 543 Bent, Charles, goes to Santa Fe, 509 Bent's Fort, 543, 97© Benton, Fort, on Bighorn, 150, 964 on Missouri, 963 Benton, Thomas H., opposes factory system, 15 secures appropriation for Santa Fe Trail, 510, 532 Berger, Jacob, sent on a mission to the Blackfeet, 331 attempts to kill Alexander Harvey, 696 Bernard, Pratte & Co., arrangement with Gen. Ashley, 7, 280, 329 assume agency W. Dept. Am. F. Co., 322 second contract with Astor, 330 Berthold and Chouteau, negotiations with Astor, 316 et seq. Berthold, B., letter concerning Manuel Lisa, 131 Berthoud, Edwin L., assistance acknowledged, xiv quoted, 750 Biddle, Thomas, cited, 114 on competition in Indian trade, on liquor question, 23 Big Blue river, Oregon Trail, 465 Big Elk, speech of, 557 Big Muddy river, Oregon Trail, 477 Big Sandy river, Neb., Oregon Trail, 465 Big Sandy river, Wyo., 476, 780 Big Sioux river, 768 Big Sioux post, 952 Big Spring, Oregon Trail, 469 Big Timbers of the Arkansas, 803 Bighorn mountains, 734 Bighorn river, 765 Bighorn sheep, 828 Bird, desperado, 663 Birds of little importance in fur trade, 835 Bissonette, Antoine, killed, 115 Bitter Root mountains, 739 Black, Captain, takes possession of Astoria, 223 Blackfeet Indians as warriors, 854 at Three Forks of the Missouri, 142 et seq. battle with the Assiniboines, 372, 673 et seq. country of, 850, 853 defeat Jones and Immel, 152 deputies visit Fort Union, 332 description of, 850 hostility of toward the whites, 142 et seq., 854 importance of in the fur trade, 854 kill Henry Vanderburgh, 299, 669 massacre of in 1842, 373 name of, 851 smallpox amonsr. 625 trade beginnings with, 334 treaty of peace with Assiniboines, 332 Black Fork of Green river, 476, 780 Black Hills, 734 forests of, 735 Blacksnake Hills, post, 949 Blanca Peak, 737 Blood Indians, 851, 853 Blue mountains, 740 1 1008 INDEX. mm mm Boat Encampment, on Columbia, 156 Boat song, Canadian, 57 Bodmer, artist to Maximilian, 638 Bois Brule Indians, 865 Boise, Fort, 480, 974 Boise river, 480, 785 Bonneville, Captain, adventures of, 396 et seq. biographical sketch, 397, 427 enters mountain trade, 299, 398 estimate of his work, 428 et seq. expedition of, its purpose, 398 fall hunt of 1833, 421 history-made man, 396 ill success as a trader, 305, 428 leave of absence, 398, 427, 431 maps of, 307, 429, 430 name given to Great Salt Lake, 430 reinstated in the army, 430, 431 relations with Ermatinger, 403 relations with Irving, 432 relations with Wyeth, 404 results of first year's operations, 405 results of second year's operations, 424 returns to the states, 427 Salt Lake exploration, 406 takes wagons to Green river, 43i Walker expedition to California, 411 et seq. winter quarters on Salmon river, 401 Bonneville, Fort, 400, 780, 972 Bonneville, Lake, 430, 793 Boston merchants in N. W. trade, 95 Boundary lines, political, 798 Bourgemont, M. de, 947 Bourgeois, explanation of term, 51 Brackenridge, H. M., accompanies Lisa's expedition, 188 cited, x, 114, 722 interposes in quarrel between Lisa and Hunt, 188 quoted, no, 635, 716 work of, 636 Bradbury, John, accompanies Hunt's expedition, 184 cited, x, 717 interposes in quarrel between Lisa and Hunt, 188 interviews John Colter, 184, 717 warns Pierre Dorion, 184 work of, 634 et seq. Bradley, Lieut. Jas. H., quoted, 963 Bradshaw, Captain, assists Walker's party, 417 Brady Island, story of, 466 "Brasseau, Fort," 270, 953 Brasseau's houses, 964 Brasseau, John, and smallpox scourge, 625 Bridger, Fort, i, 366, 476, 972 Bridger, James, biographical sketch, 257 " builds Fort Bridger, i, 476 cited, 65 discovers Great Salt Lake, 258, 795 guide to Captain Raynolds, 461 in Am. F. Co. service, 366 member R. M. F. Co., 292 quoted, 972 see also "Fitzpatrick" and "Sublette" wounded by the Blackfeet, 300, 671 Brigade, meaning of term in fur trade, 38 British colonial history, 72 et seq. British competition in American * "furtra3e720 British^flag at mouth of Snake river, 201 British influence among Indians, . 342, 557, 617, 629 British traders excluded from U. S. territory, 310 — British use of liquor along boundary, 26, 27, 357 Broadhead, G. C, assistance acknowledged, xii Broadus, Mr., loses his arm, 547 Brown's Hole, 748 Brown, J. C, quoted, 537 report not published, 534 surveyor Santa Fe road commission, 533 Brule, Fort, 373 Bryant, W. G, uses name "Oregon," 792 Buenaventura river, 307 Buffalo, commercial importance of, 817 description of, 809 et seq. extermination of, 816 flesh of, 810 INDEX. IOO9 hunting of, 812 importance of to the Indian, 816 numbers of, 816 uses of, 810 Buffalo Fork of Snake river, 783 Bull-boats, 35 Burgoldt, Paul, map work of, vii Burgwin, Captain, and liquor inspection, 679 et seq. Burnt river, Oregon Trail, 481 Business code of the wilderness, 68, 69 Cabanne, J. P., and Leclerc affair, 347 quoted, 380 trading post of, 950 Cable, Claude, owner of Mackinaw letter books, 311 Cache, meaning and application of term, 41 "Cache Creek," frequency of name, 42 "Caches," The, 42, 504, 539 Cache valley, 42, 749 Cactus, 805 Caddoan family, 848 Caldron Linn, arrival of Astorians at, 191 location of caches at, 198 meaning of term, 198 Calhoun, J. G, interest in Yellowstone expedition, 563 Calhoun, Fort.,951 California Trail, 480 Camas root, 806 Campbell, Robert, biographical sketch, 260 letter in regard to Flathead Mission, 645, 922 Campbell and Sublette, see Sublette and Campbell Camp keepers, 54 Canadian boat song, 57 Canadian river, 775 Canoes, use o* in fur trade, 34 Captain Bonneville, 243, 432 Caravans of the plains, 38 Carpenter killed by Mike Fink, 711 Carson, Alexander, detached at Snake river, 191 joins Astorians, 186 Carson, Kit, cited by Inman, 538 goes to Santa Fe, 509, 539 runs away, 539 Carson Lake, 797 Carver, Jonathan, originates name Oregon, 792 Cascade range, 741 Cascades of the Columbia, 482 Cass, Fort, 337, 964 Cass, Governor, and the liquor traffic, 28 Cass the hunter killed, 208 Castorum, 821 Catholic missions in Oregon, 648 Catlin, George, at Fort Pierre, 981 alleged painting of Flathead Indians, 642 on board the Yellowstone, 340, 642 with Colonel Dodge in 1834, 631 work of criticised, 637 Cedars, varieties of, 802 Cedar Fort, 954 Cedar islands in the Missouri, 802 Centennial valley, 744 Cerre, M. S., chief assistant of Capt. Bonneville, 399 goes to states with returns, 405, 425 with Wyeth at Fort Union, 359 Chambers, Samuel, see McKnight, Baird & Chambers Chambers, Col. Talbot, seizes boat of Am. F. Co., 313 suit brought against, 313 Chantier, meaning of the term, 47 situation of at Benton, Pierre and Union, 47, 956 Chaplain, companion of Ezekiel Williams, 652 Chappell, Phil E., assistance acknowledged, 464 Chardon, F. A., instigates Blackfoot massacre of 1842-3, 373 Chardon Fort, 373, 962 Charles, Fort on Hudson Bay, 87 on Missouri, 951 Cheyenne Indians, 852, 867 Cheyenne river, 767 Chick, Jas. S., assistance acknowledged, 464 Chimney Rock, Oregon Trail, 467 Chopunnish Indians, 888 Chouteau, Auguste, associated with Laclede, 99, 100 member Mo. F. Co.. 138 member Commission of 1815, 559 ai IOIO INDEX. m on the founding of St. Louis, ioo, IOI Chouteau Bluffs, origin of name, 339 Chouteau, G P., assistance acknowledged, xii Chouteau and De Munn, imprisonment of, 497, 545 Chouteau Island in the Arkansas, 540 Chouteau papers, xii, 384 Chouteau, Pierre, assistance acknowledged, xii, 105 Chouteau, Pierre Jr., ascends Missouri on Yellowstone, 339, 340 biographical sketch, 382 et seq. Fort Union distillery, 360 quoted on Bonneville, 406 quoted on mountain trade, 329, 366 quoted on miscellaneous subjects, 25, 27, 30, 58, 330, 337, 338, 339, 342, 345, 626, 959 quoted on Sublette-Campbell compromise, 353 sends warning to McKenzie, 361, 362 Chouteau, Pierre Sr., defeated by Aricaras in 1807, 123 in charge of trading party in 1807, 120 member Mo. F. Co., 138 - Chouteau Post, 948 Cimarron desert, 531 Cimarron river, 541, 775 lower spring of, 541 upper spring of, 541 Clappine, Antoine, drowned, 191 Clark's Fork of the Columbia, 787 Clark Fort, see Osage Fort Clark, Fort, at Mandans, 389, 957 Clark, Malcolm, attempts to kill Alexander Harvey, 696 Clark, William, calls for report on Fort Union distillery, 360 connection of with Flathead mission, 643, 915 et seq. member of Commission of 1815, 559 Clarke, John, builds post at Spokane, 205 member of Pac. F. Co., 169 Clearwater mountains, 740 Clearwater river, 786 Clerk in the fur trade, 53 Cloud Peak, 734 Coasts of the Platte, 466 Coeur d' Alene Indians, 892 Colonial beginnings in America, 72 et seq. Colorado mountains, 736 Colorado river system, 760, 778 name of, 779 Colter, John, adventures of, 119, 713 et seq. death of, 723 discoveries of, 717 interview with Bradbury, 184, 717 meets Lisa at mouth of Platte, 115, 713 . responsibility for Blackfoot hostility, 721 route of in 1807, 716 stories not believed, 722 Columbia Fur Company, sketch of, 323, 933 Columbia, Great Plain of, 787 Columbia River Fishing and Trading Co., 448 Columbia river, bar at mouth of, 174, 7.89 description of, 787 et seq. -historical character of, 791 name of, 791 navigation of, 789 relation to the American fur s*— trade, 790 system, 760, 783 et seq. upper course of, 787 valley of, a fine fur country, 787, 789 Comanche Indians, 880 Commerce of the Prairies, viii, 544 Competition in the Indian trade, 17 et seq. American F. Co. methods, 344 between Am. F. Co. and R. M. F. Co., 295 et seq. Continental Divide, 726 et seq. Cook, Captain, voyage of, 95 Cooke, P. St. G., cited, x quoted, 538, 631 Cooper, Braxton, his expeditions to Santa Fe, 505, 506 with Ezekiel Williams, 653 Corn, its use by the Indians, 807 Cottonwood, its uses in the fur trade, 799 et seq. mm INDEX. IOII Coues, Elliott, assistance acknowledged, ix cited, ix, 494 opinion of Irving's works, 246 works on western history, ix Council Bluffs, 949 Council Grove on Santa Fe Trail, 526, 536, 803 Courthouse Rock, Oregon Trail, 467 Cox, Ross, biographical sketch, .905 cited, x Irving's reliance on, 246 Coyner, David H., author of "Lost Trappers/' x, 651, 655 Coyote, 830 Croghan, Fort, 950 Crooks, Ramsay, agent Am. F. Co., 312 attacks U. S. Factory system, 15 biographical sketch, 381 goes to Europe to see Astor, 317 joins Pac. F. Co., 162, 182 member overland Astorian Expeditions, 182, 206 on Snake river, 1811, 192 purchases Northern Dept. Am. F. Co., 364 quoted on Fort Union distillery, 356, 362 quoted on liquor traffic, 27 quoted on miscellaneous subjects, 15, 311 to 319, 326, 343, 355 I quoted on the voyage of the Yellowstone, 341 sick in Pierre's Hole, 210 Crooks and Day arrive at Astoria, 196 robbed by the Indians, 195 Crooks and McLellan, post of, 950 relations with Lisa, 131, 161, 186 sketch of their enterprise, 159 et seq. Crooks and Stuart, see "Stuart and Crooks" Cross Timbers, 803 Crow Indians, 855 first post in their country, 119 smallpox among, 626 Cruzatte's post, 951 Culbertson, Alexander, biographical sketch, 388 Culebra mountains, 737 Customhouse regulations at Santa Fe, 527 to 529 Cutting, Agent F. L. & Co., 369 experience with Assiniboine chief, 372 D Dalles, The, 482, 790 Davy Crockett, Fort, 971 Day, John, becomes insane, 207 biographical sketch, 905 enters service Pac. F. Co., 183 see also "Crooks and Day" Deer, 827 Deer creek, Oregon Trail, 470 Defiance, Camp, 974 Defiance, Fort, 953 De la Verendrye, referred to, 766 "De Munn, Julius, see Chouteau and De Munn goes to Santa Fe, 497 Des Chutes river, 482, 788 Desert, Great American, 754 Cimarron, 531, 754 Desertion of engages, 62 De Smet, Father, cited, ix Oregon mission, 648 quoted on the Oregon Trail, 460, 461 quoted, miscellaneous, 58, 471, 839, 884 De Soto, discovery of Mississippi, 72 Devil's Gate, Wyo., 470 Diamond Springs, Santa Fe Trail, 537 Dickson's post, 952 Disoway, G. P., quoted, 644, 912 Distillery at Fort Union, 356 et seq. Dodge, Colonel, expeditions of, 631, 633 Dog, uses of, 833 Dolly, The, 203 Dorion, Pierre, biographical sketch, 906 enters service of W. P. Hunt, 184 experiences of his wife, 225 killed, 225 Dougherty, John, quoted, 7 Drainage, areas of river systems, 760 Drips, Andrew, appointed Indian agent, 368 IOI2 INDEX. biographical sketch, 392 cited, 8 enters mountain trade, 295, 366 quoted, 372 reports liquor smugglers from Santa Fe, 369 Drouillard, George, associated with Lisa, 114 death of, 143 kills Antoine Bissonette, 115 Ebbette, agent F. L. & Co., 369 Edible roots, 806 Edwards, Ninian, member of Commission of 1815, 559 Elk, 826 Elkhorn monument, 827 Elm Grove, Santa Fe Trail, 464 Engages, 58 Engineer Cantonment, 573, 951 Ermatinger, H. B. Co. trader, relations with Capt. Bonneville, 403 relations with Wyeth, 445 Exploration, geographical, iii Express, application of term, 41 Factory system of trade with the Indians, 12 to 15 Fair held by Indians on South Platte r., 877 Falkland Islands, affair of Tonquin at, 173 Fall and spring hunts, 42 Falls Indians, 853 Farnham, Russel, biographical sketch, 315 carries^Am. F. Co. trade into Mo. r., 315 — field of work, 927 in service Am. F. Co., 312 journey from Astoria to New York, 224 outfit seized by Col. Chambers, 313 winters among the Flatheads. 205 Farnham, T. J., cited, x observations on Wyeth's enterprise, 454 quoted, 377, 472 Fauna of the west, 809 et seq. Ferris, W.«A., biographical sketch, 395 cited, x, 276, 468 quoted, 401, 747, 749, 889, 973 visits geysers of the Yellowstone, 366 wounded, 669 "Fiery Narrows," 211, 470 Fink, Mike, noticed, 261 sketch of his career, 707 et seq. Fires of the prairies, 756 Firs, varieties of, 801 Fish, Mrs. M. J., cited, 436 Fishes, relation to the fur trade, 835 Fisk, President, and Flathead mis- sionj 642 Fitzpatrick, Thomas, biographical sketch, 259 goes to Santa Fe, 294 in Aricara campaign, 590 lost, 297 member R. M. F. Co., 292 quoted, 20 repudiates contract with Wyeth, 68 robbed by the Crows, 20, 68, 301, 35i, 361 secures Ogden's fur, 293 takes part in Aricara campaign, 590. Fitzpatrick and Bridger pursued by Vanderburgh and Drips, 295 et seq., 667 et seq. wanderings of in 1830, 293 Fitzpatrick, Sublette and Bridger, 304, 450 Flathead Indians, 889, 891, 918 deputation of to St. Louis, 641, 891, 912 et seq. Flathead lake, 787 Flora of the plains and mountains, 799 et seq. Floyd, Fort, 328, 958 Floyd, Sergeant Charles, monument to, 81 Fontenelle creek, 780 Fontenelle, Lucien, biographical sketch, 391 enters mountain trade, 295 Fontenelle, Lucien, on Bonneville's work, 405, 425 quoted, 305, 365, 967 with Bonneville on Green r., 400 Forests of the mountains, 801 Fort, see "Trading Post" INDEX. IOI3 Fort aux Cedres, 954 Fort de Prairie, 156 Forty Years a Fur Trader, 394 Fowler, Jacob, see "Glenn and Fowler" builds house on upper Arkansas, 969 cited, x journal of, 503 quoted, 504, 629 Fox, Livingston and Co. post, 956 367 et seq. sell out to Am. F. Co., 372 Fox, Tonquin mate, lost on Columbia bar, 174 Fraeb, Henry, biographical sketch, 260 leaves R. M. F. Co., 304 meets Fitzpatrick on North Platte, 183 , 295 member R. M. F. Co., 292 Fraeb's post, 260, 781, 971 France, colonial policy of, 71 -Franchere, Gabriel, biographical sketch, 906 ■—> cited, x tr—criticism of Astoria, 244 leaves Fort George, 224 quoted, 233, 234, 236 ^iews of on Astorian enterprise, """ 234 Franklin, Mo., birthplace of Santa Fe trade, xii, 516 Free hunters, trappers, or freemen, ii, 3, 55 business accounts of, 941 et seq. Fremont, Gen. J. G, cited, 459, 464, 779 explorations of, 639 incident at Independence Rock, 472 wrecked in Platte Canon, 471 Fremont Peak, 733 French and Indian War, 76, 85 French Fort, 948 French Fur Company, 345 French fur trade, 85 Front Range, 736 Fruits, 806 Fur-bearing animals, 826 Furs, methods of procuring, 3 packs of, 40 Fur companies on Missouri river in 1819, 150 Fur trade, American, authorities for history of, viii et seq. British influence in, 20 character of the business, 2 competition in, 18 decline of, 364 early importance of, 1 first business in a new country, 1 influence of upon the Indians, iv loss of life in, 8 magnitude of, 7 miscellaneous notes by Thomas Forsyth, 926 number of persons engaged in, 7 of Northwest coast, 94 period of defined, i profits and losses in, 6-8 relation of to the Indians, 9 relation of to river systems, 761 relation of to Western history, iii rise of in America, 83 royal grants of, 85 slow development of in United States, 94 state of in mountains, 1834, 3°3 unjust distribution of profits, 306 Gallatin, Albert, map of Western country, 307, 430 > Gallatin Fork of the Missouri, 744 Gallatin valley, 744 Game, prevalence of, 834 Gant and Blackwell, traders, 296, 409, 878, 969 Garces, Francisco, journals of, ix Gardiner's Hole, 746 Gardner, Johnson, accounts of, 941 et seq. avenges murder of Hugh Glass, 705 Gates of the mountains, 763 George, Fort, on the Columbia, christened by Captain Black, 223 George, Fort, on the Missouri, 370, 954 George, Fort, on the Platte, 968 George, Old Fort, 956 Gervais, John Baptiste, leaves R. M. F. Co., 304 member R. M. F. Co., 292 Gila river, 783 ioi4 INDEX. Gilbert Peak, 738 Glass Bluffs, 705 Glass, Hugh, adventures of, 268, 698 et seq., 823 at Fort Floyd, 328 death of, 705 in Ashley's fight at Aricara villages, 270, 699 Glenn and Fowler, 502 Glenn's post, 970 Godin, Antoine, slays Blackfoot chief, 659 killed, 663 Gold, discovery of in Colorado, 486 Goose creek, 480 Gordon, William, see "Jones and Immel" Government factories, abolition of, 15 Government publications, x Government relations with the Indians, 9 et seq. Grand Canon of the Colorado, 782 Grand Encampment creek, Colo., 877 Grand Portage on Lake Superior, 89 Grand river, 781 Grand Teton, 731, 736 Grande Ronde, 481, 749 Grande Ronde river, 785 Grasses, 805 Grasshoppers, 839 Gratiot, Charles, quoted, 16, 147, 165, 181, 229, 555 Gray, M. L., assistance acknowledged, xiii, 410, 662 Greasewood, 804 Great American desert, 754 Great Basin, The, 792 Great Bend of the Yellowstone, 745 Great Britain and the fur trade, 86 Great Falls of the Missouri, 763 Great Salt Lake, 793 historical data concerning, 258, 307,. 794 Green river, 476, 779 Ashley's attempt to navigate, 274 first known use of name, 507, 779 rendezvous on (1833), 300 valley of, 748 Gregg, Josiah, cited, viii, 504 enters Santa Fe trade, 509 follows new route, 535 notice of, 544 quoted, 67, 70, 537, 539, 548, 869 Grey Eyes, Aricara chief, killed, . 593 I I Grizzly bear, description of, 822 noted encounters with, 823 Groseilliers, founder of H. B. Co., 86 Grosventres of the Missouri, 858 Grosventres of the Prairies, 851 Grosventre river, 783 Gunnison, Captain, death of, 782 Gunnison river, 782 H Hall, Fort, 451, 479, 785, 974 sold, 455 Halsey, Jacob, biographical sketch of, 393 carries smallpox to Fort Union, 623 Hamilton, J. A., sketch of, 389 Ham's Fork, 476, 780 Handy's Post, 952 Harney Peak, 735 Harrison, Dr. B., 300 Harvey, Alexander, and Blackfoot massacre, 373, 694 exploits of, 692 e. seq. Harvey, Primeau & Co., 697 Hawaiian Islands annexed to U. S., 172 Hayden, F. V., observations upon the buffalo, 817 Head of navigation on Missouri, 764 Heart river, 767 Hempstead, Stephen, quoted, 132 Henry, Alexander, arrives at Astoria, 222 cited, ix journal of, 222 notes on affairs of upper Missouri, 146 Henry, Andrew, at Three Forks, Missouri, 144 biographical sketch, 251 builds Fort Henry, 144 crosses Continental Divide, 144 defeated by the Blackfeet (1823), 264 horses of stolen by the Assiniboines, 263 joins Ashley below Aricara villages, 269 INDEX. IOI5 loses a keelboat, 263 member Mo. F. Co., 138 operations after Aricara campaign, 270 retires from the fur trade, 272 takes part in Aricara campaign, 270, 589 Henry Fork, Idaho, 784 Henry Fork, Wyo., 780 Henry Fort, 144, 974 abandonment of, 145 reoccupied by Astorians, 191 Henry Hall, Tucker and Williams, 439 Henry lake, 784 Hidatsa Indians, 858 Hill, Walter H., assistance acknowledged, 643 Historical Societies, assistance from, xi Hivernans, or winterers, 58 Hoback river, 783 Hoback, Robinson and Rezner, detached at Fort Henry, 191 fate of, 225 hunting tour, 207 join overland Astorians, 186 "Holes" of the mountains, 743 Holy Cross mountain, 737 Honey bees, 840 Horse, The, importance of, 832 Horse creek, tributary of Green r., 780 Horse creek, Oregon Trail, 469 Horseshoe creek, Oregon Trail, 470 Hubbell, J. B., organizes Northwestern Fur Co., 367 Huddart, William, on Green r., 1824, 507 Hudson Bay Company, founding of, 87 liquor traffic of, 27 organization and methods of business, 92 posts of, 974 relations with the Indians, 17, 92 §#§§ g§ struggle with the Northwest Co., 9i traders around Great Salt Lake, 795 union with N. W. Co., 92 Hudson, Henry, discoveries of, 86 Humboldt, Baron von, error of in regard to Red river, 776 Humboldt lakes, 797 Humboldt river, 797 Hunt, W. P., alarmed at Rose, 686 among the Cheyennes, 189 arrangement with McDougal, 221 arrives at Astoria, 194, 220, 221, 223 assigned to maritime part of enterprise, 204 at Aricara villages, 188 at Caldron Linn, 191 at Sandwich Islands, 219 biographical sketch, 907 criticism of his work, 232 deceives Lisa4 186 detaches trapping parties, 191 joins Pac. F. Co., 169 leaves Astoria, 224 leaves Caldron Linn, 192 leaves Missouri river, 192 leaves Nadowa, 185 leaves St. Louis spring of 1811, 184 leaves Snake r. for the Columbia, 224 opposed by Lisa in St. Louis, 183 organizes overland expedition, 182 quarrel with Lisa, 187 race with Lisa, 185 returns to Astoria with Albatross, 218 returns to Astoria with Pedler, 223 spends winter of 1810-11 in St. Louis, 183 wanderings of over the Pacific, 218 et seq. Hunter, The American, 55, 229 Hunter and Trapper, 53 desertion among, 62 dress of, 60 improvidence of, 58 lack of interest in geology, 63 language of, 63 life of, 65 et seq. shelter of, 61 subsistence of, 62 wages of, 62 winter camp of, 61 I Iatan Indians, 876 Iatan, Oto chief, 874 ■ • W&. ioi6 INDEX. Iberville founds lower Louisiana colony, 74 Immel and Jones, see "Jones and Immel" Independence, Mo., 463, 517 Independence Rock, 471 Indians, American, British system — of dealing with, 936 — characteristics of, 841 et seq. -effects of liquor and disease upon, 24, 619 ethnic relations of, 848 impression of steamboat upon, 34i influence of fur trade upon, iv, . 936 life of, white man's fondness for, 846 linguistic families of, 847 of Columbia valley, 891 permanent village tribes, 844 predatory tribes, 841 Question, 10, 912, 936 trade with, 12, 17, 928 wars of, 846 Inman, Col., cited, 538, 656 Insurrection of 1837 in New Mexico, 513 International boundaries, 798 Iowa Indians, 874 Irving, Washington, accuracy of his chronology, 240 cited, v, viii critics answered, 240 et seq. motive of his works on the fur trade, 241 quoted, 770 relations with Mr. Astor, 242 relations with Captain Bonneville, 399, 429, 430, 431 Wyeth's Journals consulted by, 456 Isodoro, a Spaniard, killed by Alexander Harvey, 694 J Jackson, David, 261, 289, 292 Jackson, Fort, 961 Jackson Hole, 261, 289, 746 Jackson Lake, 746, 783 Jackson's Little Hole, 747 Jackson, President, reinstates Bonneville, 430 James, Dr. Edwin, ascends Pike's Peak, 576, 580, 583 edits report of Long's expedition, 584 quoted, 574 James river, 768 Jefferson, Thomas, and Louisiana Purchase, 80 John Day river, 482, 783, 788 John, Fort, 365, 390, 469, 967 John Gray river, 783 Johnson, James, contractor, 569 Joliet and Marquette, discover the Mississippi, 73 Jones, Ben, joins overland Astorians, 186 Jones and Immel, biographical sketch, 158 defeated and slain by Blackfeet, 153 expedition to Three Forks in 1823, 151 interview with the Blackfeet, 151 site of battle with Blackfeet, 152 Jordan river, 794 Journal of Fort Tecumseh and Fort Pierre, 975 et seq. Journal of steamboat voyage, 984 et seq. Journals of trading posts, 49 Junction of Santa Fe and Oregon Trails, 464, 536 K Kansas Indians, 872 Kansas Post described, 948 Kansas river, 771 ford of on Oregon Trail, 465 Keelboat, its use in the fur trade, 32 Keemle, see "Jones and Immel" Kelley, Hall J., and the Oregon Question, 434 et seq. on the Columbia, 453 relation of to name Oregon, 792 relation of with Wyeth, 438 Kelsey, agent F. L. & Co., 370 kills desperadoes on Simeneau Island, 371 Kennedy, Lieutenant, visits Sioux in 1815, 561 Kephart, Horace, assistance acknowledged, xi discovers Leonard's Narrative, 397 mm INDEX. 1017 Kimball, Lieutenant, commands Sioux escort, 120 Kiowa, Fort, 953 Kiowa Indians, 879 Kiowan family, 848 Kipp, James, 389 builds fort at Mandans, 324 establishes Fort Piegan, 334, 673, 961 Knight-errantry of the fur trade ii Koch, Peter, assistance acknowledged, viii replies to H. H. Bancroft, 246 La Barge, Joseph, father of Captain La Barge, 561 La Barge, Captain Joseph, 348 assistance acknowledged, xiii pilot on the Omega, 678, 985 La Barge creek, 780 La Bonte creek, Oregon Trail, 470 La Bonte, post, 968 Laclede, Pierre Liguest, 98 arrives at Fort de Chartres, 99 his plans for founding a post, 100 prediction concerning St. Louis, 101, 112 Ladoga, The, and the Walker Expedition, 417 Lafayette and Captain Bonneville, 398, 432 . E Laidlaw, William, biographical sketch, 387 enters Columbia Fur Company, 323 quoted, 346 La Lande, Baptiste, goes to Santa Fe, 491 Lamme, Mr., death of, 509 Lamont, Daniel, 390 enters Columbia Fur Company, 323 Lancaster, Fort, 968 Langford, N. P., ascends Grand Teton, 732 La Prele creek, Oregon Trail, 470 Laramie, origin of name, 409 Laramie, Fort, 469, 967 Laramie, Peak, 736 Laramie river, 469, 769 Lark, The, Astor's annual ship, 220 Larpenteur, Charles, biographical sketch, 394 cited, ix, 369 et seq., 620 quoted, 353, 386, 389 role of during smallpox scourge at Fort Union, 623 et seq. La Salle, enterprises of, 73 Lava plains, 754 Lawrence and Great Salt Lake, 794 § WSR Leavenworth, Colonel, and Aricara Campaign, 588 et seq. arrives before Aricara villages, 592 attacks Aricara villages, 592 et seq. biographical sketch, 606 conduct before Aricara villages, 593 et seq. death of, 631 founds Fort Leavenworth, 630 misunderstanding with Joshua Pilcher, 604 et seq. quoted, 599, 602 review of his conduct of Aricara campaign, 600 et seq. Leavenworth, Fort, 630, 949 Le Clerc, Francis, incident in Green River Valley, 210 Leclerc, Narcisse, affair of, 346 Lee, Jason and Daniel, 449, 642 Legal restraint, absence of, 68 Leonard, Zenas, adventures of, 409 et seq. cited, x Narrative of, 397 quoted, 59, 67, 407, 411 et seq. Letter from Three Forks of the Missouri in 1810, 142, 893 Lewis, Captain M. L., contracts with Mo. F. Co. for return of Mandan chief, 139 kills a Grosventre Indian, 853 Lewis and Clark, cited, ix expedition of, 80, 634 at Mandans, 766 quoted, 114, 889 return of, i Lewis, Fort, 963 Lewis, James, destroys the Tonquin, 179 Lewis, Reuben, member Mo. F. Co., 138 Life in the wilderness, ii, 65, 731 1018 INDEX. Liquor, confiscated at Fort Leavenworth, 357 fondness of Indians for, 23, 26, 358 for boatmen, 25 fraud in selling to Indians, 24 importance of in Indian trade, 23,, 355 prohibitory act of 1832, 355 smuggling into Indian country, 23, 678 et seq. traffic, 22 et seq. Lisa, Manuel, applies to Crooks for goods, 317 biographical sketch, 125 et seq. business relations, 130 connection with Pryor's expedition, 121 death of, 129, 150 early operations of, 138, 931 enemies of, 130 great ability of, 113 in War of 1812, 128, 899 Indian wife of, 133 interest in Yellowstone expedition of 1825, 129, 573 language of, 135 letter to General Clark, 135, 899 made Indian agent, 127 marriages of, 132 monument to in Bellefontaine cemetery, 136 name of, 135 opposes W. P. Hunt, 183 plans to enter Santa Fe trade, 126, 493 portrait of, 135 quarrels with W. P. Hunt, 187 quoted, 130, 556 race with W. P. Hunt, 185, 187 relation with Crooks and McLellan, 161 relations with the Indians, 116 religion of, 136 work of, 129 et seq. Lisa, Fort, at Aricaras, 956 at Bighorn river. 119, 964 at Council Bluffs, 128, 149, 951 at Mandans, 957 Lisa, Menard and Morrison, 114, 138 Little Blue river, Oregon Trail, 465 Little Colorado river, 783 Little Missouri river, 766 Little Sandy creek, Oregon Trail, 476 Little Soldier, Aricara chief, 597 et seq. Locke and Randolph, post, 968 • Log of Steamboat Omega, 984 et seq. Loisell's post, 954 Lone Tree, on Oregon Trail, 481 Long, Major S. H., cited, x at Council Bluffs, 573 criticism of his work, 582 et seq. establishes identity of Canadian river, 578, 583 expedition of 1819-20. 567, 575 itinerary of route, 579 et seq. quoted, 584 report of, 584 et seq. Long's Peak, 576, 584, 736 Lookout, Fort, 953 Lorretto in battle of Fort McKenzie, 674 story of, 671 Losses in the Fur Trade, 8 "Lost Trappers," story of, 651 Louisiana Gazette, xi Louisiana, historical sketch of, 71 et seq. named by La Salle. 74 transfer of to the United States, 104 Louisiana Purchase, 79 Lucien, Fort, 965 Lupton, Fort, 968 M McAllister, letter on Flathead mission, 923 McCoy, John, cited, 464 McDougal, Duncan, criticism of, 232 decides to abandon Astoria, 216 in control at Astoria, 175 member Pac. F. Co., 169 threatens Indians with smallpox, 202 McKay, Alexander, killed in Tonquin massacre, 179 member Pac. F. Co., 169 sails on the Tonquin from Astoria, 176 Mackenzie, Alexander, 89, 90 McKenzie, Donald, arrives at Astoria, 195 INDEX. IOI9 breaks up post on Snake r., 216 builds post on Snake r., 205 criticism of, 232 member Pac. F. Co.. 169 offended at Astor, 183 McKenzie, Fort, 336, 373, 388,962 battle of, 373, 673 et seq. McKenzie, Kenneth, biographical sketch, 384 et seq. concludes treaty with Blackfeet, 332 distillery project of, 356 et seq. emissaries in Crow country, 422 enters Col. F. Co., 323 leaves Indian country, 362 quoted on Berger's mission, 333 quoted on robbery of Fitzpatrick, 302 quoted on Sublette-Campbell opposition, 351 quoted, miscellaneous, 301, 302, 357, 851, 958, 959 McKenzie, Owen, 387 Mackinaw Company, 93, 309 purchased by Astor, 309 Mackinaw boats, 34 Mackinaw letter books, xiv, 311 McKnight, Baird and Chambers, imprisonment of, 496, 501 McKnight, John, builds a post on Arkansas, 501 McKnight, Robert, returns to Chihuahua, 501 McLellan, Robert, see "Crooks and McLellan" arrives at Astoria, 195 biographical notes, 159, 162 conduct in Pierre's Hole, 210 joins Pac. F. Co., 162, 183 threatens Lisa, 162, 186, 188 McLoughlin, John, and N. J. Wyeth, 453 and J. S. Smith, 286, 289 McNees Creek, 541 McNees and Munroe, murder of, 509, 548 McTavish, John George, at Astoria, 217 Maize or Indian corn, 807 Madison, James, relation of to Astor's enterprise, 167 Malgares, commander of Spanish expedition to Pawnees in 1806, 495 Malheur river, 481 Mallett brothers name Platte river, 769 visit Santa Fe, 489 Mandan chief, return of to his nation, 119, 139, 654 Mandan, Fort, 957 Mandan, Indians, 859 country of, 766, 859 smallpox among, 621 et seq., 860 Mangeur de lard, 58 Manifesto of partners at Astoria, July 1, 1813, 217 Manuel, Aunt, 132 Manuel, Fort, 119, 956, 964 Manuel Lisa, see "Lisa" Map accompanying present work in pocket Vol. Ill Marias river, situation at mouth of, 764 Marmaduke, Governor, goes to Santa Fe, 505, 508 Marquette and Joliet discover the Mississippi, 73 map by, 763 Martin, Camp, 949 Mathieu, with Bonneville's horses on Bear river, 400, 402 Mauvaises Terres, 753 Maxent Laclede and Co., 98 Maximilian, Prince of Wied, 638 ascends the Missouri, 357 at battle of Fort McKenzie, 373, .674 cited, viii quoted, 357, 602, 663, 675, 705, 953 May Dacre, Wyeth's ship, 448, 452 May, William P., robbed by Kel- sey's men, 371 Means, John, death of, 509, 549 Medals, Astor, 342 Meek, Joseph, adventures of cited, ix among the geysers, 290 return route from California, 419 Menard, Pierre, associated with Lisa in 1807, 114 letter of, written at Three Forks of Missouri, 1810, 142, 893 member Mo. F. Co., 138 Mercantile Library of St. Louis, xi Merchandise for Am. F. Co., 376 1020 INDEX. for the fur trade, 4 inventory of Gen. Ashley's, 4 Meriwether, D., arrested by Spaniards, 500 Mexican Revolution, 550 Mexican escort to Santa Fe Caravan, 512 Michilimackinac, head quarters Northern Department, 376 Middle Park, Colo., 749 Military escorts to Santa Fe Car- avans, 511, 512 Military occupation of trans-Mississippi territory, 628 et seq. Milk river, 764 Mill creek in old St. Louis, no Miller, Indian agent at Bellevue, 682 Miller, Joseph, adventures of, 207, 795, 907 becomes guide to Stuart's party, 208 enters Pac. F. Co., 183 withdraws from Pac. F. Co., 191 Miller river, same as Bear river, 208 Mineral wealth of the mountains, 63 Minnetarees, 858 Mirages, 757 Missionary work, 640 Mississippi, importance of navigation in early history, 78 length of, 763 name of, 7^3 Missoula, lake, 787 Missouri, Camp, 570, 951 Missouri Indians, sketch of, 875 attacked by Spaniards, 875, 947 Missouri Fur Company, articles of association, 138 causes of failure of first organization, 147 first expedition of, 140 "first organization dissolved, 146 members of, 138 operations of, 139 et seq. origin of, 137 reorganization of, 147 termination of, 157 under Joshua Pilcher, 150 et seq. Missouri Gazette, xi Missouri Intelligencer, xii, 510 "Missouri Legion," in the Aricara campaign, 591 Missouri river, 762 et seq. first steamboat to enter, 106 importance of in fur trade, 774 length of, 762 mouth of, 772 name of, 762 navigation, head of, 764 physical characteristics of, 772 et seq. source of, 762 system, 760, 762 et seq. Mitain, Omaha woman, romance of, 133 Mitchell, D. D., at battle of Fort McKenzie, 675 et seq. biographical sketch, 388 builds Fort McKenzie, 336, 673 loses a keelboat on upper Missouri, 336 Mitchell, Fort, 952 Mojave Indians, 888 Moki Indians, 888 Monroe, President, interest of in Yellowstone Expedition of 1819, 563 More and Foy killed by Blackfeet, 401, 443, 447, 662 Morrison, Wm., associated with Lisa in 1807, 114 attempts to open trade with Santa Fe, 491 member Mo. F. Co., 138 Mortimer, Fort, 370, 960 Mosquitoes, 838 Mountain life, attractions of, 731 Mountain sheep, 828 Mountain trade unprofitable to Am. F. Co., 365 Mountaineer, use of term, 53 Mulkey, Mrs. William, daughter of Andrew Drips, xiii, 392 Muscleshell river, 764 Mustang, 832 N Nadowa, winter camp of Astorians, 1810-n, 183 Napoleon Bonaparte and Louisiana, 78 Navajo Indians, 882 Navajo Blanket, 882 Navigation, head of, on Missouri, 764 II m INDEX. I02I Navy yard of Fort Pierre, 47, 956 New Fork, 780 New Park, 749 Nez Perce Indians, 888 relation to Flathead mission of 1832, 643, 924 cited, x Nicollet, J. N., cited x notice of, 638 Nidiver, George, kills two Indians at one shot, 415 quoted, 407 Nimrod, The, voyage of in 1844, 681 Niobrara river, 767 Nishnabotna, post, 949 Nixon, O. W., cited, 642 Northern Department Am. F. Co., 320, 928 North Park, Colo., 749 North Platte, Ford of, 470 Northwest Brigade arrives at Astoria, 217, 221 leaves Astoria, April 4th, 1814, 224. Northwest Fur Company, carries trade to the Columbia, 89, 201 conduct in War of 1812, 558 exonerated from blame in connection with Astoria, 238 historical sketch of, 88 et seq purchases Astoria, 221 relation with J. J. Astor, 168 rivalry with H. B. Co., 91 unites with H. B. Co., 92 Northwest Fur Company, name given to Leclerc's Company, 346 Northwestern Fur Company buys out Am. F. Co., 367 Nuttall, Thomas, accompanies Astorian party, 184 cited, x notice of, 635 with N. J, Wyeth, 449, 636 O'Fallon, Benjamin, commissioner to treat with Indians, 608 quoted, 154 see "Yellowstone Expedition" Ogallallas, 865 Ogden, Peter Skeen, in Salt Lake valley, 749 name given to Humboldt river, 797 relations with Ashley, 277 relations with Fitzpatrick, 293 Ogden Hole, 748 Ogden river, 793, 796 Okanagan post, 202, 974 Okanagan river, 788 Old Park, 749 Omaha Indians, 871 Omega, log book of, quoted, 984 et seq. voyage of, 678 One-Eyed Sioux, 560 Opposition, meaning of term in Mo. R. trade, 378 Oregon, origin of name, 792 Oregon Trail, the, character of as a public highway, 460 eastern terminus of, 97, 463 future occupation of route, 462 general description of, 460 et seq. historical sketch, 214, 457 et seq. impression upon the Indians, 461 itinerary of, 464 et seq. junction with Santa Fe Trail, 464, 536 Orleans, Fort, 75, 947 Osage, Fort, 628, 948 Osage Indians, 872 Osage river, 772 Oto Indians, 874 Overland Astorians, see 'Asto rians Overland journeys, 38 Owen, William, ascends Grand Teton, 732 Owls in prairie dog holes, 832 Owyhee river, 307, 785 Pacific Fur Company, origin and scope of, 168, et seq. Pacific Spring, Oregon Trail, 476 Packs of furs, how composed, 40 Paduca Indians, an ancient tribal name, 876 Paine, Thomas, and Captain Bonneville, 397, 432 Pai-Ute Indians, 886 Palmer, Joel, itinerary of Oregon Trail, 459, 464, 475 Pambrun, H. B., trader on Walla - «mmvm ■WMMMMMi 1022 INDEX. if Walla, 424, 443 Panimaha Indians, 868 Panther, American, 830 Parker, Samuel, cited, x mission to Oregon, 642 quoted, 475 Partisans, or leaders, 51 Pattie, James O., expedition of, 5°7 Patriotism on the prairies, 524 Pawnee Indians, 868 Pawnee Rock, Santa Fe Trail, 538 Payette river, 786 Pedler, The, chartered by Mr. Hunt, 220 voyage of from Astoria, 224 Pemmican, 811 Pend d' Oreille Indians, 892 Pend d' Oreille lake, 787 Phillebert's Company, 497, 654 Picotte, Honore, notice of, 388 quoted, 29 Piegan, Fort, 335, .961 attacked by Indians, 335 Piegan Indians, 851 valor of, 677 Pierre, Chouteau Jr. and Co., 366 Pierre, Fort, history of, 340, 955 locality of, 767 Pierre's Hole, 289, 657, 747, 784 battle of, 298, 442, 657 et seq. rendezvous in, 657 Pike's Peak, 736 first ascent of, 576, 580, 583 first measurement of altitude, 576, 580, 583 Pike, Zebulon Montgomery, cited, ix, x expeditions of, 81, 96, 494, 634 experience with La Lande, 491 taken to Santa Fe, 494 Pilcher, Joshua, biographical sketch, 158 conduct in the Aricara campaign, 589 et seq. member Mo. F. Co., 149, 158 misunderstandings with Col. Leavenworth, 604 quoted, 153, 154, 603, 606 succeeds Manuel Lisa, 150 tour of the Northwest, 156 Pines, 801 Plains, The, 751 et seq. Plains rivers, 774 Platte, Fort, 368, 967 Platte river, 768 et seq. fords of, 466, 470 locality at mouth of, 768 name of, 769 north fork of, 769 south fork, 770 Plus, meaning of term, 40 Poison Spider creek, 470 Political boundaries, 798 Ponca Indians, 871 Ponca post, 952 Pond, Pangman and Company, 89 Poplar, 801 Portage des Sioux, council at, in 1815, 559 Portneuf river, 479, 785 Portuguese ho'uses, 966 "Possibles," meaning of term, 62 Posts of Am.- F. Co. named in licenses, 965 Posts trading, see "Trading posts" Potts, companion of Colter, 719 Powder river, Wyo., 766 valley a favorite wintering ground, 294, 766 Powder river, Oregon, 481, 785 Powell, J. W., and the "Ashley" inscription, 274 Prairies, The, 751 Prairie dog, 831 Prairie fires, 756 Pratte, Cabanne & Co., 367 Pratte. Chouteau & Co., purchase Western Dept., 364 Pratte and Vasquez post, 951 Price river, 781 Prices in the mountains, 4, 5, 929 Prickly Pear, 805 Prince Paul of Wurtemburg, 636 Profits and losses in Am. F. Co. business, 377 Profits in the fur trade, 6 Profits in Santa Fe trade, 7 Provo river, 794, 796 Provost, Etienne, discovers South Pass, 261, 271 falls out with Gen. Ashley, 280 in Salt Lake valley, 275 massacre of party by Indians, 276 meets Gen. Ashley near Green river, 275 sent by McKenzie to bring in free trappers, 328 Pryor, Nathaniel, defeated by Aricaras, 121 et seq. INDEX. IO23 escorts Mandan chief up Missouri, 120 relations with Manuel Lisa, 121, 131 Psoralea esculenta, 806 Pueblos, 881 Purcell, James, discovers gold in Colorado, 486 story of his Santa Fe expedition, 492 Pyramid Lake, 797 Quaking Asp, 801 %' R Rabbit Ear creek, Santa Fe Trail, 542 Raccoon, The, arrives at Astoria, 222 leaves Fort George, 223 Raft river, Oregon Trail, 480 Rainier, Mount, 742 Rampart range, 736 Rattlesnakes, 837 Raynolds, Captain, and the Oregon Trail, 461 quoted, 966 Recovery, Fort, 952 Col. Leavenworth at, 590 Red river of Natchitoches, 776 navigation of, 535 Reed, John, arrives at Astoria, 195 biographical sketch, 908 massacre of party. 225 robbed of dispatches, 203 visits caches at Caldron Linn. 205 Rendezvous of the mountains, 39 beginning of, 272, 273 of 1826, 279 of 1830, 292 of 1832, 296 of 1833^300 of 1834, 304 I II liBM Renville, Joseph, founder Col. r. Co., 323 Republic, The, of St. Louis, assistance acknowledged, xi Rezner, Jacob, see "Hoback, Robinson and Rezner" Richards, Gov. W. A., assistance acknowledged, 197 Riley, Major, escorts Santa Fe traders, 509, 511 Rio Colorado, Santa Fe Trail, 542 Rio Grande, 535, 776 Rio San Juan, 783 Rio Virgin, 782 Rivers, their relation to the fur trade, 759 et seq. River systems of the west, 760 et seq. relation to fur trade, 761 relation to territorial expansion, 761 River of the West, 791 Riviere a Jacques post, 952 Roads of the prairies, 755 Robidoux posts, 949, 971 Robidoux on Green river, in 1824, 507 Robinson, Edward, see "Hoback, Robinson and Rezner" Rock creek, 480 Rock with impression of human feet, 613 Rocky mountains, application of the name, 728 physical aspects of, 728 et seq. Rocky Mountain Fur Company, contract with Wyeth, 301-3, 446, 448, 450 decline of its business, 299, 303 losses of life and property, 306 offer to divide territory with Am. F. Co., 299 origin of, 262 place of in western history, 305 et seq. promotes geographical knowledge, 306 termination of, 304 true application of name, 292 Rootdigger Indians, 886 massacre of by Walker party, 411, 418 Rose, Edward, Aricara campaign, .590, 597 biographical sketch, 684 et seq. grave of, 688 Hunt's alarm over, 189, 686 incident at Mandans 1825, 614, 687 Leavenworth's opinion of, 686. 687 method of hunting buffalo, 612 noticed, 655 on Yellowstone Expedition, 1825, 610, 687 1024 INDEX. fff warns Ashley against Aricaras, 266 Ross, Alexander, biographical sketch, 908 cited, x, 221, 884 opinion of, about J. S. Smith, 271 quoted, 233 Round Grove, Oregon Trail, 464, 536 Round Mound, Santa Fe Trail, 542 Routes from St. Louis to seaboard, 2 Routes of overland Astorians, 196, 214, 241 Russian fur trade, 94 Russian government, relations of J. J. Astor with, 170 iRuxton, Frederick, cited, x Sac Indians in War of 1812, 559 Sage brush, 803 et seq. Sage, Rufus, cited, x, 466, 749 quoted, 62, 467, 472. 538 Saint Ange de Belle Rive, 102 St. Lawrence valley, the highway of the fur trade, 84 St. Louis, arrival of first steamboat, 106 character of population at time of cession, 108 comparison of old and new towns, 109 et seq. defenses, ancient, 103, no early growth of, 105 early inhabitants, 106 emporium of western fur trade. 2, 97 headquarters Western Department, Am. F. Co., 320 historical sketch, 97 et seq. magnitude of fur trade before cession, 109 magnitude of fur trade at present time, 109 offspring of the fur trade, 109 St. Louis Republic, assistance acknowledged, xi St. Louis traders, early, 109 opposition to Mr. Astor, 229, 312, 316 et seq. St. Vrain, Ceran, quoted, 520 sketch of, 543 takes expedition to. Santa Fe, 509 St. Vrain, Fort, 543, 968 Salishan family, 848 Salmon, description of, 835 Salmon Falls, 480 Salmon river, 786 Salmon River mountains, 740 Salt river, 783 Sand hills of Nebraska, 752 Sanford, J. F. A., in Washington, 30 quoted, 368 Sangre de Cristo mountains, 737 San Luis valley, 750 San Miguel, Santa Fe Trail, 542 Sans Arcs Indians, 865 Santa Clara Spring, 542 Santa Fe, arrival ot caravans at, 528 caravans, 523 et seq. caravans, military escorts of. m 532 commercial isolation of, 487, 516 description of, 487 et seq. expeditions, condensed summary of, 508 historical sketch of, 484 Santa Fe Road Commission, of 1825, 510, 533 Santa Fe trade, custom house difficulties, 527, 528 divisions among small proprietors, 520 early expeditions, 489 et seq. influence of in war with Mexico, i", 513 magnitude of, 518, 521, 935 Mexican proprietorship of, 508 profits in, 520 prohibited, 522, 529 statistics of, 519 transportation of specie, 526 Santa Fe Trail, description of, 530 et seq. incidents of, 545 itinerary of, 535 et seq. junction with Oregon Trail, 536 location of, 534 mountain branch, 532, 543 wagons first used on, 501, 504 Saones, a Sioux tribe, 865 Sarpy, Fort, 390, 965 Sarpy, Gregoire, 390 Sarpy, John B., 390 Sarpy, Peter A., 391 INDEX. IO25 Sarpy, Thomas L., 390 Science, cause of promoted by traders, iv Scott's Bluffs, story of, 467 Seever, William, assistance acknowledged, xiii Sehon, E. W., letter on Flathead mission, 645, 922 Selkirk colony, 91 Seton, Alfred, and Captain Bonneville, 399 home journey from Astoria, 224 Sevier Lake and river, 796 Shahaptian family, 848 Shasta, Mt., 742 Sheepeater Indians, 888 Shoshonean family, 848 Shoshone Falls, 785 Shoshone Indians, 884 Shoshone Lake, 783 Sibley, G. G, and Ezekiel Williams, 653 member Santa Fe Road Commission, 510, 533 quoted, 570, 628 Sierra Blanca, 737 Sierra Nevada, 741 Sinclair killed at Battle of Pierre's Hole, 298 Siouan family, 847 Sioux Indians, 863 et seq. in War of 1812, 557 participants in Aricara campaign, 590 et seq. relations with the traders, 865 Sire, Joseph A., 393 master of Omega, 1843, 985 quoted, 680, 683 steamboat master, 678 Smallpox scourge of 1837, 620 et seq. Smith, Jedediah S., adventures of, 282 et seq. American Fork, Cal., named from, 286 among the Mojave Indians in 1826, 283 at Fort Vancouver, 286 attacked by Mojave Indians in 1827, 285 biographical sketch, 252 et seq. California expedition, 283 et seq. carries express to Henry, 253, 269, 588 commended by Gen. Atkinson. 272 complimented by Alexander Ross, 271 death of, 253, 292, 552 generously treated by H. B. Co., 286, 289 'geographical knowledge promoted by, 306, 307 in Aricara campaign, 590 in H. B. territory 1824, 271 meets Sublette and Jackson 1829, 287, 289 partner of Gen. Ashley, 272 party massacred by Umpquah Indians, 286 remarkable character of. 282 returns to Great Salt Lake 1827, 284 route across the Sierras, 284 trouble with Spanish authorities, 283, 285 winters in California 1826-8, 284, 286 Smith, Jackson and Sublette buy out Ashley, 279 enter Santa Fe trade, 292 quoted, 66 sell out to R. M. F. Co., 292 Smith Fork of Bear river, 478 Smuggling liquor into Indian country, 23, 368, 678 et seq. Snake Indians, 884 massacre Provost's party, 276 Snake river, 783 canon, 786 cataracts of, 785 first crossing of. 480 lower crossing of, 480 navigability of, 785 physical characteristics of, 784 Soda Springs on Bear river, 479 Sources of Continental river systems, 760 Sources of the History of Oregon, 456 South Park, Colo., 749 South Pass, description of, 727 discovery of, 271, 475 referred to, 292 South Platte river, ford of, 467 road along, 467 Southwest Fur Company, 310 Sowles, Captain, timid counsels of, 219 Spalding, Rev. H. H., ascends 1026 INDEX. Grand Teton, 732 Spanish authority in Mexico overthrown, 500, 516 Spanish colonial history, 72 et seq. Spanish expedition of 1720, 75, 947 to Pawnees in 1806, 495 to Council Bluffs in 1824, 507 Spanish fur trade, 86 Spanish governors of upper Louisiana, 102 Spanish jealousy of the U. S., 78 Spanish Peaks, 737 Spanish settlements in America, antiquity of, 483 Spanish Trail, 781 Specie, transportation of by pack animals, 526 Spring hunts, 42 Stansbury, Howard, on mileage of Oregon Trail, 459, 464 Statistics of the fur trade, 7 Steamboat, Missouri river, annual voyage of, 36 description of, 35 first at St. Louis, 106 first on Missouri river, 106 impression upon the Indians, 341 introduced into Am. F. Co. service, 338 journal of voyage to Fort Union, 984 et seq. Steamboat navigation, early growth on western rivers, 106 Stephens, Alfred K., free trapper, 409 killed, 298, 410, 442, 662 Stevenson, James, ascends Grand Teton, 732 Stinkingwater river, 766 Stoddard, Amos, his connection with transfer of Louisiana, 104 quoted, 105, 400, 969 Stone, Bostwick & Co. enter Am. F. Co., 316, 321 Storms of the prairies, 755 Storrs, Augustus, goes to Santa Fe, 508 Streams of the mountains, familiarly known to trapper, 760, 762 Stuart and Crooks with overland Astorians east arrive in St. Louis, 213 at Caldron Linn, 208 first winter quarters, 212 miss South Pass, 211 robbed by the Crows, 209 second winter quarters, 213 turn off to find Hunt's trail, 209 visited by the Arapahoes, 212 Stuart, David, established post at Okanagan, 202 member Pac. F. Co., 169 winters on Thompson river, 205 Stuart, Robert, agent Am. F. Co., 312 bearer of dispatches to New York. 206 biographical sketch, 908 horse of, stolen by Snake Indians, 207 in charge of Northern Department, 320 incident with Captain Thorn at Falkland Islands, 173 member Pac. F. Co., 169 Stuart. Capt. W. D.. 300 Sublette, Andrew, death from a grizzly bear, 824 Sublette and Campbell at mouth of Yellowstone, 350 divide field with Am. F. Co., 354 firm of, 255, 304 ill success on Missouri, 353 et seq. opposition to Am. F. Co., 350 posts of, 953, 956, 957 Sublette's cut-off, 476, 478 Sublette, Milton G., biographical sketch, 254 contract with Wyeth, 301, 302. 303, 446, 448, 45o member R. M. F. Co.. 292 turns back from expedition of 1834, 449 Sublette, William L., at mouth of Yellowstone 1833, 350, 447 biographical sketch, 254 in Aricara campaign, 590 liquor license of, 25 pockets profits of R. M. F. Co., 303 trip from St. Louis to rendezvous 1830, 291 winter journey to St. Louis, 290 with Ashley in Aricara fight, 266 wounded at battle of Pierre's Hole, 298, 661 Sultana, The, Wyeth's ship, 439 Surgery on the plains, 547 Sweetwater river, 471, 474, 769 ■ mmez INDEX. I027 Swift, Lieutenant, measures altitude of Pike's Peak, 580, 583 Switzler, Irvin, cited, xii, 250 Tahoe lake, 797 Talbot, kills Mike Fink, 711 drowned, 711 Taos, 533, 750 valley of, 750 Tecumseh, Fort, 324, 955 changed to Fort Pierre, 340 journal of, 975 Territorial expansion, relation of to river systems, 761 Teton Indians, 865 Teton Mountains, 731 Teton Pass, 732 Teton Post, 956 Teton river, Idaho, 784 Teton river, tributary of Missouri, 767 Thanatopsis, and name Oregon, 792 Thing, Captain, goes to Fort Hall, 452 Thompson, David, arrives at Astoria, 201 cited, ix in service N. W. Co., 89 Thompson Fork, Oregon Trail, 478 Thorn, Captain Jonathan, 171 attempts to cross bar of Columbia, 174 comments on, 181 killed, 179 trouble with Tonquin passengers, 172, 173 Three Buttes, 741 Three Forks of the Missouri, 745 letter from in 1810, 142, 893 post, 141, 963 Tilton & Co., name of Col. F. Co., 323 Tilton's post, 957 Tobacco, plants used for, 808 Tongue river, 766 Tonquin, The, 171 arrives at Nootka, 177 authorities for account of loss of, 176 destroyed, 180, 909 enters Columbia, 175 first published account of disaster, 176, 909 massacre of crew, 179, 909 sails from Astoria, 176 voyage of, 171 et seq. Townsend, J. K., cited, x noticed, 636 observations upon Wyeth's enterprise, 453 Trade with the Indians, 9 et seq. Trading posts, description of, 44 et seq. geographical location of, 49 journals of, 49 life at, 48 list of, 947 et seq. Trader's engagement, 945 Transportation methods, 32 et seq. Trapper, the, see "Hunter and Trapper" Trapping fraternity, the, 51 et seq. Trapping, method of, 54 Treaty between Blackfeet and Assiniboines, 333 Treaty of Paris, Feb. 10, 1763, 77^ 88 Treaty of San Ildefonso, March 21, 1801, 78 Trudeau's house, 952 Trudeau, Zenon, founder of a St. Louis Fur Co., 137 sixth Spanish governor of Upper Louisiana, 103 Tulloch, Samuel, builds Fort Cass, 337 Two Kettles Indians, 865 U Uintah, Fort, 971 Uintah mountains, 738 Uintah river, 781 Umatilla river, 481, 788 Uncompahgre river, 782 Union, Fort, 327, 858, 958 et seq. Union Fur Company, 369 et seq. sells out to Am. F. Co., 372 Union Pass, 727, 733 United States, responsibility of, for Astorian failure, 237 Upper Missouri Outfit, origin of name, 326 Utah Indians, 887 Utah lake, 794 1028 INDEX. Valleys of the mountains, 743 et seq. Van Buren, Fort, 965 Vancouver, Fort, 482 Vanderburgh, Fort, 153, 957 Vanderburgh, W. H., battle with Blackfeet, 328 biographical sketch, 392 death of, 299, 665 et seq. enters mountain trade, 295, 328 in Aricara campaign, 591, 598, 605 Vanderburgh and Drips, Am. F. Co. agents, 295 at rendezvous in Pierre's Hole, 299, 666 enter mountain trade, 295 misled by Fitzpatrick and Bridger, 299, 667 Vasquez and Sublette Post, 968 Vegetables, garden, 807 Vermillion creek, Oregon Trail, 465. Vermillion post, 952 Vermillion river, 768 Victor, Mrs. Frances Fuller, cited, ix, 290, 792 quoted, 791 Virgin river, 782 Volcano, Fort, 065 Voyageur, The, 55 W Wages in the fur trade, 62 Wagonhound creek, Oregon Trail, 470 Wagons on Oregon Trail, 431, 647 on Santa Fe Trail, 431, 501, 504 Wakarusa creek, Oregon Trail, 465 Waldo, David E., in partnership with David Jackson, 292 Waldo, William, cited, xiii quoted on J. S. Smith, 253 Walker California Expedition, 411 et seq. arrives at Monterey. 417 crosses Sierra Nevadas, 416 discovers Mariposa trees, 417 discovers Yosemite 417 massacres Rootdigger Indians, 411, 418 returns to Bear river, 419 et seq. route across Sierras, 420 Walker, I. R., chief assistant to Capt. Bonneville, 399, 406, 409 epitaph of, 417 Walker lake, 797 Walker, Wm., Wyandotte interpreter, account of Flathead mission, 643, 914 Walla Walla Indians, 892 Walla Walla river, 788 War of 1812, 555 et seq. influence upon Astorian affairs, 204, 231 War with Mexico, iii, 513 Warren, Gen. G. K., and Bonneville's maps, 430 Wasatch mountains, 739 Waterhouse, Professor, on dress of hunter, 61 Weber river, 793, 796 Weiser river, 786 Western Department, Am. F. Co., date of establishment, 320, 928 Western Engineer, description of, 570 et seq. Westport, Mo., 464, 517 Wheeler, O. D., assistance acknowledged, 395 White Earth river. Kipps' post at, 957. White river, 767 Whitman, Marcus, 642 his work in Oregon, 647 extracts arrow from Bridger's back, 672 Whitney, Mt"., 742 Wilderness life, ii, 65, 731 Wilkinson, B., member Mo. F Co., 138 Wilkinson, Gen. J., warns Pike against Lisa, 126 Willamette river, 789 William, Fort, on Arkansas, 543, 97c at mouth of Willamette, 452, 974 at mouth of Yellowstone, 351, 960 on Lake Superior, 90 on Laramie, 305, 449, 967 Williams, Ezekiel, adventures of, 651 et seq. goes to Santa Fe, 509 Willows, 802- Wind river, 766 Wind River mountains, 733 INDEX. IO29 Wislizenus, Dr. F. A., 639 cited, x, 758, 969 quoted, 464, 531, 536, 967 Wolf, 829 Wurtemburg, Paul, Prince of, 636 Wyeth, J. B., cited, x, 439 quoted, 440, 441, 472 Wyeth, N. J., agrees with Bonneville for joint hunt, 404, 445 at Battle of Pierre's Hole, 442, 659 at Fort Union, 359, 447 at Green river rendezvous (1833), 446 at Pierre's Hole rendezvous, 297, 441 et seq. biographical sketch, 435 character of enterprise, 436 et seq. cited, x, 397 contract with R. M. F. Co., 301, 446, 448, 450 criticism of enterprise, 455 cuts loose from Hall J. Kelley, 438 , division of party in Pierre s Hole, 442 enters mountain trade, 299 failure of enterprise, 453 first expedition of, 439 et seq. Fort Hall built by, 451 Fort Hall sold by, 455 journals of, 456 leaves Pierre's Hole with M. G. Sublette, 443 operations on the Columbia, 452 quoted 6, 59, 277, 300, 303, 451, 521, 960, 967 reaches the Columbia, 444 reports McKenzie for distillery at Fort Union, 360, 447 returns home, 455 second expedition, 448 et seq. starts east in spring of 1833, 444 strength of first expedition, 444 Wyeth's creek, Oregon Trail, 465 X XY Fur Company, 90 Y Yakima river, 788 Yampah river, 781 Yankton Indians, 864 Yanktonais Indians, 864 Yellowstone, The, voyage of, 339, 340, 979 Yellowstone Expedition, 1819-20, 562 et seq., 629 estimate of results, 582 et seq. expectations in regard to, 563 et seq. failure of, 574 mismanagement of, 569 et seq. purpose of, 563 transportation of troops, 568 et seq. Yellowstone Expedition of 1825, 608 et seq., 629 Yellowstone National Park, visited by Colter (1807), 716, 717 visited by Ferris (1834), 366 visited by Meek (1829), 290 Yellowstone river, description of, 765 et seq. Yellowstone river, importance of situation at mouth, 764 Yosemite, discovered by Walker Expedition, 411 Young, Brigham, referred to, iii THE END