Canadian
Indian Research
Indian Research
Tribes of Canada
Canadian
Tribal Resources
Hydah Indians of Canada
Hudson Bay Territory
Canadian
Research
Alberta
British
Columbia
Manitoba
New Brunswick
Newfoundland
Northern
Territories
Nova Scotia
Nanavut
Ontario
Prince Edward
Island
Quebec
Saskatchewan
Yukon
Canadian Indian
Tribes
Free Genealogy Forms
Family Tree
Chart
Research
Calendar
Research Extract
Free Census
Forms
Correspondence Record
Family Group Chart
Source
Summary Other Websites
British Isles Genealogy
Australian Genealogy
FREE Web Site Hosting at
Canadian Genealogy
|
Active Operations at Astoria
Active Operations at Astoria—Various Expeditions
Fitted Out.—Robert Stuart and a Party Destined for New York—
Singular Conduct of John Day.—His Fate.—Piratical Pass and Hazardous
Portage.-Rattlesnakes.—Their Abhorrence of Tobacco.—Arrival Among
the Wallah-Wallahs.—Purchase of Horses—Departure of Stuart and His
Band for the Mountains.
THE arrival of the Beaver with a reinforcement and
supplies, gave new life and vigor to affairs at Astoria. These were
means for extending the operations of the establishment, and
founding interior trading posts. Two parties were immediately set on
foot to proceed severally under the command of Messrs. M'Kenzie and
Clarke, and establish posts above the forks of the Columbia, at
points where most rivalry and opposition were apprehended from the
Northwest Company.
A third party, headed by Mr. David Stuart, was to repair with
supplies to the post of that gentleman on the Oakinagan. In addition
to these expeditions, a fourth was necessary to convey despatches to
Mr. Astor, at New York, in place of those unfortunately lost by John
Reed. The safe conveyance of these despatches was highly important,
as by them Mr. Astor would receive an account of the state of the
factory, and regulate his reinforcements and supplies accordingly.
The mission was one of peril and hardship and required a man of
nerve and vigor. It was confided to Robert Stuart, who, though he
had never been across the mountains, and a very young man, had given
proofs of his competency to the task. Four trusty and well-tried
men, who had come overland in Mr. Hunt's expedition, were given as
his guides and hunters. These were Ben Jones and John Day, the
Kentuckians, and Andri Vallar and Francis Le Clerc, Canadians. Mr.
M'Lellan again expressed his determination to take this opportunity
of returning to the Atlantic States. In this he was joined by Mr.
Crooks,—who, notwithstanding all that he had suffered in the dismal
journey of the preceding winter, was ready to retrace his steps and
brave every danger and hardship, rather than remain at Astoria. This
little handful of adventurous men we propose to accompany in its
long and perilous peregrinations.
The several parties we have mentioned all set off in company on the
29th of June, under a salute of cannon from the fort. They were to
keep together for mutual protection through the piratical passes of
the river, and to separate, on their different destinations, at the
forks of the Columbia. Their number, collectively, was nearly sixty,
consisting of partners and clerks, Canadian voyageurs, Sandwich
Islanders, and American hunters; and they embarked in two barges and
ten canoes.
They had scarcely got under way, when John Day, the Kentucky hunter,
became restless and uneasy, and extremely wayward in his deportment.
This caused surprise, for in general he was remarkable for his
cheerful, manly deportment. It was supposed that the recollection of
past sufferings might harass his mind in undertaking to retrace the
scenes where they had been experienced. As the expedition advanced,
however, his agitation increased. He began to talk wildly and
incoherently, and to show manifest symptoms of derangement.
Mr. Crooks now informed his companions that in his desolate
wanderings through the Snake River country during the preceding
winter, in which he had been accompanied by John Day, the poor
fellow's wits had been partially unsettled by the sufferings and
horrors through which they had passed, and he doubted whether they
had ever been restored to perfect sanity. It was still hoped that
this agitation of spirits might pass away as they proceeded; but, on
the contrary, it grew more and more violent. His comrades endeavored
to divert his mind and to draw him into rational conversation, but
he only became the more exasperated, uttering wild and incoherent
ravings. The sight of any of the natives put him in an absolute
fury, and he would heap on them the most opprobrious epithets;
recollecting, no doubt, what he had suffered from Indian robbers.
On the evening of the 2d of July he became absolutely frantic, and
attempted to destroy himself. Being disarmed, he sank into quietude,
and professed the greatest remorse for the crime he had meditated.
He then pretended to sleep, and having thus lulled suspicion,
suddenly sprang up, just before daylight, seized a pair of loaded
pistols, and endeavored to blow out his brains. In his hurry he
fired too high, and the balls passed over his head. He was instantly
secured and placed under a guard in one of the boats. How to dispose
of him was now the question, as it was impossible to keep him with
the expedition. Fortunately Mr. Stuart met with some Indians
accustomed to trade with Astoria. These undertook to conduct John
Day back to the factory, and deliver him there in safety. It was
with the utmost concern that his comrades saw the poor fellow
depart; for, independent of his invaluable services as a first-rate
hunter, his frank and loyal qualities had made him a universal
favorite. It may be as well to add that the Indians executed their
task faithfully, and landed John Day among his friends at Astoria;
but his constitution was completely broken by the hardships he had
undergone, and he died within a year.
On the evening of the 6th of July the party arrived at the piratical
pass of the river, and encamped at the foot of the first rapid. The
next day, before the commencement of the portage, the greatest
precautions were taken to guard against lurking treachery, or open
attack. The weapons of every man were put in order, and his
cartridge-box replenished. Each one wore a kind of surcoat made of
the skin of the elk, reaching from his neck to his knees, and
answering the purpose of a shirt of mail, for it was arrow proof,
and could even resist a musket ball at the distance of ninety yards.
Thus armed and equipped, they posted their forces in military style.
Five of the officers took their stations at each end of the portage,
which was between three and four miles in length; a number of men
mounted guard at short distances along the heights immediately
overlooking the river, while the residue, thus protected from
surprise, employed themselves below in dragging up the barges and
canoes, and carrying up the goods along the narrow margin of the
rapids. With these precautions they all passed unmolested. The only
accident that happened was the upsetting of one of the canoes, by
which some of the goods sunk, and others floated down the stream.
The alertness and rapacity of the hordes which infest these rapids,
were immediately apparent. They pounced upon the floating
merchandise with the keenness of regular wreckers. A bale of goods
which landed upon one of the islands was immediately ripped open,
one half of its contents divided among the captors, and the other
half secreted in a lonely hut in a deep ravine. Mr. Robert Stuart,
however, set out in a canoe with five men and an interpreter,
ferreted out the wreckers in their retreat, and succeeded in
wrestling from them their booty.
Similar precautions to those already mentioned, and to a still
greater extent, were observed in passing the Long Narrows, and the
falls, where they would be exposed to the depredations of the
chivalry of Wish-ram, and its freebooting neighborhood. In fact,
they had scarcely set their first watch one night, when an alarm of
"Indians!" was given. "To arms" was the cry, and every man was at
his post in an instant. The alarm was explained; a war party of
Shoshonies had surprised a canoe of the natives just below the
encampment, had murdered four men and two women, and it was
apprehended they would attack the camp. The boats and canoes were
immediately hauled up, a breastwork was made of them and the
packages, forming three sides of a square, with the river in the
rear, and thus the party remained fortified throughout the night.
The dawn, however, dispelled the alarm; the portage was conducted in
peace; the vagabond warriors of the vicinity hovered about them
while at work, but were kept at a wary distance. They regarded the
loads of merchandise with wistful eyes, but seeing the "long-beards"
so formidable in number, and so well prepared for action, they made
no attempt either by open force or sly pilfering to collect their
usual toll, but maintained a peaceful demeanor, and were afterwards
rewarded for their good conduct with presents of tobacco.
Fifteen days were consumed in ascending from the foot of the first
rapid to the head of the falls, a distance of about eighty miles,
but full of all kinds of obstructions. Having happily accomplished
these difficult portages, the party, on the 19th of July, arrived at
a smoother part of the river, and pursued their way up the stream
with greater speed and facility.
They were now in the neighborhood where Mr. Crooks and John Day had
been so perfidiously robbed and stripped a few months previously,
when confiding in the proffered hospitality of a ruffian band. On
landing at night, therefore, a vigilant guard was maintained about
the camp. On the following morning a number of Indians made their
appearance, and came prowling round the party while at breakfast. To
his great delight, Mr. Crooks recognized among them two of the
miscreants by whom he had been robbed. They were instantly seized,
bound hand and foot, and thrown into one of the canoes. Here they
lay in doleful fright, expecting summary execution. Mr. Crooks,
however, was not of a revengeful disposition, and agreed to release
the culprits as soon as the pillaged property should be restored.
Several savages immediately started off in different directions, and
before night the rifles of Crooks and Day were produced; several of
the smaller articles pilfered from them, however, could not be
recovered.
The bands of the culprits were then removed, and they lost no time
in taking their departure, still under the influence of abject
terror, and scarcely crediting their senses that they had escaped
the merited punishment of their offenses.
The country on each side of the river now began to assume a
different character. The hills, and cliffs, and forests disappeared;
vast sandy plains, scantily clothed here and there with short tufts
of grass, parched by the summer sun, stretched far away to the north
and south. The river was occasionally obstructed with rocks and
rapids, but often there were smooth, placid intervals, where the
current was gentle, and the boatmen were enabled to lighten their
labors with the assistance of the sail.
The natives in this part of the river resided entirely on the
northern side. They were hunters, as well as fishermen, and had
horses in plenty. Some of these were purchased by the party, as
provisions, and killed on the spot, though they occasionally found a
difficulty in procuring fuel wherewith to cook them. One of the
greatest dangers that beset the travellers in this part of their
expedition, was the vast number of rattlesnakes which infested the
rocks about the rapids and portages, and on which the men were in
danger of treading. They were often found, too, in quantities about
the encampments. In one place, a nest of them lay coiled together,
basking in the sun. Several guns loaded with shot were discharged at
them, and thirty-seven killed and wounded. To prevent any unwelcome
visits from them in the night, tobacco was occasionally strewed
around the tents, a weed for which they have a very proper
abhorrence.
On the 28th of July the travellers arrived at the mouth of the
Wallah-Wallah, a bright, clear stream, about six feet deep, and
fifty-five yards wide, which flows rapidly over a bed of sand and
gravel, and throws itself into the Columbia, a few miles below Lewis
River. Here the combined parties that had thus far voyaged together
were to separate, each for its particular destination.
On the banks of the Wallah-Wallah lived the hospitable tribe of the
same name who had succored Mr. Crooks and John Day in the time of
their extremity. No sooner did they hear of the arrival of the
party, than they hastened to greet them. They built a great bonfire
on the bank of the river, before the camp, and men and women danced
round it to the cadence of their songs, in which they sang the
praises of the white men, and welcomed them to their country.
On the following day a traffic was commenced, to procure horses for
such of the party as intended to proceed by land. The Wallah-Wallahs
are an equestrian tribe. The equipments of their horses were rude
and inconvenient. High saddles, roughly made of deer skin, stuffed
with hair, which chafe the horse's back and leave it raw; wooden
stirrups, with a thong of raw hide wrapped round them; and for
bridles they have cords of twisted horse-hair, which they tie round
the under jaw. They are, like most Indians, bold but hard riders,
and when on horseback gallop about the most dangerous places,
without fear for themselves, or pity for their steeds.
From these people Mr. Stuart purchased twenty horses for his party;
some for the saddle, and others to transport the baggage. He was
fortunate in procuring a noble animal for his own use, which was
praised by the Indians for its great speed and bottom, and a high
price set upon it. No people understand better the value of a horse
than these equestrian tribes; and nowhere is speed a greater
requisite, as they frequently engage in the chase of the antelope,
one of the fleetest of animals. Even after the Indian who sold this
boasted horse to Mr. Stuart had concluded his bargain, he lingered
about the animal, seeming loth to part from him, and to be sorry for
what he had done.
A day or two were employed by Mr. Stuart in arranging packages and
pack-saddles, and making other preparations for his long and arduous
journey. His party, by the loss of John Day, was now reduced to six,
a small number for such an expedition. They were young men, however,
full of courage, health, and good spirits, and stimulated rather
than appalled by danger.
On the morning of the 31st of July, all preparations being
concluded, Mr. Stuart and his little band mounted their steeds and
took a farewell of their fellow-travellers, who gave them three
hearty cheers as they set out on their dangerous journey. The course
they took was to the southeast, towards the fated region of the
Snake River. At an immense distance rose a chain of craggy
mountains, which they would have to traverse; they were the same
among which the travellers had experienced such sufferings from cold
during the preceding winter, and from their azure tints, when seen
at a distance, had received the name of the Blue Mountains.
This site includes some historical materials that
may imply negative stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of
a particular period or place. These items are presented as part of
the historical record and should not be interpreted to mean that the
WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes implied.
Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The
Rocky Mountains
Astoria |