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Departure From Snake River
Departure From Snake River—Mountains to the North.—Wayworn
Travellers—An Increase of the Dorion Family.—A Camp of Shoshonies.—A
New-Year Festival Among the Snakes.—A Wintry March Through the
Mountains.—A Sunny Prospect, and Milder Climate.—Indian
Horse-Tracks.—Grassy Valleys.—A Camp of Sciatogas.—Joy of the
Travellers.-Dangers of Abundance.— Habits of the Sciatogas.—Fate of
Carriere.—The Umatilla.— Arrival at the Banks of the
Columbia.—Tidings of the Scattered Members of the
Expedition.—Scenery on the Columbia.—Tidings of Astoria-Arrival at
the Falls.
ON the 24th of December, all things being arranged,
Mr. Hunt turned his back upon the disastrous banks of Snake River,
and struck his course westward for the mountains. His party, being
augmented by the late followers of Mr. Crooks, amounted now to
thirty-two white men, three Indians, and the squaw and two children
of Pierre Dorion. Five jaded, half-starved horses were laden with
their luggage, and, in case of need, were to furnish them with
provisions. They travelled painfully about fourteen miles a day,
over plains and among hills, rendered dreary by occasional falls of
snow and rain. Their only sustenance was a scanty meal of horse
flesh once in four-and-twenty hours.
On the third day the poor Canadian, Carriere, one of the famished
party of Mr. Crooks, gave up in despair, and laying down upon the
ground declared he could go no further. Efforts were made to cheer
him up, but it was found that the poor fellow was absolutely
exhausted and could not keep on his legs. He was mounted, therefore,
upon one of the horses, though the forlorn animal was in little
better plight than himself.
On the 28th, they came upon a small stream winding to the north,
through a fine level valley; the mountains receding on each side.
Here their Indian friends pointed out a chain of woody mountains to
the left, running north and south, and covered with snow, over which
they would have to pass. They kept along the valley for twenty-one
miles on the 29th, suffering much from a continued fall of snow and
rain, and being twice obliged to ford the icy stream. Early in the
following morning the squaw of Pierre Dorion, who had hitherto kept
on without murmuring or flinching, was suddenly taken in labor, and
enriched her husband with another child. As the fortitude and good
conduct of the poor woman had gained for her the goodwill of the
party, her situation caused concern and perplexity. Pierre, however,
treated the matter as an occurrence that could soon be arranged and
need cause no delay. He remained by his wife in the camp, with his
other children and his horse, and promised soon to rejoin the main
body, who proceeded on their march.
Finding that the little river entered the mountains, they abandoned
it, and turned off for a few miles among hills. Here another
Canadian, named La Bonte, gave out, and had to be helped on
horseback. As the horse was too weak to bear both him and his pack,
Mr. Hunt took the latter upon his own shoulders. Thus, with
difficulties augmenting at every step, they urged their toilsome way
among the hills, half famished and faint at heart, when they came to
where a fair valley spread out before them, of great extent and
several leagues in width, with a beautiful stream meandering through
it. A genial climate seemed to prevail here, for though the snow lay
upon all the mountains within sight, there was none to be seen in
the valley. The travellers gazed with delight upon this serene,
sunny landscape, but their joy was complete on beholding six lodges
of Shoshonies pitched upon the borders of the stream, with a number
of horses and dogs about them. They all pressed forward with
eagerness and soon reached the camp. Here their first attention was
to obtain provisions. A rifle, an old musket, a tomahawk, a tin
kettle, and a small quantity of ammunition soon procured them four
horses, three dogs, and some roots. Part of the live stock was
immediately killed, cooked with all expedition, and as promptly
devoured. A hearty meal restored every one to good spirits. In the
course of the following morning the Dorion family made its
reappearance. Pierre came trudging in the advance, followed by his
valued, though skeleton steed, on which was mounted his squaw with
her new-born infant in her arms, and her boy of two years old
wrapped in a blanket and slung at her side. The mother looked as
unconcerned as if nothing had happened to her; so easy is nature in
her operations in the wilderness, when free from the enfeebling
refinements of luxury, and the tamperings and appliances of art.
The next morning ushered in the new year (1812). Mr. Hunt was about
to resume his march, when his men requested permission to celebrate
the day. This was particularly urged by the Canadian voyageurs, with
whom New-Year's day is a favorite festival; and who never willingly
give up a holiday, under any circumstances. There was no resisting
such an application; so the day was passed in repose and revelry;
the poor Canadians contrived to sing and dance in defiance of all
their hardships; and there was a sumptuous New-Year's banquet of
dog's meat and horse flesh.
After two days of welcome rest, the travellers addressed themselves
once more to the painful journey. The Indians of the lodges pointed
out a distant gap through which they must pass in traversing the
ridge of mountains. They assured them that they would be but little
incommoded by snow, and in three days would arrive among the
Sciatogas. Mr. Hunt, however, had been so frequently deceived by
Indian accounts of routes and distances, that he gave but little
faith to this information.
The travellers continued their course due west for five days,
crossing the valley and entering the mountains. Here the travelling
became excessively toilsome, across rough stony ridges, and amidst
fallen trees. They were often knee deep in snow, and sometimes in
the hollows between the ridges sank up to their waists. The weather
was extremely cold; the sky covered with clouds so that for days
they had not a glimpse of the sun. In traversing the highest ridge
they had a wide but chilling prospect over a wilderness of snowy
mountains.
On the 6th of January, however, they had crossed the dividing summit
of the chain, and were evidently under the influence of a milder
climate. The snow began to decrease; the sun once more emerged from
the thick canopy of clouds, and shone cheeringly upon them, and they
caught a sight of what appeared to be a plain, stretching out in the
west. They hailed it as the poor Israelites hailed the first glimpse
of the promised land, for they flattered themselves that this might
be the great plain of the Columbia, and that their painful
pilgrimage might be drawing to a close.
It was now five days since they had left the lodges of the
Shoshonies, during which they had come about sixty miles, and their
guide assured them that in the course of the next day they would see
the Sciatogas.
On the following morning, therefore, they pushed forward with
eagerness, and soon fell upon a stream which led them through a deep
narrow defile, between stupendous ridges. Here among the rocks and
precipices they saw gangs of that mountain-loving animal, the
black-tailed deer, and came to where great tracks of horses were to
be seen in all directions, made by the Indian hunters.
The snow had entirely disappeared, and the hopes of soon coming upon
some Indian encampment induced Mr. Hunt to press on. Many of the
men, however, were so enfeebled that they could not keep up with the
main body, but lagged at intervals behind; and some of them did not
arrive at the night encampment. In the course of this day's march
the recently-born child of Pierre Dorion died.
The march was resumed early the next morning, without waiting for
the stragglers. The stream which they had followed throughout the
preceding day was now swollen by the influx of another river; the
declivities of the hills were green and the valleys were clothed
with grass. At length the jovial cry was given of "an Indian camp!"
It was yet in the distance, In the bosom of the green valley, but
they could perceive that it consisted of numerous lodges, and that
hundreds of horses were grazing the grassy meadows around it. The
prospect of abundance of horse flesh diffused universal joy, for by
this time the whole stock of travelling provisions was reduced to
the skeleton steed of Pierre Dorion, and another wretched animal,
equally emaciated, that had been repeatedly reprieved during the
journey.
A forced march soon brought the weary and hungry travellers to the
camp. It proved to be a strong party of Sciatogas and Tusche-pas.
There were thirty-four lodges, comfortably constructed of mats; the
Indians, too, were better clothed than any of the wandering bands
they had hitherto met on this side of the Rocky Mountains. Indeed,
they were as well clad as the generality of the wild hunter tribes.
Each had a good buffalo or deer skin robe; and a deer skin hunting
shirt and leggins. Upwards of two thousand horses were ranging the
pastures around their encampment; but what delighted Mr. Hunt was,
on entering the lodges, to behold brass kettles, axes, copper
tea-kettles, and various other articles of civilized manufacture,
which showed that these Indians had an indirect communication with
the people of the sea-coast who traded with the whites. He made
eager inquiries of the Sciatogas, and gathered from them that the
great river (the Columbia) was but two days' march distant, and that
several white people had recently descended it; who he hoped might
prove to be M'Lellan, M'Kenzie, and their companions.
It was with the utmost joy and the most profound gratitude to
heaven, that Mr. Hunt found himself and his band of weary and
famishing wanderers thus safely extricated from the most perilous
part of their long journey, and within the prospect of a termination
of their tolls. All the stragglers who had lagged behind arrived,
one after another, excepting the poor Canadian voyageur, Carriere.
He had been seen late in the preceding afternoon, riding behind a
Snake Indian, near some lodges of that nation, a few miles distant
from the last night's encampment; and it was expected that he would
soon make his appearance. The first object of Mr. Hunt was to obtain
provisions for his men. A little venison, of an indifferent quality,
and some roots were all that could be procured that evening; but the
next day he succeeded in purchasing a mare and colt, which were
immediately killed, and the cravings of the half-starved people in
some degree appeased.
For several days they remained in the neighborhood of these Indians,
reposing after all their hardships, and feasting upon horse flesh
and roots, obtained in subsequent traffic. Many of the people ate to
such excess as to render themselves sick, others were lame from
their past journey; but all gradually recruited in the repose and
abundance of the valley. Horses were obtained here much more
readily, and at a cheaper rate, than among the Snakes. A blanket, a
knife, or a half pound of blue beads would purchase a steed, and at
this rate many of the men bought horses for their individual use.
This tribe of Indians, who are represented as a proud-spirited race,
and uncommonly cleanly, never eat horses or dogs, nor would they
permit the raw flesh of either to be brought into their huts. They
had a small quantity of venison in each lodge, but set so high a
price upon it that the white men, in their impoverished state could
not afford to purchase it. They hunted the deer on horseback,
"ringing," or surrounding them, and running them down in a circle.
They were admirable horsemen, and their weapons were bows and
arrows, which they managed with great dexterity. They were
altogether primitive in their habits, and seemed to cling to the
usages of savage life, even when possessed of the aids of
civilization. They had axes among them, yet they generally made use
of a stone mallet wrought into the shape of a bottle, and wedges of
elk horn, in splitting their wood. Though they might have two or
three brass kettles hanging, in their lodges, yet they would
frequently use vessels made of willow, for carrying water, and would
even boll their meat in them, by means of hot stones. Their women
wore caps of willow neatly worked and figured.
As Carriere, the Canadian straggler, did not make his appearance for
two or three days after the encampment in the valley two men were
sent out on horseback in search of him. They returned, however,
without success. The lodges of the Snake Indians near which he had
been seen were removed, and the could find no trace of him. Several
days more elapsed, yet nothing was seen or heard of him, or the
Snake horseman, behind whom he had been last observed. It was
feared, therefore, that he had either perished through hunger and
fatigue; had been murdered by the Indians; or, being left to
himself, had mistaken some hunting tracks for the trail of the
party, and been led astray and lost.
The river on the banks of which they were encamped, emptied into the
Columbia, was called by the natives the Eu-o-tal-la, or Umatilla,
and abounded with beaver. In the course of their sojourn in the
valley which it watered, they twice shifted their camp, proceeding
about thirty miles down its course, which was to the west. A heavy
fall of rain caused the river to overflow its banks, dislodged them
from their encampment, and drowned three of their horses which were
tethered in the low ground.
Further conversation with the Indians satisfied them that they were
in the neighborhood of the Columbia. The number of the white men who
they said had passed down the river, agreed with that of M'Lellan,
M'Kenzie, and their companions, and increased the hope of Mr. Hunt
that they might have passed through the wilderness with safety.
These Indians had a vague story that white men were coming to trade
among them; and they often spoke of two great men named Ke-Koosh and
Jacquean, who gave them tobacco, and smoked with them. Jacquean,
they said, had a house somewhere upon the great river. Some of the
Canadians supposed they were speaking of one Jacquean Finlay, a
clerk of the Northwest Company, and inferred that the house must be
some trading post on one of the tributary streams of the Columbia.
The Indians were overjoyed when they found this band of white men
intended to return and trade with them. They promised to use all
diligence in collecting quantities of beaver skins, and no doubt
proceeded to make deadly war upon that sagacious, but ill-fated
animal, who, in general, lived in peaceful insignificance among his
Indian neighbors, before the intrusion of the white trader. On the
20th of January, Mr. Hunt took leave of these friendly Indians, and
of the river on which they encamped, and continued westward.
At length, on the following day, the wayworn travellers lifted up
their eyes and beheld before them the long-sought waters of the
Columbia. The sight was hailed with as much transport as if they had
already reached the end of their pilgrimage; nor can we wonder at
their joy. Two hundred and forty miles had they marched, through
wintry wastes and rugged mountains, since leaving Snake River; and
six months of perilous wayfaring had they experienced since their
departure from the Arickara village on the Missouri. Their whole
route by land and water from that point had been, according to their
computation, seventeen hundred and fifty-one miles, in the course of
which they had endured all kinds of hardships. In fact, the
necessity of avoiding the dangerous country of the Blackfeet had
obliged them to make a bend to the south and traverse a great
additional extent of unknown wilderness.
The place where they struck the Columbia was some distance below the
junction of its two great branches, Lewis and Clarke rivers, and not
far from the influx of the Wallah-Wallah. It was a beautiful stream,
three-quarters of a mile wide, totally free from trees; bordered in
some places with steep rocks, in others with pebbled shores.
On the banks of the Columbia they found a miserable horde of
Indians, called Akai-chies, with no clothing but a scanty mantle of
the skins of animals, and sometimes a pair of sleeves of wolf's
skin. Their lodges were shaped like a tent, and very light and warm,
being covered with mats and rushes; besides which they had
excavations in the ground, lined with mats, and occupied by the
women, who were even more slightly clad than the men. These people
subsisted chiefly by fishing; having canoes of a rude construction,
being merely the trunks of pine trees split and hollowed out by
fire. Their lodges were well stored with dried salmon, and they had
great quantities of fresh salmon trout of an excellent flavor, taken
at the mouth of the Umatilla; of which the travellers obtained a
most acceptable supply.
Finding that the road was on the north side of the river, Mr. Hunt
crossed, and continued five or six days travelling rather slowly
down along its banks, being much delayed by the straying of the
horses, and the attempts made by the Indians to steal them. They
frequently passed lodges, where they obtained fish and dogs. At one
place the natives had just returned from hunting, and had brought
back a large quantity of elk and deer meat, but asked so high a
price for it as to be beyond the funds of the travellers, so they
had to content themselves with dog's flesh. They had by this time,
however, come to consider it very choice food, superior to horse
flesh, and the minutes of the expedition speak rather exultingly now
and then, of their having made a famous "repast," where this viand
happened to be unusually plenty.
They again learnt tidings of some of the scattered members of the
expedition, supposed to be M'Kenzie, M'Lellan, and their men, who
had preceded them down the river, and had overturned one of their
canoes, by which they lost many articles. All these floating pieces
of intelligence of their fellow adventurers, who had separated from
them in the heart of the wilderness, they received with eager
interest.
The weather continued to be temperate, marking the superior softness
of the climate on this side of the mountains. For a great part of
the time, the days were delightfully mild and clear, like the serene
days of October on the Atlantic borders. The country in general, in
the neighborhood of the river, was a continual plain, low near the
water, but rising gradually; destitute of trees, and almost without
shrubs or plants of any kind, excepting a few willow bushes. After
travelling about sixty miles, they came to where the country became
very hilly and the river made its way between rocky banks and down
numerous rapids. The Indians in this vicinity were better clad and
altogether in more prosperous condition than those above, and, as
Mr. Hunt thought, showed their consciousness of ease by something
like sauciness of manner. Thus prosperity is apt to produce
arrogance in savage as well as in civilized life. In both
conditions, man is an animal that will not bear pampering.
From these people Mr. Hunt for the first time received vague but
deeply interesting intelligence of that part of the enterprise which
had proceeded by sea to the mouth of the Columbia. The Indians spoke
of a number of white men who had built a large house at the mouth of
the great river, and surrounded it with palisades. None of them had
been down to Astoria themselves; but rumors spread widely and
rapidly from mouth to mouth among the Indian tribes, and are carried
to the heart of the interior by hunting parties and migratory
hordes.
The establishment of a trading emporium at such a point, also, was
calculated to cause a sensation to the most remote parts of the vast
wilderness beyond the mountains. It in a manner struck the pulse of
the great vital river, and vibrated up all its tributary streams.
It is surprising to notice how well this remote tribe of savages had
learnt, through intermediate gossips, the private feelings of the
colonists at Astoria; it shows that Indians are not the incurious
and indifferent observers that they have been represented. They told
Mr. Hunt that the white people at the large house had been looking
anxiously for many of their friends, whom they had expected to
descend the great river; and had been in much affliction, fearing
that they were lost. Now, however, the arrival of him and his party
would wipe away all their tears, and they would dance and sing for
joy.
On the 31st of January, Mr. Hunt arrived at the falls of the
Columbia, and encamped at the village of the Wish-ram, situated at
the head of that dangerous pass of the river called "the Long
Narrows".
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Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The
Rocky Mountains
Astoria |