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Determination of the Party to Proceed on Foot
Determination of the Party to Proceed on
Foot.—Dreary Deserts Between Snake River and the
Columbia.—Distribution of Effects Preparatory to a March—Division of
the Party.— Rugged March Along the River.—Wild and Broken Scenery.—
Shoshonies.—Alarm of a Snake Encampment—Intercourse with the
Snakes.—Horse Dealing.—Value of a Tin Kettle.— Sufferings From
Thirst—A Horse Reclaimed.—Fortitude of an Indian Woman.—Scarcity of
Food.—Dog's Flesh a Dainty.—News of Mr. Crooks and His
Party.—Painful Travelling Among the Mountains.—Snow Storms.—A Dreary
Mountain Prospect.—A Bivouac During a Wintry Night.—Return to the
River Bank.
THE resolution of Mr. Hunt and his companions was
now taken to set out immediately on foot. As to the other
detachments that had in a manner gone forth to seek their fortunes,
there was little chance of their return; they would probably make
their own way through the wilderness. At any rate, to linger in the
vague hope of relief from them would be to run the risk of perishing
with hunger. Besides, the winter was rapidly advancing, and they had
a long journey to make through an unknown country, where all kinds
of perils might await them. They were yet, in fact, a thousand miles
from Astoria, but the distance was unknown to them at the time:
everything before and around them was vague and conjectural, and
wore an aspect calculated to inspire despondency.
In abandoning the river, they would have to launch forth upon vast
trackless plains destitute of all means of subsistence, where they
might perish of hunger and thirst. A dreary desert of sand and
gravel extends from Snake River almost to the Columbia. Here and
there is a thin and scanty herbage, insufficient for the pasturage
of horse or buffalo. Indeed, these treeless wastes between the Rocky
Mountains and the Pacific are even more desolate and barren than the
naked, upper prairies on the Atlantic side; they present vast desert
tracts that must ever defy cultivation, and interpose dreary and
thirsty wilds between the habitations of man, in traversing which
the wanderer will often be in danger of perishing.
Seeing the hopeless character of these wastes, Mr. Hunt and his
companions determined to keep along the course of the river, where
they would always have water at hand, and would be able occasionally
to procure fish and beaver, and might perchance meet with Indians,
from whom they could obtain provisions.
They now made their final preparations for the march. All their
remaining stock of provisions consisted of forty pounds of Indian
corn, twenty pounds of grease, about five pounds of portable soup,
and a sufficient quantity of dried meat to allow each man a pittance
of five pounds and a quarter, to be reserved for emergencies. This
being properly distributed, they deposited all their goods and
superfluous articles in the caches, taking nothing with them but
what was indispensable to the journey. With all their management,
each man had to carry twenty pounds' weight besides his own articles
and equipments.
That they might have the better chance of procuring subsistence in
the scanty region they were to traverse, they divided their party
into two bands. Mr. Hunt, with eighteen men, besides Pierre Dorion
and his family, was to proceed down the north side of the river,
while Mr. Crooks, with eighteen men, kept along the south side.
On the morning of the 9th of October, the two parties separated and
set forth on their several courses. Mr. Hunt and his companions
followed along the right bank of the river, which made its way far
below them, brawling at the foot of perpendicular precipices of
solid rock, two and three hundred feet high. For twenty-eight miles
that they travelled this day, they found it impossible to get down
to the margin of the stream. At the end of this distance they
encamped for the night at a place which admitted a scrambling
descent. It was with the greatest difficulty, however, that they
succeeded in getting up a kettle of water from the river for the use
of the camp. As some rain had fallen in the afternoon, they passed
the night under the shelter of the rocks.
The next day they continued thirty-two miles to the northwest,
keeping along the river, which still ran in its deep-cut channel.
Here and there a shady beach or a narrow strip of soil, fringed with
dwarf willows, would extend for a little distance along the foot of
the cliffs, and sometimes a reach of still water would intervene
like a smooth mirror between the foaming rapids.
As through the preceding day, they journeyed on without finding,
except in one instance, any place where they could get down to the
river's edge, and they were fain to allay the thirst caused by hard
travelling, with the water collected in the hollow of the rocks.
In the course of their march on the following morning, they fell
into a beaten horse path leading along the river, which showed that
they were in the neighborhood of some Indian village or encampment.
They had not proceeded far along it, when they met with two
Shoshonies, or Snakes. They approached with some appearance of
uneasiness, and accosting Mr. Hunt, held up a knife, which by signs
they let him know they had received from some of the white men of
the advance parties. It was with some difficulties that Mr. Hunt
prevailed upon one of the savages to conduct him to the lodges of
his people. Striking into a trail or path which led up from the
river, he guided them for some distance in the prairie, until they
came in sight of a number of lodges made of straw, and shaped like
hay-stacks. Their approach, as on former occasions, caused the
wildest affright among the inhabitants. The women hid such of their
children as were too large to be carried, and too small to take care
of themselves, under straw, and, clasping their infants to their
breasts, fled across the prairie. The men awaited the approach of
the strangers, but evidently in great alarm.
Mr. Hunt entered the lodges, and, as he was looking about, observed
where the children were concealed; their black eyes glistening like
those of snakes, from beneath the straw. He lifted up the covering
to look at them; the poor little beings were horribly frightened,
and their fathers stood trembling, as if a beast of prey were about
to pounce upon their brood.
The friendly manner of Mr. Hunt soon dispelled these apprehensions;
he succeeded in purchasing some excellent dried salmon, and a dog,
an animal much esteemed as food by the natives; and when he returned
to the river one of the Indians accompanied him. He now came to
where the lodges were frequent along the banks, and, after a day's
journey of twenty-six miles to the northwest, encamped in a populous
neighborhood. Forty or fifty of the natives soon visited the camp,
conducting themselves in a very amicable manner. They were well
clad, and all had buffalo robes, which they procured from some of
the hunting tribes in exchange for salmon. Their habitations were
very comfortable; each had its pile of wormwood at the door for
fuel, and within was abundance of salmon, some fresh, but the
greater part cured. When the white men visited the lodges, however,
the women and children hid themselves through fear. Among the
supplies obtained here were two dogs, on which our travellers
breakfasted, and found them to be very excellent, well-flavored, and
hearty food.
In the course of the three following days they made about
sixty-three miles, generally in a northwest direction. They met with
many of the natives in their straw-built cabins, who received them
without alarm. About their dwellings were immense quantities of the
heads and skins of salmon, the best part of which had been cured,
and hidden in the ground. The women were badly clad; the children
worse; their garments were buffalo robes, or the skins of foxes,
hares, and badgers, and sometimes the skins of ducks, sewed
together, with the plumage on. Most of the skins must have been
procured by traffic with other tribes, or in distant hunting
excursions, for the naked prairies in the neighborhood afforded few
animals, excepting horses, which were abundant. There were signs of
buffaloes having been there, but a long time before.
On the 15th of November they made twenty-eight miles along the
river, which was entirely free from rapids. The shores were lined
with dead salmon, which tainted the whole atmosphere. The natives
whom they met spoke of Mr. Reed's party having passed through that
neighborhood. In the course of the day Mr. Hunt saw a few horses,
but the owners of them took care to hurry them out of the way. All
the provisions they were able to procure were two dogs and a salmon.
On the following day they were still worse off, having to subsist on
parched corn and the remains of their dried meat. The river this day
had resumed its turbulent character, forcing its way through a
narrow channel between steep rocks and down violent rapids. They
made twenty miles over a rugged road, gradually approaching a
mountain in the northwest, covered with snow, which had been in
sight for three days past.
On the 17th they met with several Indians, one of whom had a horse.
Mr. Hunt was extremely desirous of obtaining it as a pack-horse; for
the men, worn down by fatigue and hunger, found the loads of twenty
pounds' weight which they had to carry, daily growing heavier and
more galling. The Indians, however, along this river, were never
willing to part with their horses, having none to spare. The owner
of the steed in question seemed proof against all temptation;
article after article of great value in Indian eyes was offered and
refused. The charms of an old tin-kettle, however, were
irresistible, and a bargain was concluded.
A great part of the following morning was consumed in lightening the
packages of the men and arranging the load for the horse. At this
encampment there was no wood for fuel, even the wormwood on which
they had frequently depended having disappeared. For the two last
days they had made thirty miles to the northwest.
On the 19th of November, Mr. Hunt was lucky enough to purchase
another horse for his own use, giving in exchange a tomahawk, a
knife, a fire steel, and some beads and gartering. In an evil hour,
however, he took the advice of the Indians to abandon the river, and
follow a road or trail leading into the prairies. He soon had cause
to regret the change. The road led across a dreary waste, without
verdure; and where there was neither fountain, nor pool, nor running
stream. The men now began to experience the torments of thirst,
aggravated by their diet of dried fish. The thirst of the Canadian
voyageurs became so insupportable as to drive them to the most
revolting means of allaying it. For twenty-five miles did they toll
on across this dismal desert, and laid themselves down at night,
parched and disconsolate, beside their wormwood fires; looking
forward to still greater sufferings on the following day.
Fortunately it began to rain in the night, to their infinite relief;
the water soon collected in puddles and afforded them delicious
draughts.
Refreshed in this manner, they resumed their wayfaring as soon as
the first streaks of dawn gave light enough for them to see their
path. The rain continued all day, so that they no longer suffered
from thirst, but hunger took its place, for after travelling
thirty-three miles they had nothing to sup on but a little parched
corn.
The next day brought them to the banks of a beautiful little stream,
running to the west, and fringed with groves of cottonwood and
willow. On its borders was an Indian camp, with a great many horses
grazing around it. The inhabitants, too, appeared to be better clad
than usual. The scene was altogether a cheering one to the poor
half-famished wanderers. They hastened to their lodges, but on
arriving at them met with a check that at first dampened their
cheerfulness. An Indian immediately laid claim to the horse of Mr.
Hunt, saying that it had been stolen from him. There was no
disproving a fact supported by numerous bystanders, and which the
horse stealing habits of the Indians rendered but too probable; so
Mr. Hunt relinquished his steed to the claimant; not being able to
retain him by a second purchase.
At this place they encamped for the night, and made a sumptuous
repast upon fish and a couple of dogs, procured from their Indian
neighbors. The next day they kept along the river, but came to a
halt after ten miles' march, on account of the rain. Here they again
got a supply of fish and dogs from the natives; and two of the men
were fortunate enough each to get a horse in exchange for a buffalo
robe. One of these men was Pierre Dorion, the half-breed
interpreter, to whose suffering family the horse was a timely
acquisition. And here we cannot but notice the wonderful patience,
perseverance, and hardihood of the Indian women, as exemplified in
the conduct of the poor squaw of the interpreter. She was now far
advanced in her pregnancy, and had two children to take care of; one
four, and the other two years of age. The latter of course she had
frequently to carry on her back, in addition to the burden usually
imposed upon the squaw, yet she had borne all her hardships without
a murmur, and throughout this weary and painful journey had kept
pace with the best of the pedestrians. Indeed on various occasions
in the course of this enterprise, she displayed a force of character
that won the respect and applause of the white men.
Mr. Hunt endeavored to gather some information from these Indians
concerning the country and the course of the rivers. His
communications with them had to be by signs, and a few words which
he had learnt, and of course were extremely vague. All that he could
learn from them was that the great river, the Columbia, was still
far distant, but he could ascertain nothing as to the route he ought
to take to arrive at it. For the two following days they continued
westward upwards of forty miles along the little stream, until they
crossed it just before its junction with Snake River, which they
found still running to the north. Before them was a wintry-looking
mountain covered with snow on all sides.
In three days more they made about seventy miles; fording two small
rivers, the waters of which were very cold. Provisions were
extremely scarce; their chief sustenance was portable soup; a meagre
diet for weary pedestrians.
On the 27th of November the river led them into the mountains
through a rocky defile where there was scarcely room to pass. They
were frequently obliged to unload the horses to get them by the
narrow places; and sometimes to wade through the water in getting
round rocks and butting cliffs. All their food this day was a beaver
which they had caught the night before; by evening, the cravings of
hunger were so sharp, and the prospect of any supply among the
mountains so faint, that they had to kill one of the horses. "The
men," says Mr. Hunt in his journal, "find the meat very good, and,
indeed, so should I, were it not for the attachment I have to the
animal."
Early the following day, after proceeding ten miles to the north,
they came to two lodges of Shoshonies, who seemed in nearly as great
extremity as themselves, having just killed two horses for food.
They had no other provisions excepting the seed of a weed which they
gather in great quantities, and pound fine. It resembles hemp-seed.
Mr. Hunt purchased a bag of it, and also some small pieces of horse
flesh, which he began to relish, pronouncing them "fat and tender."
From these Indians he received information that several white men
had gone down the river, some one side, and a good many on the
other; these last he concluded to be Mr. Crooks and his party. He
was thus released from much anxiety about their safety, especially
as the Indians spoke about Mr. Crooks having one of his dogs yet,
which showed that he and his men had not been reduced to extremity
of hunger.
As Mr. Hunt feared that he might be several days in passing through
this mountain defile, and run the risk of famine, he encamped in the
neighborhood of the Indians, for the purpose of bartering with them
for a horse. The evening was expended in ineffectual trials. He
offered a gun, a buffalo robe, and various other articles. The poor
fellows had, probably, like himself, the fear of starvation before
their eyes. At length the women, learning the object of his pressing
solicitations and tempting offers, set up such a terrible hue and
cry that he was fairly howled and scolded from the ground.
The next morning early, the Indians seemed very desirous to get rid
of their visitors, fearing, probably, for the safety of their
horses. In reply to Mr. Hunt's inquiries about the mountains, they
told him that he would have to sleep but three nights more among
them; and that six days' travelling would take him to the falls of
the Columbia; information in which he put no faith, believing it was
only given to induce him to set forward. These, he was told, were
the last Snakes he would meet with, and that he would soon come to a
nation called Sciatogas.
Forward then did he proceed on his tedious journey, which, at every
step, grew more painful. The road continued for two days through
narrow defiles, where they were repeatedly obliged to unload the
horses. Sometimes the river passed through such rocky chasms and
under such steep precipices that they had to leave it, and make
their way, with excessive labor, over immense hills, almost
impassable for horses. On some of these hills were a few pine trees,
and their summits were covered with snow. On the second day of this
scramble one of the hunters killed a black-tailed deer, which
afforded the half-starved travellers a sumptuous repast. Their
progress these two days was twenty-eight miles, a little to the
northward of east.
The month of December set in drearily, with rain in the valleys and
snow upon the hills. They had to climb a mountain with snow to the
midleg, which increased their painful toil. A small beaver supplied
them with a scanty meal, which they eked out with frozen
blackberries, haws, and choke-cherries, which they found in the
course of their scramble. Their journey this day, though excessively
fatiguing, was but thirteen miles; and all the next day they had to
remain encamped, not being able to see half a mile ahead, on account
of a snow-storm. Having nothing else to eat, they were compelled to
kill another of their horses. The next day they resumed their march
in snow and rain, but with all their efforts could only get forward
nine miles, having for a part of the distance to unload the horses
and carry the packs themselves. On the succeeding morning they were
obliged to leave the river and scramble up the hills. From the
summit of these, they got a wide view of the surrounding country,
and it was a prospect almost sufficient to make them despair. In
every direction they beheld snowy mountains, partially sprinkled
with pines and other evergreens, and spreading a desert and toilsome
world around them. The wind howled over the bleak and wintry
landscape, and seemed to penetrate to the marrow of their bones.
They waded on through the snow, which at every step was more than
knee deep.
After tolling in this way all day, they had the mortification to
find that they were but four miles distant from the encampment of
the preceding night, such was the meandering of the river among
these dismal hills. Pinched with famine, exhausted with fatigue,
with evening approaching, and a wintry wild still lengthening as
they advanced, they began to look forward with sad forebodings to
the night's exposure upon this frightful waste. Fortunately they
succeeded in reaching a cluster of pines about sunset. Their axes
were immediately at work; they cut down trees, piled them in great
heaps, and soon had huge fires "to cheer their cold and hungry
hearts."
About three o'clock in the morning it again began to snow, and at
daybreak they found themselves, as it were, in a cloud, scarcely
being able to distinguish objects at the distance of a hundred
yards. Guarding themselves by the sound of running water, they set
out for the river, and by slipping and sliding contrived to get down
to its bank. One of the horses, missing his footing, rolled down
several hundred yards with his load, but sustained no injury. The
weather in the valley was less rigorous than on the hills. The snow
lay but ankle deep, and there was a quiet rain now falling. After
creeping along for six miles, they encamped on the border of the
river. Being utterly destitute of provisions, they were again
compelled to kill one of their horses to appease their famishing
hunger.
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Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The
Rocky Mountains
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